United States v. PARIS ( 2010 )


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  •      08-5071-cr
    US v. PARIS
    1                      UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    2                          FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT
    3
    4                                August Term 2009
    5    Argued: July 13, 2010                   Decided: September 17, 2010)
    6                              Docket No. 08-5071-cr
    7
    8    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
    9                                                Appellee,
    10
    11                                      v.
    12   RONALD MARTINEZ, BRIAN FORBES, ANTONIO DOVE, also known as
    13   Dontell Dove, also known as Tone, JEROME HARGROVE, also known as
    14   June, WARREN WILLIAMS, CHRISTOPHER FANNING, KAZIMIERZ SULEWSKI,
    15   also known as Kaz, STEVEN TANUIS, SHANAYA HICKS,
    16
    17                                                Defendants,
    18   DENNIS PARIS, also known as Rahmyti,
    19                                                Defendant-Appellant.
    20
    21   Before:       JACOBS, Chief Judge, and WESLEY and CHIN, Circuit
    22                 Judges.
    23                 Appeal from a judgment of the United States District
    24   Court for the District of Connecticut (Droney, J.) convicting
    25   defendant-appellant of sex trafficking crimes.
    26                 AFFIRMED.
    1                             JEREMIAH DONOVAN, Old Saybrook,
    2                                  Connecticut, for Defendant-
    3                                  Appellant.
    4                             WILLIAM J. NARDINI, Assistant United
    5                                  States Attorney (Nora R. Dannehy,
    6                                  United States Attorney, and Sandra
    7                                  S. Glover, Assistant United States
    8                                  Attorney, District of Connecticut,
    9                                  on the brief), for Appellee.
    10   CHIN, Circuit Judge:
    11             In this case, a jury convicted defendant-appellant
    12   Dennis Paris of sex trafficking crimes, including sex trafficking
    13   of minors and sex trafficking by force, fraud, or coercion.    The
    14   evidence showed that for more than five years, Paris operated a
    15   prostitution business in and around Hartford, Connecticut,
    16   exploiting and abusing young women and teenage girls.    The
    17   district court (Droney, J.) sentenced Paris principally to thirty
    18   years' imprisonment.
    19             During the jury selection process, each side raised an
    20   objection pursuant to Batson v. Kentucky, arguing that the other
    21   side had exercised peremptory strikes based on gender.    At the
    22   outset of jury selection, Paris's counsel stated explicitly that
    23   he wanted to strike female jurors because of their gender because
    24   he believed that, in light of the nature of the charges, men
    25   would be "fairer" to Paris than women.   The district court
    -2-
    1    refused the request and prohibited defense counsel from
    2    exercising peremptory challenges based on gender.    Later in jury
    3    selection, after the Government used its first four peremptory
    4    strikes against men, Paris objected under Batson.    The district
    5    court overruled the objection, holding that Paris had not made a
    6    prima facie showing that the Government was exercising its
    7    peremptory challenges based on gender.
    8              We affirm.   We hold that a defendant in a criminal case
    9    may not, consistent with the Constitution, exercise peremptory
    10   challenges based on gender.   Accordingly, the district court
    11   correctly barred Paris from doing so.    We also affirm the
    12   district court's ruling that Paris did not, merely by relying on
    13   the fact that the Government's first four strikes were against
    14   men, make a prima facie showing that the Government was
    15   improperly exercising peremptory challenges based on gender.
    16                          STATEMENT OF THE CASE
    17   A.   The Facts
    18             Construed in the light most favorable to the
    19   Government, see United States v. Gomez, 
    580 F.3d 94
    , 97 (2d Cir.
    20   2009), the evidence at trial showed the following:
    21              From at least 1999 until his arrest in 2004, Paris
    22   forced or induced teenage girls and young women to engage in sex
    -3-
    1    with men for money.   Paris operated his prostitution business in
    2    and around Hartford, and recruited his victims to work for him as
    3    prostitutes from around Hartford and as far away as New
    4    Hampshire.
    5               In 1999, Paris induced a fourteen-year old ninth-grader
    6    to work for him as a prostitute doing "calls" -- engaging in
    7    sexual intercourse with men for money -- in a motel and at
    8    customers' homes.   Over the course of a year and a half, she did
    9    approximately 100 "calls" for Paris.
