v.
Deborah Tremblay, and David Tremblay.
Distilled to its essence, the defendants contend that the indicting grand jury and any petit jury empanelled under the current jury selection methods reflect unconstitutional under representations of and purposeful discrimination "against minorities, Blacks, Hispanics, and residents of Providence, Central Falls and Pawtucket." Defendants' Memorandum at 30.2
The Court disagrees.
* * * * *
On May 23, 1997, the grand jury returned its indictment in this case. The defendants, who were without means to retain private attorneys, were thereafter provided with able court-appointed counsel who were accorded ample funds by the Court in order to engage a qualified expert to assist them. Some years elapsed before the defendants and the State finally filed all of their memoranda and their experts' reports. The defendants filed their most recent memorandum on February 20, 2003.
The Court recognizes that much of the delay is attributable to the protracted discovery process related to retrieving and reviewing petit and grand jury records and the preparation of the reports of their respective experts. The parties agreeably consented to providing each other with generous enlargements of time to complete their efforts. Mindful of the implication and the import of the issues underlying this motion, and cognizant that the defendants have been admitted to bail and are not incarcerated, the Court therefore granted the parties' requests not to set unduly restrictive time tables or deadlines.
Nonetheless, on several occasions the Court was constrained to express its concern to the parties over the inordinately long period that it was taking them to prepare their pleadings such that this motion was ripe for consideration and disposition by the Court. On January 13, 2003, this Court again met with counsel and renewed those sentiments.
At that January 13 conference, defense counsel expressed a desire for an evidentiary hearing on the instant motion. On January 17, 2003, the Court entered an Order noting that such an evidentiary hearing would not be had unless the Court was first satisfied, from all of the pleadings, that the defendants had established a requisite prima facie case in support of their claims pursuant to Duren v. Missouri,
The parties have now submitted their full complement of pleadings. The defendants' filings comprise two memoranda of law (hereafter "Defendants' Memorandum" and "Defendants' Reply Memorandum") and two Affirmations, with multiple statistical exhibits thereto, in the form of reports by their expert, Dr. Andrew A. Beveridge (hereafter "Beveridge I and/or II"). The State's materials include a responsive legal memorandum, together with an Affidavit by its expert, Dr. Stephan Michelson, in the form of a report that also includes several statistical exhibits (hereafter "Michelson").3
Pursuant to this Court's January 17, 2003 directive, the parties have also jointly filed a "Statement of Agreed Facts" (Exhibit A hereto) that sets forth, inter alia, the manner and means by which individuals are presently summoned for grand and petit jury service. Also attached (Exhibit B hereto) is a copy of the petit Juror Qualification Questionnaire (the grand juror questionnaire is identical to that of the petit juror questionnaire, save for its yellow color and its designation as "grand" jury). Reference will be made to Exhibits A and B as may be necessary or relevant to this Decision.
Because a jury must "be a body truly representative of the community . . . and not the organ of any special group or class," the United States Supreme Court has held that "the selection of a petit jury from a representative cross section of the community is an essential component of the Sixth Amendment right to a jury trial." Taylor, 419 U.S. at 527, 528.4
Although this mandate does not require that "juries actually chosen must mirror the community and reflect the various distinctive groups in the population" or that a defendant receive a jury composition of his choice, "the jury wheels, pools of names, panels, or venires from which juries are drawn must not systematically exclude distinctive groups in the community and thereby fail to be reasonably representative thereof."Id. at 538.
In order to establish a prima facie case for a violation of the Sixth Amendment's fair cross-section requirement, a defendant must demonstrate:
"(1) that the group alleged to be excluded is a `distinctive' group in the community; (2) that the representation of this group in venires from which juries are selected is not fair and reasonable in relation to the number of such persons in the community; and (3) that this underrepresentation is due to systematic exclusion of the group in the jury-selection process." Duren, 439 U.S. at 364.
