Commonwealth v. Williams , 481 Mass. 443 ( 2019 )


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    SJC-12549
    COMMONWEALTH   vs.   QUINTON K. WILLIAMS.
    Plymouth.      October 2, 2018. - February 13, 2019.
    Present (Sitting at Worcester): Gants, C.J., Lenk, Gaziano,
    Lowy, Budd, Cypher, & Kafker, JJ.
    Jury and Jurors.   Practice, Criminal, Jury and jurors, Challenge
    to jurors.
    Complaint received and sworn to in the Brockton Division of
    the District Court Department on March 1, 2016.
    The case was tried before Daniel J. Hourihan, J.
    The Supreme Judicial Court granted an application for
    direct appellate review.
    Edward Crane for the defendant.
    Gail M. McKenna, Assistant District Attorney, for the
    Commonwealth.
    Anthony Mirenda, Caroline S. Donovan, Amanda Hainsworth,
    Christopher J. Cifrino, & Justin Marble, for Massachusetts
    Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers & others, amici curiae,
    submitted a brief.
    Rebecca Kiley, Committee for Public Counsel Services, for
    Committee for Public Counsel Services, amicus curiae, submitted
    a brief.
    2
    BUDD, J.   The defendant, Quinton K. Williams, an African-
    American man, was charged with possession of a class B substance
    with the intent to distribute pursuant to G. L. c. 94C,
    § 32A (a).   During jury selection, over the defendant's
    objection, the judge excused for cause a prospective juror who
    stated that she believed that "the system is rigged against
    young African American males."    The defendant subsequently was
    convicted and now appeals, claiming that the judge abused his
    discretion in dismissing the prospective juror.
    Our jurisprudence regarding how to assess beliefs or
    opinions expressed by prospective jurors during voir dire has
    been less than clear.     Accordingly, we take this opportunity to
    set forth the factors that a judge should consider when a
    prospective juror discloses a belief or opinion based on his or
    her world view.   We conclude that although the voir dire was
    incomplete, it did not prejudice this defendant.     Thus, we
    affirm the conviction.1
    1 We acknowledge the amicus briefs submitted by the
    Committee for Public Counsel Services and by the Massachusetts
    Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers, the American Civil
    Liberties Union of Massachusetts, the New England Innocence
    Project, the Innocence Project, the Charles Hamilton Houston
    Institute for Race and Justice, the Criminal Justice Institute
    at Harvard Law School, retired Supreme Judicial Court Justice
    Geraldine S. Hines, retired United States District Court Judge
    for the District of Massachusetts Nancy Gertner, Harvard Law
    School Professor Ronald S. Sullivan, Jr., and Northeastern
    University Professor Jack McDevitt.
    3
    Background.   During jury selection, the judge asked
    questions of the entire venire, including the following:
    "[Y]ou've been read a copy of the complaint which charges
    [the defendant], which is just an allegation, that he
    possessed [a] class B controlled substance, cocaine, with
    the intent to distribute.
    "Is there anything about the subject matter or your views
    about the subject matter that would affect your ability to
    be fair and impartial in deciding the case?"
    Prospective juror no. 15 (prospective juror), among other
    potential jurors, answered in the affirmative.   Subsequently,
    the judge and the prospective juror had the following exchange
    at sidebar:
    Q.: "I believe you might have answered a question
    affirmatively. Was that a -- a hardship question?"
    The clerk: "No. . . .    It was on fair and impartial . . .
    [o]r bias."
    Q.:   "You feel like you might have a bias in the case?"
    A.: "Yeah. I worked with, like, low income youth in a
    school setting. I worked a lot with people who were
    convicted of -- like teenagers who were convicted of drug
    crimes.
    "And frankly, I think the system is rigged against young
    African American males.
    "I'm happy to serve on the jury trial -- on the jury
    because I think it's important, but -- "
    Q.: "You think that belief might interfere with your
    ability to be fair and impartial?"
    A.:   "I don't think so."
    Q.: "You -- you think you can put aside that opinion and
    bias -- "
    4
    A.:   "I don't think I can put it aside.         I think that's --"
    Q.:   "No?"
    A.: " -- the lens that I view the world through, but I
    think I can be unbiased -- I think I can be -- I think I
    can listen to the evidence."
    Q.: "All right. But you're going to have to be able to
    put that out of your mind and look at only the evidence.
    Do you think you can do that?"
    A.:   "I think so."
    Q.: "I have to be assured that you can though. You think
    you -- as -- as you sit in there, it might -- your
    experiences with -- with people in that type of a situation
    is going to have you look at it differently?"
    A.:   "Probably."
    Q.:   "Okay.    Step over there for a minute."
    When the prospective juror stepped away from the sidebar,
    the Commonwealth requested that she be excused for cause and the
    following discussion ensued between the judge and the parties:
    The prosecutor:     "I ask that she be excused for cause."
    The judge:     "Okay.    What do you say?"
    Defense counsel:        "Judge, I'm objecting.
    "I mean there -- there's -- the drug -- the issues
    regarding the mass incarceration of young African American
    males has been all over the news. Everybody has read about
    it. This is -- she has a little more information, but she
    did say she could be impartial.
    "And by the way, he's not a juvenile.        He's an adult."
    The judge: "Yeah. But he's a youthful looking guy, and
    she says she's going to have trouble. She hesitated quite
    5
    a bit, Counsel, and I -- I -- I find on the record that she
    really struggled with it.
    "She said I'll try to and then that --
    "I'm going to let her go for cause.    I think -- "
    The judge thereafter excused the prospective juror for
    cause.   By the end of jury selection, the Commonwealth and the
    defendant each had one remaining peremptory challenge.
    Ultimately, the jury found the defendant guilty.    We granted the
    defendant's application for direct appellate review.
    Discussion.    The defendant argues on appeal that it was
    error to dismiss the prospective juror for cause because neither
    her work experience nor her belief that the criminal justice
    system is unfair to African-American men rendered her unfit to
    serve, and further that the dismissal was prejudicial.