    10              In 2002, Paris employed a sixteen-year old girl who had
    11   run away from home as a prostitute for about two weeks.   When she
    12   told Paris her age after she began working for him, he told her
    13   to say that she was nineteen if she were asked her age.
    14              In late 2003, Paris began using two eighteen-year old
    15   girls as prostitutes.   Although he paid them at first, eventually
    16   he held them against their will and exploited their addiction to
    17   heroin.   He raped both of them, used force and intimidation
    18   against both of them, and physically and psychologically abused
    19   them.
    20              Paris's prostitution business ended in June 2004 when
    21   he was arrested by the Hartford Police for violating the terms of
    22   his probation (imposed for unrelated crimes).   Following his
    -4-
    1    arrest, one of Paris's victims left the motel where he had been
    2    forcing her to stay and tried to work as a prostitute on the
    3    street.   She was arrested and the ensuing investigation led to
    4    the arrest and conviction of Paris and others on multiple sex
    5    trafficking and related charges.
    6    B.   Proceedings Below
    7               Paris was indicted, with others, for conspiracy to use
    8    an interstate facility to promote prostitution (18 U.S.C. § 371),
    9    sex trafficking of a minor (18 U.S.C. § 1591), sex trafficking by
    10   force, fraud, or coercion (18 U.S.C. § 1591), and use of an
    11   interstate facility to promote prostitution (18 U.S.C. §
    12   1952(a)(3)).1   He was the only defendant to go to trial.
    13              Before trial, defense counsel submitted written notice
    14   to the district court that Paris intended to exercise peremptory
    15   challenges on the basis of gender.    Shortly after jury selection
    16   began on May 23, 2007, defense counsel explained why he intended
    1
    Paris was also indicted for money laundering, but these
    counts, as well as one of the use of interstate facility counts,
    were dismissed at the request of the Government before the case
    was submitted to the jury.
    -5-
    1    to exercise his peremptory challenges to strike women from the
    2    jury:
    3             [W]omen feel about this case very, very, very
    4             differently from men. And . . . probably the
    5             major factor in how a juror will approach
    6             this case is her gender. And having reached
    7             that conclusion, I intend to make gender one
    8             of the primary -- one of my primary reasons
    9             for striking jurors . . . . I would doubt
    10             that I will exercise a peremptory against a
    11             male juror. My objective here is to get as
    12             many male jurors on the jury as I can,
    13             because I think that they will be fairer to
    14             Mr. Paris than female jurors will be.
    15   Defense counsel further stated that "gender probably, almost
    16   surely, will be my primary reason for exercising peremptories."
    17   The district court offered to rule on the constitutionality of
    18   gender-based peremptory challenges prior to voir dire, but the
    19   parties requested that the court wait to rule until the
    20   peremptory challenge stage of the jury selection process.
    21             After all challenges for cause were resolved, thirty-
    22   six prospective jurors remained.   The district court randomly
    23   selected twenty-eight -- fifteen men and thirteen women -- for
    24   the initial peremptory challenge phase.   Paris used his first
    25   four peremptory challenges to strike women.   Following Paris's
    26   fourth strike, the Government raised a Batson challenge and
    27   argued that Paris's openly expressed intention to strike women
    -6-
    1    from the jury combined with his four straight strikes of female
    2    jurors and the lack of a legitimate reason for excluding them
    3    established a prima facie case of impermissible gender
    4    discrimination.   Defense counsel then conceded that gender was at
    5    least part of the reason for his peremptory challenges:
    6             When your honor read the nature of the
    7             charges to the jurors, I watched their
    8             reactions carefully and I noticed . . . a
    9             tightening of the lips and a frown on the
    10             faces of many of the women jurors, whereas
    11             the men had almost no response whatsoever.
