2016 IL App (1st) 161259
SECOND DIVISION
October 7, 2016
No. 1-16-1259
In re A.S., a Minor ) Appeal from the
) Circuit Court of
(The People of the State of Illinois, ) Cook County
)
Petitioner-Appellee, ) No. 15 JD 901
)
v. ) Honorable
) Steven James Bernstein,
A.S., a Minor, ) Judge Presiding.
)
Respondent-Appellant). )
JUSTICE MASON delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion.
Justices Neville and Pierce concurred in the judgment and opinion.
OPINION
¶1 After a jury trial, 1 minor respondent A.S. was adjudicated delinquent of the offense of
residential burglary and sentenced to the Juvenile Department of Corrections. Respondent
seeks a new trial based on his claim that the State used peremptory challenges to strike
prospective black jurors without providing a race-neutral explanation as required under
Batson v. Kentucky, 476 U.S. 79 (1986), and that the trial court did not fulfill its duty to
closely evaluate the State’s proffered reasons for striking these panel members. Alternatively,
respondent contends that the State’s failure to provide any reason for its peremptory
challenge to one black member of the venire and the trial court’s failure to inquire into the
reason for the challenge as well as other irregularities in the proceedings require remand for a
1
As the State chose to charge A.S. under the habitual juvenile offender provision of the Juvenile Court Act
of 1987, he was entitled to a trial by jury. 705 ILCS 405/5-820(d) (West 2014).
No. 1-16-1259
new Batson hearing. We agree with respondent’s alternative argument and reverse and
remand for further Batson proceedings.
¶2 BACKGROUND
¶3 We confine our discussion of the facts to a summary of the jury selection process prior to
respondent’s trial. Jury selection spanned two days. On the first day, January 6, 2016, the
State challenged for cause the first black member of the venire, Charles H. because he failed
to disclose his criminal history, including charges for unlawful use of a weapon and
attempted arson. The State also used challenges for cause against Bill B. and Kenneth J., two
white males, for failing to disclose prior arrests during voir dire. Bill B. failed to reveal a
DUI arrest and Kenneth J. did not disclose a battery charge from 1996.
¶4 Over the remainder of jury selection conducted that day, the State proceeded to use
sequential peremptory challenges to strike three black members of the venire: Addie M.,
Madelyn B. and Connie T.
¶5 With respect to Connie T., a clerical worker for the Chicago Teachers Union, the State
initially proposed to strike her for cause because she had not disclosed a theft conviction
from 1977 for which she received supervision. It is unclear from the record whether this
conviction was expunged. At the insistence of respondent’s counsel, Connie T. was
questioned in chambers. She at first did not remember the 39-year-old charge, but eventually
recalled that in her teens she was in a store with her boyfriend who put an item in her purse
without her knowledge and she was stopped on leaving the store. The State asked Connie T.
no questions. Upon hearing Connie T.’s explanation, the court denied the State’s challenge
for cause and the State elected to use a peremptory challenge to dismiss her.
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¶6 Respondent’s counsel then raised a Batson challenge based on the State’s conduct in
striking Charles H. for cause and using peremptories to strike the three remaining black
members of the venire. Counsel argued that these challenges had resulted in the dismissal of
every prospective juror who was black.
¶7 After hearing argument, the trial court reiterated its belief that it had properly granted the
State’s motion to strike Charles H. for cause given his failure to disclose past arrests for
serious crimes. The court further determined that respondent had not made a prima facie
showing that that State’s use of three of its peremptories against Addie M., Madelyn B. and
Connie T. was racially motivated. Referencing Connie T., the court commented that “I think
there’s been some consistency in [the State’s] feeling with respect to failure to disclose” past
criminal matters.
¶8 Requesting to make a record, the prosecutor noted that she had consistently stricken for
cause jurors of any race who failed to disclose prior arrests during voir dire and that she had
used a peremptory challenge against Holly B., a white woman, in addition to the three black
women. Finally, the prosecutor noted that of the 40-person venire, “fewer than 10” and
maybe only “five or six” were black.