    We agree that holding particular beliefs about how African-
    American men are treated in the criminal justice system should
    not be automatically disqualifying.    See Mason v. United States,
    
    170 A.3d 182
    , 187 (D.C. 2017).    However, that is not what
    happened here.    The judge undertook to determine whether, given
    her opinion about the criminal justice system, the prospective
    juror could nevertheless be an impartial juror in the trial of
    an African-American man.    However, the voir dire ultimately was
    incomplete because the judge did not inquire further to
    determine whether, given the prospective juror's beliefs based
    6
    on her life experiences, she nevertheless could fairly evaluate
    the evidence and follow the law.
    Instead, the judge decided that the prospective juror was
    not able to be impartial because she expressed uncertainty about
    being able to "put aside" her beliefs and experiences and
    because she acknowledged that she would look at the case
    "differently" due to her experiences.   As discussed infra, a
    judge in this situation should focus not on a prospective
    juror's ability to put aside his or her beliefs formed as a
    result of life experiences, but rather on whether that juror,
    given his or her life experiences and resulting beliefs, is able
    to listen to the evidence and apply the law as provided by the
    judge.
    A judge's discretion in this realm, although broad, is
    rooted in determining a prospective juror's impartiality based
    on the juror's answers in a sufficiently thorough voir dire.
    Because the voir dire of the prospective juror here did not
    address whether she could fairly evaluate the evidence and apply
    the law given her belief regarding the justice system, the
    judge's assessment of her ability to be a fair and impartial
    juror was incomplete.   However, because we conclude that the
    defendant was not prejudiced as a result, we affirm.
    1.   Standard.   A criminal defendant is entitled to a trial
    by an impartial jury pursuant to the Sixth Amendment to the
    7
    United States Constitution and art. 12 of the Massachusetts
    Declaration of Rights.    See Commonwealth v. Vann Long, 
    419 Mass. 798
    , 802 (1995), and cases cited.    That is, each juror must be
    "impartial as to the persons involved and unprejudiced and
    uncommitted as to the defendant['s] guilt or past misconduct."
    Commonwealth v. Ricard, 
    355 Mass. 509
    , 512 (1969).     General Laws
    c. 234A, § 67A, addresses the situation when a prospective juror
    indicates that he or she may not be able to be impartial,
    stating in pertinent part:
    "To determine whether a juror stands indifferent in the
    case, if it appears that, as a result of the impact of
    considerations which may cause a decision to be made in
    whole or in part upon issues extraneous to the case,
    including, but not limited to, community attitudes,
    possible exposure to potentially prejudicial material or
    possible preconceived opinions toward the credibility of
    certain classes of persons, the juror may not stand
    indifferent, the court shall, or the parties or their
    attorneys may, with the permission and under the direction
    of the court, examine the juror specifically with respect
    to such considerations, attitudes, exposure, opinions or
    any other matters which may cause a decision to be made in
    whole or in part upon issues extraneous to the issues in
    the case."
    Thus, if it appears that a juror might not stand
    indifferent, the judge must hold an individual voir dire, the
    scope of which is within the judge's sound discretion.      See
    Commonwealth v. Flebotte, 
    417 Mass. 348
    , 355 (1994).      Concluding
    whether a prospective juror stands indifferent is also within
    the judge's discretion.    Commonwealth v. Ruell, 
    459 Mass. 126
    ,
    136, cert. denied, 
    565 U.S. 841
     (2011).   However, this
    8
    discretion is not unfettered; the judge's conclusion must be
    supported by a voir dire that sufficiently uncovers whether the
    prospective juror can fairly evaluate the evidence and follow
    the law.   See Commonwealth v. Perez, 
    460 Mass. 683
    , 688 (2011)
    ("judge's duty is to 'examine jurors fully regarding possible
    bias or prejudice'").
    We have not been particularly precise when discussing the
    handling of juror opinions, and, as a result, our jurisprudence
    is somewhat muddled regarding the proper procedure for
    determining impartiality when a prospective juror expresses any
    preconceived opinions he or she has regarding the case to be
    tried as compared to an opinion formed based on his or her life
    experiences or belief system.   Nonetheless, there is an
    important difference between the two:   asking a prospective
    juror to put aside his or her preconceived notions about the
    case to be tried is entirely appropriate (and indeed necessary)2;
    however, asking him or her to put aside opinions formed based on
    his or her life experiences or belief system is not.
    We acknowledge that we have said repeatedly that, in
    determining juror impartiality, the general rule is that a judge
    2 The same is true for other extraneous information related
    to the trial but not admitted in evidence. See, e.g.,
    Commonwealth v. Blanchard, 
    476 Mass. 1026
    , 1029 (2017);
    Commonwealth v. Entwistle, 
    463 Mass. 205
    , 221-222 (2012), cert.
    denied, 
    568 U.S. 1129
     (2013).
    9
    must look at whether jurors can "set aside their own opinions."
    See, e.g., Commonwealth v. Kennedy, 
    478 Mass. 804
    , 819 (2018);
    Commonwealth v. Brown, 
    477 Mass. 805
    , 821 (2017), cert. denied,
    
    139 S. Ct. 54
     (2018); Commonwealth v. Andrade, 
    468 Mass. 543
    ,
    547-548 (2014); Perez, 
    460 Mass. at 688-689
    ; Commonwealth v.
    Bryant, 
    447 Mass. 494
    , 501 (2006); Commonwealth v. Leahy, 
    445 Mass. 481
    , 495 (2005); Commonwealth v. Stroyny, 
    435 Mass. 635
    ,
    639 (2002).    However, in so doing, we have not differentiated
    between opinions regarding the case and opinions about
    particular topics based on a prospective juror's life
    experiences or world view.    Even so, none of the above-cited
    cases has to do with the latter.
    Where a prospective juror "has expressed or formed an
    opinion regarding the case, or has an interest, bias, or
    prejudice related to the unique situation presented by the
    case," the judge must satisfy him or herself that the
    prospective juror will set aside that opinion or bias and
    properly weigh the evidence and follow the instructions on the
    law.   Commonwealth v. Soares, 
    377 Mass. 461
    , 482, cert. denied,
    
    444 U.S. 881
     (1979).    Otherwise, removal of the prospective
    juror "is clearly appropriate in the interest that persons
    actually prejudiced not be seated on the jury even if it tends
    to skew an otherwise balanced panel."    
    Id.
