Watkins v. State

245 S.W.3d 444, 2008 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 215, 2008 WL 375491
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 13, 2008
DocketPD-1438-06
StatusPublished
Cited by210 cases

This text of 245 S.W.3d 444 (Watkins v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Watkins v. State, 245 S.W.3d 444, 2008 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 215, 2008 WL 375491 (Tex. 2008).

Opinion

OPINION

PRICE, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court

in which MEYERS, WOMACK, JOHNSON, KEASLER, HERVEY, HOLCOMB and COCHRAN, JJ., joined.

After a jury trial, the appellant was convicted of the offense of burglary of a habitation, and his punishment was assessed by the jury at a term of twenty years in the penitentiary. On direct appeal the appellant claimed, inter alia, that the State exercised a number of its peremptory challenges to remove African-American panelists on account of their race. In an unpublished opinion, the Dallas Court of Appeals held that the trial court’s ruling that the appellant failed to establish purposeful discrimination was not clearly erroneous. 1 In his petition for discretionary review, the appellant complains that the court of appeals conducted an inadequate analysis of his claim in light of the opinion of the United States Supreme Court in Miller-El v. Dretke, 2 and that it ignored many of the arguments presented in his brief explaining how the record establishes purposeful discrimination. We granted the appellant’s petition in order to address these contentions. 3

THE LEGAL STANDARD

1. At Trial

Since the Supreme Court’s opinion in Batson v. Kentucky, 4 a criminal *447 defendant has been able to demonstrate that the State has engaged in purposeful discrimination in the exercise of its peremptory challenges “by relying solely on the facts concerning [jury] selection in his case.” 5 Proof of systematic exclusion of minority jurors over the course an extended period of time is no longer required. The defendant must demonstrate, by a preponderance of the evidence, that the prosecutor indulged in purposeful discrimination against a member of a constitutionally protected class in exercising his peremptory challenges. 6 As the process has been described by the Supreme Court:

Under our Batson jurisprudence, once the opponent of a peremptory challenge has made out a prima facie case of racial discrimination (step one), the burden of production shifts to the proponent of the strike to come forward with a race-neutral explanation (step two). If a race-neutral explanation is tendered, the trial court must then decide (step three) whether the opponent of the strike has proved purposeful racial discrimination. 7

At the second step of this process, the proponent of the strike need only tender an explanation that is race neutral on its face. 8 The ultimate plausibility of that race-neutral explanation is to be considered as part of the third step of the analysis, in which the trial court determines whether the opponent of the strike (usually the defendant) has satisfied his burden of persuasion to establish by a preponderance of the evidence that the strike was indeed the product of the proponent’s purposeful discrimination. 9 Whether the opponent satisfies his burden of persuasion to show that the proponent’s facially race-neutral explanation for his strike is pre-textual, not genuine, is a question of fact for the trial court to resolve in the first instance. 10

2. On Appeal

Once the opponent of the challenged strike raises a question of purposeful discrimination, if the trial court then proceeds immediately to the second step by inquiring of the proponent whether he had a non-diseriminatory purpose, a reviewing court is to assume that the opponent has satisfied his step-one obligation to make a prima facie case of purposeful discrimination and address only the second and third steps. 11 The reviewing court *448 should not overturn the trial court’s resolution of the Batson issue unless it determines that the trial court’s ruling was clearly erroneous. 12 In assaying the record for clear error, vel non, the reviewing court should consider the entire record of voir dire; it need not limit itself to arguments or considerations that the parties specifically called to the trial court’s attention so long as those arguments or considerations are manifestly grounded in the appellate record. 13 But a reviewing court should examine a trial court’s conclusion that a facially race-neutral explanation for a peremptory challenge is genuine, rather than a pretext, with great deference, reversing only when that conclusion is, in view of the record as a whole, clearly erroneous. 14

3. Miller-El v. Dretke

But, as the Supreme Court has illustrated in its opinion in Miller-El v. Dretke, “[djeference does not by definition preclude relief.” 15 Because Miller-El raised his Batson claim in the context of a federal application for writ of habeas corpus, the standard he was required to meet was rigorous indeed. 16 The Supreme Court nevertheless held that Miller-El met that demanding standard.

The Supreme Court considered the combined impact of a number of factors in concluding that, by clear and convincing evidence, the prosecutors exercised two peremptory challenges on a racially discriminatory basis, notwithstanding the race-neutral explanations they offered at the Batson hearing. 17 Those factors included;

• that the State exercised its peremptory challenges to eliminate a far greater proportion of the African-American veniremen than the non-African-American veniremen; 18
• that the reasons the State asserted for eliminating the two African-American veniremen in question appeared to apply equally well to many of the non-African-American veniremen whom *449 the State did not challenge; 19
• that the State utilized its option to shuffle the jury panels in a manner that supported an inference of race discrimination; 20

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
245 S.W.3d 444, 2008 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 215, 2008 WL 375491, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/watkins-v-state-texcrimapp-2008.