¶9 When jury selection resumed the following day, respondent’s counsel requested a
mistrial, again based on the claimed Batson violation. Counsel noted that A.S. was black and
the complaining witness was white. The State repeated the previous day’s arguments and
posited that, in any event, respondent’s motion was premature given that jury selection had
not concluded. The trial court adhered to its finding that respondent had not made out
a prima facie case of a Batson violation, postponed ruling on respondent’s motion for a
mistrial and resumed jury selection.
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¶ 10 Joe W., a black man who indicated during questioning that he had a number of health
problems and was not feeling well, was interviewed in chambers. Joe W. indicated that he
had diabetes and high blood pressure and expressed doubt that he could make it through the
trial. Ultimately, when asked if he thought he could serve if the court attended to any
problems that arose by taking breaks or having juice available, Joe W. agreed that he could.
¶ 11 Joe W. had failed to disclose a DUI arrest from 2003. When questioned about the arrest
by the trial court, he indicated that he forgot about it. Joe W. also indicated that he really
didn’t consider the DUI a “criminal” matter. Notwithstanding the previous day’s assertion
that it had challenged any prospective juror, regardless of race, who failed to disclose prior
arrests, the State asked Joe W. no questions and accepted him as the 11th juror, as did
respondent’s counsel.
¶ 12 After the parties had selected 12 jurors, they proceeded to the selection of alternate jurors.
The State used a peremptory challenge against Rita J., a black woman who had worked for
26 years as a therapist for the Department of Children and Family Services (DCFS). The
State asked no questions of Rita J. during voir dire prior to using the peremptory. At that
point, apparently based on the State’s use of four of its five peremptories to dismiss black
jurors, the court sua sponte found that respondent had made a prima facie case of a Batson
violation (“now I’m saying that there is a pattern”) and proceeded to question the State
regarding the reasons for striking black members of the venire.
¶ 13 Starting with Rita J., the State cited her work history and argued that a DCFS social
worker “may have some tendency to be lenie[nt] against [sic] the minor respondent.”
Respondent’s counsel, who did not have his jury selection notes with him in chambers,
pointed out that other members of the venire were in social service professions and he
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“guessed” that the State had accepted one or more of them. Based on the State’s explanation,
the court found the State’s reason for exercising a peremptory against Rita J. was based on
factors other than her race.
¶ 14 The parties next addressed the dismissal of Addie M. During voir dire questioning, Addie
M. had disclosed that 12 years earlier her home had been surrounded on one occasion by
police who were there to arrest her son on a robbery warrant. Addie M.’s son was later
convicted and served prison time. The prosecutor stated that, as a result of that incident, the
State believed Addie M. “might have some feelings about the police that would be adverse to
[the] prosecution.” Respondent’s counsel pointed out that another juror, Shelly L., a white
woman, also had a son involved in a criminal matter where police came to her home looking
for him, an argument ensued and she later determined he was involved. The prosecutor
asserted that the circumstances described by Addie M. were materially different as there was
no indication that police had surrounded Shelly L.’s home or that her son had been convicted
or served time on any criminal charge. Based on this explanation, the trial court concluded
that the State had offered a race-neutral reason for Addie M.’s dismissal.
¶ 15 With respect to Madelyn B., she revealed on voir dire that she worked for Breakthrough
Urban Ministries, an organization that serves a homeless population on the west side of
Chicago. In articulating the reason for dismissing her, the State indicated, “the fact that she’s
a social worker from East Garfield Park would have been reason enough for us to think that”
she would be adverse to the prosecution. Madelyn B. had further revealed during voir dire
that she had been convicted of attempted robbery in the early 1960s and criminal trespass in
the 1970s, although the State was not in possession of a criminal history indicating that she
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had any criminal convictions. Madelyn B. also used the phrase “substance abuse” in
referencing her trespass conviction, but she did not elaborate.
¶ 16 During the in-chambers discussion regarding Madelyn B., respondent’s counsel
questioned the State’s consistency in striking potential jurors with criminal backgrounds,
citing the State’s acceptance of Matthew H., a white juror who had been convicted of inciting
a riot at Michigan State University. The conviction was later expunged. The State
characterized the comparison as “laughable” and, without further explanation from the State,
the court engaged in its own comparison of Madelyn B. and Matthew H.:
“THE COURT: Time out. Something happened at Michigan State where he was
arrested for mob action. Again you’re talking about questions of degree. ***
***
I see a substantial difference. I mean I would want a recovering alcoholic, a
recovering drug person on the jury if I was a defense lawyer, but as a State I can
understand it. They are all questions of degree.
