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Summary: NOT RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION File Name: 20a0335n.06 Case No. 18-2106 UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT CURTIS PARKS, ) FILED ) Jun 09, 2020 Petitioner-Appellant, ) DEBORAH S. HUNT, Clerk ) v. ) ) ON APPEAL FROM THE WILLIS CHAPMAN, Warden, ) UNITED STATES DISTRICT ) COURT FOR THE EASTERN Respondent-Appellee. ) DISTRICT OF MICHIGAN Before: BATCHELDER, DONALD, and READLER, Circuit Judges. ALICE M. BATCHELDER, Circuit Judge. Curtis Parks, an inmate in a Michigan prison, appeals
Summary: NOT RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION File Name: 20a0335n.06 Case No. 18-2106 UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT CURTIS PARKS, ) FILED ) Jun 09, 2020 Petitioner-Appellant, ) DEBORAH S. HUNT, Clerk ) v. ) ) ON APPEAL FROM THE WILLIS CHAPMAN, Warden, ) UNITED STATES DISTRICT ) COURT FOR THE EASTERN Respondent-Appellee. ) DISTRICT OF MICHIGAN Before: BATCHELDER, DONALD, and READLER, Circuit Judges. ALICE M. BATCHELDER, Circuit Judge. Curtis Parks, an inmate in a Michigan prison, appeals ..
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NOT RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION
File Name: 20a0335n.06
Case No. 18-2106
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
CURTIS PARKS, )
FILED
) Jun 09, 2020
Petitioner-Appellant, ) DEBORAH S. HUNT, Clerk
)
v. )
) ON APPEAL FROM THE
WILLIS CHAPMAN, Warden, ) UNITED STATES DISTRICT
) COURT FOR THE EASTERN
Respondent-Appellee. ) DISTRICT OF MICHIGAN
Before: BATCHELDER, DONALD, and READLER, Circuit Judges.
ALICE M. BATCHELDER, Circuit Judge. Curtis Parks, an inmate in a Michigan
prison, appeals the district court’s denial of his 28 U.S.C. § 2254 petition for a writ of habeas
corpus. We AFFIRM.
I.
Beverly Jefferson was a 44-year-old woman who lived in an apartment with her three cats.
Early one Sunday morning in April 2001, she answered a knock at her door to find an African-
American man, Curtis Parks, asking to use her phone. She did not know Parks but let him in.
Parks punched her in the face, knocked her to the floor, and raped her. He stayed all day and raped
her several times. He broke her belongings, urinated on her bed, and threatened her continually.
He told her he had been watching her for a while. Eventually, Parks fell asleep and Jefferson
called 911.
When the responding police officer arrived, Parks was in the process of raping Jefferson
again. The officer heard Jefferson screaming, kicked in the door, and found Parks on top of her
with his pants down, raping her. Parks lunged at the officer who drew his gun and subdued and
Case No. 18-2106, Parks v. Chapman
arrested Parks. At the emergency room, Jefferson received stitches to close the wounds to her lip,
both inside and out. A sexual-assault nurse found “very fresh” injuries to Jefferson’s vagina and
anus that were typical of forced sex and assault, not consensual intercourse.
In October 2001, the state prosecutor charged Parks with three counts of criminal sexual
conduct in the first-degree and tried him to a jury in Kent County, Michigan. It was unknown at
the time but was later established that a computer error was causing an underrepresentation of
African-Americans in the panels of prospective jurors (venires) being drawn for Kent County
trials—African-Americans made up 8.24% of the community but, due to the error, made up only
4.79% of the improperly constructed community-wide pool. For Parks’s venire, however, at least
four of the 42 (9.52%) prospective jurors were African-American,1 but the prosecutor removed
those four with peremptory challenges (the prosecutor used seven of his 12 peremptory
challenges), and the resulting jury was all Caucasian. Parks’s defense counsel, who used four
peremptory challenges of his own, did not raise any Batson2 claim; to the contrary, he told the
court that he was “satisfied” with the empaneled jury.
At trial, Jefferson testified at length and in detail, describing the violence, the repeated
rapes, and her call to 911. The responding officer testified about Jefferson’s screams, finding
Parks on top of her with his pants off, and Parks’s lunging at him. The emergency room doctor
testified about Jefferson’s lip injury, that it was new and needed stitches to close it, and that Parks
could not have been unaware of it. And the sex-assault nurse testified about the injuries to
Jefferson’s vagina and anus, that they were fresh and typical of forced sexual assault, not
consensual sex. Parks testified in his defense, asserting that Jefferson was a prostitute who
1
The record established that four excluded jurors were African-American and that the 12 empaneled jurors
were Caucasian. It is unknown whether any, or how many, of the other 26 people in the venire were African-American.
2
Batson v. Kentucky,
476 U.S. 79 (1986).
2
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propositioned him and only called the police because she thought he was not going to pay. Parks
said he was unaware of Jefferson’s bloody lip and denied being on her when the officer arrived or
that he had lunged at the officer. The jury convicted Parks on all counts.
On direct appeal, Parks raised a “fair cross section” claim based on the computer error, but
the Michigan appellate court found that he had forfeited the claim by failing to raise a timely
objection at trial, i.e., before the jury was impaneled and sworn, and had actually affirmatively
waived it by “express[ing] satisfaction with the jury’s composition.” Michigan v. Parks, No.
239728,
2003 WL 21958299, at *1 (Mich. Ct. App. Aug. 14, 2003) (per curiam). Parks also raised
a Batson claim on direct appeal, based on the prosecutor’s use of peremptory challenges to remove
the four African-Americans from the venire, and the court’s empaneling an all-Caucasian jury.
The trial transcript and record did not reflect the race of any jurors, but Parks submitted affidavits
from the four dismissed African-Americans and from another person who attested to the all-
Caucasian jury. The Michigan appellate court found that Parks had similarly forfeited and waived
that claim by failing to raise it at trial, but further stated that it was not “clear from the record that
the prosecutor used her peremptory challenges in a discriminatory fashion.”
Id. And Parks raised
an ineffective-assistance-of-counsel (IAC) claim based on his counsel’s failure to make the Batson
challenge at trial, but the court found “no record of any wrongdoing,” and hence no IAC, because
the transcript from the jury voir dire did not “indicate that the prosecutor exercised her peremptory
challenges to remove African-Americans from the jury because of their race.”
Id. The Michigan
appellate court affirmed,
id. at *3, and the Michigan Supreme Court denied leave to appeal.