Failure of a defendant to substantiate any one of the three elements of the Duren test forecloses a Sixth Amendment challenge. United States v.Allen,
After juxtaposing the defendants' Sixth Amendment claims to Duren's three-part test, this Court holds herein:
1. The defendants can show, in part, a prima facie case as to Duren's first prong, i.e., Blacks and Hispanics are cognizable groups.
2. The defendants' offerings under Duren's second requirement (fair cross section of the community) fail to demonstrate impermissible disparities of Blacks and Hispanics in Pawtucket or Central Falls, and their statistical claim of underrepresentation in the City of Providence does not exceed constitutional limits.
3. The defendants' assertions as to Duren's third requisite element are wholly without merit and devoid of any showing of systematic exclusion.
Accordingly, the defendants cannot succeed in their Sixth Amendment challenge. Consideration of each of the three Duren elements is set forth below.
Courts have, however, consistently held that community residents or groups classified by geographical location alone do not constitute cognizable classes under the fair cross-section analysis. United Statesv. Foxworth,
Although the defendants correctly assert that Blacks and Hispanics are recognized as distinctive groups, neither the residents of nor the geographical units of Providence, Central Falls or Pawtucket are cognizable or distinct groups for the purposes of the defendants' Sixth Amendment challenge, or for that matter, their equal protection claim. Part II, infra. Moreover, as held in Part I (3)(A) and Part II herein, the defendants cannot in any way, either directly or by implication, classify "renters" as a distinct or cognizable group who garner constitutional protection in these jury selection challenges.
In determining what constitutes a "fair and reasonable" cross section under Duren, courts have examined statistical evidence that may, or may not, demonstrate disparities between the percentage of members of a cognizable group in the relevant community and the actual percentage of those members selected for the jury venire. Duren, 439 U.S. at 364;United States v. Weaver,
Courts have used a variety of statistical tests to determine the extent of the claimed underrepresentation and look, in part, to the strength of these statistics to assess whether a defendant has met his burden of showing an unfair and unreasonable representation of the group in the venires. Court-tested methods have typically consisted of four types of statistical analysis: (1) absolute disparity; (2) substantial impact; (3) comparative disparity; and, (4) statistical decision (which the defendants' refer to as statistical significance). See generally,Commonwealth v. Arriaga,
The defendants apparently would prefer that the Court focus more on the latter three matrices than on the more judicially accepted absolute disparity model, application of which is much less supportive of their claim. They additionally entreat the Court to place particular emphasis on another statistical yardstick denominated "disparity of risk."
They claim at page 17 of their Memorandum that this is a "new" and more reliable test. Suffice to say that it is neither new (it was noted almost a decade ago), nor has it been anointed as a reliable methodology in any published judicial decision.7 Indeed, in January of this year, the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts rejected its purported utility, noting, "We are not aware of any jurisdiction that has adopted this test for determining whether a defendant's constitutional rights are violated by statistical underrepresentation in the jury pool, and we decline to adopt it now." Arriaga, 438 Mass. at 567, 781 N.E.2d at 1265. This Court similarly declines the defendants' invitation to do so in this case.
As noted in the margin, the absolute disparity test has generally gained wider acceptance in the courts than any of the other equations. The First Circuit Court of Appeals has approved it, Royal, 174 F.3d at 9-10, as have others. Arriaga, 438 Mass. at 565 and n. 5, 781 N.E.2d 1264 and n. 5 (collecting cases). "Consistent with the majority of jurisdictions, we apply the absolute disparity test to determine whether underrepresentation of a group is substantial." Id.8
At page 24 of their Memorandum the defendants state that the "absolute disparity is 7.59% for all minorities, 2.24% for blacks and 3.65% for Hispanics." Dr. Beveridge relates these absolute disparity figures to the "voting age population." Beveridge I, ¶ 58. Accepting those calibrations, they do not rise to a level that has been held constitutionally impermissible. United States v. Hafen,
At page 21 of their memorandum the defendants offer another array of absolute disparity percentages: 11.14% for Providence; 1.61% for Pawtucket; and .96% for Central Falls. The Pawtucket and Central Falls percentages do not come anywhere near impermissible demarcations of absolute disparity. While the Providence calibration may approach borderline levels, it is not constitutionally excessive, and even it does not reach the 14.1% absolute disparity level that was rejected as insufficient in a New Jersey challenge. Weaver, 267 F.3d at 241, referencing Ramseur, 983 F.2d at 1233-35.9
Thus, quite apart from their mere recitation of statistics and percentiles, the defendants must, in addition, show that the claimed systematic exclusion is a result of some improper feature of the selection process, People v. Burgener,
Furthermore, the defendants are obliged to offer more than just speculation or surmise as to the reason for the alleged impermissible exclusion. Burgener, 29 Cal.4th at 858, 62 P.3d at 21 ("Speculation as to the source of the disparity is insufficient to show systematic exclusion").