MR. BARRIDO [respondent’s counsel]: Judge, with all due respect are you saying—
THE COURT: Am I saying that there is a distinction between somebody who is
guilty of mob action in a riot when back in the day those things were happening.
MR. BARRIDO: And back in the day the African American lady was also
presumably very young when these things occurred.
THE COURT: It’s a different situation.
MR. BARRIDO: May I have her age for the record Judge.
THE COURT: I don’t have it with me.
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MR. PONCE DE LEON: Judge I believe that same potential juror said it was the 60’s
or 70’s.
THE COURT: Oh, yeah she said she was blasted. All I’m trying to establish here is
that there is some rational basis for the State of Illinois not to want this person.
***
I do draw a distinction between the degrees of the crimes.” (Emphasis added.)
The court did not make an explicit finding that the State’s proffered reason for striking
Madelyn B. was race-neutral. The record further does not disclose how old Matthew H. was
the time of jury selection or when he was convicted, although during questioning, he
indicated that he had children aged 4 and 11 months.
¶ 17 The State did not offer and the court did not ask for any race-neutral explanation for
exercising a peremptory challenge against Connie T. The only basis for the State’s for-cause
challenge was Connie T.’s failure to disclose her 39-year-old theft conviction, which the
court rejected. As noted, the court had earlier commented on the State’s apparent consistency
in dismissing members of the venire who had failed to disclose past arrests, but that was
before the court determined that respondent had established a prima facie case and before the
State had accepted Joe W., who had also failed to disclose a prior DUI.
¶ 18 During the discussion of Madelyn B., the court indicated that it had not reviewed Batson
recently and, after the parties completed jury selection, recessed to review it. When court
reconvened and prior to the arrival of respondent’s counsel, who had gone to get a copy of
the decision for the court, the court ruled that the State had not exercised peremptory
challenges against black jurors for racially motivated reasons, commenting:
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“THE COURT: It is a real low bar. ***And now I’m going along with a dissent in
the [Batson] case. But I’ve always believed that the *** lawyers trying the case have the
right to do the best for their client be it the State or the [d]efense. And absen[t] some
absolutely no showing that there is a reason other than racial discrimination to exclude a
particular witness [sic] from a case, I think that’s what peremptory challenges are and
should be about.
I think people unfortunately have the right to look at somebody and say I don’t
like the way that guy is looking at me.”
The court then denied respondent’s motion for a mistrial.
¶ 19 When counsel for respondent arrived after the court’s oral ruling, apologizing that it took
him longer to get the decision than he anticipated, the court stated “I think there are reasons
other than race for the State to have excluded those people that they excluded.” Jury selection
was completed and the matter then proceeded to trial.
¶ 20 ANALYSIS
¶ 21 In Batson, the United States Supreme Court determined that the prosecution’s use of
peremptory challenges to exclude prospective jurors on the basis of race violated a
defendant’s right to equal protection under the fourteenth amendment. 476 U.S. at 89.
“Although a prosecutor ordinarily is entitled to exercise permitted peremptory challenges ‘for
any reason at all, as long as that reason is related to his view concerning the outcome’ of the
case to be tried[ ] [citations], the [e]qual [p]rotection [c]lause forbids the prosecutor to
challenge potential jurors solely on account of their race or on the assumption that black
jurors as a group will be unable impartially to consider the State’s case against a black
defendant.” Id.
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¶ 22 Batson’s three-step process for addressing alleged discriminatory use of peremptory
challenges is well-settled. First, it is the defendant’s burden to make a prima facie showing
that the prosecutor has exercised peremptory challenges on the basis of race. Id. at 96; see
also People v. Davis, 231 Ill. 2d 349, 360 (2008). Our supreme court has articulated a
number of factors trial courts should consider in this context, which we discuss in more detail
below. See, e.g., People v. Rivera, 221 Ill. 2d 481, 501 (2006) (enumerating nonexclusive list
of factors).
¶ 23 Second, once a defendant makes out a prima facie case, the burden shifts to the
prosecution to articulate a race-neutral reason for excluding each dismissed juror, which
“need not rise to the level justifying exercise of a challenge for cause.” Batson, 476 U.S. at
97. Also at the second stage, defendant is afforded the opportunity to argue that the State’s
proffered reasons for striking particular members of the venire are pretextual. Davis, 231 Ill.