Michigan v. Parks,
677 N.W.2d 27 (Mich. 2004). Parks did not pursue any state post-conviction
motions; he next filed a pro se federal habeas petition.
3
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Parks’s § 2254 petition raised two claims—Batson and fair-cross-section—but recognized
that both were procedurally defaulted. He argued that trial counsel’s IAC excused the procedural
default of the Batson claim. The district court denied the IAC claim, finding no evidence of trial
counsel’s deficient performance, and held the Batson claim procedurally defaulted because Parks
could not overcome the default without proving IAC. See Parks v. Warren, No. 05-10036,
2011
WL 5838486, at *1 (E.D. Mich. Nov. 21, 2011). On the fair-cross-section claim, the court found
cause to excuse the default—namely, that the computer error was unknown at the time of Parks’s
trial—and assumed prejudice, so it appointed counsel for Parks and held an evidentiary hearing.
Id. Thereafter, the court denied the fair-cross-section claim on the merits, finding that even though
the Kent County Court had underrepresented African-Americans in its community-wide jury pool
for several months, the racial composition of Parks’s venire paralleled the proportion of African-
Americans in the community.
Id.
On appeal here, a prior panel held that it was improper for the district court to assume
prejudice in order to excuse the procedural default and decide the fair-cross-section claim on the
merits, so it vacated the ruling on that claim and remanded for the district court to decide whether
Parks had suffered actual prejudice to excuse the procedural default. Parks v. Klee, 555 F. App’x
573 (6th Cir. 2014). The panel also vacated the ruling on the IAC claim and included it in the
remand, explaining that “the district court appears to have overlooked the existence in the record
of the voir dire transcript from Parks’[s] state court trial.”
Id.
On remand, the district court recognized, again, that Parks had procedurally defaulted both
his fair-cross-section and Batson claims. Parks v. Warren,
278 F. Supp. 3d 975, 978 (E.D. Mich.
2017). On the fair-cross-section claim, the court found cause but no prejudice “because the trial
record plainly depicts a case against [Parks] so strong, and a defense so weak, that it is highly
4
Case No. 18-2106, Parks v. Chapman
improbable that an unbiased jury could acquit him.”
Id. at 981. Therefore, the district court denied
the fair-cross-section claim based on procedural default.
Id. at 983.
On the Batson claim, Parks asserted that the cause for the default was trial counsel’s IAC,
citing Strickland.3
Id. at 984. But the district court rejected that contention:
[Parks] is not entitled to relief on his Batson and Strickland claims, because he has
not pointed to any circumstances evident from the record sufficient to make out a
prima facie claim that the prosecutor’s use of peremptory strikes was racially
motivated. And because the record discloses no plausible basis for raising a Batson
objection, [Parks]’s counsel cannot have been ineffective for failing to make one.
Id. at 985. Having found no basis for raising a Batson challenge, the district court concluded that
because there had been no reason for trial counsel to raise the Batson challenge, counsel had not
performed deficiently, and because counsel’s performance had not been deficient, counsel had not
rendered ineffective assistance. Parks had thus shown neither cause nor prejudice to excuse his
procedural default of the claimed Batson violation.
In sum, the district court found that Parks did not and could not point to evidence in “the
record sufficient to suggest that the [peremptory] removal of those [four African-American] jurors
was ‘motivated by race.’”
Id. at 986. The court specifically listed certain shortcomings in Parks’s
proof, stating that the record revealed: (1) the race of only the four affiants and that the empaneled
jury was all Caucasian, but did not reveal the race of anyone else in the venire who was neither
affirmatively removed nor ultimately selected, so there was no proof “that the prosecutor engaged
in a ‘pattern’ of strikes against African-American jurors”; (2) no racial pretext in the prosecutor’s
voir dire questioning or commentary; and (3) that both sides used peremptory challenges, but
neither used them all, and the prosecutor used just four of her seven on African-Americans.
Id. at
986–87. The district court emphasized that the absence of African-Americans, standing alone,
3
Strickland v. Washington,
466 U.S. 668 (1984).
5
Case No. 18-2106, Parks v. Chapman
does not “support any valid inference of purposeful discrimination.”
Id. at 987. The court
acknowledged that the record was silent as to the prosecutor’s reasons for removing those jurors,
“principally because [Parks]’s attorney did not object to any of the challenges, and at the end of
the selection process he stated that ‘the defense is satisfied with the jury.’”
Id. at 984. The court
then denied the Batson claim after finding that, even if Parks’s counsel had raised the claim, the
voir dire transcript revealed “plausible non-racial reasons for the exercise of the challenges to the
four African-American jurors.”
Id. at 983. Finally, the court denied Parks’s request for an
evidentiary hearing because his request was based on only “naked speculation,” which “does not
warrant an evidentiary hearing in a habeas proceeding.”
Id. But the court did grant Parks a
certificate of appealability on both the fair-cross-section and Batson claims.
Parks moved the district court to reconsider based on the Supreme Court’s then-recent
decision in Weaver v. Massachusetts,
137 S. Ct. 1899 (2017), which—according to Parks—
abrogated the rule laid down in Ambrose v. Booker,
684 F.3d 638 (6th Cir. 2012), that required
proof of actual prejudice, and required the court to instead presume prejudice on collateral review
of any claims implicating structural error. The district court denied the motion, explaining that
Weaver does not compel that conclusion, and that the Sixth Circuit had rejected that argument in
Carter v. Lafler, No. 17-1409,
2017 WL 4535932, at *3 (6th Cir. Aug. 30, 2017) (order), and
Wellborn v. Berghuis, No. 17-2076,
2018 WL 4372196, at *2 (6th Cir. May 16, 2018) (order).
Parks v. Warren, No. 05-10036,
2018 WL 4478767, at *3 (E.D. Mich. Sept. 19, 2018).
II.
The district court held that Parks procedurally defaulted two of the claims before the court
in this appeal because he failed to raise them in the state trial court. In an appeal from a district
6
Case No. 18-2106, Parks v. Chapman
court’s finding of procedural default, we review the district court’s legal conclusions de novo and
its findings of fact for clear error. Scott v. Houk,
760 F.3d 497, 503 (6th Cir. 2014).
In short, a § 2254 petitioner is barred from asserting claims in federal court that have been
“procedurally defaulted.” Woodford v. Ngo,
548 U.S. 81, 93 (2006). To overcome a procedural
default, the petitioner must “demonstrate cause for the default and actual prejudice as a result of
the alleged violation . . . or demonstrate that failure to consider the claims will result in a
fundamental miscarriage of justice.” Coleman v. Thompson,
501 U.S. 722, 750 (1991).
A.