    12             This small perception is the kind of thing
    13             that we use when we're picking jurors and it
    14             confirms what I know, [which] is that women
    15             will approach this case in a different manner
    16             than men.
    17   Defense counsel acknowledged that gender "absolutely" was one of
    18   the reasons he exercised his first four peremptory challenges
    19   against women, and even stated that in the end gender could be
    20   the sole reason for some of his strikes.
    21             The district court then ruled that gender-based
    22   peremptory challenges violate the Equal Protection Clause of the
    23   U.S. Constitution:   "[B]ased on the precedent of Batson v.
    24   Kentucky, Georgia v. McCollum, and J.E.B. v. Alabama, the Court
    25   finds that Mr. Paris may not exercise peremptory challenges based
    26   on gender."   The district court then asked defense counsel to
    27   explain the reasons for the exercise of his first four peremptory
    -7-
    1    challenges.   When Paris articulated non-gender-based reasons for
    2    those challenges, the Government withdrew its Batson challenge as
    3    to one of Paris's strikes and the district court accepted Paris's
    4    reasons for his remaining strikes.    Accordingly, the district
    5    court allowed Paris's strikes to stand.
    6              Paris used his next two peremptory challenges against
    7    prospective female jurors, and then asked the district court to
    8    reconsider its ruling forbidding gender-based challenges.    In
    9    particular, Paris pointed out that the Government had exercised
    10   its first three challenges against men and argued that he should
    11   be permitted to strike female jurors to "balance" the jury
    12   between men and women.   Paris's counsel argued:
    13             [W]hen . . . the other side, whether it's for
    14             reasons that are subject to question under
    15             Batson or for totally other reasons, has
    16             exercised its challenges all against one
    17             gender, it's appropriate for me then to try
    18             to compensate for that by . . . taking gender
    19             into account in exercising my challenges.
    20             After the district court reiterated its ruling that
    21   Paris could not exercise peremptory challenges based on gender,
    22   Paris used his seventh and eighth peremptory challenges to strike
    23   a man and a woman.   Defense counsel then reiterated to the court
    24   his goal of eliminating as many women as possible from the jury
    25   and stated that he would have used both challenges against women
    -8-
    1    "if your Honor had not ordered me otherwise."
    2              Following Paris's seventh and eighth peremptory
    3    challenges, the Government exercised its fourth peremptory
    4    challenge, which, like each of its prior three challenges, was
    5    against a man.   At that point, defense counsel raised a Batson
    6    challenge on behalf of Paris:
    7             It's hard to believe that [the Government
    8             has] not taken into account gender in
    9             exercising each of the four peremptories that
    10             they have against males. And so I think that
    11             in a case like this where gender is such an
    12             important issue, I think that issuing four
    13             straight challenges against the male [panel
    14             members] demonstrates . . . that the
    15             Government is issuing its peremptories based
    16             on gender . . . .
    17   The Government expressed its willingness to articulate the
    18   permissible reasons for its peremptory challenges, but argued
    19   that Paris had not made out a prima facie case of discrimination.
    20   In particular, the Government pointed out that Paris's Batson
    21   challenge was based on nothing more than the fact that the
    22   Government used its first four challenges against men.    Unlike
    23   Paris, the Government never expressed any intention to strike
    24   jurors on the basis of gender.   In response, Paris argued that
    25   the nature of the case also raised an inference of improper
    26   gender bias by the Government.   The district court rejected his
    -9-
    1    argument and ruled that a prima facie case of gender
    2    discrimination had not been established because Paris "has not
    3    shown that the circumstances raised an inference of sex
    4    discrimination by simply striking four men at this time."
    5               Following the rejection of his Batson challenge, Paris
    6    exercised his final two peremptory challenges against a man and a
    7    woman.    Paris then reiterated that he would have used his seventh
    8    peremptory challenge against a woman if he had been permitted to
    9    consider gender.
    10              In the end, the jury consisted of eight men and four
    11   women.