The defendants, through Dr. Beveridge, have tendered an array of statistics and charts. Those calibrations not only fail to meet Duren's second requisite fair cross-section element, they do not, by themselves, at all satisfy the defendants' burden of demonstrating systematic exclusion, Duren's third necessary prong. Moreover, Dr. Beveridge's barren assertions as to when and why the claimed exclusions occurred (to the extent that he has offered them at all), fall woefully short of establishing a prima facie showing of systematic exclusion. To the contrary, those assertions, in this Court's view, reflect unacceptable speculation and surmise.
A review of Dr. Beveridge's two reports discloses that after much statistical recitation, he is simply unable to conclude, in any reliable manner, that systematic exclusion has occurred; or, that if it has allegedly occurred, he cannot advance any reliable explanation as to when and why it purportedly occurred. In his initial report he suggests, "Putting it simply, it is impossible that the disparity found by town and place could have occurred by chance. Something systematic has occurred." Beveridge I, ¶ 37 (emph. added). He does not identify what that "something" is. His conclusion is, as his prefatory phrase forecasts, put too simply.
Dr. Beveridge also inappropriately alleges that there is "geographic" bias and underrepresentation in the potential juror list.10 Beveridge I, ¶ 41. He then remarks, in what sounds far closer to a question than anything in the neighborhood of a substantiated conclusion, that "there must be something in the process of creating the list" that is causing it, and that "whatever it is" also relates to grand jury lists. Beveridge I, ¶ 42 (emph. added).
In his second report Dr. Beveridge suggests that there is minority bias in "the voter list, the DMV list or the combined lists." Beveridge II, ¶ 18. He then acknowledges, however, that because he lacks additional data, it is "impossible for me to estimate" any such bias. Id.
Thereafter, in that second report, Dr. Beveridge concedes that "at this point, we do not know if there are systematic biases with respect to minority status in the source list." Beveridge II, ¶ 19 (emph. added). Statements such as these, which so loudly ring of uncertainty, are hardly compelling support for establishing a requisite prima facie case.
This Court is not suggesting that Dr. Beveridge is without qualified credentials to offer his views, or that he has necessarily given short shrift to his endeavors.11 What the Court is saying, however, and what this Court finds from that which the defendants have presented, is that there exists altogether too much uncertainty and speculation in their assertions that there is systematic exclusion of minorities in the jury selection process. See Burgener, 29 Cal.4th at 858, 62 P.3d at 21, where similar acknowledgements of uncertainties by a defendant's expert also doomed the challenge to a jury selection process.
The deficiencies described above are, by themselves, reason enough to find that the defendants have not met their burden under Duren's third requisite element. Other grounds exist, as well.
In determining whether systematic exclusion has occurred, courts consider the very nature of the process by which jury lists are composed. Such considerations include for example, whether the process is randomly conducted, whether it is facially race-neutral, whether exemptions or excusals from jury service are acceptably reasonable, whether efforts to reform the system have been implemented, and whether the juror pool itself is inherently impermissible. When such considerations are juxtaposed to Rhode Island's process, no systematic exclusion can be found at all.