The first issue is whether Parks procedurally defaulted his Batson claim. Parks argues that
his trial counsel was ineffective for failing to raise that claim at voir dire and that IAC demonstrates
cause and prejudice to overcome the default. See Wade v. Timmerman-Cooper,
785 F.3d 1059,
1077 (6th Cir. 2015) (ineffective assistance of counsel can serve as both cause and prejudice).
Our precedent does not definitively provide the standard of review that we must apply to
Parks’s argument regarding procedural default. The Michigan appellate court did address Parks’s
IAC claim on the merits. Ordinarily, then, the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act
(AEDPA) would govern our review of that claim in this collateral posture. As a result, we could
grant relief only if the last reasoned opinion from the state court that adjudicated the challenged
issue on the merits “was contrary to, or involved an unreasonable application of, clearly established
Federal law, as determined by the Supreme Court of the United States[,] or resulted in a decision
that was based on an unreasonable determination of the facts.” 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d). But in
examining whether a petitioner has shown cause and prejudice to excuse procedural default, “we
have sometimes said that AEDPA deference does not cabin our review of the cause and prejudice
aspect of procedural default” and have instead applied de novo review. Williams v. Burt,
949 F.3d
7
Case No. 18-2106, Parks v. Chapman
966, 974 (6th Cir. 2020) (citing Hall v. Vasbinder,
563 F.3d 222, 236-37 (6th Cir. 2009)). We
need not resolve this issue today, however, as Parks plainly cannot meet the demanding Strickland
test even on the more lenient de novo standard of review. See
id.
To prove an IAC claim, the petitioner “must show that [his counsel’s] deficient
performance prejudiced [his] defense.”
Strickland, 466 U.S. at 687. That is, Parks must show,
based on the evidence that was before the state court, see Cullen v. Pinholster,
563 U.S. 170, 181
(2011), that counsel’s performance was deficient and that deficiency prejudiced his defense.
The allegedly deficient performance is Parks’s trial counsel’s decision not to object to the
prosecutor’s use of peremptory challenges to remove the four African-Americans from the jury;
i.e., counsel’s decision not to raise the Batson challenge. The Michigan appellate court, the district
court, and the prosecutor reasoned this way: there is no evidence in the record that race influenced
the prosecutor’s peremptory removals; therefore the trial court would have denied a Batson
objection (i.e., the objection would have been futile); therefore trial counsel was not obligated to
object (and pursue a futile argument); therefore that decision was not necessarily or objectively
incorrect; therefore trial counsel did not perform deficiently by deciding not to object; therefore
no IAC. Parks attacks the first of that line of falling logical dominoes, insisting that “the record
amply establishes a prima facie showing of racial discrimination,” Apt. Br. at 39 (and at 34 & 37),
based solely on the prosecutor’s removal of the four identified African-Americans and on the all-
Caucasian jury. The parties dispute whether the case law supports or rejects this theory, but we
can sidestep that dispute here by assuming that if defense counsel had raised it to the trial judge,
the judge would have asked the prosecutor for an explanation (i.e., would have found Batson’s
step one—the prima facie case—satisfied and proceeded to step two).
8
Case No. 18-2106, Parks v. Chapman
But we must start the analysis with Strickland rather than Batson, and the first question
therefore is whether defense counsel’s decision might have been reasonable under prevailing
professional norms.
Strickland, 466 U.S. at 688. Maybe it was a strategic decision because
defense counsel did not want those four on the jury anyway, or maybe their removal would make
room for other potential jurors whom defense counsel found more favorable. We do not know and
should not speculate. But that does not mean that we should ignore or discredit defense counsel’s
affirmative statement to the trial court that he was “satisfied with this jury”; that is, defense counsel
was expressly “satisfied” with an all-Caucasian jury, for whatever reason. Even if that was a bad
decision, “errors of tactics or omission do not necessarily mean that counsel has functioned in a
constitutionally deficient manner.” Greer v. Mitchell,
264 F.3d 663, 676 (6th Cir. 2001).
Moreover, even if we assume that, in this case, counsel’s performance (i.e., decision to
forgo the Batson challenge) was outside “the wide range of reasonable professional assistance,”
Parks must still demonstrate that there is a reasonable probability that, due to that decision, the
result of the trial would have been different.
Strickland, 466 U.S. at 689, 694. That is, Parks must
show that if the trial court had upheld the Batson challenge, or if the prosecutor had withdrawn the
peremptory strikes, and the four African-Americans had sat on Parks’s jury, the outcome of his
trial would have been different. See
id. And he cannot. The case against Parks was so strong and
his defense was so weak, that no unbiased juror would have voted acquit him.
Because Parks cannot prove IAC on de novo review, let alone AEDPA review, he cannot
overcome his procedural default of his Batson claim and we have no authority to consider the
Batson claim in this appeal.
9
Case No. 18-2106, Parks v. Chapman
B.
The next issue in this appeal is whether the district court erred by denying the fair-cross-
section claim because it was procedurally defaulted. Parks contends that he has overcome his
procedural default of the fair-cross-section claim because he had cause for not raising it, namely,
that he was not aware of it (no one was), and he can prove prejudice “because fair-cross section
violations always render trials fundamentally unfair.” But, as explained above, the prior panel
decision held that Parks had to prove “actual prejudice,” Parks, 555 F. App’x at 573, and the
district court found that he could not do so. Before that appeal, the district court found that even
though African-Americans had for several months been underrepresented in the jury pools of the
Kent County Court, there was no prejudice to Parks because the racial composition of his venire
(at least 9.52% African-American) exceeded the proportion of African-Americans in the
community (8.24%). Parks,
2011 WL 5838486, at *3. On remand, the district court found no
prejudice “because the trial record plainly depicts a case against [Parks] so strong, and a defense
so weak, that it is highly improbable that an unbiased jury could acquit him.” Parks,
278 F. Supp.
3d at 981.
Parks moved the district court to reconsider based on the Supreme Court’s then-recent
decision in Weaver,
137 S. Ct. 1899, which Parks argued had abrogated the rule laid down in
Ambrose, 684 F.3d at 650-51 (requiring proof of actual prejudice “regardless of the nature of the
underlying constitutional claim”), and instead—Parks contends—requires that the court presume
prejudice on collateral review of any claims implicating “structural error.” See Parks,
2018 WL
4478767, at *3. That is the argument he now presses in this appeal.