    12              On June 14, 2007, after seven days of evidence and one
    13   day of deliberation, the jury convicted Paris on all pending
    14   counts.   On October 14, 2007, the district court sentenced Paris
    15   principally to thirty years' imprisonment.
    16              This appeal followed.
    17                                DISCUSSION
    18              Two principal issues are presented:   first, whether the
    19   district court erred in prohibiting Paris from exercising
    20   peremptory challenges based on gender; and, second, whether the
    21   district court erred in ruling that Paris had not made a prima
    22   facie showing of a Batson violation based on the fact the
    -10-
    1    Government's first four peremptory challenges were against men.
    2    We address each issue in turn.
    3    A.   Gender-Based Peremptory Challenges
    4               The district court's holding that a defendant's use of
    5    gender-based peremptory challenges in a criminal case violates
    6    the Constitution presents a question of law that we review de
    7    novo.   See United States v. Hester, 
    589 F.3d 86
    , 90 (2d Cir.
    8    2009), cert. denied, 
    130 S. Ct. 2137
    (Apr. 19, 2010).
    9               In Batson v. Kentucky, the Supreme Court held that the
    10   Equal Protection Clause forbids a prosecutor from exercising
    11   peremptory challenges based on race.    
    476 U.S. 79
    , 89 (1986).   In
    12   reaching its decision, the Supreme Court considered the right of
    13   a defendant in a criminal case to a fair trial as well as the
    14   rights of potential jurors to serve on the jury and the public's
    15   perception of the jury system.    
    Id. at 87.
      The Court held that
    16   "[t]he harm from discriminatory jury selection extends beyond
    17   that inflicted on the defendant and the excluded juror to touch
    18   the entire community[,] . . . undermin[ing] public confidence in
    19   the fairness of our system of justice."    
    Id. 20 The
    Supreme Court extended the prohibition against
    21   race-based peremptory challenges to strikes by defendants in
    22   criminal cases in Georgia v. McCollum, 
    505 U.S. 42
    , 55 (1992).
    -11-
    1    The Court ruled that the exercise of a peremptory challenge by
    2    any party, including a defendant in a criminal case, constitutes
    3    state action because it is the exercise of the power to choose
    4    "the institution of government on which our judicial system
    5    depends."    
    Id. at 54.
      A few years later, the Supreme Court held
    6    in J.E.B. v. Alabama that peremptory challenges based on gender
    7    by a defendant in a civil case are unconstitutional.    
    511 U.S. 8
       127, 129 (1994) ("[G]ender, like race, is an unconstitutional
    9    proxy for juror competence and impartiality.").
    10               Paris correctly notes that neither the Supreme Court
    11   nor the Second Circuit has decided a case in which a defendant in
    12   a criminal case sought to exercise gender-based peremptory
    13   challenges.2   In the absence of controlling precedent, Paris
    14   argues that because gender is different from race, the district
    2
    As the district court noted, in United States v.
    Martinez-Salazar, 
    528 U.S. 304
    , 315 (2000), the Supreme Court
    held that "[u]nder the Equal Protection Clause, a defendant may
    not exercise a peremptory challenge to remove a potential juror
    solely on the basis of the juror's gender, ethnic origin, or
    race." (Emphasis added). This was dictum with respect to
    gender, however, as Martinez-Salazar did not involve gender-based
    peremptory challenges. Moreover, the Supreme Court cited as
    authority for the statement only J.E.B., which involved gender-
    based strikes in a civil case; Hernandez v. New York, 
    500 U.S. 352
    (1991), which involved ethnicity-based strikes in a criminal
    case; and Batson, which involved race-based strikes in a criminal
    case. 
    Martinez-Salazar, 528 U.S. at 315
    .