       Where, on the other
    hand, a prospective juror has expressed an opinion or world view
    10
    based upon his or her life experience or belief system, rather
    than asking him or her to set it aside (which is difficult if
    not impossible to do), a judge must determine whether, given
    that particular opinion, the juror nevertheless is able to be
    impartial in the case to be tried.3   See id. at 487 ("No human
    being is wholly free of the interests and preferences which are
    the product of his cultural, family, and community experience.
    Nowhere is the dynamic commingling of the ideas and biases of
    such individuals more essential than inside the jury room").
    Thus, we emphasize that, in determining each prospective
    juror's ability to be impartial, although a judge may require a
    prospective juror to set aside an opinion regarding the case,
    the judge should not expect a prospective juror to set aside an
    opinion born of the prospective juror's life experiences or
    belief system.
    2.   Analysis.   After the prospective juror responded
    affirmatively to the question put to the entire venire regarding
    3 Whether a juror's thoughts about a particular matter that
    have been formed through his or her life experiences are
    characterized as an opinion, point of view, belief system, or
    bias, as discussed infra, the dispositive question that must be
    asked is whether the juror can decide the case based on the
    evidence presented and the law as provided by the judge. That
    said, we agree with the view expressed by the concurrence that
    there are some belief systems that may be incompatible with the
    ability to be a fair and impartial juror. See post at     .
    Religious beliefs that prohibit one from sitting in judgment of
    another are an example.
    11
    whether there was anything about their views on the subject
    matter that would affect their ability to be fair and impartial
    in deciding the case, she was called to sidebar for an
    individual voir dire.       See Flebotte, 
    417 Mass. at 355
    .   At
    sidebar, the prospective juror stated her opinion that the
    "system is rigged against young African American males."         The
    judge asked questions in an attempt to determine whether the
    prospective juror could be impartial.       See Perez, 
    460 Mass. at 688-689
    .      See also G. L. c. 234A, § 67A.   The colloquy that
    followed warrants closer review.
    The judge's first question to the prospective juror was
    proper:       "You think that belief might interfere with your
    ability to be fair and impartial?"       The prospective juror
    responded, "I don't think so."4      The judge went on to ask the
    juror:       "You . . . think you can put aside that opinion and bias
    --."       He did not get a chance to finish the question because the
    The prospective juror phrased this answer, as well as
    4
    others, to reflect the form of the judge's questions, i.e., her
    answer sometimes began with, "I think," in response to a
    question phrased, "You think . . . ?" We note that an answer
    that mirrors the syntax of a judge's question does not
    necessarily indicate an equivocal answer. See Commonwealth v.
    Prunty, 
    462 Mass. 295
    , 311-312 (2012); Commonwealth v. Bryant,
    
    447 Mass. 494
    , 501 (2006), citing Commonwealth v. Leahy, 
    445 Mass. 481
    , 495-496 & n.13 (2005) (affirming judge's
    determination of impartiality where juror responses included "I
    think. I've never done this before so it's hard"; "I think I
    could"; and "I suppose so"); Commonwealth v. Ascolillo, 
    405 Mass. 456
    , 459-460 (1989).
    12
    prospective juror interrupted him, stating that she did not
    think that she could put "it" aside, and that "it" was "the lens
    that [she viewed] the world through."   Although she also
    affirmed that she could be unbiased and could listen to the
    evidence, it was within the judge's discretion to inquire
    further if he was not satisfied that her answer was unequivocal.
    See Commonwealth v. Clark, 
    446 Mass. 620
    , 629-630 (2006).
    The judge did continue to question the prospective juror,
    telling her that she would "have to be able to put that out of
    [her] mind and look at only the evidence."   When the judge asked
    her, "Do you think you can do that?" the prospective juror
    responded, "I think so."   Finally the judge asked:   "You think
    . . . your experiences with . . . people in that type of a
    situation is going to have you look at it differently," implying
    that the prospective juror could not take her life experiences
    into account as a juror.   After the juror responded, "Probably,"
    the judge excused her for cause.
    Although the prospective juror indicated that, due to
    experiences she had, she believed that the "system is rigged
    against young African American males," and that this belief was
    not one that she could "put aside," she did not express any
    opinions having to do with the defendant or the case about to be
    13
    tried.5   Nevertheless, the record here indicates that the judge
    required the prospective juror to "put aside" her firmly held
    beliefs shaped by her life experiences in order to serve, and
    excused her because her experiences would cause her to "look at
    [the case] differently."
    Every prospective juror comes with his or her own thoughts,
    feelings, opinions, beliefs, and experiences that may, or may
    not, affect how he or she "looks" at a case.   Indeed, this court
    has acknowledged on multiple occasions that jurors do not
    approach their duties with a tabula rasa.   See, e.g.,
    Commonwealth v. Mutina, 
    366 Mass. 810
    , 817-818 (1975) ("Jurors
    do not come to their temporary judicial service as sterile
    intellectual mechanisms purged of all those subconscious factors
    which have formed their characters and temperaments such as
    racial or ethnic background, sex, economic status, intellectual
    5 At a certain point during the colloquy, after the
    prospective juror told the judge that she could not put aside
    "the lens that [she] view[ed] the world through," the judge
    responded that she was "going to have to be able to put that out
    of [her] mind and look at only the evidence." The concurrence
    suggests that it is not clear whether the judge "was directing
    the juror to set aside any preconceived notions that may affect
    her ability fairly to consider the evidence in this case or to
    set aside the 'lens' through which she viewed the world." Post
    at    . However, there is nothing in the record to indicate
    that the judge was referring to the former. In fact, except for
    the judge informing the prospective juror that she would have to
    be able to "look at only the evidence," and asking her, "Do you
    think you can do that?" to which she replied, "I think so,"
    there was no discussion about whether the prospective juror had
    any opinions about the case at all.
    14
    capacity, family status, religious persuasion, political
    leanings, educational attainment, moral convictions, employment
    experience, military service or their individual appreciations
    of the social problems of the moment"); Ricard, 
    355 Mass. at 512
    ("Every individual has impressions and beliefs, likes and
    dislikes").
    It would neither be possible nor desirable to select a jury
    whose members did not bring their life experiences to the court
    room and to the jury deliberation room.   See, e.g., J.E.B. v.