The Weaver Court, despite limiting its holding to its particulars (i.e., a claim of IAC for
failure to raise a structural error in “the context of trial counsel’s failure to object to the closure of
10
Case No. 18-2106, Parks v. Chapman
the courtroom during jury selection,”
Weaver, 137 S. Ct. at 1907), described generally three kinds
of structural error,
id. at 1908 (i.e., error as to a right that protects the defendant from some interest
other than erroneous conviction; error the effects of which are too hard to measure; error that
always results in fundamental unfairness). The Court nonetheless held that IAC on a public-trial
claim did not result in fundamental unfairness. Parks claims that a violation of the fair-cross-
section right always and necessarily renders a trial fundamentally unfair, so Weaver means that he
need not prove actual prejudice.
But that is not a reasonable reading of Weaver. Weaver stands for the idea that finality and
judicial economy can trump even structural error; so, when a defendant raises a structural error on
collateral review rather than on direct review, he must prove actual prejudice, even though he
would not have had to prove actual prejudice if he had raised it on direct review. That is because,
if the error is one that results in fundamental unfairness (e.g., denial of counsel, no reasonable-
doubt instruction, biased judge), actual prejudice should be easy to show and when a defendant
raises the error immediately to the trial court, the court can correct the mistake; or, when it is raised
on direct review, only minimal time will have passed, so witnesses and evidence are still available.
But when the error is raised on collateral review, it is a larger burden on the system and on the
concept of fairness.
Id. at 1912. All in all, Weaver does not support Parks’s contention that he
need not prove actual prejudice solely because a fair-cross-section violation is structural error.
Because Parks has not proved and cannot prove actual prejudice, he cannot overcome his
procedural default and the panel has no authority to decide his fair-cross-section claim.
C.
The final issue in this appeal is whether Parks is entitled to an evidentiary hearing in federal
court. Parks insists that an evidentiary hearing in federal court is warranted to force the prosecutor
11
Case No. 18-2106, Parks v. Chapman
to state specific reasons for the peremptory removals, which Parks could then attempt to construe
as sufficiently incriminating to prove the prima facie case of racial discrimination for his Batson
claim. The district court correctly rejected this as rank speculation.
Regardless, Parks defaulted his Batson claim. Even if he could provide actual evidence of
racial discrimination, because he defaulted his Batson claim, he could not obtain habeas relief on
it. Therefore, no hearing is warranted.
III.
For the foregoing reasons, we AFFIRM the judgment of the district court.
12
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BERNICE BOUIE DONALD, Circuit Judge, concurring in the judgment. I agree
with the majority that Curtis Parks is unable to show actual prejudice for either claim because of
the strength of the case against him and would affirm the judgment of the district court. I write
separately, however, to discuss the majority’s failure to address the constitutional guarantee to be
tried by an impartial jury and the court system’s inability to protect Parks. Parks was tried and
convicted by an all-white jury, Parks v. Warren,
278 F. Supp. 3d 975, 987 (E.D. Mich. 2017),
resulting from the prosecutor’s use of four of her seven peremptory challenges to remove every
African-American juror from Parks’ jury panel and the now well-documented Kent County
computer glitch.1 He raised both procedurally defaulted claims in his 28 U.S.C. § 2254 petition.
I.
To show that Parks’ trial counsel’s performance was deficient under Strickland for failure
to raise a challenge under Batson v. Kentucky,
476 U.S. 79 (1986), Parks must show that his
“counsel’s representation fell below an objective standard of reasonableness.”
Strickland,
466 U.S. at 688. We have previously acknowledged the possibility that the failure to raise a Batson
challenge constitutes deficient performance. See Mitchell v. Rees,
114 F.3d 571, 579 n.13 (6th
Cir. 1997) (stating that if the petitioner was able to demonstrate that his Batson claim had merit,
1
Many criminal defendants were affected by the glitch, which we have previously addressed in our prior
opinions:
On July 30, 2002, the Grand Rapids Press reported that a computer glitch had an impact on Kent
County’s system for selecting jury venires. The glitch was introduced accidentally by the county
when it assumed control of the jury selection computer program from a private vendor in April 2001.
The problem came to light in 2002, when a local high school teacher, Wayne Bentley, completed a
study of minority representation on Kent County juries. Bentley found that the underrepresentation
of minorities was statistically significant, and shared his findings with county officials. The county
subsequently conducted an internal study that revealed that “nearly 75 percent of the county’s
454,000 eligible residents were excluded from potential jury pools since spring 2001” and that
“[m]any blacks were excluded from . . . jury pools due to a computer glitch that selected a majority
of potential candidates from the suburbs.” The chief judge of the Kent County Circuit Court, George
Buth, stated, “There has been a mistake—a big mistake.”
Ambrose v. Booker,
684 F.3d 638, 640-41 (6th Cir. 2012) (alteration and ellipsis in original).
13
Case No. 18-2106, Parks v. Chapman
“he might also be able to prevail on [his] related ineffective assistance claim”) (abrogated on other
grounds by Abdur’Rahman v. Bell,
226 F.3d 696, 705 (6th Cir. 2000)). The majority, however,
contends that counsel’s failure to raise a Batson challenge may be considered a “strategic decision”
because defense counsel expressed that he was “satisfied” with the jury when he neglected to
exercise his remaining peremptory challenges. Op. at 9. This defies logic! The majority would
see to it that the courthouse is effectively closed to any ineffective assistance of counsel claim
based on counsel’s failure to raise a Batson challenge because counsel’s failure could always be
described as “strategic.” Counsel that declines to raise a Batson challenge, or some other issue
regarding the sufficiency of the jury, is necessarily “satisfied” with the jury in order for the jury to
be empaneled and the trial to move forward. Not only that, this rationale can be easily applied to
any ineffective assistance of counsel claim; as long as counsel was “satisfied” with their
performance, any decisions must have been “strategic” and therefore fall short of constitutional
deficiency under Strickland.
Moreover, even in the extremely rare situation wherein counsel’s active decision not to
raise a Batson challenge could be considered strategic, counsel must still be guided by ensuring “a
fair trial, a trial whose result is reliable.”
Strickland, 466 U.S. at 687. “[T]he purpose of the
effective assistance guarantee of the Sixth Amendment is not to improve the quality of the legal
representation . . . . The purpose is simply to ensure that criminal defendants receive a
constitutionally fair trial.”
Id. at 689. Therefore, because even a strategic decision to forgo
challenging the discriminatory use of a peremptory challenge nevertheless fails to provide the
defendant with a fair trial, I would hold that the failure to raise a meritorious Batson challenge is
outside the range of reasonable trial strategy.