2d at 363; People v. Easley, 192 Ill. 2d 307, 324 (2000).
¶ 24 At the third stage, the trial court makes the ultimate determination of whether the party
opposing the challenge has made the required showing of purposeful discrimination. At this
stage, it is the trial court’s responsibility to undertake “ ‘a sincere and reasoned attempt to
evaluate the prosecutor’s explanations in light of the circumstances of the case.’ ” People v.
Harris, 129 Ill. 2d 123, 174-75 (1989) (quoting State v. Hall, 672 P.2d 854, 858 (Cal. 1983)).
In addition to considering the stated reasons offered by the prosecutor, the court evaluates the
prosecutor’s demeanor, which reviewing courts have recognized entails credibility
determinations. Hernandez v. New York, 500 U.S. 352, 365 (1991) (“the best evidence
[bearing on the ultimate question of discrimination] often will be the demeanor of the
attorney who exercises the challenge”); Rivera, 221 Ill. 2d at 502 (“[A] trial court’s third
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stage finding on the ultimate issue of discrimination rests largely on credibility
determinations. McDonnell v. McPartlin, 192 Ill. 2d 505, 527 (2000).” (Emphasis omitted.)).
For this reason, a trial court’s third-stage findings regarding purposeful discrimination are
afforded deference and will not be reversed unless they are clearly erroneous. Hernandez,
500 U.S. at 365; People v. Hogan, 389 Ill. App. 3d 91, 100 (2009). Finally, “ ‘the ultimate
burden of persuasion regarding racial motivation rests with, and never shifts from, the
opponent of the strike.’ ” Rice v. Collins, 546 U.S. 333, 338 (2006) (quoting Purkett v. Elem,
514 U.S. 765, 768 (1995) (per curiam); see also Davis, 231 Ill. 2d at 363.
¶ 25 Here, although respondent raised a Batson challenge on the first day of jury selection and
renewed it the following day before jury selection resumed, the trial court sua sponte
determined that a prima facie case was established once the State used a peremptory to
dismiss Rita J. as an alternate juror. The record does not reflect that the court relied on
anything other than the number of peremptories used by the State against prospective black
jurors, a factor that, while relevant, is not, standing alone, sufficient to make out a prima
facie Batson violation. See People v. Garrett, 139 Ill. 2d 189, 203 (1990) (number of black
members of venire peremptorily challenged, without more, not sufficient to establish prima
facie case of discrimination); see also Rivera, 221 Ill. 2d at 514 (pattern of discrimination not
demonstrated “anytime a party strikes more than one juror of any race”); People v. Shaw,
2014 IL App (4th) 121157, ¶ 25 (“[W]hile evidence of a pattern of discriminatory strikes is
one factor a court should consider when determining whether the party challenging the
peremptory strike has established a prima facie case under Batson, it is not a dispositive
factor.”). Indeed, discrimination may be found even in the absence of a pattern of peremptory
challenges. People v. Davis, 345 Ill. App. 3d 901, 910 (2004) (“If the absence of a ‘pattern of
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strikes’ were enough, in and of itself, to defeat the establishment of a prima facie case of
discrimination under Batson, this would effectively enable a prosecutor to exercise at least
one peremptory challenge in a discriminatory manner. Such a possibility is untenable in light
of the fact that pursuant to Batson and its progeny, the exclusion of just one venireperson on
account of race is unconstitutional and requires reversal of the conviction.”). We cannot
discern what led the court to conclude that three peremptories in a row against black
members of the venire did not a prima facie case make, while another peremptory exercised
the following day against Rita J. did. See Rivera, 221 Ill. 2d at 505 (“[W]hen a trial court
chooses to act sua sponte, it must make an adequate record, consisting of all relevant facts,
factual findings, and articulated legal bases for *** its finding of a prima facie case ***.”).
¶ 26 In a colloquy on the first day of jury selection after respondent’s counsel first raised his
Batson challenge, the court commented that it did not find a “systematic” exercise of
peremptories against black members of the venire “because there has been some consistency
in the [State’s] feeling with respect to failure to disclose” prior criminal matters. But that
rationale—not yet articulated by the State because the court declined to make a finding of a
prima facie Batson violation—did not apply either to Addie M. or Madelyn B. Addie M. had
no criminal background, disclosed or undisclosed, and Madelyn B. disclosed her decades-old
criminal background, of which the State apparently had no record.
