Cecil Hayes v. Rick Thaler, Director , 361 F. App'x 563 ( 2010 )


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  •      Case: 08-10057       Document: 00511007241          Page: 1   Date Filed: 01/19/2010
    IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT  United States Court of Appeals
    Fifth Circuit
    FILED
    January 19, 2010
    No. 08-10057                    Charles R. Fulbruge III
    Summary Calendar                          Clerk
    CECIL KEITH HAYES,
    Petitioner - Appellant
    v.
    RICK THALER, DIRECTOR, TEXAS DEPARTMENT OF CRIMINAL
    JUSTICE, CORRECTIONAL INSTITUTIONS DIVISION,
    Respondent - Appellee
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Northern District of Texas
    USDC No. 3:05-CV-01974
    Before KING, STEWART, and HAYNES, Circuit Judges.
    HAYNES, Circuit Judge:*
    In this habeas case, Cecil Keith Hayes (“Hayes”) challenges his state-court
    conviction following a jury trial before a jury selected in a process he contends
    was tainted by Batson 1 violations. The district court granted a Certificate of
    Appealability (COA) on this question with respect to the prosecution’s striking
    *
    Pursuant to 5TH CIR . R. 47.5, the court has determined that this opinion should not
    be published and is not precedent except under the limited circumstances set forth in 5TH CIR .
    R. 47.5.4.
    1
    Batson v. Kentucky, 
    476 U.S. 79
     (1986).
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    of Juror #15, Cynthia Richard. We granted a COA on the same question as to
    Juror #16, Linda Jackson. Our review is limited to these questions under the
    applicable AEDPA 2 deferential review standards. For the reasons set forth
    below, we REVERSE and REMAND with instructions.
    I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    In 2002, Hayes was tried in a Dallas County state district court on the
    charge of aggravated robbery. During the jury selection process, Hayes objected
    to the prosecution’s use of eight of its eleven peremptory strikes to remove all
    eligible African-American venire members from the panel that was ultimately
    seated. Following a Batson hearing, the trial court judge sustained the Batson
    challenge regarding the striking of one potential juror, Juror #6, Gertrude
    Hashaway, but overruled it as to the remaining jurors, including the two in
    question here, Richard and Jackson.
    With respect to Hashaway, the prosecutor contended that she was sleeping
    during voir dire and was “grandmotherly and careless in her appearance.” The
    trial court concluded that she was not sleeping and that being “grandmotherly”
    and careless in one’s appearance was not a “proper reason” for a peremptory
    strike. She was then reinstated to the jury.
    With respect to Richard, the prosecution claimed that she was struck for
    five different reasons: (1) she was “hostile”; (2) she failed to respond to the
    judge’s questions; (3) she had a “bad juror rating”; (4) she was employed as a
    teacher; and (5) she selected “rehabilitation” as an important goal of the criminal
    justice system.      During the Batson hearing, the trial judge dismissed the
    assertion that Richard was non-responsive and focused on the “hostility” prong.
    The trial judge concluded that, while he noticed no such hostility, hostility is a
    legitimate reason for striking a juror. Notably, the prosecution did not strike
    2
    Anti-Terrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act § 104, 
    28 U.S.C. §2254
     (2006).
    2
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    two people who were white teachers and served as jurors nor did it strike a white
    juror who also had a “bad juror rating”; additionally, Richard actually did not
    mention rehabilitation as a goal of the criminal justice system.
    With respect to Jackson, the prosecution claimed that she was struck for
    three reasons: (1) she had a cousin with a pending criminal case in the same
    county; (2) she allegedly gave conflicting answers about whether she would need
    to see the gun that was used in the robbery; and (3) she chose rehabilitation as
    a goal of the criminal justice system. In response, the defense noted that other
    individuals were selected for the jury who also had relatives with criminal cases
    and who chose rehabilitation as a goal of the criminal justice system. The
    defense also pointed out that Jackson’s seeming “conflicting answers” about the
    gun actually reflected confusion about the original question; once clarified, she
    indicated she did not need to see the gun.
    Following his conviction, Hayes appealed the denial of his objections to the
    state’s intermediate court of appeals, as well as the Texas Court of Criminal
    Appeals. Both affirmed. Hayes v. State, No. 11-02-00348-CR, 
    2003 WL 22064066
    (Tex. App. – Eastland Sept. 4, 2003) (unpublished), aff’d, No. PD-16556-03 (Tex.
    Crim. App. March 3, 2004) (unpublished). The record does not indicate that a
    petition for writ of certiorari was filed in the United States Supreme Court.