14
Case No. 18-2106, Parks v. Chapman
It is counsel’s duty to ensure that his client faces a jury constructed in a nondiscriminatory
manner. “Those on the venire must be ‘indifferently chosen,’ to secure the defendant’s right under
the Fourteenth Amendment to ‘protection of life and liberty against race or color prejudice.’”
Batson, 476 U.S. at 86-87 (quoting Strauder v. West Virginia,
100 U.S. 303, 309 (1879)).
By neglecting to raise a meritorious Batson challenge, counsel denies the defendant the protection
to ensure this right. Not only that, the use of Batson challenges also “enforces the mandate of
equal protection and furthers the ends of justice.”
Id. at 99. The duty to uphold this fundamental
principle is as much the responsibility of a nondiscriminatory prosecution as it is a vigilant defense.
A.
Therefore, the first step in deciding Parks’ ineffective assistance of counsel claim is to
determine if a Batson challenge to the prosecutor’s use of peremptory strikes had merit. The Equal
Protection Clause guarantees “the right to be tried by a jury whose members are selected pursuant
to nondiscriminatory criteria.”
Id. at 85-86. This right is violated by the purposeful, racially-
discriminatory use of peremptory challenges to remove certain persons from the jury panel.
Id. at
86. In order to challenge a party’s use of peremptories, the opposing party must follow the three-
step process outlined in Batson. First, the opponent must make out a prima facie case of racial
discrimination. Purkett v. Elem,
514 U.S. 765, 767 (1995). Next, the proponent must offer a race-
neutral explanation for the use of each peremptory strike in question.
Id. Finally, the trial court
must decide whether there has been purposeful discrimination based on whether it finds the
proponent’s race-neutral explanations credible.
Id. at 767-68.
Because Parks’ trial counsel did not raise a Batson challenge, there is no record of the
prosecutor’s explanations for the removal of the four African-American jurors. Nevertheless, to
show deficient performance, Parks need only show that he can satisfy step one of Batson—that he
15
Case No. 18-2106, Parks v. Chapman
can establish a prima facie case of racial discrimination—because that is the only aspect of Batson
impacted by the performance of trial counsel. Step two is entirely the province of the prosecutor,
and step three is a credibility determination of the prosecutor’s reasoning by the court.
“To establish a prima facie case, the defendant must show that (1) he is a member of a
cognizable racial group; (2) the prosecution has removed a member of his race; and
(3) circumstances raise an inference that the removal was motivated by race.” United States v.
Lawrence,
735 F.3d 385, 443 (6th Cir. 2013). Parks is African-American, and there is no dispute
that the prosecutor used four peremptory strikes on African-American jurors. Therefore, the only
question remaining is whether Parks has overcome his burden in establishing that the
circumstances here raise an inference that the jurors’ removal was motivated by race.
1.
In reviewing the voir dire transcript, we can discern the following information regarding
the makeup of Parks’ jury. The prosecutor exercised seven peremptory challenges in the following
order: Gregory Scrivens, Thomas Zandbergen, Roger Elliot, Ahmed Shabazz, Kelli Adame, Aria
Moody, and Melanie Gipson2. Parks’ counsel exercised six peremptory challenges: Susan
Bowers, Philip Hack, Deborah Enos, Keith Williams, Richard Brancato, and Charles Rossman.
Although it is unclear how many peremptory challenges were allowed to each side here, Michigan
law generally allows twelve. Mich. Ct. R. 6.412(E).
During Parks’ state court appeal, he obtained affidavits from three of the stricken jurors
and an individual who observed the trial and was able to assess the composition of the selected
jury.3 Ahmed Shabazz, Aria Moody, and Melanie Gipson all stated that they are African-American
2
Gipson is misspelled as “Gibson” in the transcript.
3
The government does not dispute any of the statements within the affidavits.
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and were removed from the jury panel. Additionally, Melanie Gipson indicated that Gregory
Scrivens, struck among the first group of peremptories used by the prosecutor, is her cousin and is
also African-American. Finally, Reverend Steven Vanhuizen stated that he observed the trial and
that Parks had been tried before an all-white jury.
Parks argues that the prosecutor’s use of peremptory challenges to remove all of the
African-American jurors from the jury panel mirrors Batson’s reference to a “pattern” of strikes
against African-American jurors which “might give rise to an inference of
discrimination.” 476
U.S. at 97. Specifically, Parks points to this Court’s language in United States v. Sangineto-
Miranda,
859 F.2d 1501 (6th Cir. 1988), to show why the prosecutor’s use of peremptories here
creates clear inferences of discrimination:
If, after the jury selection process has ended, the final jury sworn has a percentage
of minority members that is significantly less than the percentage in the group
originally drawn for the jury (or in the whole jury pool or in the district), then that
would be a factor pointing toward an inference of discrimination. If, on the other
hand, the percentage of minority members in the ultimate jury is the same or
greater, that would be a factor tending to negate the inference of discrimination.
If there are minority members on the jury but the prosecutor did not use all its
peremptory challenges, that would be a factor tending to refute discrimination.
However, if all the prosecutor's challenges were used, that fact would point toward
an inference of discrimination.
Id. at 1521-22. The percentage of African-Americans in the jury pool was at least 9.5% (4/42),
which, despite the computer glitch, was higher than the 8.24% in the community. But, after the
prosecutor’s removal of all the African-American jurors, Parks was left with 0% African-
Americans—an all-white jury. And unlike in Sangineto-Miranda, where the final jury consisted
of some minority members despite the prosecutor’s ability to remove them with unused
peremptory challenges,
id., in Parks’ case the prosecutor continued to use her peremptory
challenges until every African-American juror was removed.
17
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2.
The government contends that, regardless of these inferences, the prosecutor’s non-
discriminatory reasoning for removing each African-American juror is evident from the voir dire
transcript. While Parks is correct to point out that it is impossible to know the prosecutor’s intent
without reaching step two, Batson is clear that courts “should consider all relevant circumstances”
in determining whether the opponent has met his prima facie
burden. 476 U.S. at 96. In addition
to the pattern of strikes previously discussed, these circumstances include whether “the
prosecutor’s questions and statements during voir dire examination and in exercising [her]
challenges may support or refute an inference of discriminatory purpose.”
Id. at 97.