¶ 27 Although courts are entitled to raise Batson claims sua sponte (Rivera, 221 Ill. 2d at 504),
because respondent here had already raised such a challenge, it would have been preferable
for the court to wait for respondent to renew his Batson claim after the State used a
peremptory against Rita J. Given respondent’s persistence in pursuing his Batson claim, there
was virtually no chance that the State’s use of another peremptory against a black member of
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the venire would have gone unchallenged. The court could then have conducted a first-stage
hearing and articulated the bases for its finding that respondent had sustained his initial
burden. We recognize that this process interrupts jury selection, but it is the process that
Batson requires.
¶ 28 The issue of the existence of a prima facie case is generally moot once a trial court finds
no discriminatory motive in striking black members of the venire. Hernandez, 500 U.S. at
359; Rivera, 221 Ill. 2d at 506 (“[W]hether a prima facie case of discrimination exists at the
outset becomes a moot point after the trial court finds valid and race-neutral reasons
supporting the peremptory challenge ***.”). But here, because we find that the trial court did
not properly conduct the second- and third-stage Batson hearing and, therefore, remand is
necessary, we examine the record to determine whether it is sufficient to find that respondent
sustained his initial burden to establish a prima facie case so that a new first-stage hearing is
not necessary.
¶ 29 Rivera articulated the following relevant factors a trial court should consider in
determining whether a prima facie Batson violation has been established:
“ ‘(1) the racial identity between [the party exercising the peremptory challenge] and
the excluded venirepersons; (2) a pattern of strikes against African-American
venirepersons; (3) disproportionate use of peremptory challenges against African-
American venirepersons; (4) the level of African-American representation in the
venire as compared to the jury; (5) the prosecutor’s questions and statements [of the
challenging party] during voir dire examination and while exercising peremptory
challenges; (6) whether the excluded African-American venirepersons were a
heterogeneous group sharing race as their only common characteristic; and (7) the
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race of the defendant, victim, and witnesses.’ ” Id. at 501 (quoting People v. Williams,
173 Ill. 2d 48, 71 (1996)).
Further, “when a Batson claim is made regarding discrimination against a particular race, the
unchallenged presence of jurors of that race on the seated jury is a factor properly considered
[citations] and tends to weaken the basis for a prima facie case of discrimination.” Id. at 513.
¶ 30 We believe the record is sufficient for us to conclude that respondent sustained his burden
to demonstrate a prima facie Batson violation. As to the first factor, when respondent
renewed his Batson claim on the second day of jury selection, one of the prosecutors stated,
“[F]irst of all with respect to the erroneous assumption that we would strike African
American jurors because we think that they would curry *** favor with a black defendant,
hello there’s a black prosecutor on the team too.” From this comment, we may infer that at
least one member of the prosecution team is black. So, for purposes of argument, we will
assume Rivera’s first factor weighs against a finding of a prima facie case. But the remaining
factors weigh in favor of such a finding.
¶ 31 There was clearly a pattern of strikes by the prosecution against black members of the
venire. Leaving aside Charles H., who was properly dismissed for cause, the State exercised
three peremptories in a row against prospective black jurors on the first day of jury selection,
resulting in the dismissal of every black member of the venire questioned thus far. At that
point in jury selection, the State had used three of four or 75% of its peremptories against
black venirepersons. Using the State’s estimate of “5 or 6” or “maybe 10” blacks in the 40-
person venire, blacks comprised anywhere from 12.25% (5 out of 40) to 25% (10 out of 40)
of the venire, yet not a single black had been chosen for respondent’s jury. Aside from asking
members of the venire whether they knew people in law enforcement or the military, the
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State asked very few questions of any member of the venire, even when they were questioned
in chambers. As to the challenged members of the venire, Connie T. was a clerical employee
who failed to disclose a 39-year-old retail theft conviction; Addie M. ran a day care business
out of her home and had no criminal history, but her son had a criminal case; and Madelyn B.
worked with the homeless and disclosed her decades-old criminal history. It would appear, at
least for purposes of a prima facie case, that these three members of the venire were a
heterogeneous group sharing race as their only common characteristic. Respondent is black
and the victim of the residential burglary is white. The record does not disclose the race of
other witnesses other than respondent and the victim, both of whom testified.