    Having thus exhausted his state court appeals, Hayes sought a writ of
    habeas corpus from the United States District Court. The magistrate judge
    conducted two hearings and first recommended denial of habeas relief before
    subsequently recommending granting habeas relief with respect to the strike of
    Richard. After hearing oral argument, the district judge concluded that relief
    should not be granted and denied Hayes’s petition. Both judges expressed
    concern about the fact that 100% of the African-American venire members were
    struck by the State and opined that this was a difficult case. This appeal
    followed.
    3
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    II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
    Our standard of review in an AEDPA case is well-established: deference
    must be given to factual findings of the state court in the absence of clear and
    convincing evidence to the contrary. 
    28 U.S.C. § 2254
    (e)(1). Because the Batson
    claims were adjudicated in state court, the district court, as well as our court,
    must defer to the state court’s resolution unless its determination was “contrary
    to” or an “unreasonable application of” clearly established federal law as
    determined by the United States Supreme Court. § 2254(d); see also Hill v.
    Johnson, 
    210 F.3d 481
    , 485 (5th Cir. 2000). A state court decision is contrary to
    clearly established federal law if it “applies a rule that contradicts the governing
    law set forth in [Supreme Court] cases,” Williams v. Taylor, 
    529 U.S. 362
    , 405
    (2000), or “if the state court confronts a set of facts that are materially
    indistinguishable from a decision of [the Supreme Court] and nevertheless
    arrives at a result different from [the Court’s] precedent.” 
    Id. at 406
    . A state
    court decision involves an unreasonable application of clearly established federal
    law if the state court “correctly identifies the governing legal rule but applies it
    unreasonably to the facts of a particular prisoner’s case . . . .” 
    Id. at 407-08
    . The
    Supreme Court has articulated the governing standards for evaluating whether
    peremptory strikes were race-based in several cases, including Batson and
    Miller-El v. Dretke (Miller-El II), 
    545 U.S. 231
     (2005). The most recent Supreme
    Court pronouncement on this subject was Snyder v. Louisiana, 
    128 S. Ct. 1203
    (2008).
    While AEDPA review is highly deferential, we note that it is not
    perfunctory. The Supreme Court has stressed that “[e]ven in the context of
    federal habeas, deference does not imply abandonment or abdication of judicial
    review. Deference does not by definition preclude relief.” Miller-El v. Cockrell
    (Miller-El I), 
    537 U.S. 322
    , 340 (2003); see also Panetti v. Quarterman, 
    551 U.S. 930
    , 953 (2007) (AEDPA does not “prohibit a federal court from finding an
    4
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    application of a principle unreasonable when it involves a set of facts different
    from those of the case in which a principle is announced. The statute recognizes,
    to the contrary, that even a general standard may be applied in an unreasonable
    manner.”) (internal quotation marks and citation omitted); Taylor, 
    529 U.S. at 377
     (AEDPA “directs federal courts to attend to every state-court judgment with
    utmost care, but it does not require them to defer to the opinion of every
    reasonable state-court judge on the content of federal law.”).
    Mindful of these precedents, our court addressed the application of Batson
    in a § 2254 proceeding in Reed v. Quarterman, 
    555 F.3d 364
     (5th Cir. 2009) and
    Haynes v. Quarterman, 
    561 F.3d 535
     (5th Cir. 2009). These cases further
    inform our analysis.
    III. DISCUSSION
    A. Standards for a Batson Inquiry
    The Equal Protection Clause forbids a prosecutor from challenging
    potential jurors solely on account of their race.         Batson, 
    476 U.S. at 89
    .
    Batson outlined a three-step process for evaluating claims that a prosecutor used
    peremptory challenges in a manner that violated the Equal Protection Clause:
    (1) a defendant must make a prima facie showing that the prosecutor has
    exercised his peremptory challenges on the basis of race; (2) the burden then
    shifts to the prosecutor to articulate a race-neutral reason for striking the juror
    in question; and (3) the trial court must determine whether the defendant has
    carried his burden of proving purposeful discrimination. Snyder, 
    128 S. Ct. at 1207
    .
    The Supreme Court explained the third step in the following manner:
    Step three of the Batson inquiry involves an evaluation of the
    prosecutor’s credibility, and the best evidence of discriminatory
    intent often will be the demeanor of the attorney who exercises the
    challenge.    In addition, race-neutral reasons for peremptory
    challenges often invoke a juror’s demeanor (e.g., nervousness,
    5
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    inattention), making the trial court’s first-hand observations of even
    greater importance.