The prosecutor asked a number of questions of the prospective jurors, including some
already raised by the court: (1) If anyone in their home was employed outside the home? (2) If
anyone had an occasion to assess a dispute in which one person was telling the truth and the other
was lying? (3) How many had friends or relatives who had been victims of criminal sexual
conduct? (4) If anyone was ever accused of a crime? (5) If anyone knew someone who had been
charged with a crime or falsely accused of anything? (6) Whether anyone required 100% certainty
to convict someone of a crime? (7) If anyone believed that a victim must resist to be guilty of
rape? (8) Whether anyone may be hindered in their deliberations because of their discomfort with
the topic or any other reason why they could not be fair or impartial?
i. Gregory Scrivens
Gregory Scrivens was the first African-American juror removed from the jury panel. He
was removed during the prosecutor’s first use of peremptory challenges, along with two other
jurors. The only information Scrivens provided to the court was that he was a mechanical engineer
and worked for Rapistan Systems.
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The government contends that Scrivens’ employment as an engineer refutes an inference
of a discriminatory purpose for his removal and cites several cases discussing the frequent removal
of engineers from the venire because of their mathematically-framed thought processes. The fact
that another juror with the same profession4 was not removed by the prosecutor, however, supports
a finding of discriminatory intent. Like Scrivens, Keith Williams5 was a member of the original
jury panel and informed the court that he was an electrical engineer. The prosecutor had two
opportunities to remove Williams and chose not to do so before he was eventually struck by Parks’
counsel. The voir dire transcript offers no material distinction between the prosecutor’s decision
to remove Scrivens and her decision not to remove Williams. This finding supports a showing of
discriminatory intent as to Scrivens’ removal.
ii. Ahmed Shabazz
Ahmed Shabazz was the second African-American juror removed by the prosecutor.
Shabazz was added to the venire after the prosecutor’s first use of peremptory challenges. Shabazz
indicated to the court that he is a case manager for Exodus Ministries Network and had worked
with several people who have been convicted of crimes involving criminal sexual conduct but
never any victims of such crimes. When the prosecutor was given a chance to question Shabazz,
she asked him whether he would be uncomfortable using himself as a juror if he were the
prosecutor. Shabazz responded that he did not think so, and the prosecutor ceased her questioning.
Shabazz was then removed by the prosecutor during her next available peremptory
challenge. The fact that someone has spent a significant amount of time around defendants, but
not victims, presents a plausible nondiscriminatory reason to remove that person from the jury.
4
Actually, two jurors in addition to Scrivens stated their professions as engineers, but one of them (Daniel
Wildey) was removed for cause before either side had a chance to execute a peremptory challenge.
5
There is no evidence indicating Williams’ race.
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Therefore, Shabazz’s statements do not raise an inference of discriminatory intent as to his
removal.
iii. Aria Moody
Aria Moody was the third African-American juror removed. Prior to Moody’s arrival to
the venire, the prosecutor indicated that she was satisfied with the construction of the then all-
white jury panel. But Parks’ counsel executed one of his peremptory challenges, which brought
Moody onto the jury panel. Upon being selected, Moody indicated to the court that she lives near
where the encounter occurred and may have heard about it when it first happened. The only
question that the prosecutor asked of Moody was whether she could convict on less than 100%
evidence. Upon Moody’s indicating that she could, the prosecutor executed a peremptory
challenge to remove Moody from the jury.
Given that Moody’s answer to the prosecutor’s question seems to show that she was the
type of juror that a prosecutor would want on a jury, it is curious that only after this question did
she remove Moody. Furthermore, although the circumstances of their potential knowledge were
different, the prosecutor chose not to remove another juror, Deborah Enos.6 Enos was added to
the jury after another juror was removed for cause, prior to the prosecutor’s second set of
peremptory challenges. Enos indicated that she may have seen Parks on television or elsewhere
because she recognized his name and his face. Although Enos never served on Parks’ jury because
she was later removed by Parks’ counsel, the prosecutor had the first opportunity to remove her
and declined to do so. Moody’s potential knowledge of the case would normally refute an
inference that she was removed for a discriminatory purpose, but the prosecutor’s failure to remove
6
There is no evidence indicating that Enos, previously in the jury pool with Moody, is African-American.
20
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Enos, who indicated similarly limited knowledge of the case, negates that premise and supports a
finding of discriminatory intent.
iv. Melanie Gipson
Melanie Gipson was the final African-American juror removed. Gipson was added to the
jury panel after the removal of Moody. When Gipson was questioned by the court, she explained
that she had a cousin who had been the victim of criminal sexual conduct. Following the court’s
inquiries, the prosecutor asked Gipson whether she believed a victim should have to resist and
Gipson said that she did. After the prosecutor explained that Gipson’s belief was contrary to the
law, Gipson agreed that she could follow the law, but also stated that she would need 100%
certainty to convict someone. Gipson was then removed from the jury by the prosecutor.
Following Gipson’s removal and the addition of a white juror, the prosecutor stated that she was
once again satisfied with the all-white jury.
Here the prosecutor was consistent in that she had previously removed Thomas Zandbergen
after he had indicated that he believed a victim must resist. This circumstance, when combined
with the knowledge that Gipson would require 100% certainty to convict, does not raise an
inference of discriminatory intent.
3.
Considering all relevant circumstances surrounding the prosecutor’s use of peremptories
to remove every African-American from the jury panel—one-by-one—until Parks was left with
an all-white jury, Parks has met his burden in establishing a prima facie case that the prosecutor’s
21
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use of peremptory challenges was discriminatory. I find no reasonable argument that Parks’
counsel’s performance was not deficient under Strickland.7
First, the sheer numbers involved make out a strong prima facie case of discrimination.
Although we cannot be certain about the number of African-American jurors drawn from the
venire on the initial jury panel, the various affidavits show that there were at one point or another
a total of four on the panel.8 As in Batson, each African-American juror was removed until Parks
faced an all-white
jury. 476 U.S. at 83 (“The prosecutor used his peremptory challenges to strike
all four black persons on the venire, and a jury composed only of white persons was selected.”).
This suggests a pattern to eliminate African-Americans from the jury panel.
Second, what can be gathered from the voir dire transcript does little to refute the inference
that the prosecutor’s strikes were used in a racially discriminatory manor. While the circumstances
surrounding the removal of Shabazz and Gipson, when analyzed in a vacuum, do not suggest
discrimination, the record does nothing to refute inferences that the removal of Scrivens and
Moody were the product of purposeful discrimination. The fact that the prosecutor exercised
peremptory challenges to remove Scrivens and Moody from the jury panel but not two similarly
situated jurors is enough to raise an inference of discrimination.