    Alabama ex rel. T.B., 
    511 U.S. 127
    , 149 (1994) (O'Connor, J.,
    concurring) ("Individuals are not expected to ignore as jurors
    what they know as men -- or women").   See also Mutina, 
    366 Mass. at 820
     ("Juries are generally instructed by judges in their
    charges and urged by counsel in their argument that they must
    not leave their common sense outside the jury room").   Thus, a
    prospective juror may not be excused for cause merely because he
    or she believes that African-American males receive disparate
    treatment in the criminal justice system.6   For that reason a
    6 We note that there is ample empirical evidence to support
    such a conclusion. See generally E. Hinton, L. Henderson, &
    C. Reed, Vera Institute of Justice, An Unjust Burden: The
    Disparate Treatment of Black Americans in the Criminal Justice
    System, at 7-9 (May 2018), citing Starr & Rehavi, Mandatory
    Sentencing and Racial Disparity: Assessing the Role of
    Prosecutors and the Effects of Booker, 
    123 Yale L.J. 2
    , 28-30
    (2013) (Federal prosecutors are more likely to charge African-
    Americans than similarly situated Caucasians with offenses that
    carry higher mandatory minimum sentences); C. Crawford, T.
    15
    trial judge must take care to determine whether such an opinion
    would affect a prospective juror's ability to be impartial.
    The questioning here raises two concerns.   First, as
    discussed supra, a judge should not require a prospective juror
    to disregard his or her life experiences and resulting beliefs
    in order to serve.7   As we have acknowledged, bringing one's life
    Chiricos, & G. Kleck, Race, Racial Threat, and Sentencing of
    Habitual Offenders, 36 Criminology 481, 503 (1998) (similar
    disparity for State prosecutors with respect to decisions to
    charge under habitual offender statutes). See also United
    States Sentencing Commission, Demographic Differences in
    Sentencing: An Update to the 2012 Booker Report, at 6 (Nov.
    2017) (African-American male defendants received sentences that
    were 19.1 per cent longer on average than similarly situated
    Caucasian male defendants). These disparities also exist for
    victims of crime. See C. Spohn & D. Holleran, Prosecuting
    Sexual Assault: A Comparison of Charging Decisions in Sexual
    Assault Cases Involving Strangers, Acquaintances, and Intimate
    Partners, 18 Just. Q. 651, 680-681 (2001) (prosecutors in Kansas
    City and Philadelphia were less likely to file sexual assault
    charges when victim was African-American rather than Caucasian).
    The problem of racial discrimination in the criminal
    justice system has not escaped the attention of this court.
    See, e.g., Commonwealth v. Buckley, 
    478 Mass. 861
    , 877 (2018)
    (Budd, J., concurring); Commonwealth v. Warren, 
    475 Mass. 530
    ,
    539-540 (2016). See also Commonwealth v. Gonsalves, 
    429 Mass. 658
    , 670 (1999) (Ireland, J., concurring).
    The Commonwealth, too, acknowledges in a letter it filed
    pursuant to Mass. R. A. P. 16 (l), as amended, 
    386 Mass. 1247
    (1982), that the "views and opinions expressed by [the
    prospective juror] are generally accepted, and shared within the
    community at large."
    7 Again, this is not to be confused with the firm
    requirement that all jurors set aside any preconceived opinions
    they may have formed regarding a case or a defendant prior to
    having heard the evidence. See Commonwealth v. Soares, 
    377 Mass. 461
    , 482, cert. denied, 
    444 U.S. 881
     (1979).
    16
    experiences to jury service is appropriate (and perhaps
    inevitable).   Mutina, 
    366 Mass. at 820
    .    Asking prospective
    jurors to "put aside" or "disregard" what they think, feel, or
    believe comes perilously close to improperly requiring them to
    "leave behind all that their human experience has taught them."
    Beck v. Alabama, 
    447 U.S. 625
    , 642 (1980) ("Jurors are not
    expected to come into the jury box and leave behind all that
    their human experience has taught them").
    Second, a judge who proceeds in this fashion mistakenly
    equates an inability to disregard one's life experiences and
    resulting beliefs with an inability to be impartial.    A judge
    should not assume that a prospective juror is unable to be
    impartial merely because he or she expressed uncertainty about
    being able to put aside his or her firmly held beliefs.
    Instead, an otherwise qualified prospective juror should only be
    excused for cause if, given his or her experiences and resulting
    beliefs, the judge concludes that the prospective juror is
    unable to fairly evaluate the evidence presented and properly
    apply the law.   See Commonwealth v. Entwistle, 
    463 Mass. 205
    ,
    221-222 (2012), cert. denied, 
    568 U.S. 1129
     (2013) ("defendant
    is not entitled to a jury that knows nothing about the crime, so
    long as jurors are able fairly to weigh the evidence in the
    case, set aside any information they learned outside the court
    17
    room, follow the judge's instructions, and render an impartial
    verdict").
    Thus, when a prospective juror states an opinion or belief,
    whether it is specific to the case or not, the judge must
    satisfy himself or herself that the prospective juror will be
    able to fairly evaluate the evidence and apply the judge's
    instructions on the law.8   See Perez, 
    460 Mass. at 688-689
    ;
    Commonwealth v. Auguste, 
    414 Mass. 51
    , 53-54, 57 (1992) (judge
    was required to investigate whether "juror would be impartial in
    his or her determination of the evidence" after juror expressed
    concern regarding convicting based on defendant's race).     See
    also Commonwealth v. McAlister, 
    365 Mass. 454
    , 459 & n.4 (1974),
    cert. denied, 
    419 U.S. 1115
     (1975) (before excusing three jurors
    for cause, "judge took pains to assure that the attitudes
    expressed were more than just personal convictions and that they
    would interfere with the jurors' capacity to perform their
    duty").   Compare Vann Long, 419 Mass. at 804-805; Commonwealth
    8 There are countless variations of a proper voir dire in a
    situation such as this. The exchange between the judge and a
    prospective juror during jury selection for the trial of
    Commonwealth v. Kennedy, 
    478 Mass. 804
    , 816-817 (2018) provides
    a good example; the concurrence also provides a helpful outline.
    See post at    . No special terms or particular phrasing is
    required. However, through the voir dire the trial court judge
    must determine whether a prospective juror who has expressed a
    deeply held opinion or belief relevant to the issues or parties
    in the case can nevertheless fairly evaluate the evidence and
    follow the instructions on the law.