    
    Id. at 1208
     (internal quotation marks and citations omitted). The ultimate
    conclusion of discriminatory intent is a factual finding. Ladd v. Cockrell, 
    311 F.3d 349
    , 356 (5th Cir. 2002). “[T]he critical question in determining whether
    a prisoner has proved purposeful discrimination at step three is the
    persuasiveness of the prosecutor’s justification for his peremptory strike. At this
    stage, implausible or fantastic justifications may (and probably will) be found to
    be pretexts for purposeful discrimination.”      Miller-El I, 
    537 U.S. at 338-39
    (internal quotation marks and citation omitted). “[T]he ultimate inquiry for the
    judge is not whether counsel’s reason is suspect, or weak, or irrational, but
    whether counsel is telling the truth in his or her assertion that the challenge is
    not race-based.” United States v. Bentley-Smith, 
    2 F.3d 1368
    , 1375 (5th Cir.
    1993).    The “decisions of this court have made it plain that the process of
    choosing a jury may be influenced by the ‘intuitive assumptions’ of the
    attorneys.” 
    Id. at 1374
    . “We have recognized that these determinations of
    credibility and demeanor lie peculiarly within a trial judge’s province, and we
    have stated that in the absence of exceptional circumstances, we would defer to
    [the trial court].” Snyder, 
    128 S. Ct. at 1208
     (internal quotation marks and
    citations omitted).    When reviewing a Batson ruling, because “all of the
    circumstances that bear upon the issue of racial animosity must be consulted,”
    this court may consider the strike of one juror for any relevance it might have
    regarding the strike of another juror. 
    Id.
    Our review is further informed by various post-Batson Supreme Court
    decisions. In Miller-El II, a Texas defendant sought federal habeas corpus relief
    on the ground that the trial court should have sustained his objection to the
    prosecutor’s discriminatory use of peremptory strikes against African-American
    jurors.   
    545 U.S. at 236-37
    .     The Supreme Court conducted “side-by-side
    6
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    comparisons of some black venire panelists who were struck and white panelists
    allowed to serve.” 
    Id. at 241
    . The Court noted that “[i]f a prosecutor’s proffered
    reason for striking a black panelist applies just as well to an otherwise-similar
    nonblack who is permitted to serve, that is evidence tending to prove purposeful
    discrimination to be considered at Batson’s third step.” 
    Id.
     The Miller-El II
    majority rejected the dissent’s assertion that “‘similarly situated’ does not mean
    matching any one of several reasons the prosecution gave for striking a potential
    juror-it means matching all of them.” 
    Id.
     at 247 n.6. The majority stated:
    None of our cases announces [sic] a rule that no comparison is
    probative unless the situation of the individuals compared is
    identical in all respects, and there is no reason to accept one. . . . A
    per se rule that a defendant cannot win a Batson claim unless there
    is an exactly identical white juror would leave Batson inoperable;
    potential jurors are not products of a set of cookie cutters.
    
    Id.
    The Court then considered two specific African-American jurors who had
    been struck by the prosecution: Billy Jean Fields and Joe Warren. 
    Id. at 242-52
    .
    The prosecutor’s proffered reason for striking Fields was that he had concerns
    with Fields’s statements indicating that he could not impose the death penalty
    because the defendant could possibly be rehabilitated. 
    Id. at 243
    . After that
    strike was challenged by defense counsel, the prosecutor added that Fields was
    struck because his brother had a prior conviction. 
    Id. at 246
    . The Court noted
    that the prosecutor mischaracterized Fields’s statements and that the prosecutor
    accepted several non-African-American venire members who expressed
    reservations about imposing the death penalty on a person who could be
    rehabilitated. 
    Id. at 244-45
    . The Court discredited the prosecutor’s secondary
    basis for the strike because it “reek[ed] of afterthought,” as Fields stated that he
    was not close to his brother, and the prosecutor did not ask whether his brother’s
    criminal history would influence him if he were to serve as a juror. 
    Id. at 246
    .
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    The prosecutor in Miller-El II provided three reasons for striking Joe
    Warren: (1) Warren provided inconsistent responses and implied that the death
    penalty may be a more lenient punishment than imprisonment for life;
    (2) Warren was struck when the State still had ten peremptory challenges left
    and could afford to be more liberal in striking potential jurors; and (3) Warren
    had a brother-in-law who had been convicted of a crime involving food stamps.
    
    Id. at 248-52
    . The Court noted that three unstruck venire members expressed
    similar opinions regarding the death penalty being more lenient than life
    imprisonment and that one of those unstruck members was accepted before
    Warren was struck, thereby obviating the prosecutor’s second proffered reason.
    
    Id. at 248-49
    . As for the third justification, the Court held that the prosecutor’s
    failure to ask any questions about Warren’s brother-in-law undermined the
    validity of that reason. 
    Id.
     at 250 n.8. The Court further noted that other
    unstruck panel members also had relatives who had criminal histories. 
    Id.