¶ 32 Under these circumstances, we believe the trial court could properly have found that
respondent established a prima facie case on the first day of jury selection. The resumed
proceedings on the next day reinforce this conclusion. Although the State ultimately accepted
Joe W., a black man, as a member of the jury, it did so under the shadow of a Batson
challenge. As we discuss below, the State’s agreement to Joe W. may have been driven by
factors that render his selection suspect. And although empaneling a black juror improves the
numbers somewhat, they are still lopsided. Once 12 jurors were selected, with one black
member, 8.3% of the jury was black. This is still below the percentage of black
venirepersons, even at the low end of the State’s estimate.
¶ 33 But once the prosecution used another peremptory against Rita J.—rendering black
members of the venire subject to 80% (4 out of 5) of the State’s peremptory challenges—
respondent’s satisfaction of his initial burden, given the other factors discussed above, was
beyond argument. Rita J., a retired DCFS worker with no criminal history, shares no obvious
commonalities with the other excluded members of the venire and, although a black man was
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ultimately selected as one of the alternates, as respondent points out, the State at that point
had no other peremptories left. We therefore agree with the trial court that respondent
established a prima facie Batson violation.
¶ 34 Once the court concluded respondent had established a prima facie case, it required the
State to proffer reasons for striking black members of the venire, starting with the most
recent peremptory exercised against Rita J. After the State articulated its belief that a DCFS
social worker might be sympathetic to respondent, respondent’s counsel contended that the
court, during its questioning of Rita J., had described her work with youth as “god’s work.”
In its questioning of members of the venire, the court had also used this phrase to describe
the social service-related professions of other members of the venire and counsel “guessed,”
because he did not have his notes in chambers, that the State had accepted some of those
jurors. As it turns out, the State had accepted Shelly L., a white member of the venire who
was a nurse employed as the executive director of a long-term care facility for disabled
children and young adults, which the trial court likewise described as “god’s work.” (Shelly
L. was later excused for health reasons.) Without evaluating whether the assertion by
respondent’s counsel was correct, the court accepted the State’s justification for striking Rita
J. as race-neutral.
¶ 35 A prospective juror’s experience in social work has been recognized as a legitimate, race-
neutral explanation for exercising a peremptory challenge by the prosecution. See People v.
Mack, 128 Ill. 2d 231, 241 (1989) (excusing jurors based on their employment was
“legitimate and race neutral”); People v. Taylor, 409 Ill. App. 3d 881, 902 (2011)
(“Employment in the social work field has been held to be a race-neutral reason for a
peremptory challenge.”); People v. Hemphill, 230 Ill. App. 3d 453, 467 (1992). But the
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record does not disclose that once the State articulated this as a basis for dismissing Rita J.,
the trial court conducted a third-stage hearing to evaluate the State’s proffered reason in the
context of the entire jury selection process, including whether Rita J.’s work was comparable
to Shelly L.’s position. Without analysis, the trial court simply accepted the State’s reason for
striking Rita J. as race neutral, stating, “I agree with you on this one.”
¶ 36 With respect to Addie M., the State’s articulated reason for dismissing her related to her
experience when police surrounded her home in order to arrest her son. Although respondent
argued that Shelly L., who had been accepted by the State, had a similar experience with her
son, the State argued that the circumstances as described by both individuals were quite
different. But the State asked no questions of either individual regarding their experiences
and the court did not further evaluate the circumstances before declaring the State’s reason
race-neutral. In effect, the court terminated the Batson process with respect to Rita J. and
Madelyn B. at stage two. If the State’s stated reason for exercising peremeptories against
these two members of the venire was not at least facially race-neutral, the hearing would not
have proceeded to stage three. But the court apparently concluded that the State sustained its
stage two burden of production and so at that point, the court should have proceeded to
evaluate the State’s proffered reasons considering all relevant factors. The court’s conclusory
declaration that it “agreed with” the State’s reasons does not constitute “a sincere and
reasoned attempt to evaluate the prosecutor’s explanations in light of the circumstances of
the case.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Harris, 129 Ill. 2d at 175-76.