    18
    v. Somers, 
    44 Mass. App. Ct. 920
    , 921-922 (1998) (juror
    improperly empaneled in case where defendant charged with
    firearm-related offenses and juror stated he has "strong
    opinions about gun control" and defendant "would not want me on
    a jury").
    Judges are expected to, and indeed must, use their
    discretion and judgment to determine whether a prospective juror
    will be fair and impartial based on verbal and nonverbal cues as
    well as the totality of the circumstances.     See Ruell, 459 Mass.
    at 136.     Here, however, the judge made that determination based
    upon whether the prospective juror could do something that is
    arguably impossible to do -- put aside her life experiences and
    her resulting world view.9    See Mutina, 
    366 Mass. at 820
    .
    3.   Prejudice.    At oral argument the defendant conceded,
    and we agree, that he suffered no actual prejudice from the
    error, as the Commonwealth completed jury selection with a
    9 The question is not, as the concurrence implies, whether
    the voir dire was done in an artful way, see post at     , but
    instead whether it was done in a way that would allow the judge
    to determine the prospective juror's ability to fairly evaluate
    the evidence and follow the judge's instructions. Although the
    judge determined that the prospective juror could not be
    impartial because he found that "she hesitated quite a bit" and
    that "she really struggled with it," the record reflects that
    the question with which she "hesitated" and "struggled" was
    essentially whether she could put aside her world view, not
    whether she could, given her world view, fairly evaluate the
    evidence and follow the law.
    19
    peremptory challenge left available to use (and which could have
    been used on the prospective juror had she not been excused for
    cause).   Moreover, the defendant has not argued that any member
    of the jury that ultimately convicted him was biased.    We
    therefore address only the defendant's arguments that the error
    should result in an automatic reversal of his conviction.
    The defendant claims that striking the prospective juror
    for cause resulted in structural error,10 warranting automatic
    reversal for two different reasons:   (1) it effectively resulted
    in an extra peremptory challenge for the Commonwealth; and (2)
    it infringed on the defendant's constitutional right to a jury
    comprised of a representative cross section of the community.11
    Structural error is "[g]enerally . . . error that
    'necessarily render[s] a criminal trial fundamentally unfair or
    10The defendant uses the terms "presumed prejudice" and
    "prejudicial per se" rather than "structural error" throughout
    his briefs. We note that presumptions of prejudice can be
    rebutted and, here, the Commonwealth can demonstrate that the
    error was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt because of its
    unexercised peremptory challenge. See Commonwealth v. McNulty,
    
    458 Mass. 305
    , 318 (2010) (applying harmless beyond reasonable
    doubt standard to nonstructural constitutional error). However,
    we do not consider the arguments for structural error waived
    because the defendant makes clear that he is analogizing to two
    well-established types of structural error -- denied peremptory
    challenges and Soares violations. See discussion, infra.
    11The defendant raised the second argument during oral
    argument. We granted both parties leave to submit further
    briefing on this issue pursuant to Mass. R. A. P. 16 (l), as
    amended, 
    386 Mass. 1247
     (1982).
    20
    an unreliable vehicle for determining guilt or innocence.'"
    Commonwealth v. Hampton, 
    457 Mass. 152
    , 163 (2010), quoting
    Washington v. Recuenco, 
    548 U.S. 212
    , 218-219 (2006).       As such,
    structural errors defy harmless error analysis, and when claims
    of structural error that are timely raised and preserved on
    appeal are upheld, they require automatic reversal.
    Commonwealth v. Cohen (No. 1), 
    456 Mass. 94
    , 118-119 (2010) (no
    prejudice analysis necessary where defendant's right to public
    trial was violated).   Structural errors "have been recognized in
    limited circumstances . . . [and] occur rarely."     Hampton,
    
    supra,
     citing Recuenco, 
    supra
     at 218 n.2.   The defendant argues
    that the facts here are analogous to cases that have resulted in
    structural error.   We conclude that the defendant's comparisons
    miss the mark.
    a.   "Extra" peremptory challenge for Commonwealth.      The
    defendant contends that the dismissal of a prospective juror for
    cause at the Commonwealth's request had the practical effect of
    giving the Commonwealth an "extra" peremptory challenge, and
    claims that in such an instance prejudice should be presumed.
    He argues that an extra peremptory challenge erroneously awarded
    to the Commonwealth is equivalent to denying a valid peremptory
    challenge to the defendant.   We have held that the latter
    results in the automatic reversal of a conviction.    See
    Commonwealth v. Wood, 
    389 Mass. 552
    , 564 (1983).     The defendant
    21
    reasons that a bonus peremptory challenge for the Commonwealth
    should similarly result in presumed prejudice.     Although the
    argument is creative, we are not convinced.
    Denying a defendant the right to exercise a valid
    peremptory challenge is prejudicial per se because "[t]he
    purpose of the properly exercised peremptory challenge is to aid
    the constitutional right to a fair and impartial jury."       
    Id. at 560
    , citing Swain v. Alabama, 
    380 U.S. 202
    , 216-220 (1965).       And
    we have held that "the right to be tried by an impartial jury is
    so basic to a fair trial that an infraction can never be treated
    as harmless error."   Wood, 
    supra at 564
    .
    Here, the judge did not deny the defendant the opportunity
    to exercise a peremptory strike; instead, the judge dismissed a
    prospective juror whom the defendant had hoped would be on the
    jury.   This scenario did not implicate the defendant's right to
    an impartial jury because where a potential juror is erroneously
    excused, the presumption is that that individual was replaced by
    another fair and impartial juror.   See Northern Pac. R.R. v.
    Herbert, 
    116 U.S. 642
    , 646 (1886) (after judge excused juror
    favored by employer, "[a] competent and unbiased juror was
    selected and sworn, and the [employer] had . . . a trial by an
    impartial jury, which was all it could demand").    See also
    Taylor v. Louisiana, 
    419 U.S. 522
    , 538 (1975) (defendants are
    not entitled to jury of any particular composition).    The
    22
    defendant is not entitled to automatic reversal based on an
    extra, unused peremptory strike provided to the Commonwealth.
    b.   Fair cross section of community.   A defendant's right
    to a fair and impartial jury includes the right to a jury drawn
    from a venire representing a fair cross section of the
    community.   See Soares, 
    377 Mass. at 478
    .   The defendant
    acknowledges that "the right to a jury representative of a
    cross-section of the community cannot require that each jury
    include constituents of every group in the population."