     In
    light of these comparisons, the Court found the prosecutor’s race-neutral reasons
    to be implausible, thereby supporting the defendant’s Batson challenge. 
    Id. at 247, 251-52
    . However, the Court’s ultimate conclusion that a Batson violation
    had occurred was also supported by the Court’s determinations that (1) the
    prosecutor engaged in purposeful discrimination by shuffling the jury panel3 and
    posing contrasting questions to the jurors regarding minimum sentences and (2)
    3
    Texas has a unique procedure allowing attorneys to “view the array” and then request
    that the venire be “shuffled.” Enacted at a time when questions could be raised as to the
    randomness of the venire panel’s assembly, its continued use has been questioned in light of
    Batson and modern selection processes. See Michael Gallagher, Abolishing the Texas Jury
    Shuffle, 35 ST . MARY ’S L. J. 303 (2004); Elaine Carlson, Batson, J.E.B., and Beyond: The
    Paradoxical Quest for Reasoned Peremptory Strikes in the Jury Selection Process, 46 BAYLOR
    L. REV . 947, 981-82 (1994). There is no indication that such a shuffle played a part in this
    case.
    8
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    the Dallas County District Attorney’s office manual4 advocating the exclusion of
    minorities from jury service had been made available to at least one of the
    prosecutors in Miller-El’s trial. 
    Id. at 253-66
    .
    In Snyder, a Louisiana defendant argued on appeal that the trial judge
    erred in rejecting his objection to the prosecutor’s discriminatory use of
    peremptory strikes against African-American jurors.                  
    128 S. Ct. at 1207
    .
    Although the defendant’s Batson claim centered on two African-American venire
    members, the Supreme Court upheld the claim as to one, Jeffrey Brooks, and
    therefore found it unnecessary to consider the claim as to the other African-
    American panelist. 
    Id. at 1208
    . The prosecutor in Snyder provided two reasons
    for striking Brooks: (1) he looked very nervous throughout the questioning; and
    (2) he was a student teacher who expressed concern about missing class and the
    prosecutor was worried that Brooks might vote for the defendant’s guilt on a
    lesser verdict in order to avoid a penalty phase. 
    Id.
    The Court noted that, although deference is due to a trial judge’s finding
    regarding a panelist’s demeanor, the trial judge did not make any explicit
    determination as to Brooks’s demeanor and simply overruled the Batson
    objection without explanation. 
    Id. at 1209
    . It therefore held that “we cannot
    presume that the trial judge credited the prosecutor’s assertion that Mr. Brooks
    was nervous.” 
    Id.
     The Court held that the prosecutor’s second proffered reason
    for striking Brooks was implausible because (1) Brooks was one of more than
    fifty venire members (many of whom were accepted as jurors by the prosecution)
    who expressed concern that jury service could interfere with their other
    4
    No evidence was presented in Hayes’s case that the now-notorious Sparling Manual
    continued to be in use at the time of his 2002 trial, by which time a new District Attorney was
    in place in Dallas County. See Fields v. Thaler, 
    588 F.3d 270
    , 281 (5th Cir. 2009) (noting with
    regard to another trial in 2002 that “long after the trials of Miller-el and Reed in 1986 and
    1983, respectively. . . . There is no evidence that the now infamous Sparling Manual, outlining
    the reasoning for excluding minorities from jury service, was still in use by Dallas County
    prosecutors when [defendant’s] case was tried.”)
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    obligations, (2) the prosecutor’s outlined scenario was highly speculative, and
    (3) Brooks’s concern regarding his teaching requirements was resolved by the
    trial judge during voir dire.    Id. at 1209-12.     The Court held that “[t]he
    prosecution’s proffer of this pretextual explanation naturally gives rise to an
    inference of discriminatory intent.”    Id. at 1212.      The Court held that the
    prosecution would only be able to salvage the strike against Brooks by showing
    that the pretextual factor was not determinative, but that, in light of the
    circumstances at issue in that case, “the record does not show that the
    prosecution would have preemptively challenged Mr. Brooks based on his
    nervousness alone.” Id. Accordingly, the Snyder Court upheld the defendant’s
    Batson challenge and vacated the Louisiana Supreme Court’s judgment. Id.