    -12-
    1    court should have permitted him to strike women from the panel
    2    based on their gender.   For support, Paris relies heavily on
    3    Justice O'Connor's concurring opinion in J.E.B., which argued
    4    that the Court's holding "should be limited to the government's
    5    use of gender-based peremptory 
    strikes," 511 U.S. at 147
    ,
    6    explaining:
    7             We know that like race, gender matters. A
    8             plethora of studies make clear that in rape
    9             cases, for example, female jurors are
    10             somewhat more likely to vote to convict than
    11             male jurors. . . . Moreover, though there
    12             have been no similarly definitive studies
    13             regarding, for example, sexual harassment,
    14             child custody, or spousal or child abuse, one
    15             need not be sexist to share the intuition
    16             that in certain cases a person's gender and
    17             resulting life experience will be relevant to
    18             his or her view of the case.
    
    19 511 U.S. at 148-49
    (citations omitted).   Paris also argues that
    20   gender classifications are reviewed under a lower standard of
    21   scrutiny than race-based classifications, and defends his gender-
    22   based peremptory challenges on the ground that his interest in
    23   eliminating biased jurors outweighed any harm caused by striking
    24   female members of the panel.
    25             We reject Paris's arguments, and hold that the
    26   Constitution bars a defendant in a criminal case from exercising
    27   peremptory challenges based on gender, for the following reasons:
    -13-
    1                   First, the principles set forth by the Supreme Court in
    2    Batson, McCollum, and J.E.B. apply with equal force to the
    3    exercise of peremptory challenges by a defendant in a criminal
    4    case.       As these cases make clear, discriminatory jury selection
    5    harms not just the parties to the case but also the prospective
    6    jurors as well as "the entire community" as it "undermine[s]
    7    public confidence in the fairness of our system of justice."
    8    
    Batson, 476 U.S. at 87
    .       There is no principled basis for
    9    distinguishing between civil and criminal cases for these
    10   purposes, or between the exercise of a peremptory strike by the
    11   government and a defendant.
    12                  Second, Paris's arguments as to the distinctions
    13   between race and gender for purposes of a Batson analysis were
    14   considered and rejected by the Supreme Court in J.E.B.       There,
    15   the State of Alabama, acting on behalf of the mother of a child
    16   born out of wedlock, sought to strike male jurors from a trial to
    17   determine the identity of the child's father.3      Alabama justified
    3
    Because J.E.B. v. Alabama involved the use of peremptory
    challenges by the State of Alabama, the Supreme Court's equal
    protection analysis was pursuant to the Fourteenth Amendment.
    This case involves a criminal defendant in federal court, and
    thus our equal protection analysis is based on the Due Process
    clause of the Fifth Amendment. See Bolling v. Sharpe, 
    347 U.S. 497
    , 498-500 (1954). Of course, we approach equal protection
    claims under the Fifth Amendment in the same fashion as we do
    -14-
    1    its discriminatory peremptory challenges on the grounds that men
    2    "might be more sympathetic and receptive to the arguments" of the
    3    putative 
    father. 511 U.S. at 137-38
    .   Just as in the instant
    4    action, the rationale for treating men and women differently was
    5    based on a "quasi-empirical claim that women and men may have
    6    different attitudes about certain issues justifying the use of
    7    gender as a proxy."   
    Id. at 138
    n.9.    The Supreme Court held that
    8    "gender-based peremptory challenges are not substantially related
    9    to an important government objective," and rejected the argument
    10   that their use could be defended based on "'the very stereotype
    11   the law condemns.'"   
    Id. at 137
    n.6, 138 (quoting Powers v Ohio,
    12   
    499 U.S. 400
    , 410 (1991)).   Although Paris's counsel was
    13   emphatically blunt in explaining his reasons for striking women
    14   from the jury, as the Supreme Court held, "[e]ven if a measure of
    15   truth can be found in some of the gender stereotypes used to
    16   justify gender-based peremptory challenges, that fact alone
    17   cannot support discrimination on the basis of gender in jury
    18   selection."   
    Id. at 139
    n.11.
    19             Third, although neither the Supreme Court nor this
    20   Court has explicitly ruled on the use of gender-based peremptory
    such claims under the Fourteenth Amendment.     See Weinberger v.
    Wiesenfeld, 
    420 U.S. 636
    , 638 n.2 (1975).