    Commonwealth v. Benjamin, 
    430 Mass. 673
    , 677 (2000), quoting
    Soares, 
    supra at 481
    .   However, he claims that erroneously
    dismissing the prospective juror was reversible error because it
    deprived him of his constitutional right to a jury made up of a
    fair and representative cross section of the community by
    limiting the chance that citizens, including African-Americans,
    holding this viewpoint about the criminal justice system would
    be represented on the jury.   We disagree.
    The defendant asserts that his case may be compared
    favorably to Soares, 
    supra.
       In Soares, this court held that the
    intentional use of peremptory challenges to exclude certain
    "discrete groups," including African-Americans,12 from a jury is
    12"[T]hose generic group affiliations which may not
    permissibly form the basis for juror exclusion . . . [are] sex,
    race, color, creed or national origin." Soares, 
    377 Mass. at 488-489
    .
    23
    an art. 12 violation of a defendant's right to a fair and
    impartial jury.13   
    Id. at 486, 488, 492
    .   As a result, this
    error, unaddressed at the time of trial, was held to be
    prejudicial per se.   
    Id. at 492
    .    See Commonwealth v. Jones, 
    477 Mass. 307
    , 325-326 (2017) (Soares violation is structural
    error).
    The defendant argues that although the error in this case
    is different, he is harmed similarly in that it reduced the
    likelihood that his jury would be drawn from a representative
    cross section of the community.     The comparison is inapt.
    In Soares, 
    377 Mass. at 488-490
    , the Commonwealth
    improperly used peremptory challenges to strike prospective
    jurors because they were members of a discrete group.     In
    contrast, here, the prospective juror was not struck due to
    being a member of a discrete group.     Instead, after conducting a
    voir dire, the judge excused the prospective juror because he
    found that she could not be a fair and impartial juror based on
    how she responded to his questions.     Although, as discussed
    supra, the judge made this finding without determining whether
    the prospective juror could fairly evaluate the evidence and
    13The court reasoned that the right to a representative
    jury pool is "wholly susceptible to nullification" if the
    Commonwealth is permitted to exercise peremptory challenges to
    remove jurors on the basis of their membership in certain
    groups. Soares, 
    377 Mass. at 486
    .
    24
    follow the instructions on the law, the judge made a good faith
    attempt to gauge whether she was qualified to serve.     The judge
    did not conclude or otherwise suggest that the prospective
    juror's belief about the criminal justice system was
    disqualifying in and of itself.
    It is the exclusion of prospective jurors "solely by virtue
    of their membership in, or affiliation with, particular, defined
    groupings in the community" that violates a defendant's
    constitutional right to a fair and impartial jury, Soares, 
    377 Mass. at 486
    , not excusing prospective jurors for cause because
    the judge believes, after voir dire, that they cannot be
    impartial, see 
    id. at 482
    .   This is so even if, as here, the
    voir dire is not complete.
    In arguing that prejudice should be presumed in these
    circumstances, the defendant points to Mason v. United States,
    
    170 A.3d 182
     (D.C. 2017), and King v. State, 
    414 A.2d 909
     (Md.
    1980).   These extrajurisdictional cases are distinguishable.    In
    King, supra at 910, prospective jurors were excused because they
    disagreed with marijuana laws in a marijuana possession case.
    In Mason, supra at 185, a potential juror was disqualified
    specifically because of her belief that the criminal justice
    system is biased against African-American men.   In both cases
    the trial court judges treated the beliefs of the prospective
    jurors as "in themselves disqualifying."   Id. at 187.    See King,
    25
    supra at 910-913.   Here, by contrast, as discussed supra, the
    judge conducted a voir dire to determine whether the prospective
    juror could be impartial.
    4.   Conclusion.   Although the voir dire of the prospective
    juror was incomplete, the defendant has not shown that the
    resulting dismissal of the prospective juror for cause resulted
    in prejudice.   We therefore decline to set aside the verdict.
    Judgment affirmed.
    GANTS, C.J. (concurring, with whom Gaziano, J., joins).      I
    agree with the court that a prospective juror may not be excused
    for cause from sitting on a jury simply because the juror
    believes that "the system is rigged against young African
    American males."   And I would like to believe that, if I were
    once again a trial court judge, I would have conducted the voir
    dire of this prospective juror a bit differently from how the
    judge in this case did after the juror raised her hand to the
    question, "Is there anything about the subject matter or your
    views about the subject matter that would affect your ability to
    be fair and impartial in deciding the case?"
    I would like to believe that I would have acknowledged that
    I respect the juror's point of view, but noted that it was this
    particular defendant and not the criminal justice system that
    was on trial, and then asked whether the juror was confident
    that she could fairly and impartially decide in this case, based
    on the evidence she would hear at trial and the law I would
    explain to her, whether the Commonwealth had met its burden of
    proving beyond a reasonable doubt each element of the offense
    charged.   And I would like to believe that I would have
    evaluated her answer to that question, including her demeanor
    and any apparent equivocation, to determine whether she would be
    a fair and impartial juror.
    2
    But I know, based on my experience questioning thousands of
    prospective jurors during more than eleven years as a Superior
    Court judge, that a trial judge often needs to discuss with
    potential jurors whether their personal beliefs, opinions, and
    life experience would affect their ability to be fair and
    impartial, and that not every such discussion travels down the
    same road.    And I know from that experience that there are
    times, with the benefit of additional thought and the wisdom of
    hindsight, in which a judge will recognize that a discussion
    with a juror could have been handled more artfully.    We have no
    template for such questioning; nor would it make sense to
    attempt to create one because there are so many different ways
    that prospective jurors may share their concerns about the risk
    of possible bias.    Addressing such concerns is necessarily
    improvisational, and therefore often imperfect.
    It is with the benefit of this trial court experience that
    I examine whether the judge abused his discretion in excusing
    this prospective juror for cause, recognizing that we "afford a
    trial judge a large degree of discretion in the jury selection
    process."    Commonwealth v. Vann Long, 
    419 Mass. 798
    , 803 (1995).