    In Reed, we recently granted federal habeas relief in a case that was very
    similar to Miller-El II. Reed argued that the State’s race-neutral reasons for
    excluding African-American jurors were pretextual because the State had
    accepted many white jurors who had the same characteristics as the excluded
    African-American jurors. Reed, 555 F.3d at 368. We first concluded that, based
    upon Texas case law, Reed’s comparative analysis argument was not
    procedurally barred in the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals and, hence, was
    subject to review by this court. Id. at 369-71. We then decided that, even
    though a comparative analysis argument had not been considered by the state
    courts, it could be considered in a federal habeas proceeding. Id. at 371-75. This
    court supported its conclusion by reviewing the procedural history of Miller-El
    II. Id. at 370-75.
    The Reed court stated that we had recently agreed that Miller-El II
    requires us to consider a comparative analysis in a Batson claim. Id. at 373
    (citing United States v. Brown, 
    553 F.3d 768
    , 797 (5th Cir. 2008) (direct appeal));
    cf. United States v. Guerra-Marez, 
    928 F.2d 665
    , 673 n.9 (5th Cir. 1991) (when
    considering an allegation of pretext, defendant must convince the district court
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    that the prosecution’s proffered reasons are pretextual by introducing “evidence
    of comparability”). Specifically, the Reed court noted that the Brown court
    determined “there [was] some indication that both the prosecution and the court
    failed to take the comparative features of two venire members into account,” and
    it concluded, after comparing those two members, that, under Miller-El II, a
    further explanation from the prosecution for the dismissal of the excluded juror
    was necessary.     Id. at 373-74.   The Reed court ultimately concluded, after
    considering, among other things, Reed’s comparative juror analysis, that Reed
    was entitled to habeas relief with respect to his Batson claim. Id. at 375-82.
    This court therefore reversed the district court’s decision denying relief and
    remanded the case to the district court with instructions to grant the writ. Id.
    at 382.
    When reviewing a Batson ruling regarding purposeful discrimination, the
    Supreme Court has initially considered statistical evidence when considering
    whether the prosecution used its peremptory strikes in a discriminatory manner.
    See Miller-El I, 
    537 U.S. at 342
    ; Miller-El II, 
    545 U.S. at 240-41
    . In Miller-El I,
    prosecutors used ten of their fourteen peremptory strikes against African-
    American venire members, thereby excluding ninety-one percent of the eligible
    African-American venire members. Miller-El I, 
    537 U.S. at 342
    . The Court
    concluded that “[h]appenstance is unlikely to produce this disparity.” 
    Id.
     In the
    instant case, the prosecutor used eight of his eleven peremptory strikes against
    African-American venire members, thereby excluding 100% of the eligible
    African-American venire members.         While we agree with the district and
    magistrate judges that this fact alone is not dispositive, see Fields, 
    588 F.3d at 281
    , it is unlikely to be the product of happenstance and is indicative of
    discriminatory intent. Miller-El I, 
    537 U.S. at 342
    .
    “More powerful than these bare statistics, however, are side-by-side
    comparisons of some black venire panelists who were struck and white panelists
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    allowed to serve.” Miller-El II, 545 U.S at 241. “[W]e are also cognizant that the
    Supreme Court has made plain that appellate review of alleged Batson errors is
    not a hollow act.” United States v. Williamson, 
    533 F.3d 269
    , 274 (5th Cir. 2008)
    (addressing a Batson challenge on direct criminal appeal).        Sometimes the
    reasons given for striking jurors are “race-neutral” when “[v]iewed in isolation.”
    
    Id. at 275
    . “However, the explanation[s] [may] falter[] upon closer examination.”
    
    Id.
     In order to engage in the appropriate analysis, we will examine both jurors
    and then compare them to other non-African-American jurors who were not
    struck.
    B. Prospective Juror Jackson
    After Hayes objected that all eligible African-American venire members
    were struck in a discriminatory manner in violation of Batson, the prosecutor
    proffered numerous “race-neutral” explanations. With respect to Juror # 16
    Jackson, the prosecutor asserted the following explanations: (1) Jackson gave
    inconsistent answers to questions regarding whether she would require the
    State to introduce a firearm into evidence to convict Hayes, thus indicating she
    might hold the State to a higher burden of proof; (2) Jackson stated that a
    primary goal of the criminal justice system was rehabilitation; and (3) at the
    time of the trial, Jackson had a cousin who was out on bond in a pending
    criminal case in Dallas County, Texas. Hayes’s defense counsel responded that
    the State’s reasons for striking Jackson were pretextual. He argued that the
    State used hypothetical questions regarding the need to see a weapon as a cover
    for impermissibly striking jurors by presenting a slanted one-sided explanation
    of the weapon requirement without fully exploring it. The prosecutor argued
    that she presented the questions fairly; that all of the jurors who gave
    inconsistent answers regarding the firearm were struck; that punishment was
    the major focus in this case; and that those jurors who responded that
    punishment and rehabilitation were important were not struck because the
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    State had only ten strikes and that was all the State had to justify striking those
    jurors. The state trial court overruled Hayes’s objection as to Jackson, finding
    that Jackson gave inconsistent answers regarding whether she would require
    the State to introduce a firearm into evidence to convict Hayes.