    -15-
    1    challenges by a defendant in a criminal case, three Circuits have
    2    held that the Constitution's equal protection guarantees bar
    3    defendants in criminal cases from striking potential jurors on
    4    the basis of gender.   See, e.g., United States v. Grant, 
    563 F.3d 5
       385, 389 (8th Cir. 2009) ("[T]he government made a prima facie
    6    showing of a J.E.B. gender violation when the government offered
    7    its objection to the pattern of [defendant's] strikes and told
    8    the district court that [defendant] exercised ten of her eleven
    9    strikes on females."), cert. denied, 
    130 S. Ct. 1504
    (2010);
    10   United States v. Kimbrel, 
    532 F.3d 461
    , 466 (6th Cir. 2008)
    11   ("Batson applies to peremptory challenges based on race or
    12   gender.   And it applies to peremptory challenges by the
    13   government and by criminal defendants.") (citations omitted);
    14   United States v. De Gross, 
    960 F.2d 1433
    , 1439-40 (9th Cir. 1992)
    15   (en banc) ("[E]qual protection principles prohibit striking
    16   venirepersons on the basis of their gender. . . . We hold that
    17   because the evils of discriminatory peremptory strikes result
    18   from the misuse of peremptory challenges, regardless of which
    19   party strikes the venireperson, the Fifth Amendment similarly
    20   limits a federal criminal defendant's peremptory strikes.").
    21   Moreover, as noted, the Supreme Court has concluded as much in
    22   dictum.   See United States v. 
    Martinez-Salazar, 528 U.S. at 315
    .
    -16-
    1              In short, the district court correctly ruled that Paris
    2    could not exercise peremptory challenges based on gender.4    The
    3    Constitution "prohibits discrimination in jury selection on the
    4    basis of gender."   
    J.E.B., 511 U.S. at 146
    .    That rule applies
    5    whether the government or the defendant is exercising the
    6    peremptory challenge, and whether the case is criminal or civil
    7    in nature.
    8    B.   The Claim of Gender Discrimination By The Government
    9              Paris argues that the district court erred when it held
    10   that he had failed to make out a prima facie showing of
    11   discrimination by the Government.     We discuss the standard of
    12   review to be applied to a district court's rejection of a Batson
    13   challenge on this basis and we then consider the district court's
    14   rejection of Paris's challenge to the Government's exercise of
    15   its peremptory strikes.
    4
    Paris also argues that after the Government used its
    first three strikes against male jurors, he should have been
    permitted to strike female jurors based on gender "to get a jury
    that may be equally balanced between men and women." Accepting
    Paris's argument would subordinate the Constitution's equal
    protection guarantees whenever the venire panel is not equally
    divided between the sexes. The district court correctly rejected
    this argument.
    -17-
    1         1.      Applicable Law
    2                 a.   Batson's Burden-Shifting Framework
    3                 When a party raises a Batson challenge, the trial court
    4    uses a three-part burden-shifting framework to assess whether the
    5    challenged peremptory strike is based on an impermissible
    6    discriminatory motive.        See 
    Batson, 476 U.S. at 93-98
    .   First,
    7    the objecting party must make a prima facie case that opposing
    8    counsel exercised a peremptory challenge on the basis of a
    9    protected class.     Hernandez v. New York, 
    500 U.S. 352
    , 358-59
    10   (1991).   To establish a prima facie case of purposeful
    11   discrimination, the objecting party must show that the other
    12   party challenged members of a specific group and that the
    13   totality of the circumstances raises an inference of
    14   discriminatory motive.        See 
    Batson, 476 U.S. at 96-97
    .
    15                Second, if a prima facie case is established, the
    16   burden shifts to the challenged party to present a non-
    17   discriminatory reason for striking the jurors in question.         See
    18   
    id. at 97.