The pool of jurors in Providence County (and statewide) generally consists of United States citizens who are residents of the county, who have attained their eighteenth birthday, and who are either registered to vote, licensed by the Department of Motor Vehicles ("DMV") to operate a motor vehicle, or have been issued a Rhode Island Identification Card by the DMV. See generally R.I.G.L. 1956 §
The Rhode Island Supreme Court has upheld as constitutional the exclusive use of voter registration lists from which to enroll jurors.State v. Romano,
The defendants conclude that the use of DMV records somehow injects a biasing effect into the system (Beveridge II, ¶ 16), but no reliable indication has been shown at all to support that barren assertion. Dr. Beveridge has conceded that not only is it "impossible" for him to estimate any such bias therein, he also admits that he cannot point to any systematic racial biases in the source list. Beveridge II, ¶¶ 18, 19.
Indeed, the very expansion of the juror pool to include DMV records is evidence that negates a fair cross-section claim and, in this Court's view, an allegation of systematic exclusion. In Ramseur v. Beyer, 983 F.2d at 1235, the Third Circuit instructively stated in language that has clear application here:
"Moreover, the selection process was facially neutral and included names from both the voter registration and DMV lists. Additionally, the New Jersey Supreme Court found it significant that these lists were employed as part of an on-going effort in New Jersey to increase the representativeness of the State's jury lists:
`We look to the State's efforts at reform. We are not dealing here with a system in which there has been long-standing abuse with no attempts at reform. New Jersey has been conscious of its obligation to achieve greater neutrality and representativeness in its jury selection system. The addition of the DMV lists in 1979 — at a time when very few jurisdictions, state or federal, required the use of multiple lists in addition to voter lists — was obviously intended to broaden the representativeness of the pool. In addition, a 1981 Task Force chaired by Justice Clifford to study the current jury system has made numerous recommendations that may serve to increase the representativeness of juries. We are certain that those currently working on improvements in jury procedures will continue to seek to improve the yield of jurors from the source lists.' Ramseur, 106 N.J. at 226, 524 A.2d at 239.
Such efforts at reform to increase the representativeness of jury lists have some relevance to the question of whether a group's representation on those lists is `fair and reasonable.' If a system appears ex ante likely to create representative jury lists there should be some presumption of its legitimacy, even though evidence ex post may demonstrate that the lists are not representative enough."
So, too, Rhode Island's demonstrated efforts to expand its jury pool merit similar approbation. Prior to 1995, jurors were conscripted exclusively from voter registration lists. Thereafter, the system was expanded to include not only licensed motorists but, as well, residents to whom the DMV issued identification cards.
Further, in September of 2001, the duration of a petit juror's minimum mandated presence in the venire was shortened from two weeks to a minimum period of two days or the length of a single trial. By stipulation, the defendants have acknowledged that this modification "was implemented to give more people an opportunity to serve as jurors," and that this change was meant "to encourage more working people, minorities and low income people to serve." Exhibit A, ¶ 40.
Such modifications and reforms to this State's jury process cannot be pejoratively labeled a system of exclusion. To the contrary, from this Court's vantage point, they reflect efforts of inclusion.