    In the federal district court, Hayes focused on a comparative analysis of
    the pool. He argued that non-African-American Juror #5 Newsome, who was not
    struck by the prosecution, also gave inconsistent answers concerning the need
    to introduce a firearm to convict.     Hayes argued that several non-African-
    American jurors, who were not struck, stated that rehabilitation was one of the
    important goals of the criminal justice system (Stanton #7, Stevens #18, Fain
    #25, Sapp #27, Olivares #28, Ryan #41, Doyle #42, Crump #44, and Noble #45).
    Hayes also argued that several non-African-American jurors, who were not
    struck, had relatives who had been prosecuted for crimes and had stated that
    they believed that their relatives had received excessive sentences (Keeble #29,
    Artieschoufsky #40, Ryan #41), whereas Jackson stated that her cousin had been
    treated fairly by the criminal justice system.
    The district court rejected these arguments and found that the reasons the
    State gave for striking Jackson were distinguishable from the characteristics of
    the seated jurors. Specifically, the district court determined that the State
    struck Jackson in part because she had a cousin who had pending criminal
    charges in Dallas County, and none of the seated jurors had a relative with
    pending criminal charges in Dallas County. The district court determined that
    the record indicated that Jackson did give inconsistent answers when asked if
    she would require the State to introduce a firearm in order to convict Hayes.
    The district court also determined that Jackson was distinguishable from Juror
    # 5 Newsome because, in the district court’s view, Jackson gave arguably
    inconsistent answers concerning the need to produce a firearm even after the
    law was explained. The district court did not address the prosecutor’s third
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    reason for striking Jackson, her statement that rehabilitation was an important
    goal of the criminal justice system.
    We disagree with the conclusions of the district court. Hayes has shown
    that the State’s reasons for striking Jackson were implausible or invalid and,
    therefore, were pretexts for discrimination.                 First, regarding the alleged
    inconsistency, Jackson initially stated that she thought the State should produce
    a firearm in order to convict Hayes. After the trial court explained the law to the
    jury, the State did not question Jackson further concerning introduction of the
    firearm. In response to defense counsel’s questions, Jackson at first stated that
    she would need to see the firearm if she did not believe the eyewitness; she then
    stated that the State need not produce a firearm if she believed the eyewitness
    testimony.       Accordingly, Hayes has shown that Jackson’s answers to the
    questions were not inconsistent 5 and that she ultimately answered that the
    State would not need to produce a firearm if it presented credible eyewitness
    testimony.6 Moreover, the prosecutor attempted to challenge Jackson for cause
    5
    It should be noted that the federal district court may have confused Juror #16
    Jackson with Juror # 46, whose last name was also Jackson. After the trial court explained
    the law, the State questioned Juror #46 Jackson concerning the need to produce the firearm;
    even after the law was explained, Juror #46 Jackson stated to the prosecutor that she “would
    want to see the gun” and “I would require it.”
    6
    During the prosecution’s questioning about the gun, Jackson (#16) responded:
    Q: Ms. Jackson, okay, you want that gun, you’re going to require the State to bring that
    gun in?
    A: If the State says that it was used, I’d like to see it.
    Q: Sure you’d like it. And that’s the thing, it’s definitely – as a juror, there’s all kinds
    of things you’d like to get. You know, I’d like to know why, I’d like to understand,
    I’d like to see the gun, I’d like to see the bloody shirt, I’d like to see that knife. You
    know, that would make, you know, your job a lot easier, but – and I understand that,
    but you understand that the State is not required to bring that in. And that’s okay.
    There’s all kind of – you know, there are people that say, “I’m sorry, I just absolutely
    have to have it.” That’s okay if you feel that way. You feel that way, Ms. Jackson,
    Juror No. 16?
    14
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    No. 08-10057
    on precisely these grounds before using a peremptory strike and the trial court
    ruled that Jackson remained qualified for the jury due to the fact that she
    affirmatively stated she would accept testimony in lieu of physical evidence. As
    A: (Nods head affirmatively.)
    Thereafter, the judge interjected that the law should be explained to the jury and
    proceeded to explain that the element of a firearm being used could be proved in various ways
    “but it’s not necessary that they actually bring a physical firearm into the courtroom and show
    it to you. They can do that by evidence, description, if a person is familiar with handguns or
    whatever, . . . .”
    The prosecutor did not thereafter question Jackson, but the defense did so yielding this
    discussion:
    Q: Well, yeah, the question is, when that witness testifies and they – you know, if they
    convince you that they saw a pistol and there was a pistol, would you still have to
    see the pistol?
    A: I would want to.