¶ 37 Other irregularities in the remainder of the Batson hearing also require remand. First,
with respect to Madelyn B., the State initially noted the nature of her employment and stated:
“the fact that she was a social worker from East Garfield Park would have been reason
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enough for us to think that she may have a position that is adverse to our position, but that
coupled with the fact that she had extensive history with the criminal justice system where
she was a defendant, we used a peremptory.” When respondent’s counsel then drew a
comparison between Madelyn B. and Matthew H., a white juror convicted of inciting a riot
who the State had accepted, the court took over the prosecutor’s role, engaging in the
extended colloquy quoted above in which it compared the two individuals and the nature of
their prior convictions. The court also embellished the facts with respect to both individuals,
characterizing Matthew H.’s conviction as occurring “back in the day” when “those things
were happening,” and referring to Madelyn B. as a “recovering alcoholic” or “recovering
drug person” who “was blasted” when she was arrested for criminal trespass in the 1970s.
None of these facts appear of record, but more importantly, it was not the court’s function to
defend the State’s exercise of a peremptory challenge against Madelyn B.
¶ 38 In People v. Crockett, 314 Ill. App. 3d 389 (2000), after the defendant raised a Batson
challenge, the trial court, in discussing one of the excluded members of the venire, stated that
she was dismissed because of arthritis that prevented her from sitting for long periods of
time. Without eliciting any race-neutral reason from the State for its exercise of a
peremptory, the court found no discrimination. Remanding for further Batson proceedings,
this court noted that “reasons articulated by the [c]ourt cannot satisfy the State’s step two
burden of production.” Id. at 397. Noting that it is the State’s burden at the second stage to
articulate its reasons for exercising peremptory challenges, the court stated: “To allow the
court to rely on its own reasons without eliciting any explanations by the State would
effectively omit step two of the Batson process, and collapse it into step three.” Id.
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¶ 39 Here, although the State initially responded that the comparison between Matthew H. and
Madelyn B. was “laughable,” the trial court did not wait for the State to articulate its position
further and instead proceeded to debate respondent’s counsel regarding what the court saw as
differences in “degree” between the two. Particularly since the State did not question either
Matthew H. or Madelyn B. about the circumstances of their prior criminal matters, the record
does not disclose how the trial court came to its own conclusion that Matthew H.’s
conviction for inciting a riot at a university was so much less significant than Madelyn B.’s
attempted robbery and criminal trespass convictions from the 1960s and 1970s. But it was
not for the court to draw this distinction during the second-stage proceeding nor was it
appropriate for the court itself to establish “some rational basis for the State of Illinois not to
want this person.” And the court never made the ultimate finding that the State’s articulated
reason for dismissing Madelyn B. was race-neutral. Because the record in this case reveals
that the trial court usurped the State’s role at stage two and failed to conduct a stage three
Batson hearing with respect to Madelyn B., this additional error requires remand for further
proceedings.
¶ 40 Finally, as noted, the trial court failed to require the State to state a race-neutral reason for
the peremptory exercised against Connie T. Once there has been a finding of a prima facie
case under Batson, the State is required to articulate a race-neutral reason for all black
members of the venire who were challenged by the State. People v. Wiley, 156 Ill. 2d 464,
476-77 (1993); Crockett, 314 Ill. App. 3d at 396-97. The trial court’s failure to elicit any
race-neutral reason from the State for the exercise of a peremptory against Connie T. requires
remand. Crockett, 314 Ill. App. 3d at 398.
