United States v. Deborah A. Brown

352 F.3d 654, 2003 U.S. App. LEXIS 25301, 2003 WL 22953279
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedDecember 16, 2003
DocketDocket 02-1135
StatusPublished
Cited by102 cases

This text of 352 F.3d 654 (United States v. Deborah A. Brown) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Deborah A. Brown, 352 F.3d 654, 2003 U.S. App. LEXIS 25301, 2003 WL 22953279 (2d Cir. 2003).

Opinion

CALABRESI, Circuit Judge.

Defendant Deborah Brown appeals from a conviction, entered in district court for the Northern District of New York (Mordue, J.), for mail fraud and conspiracy to defraud the United States Department of Health and Human Services (HHS). She argues that the prosecutor exercised a peremptory challenge against a black venire member on the basis of race, in violation of Batson v. Kentucky, 476 U.S. 79, 106 S.Ct. 1712, 90 L.Ed.2d 69 (1986). In the alternative, she contends that the prosecutor contravened Batson’s principles, and those of subsequent cases, by basing that same challenge on the prospective juror’s religion. She did not raise this latter claim during jury selection, as she was required to do, and it is therefore subject to plain error review. With respect to defendant’s race-based Batson claim, we affirm, since she has not shown that the prosecutor’s race-neutral explanation was pretextual. With respect to the defendant’s religion-based Batson claim, we affirm, because she has not demonstrated plain error.

BACKGROUND

Defendant-Appellant Deborah Brown and her mother, Mattie L. Brown, were convicted in 2002 for misdeeds connected to their positions as directors of Utica Head Start, a federal childcare program. 1 Specifically, Deborah Brown was found guilty, following a jury trial in district *658 court in the Northern District of New York (Mordue, J.), (1) of conspiracy to defraud HHS, and to convert federal funds, by engaging in nepotism and conflicts of interest, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 371; and (2) of mail fraud, by lying to a mortgage company about her employment status at Utica Head Start, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1341. She was sentenced to a 24-month prison term and is currently serving her sentence.

The Batson Objection and Response

During jury selection prior to. trial, the prosecutor exercised a peremptory challenge against one of three African-Americans in the venire. Brown’s trial counsel made a timely Batson challenge, asserting that the prosecutor had impermissibly struck the potential juror on the basis of her race. The prosecutor did not explicitly concede that the defense had made a pri-ma facie showing of discrimination, but he did offer a race neutral explanation. He stated that the potential juror in question, a Ms. Diane Underwood, “explained to the jury that she’s very active in local and I guess regional church.” He went on to note that “[o]ne of Mattie Brown’s supporters who is going to be here through the trial I guess was identified by her as someone that she knows from meetings, and I just feel that that would — that connection would subtlely or unsubtlely bias her in favor of the defendants and so that’s my basis for my objection to her.”

The prosecutor’s proffered reason related in part to an exchange between the court and Ms. Underwood, which occurred earlier during voir dire. The relevant portion follows:

CouRt: Okay. All right. Can you think of anything I should ask you that has not been asked?
Underwood: I wanted to — the people that are in here today, in the back, are they a part of this?
Court: Yes.
Underwood: I go — I’m [a] member of the Churches of God In Christ Jurisdiction Number 1 ... [A]nd the elder back there, I don’t know him personally, but I know he’s an elder in that jurisdiction.
Court: Okay. Now is that going to affect your ability to serve, be a fair juror? Underwood: Oh, no.
Court: I don’t know if he’s going to testify or not, but, you know of him. Underwood: I know that he attends, he’s an elder there, I don’t know him personally.
Court: All right. Thank you. 2

After the prosecutor gave his initial explanation for striking Ms. Underwood— her familiarity with this church elder— defense counsel responded by observing that “she unequivocally stated it wouldn’t have any effect on how she would be as a juror in this case.” The prosecutor then offered a second reason for the strike: Ms. Underwood’s avid participation in church affairs. Ms. Underwood had told the court that in her “spare time,” she liked to “[g]o to church.” And during the prosecutor’s own questioning of the venire members, Ms. Underwood had explained that she traveled twice a year from Syracuse to Rochester for “state meeting[s],” and had indicated that she also attended national meetings in Memphis. Based on these responses, the prosecutor said:

*659 I also find that, also just for the purposes of making a record, Juror Number 2, Miss Saliba, I’m striking her in part because she’s married to a pastor and my general feeling as a prosecutor, that people who are very active in church groups sometimes find it very difficult to judge others and so I think my strike of Miss Underwood is consistent with my other strike.

Upon hearing this second reason, the district court interjected that the Book of John contains the admonition “let not you who sinned cast the first stone, something like that.” Neither lawyer responded to the district court’s citation, of scripture, nor did defense counsel object to this second reason for striking Ms. Underwood. Instead, he continued to focus on the first reason, arguing that she never “indicated that she knew the pastor” and that she “recovered herself very well” by stating she would have no trouble being impartial. The prosecutor responded to these arguments by returning to Ms. Underwood’s church activities: “Again, I’m not challenging her for cause. I go to church with a number of ladies like Ms. Underwood and Ms. Saliba and they’re wonderful women. If I had an illness in the family, they’d be the first person I’d call on the phone; that doesn’t mean I want them to sit on a criminal jury.”

At that stage, the district court overruled defense counsel’s Batson challenge, concluding that the prosecutor had “laid a sufficient basis for why he exercised that peremptory.” Neither the court nor defense counsel ever directly addressed the prosecutor’s explanation regarding the ve-nire member’s participation in church affairs. Thus, while defense counsel had raised a race-based Batson challenge during jury selection — a challenge which was ultimately denied — he never offered a religion-based Batson challenge.

Post-trial motions

In a post-trial motion for a judgment of acquittal and/or a new trial, defendant Mattie Brown reasserted her race-based Batson claim, and, for the first time, offered a religion-based Batson objection as well. Deborah Brown also filed post-trial motion papers, but did not raise any Bat-son claim.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
352 F.3d 654, 2003 U.S. App. LEXIS 25301, 2003 WL 22953279, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-deborah-a-brown-ca2-2003.