Moreover, a review of Exhibit A, describing the various stages that ultimately lead to the mailing of Juror Qualification Questionnaires and the composing of jury lists, reflects a randomly computerized and facially neutral process. It is reasonably monitored and contains reasonable safeguards to avoid inappropriate disclosure of race/ethnicity;12 and, lists are "merged and purged" in an effort to avoid duplication of names. Where, as here, the selection process is "neutral on its face and [is] monitored, and [is] modified, to try toenhance its representative character," no Sixth Amendment violation occurs. Weaver, 267 F.3d at 244 (emph. added); Ramseur, 983 F.2d at 1235; Arriaga, 438 Mass. at 567, 781 N.E.2d at 1265 (randomly generated computerized lists do not indicate systematic exclusion); accord Princev. Parke,
The defendants also intimate that requests by jurors for excusals and/or the statutory exemptions afforded some prospective jurors might somehow offer a subjective opportunity to invite systematic exclusion. Experience teaches, however, that those who are typically excused from jury service are released principally because of financial hardship or because their employers decline to compensate them during jury service, or for family and medical reasons and the like. As the United States Supreme Court has observed, "[I]t is unlikely that reasonable exemptions, such as those based on special hardship, incapacity, or community needs, `would pose substantial threats that the remaining pool of jurors would not be representative of the community.'" Duren, 439 U.S. at 370 (quoting Taylor v. Louisiana,
Thus, "[g]ranting excuses based on the application of neutral criteria to prospective jurors' individual situations does not constitutesystematic exclusion." State v. Sanderson,
At the outset, the defendants cannot surmount Duren's first element of establishing "renters" as a distinct or cognizable group for Sixth Amendment purposes. They have cited no case or primary legal authority to support such an expansive view.15 Further, their attempts to aggregate Blacks and Hispanics into a group labeled "renters" does not at all transmute or otherwise transform the individual cognizable racial groups of Blacks and Hispanics into a purportedly larger cognizable group called "minority-renters," much less "renters" generally. See Prince, 907 F. Supp. at 1247 (wherein the district court noted, "This court does not understand the requirement of a distinctive group under Duren to allow various groups to be `lumped' together into one distinctive group called `minorities.' Any group of persons which might casually be referred to as `minorities' would have no internal cohesion, nor would it be viewed as an identifiable group by the population at large"); Wilkins v. State,
Thus, the defendants' inability to circumscribe renters as a cognizable group is, by itself, ample reason to reject their "renters" theorum, as it fails at the very outset to satisfy Duren's first essential element. Even further flawed is their attempt to demonstrate Duren's requisite element of systematic exclusion.
In their strained attempt to theorize systematic exclusion of renters, a non-cognizable group in any event, the defendants fasten upon considerations gleaned from Dr. Michelson's findings, such as renters' lesser involvement in the voting process, their lower likelihood to register for local licenses, and their inherent mobility and transitory nature (See Part II, infra, identifying such factors). However, systematic exclusion, if any there be, must be attributable to and caused by state action. Private sector influences, such as cultural patterns, residential mobility, linguistic isolation, and, indeed, personal disinclinations to vote or to register for drivers' licenses, do not establish systematic exclusion for purposes of a Sixth Amendment challenge (or, for that matter, an equal protection claim of intentional discrimination. Part II, infra). Gibbs, 274 Conn. at 596-97, 758 A.2d at 340; United States v. Purdy,
Noninclusion of renters in a jury pool cannot therefore be attributed to something that the State has caused by its jury selection procedures. Instead, their noninclusion in the venires is a result of external factors, all or any of which may cause renters affirmatively to separate themselves from the system. Such does not at all constitute "deliberate and systematic" denial of their constitutional rights by the State.Gibbs, 254 Conn. at 596-97, 758 A.2d at 340 (emph. added); Weaver, 267 F.3d at 244 (an "underrepresented group [that] has freely excluded itself quite apart from the system" is not indicative of systematic exclusion).
Further, the State is under no duty to offset the effects on the jury selection system of individual patterns of behavior occurring externally to the system. As the Rioux district court noted, "The underrepresentation complained of by the defendant is not `due' to any element of the jury selection system . . . . Rather, it is `due' to suchprivate sector influences as voting patterns, demographic trends, and cultural differences," and "[b]ecause the Sixth Amendment does not impose an affirmative obligation on the courts to counteract such influences, the failure to do so cannot constitute systematic exclusion." Rioux, 930 F. Supp. at 1578, aff'd,
* * * * *
In all, there is nothing before this Court that supports any part of the defendants' claim of systematic exclusion under Duren's requisite third element. Their failure to make such a prima facie showing of this essential element (quite apart from their inability to surmount Duren's second requirement) therefore forecloses their Sixth Amendment challenge.
"the procedure employed resulted in substantial underrepresentation of his race or of the identifiable group to which he belongs. The first step is to establish that the group is one that is a recognizable, distinct class, singled out for different treatment under the laws, as written or as applied. Next, the degree of underrepresentation must be proved, by comparing the proportion of the group in the total population to the proportion called to serve as grand jurors, over a significant period of time. . . . Finally, . . . a selection procedure that is susceptible of abuse or is not racially neutral supports the presumption of discrimination raised by the statistical showing." Castaneda, 430 U.S. at 494 (internal citations omitted).