    Every prospective juror brings his or her opinions,
    beliefs, and life experience to the court house when asked to
    perform juror service.    We do not require jurors to leave them
    at the front door; nor could they.    See Commonwealth v. Mutina,
    3
    
    366 Mass. 810
    , 817 (1975) ("Jurors do not come to their
    temporary judicial service as sterile intellectual mechanisms
    purged of all those subconscious factors which have formed their
    characters and temperaments . . .").     Indeed, we expect jurors
    to apply common sense derived from their life experience when
    evaluating the evidence presented at trial.     See Commonwealth v.
    Caruso, 
    476 Mass. 275
    , 289 (2017) ("Jurors may rely on their own
    common sense and life experience in their role as fact
    finders").    And we aim for diverse juries precisely because we
    believe that the quality of fact finding will be enhanced by
    jurors' varied life experiences and points of view.    See
    Commonwealth v. Soares, 
    377 Mass. 461
    , 487, cert. denied, 
    444 U.S. 881
     (1979) ("No human being is wholly free of the interests
    and preferences which are the product of his cultural, family,
    and community experience.    Nowhere is the dynamic commingling of
    the ideas and biases of such individuals more essential than
    inside the jury room"); id. at 478 ("fair jury is one that
    represents a cross section of community concepts" [citation
    omitted]).    The goal in jury selection is not to select jurors
    without opinions or beliefs, but to select jurors whose opinions
    and beliefs do not affect their ability fairly and impartially
    to find the facts, to follow the law, and to render a just
    verdict.     See Commonwealth v. Kennedy, 
    478 Mass. 804
    , 818 (2018)
    (judge "required to determine whether jurors . . . were capable
    4
    of setting aside their own opinions, weighing the evidence
    without considering extraneous issues, and following his legal
    instructions").
    But there certainly are opinions, beliefs, and life
    experiences that might affect a juror's ability to fairly and
    impartially find the facts or apply the law, or a judge's
    confidence in the juror's ability to do so.   If a juror were to
    characterize himself or herself as a white nationalist, we would
    expect a judge to inquire into whether those beliefs would
    affect the juror's ability to be fair and impartial, especially
    in a case with an African-American defendant.   See G. L.
    c. 234A, § 67A ("if it appears that, as a result of the impact
    of considerations which may cause a decision to be made in whole
    or in part upon issues extraneous to the case, . . . the juror
    may not stand indifferent, the court shall . . . examine the
    juror specifically with respect to such considerations,
    attitudes, exposure, opinions or any other matters which may
    cause a decision to be made in whole or in part upon issues
    extraneous to the issues in the case").   And even if such a
    juror were to insist that he or she would be fair, we would not
    fault a judge -- who has the benefit of observing the juror's
    affect and demeanor -- for questioning the sincerity of the
    juror's claim and deciding to excuse the juror for cause.      See
    Commonwealth v. Mattier (No. 2), 
    474 Mass. 261
    , 274-275 (2016)
    5
    (judge's determination regarding juror bias "is essentially one
    of credibility, and therefore largely one of demeanor" [citation
    omitted]); Commonwealth v. Ruell, 
    459 Mass. 126
    , 136, cert.
    denied, 
    565 U.S. 841
     (2011) ("A judge has broad discretion in
    deciding whether a prospective juror is impartial . . .").
    Nor need the opinion or belief be on the fringe to warrant
    such inquiry.   Opinions about the proper balance between the
    needs of law enforcement and the protection of civil liberties
    in a criminal case, about defensive medicine in a medical
    malpractice case, or about the prevalence of racism in a
    discrimination case, for instance, could provide reason for
    further individual questioning.    And while we do not expect
    people to transform into blank slates upon taking a seat in the
    jury box, dismissal for cause is appropriate where the judge,
    after evaluating a prospective juror's responses to voir dire
    questions, reasonably concludes that a belief or opinion will
    cloud that juror's ability fairly to evaluate the evidence and
    follow the court's instructions.    See Commonwealth v. Colton,
    
    477 Mass. 1
    , 17 (2017) ("As a general principle, it is an abuse
    of discretion to empanel a juror who will not state
    unequivocally that he or she will be impartial").
    Here, the prospective juror indicated that she was
    concerned about her own potential bias by raising her hand when
    members of the venire were asked whether anything about the
    6
    subject matter of the case, or their views on the subject
    matter, would affect their ability to be fair and impartial.
    Under such circumstances, it was certainly appropriate for the
    judge to explore through individual voir dire whether this juror
    would, in fact, be fair and impartial.    See G. L. c. 234A,
    § 67A.
    I infer from the judge's questions that he wanted to be
    assured that the juror would decide the case based solely on the
    evidence, and that her fact finding would not be unfairly
    influenced by her opinion and life experience.    The judge began
    his questioning by asking whether the prospective juror felt
    that she might have a bias in the case.    When the juror answered
    in the affirmative and expressed her view that "the system is
    rigged against young African American males," the judge
    proceeded to ask whether her belief might interfere with her
    ability to be fair and impartial.   "I don't think so," the juror
    responded.   The judge followed up on this response, asking
    whether the juror thought she would be able to "put aside that
    opinion and bias."   When the juror told the judge that she did
    not think she could "put it aside" and that her belief was "the
    lens that [she] view[ed] the world through," the judge informed
    the juror that she was "going to have to be able to put that out
    of [her] mind and look at only the evidence."    It is not clear
    from this instruction whether the judge -- who properly
    7
    emphasized the importance of looking only at the evidence -- was
    directing the juror to set aside any preconceived notions that
    may affect her ability fairly to consider the evidence in this
    case or to set aside the "lens" through which she viewed the
    world.   While asking a juror to set aside preexisting opinions
    regarding a particular case or set of circumstances is proper,
    see Kennedy, 478 Mass. at 818, I agree with the court that it
    would be improper to instruct a juror to set aside his or her
    life experiences or beliefs more broadly.     Cf. Soares, 
    377 Mass. at
    486 n.30 (where "tendencies do not stem from individual
    biases related to the peculiar facts or the particular party at
    trial, but from differing attitudes toward the administration of
    justice and the nature of criminal offenses," "differences in
    juror attitudes" enhance jury deliberations).     I also agree that
    the judge's subsequent question, which asked whether the juror's
    experience working with low-income youth was "going to have
    [her] look at it differently" wrongly implied that the juror was
    required to set aside her world view.