    Q: Well, sure. Really, we’d all like to have a video of it, so then we’d know – so then
    we’d know because we could see it, you know. Then we wouldn’t have to guess. But
    there isn’t one. But – and – I mean, really, see the question? Do you believe the
    witness and does that prove the case beyond a reasonable doubt? Do you believe her
    or him when they say they saw a pistol? If you do, then you don’t need to see the
    pistol.
    A: Well, yeah, that’s right I would need to see the pistol.
    Q: You would need to?
    A: If I didn’t believe that person.
    Q: Of course, if you don’t believe the person, they haven’t proved their case beyond a
    reasonable doubt.
    A: Right.
    Q: So you could get along without the pistol if you were convinced a pistol was used?
    A: I guess.
    Q: Well, you can’t guess.
    A: Okay. Yes, if he were believable, yes.
    15
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    such, any misperception that Jackson was inconsistent was put to rest by the
    trial court well before the prosecutor advanced inconsistency as the justification
    for the State’s strike. Nonetheless, even if the “inconsistency” justification was
    plausible notwithstanding all of the above, Hayes correctly notes that the trial
    court failed to follow the Supreme Court’s clearly established Batson protocol.
    The required comparative analysis would have demonstrated that non-African
    American Juror Newsome also gave inconsistent answers to the same series of
    questions. In short, a proper application of Miller El II in the broader context
    of this voir dire would have required Jackson’s reinstatement.
    Second, the prosecutor’s “pending charges” justification similarly lacks
    credibility, and the trial court’s contrary conclusion runs afoul of clearly
    established federal law under the required comparative framework. Although
    Jackson had a cousin with pending criminal charges, she also stated that she
    believed her cousin was being treated fairly in the criminal justice system.
    Moreover, Jackson stated that her cousin’s pending case would not affect her
    jury service. Although no other jurors had family members or friends with
    pending criminal cases, numerous jurors had family members or friends who had
    criminal convictions. As Hayes pointed out, some of these non-African-American
    potential jurors had relatives that the potential jurors believed were treated
    unfairly by the system or received harsh sentences (Keeble #29, Artieschoufsky
    #40, and Ryan #41). While the district court divorced the question of pendency
    from the question of fairness/severity, we find that these two concerns are
    inextricably intertwined because the quality of each juror’s prior experience
    directly informs the credibility of using that experience as a justification to
    strike. Viewed in that way, the decision to strike Jackson, with her favorable
    view of the justice system, rather than Keeble, Artieschoufsky, or Ryan, who had
    personal objections to that same system, cannot be justified under comparative
    16
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    No. 08-10057
    analysis.   Again, properly applying Miller El II, the trial court had clear
    Supreme Court guidance mandating Jackson’s reinstatement.
    Hayes has thus shown that the reasons given by the State for striking
    Jackson also applied to non-African-American jurors who were not struck. In
    particular, Juror # 5 Newsome, a non-African-American prospective juror, gave
    inconsistent answers concerning the need to see a firearm to convict. Numerous
    non-African-American jurors, who were not struck, stated that rehabilitation
    was a primary goal of the criminal justice system. (Stanton #7, Stevens #18, Fain
    #25, Sapp #27, Olivares #28, Ryan #41, Doyle #42, Crump #44, and Noble #45).
    Several non-African-American jurors, who were not struck, had relatives who
    had been prosecuted for crimes. (Keeble #29, Artieschoufsky #40, Ryan #41).
    When these non-African-Americans were questioned further concerning their
    relatives with criminal convictions, they stated that they believed their relatives
    received harsh sentences. (Keeble #29, Artieschoufsky #40, Ryan #41). Juror
    # 41 Ryan was ultimately chosen to serve on the jury.            In view of these
    comparisons, Hayes has shown that the state trial court unreasonably applied
    clearly established federal law in examining the prosecutor’s reasons for striking
    Jackson. See Miller-El II, 
    545 U.S. at 247, 251-52
    .
    C. Prospective Juror Richard
    With respect to Juror # 15 Cynthia Richard, the district court erred in
    deferring to the state court’s decision to a greater degree than directed by Miller-
    El and Snyder. The district court stated that “based on all of the circumstances,
    a trial court could have found that the prosecutor lacked credibility in her
    explanation of why she struck Richard. However, the Court does not agree that
    the trial court was obliged to so find.”        The district court’s analysis is
    inconsistent with the analysis in Miller-El II, Snyder, and Reed in its approach
    to reviewing the state court’s determination in those cases.