The analysis of an equal protection claim in jury selection cases is somewhat comparable to that of a Sixth Amendment challenge. It is not identical, however.
In both instances, a defendant must demonstrably identify a cognizable group that is the subject of the alleged underrepresentation. As noted in the Sixth Amendment discussion in Part I (1), the defendants have properly identified Blacks and Hispanics as cognizable groups, but the defendants cannot succeed in an attempt to classify the residents of or the vicinages of Providence, Central Falls or Pawtucket as distinct groups themselves. Moreover, and as explicated in Part I (3)(A), the defendants' suggestion that renters are somehow a distinct cognizable group is meritless.
The Sixth Amendment's fair cross-section element (Duren's second prong) also spans Castaneda's second requirement to demonstrate underrepresentation. Because of their inability to overcome Duren's second requisite element, the same result obtains in the defendants' equal protection challenge: The absolute disparity percentiles for Blacks and Hispanics in the subject cities do not transgress constitutional limits. See Part I (2).
The distinctive issue in their equal protection claim is not whether the defendants have shown systematic exclusion, an essential element that they have wholly failed to show in their Sixth Amendment challenge. See Part I (3). Instead, the key element that they must demonstrate in their equal protection claim is a prima facie case of deliberate and purposeful intent to discriminate. Put plainly, "discriminatory purpose" is an "essential element" of an equal protection challenge. Duren, 439 U.S. at 368 n. 26; Castaneda, 430 U.S. at 493 (substantial underrepresentation of a group is impermissible "if it results from purposeful discrimination") (emph. added); Royal, 174 F.3d at 6 n. 2 (explicitly noting that a defendant who asserts an equal protection claim must demonstrate, inprima facie fashion, the necessary element of intentional discrimination); Ramseur, 983 F.2d at 1225-26.
So, too, the Rhode Island Supreme Court has, on a number of occasions, expressly held that a defendant who alleges such an equal protection challenge must demonstrate intentional discrimination. Jenison, 122 R.I. at 153 n. 7, 405 A.2d at 9 n. 7 (defendant has the burden of demonstrating the existence of purposeful discrimination); State v.Johnson,
In their initial offering in March of 2001, the defendants conceded that the underrepresentation that they perceive in grand and petit juries is "not because of deliberate intent." Defendants' Memorandum at 1. Two years later, in their Reply Memorandum, they disavow that acknowledgement. The slender reed upon which they now seek to support their contention of purposeful discrimination is premised upon their acceptance of a portion of Dr. Michelson's report relating to the demographics of renters.
Even before they attempt to pursue such a claim of intentional discrimination under an equal protection theory, however, the defendants still must initially show that "renters" are a cognizable group. They cannot do so. For the same reasons that their efforts failed in the context of their Sixth Amendment claim, they similarly fail in an equal protection context. See Part I (3)(A). On that basis alone, their new claim is decidedly defective.
The Court nonetheless undertakes an examination of the defendants' contention of purposeful discrimination if only to demonstrate its inherent lack of merit in any event. The defendants' argument is bottomed on Dr. Michelson's stipulated findings concerning renters. These findings devolve to the following considerations, which the defendants have embraced in the parties' Statement of Agreed Facts (Exhibit A, ¶¶ 47-59):
• Many minorities reside in the inner cities of Providence, Pawtucket, Woonsocket, and Central Falls.
• Inner city residents are more likely to rent than own their homes.
• Renters are more transient, more likely to relocate, and are, therefore, less likely to be included in the jury lists for those communities.
• Renters are less likely to have "jury attaining behavior" (¶ 51) and less likely to participate because they typically fail to take deliberate or affirmative steps to register to vote and to obtain drivers' licenses.