It is well established that a Batson violation may be shown by disparate treatment
of white and minority jurors—that is, if a side-by-side comparison[] of some black
[potential jurors] who were struck and white ones who were not shows that the only
material distinction between the removed black and the retained white individuals
is their race. In conducting a comparative juror analysis, the compared jurors need
not be similarly situated in all respects. In fact, the empaneled white jurors need
7
Like the majority, I take no position on whether AEDPA deference applies to Parks’ Batson claim. I find
that Parks’ counsel’s performance was deficient even under the more demanding standard of Strickland through the
lens of AEDPA. See Harrington v. Richter,
562 U.S. 86, 105 (2011).
8
Moody stated in her undisputed affidavit that she “was one of three African-Americans in the jury pool”
because she had seen only two other African-Americans in the pool. The original jury panel also included at least one
African-American, Scrivens, who was removed from the panel before Moody moved from the pool to the panel.
22
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not even match the stricken black venirepersons in all of the characteristics the
prosecution identified in striking the black venirepersons.
United States v. Atkins,
843 F.3d 625, 631 (6th Cir. 2016) (internal citations and quotation marks
omitted, alterations in original). While there is an argument that Moody and Enos’ potential
proximity to some aspects of the case are distinct, there is no discernible difference between
Scrivens and Williams. The only relevant information revealed by both is that they were employed
as engineers. Scrivens, an African-American, was removed during the prosecutor’s first
opportunity to execute a peremptory challenge and Williams was not removed during either of the
prosecutor’s first two chances to exercise peremptories. “The Constitution forbids striking even a
single prospective juror for a discriminatory purpose.” Snyder v. Louisiana,
552 U.S. 472, 478
(2008) (quoting United States v. Vasquez-Lopez,
22 F.3d 900, 902 (9th Cir. 1994)).
Finally, although the disparate treatment of even one pair of similarly situated jurors is
enough to satisfy the first step of Batson, the timing of the prosecutor’s use of challenges leaves
no doubt. Each time an African-American juror was added to the jury panel, the prosecutor
exercised a peremptory challenge to remove that juror. Scrivens was presumably the only African-
American on the initial panel. He was removed in the prosecutor’s first set of peremptory
challenges. Before the prosecutor was able to execute any more challenges, Shabazz was added
to the jury panel. Shabazz was removed with the prosecutor’s second set of challenges. When the
prosecutor was again given an opportunity to use her remaining peremptory challenges, faced with
a presumably all-white jury,9 she stated that she was satisfied with the jury. Then, following Parks’
counsel’s removal of a different juror, Moody was added. The prosecutor removed Moody at her
next opportunity and then repeated the same action after Gipson took Moody’s place. A white
9
The only potential juror whose race was unknown from the panel at that time was Brancato. There is no
evidence indicating that Brancato, previously in the jury pool with Moody, is African-American.
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juror was added in Gipson’s place, and the prosecutor was once again content with an all-white
jury.
B.
To be entitled to relief,10 however, Parks must show actual prejudice because his real claim
lies under Strickland. Despite the majority’s one-sided portrait of the underlying facts of the
case,11 I agree that Parks fails to show actual prejudice. Although there were only two witnesses
to the encounter, and both stuck to their versions of the facts, Jefferson’s account is far more
10
Parks maintains that he is entitled to an evidentiary hearing to establish a Batson violation. The government
contends that an evidentiary hearing cannot be held due to the amount of time that has passed since the trial (over
eighteen years) and the Supreme Court’s decision in Cullen v. Pinholster,
563 U.S. 170, 185 (2011) (barring
evidentiary hearings in federal court where a state court has already ruled on the merits). Passage of time arguments
aside, I agree with the majority that we need not decide whether an evidentiary hearing is precluded, not because a
hearing could only seek “rank speculation,” Op. at 12, but because Parks has already succeeded in showing what an
evidentiary hearing would set out to find—that his trial counsel’s performance was deficient.
11
A broader rendition of the facts is necessary to assess the prejudice prong. Most of the trial focused on
the conflicting testimonies of Parks and the victim, Beverly Jefferson. Jefferson testified that, in the early morning of
April 22, 2001, she awoke to an unknown man (Parks) knocking on her door. Upon answering the door, Parks asked
to use Jefferson’s phone, and Jefferson showed him inside her apartment. After using the phone, Jefferson testified
that Parks hit her in the mouth several times and told her to remove her clothes or else he would strike her again. Parks
then forcibly engaged in non-consensual vaginal intercourse with Jefferson until she managed to secure a knife from
the kitchen. Following a brief struggle, Jefferson handed the knife to Parks because Parks threatened to destroy her
possessions. Parks then penetrated Jefferson (anally and orally), but he eventually fell asleep on Jefferson’s bed as
she performed oral sex on him, during which time Jefferson called 911 and indicated that she had been raped. Parks
awoke before the police arrived and continued to rape Jefferson until Jefferson heard the police at her door and
screamed for them to enter. After hearing her pleas for help, the police kicked in the door and arrested Parks just prior
to 9:00 A.M.
Parks testified to a very different set of events. According to Parks, he was on his way home after staying up
with his friends all night and purchasing marijuana, which he smoked while he walked home. As he was walking,
Parks heard Jefferson call out to him from the door of her apartment building. Jefferson asked Parks if he had any
“dope.” Parks informed her that he did not, and Jefferson proceeded to offer him sex in exchange for $20. Although
Parks explained that he only had $10 and began to leave, Jefferson relented and agreed to the lower amount. At that
point, the two walked up to Jefferson’s apartment and began talking. Jefferson excused herself to get ready and
proceeded to smoke something that Parks could only describe as not a cigarette. While Jefferson was getting ready,
Parks started to call his cousin from her phone but decided against it.
According to Parks, once Jefferson was ready, she motioned him to the bed, and they engaged in intercourse.
Parks eventually dozed off while Jefferson was performing oral sex on him and later awoke to see Jefferson sitting at
her window. Parks confronted Jefferson, and she accused him of lying about how much money he had. Parks then
agreed to pay Jefferson $20 if she would “let [him] finish,” and the two once again engaged in consensual intercourse
until the police arrived.
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credible because, unlike Parks’, her version corroborates their interactions with the police and the
physical evidence.
First, it is certain that, on the morning of April 22, 2001, Jefferson called 911 and reported
that she had been raped by Parks. Parks posits that perhaps Jefferson called 911 because she was
displeased with the fact that Parks had fallen asleep while she performed oral sex or that she
believed Parks was not going to pay her as he had promised. To be sure, Parks does not claim to
know the reason that Jefferson called the police claiming that she had been raped, but his potential
explanations seem much less plausible than the more straightforward motive of a victim of an
ongoing sexual assault calling 911 to report it.