    17
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    The    prosecutor      advanced      three    allegedly     race-neutral subjective
    explanations for striking Richard: (1) she was “hostile,” (2) she failed to respond
    to the judge’s questions 7 ; and she had a “bad juror rating.” The prosecutor also
    offered two “objective” justifications: (1) Richard was employed as a teacher and
    (2) she selected “rehabilitation” as an important goal of the criminal justice
    system. The “objective” factors are quickly dispatched: two white jurors were
    teachers and served on the jury; other persons who selected rehabilitation served
    on the jury and, notably, Richard did not in fact select the “rehabilitation”
    option.8
    The state trial judge also did not appear to credit these reasons but,
    instead, focused on the “hostility” prong.9 While Snyder requires deference to a
    state trial court’s finding of credibility, the state trial judge here did not
    expressly find that the explanation was truthful. See Snyder, 
    128 S. Ct. at 1209
    .
    Instead, the trial court focused on the concept that hostility is a valid basis for
    7
    The state trial judge rejected this reason stating, “The few questions I had dealt with
    the qualifications of the jurors, and just general questions that was [sic] directed to the entire
    panel as to whether or not they could accept certain propositions of the law.”
    8
    Appellee makes much of the fact that Hayes has supplemented the record to include
    the juror cards from the trial and a juror rating form to assist the comparative analysis.
    Appellee claims we are barred from considering this information as it was not presented to the
    state appellate courts. This argument is without merit. We have held that we will consider
    additional information where evidence presented supplements but does not fundamentally
    alter the claim presented to the state courts. Anderson v. Johnson, 
    338 F.3d 382
    , 386-87 (5th
    Cir. 2003). Hayes has consistently argued that the prosecutor offered pretextual justifications
    for striking the African-American jurors. In providing the juror cards and printouts, Hayes
    merely added evidentiary support to the claim he has raised in every court to address his case.
    
    Id. at 387-88
     (holding that presenting a habeas claim in a “stronger evidentiary posture” does
    not trigger an exhaustion dismissal where the petitioner does not seek to advance “a ground
    [for relief] that is entirely independent of the grounds presented in the state courts.” (internal
    quotation marks and citations omitted)). Furthermore, these juror cards are not case
    dispositive.
    9
    The state trial judge also discounted the “bad juror rating” justification. Hayes notes
    that another non-African-American prospective juror, Deborah Noble, had a “bad juror rating”
    but sat as an alternate.
    18
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    No. 08-10057
    striking a juror. But the state trial judge stated that he observed no such
    hostility from Richard. More importantly, he never made any finding regarding
    whether “hostility” was the prosecutor’s true motive. Taken against the trial
    court’s statements with respect to both Juror Hashaway and Juror Jackson, it
    appears that the trial judge’s analysis was based upon whether the proffered
    explanation was a “valid” reason to strike a juror peremptorily, not on whether
    the reason given was “true” or, more pointedly, whether the prosecutor was
    telling the truth. In this respect, then, the state trial judge unreasonably failed
    to apply clearly established law to the facts by failing to examine not just the
    validity of the reason but the credibility of the prosecutor.10 This is particularly
    a problem because neither the judge nor defense counsel observed this supposed
    hostility. Thus, while it is true that hostility towards a lawyer could be a valid
    race-neutral reason to strike a prospective juror, we have no clear answer to the
    question of whether Richard was actually hostile. The answers to the voir dire
    questions evince no hostility.          The judge saw none.           The judge did not
    affirmatively find the prosecutor’s testimony credible, only the reason given to
    be one that, if true, is a valid reason to strike. This case is thus similar to
    Snyder where no finding as to demeanor was made, and the United States
    Supreme Court found no deference could thus be given. 
    128 S. Ct. at 1209
    .
    Accordingly, the state court’s failure to overrule the strike of Richard represents
    an unreasonable application of clearly established law to the facts.
    IV. CONCLUSION
    10
    Any sense that the state trial judge implicitly found the prosecutor to be generally
    credible and free from race-based bias is undermined by the sustaining of the Batson challenge
    as to Hashaway. It is inconsistent to say the prosecutor is always credible about motivations
    and yet say that the prosecutor was not credible as to the motive in striking Hashaway.
    Additionally, the trial judge discounted other proffered reasons as to Richard, such as her
    alleged non-responsiveness to his questions.
    19
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    The district court correctly noted the highly deferential AEDPA review
    standard for this case. However, as numerous cases from the Supreme Court
    and our court have made clear, the deference is not unlimited. Where, as here,
    the state court unreasonably applied Supreme Court precedent to the facts, the
    federal courts must act to correct the error. Therefore, we REVERSE and
    REMAND with instructions to grant the writ, set aside Hayes’s conviction and
    sentence, and order Hayes’s release from custody unless the State grants Hayes
    a new trial within a reasonable time to be set as a date certain by the federal
    district court in its order on remand.
    REVERSED and REMANDED with instructions.
    20