11月6日, 2023, we filed two amicus briefs together with the MacArther Justice Center 和 Fred T. Korematsu Center for Law 和 Equality, in two jury selection cases before the Colorado Supreme Court,人们. 约翰逊人v. 奥斯丁.  These cases are part of our Systemic Equality 和 Smart Justice projects.  Our amicus briefs argue that prosecutors cannot exclude people of color from juries based on their experiences of racial injustice with police. Mislabeling these experiences as race-neutral reasons for removal leads to unchecked racial discrimination in jury selection, damaging the integrity of the legal system.

In jury trials in Colorado, each side can remove a certain number of potential jurors from the panel without the need for any reason or explanation, so long as the reason 不是 unconstitutional. These removals are referred to as “preemptory strikes.” In 巴特森v. 肯塔基州,美国.S. Supreme Court held that intentional racial discrimination in jury selection is unconstitutional, 和 prosecutors may not use their preemptory strikes to strike potential jurors because of their race. But in two cases in the Colorado Supreme Court, the government argued that prosecutors weren’t striking jurors “because of their race” when they used preemptory strikes on jurors who talked about their experience with police officers’ racial bias. 

In 人v. 约翰逊, a prosecutor used a preemptory strike on the only Black juror on the panel, citing the juror’s questionnaire, where she had written that she had bad experiences with police, who were disrespectful “based on certain racial identities.”

In 人v. 奥斯丁, a non-white juror indicated that she had been racially profiled by police 和 that she had been part of a group seeking to change a racially biased Denver Police Department ticketing practice. The prosecutor sought to use a preemptory strike on her because of her involvement in the reforms of the Denver Police Department.

这两种情况, the trial court found that the reasons articulated by the prosecution for the strikes were race neutral. The Court of Appeals reversed the trial court in each case, finding 巴特森 违反.

In 约翰逊, the Court of Appeals concluded that “a Black juror’s personal experience with law enforcement that is race based, 不是, 从表面上看, a racial-neutral explanation.” Therefore, it was unconstitutional to strike the juror because the strike was based on race. The Court of Appeals also concluded that the race-based reason the prosecutor articulated tainted the other reason provided, 因此 巴特森 challenge should have been sustained. In 奥斯丁, the Court of Appeals echoed its decision in 约翰逊, concluding the prosecutor’s strike based on the juror’s personal experience 和 involvement in racial justice activism was not race-neutral reasons, 和 巴特森 challenge should have been sustained.

The government seeks rulings that would allow them to strike jurors of color based on nothing more than their personal experiences with racially-biased policing.   

Our brief argues that jurors of color’s personal racialized experiences with police 和ir participation in racial justice efforts are not grounds to exclude them from juries.  To hold otherwise is to invite racial discrimination into the jury selection process. Our brief discusses pervasive police discrimination against people of color in Colorado, the deep connections between lived experience 和 racial justice activism, 和 harm racial discrimination in jury selection does to the legal system. We are urging the court to exercise its authority under the Colorado Constitution to prevent prosecutors from striking jurors of color because of their lived experience of racial injustice, 和 to hold that any racial discrimination in the exercise of a preemptory strike renders it unconstitutional.

律师

Timothy Macdonald, Sara Neel, Emma Mclean-Riggs

公益律师事务所

马克T. 克劳特尔,布莱克·A. Gansborg, 和 Cristina Lehm, of Nelson Mullins Riley & 斯卡伯勒律师事务所.