A North Carolina death-row pris­on­er is seek­ing a new tri­al based on alle­ga­tions that pros­e­cu­tors in his case used a train­ing doc­u­ment steeped in racist stereo­types to man­u­fac­ture pre­tex­tu­al rea­sons to exclude African Americans from serv­ing on his jury. In a June 4, 2019 court fil­ing in the appeal of Russell William Tucker (pic­tured), two nation­al experts say that the Forsyth County pros­e­cu­tors uncon­sti­tu­tion­al­ly exer­cised their dis­cre­tionary juror chal­lenges on the basis of race to strike all five black jurors from his case. Bryan Stevenson, exec­u­tive direc­tor of the Equal Justice Initiative, says that the prosecution’s use of pre-pre­pared rea­sons con­tained in the train­ing doc­u­ment shows that the race neu­tral” jus­ti­fi­ca­tions the pros­e­cu­tion offered for their strikes were pre­tex­tu­al. Dr. Ibram X. Kendi, an his­to­ri­an and the direc­tor of the Antiracist Research and Policy Center at American University, says that the rea­sons extract­ed from the train­ing hand­out are out­growths of false white suprema­cist myths about African Americans and them­selves evince racial bias.”

Tucker was sen­tenced to death in February 1996 for the 1994 mur­der of a K‑Mart secu­ri­ty guard. In select­ing the jury in his case, pros­e­cu­tors David Spence and Robert Lang relied on a doc­u­ment, Batson Justifications: Articulating Juror Negatives,” dis­trib­uted in a pros­e­cu­to­r­i­al train­ing ses­sion to offer facial­ly race-neu­tral jus­ti­fi­ca­tions if the prosecutor’s use of dis­cre­tionary jury strikes were chal­lenged. Both pros­e­cu­tors and defense lawyers may peremp­to­ri­ly chal­lenge a lim­it­ed num­ber of jurors to remove them from the jury pool and they do not have to give a rea­son for doing so. However, those strikes may not be used to remove jurors because of their race, and in 1986, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in Batson v. Kentucky that if the defense chal­lenges a strike, the pros­e­cu­tor must pro­vide a race-neu­tral expla­na­tion for doing so. Tucker’s peti­tion alleges that pros­e­cu­tors used lan­guage direct­ly from the train­ing doc­u­ment to jus­ti­fy their strikes, cit­ing jurors’ mono­syl­lab­ic” replies, body lan­guage,” or their opin­ion that the juror had no stake in the community.”

In an affi­davit sup­port­ing Tucker’s peti­tion, Stevenson called “[t]he North Carolina Batson Justifications hand­out … anoth­er exam­ple of the com­mon pros­e­cu­to­r­i­al response to Batson: pros­e­cu­tors came up with ways to con­ceal racial bias, and avoid find­ings of Batson vio­la­tions, by devel­op­ing rea­sons’ that would like­ly be deemed race-neu­tral, and there­fore, accept­able to review­ing courts.” Stevenson said that, despite appear­ing race-neu­tral, many of the list­ed rea­sons are based on long­stand­ing racist stereo­types that have been used to deny rights to Blacks for cen­turies.” Kendi — whose National Book Award-win­ning book Stamped from the Beginning traces the roots of anti-black racist ideas from colo­nial times to the mod­ern era — described many of the rea­sons con­tained in the train­ing hand­out as a mod­ern appli­ca­tion of the same types of lan­guage used to jus­ti­fy Jim Crow poli­cies, seg­re­ga­tion, and vot­er sup­pres­sion. “[M]any of the rea­sons list­ed on the Batson Justifications hand­out and offered to the court as race neu­tral’ rea­sons to remove Blacks from Mr. Tucker’s jury were not race neu­tral at all,” he wrote in an affi­davit. Instead, many of the list­ed rea­sons are based on long­stand­ing racist stereo­types that have been used to deny rights to Blacks for centuries.”

Racial dis­crim­i­na­tion in jury selec­tion remains a wide­spread prob­lem in death-penal­ty cas­es, despite the Supreme Court’s rul­ing in Batson. A Michigan State University study of North Carolina pros­e­cu­to­r­i­al jury strikes or accep­tances of more than 7,400 jurors from 173 cap­i­tal cas­es tried over a twen­ty-year peri­od showed that pros­e­cu­tors across the state con­sis­tent­ly struck African-American jurors at approx­i­mate­ly twice the rate of oth­er jurors. Yet a 2016 study of Batson chal­lenges in North Carolina found that, “[i]n the 114 cas­es decid­ed on the mer­its by North Carolina appel­late courts, the courts have nev­er found a sub­stan­tive Batson vio­la­tion where a pros­e­cu­tor has artic­u­lat­ed a rea­son for the peremp­to­ry chal­lenge of a minor­i­ty juror.” A 2015 New Yorker arti­cle on the dis­crim­i­na­to­ry tac­tics used by pros­e­cu­tors high­light­ed the same train­ing doc­u­ment that is being chal­lenged in Tucker’s appeal. The issue has reached the U.S. Supreme Court sev­er­al times in recent years. In May 2016, the U.S. Supreme Court grant­ed a new tri­al to death-row pris­on­er Timothy Foster after find­ing that Georgia pros­e­cu­tors had invent­ed pre­tex­tu­al rea­sons for strik­ing every black juror from his case. On March 20, 2019, the U.S. Supreme Court heard oral argu­ment in Flowers v. Mississippi, an appeal from a Mississippi pris­on­er who had been tried six times. Over the course of his six tri­als, pros­e­cu­tors removed all but one black juror. The Court has not yet issued a deci­sion in that case.

(Michael Hewlett, Court papers: Training doc­u­ment designed to exclude black jurors in mur­der case, Winston-Salem Journal, June 8, 2019; Jacob Biba, N.C. Prosecutors Were Taught How to Remove Blacks From Juries. That Might Save Russell William Tucker’s Life, Indy Week/​The Appeal, September 5, 2018; Michael Hewlett, Motion: Prosecutors used race in jury selec­tion in Winston-Salem mur­der tri­al involv­ing killing of Kmart secu­ri­ty guard, Winston-Salem Journal, July 29, 2018.) Read the fil­ing in North Carolina v. Russell William Tucker. See Race and Prosecutorial Misconduct.

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