Hurshel Williams v. Larry Rhoades Matt Fontaine

354 F.3d 1101, 2004 U.S. App. LEXIS 600, 2004 WL 67841
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 16, 2004
Docket02-15280
StatusPublished
Cited by38 cases

This text of 354 F.3d 1101 (Hurshel Williams v. Larry Rhoades Matt Fontaine) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hurshel Williams v. Larry Rhoades Matt Fontaine, 354 F.3d 1101, 2004 U.S. App. LEXIS 600, 2004 WL 67841 (9th Cir. 2004).

Opinion

OPINION

FARRIS, Circuit Judge.

Hurshel Williams appeals the district court’s ruling denying his petition for ha-beas corpus, claiming that race motivated the prosecutor’s peremptory strike of the only African American from his jury in violation of the Equal Protection principles articulated in Batson v. Kentucky. The record reflects that the state courts did not unreasonably apply clearly established law or unreasonably determine the facts in denying Williams’ Batson challenge. We affirm.

Background

Williams was charged in California state court with conspiracy to defraud, misappropriation of public funds, and grand theft by false pretenses in connection with a scandal at the Lost Hills Water District. The State alleged that Williams, a supplier to the District, submitted false invoices with the aid of Dennis Stowe, a District employee. Stowe received kickbacks from Williams in the form of checks written to fictitious payees. Stowe or his mother, Alice Stowe, cashed the checks at the bank where she worked as a teller.

Williams’ first trial ended when the jury was unable to reach a unanimous verdict. During voir dire before the second trial, the parties questioned “Juror X,” a 60-year-old African American woman, about her knowledge of the case through press coverage, and her experience testifying in a prior murder trial.

When the prosecutor later used a peremptory challenge to strike Juror X, Williams objected, claiming the challenge was improperly race-based under People v. Wheeler, the California version of Batson v. Kentucky. 1 The trial court ruled that Williams made a prima facie showing of discrimination and required the prosecutor to give reasons for striking Juror X.

The prosecutor explained that Alice Stowe, who “happen[ed] to be African American,” would testify about the kickback checks written to her son. He predicted that Alice Stowe would be a hostile witness since she originally had been charged in the conspiracy and was granted immunity so the prosecutor could compel her testimony. The prosecutor stated that “Alice Stowe is almost in virtually in the same situation as [Juror X],” noting that the two had sons of the same age. In light of the similarities, the prosecutor feared that Juror X might not view Stowe’s testimony objectively.

The following comments form the centerpiece of Williams’ Batson challenge:

This is the fourth time now that I have tried personally one of these Lost Hills Water District cases. The one on Dennis Stowe lasted all summer, year ago to the day. I left — -deliberately left a black juror on that case. I felt it was the responsibility, the consensus of the community in the form of the verdict. I think it gives more weight and more authority to the jury.
Quite frankly, when there are all different ethnic persuasions, here’s what we find to be the truth: That the jury came back and convicted in the Donald *1105 Moore case [sic ]. The ... foreman of that jury was, in fact, black. And in the last case that I tried, that one hung up, it was the case of People versus Hurshel Williams that hung up.
One of the reasons it hung up, I had an African American juror who went back and nullified that jury because of race, solely because of race, and I had left that juror on, again, because I wanted to make a statement to the community that this was a fair and impartial jury. The lesson that I learned was that I had ignored some significant factors in that juror’s background, one that I would have ignored was that juror was of any racial background [sic ].
Just as the Court will recognize yesterday, I have challenged three jurors, two of them were white, and the third juror of whom was black. Two of those jurors I specifically excused because I was concerned about jury nullification.
As to jury nullifications, your Honor, I struggle with this. In this country, we don’t have a lot of black jurors to sit on juries. There’s nothing I would want more of. I mean that truly. But in this specific case, with this specific juror— this is the only black juror that I have excused to my knowledge since I’ve been back in the district attorney’s office last April — but this particular juror, having looked at her answers and watched the way she responded to me, I felt I had no other alternative but to represent my client and to exercise that peremptory challenge.

Williams argued these statements showed the prosecutor struck Juror X because she was African American, like the problem juror in the first trial. The trial court agreed that Juror X had acted differently toward the prosecutor, and found it curious that she could not remember her prior trial experience, given that it was a murder trial. The court then asked the prosecutor what had occurred in the first trial. The prosecutor explained that several angry jurors told him that the African American juror had refused to deliberate, stating he would never vote to convict. The prosecutor concluded:

I have my mind set. I’ve bent over backwards. I have a defendant of African American persuasion, at least one person in the community that matches their ethnic persuasion on that case. That’s the point I’m trying to make.
But I think the lesson that I’ve learned is that you can’t be blind to the other things that they’re telling you ... You can’t assume that, well, okay, because they happen to be of the same ethnic persuasion of the defendant, I’m going to allow them to be on the jury. We can’t be blind in our society. There are people whose sole purpose is to get on a jury just solely so they can nullify the verdict.
That’s why I excused [another juror] yesterday, and that’s why I excused [Juror X] today. And my initial reaction ... if [Juror X] had not been black, I would have excused her as soon as she was done. I might have excused her as to cause because she testified in a murder case, couldn’t remember, et cetera, et cetera. Because she was black, I bent over backwards to try to find a justification in my mind for keeping her, and I couldn’t. That’s why I excused her.

The trial court overruled Williams’ Bat-son/Wheeler objection, stating:

I do not think, as I analyze it, that the one part of the rationale of the prosecutor is valid. I do not think that because I do not think that it can be fairly said that [Juror X] came in here and wanted to serve someplace so that she could *1106 return a verdict in favor of Mr. Williams because she shared the same ethnic background or race ...
So with all due respect, I do not believe it to be valid that one can say that in a case such as this, one will not keep a black person because that person is going to not follow the law.
On the other hand, having set that aside, I think that the other reasons advanced by [the prosecutor] are entirely legitimate. I noticed her demeanor.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
354 F.3d 1101, 2004 U.S. App. LEXIS 600, 2004 WL 67841, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hurshel-williams-v-larry-rhoades-matt-fontaine-ca9-2004.