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¶ 41 Although the State argues on appeal that its for cause challenge to Connie T. on the basis
of her undisclosed retail theft case should suffice, the court found no cause to dismiss Connie
T. and we cannot imply a race-neutral reason for the exercise of this peremptory. Id. at 409
(even if State’s race-neutral reason could be anticipated by court of review, court refused to
establish precedent for elimination of State’s stage-two burden of production). Because
further proceedings are required on remand, we point out that the State’s position on this
issue may be problematic given its decision to accept Joe W. with the knowledge that he had
failed to disclose a DUI case. Once the State varied from its position that, regardless of race,
any member of the venire who failed to disclose a past criminal arrest would be dismissed, its
continued reliance on this reason becomes open to question. If, as the State maintained on the
first day of jury selection, the sine qua non of an unacceptable juror was a failure to disclose,
it is hard to rationalize why the State accepted Joe W. At that point in jury selection the State
still had three unused peremptories and could easily have dismissed him. On the other hand,
the prosecution must have realized that the court would be hard-pressed not to entertain a
Batson challenge after the State’s fourth peremptory against a black member of the venire
and may have calculated that Williams, with his health problems, was unlikely to be a
holdout juror and would in all likelihood go along with whatever his fellow jurors decided to
do. In addition, a comparison between Connie T. and Matthew H. does not necessarily appear
“laughable.” It is these types of considerations that should inform a trial court’s third-stage
evaluation of reasons proffered by the State for dismissing minority members of the venire.
¶ 42 While respondent’s counsel could have brought the State’s failure to articulate a race-
neutral reason for exercising a peremptory against Connie T. to the trial court’s attention, the
State has not argued waiver on appeal. See People v. Jones, 374 Ill. App. 3d 566, 578 (2007)
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(finding that because defendant did not pursue a Batson objection to the State’s use of a
peremptory against a black member of the venire by insisting that the State articulate a race-
neutral justification, he could not pursue that objection on appeal). Further, we do not believe
finding waiver of this error would be appropriate under the circumstances here where we
have found multiple errors in the Batson proceedings and the trial court made its ultimate
finding of nondiscrimination in the absence of respondent’s counsel.
¶ 43 We must also address the incorrect standards the trial court employed in making its
ultimate, albeit incomplete, ruling that the State’s exercise of peremptories against black
members of the venire was not discriminatory. In the course of his oral ruling, the trial judge
stated that he was “going along with a dissent in the [Batson] case” and that, in exercising
peremptories, lawyers “have the right to look at somebody and say I don’t like the way that
guy is looking at me.” These are clear errors of law. See Wiley, 156 Ill. 2d at 474-75 (court’s
concern that trial court applied outdated legal standard during Batson hearing warranted
remand: “[T]he remarks made by the trial court were improper and misguided. Their
occurrence is an integral part of our decision to remand the matter for further Batson
proceedings.”).
¶ 44 Whatever idea the trial judge meant to convey by his first comment, he was not at liberty
to follow the reasoning of a dissent in a controlling United States Supreme Court case. And
while prosecuting attorneys may offer any race-neutral reason for exercising a peremptory,
including the way a member of the venire looks and acts, such subjective observations should
be subject to close scrutiny. People v. Williams, 209 Ill. 2d 227, 245 (2004) (subjective
assessments of a venireperson’s demeanor should be given close scrutiny because such
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perceptions may be easily used as a pretext for discrimination (citing People v. Wiley, 165 Ill.
2d 259, 274-75 (1995))); Easley, 192 Ill. 2d at 327.
¶ 45 But no matter what reason is offered by the prosecution for the exercise of a peremptory,
it is the trial court’s responsibility at the third stage to evaluate that reason in light of the
nature of the case, the exercising attorney’s demeanor and the jury selection process as a
whole. Because the stage-two and stage-three Batson hearing in this case may have been
influenced by the trial court’s demonstrably incorrect view of the law, and in light of the
other errors discussed above, we remand for further proceedings.
¶ 46 CONCLUSION
¶ 47 Respondent has requested that we reverse and remand for a new trial. That result would
be appropriate if any member of the venire was dismissed based on race. Davis, 231 Ill. 2d at
360; Snyder v. Louisiana, 552 U.S. 472, 478 (2008) (“ ‘[T]he Constitution forbids striking
even a single prospective juror for a discriminatory purpose.’ ” (quoting United States v.
Vasquez-Lopez, 22 F.3d 900, 902 (9th Cir. 1994))); Mack v. Anderson, 371 Ill. App. 3d 36,
55 (2006). But because the trial court did not conduct the required stage-two and stage-three
Batson hearing, we will not make that initial determination on appeal. Therefore, we grant
respondent’s alternative request for relief and remand this matter to the trial court for a
Batson hearing to be conducted within 60 days of the date of this order and consistent with
the directions contained herein. We retain jurisdiction to resolve any further issues following
completion of the hearing on remand.
¶ 48 Reversed and remanded with directions.
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