Guillory v. Cain

303 F.3d 647, 2002 U.S. App. LEXIS 17665, 2002 WL 1966389
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedAugust 26, 2002
Docket01-30032
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 303 F.3d 647 (Guillory v. Cain) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Guillory v. Cain, 303 F.3d 647, 2002 U.S. App. LEXIS 17665, 2002 WL 1966389 (5th Cir. 2002).

Opinion

PATRICK E. HIGGINBOTHAM, Circuit Judge:

Christopher Guillory was convicted in Louisiana of three counts of first degree murder. In this federal habeas petition he attacks the process for selecting the foreperson of the grand jury that indicted him in Calcasieu Parish. The system of selection that Guillory complains of here was at issue in Campbell v. Louisiana 1 in 1998, discontinued the next year by an amendment to the state criminal code and condemned in State of Louisiana v. Ricky Langley, 2 in reliance upon Campbell.

The contention is that before the change in the criminal code, the judge presiding over the grand jury selected a foreperson from the general venire summoned for grand jury service and not from those randomly chosen for service from that ve-nire. The argument continues that this unguided discretion, left to presiding judges, formerly white males, had produced a historical pattern of selecting white males over blacks and females sufficient to create a prima facie case of both racial and gender-based discrimination.

Both the state courts of Louisiana and the federal district court refused Guillory’s *649 request for relief. The United States District Court concluded after conducting an evidentiary hearing that the state had overcome Guillory’s prima facie case of discriminatory selection with the testimony of the state trial judge who selected the foreperson in his case. It then issued a certificate of appealability limited to “whether the indictment should have been quashed due to discrimination in the selection of the Grand Jury foreman”.

I

Guillory was indicted on May 6, 1993, on three counts of murder and found guilty by a jury on May 10, 1996. He was sentenced to three life terms. The Third Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed his conviction and sentence on March 11, 1998, and the Supreme Court of Louisiana denied certiorari on October 9, 1998, in an unpublished opinion. On direct appeal Guillory raised 20 points of error, including in one assignment that the indictment should have been quashed because there was racial and sexual discrimination in the selection of the foreperson of the grand jury in Calcasieu Parish. The state court of appeals rejected this contention, finding that Guillory had failed to make a prima facie case. It faulted the absence of a statistical comparison of the race and sex of the selected foreperson with the venire from which they were drawn, applying State v. Young’s 3 teaching that drawing a proportion with general population figures was not meaningful.

Guillory then filed on October 8, 1999, a federal petition for writ of habeas corpus under 28 U.S.C. 2254, the petition now before us. He asserted eleven claims, but only the claim that the selection of the foreperson was tainted by discrimination remains.

II

A federal magistrate judge, after reviewing affidavits submitted by the parties at his direction, conducted an evidentiary hearing. Guillory’s counsel had developed an extensive study of the patterns of selection of forepersons of grand juries in Cal-casieu Parish, as counsel in the Langley case. By agreement of counsel, this study, as well as the testimony of Dr. Joel Devine who testified in Langley as an expert in statistics, was admitted before the magistrate. The state relied upon the testimony of Judge Wilford Carter, the presiding judge who selected the foreperson, and Dr. Nola McDaniel, the state’s expert in statistics.

The state did not contend that census figures could not serve as a base in establishing a prima facie case of discrimination. Rather, its strategy was to accept that a prima facie case was established by the same record developed in Langley and then carry the burden of responding to it. 4 In short, events in this case overran the limited circumstances under which a federal court can grant an evidentiary hearing in federal habeas review of a state convie *650 tion. 5 Our question is then whether the finding of no intentional discrimination by the magistrate judge was clearly erroneous.

Ill

The state first contends that the historical record of the appointing process is not relevant when the trial judge who made the appointment at issue explains why the selection was made. We agree in part. But the argument misses the point that it was the practice of requiring the presiding judge to select a foreperson from the venire and not from randomly selected members of the grand jury that opened the door to discrimination. And a simple denial that race or sex had nothing to do with a selection that followed this selection practice, in the face of the statistically established prima facie case it produced, is not adequate. 6 This does not mean that the selecting judge cannot offer objective and nondiscriminatory reasons for the selection which, if found to be credible by the trier of fact, will defeat the prima facie case. But that very prima facie case places the burden of offering such explanations upon the official.

The state’s related argument is that since Judge Carter was black, a new judge making his first selection, and at the time of the federal hearing had only made three selections, there was an inadequate basis for inferring discrimination. This ignores the force of the prima facie case created by the unchallenged evidence of the historical record that this system produced: the burden is now upon the state to offer nondiscriminatory reasons. Judge Carter’s short tenure as a judge at the time of the now-contested selection, his first, and a total of only three selections will not alone support an inference of intentional discrimination. That is plainly so, as Dr. McDaniel observed, but that reality also cuts against the state’s efforts to draw upon it in defense. So we return to our required inquiry of whether the state has offered credited evidence of nondiscriminatory purpose.

IV

We review findings of fact by the standard of clearly erroneous and questions of law de novo. The magistrate judge made findings regarding the question that controls this case, whether there was intentional discrimination. This finding of fact in the context of this case a fortiori overcomes the prima facie case. There is no legal question here regarding the structure or mechanics of the prima facie case and the state’s burden of proof. We have only a pure question of fact, and we review only for clear error. 7 We start with the findings of fact that underpin the finding of no intentional discrimination.

Judge Carter testified that his primary aim in selecting a foreperson was to choose a person “who would be fair and *651 independent” and “not necessarily go along” with the government.

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Bluebook (online)
303 F.3d 647, 2002 U.S. App. LEXIS 17665, 2002 WL 1966389, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/guillory-v-cain-ca5-2002.