       At this stage, proffered explanations are deemed
    19   valid unless discriminatory intent is inherent in the challenged
    20   party's explanation.     "Although the [challenged party] must
    21   present a comprehensible reason, '[t]he second step of this
    22   process does not demand an explanation that is persuasive, or
    -18-
    1    even plausible'; so long as the reason is not inherently
    2    discriminatory, it suffices."     Rice v. Collins, 
    546 U.S. 333
    , 338
    3    (2006) (quoting Purkett v. Elem, 
    514 U.S. 765
    , 767-68 (1995)).
    4                Finally, if a valid reason is articulated, the trial
    5    court considers the totality of the circumstances to determine
    6    whether the objecting party has carried its burden of proving
    7    purposeful discrimination by a preponderance of the evidence.
    8    
    Hernandez, 500 U.S. at 363-64
    .    Despite Batson's three part
    9    framework, "the ultimate burden of persuasion regarding improper
    10   motivation rests with, and never shifts from, the opponent of the
    11   strike."   
    Rice, 546 U.S. at 333-34
    (quoting 
    Purkett, 514 U.S. at 12
      768).
    13              b.     Standard of Review
    14              This Circuit has not ruled on the standard of review to
    15   be applied to a district court's determination whether a party
    16   has met the first prong of the Batson analysis by showing a prima
    17   facie case of discrimination.    The Supreme Court has held that "a
    18   trial court's ruling on the issue of discriminatory intent must
    19   be sustained unless it is clearly erroneous," Snyder v.
    20   Louisiana, 
    552 U.S. 472
    , 477 (2008), but it has not ruled on the
    21   standard of review to be applied to a ruling on step one of the
    22   Batson inquiry.    Other circuits have split on the question,
    -19-
    1    dividing on whether the determination is subject to clear error
    2    or de novo review.5
    3              We hold that a district court's determination whether a
    4    party has established a prima facie case under Batson is subject
    5    to review for abuse of discretion.    The question whether a prima
    6    facie case of discrimination has been shown presents a mixed
    7    question of law and fact.   See Overton v. Newton, 
    295 F.3d 270
    ,
    8    276-77 (2d Cir. 2002) (threshold determination of whether Batson
    9    prima facie case has been established "involves both issues of
    10   fact and an issue of law") (citation omitted); accord Mahaffey,
    
    11 162 F.3d at 484
    (same).   The trial court is entitled to some
    12   deference, as there clearly is an element of fact-finding to the
    13   determination:   the trial court has heard the answers of the
    5
    Compare, e.g., Brewer v. Marshall, 
    119 F.3d 993
    , 1004
    (1st Cir. 1997) ("That same clear error standard applies to
    rulings on whether the defendant has made a Batson prima facie
    case."), and Tolbert v. Page, 
    182 F.3d 677
    , 685 (9th Cir. 1999)
    (en banc) ("A trial court's determination of whether a prima
    facie case of discrimination under Batson has been established is
    to be reviewed deferentially, on direct review for clear error,
    or in the habeas context, by application of the statutory
    presumption of correctness."), with Mahaffey v. Page, 
    162 F.3d 481
    , 484 (7th Cir. 1998) ("Unlike the ultimate issue of
    discriminatory intent, which as a factual question is entitled to
    deferential review . . . , the preliminary question of whether a
    [Batson] prima facie case has been shown presents a mixed
    question of law and fact . . . , which the appellate courts
    should review de novo.") (citations omitted).
    -20-
    1    prospective jurors and questions and statements of the lawyers in
    2    voir dire and observed the demeanor of both.    See, e.g., Brewer,
    
    3 119 F.3d at 1004
    .6   On the other hand, the inquiry is not
    4    entirely factual, as the question of whether an inference of
    5    discrimination can be drawn (e.g., from the fact of four straight
    6    strikes against men) is often more a question of law than fact.
    7    See, e.g., 
    Mahaffey, 162 F.3d at 484
    ; see also Overton v. Newton,
    
    8 295 F.3d at 276-77
    (once trial court performs its fact-finding,
    9    it must decide, as matter of law, whether prima facie case of
    10   discrimination has been established).   While one could fairly
    11   argue that the determination of a Batson prima facie case could
    12   be subject to a two-step review -- clear error for factual
    13   findings and de novo for rulings of law -- in this context the
    14   inquiries often are not clearly delineated.    Accordingly, we
    15   conclude that the better course is to apply an abuse of
    16   discretion standard of review.    See, e.g., Cooter & Gell v.