Second, when officers arrived, Jefferson had a large gash on the inside of her lip which
required between seven and fourteen stitches. The laceration was treated by an emergency
physician who stated that the wound appeared to be less than twelve hours old. Parks claims that
he never struck Jefferson and that he was unaware of the laceration inside her mouth. Again,
Parks’ description seems less plausible. It is unlikely that someone would consensually engage in
intercourse with such a significant wound or that Parks would never have noticed the blood which
Jefferson testified dripped onto her clothes and furniture.
Third, Jefferson was examined by a sexual assault nurse examiner the same morning who
discovered two abrasions and one laceration on the outer portion of her vagina and a hemorrhoidal
tag and a laceration on the outer portion of her anus. The nurse found the injuries to be “very
consistent” with forced sex but was unable to rule out the possibility that the injuries were caused
by rough sex. Like the comparison between their conflicting accounts regarding the wound to
Jefferson’s mouth, it is unlikely that someone with such significant injuries would want to continue
to engage in the same conduct that caused or would exacerbate those injuries.
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Additionally, while Parks’ character witnesses (a former employee in charge of
neighborhood outreach at Parks’ church and his sister) painted a picture of someone not capable
of committing the acts alleged by the State, this testimony cannot overcome the physical evidence
against Parks. In sum, the case against Parks is strong enough, such that he cannot show actual
prejudice to “undermine confidence in the outcome of the trial.”
Strickland, 466 U.S. at 694.
Therefore, Parks is not entitled to habeas relief pursuant to his Batson/Strickland claim.
II.
As for Parks’ fair cross-section claim, there is no dispute that Parks’ claim that his jury
pool was not drawn from a fair cross-section of his community was meritorious. Like other
defendants who were subject to the Kent County computer glitch, Parks’ claim is not that his
particular venire was unfair, but that the pool from which the jury was drawn was unfair. See
Ambrose, 684 F.3d at 645. “The Sixth Amendment secures to criminal defendants the right to be
tried by an impartial jury drawn from sources reflecting a fair cross section of the community.”
Berghuis v. Smith,
559 U.S. 314, 319 (2010) (emphasis added). By going to trial, Parks put his
trust in the fairness of the procedures of the 17th Judicial Circuit Court (Kent County, Michigan).
The Kent County Court’s systematic exclusion of minority jurors abused Parks’ trust and failed to
safeguard that which every criminal defendant is guaranteed by the Sixth Amendment: a jury
drawn from a source representing a fair cross-section of the community. U.S. Const. Amend VI;
Taylor v. Louisiana,
419 U.S. 522, 530 (1975) (“We accept the fair-cross-section requirement as
fundamental to the jury trial guaranteed by the Sixth Amendment.”); Brown v. Allen,
344 U.S. 443,
474 (1953) (“Our duty to protect the federal constitutional rights of all [requires that] the source
[of jurors] reasonably reflects a cross-section of the population suitable in character and
intelligence for that civic duty.”).
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Moreover, it is clear that Parks’ procedural default should be excused because the Kent
County computer glitch, which caused the systematic underrepresentation of African-Americans
in jury pools from 2001 to 2002,12 was not discovered until after his conviction. I agree with the
majority, however, that Weaver v. Massachusetts,
137 S. Ct. 1899 (2017), does not relieve Parks’
burden of showing prejudice,13 and that he remains bound by our holding in Ambrose, applying
the actual prejudice
standard. 684 F.3d at 640. Therefore, like his Batson/Strickland claim,
because Parks has not shown actual prejudice, he is not entitled to relief.
12
Research from the Kent County Jury Management System Report indicates that the absolute disparity (the
difference between the percentage of jury-eligible African-Americans in the County and in the jury pool) was 3.45%
(African-Americans made up approximately 8.24% of the County compared to their actual jury pool representation of
4.79%) and the comparative disparity (the absolute disparity relative to the percentage of jury-eligible African-
Americans in the County) was 42% (3.45% divided by 8.24%).
Ambrose, 684 F.3d at 642-43.
13
Parks points out that the Supreme Court was clear that their holding applies “only in the context of trial
counsel’s failure to object to the closure of the courtroom during jury selection[,]”
Weaver, 137 S. Ct. at 1907, and
that the Court left open the possibility that there may be situations in which a more egregious error requires automatic
reversal, or, at least, a minimal showing of actual prejudice despite being procedurally defaulted.
Id. at 1913. Parks
argues that his claim differs from Weaver’s in two material aspects and, therefore, falls into the category of claims
which require automatic reversal. First, Parks’ claim is procedurally defaulted, not due to trial counsel’s error, but
because the error was not revealed until the publication of the Grand Rapids Press report long after the trial. Second,
the error here is more egregious. Parks’ claim is based on the violation of his right to a jury pool drawn from a fair
cross-section of the community—an error involving a greater level of fundamental unfairness than in Weaver.
I agree with Parks that the circumstances surrounding the procedural default and error in Weaver do not
implicate the same level of fundamental unfairness he faces here. “The purpose of a jury is to guard against the
exercise of arbitrary power—to make available the commonsense judgment of the community as a hedge against the
overzealous or mistaken prosecutor and in preference to the professional or perhaps overconditioned or biased
response of a judge.” Taylor, 419 U.S. at530 (citing Duncan v. Louisiana,
391 U.S. 145, 155-56 (1968)). A jury
drawn from only certain segments of the community fails to provide the impartiality necessary to sustain a judicial
system based on trial by jury. It is every trial court’s constitutional duty to ensure this impartiality.
Unfortunately for Parks, the Supreme Court was clear that Weaver’s scope is limited: “[T]his opinion does
not address whether [a particular structural error causing fundamental unfairness] should be [assessed] different[ly] if
the errors were raised . . . in an ineffective-assistance claim on collateral review.”
Weaver, 137 S. Ct. at 1912. Despite
Parks’ arguments to the contrary, Weaver declined to address the proper standard when faced with a claim such as his
or the petitioners’ in Ambrose. We are therefore bound by precedent to conclude that Parks must show actual
prejudice. There may be substantial merit to the application of Weaver’s fundamental error analysis to Parks’ fair
cross-section claim, but a panel of this court cannot overrule Ambrose. This requires an inconsistent decision of the
Supreme Court—which Weaver is not—or a decision of the en banc court. See Brumbach v. United States,
929 F.3d
791, 795 (6th Cir. 2019); Salmi v. Sec’y of Health & Human Servs.,
774 F.2d 685, 689 (6th Cir. 1985).
27