    Nevertheless, I infer from the judge's spare findings (and
    findings are routinely spare when a prospective juror is
    dismissed) that the judge excused this juror for cause not
    because of her opinions or world view, but because he was not
    assured of her ability to be impartial.     A juror certainly may
    not be excused for cause solely because he or she believes that
    8
    the criminal justice system disfavors African-American
    defendants.   See Mason v. United States, 
    170 A.3d 182
    , 187 (D.C.
    2017) ("Standing alone, the belief that the criminal-justice
    system is systemically unfair to blacks is not a basis to
    disqualify a juror").   In fact, the belief voiced by this
    prospective juror is shared by many in our community, including
    most African-Americans.1   Aggressively excusing jurors who hold
    this belief therefore risks excusing a disproportionate number
    of African-American jurors.   Here, however, the judge appeared
    less concerned with the juror's beliefs about the inequities of
    the criminal justice system or her specific answers to his
    1 See Hyams Foundation and MassINC Polling Group, Racial
    Inequities, Policy Solutions: Perceptions of Boston's
    Communities of Color on Racism and Race Relations 19 (Mar. 2018)
    (in Boston, fifty-two percent of all people surveyed and forty-
    one percent of black people surveyed thought Boston police
    officers treat black and Latino people "somewhat or very
    fairly"; forty-five percent of all people surveyed and twenty-
    seven percent of black people surveyed thought Boston courts
    treat black and Latino people "somewhat or very fairly"); Voters
    Split on Whether Criminal Justice System Treats All People
    Fairly, NBC News, Nov. 8, 2016, https://www.nbcnews.com/card/
    nbc-news-exit-poll-voters-split-whether-criminal-justice-system-
    n680366 [https://perma.cc/PTF8-XGT8] (nationwide, eighty-two
    percent of black voters and forty-two percent of white voters
    believe criminal justice system treats black people unfairly).
    See generally Balko, Opinion, There's Overwhelming Evidence that
    the Criminal-Justice System Is Racist. Here's the Proof, Wash.
    Post, Sept. 18, 2018, https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/
    opinions/wp/2018/09/18/theres-overwhelming-evidence-that-the-
    criminal-justice-system-is-racist-heres-the-proof/
    ?utm_term=.7fc6ef33714f [https://perma.cc/BU4Z-8E37] (compiling
    studies demonstrating racial bias in various aspects of criminal
    justice system).
    9
    questions than with the manner in which she responded.   The
    judge noted that the juror "hesitated quite a bit" and "really
    struggled with it."2   I infer from these findings that the judge
    understood the juror's hesitation and struggle to reflect her
    uncertainty whether she could decide the case based solely on
    the evidence.   And because the judge was not assured that she
    would be fair and impartial, he exercised his discretion to err
    on the side of caution and excuse the juror for cause.   Cf.
    Commonwealth v. Seguin, 
    421 Mass. 243
    , 246 (1995), cert. denied,
    
    516 U.S. 1180
     (1996) (judge properly "pursued the subject" where
    prospective juror hesitated before answering question regarding
    opinion on insanity defense).
    2 The court correctly asserts that a prospective juror's
    hesitation in answering a question, or his or her apparent
    struggle in answering it, means little if the question itself
    asks the juror to do the impossible. See ante at note 9. But
    the record does not clearly identify which question the judge
    was referring to when he said that the prospective juror
    "hesitated quite a bit" and "really struggled with it." The
    court assumes, perhaps correctly, that the judge was referring
    to his question, "But you're going to have to be able to put
    that out of your mind and look at only the evidence. Do you
    think you can do that?" The court then assumes that the judge
    found that the prospective juror hesitated and struggled with
    "whether she could put aside her world view." 
    Id.
     Given the
    compound nature of the judge's question, however, the judge
    reasonably could have understood the prospective juror to be
    hesitating and struggling with whether she could "look at only
    the evidence." It is also possible that the judge, in
    describing the prospective juror's hesitation and struggle, was
    referring to her manner of response to an earlier question --
    whether she thought her "belief might interfere with [her]
    ability to be fair and impartial."
    10
    I might have exercised my discretion differently and denied
    the prosecutor's motion to excuse this juror for cause, leaving
    it to the prosecutor to use a peremptory challenge if she wanted
    to remove the juror from the panel.    And I might have credited
    the juror's assertion that she did not think her opinion of the
    criminal justice system might interfere with her ability to be
    fair and impartial, and that she believed she could decide the
    case based solely on the evidence.    But I did not speak with
    this prospective juror -- the trial judge did.    His evaluation
    of the juror's demeanor and her confidence in her ability to be
    fair is therefore entitled to great deference.   See Commonwealth
    v. Stroyny, 
    435 Mass. 635
    , 639 (2002) ("Whether to accept the
    declaration of a juror that he or she is disinterested lies
    within the broad discretion of the trial judge").    See also
    Mattier (No. 2), 474 Mass. at 274-275.    "An appellate court's
    review of a trial judge's decision for abuse of discretion must
    give great deference to the judge's exercise of discretion; it
    is plainly not an abuse of discretion simply because a reviewing
    court would have reached a different result."    L.L. v.
    Commonwealth, 
    470 Mass. 169
    , 185 n.27 (2014).
    Because judges' quick and often difficult decisions
    concerning whether to excuse a juror for cause are entitled to
    substantial deference, I am reluctant to find that a judge
    abused his discretion where, as here, the judge made a good
    11
    faith decision to excuse the juror because of concerns about her
    ability to decide the case based solely on the facts and the
    law.    I do not believe that such a decision satisfies the test
    for an abuse of discretion articulated in L.L., 470 Mass. at 185
    n.27:    that "a judge's discretionary decision constitutes an
    abuse of discretion where we conclude the judge made a clear
    error of judgment in weighing the factors relevant to the
    decision . . . such that the decision falls outside the range of
    reasonable alternatives" (quotation and citation omitted).
    Therefore, as much as I appreciate the concerns raised by
    the defendant regarding the judge's manner of addressing the
    prospective juror's opinion on racial biases in our criminal
    justice system, I would decide the issue the court did not
    decide and conclude that the judge's decision to excuse the
    juror was not an abuse of discretion.    For these reasons, I
    concur.