    17   Hartmax Corp., 
    496 U.S. 384
    , 405 (1990) (holding that abuse of
    6
    See also United States v. Bergodere, 
    40 F.3d 512
    , 517
    (1st Cir. 1994) ("Evaluative judgments concerning juror
    suitability are often made partially in response to nuance,
    demeanor, body language, and a host of kindred considerations.
    Thus, the trial judge, who sees and hears both the prospective
    juror and the opposing attorneys in action, is in the best
    position to pass judgment on counsel's motives.").
    -21-
    1    discretion standard applies to review on appeal of determinations
    2    of whether Fed. R. Civ. P. 11 was violated, as both factual and
    3    legal inquiries are required).    Of course, the exercise of
    4    discretion based on clearly erroneous facts or incorrect rulings
    5    of law would necessarily constitute an abuse of discretion.     Id.;
    6    accord Milanese v. Rust-Oleum Corp., 
    244 F.3d 104
    , 110 (2d Cir.
    7    2001) (citing Cooter & Gell v. Hartmax 
    Corp., 496 U.S. at 405
    ).
    8         2.   Application
    9              We conclude that the district court did not abuse its
    10   discretion in holding that Paris had failed to show a prima facie
    11   case of discrimination under Batson.
    12             Paris's challenge was based on nothing more than the
    13   Government's exercise of its first four peremptory challenges
    14   against men.   In certain circumstances, a pattern of peremptory
    15   challenges alone may give rise to an inference of impermissible
    16   discrimination.   
    Batson, 476 U.S. at 97
    ; see, e.g., Mahaffey, 
    162 17 F.3d at 485
    (prima facie case shown by pattern of strikes where
    18   prosecutor excused all seven prospective African-American
    19   jurors); McCain v. Gramley, 
    96 F.3d 288
    , 292 (7th Cir. 1996)
    20   (inference of discrimination may be drawn "where there are only a
    21   few members of a racial group on the venire panel and one party
    22   strikes each one of them").   Here, however, the district court
    -22-
    1    did not abuse its discretion in concluding that the Government's
    2    pattern of four strikes in a row against men did not, by itself,
    3    establish a prima facie case of gender discrimination.
    4              First, at the start of the peremptory challenge stage,
    5    more than half of the prospective jurors were men, as there were
    6    fifteen men and thirteen women.   Second, Paris (who had ten
    7    strikes to the Government's six), used seven of his first eight
    8    challenges against women, which increased the percentage of men
    9    in the jury pool and the statistical likelihood that the
    10   Government would use its peremptory challenges against men.    By
    11   the time the Government exercised its third and fourth peremptory
    12   challenges, the odds were nearly two to one, based just on the
    13   numbers, that a male juror would be stricken.   See United States
    14   v. Alvarado, 
    923 F.2d 253
    , 255-56 (2d Cir. 1991) ("Only a rate of
    15   minority challenges significantly higher than the minority
    16   percentage of the venire would support a statistical inference of
    17   discrimination.").   Third, although Paris's counsel had announced
    18   that he was going to strike women jurors because of their gender,
    19   the Government had made no such statement about male jurors.
    20             District courts have broad latitude to consider the
    21   totality of the circumstances when determining whether a party
    22   has raised an inference of discrimination.   Batson, 476 U.S. at
    -23-
    1   96-97, 98 n.21.   Based on the record here, we conclude that the
    2   district court did not abuse its discretion in determining that
    3   Paris had failed to make a prima facie showing of discrimination
    4   by the Government in its exercise of its peremptory strikes.
    5                                CONCLUSION
    6             We have considered Paris's remaining arguments on
    7   appeal and conclude that they are without merit.
    8             For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of conviction
    9   and sentence are AFFIRMED.
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