At this criminal trial, the prosecutor used his peremptory challenges to remove a series of Black jurors from the case. The criminal defendant was convicted of capital murder but challenged the fairness of the trial due to what he claimed was the racially-motivated jury selection process. He wins in the Supreme Court.
The case is Pitchford v. Cain, issued on May 28. Never let anyone tell you that a conservative Supreme Court does not always rule in a liberal manner. This is a 5-4 decision, with Justices Kavanaugh and Roberts voting with the three liberals.
In this case, during jury selection, the prosecutor struck four potential jurors, all of them Black. The defendant's lawyer objected on Batson grounds. Under Batson, named after a Supreme Court ruling from 1986, upon such an objection, the prosecutor has to articulate a race-neutral reason for striking the Black jurors. The judge then has to decide -- on the spot -- if that justification is a pretext, or a knowingly false reason. The prosecutor does not have a heavy burden in defending his choices, but this procedure must be followed.
Although the jury convicted the defendant of murder, yielding a 20-year sentence, the Supreme Court grants the habeas corpus petition, holding that the state courts did not reasonably apply Court precedent on this issue. Remember that habeas petitions are not granted simply because the state court did something unconstitutional during trial. The criminal defendant has to show the state court did not reasonably apply Supreme Court precedent. As Justice Gorsuch writes in dissent, "showing legal error . . . isn't enough to satisfy [the habeas statute]. Instead, a petitioner must demonstrate that no fairminded jurist could reach the state court's conclusion under this Court's precedents." So a mere constitutional violation is not enough. The habeas equation, in my view, is one of the greatest anomalies in federal law. But that's a lecture for another day.
What went wrong at the criminal trial was this: the criminal court judge said the prosecutor articulated a neutral reason for striking the Black jurors, but it did not afford defense counsel a chance to rebut the prosecutor's race-neutral reasons as pretextual. Nor did the criminal court make any findings regarding whether the prosecutor's reasons were a pretext for race discrimination. When jury selection ended, defense counsel again raised an objection, to no avail. The trial court cut him off. The defendant gets another shot at challenging the prosecutor's actions, potentially leading to a new trial with a fresh jury. Hey, everyone deserves a second chance, right?
