Olibrices v. State
Decision Date | 07 June 2006 |
Docket Number | No. 4D04-2104.,4D04-2104. |
Citation | 929 So.2d 1176 |
Parties | Michael OLIBRICES, Appellant, v. STATE of Florida, Appellee. |
Court | Florida District Court of Appeals |
Carey Haughwout, Public Defender, and Jeffrey Golant, Assistant Public Defender, West Palm Beach, for appellant.
Charles J. Crist, Jr., Attorney General, Tallahassee, and James J. Carney, Assistant Attorney General, West Palm Beach, for appellee.
During jury selection in this criminal case the State exercised a peremptory challenge against juror Mohammed Kahn.Thereupon defendant objected, asking the court to require a non-invidious reason.1The following then ensued:
Court: Is he a minority that's recognized under Neil Slappy?2I have never heard Muslim recognized under Neil Slappy.
Defense: Your honor, if you give me a moment to look through my notes, that Neil Slappy can be used on anyone now.
Court: No, not anyone.It has to be a recognized class of people that resides in the Community.So far, the cases I have seen are race.I have seen Spanish, Jewish; I haven't seen any Muslim.
State: Your honor, I don't know if he was ever asked that question.I don't know what his religious affiliation is.How could I strike somebody on religious affiliation?
Court:He is Pakistani.And I don't think there's a significant number of Pakistanis in the United States to come under Neil Slappy.There was nothing shown as to his religion.
State: Is it Hindu?I don't know what the religion is in Pakistan.
Defense: There are many Muslims.
...
Court: Okay.I think counsel is looking up whether or not Pakistani comes under Neil Slappy, and I haven't seen a case where Pakistani—.By that theory, then, everyone would come under Neil Slappy because everyone came from somewhere.
Defense: Your Honor, I said the fact that he was Muslim.
Court: There was no testimony whatsoever that he is Muslim, was there?It's just an assumption on your part.He said he was Pakistani.That's the ethnicity that I have.
Defense: And that assumption is based on, Your Honor, the name Mohammad is common.
Court: Well, unless you can show me a case where a Pakistani is excluded, or that's something under Neil Slappy, that Pakistanis are a recognized group that comprises a group under Neil Slappy.I have never seen a case on that.So I will deny it.Okay.He is struck.Mohammad Khan is struck by the state.
Defense: And I just object for the record, Your Honor.
Defendant was convicted and appeals.We reverse.3
The exclusion of jurors by peremptory challenge under Florida law is subject to judicial examination to establish whether the prospective juror has been singled out for invidious reasons.As the court explained in Muhammad v. State,782 So.2d 343(Fla.2001):
[e.s.]
782 So.2d at 352, n. 4.In Dorsey v. State,868 So.2d 1192(Fla.2003), during a discussion of alleged impermissible peremptory challenges of jurors on invidious grounds the court said:
In response to the dissent's suggestion that this holding applies to jurors of a `particular gender, occupation or profession or other economic, social, religious, political, or geographic group,'we note that this Court has not extended Neil's protections beyond peremptory challenges based on race, gender, and ethnicity.
868 So.2d at 1202 n. 8[c.o.].This is therefore—at least partially—an issue of first impression.
The term ethnic—and by necessary implication its sibling, ethnicity—is understood to mean: "Of or relating to sizable groups of people sharing a common and distinctive racial, national, religious, linguistic, or cultural heritage."AMERICAN HERITAGE DICTIONARY 630 (3d ed. 1992).According to an electronic encyclopedia:
The modern sense of the word ethnic thus clearly means "a member of a particular ethnic group" which, in turn, may involve a particular religious identification.Given this rather definite inclusion of religion in the elements of ethnicity, it is obvious that sharing a common religion cannot foreclose a social group from having a common ethnicity.Dorsey's disclaimer of any holding applying Neil Slappy equally to the singular classification of religion does not yield the conclusion that the principle may not be applied where a common religious heritage is also involved in the shared identity of a given ethnic group.5
Ethnicity was formally recognized for Neil Slappy purposes in State v. Alen,616 So.2d 452(Fla.1993).There, peremptory challenges were admittedly used to excuse potential Hispanic jurors.In extending Neil to persons of Hispanic ethnicity, the court offered the following by way of explanation:
""
616 So.2d at 455(citingPeople v. Trevino,39 Cal.3d 667, 217 Cal.Rptr. 652, 659-60, 704 P.2d 719, 726-27(1985)).
Alen attempted to suggest a specific inquiry to assist in a judicial determination of whether a given group may be deemed a "cognizable class" for Neil purposes: "the cognizability requirement inherently demands that the group be objectively discernible from the rest of the community."[e.s.]616 So.2d at 454.The court said:
616 So.2d at 454.We do not think that the term community in this explanation should be understood in a physical sense but, instead, more as metaphor.We read it to refer to social groups linked by origin, language, culture and religion, not necessarily to a physical collection of people or houses in a city, county or nation.It is also not limited to oppressed minorities, for a party to litigation may also seek to use race, sex or ethnicity to remove members of the dominant social group from a proposed jury.In short, the court's use of community in Alen should be read as shorthand for both de jure social groups, as well as racial, ethnic or religious groups sharing common characteristics a party is seeking invidiously to exclude.
We think the community of Pakistani people in the United States—numbering about 500,000 people—is large enough to be, by consensus, an objectively discernible group for ethnic classification.By population Pakistan is the sixth largest country in the world, sharing at least two dominant languages, a common culture, and is overwhelmingly Muslim.6The population is heavily Semitic in origin.We therefore think its culture, language, history and—yes—its religion, make it objectively and discernibly large, distinct and homogeneous enough to be deemed an ethnic group capable of identification.
In fact we find that any difficulties in...
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Olibrices v. State , 929 So.2d 1176, 1180 (Fla. 4th DCA 2006), our court found that the potential juror's "membership within the objectively discernible group of Pakistani Muslims" was the basis of the exercise of a peremptory challenge. We concluded that "whether the jurorconcluded that "whether the juror was challenged because he is of Pakistani origin or because his religious belief is Muslim, it would be a Neil Slappy violation to exercise a peremptory challenge of him on either account." Id.Similarly, in the present case, the potential juror is a member of an "objectively discernible group," that being the Jehovah's Witnesses. Rodriguez v. State , 826 So.2d 494 (Fla. 4th DCA 2002), and Happ v. State , 596 So.2d 991 (Fla. 1992),category which presumably would include classifications based on religion. Id.Justice Thomas correctly suggested that the rationale of Batson and J.E.B. should be extended. Based on Alen , Joseph , and this court's decision in Olibrices, the trial court clearly erred in allowing the prospective juror to be struck from service based on her membership in a religious group.Thus, the state's strike was either pretextual and entirely... -
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