From all of this the defendants entreat the Court to find, inferentially, purposeful racism by the State. That contention has neither legal nor factual merit. See United States v. Grisham,
"[D]efendants who raise the issue of the absence from a jury of representatives of an identifiable segment of the community must prove that the absence is due to a preconceived exclusionary plan by those responsible for the formulation of the jury lists." (emph. added) DeWitt, 423 A.2d at 831; accord Gaines, 528 A.2d at 308; Johnson, 116 R.I. at 457, 358 A.2d at 375; Clark, 112 R.I. at 275, 308 A.2d at 795.
The defendants have made no such showing.
Their misguided attempt to analogize Rhode Island's jury selection process to the deliberate, impermissible procedures that were invalidated by the United States Supreme Court in Thiel v. Southern Pacific Co.,
If Rhode Island's Jury Commissioner or his agents had actively and deliberately excluded community members in compiling the venires, or if the selection process included racial designations on the juror questionnaires that provided an easy opportunity for racial discrimination, or if the current methods reflected other highly subjective procedures that invited racial/ethnic discrimination, then such would constitute an equal protection violation. Alexander v.Louisiana,
The defendants can draw no support whatsoever from Dr. Michelson's report for their "renters" hypothesis of purposeful or deliberate discrimination. The considerations they point to as supportive of their theory have been deemed entirely external to the jury selection process and demonstrate neither systematic exclusion nor deliberate discrimination by the State. See Part I (3)(A). Just as such external influences have no bearing on a Sixth Amendment claim of systematic exclusion, neither do they carry any weight in the defendants' equal protection allegation of intentional discrimination. As the Connecticut Supreme Court has aptly stated:
"In the present case, the defendant has produced no evidence that Connecticut's jury selection system is capable of `deliberately and systematically' denying Hispanic persons the opportunity to be selected for jury service by excluding them from jury arrays. Rather, the factors that the defendant claims as proof of discriminatory intent, for example, the use of outdated addresses, and the number of no-shows for jury service in the Hispanic community, clearly were shown to be the product either of random chance, or of factors external to the system. As the trial court found, there is a greater occurrence of undeliverable jury summonses and failures to report for jury service in the Hispanic community than in the general population, not as a result of racial discrimination, but in the main because of residential mobility and linguistic isolation. These facts do not show a `deliberate and systematic' denial of rights." Gibbs, 254 Conn. at 596-97, 758 A.2d at 340 (emph. in original).17
* * * * *
The defendants have not shown and cannot demonstrate a scintilla of racially motivated prejudice by those who administer Rhode Island's jury selection process, much less any purposeful exclusion of minorities from the venires. In the end, the defendants' initial assessment of the jury selection system was the correct one: Any perceived underrepresentation is "not because of deliberate intent." Indeed, to the extent that there has been any intentional action by the State, it reflects affirmative efforts by the Legislature as well as the Judiciary to enroll more minorities, not to exclude them.
Accordingly, the defendants' equal protection claim must also fail.18
Some of the material that has been offered, although not reaching unconstitutional levels, is nonetheless unsettling,19 but as the First Circuit has observed "[T]here is a difference between the optimal results which particularly well administered jury plans . . . can achieve, and the minimum which the Constitution requires." Anaya v.Hansen,
Accordingly, in addition to the steps already taken, it would be appropriate for Rhode Island authorities to consider instituting further measures in their ongoing efforts to increase jury participation by all Providence County residents, and, more particularly, by inner city minority residents. Consideration should be given, for example, to a more expeditious method of tracking current addresses of potential jurors and to more productive follow-ups with respect to prospective jurors who do not return their quailfication forms or whose questionnaires are returned as nondeliverable;20 as well as installing more convenient mechanisms for DMV licensing and instituting better outreach programs that further encourage voter registration.
Consideration may also be given to increasing juror stipends from a paltry $15 per day to $40 per diem, the amount currently accorded to federal jurors; mandating that private sector employers compensate, at least in part, their employees who are engaged in jury service; designating parking areas for jurors and/or reimbursing them for parking fees; and, reimbursing jurors for day care expenses.21
The spectrum of choices is limitless, but the options are not limited solely to the two extremes of either standing pat or implementing the full panoply of all conceivable measures. Those who have the authority to make such choices can come down anywhere in the middle that may be appropriate. In part, implementing many such emendations will, of course, be affected by budgetary and financial constraints in both the public and private sectors. Some such modifications may be attainable now or in the short run, while others may have to await closer scrutiny.
