Kahtisha McKnight v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 5, 2009
Docket03-08-00105-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Kahtisha McKnight v. State (Kahtisha McKnight v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kahtisha McKnight v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN

NO. 03-08-00105-CR

Kahtisha McKnight, Appellant

v.

The State of Texas, Appellee

FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF BELL COUNTY, 27TH JUDICIAL DISTRICT NO. 60884, HONORABLE JOE CARROLL, JUDGE PRESIDING

MEMORANDUM OPINION

A jury convicted Kahtisha McKnight of the offense of murder. See Tex. Penal Code

Ann. § 19.02(b)(3) (West 2003). Punishment was assessed at life imprisonment. In a single issue

on appeal, McKnight asserts that the district court erred in denying her challenge to the State’s use

of its peremptory strikes on the basis that some strikes were racially motivated. We will affirm

the judgment.

BACKGROUND

The underlying facts of this case are not disputed on appeal. The State alleged that

McKnight, during the course of intentionally, knowingly, or recklessly attempting to commit or

committing the offense of injury to a child, caused the death of her daughter by striking her with an

unknown object or by throwing, shoving, or kicking her against an unknown object. The case proceeded to trial. The venire panel was comprised of fifty potential jurors.

Of these, the following potential jurors indicated on their juror questionnaires that they were of a

race other than white: 6 (black), 16 (black), 20 (black), 23 (black), 26 (black), 29 (hispanic),

32 (“mixed”), 34 (asian), 36 (black), 40 (hispanic), 45 (black), 47 (black), and 48 (white/hispanic).

Four additional potential jurors failed to identify their race, although the record reflects that

one—22—was black. The State exercised six of its ten peremptory strikes on non-white prospective

jurors: 16, 20, 22, 23, 26, and 32. It did not strike two non-white jurors in the range likely to be

selected, 6 and 29, who were both ultimately seated on the jury.

Before the jury was empaneled, defense counsel made a Batson challenge to the

State’s peremptory strikes, claiming they were racially motivated. See Batson v. Kentucky, 476 U.S.

79 (1986). The State offered the following explanations for its strikes:

[Regarding prospective juror 16, a black female who had indicated during voir dire that she

previously had been represented by defense counsel]

[Prosecutor]: Judge, she was previously represented by [defense counsel].

[The court]: Uh-huh, okay.

[Prosecutor]: On a bankruptcy case where she was directly represented by him.

[The court]: All right.

[Prosecutor]: And I even asked her about that attorney-client relationship.

[The court]: Okay. Let’s—Anything else before we—

[Prosecutor]: No.

....

2 [Regarding prospective juror 20, a black female who indicated on her questionnaire that she was

employed as a certified nursing assistant (CNA)]

[Prosecutor]: Judge, No. 20 is a certified nurse’s aide, a CNA.

[The court]: Uh-huh.

[Prosecutor]: I routinely strike all CNAs, regardless of race, gender. I see CNAs all the time testifying for defendants. CNAs are folks—not to slam the profession per se—but they’re folks who did [not] go on to get a nursing degree, they are folks take care of the basic type things, and I believe there’s even a program over in the Work Force to get them jobs. More often than not the people I have testify at bond reductions to get out drug dealers and other folks are going to be CNAs. And I never keep CNAs or for that matter prison guards on my juries. I just simply don’t do it.

[The court]: Did anybody ask her any questions?

[Prosecutor]: No, Judge. I did not ask her any. I just drew a line through it when I saw “CNA” when I was going over my initial list.

[Regarding prospective juror 22, a black female who had indicated on her questionnaire that she was

employed as a manicurist]

[Prosecutor]: Judge, I struck her because she indicated she had a problem focusing on this case because she was self-employed as a manicurist.

[The court]: Yeah.

[Prosecutor]: And that is when I made the point about being hogs for people’s attention, we needed the undivided attention, at which time another juror who is a mechanic piped up and said he was self-employed. And that would be Juror No. 19, [juror’s name]. And I struck him as well. Both of those folks indicated they were self-employed and they

3 were losing money for being here and their attention would be diverted from the facts. [Prospective juror 19] listed his race as white.

[Regarding prospective juror 23, a black female]

[Prosecutor]: Judge, I’m pretty sure I prosecuted her husband, [name]. I was looking on my computer system. There are [name] in the AS400. I’m pretty sure I’m familiar with that name. I recall him being in his mid 50s, and it was a drug possession case.

[Regarding prospective juror 26]

[Prosecutor]: Judge, that is [prospective juror 26]. I’m actually prosecuting . . . her sister, who also works at Quality Time Day Care for injury to a child. I pulled my file while I was in the office, and Mrs. Schneible—we were trying to figure out if it was the same person. The person I’m prosecuting is [name of prospective juror’s sister], and she works at Quality Time Day Care. This must be her sister, [prospective juror 26], who works over at the same day care over in Killeen. And the fact that I’m prosecuting her, and I am prosecuting her, she is represented by Potter and Company. That, of course, caused me some concern.

[Regarding prospective juror 32]

[Prosecutor]: Judge, our reason—Well, to start with, I thought he was Caucasian, but I guess he wrote down “mixed.” But I recall him because he was very odd. When I was talking to him during my voir dire, he talked about how everything is all choreographed. And I was talking to

4 them about pretrial publicity and whether he believes stuff in the newspapers and what he sees on TV, or if he wants to wait and hear it in court. That’s the best place to get the facts directly from the witnesses who know about them. And he made the comment about it all being very choreographed. And then he was the focus of [defense counsel’s] question. [Defense counsel] went to him on a number of things, and I saw him truthfully as a strong defense juror because of the choreographed statement. And being we are the ones that is going to be presenting witnesses, that caused me some concern.

The district court stated its belief that the State had provided race-neutral explanations

for striking prospective jurors 16, 22, 23, 26, and 32. However, the court later inquired about the

State’s reason for striking prospective juror 20, the CNA. The district court asked the prosecutor if

he had struck any other CNAs, specifically any “white ones.” The prosecutor explained,

[Prosecutor]: No, Judge. There was no one else. And I always go through looking for CNAs and prison guards, but there were no other folks who reported being CNAs. We do have other medical people, but they went on to get their nursing license and degree. And that’s the reason I focused in on this CNA. And, Judge, you can even ask Judge Trudo, if you want to; but she is very familiar with the fact that I strike all CNAs regardless of gender or anything else.

[The court]: Well, that’s—I don’t know. Have you got any cases that—Anybody have any cases on that issue that they could cite me to?

[Defense]: Your Honor, I based my Batson challenge based on the fact that it was 60% of the strikes, more than half of the peremptories used, and that merely shifts the burden. It’s the State’s burden to prove to the Court race neutral conditions.

[The court]: . . . . Well, I think you got a race neutral explanation on everything except No. 20, and I’m just confused about that.

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