Nevertheless, after close and careful consideration of all of the defendants' contentions, this Court finds that no constitutional or otherlegal infirmity currently exists that justifies dismissal of this indictment or that now precludes a jury a trial on the merits of the charges contained therein. The defendants' motion is therefore denied.
Such frivolous objurgations might somehow provide these two with a measure of personal satisfaction or self-approbation, but they assist the Court not at all. They are wholly irrelevant distractions that serve only to diminish and obscure their presentations. To the extent that this Court finds their proffers relevant to the legal analysis of the instant matter, reference will be made thereto.
The other statistical approaches urged by these defendants are not the most reliable tools in the shed and have invited more than a modicum of criticism. As noted in the text, the disparity of risk method has received no reported judicial plaudits. The comparative disparity test has been criticized because it invites distortion of the alleged underrepresentation. Burgener, 29 Cal.4th at 860, 62 P.3d at 22. It is "strongly disfavored" in the Ninth Circuit because "it exaggerates the effect of any deviation." Id. (quoting Thomas v. Borg, 159 F.3d 1147, 1150 (9th Cir. 1998)); accord Arriaga, 438 Mass. at 556, 781 N.E.2d at 1265; United States v. Haley,
Courts have also noted the limited usefulness of the statistical significance matrix. E.g., People v. Bell,
"As we address in our discussion of Weaver's statistical presentation, despite his testimony, Beveridge did not actually analyze the entire master wheel. He testified that he was able to determine the race of nearly every juror on the master wheel based on those jurors indicating their race on the questionnaires sent to them. The master wheel consists of jurors chosen at random from the voter registration rolls, before any questionnaires have been mailed yet. But Beveridge actually examined, and testified based on, the returned questionnaires. For the 1999 wheel, 5,877 questionnaires were mailed. App. at 125. Yet only 4,753 of those were completed and returned. Id. Beveridge did not attempt to account for those not returned, yet consistently testified that he had examined the entire composition of the master wheel."
Certain categories of the populace are, by statute, exempted from jury service, such as federal and state legislators, general officers of the State, judges, lawyers, as well as police and fire department personnel. R.I.G.L. 1956 §
"Approximately 22,000 to 24,000 juror questionnaires are sent out annually in Providence and Bristol County. Of these, usually 65% are returned completed. Of these, up to one half may be determined to be ineligible as determined by statute, or they may no longer live within the judicial district. . . . In Providence and Bristol County, approximately 18% come back `undeliverable' and 17% do not come back at all. Statewide, the undeliverable rate is usually about 11-12%. . . . In 1999, 20.4% of petit juror questionnaires were returned undelivered, and 15.6% of the grand juror questionnaires were returned undelivered. 23% of petit juror and 20% of grand jury questionnaires were not returned. The total of not delivered and not returned was 39% from the petit jury mailing, and 22.5% from the grand jury mailing." Exhibit A, ¶¶ 31-32, 58.
Further, the absolute disparity percentage suggested by the defendants for the City of Providence (11.14%), although within allowable levels, is disquieting.
For a wide-ranging view of suggested methods to increase juror participation, see, e.g., Robert G. Boatright et al., Improving CitizenResponse to Jury Summonses: A Report with Recommendations, AmericanJudicature Society (1998); Greg Moran, When Jury Duty Calls —Counties Wrestle with High Evasion Rates: And What Courts Can Do AboutIt, California Lawyer, May 2001, at 22; Court Review — The Journalof American Judges Association, Vol. 36, Fall 1999, pp. 79-80, collecting numerous sources and websites relating to jury reform; Robert G. Boatright, Why Citizens Don't Respond to Jury Summonses, 82 Judicature 156 (Jan. — Feb. 1999); Jury Reform, Council for Court Excellence, Washington, D.C., available at www.courtexcellence.org.