Chamberlin v. Fisher

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After agreeing to hear this case en banc, the Fifth Circuit reversed the district court's grant of a petition for habeas relief and order of a new trial. The district court found that the Mississippi Supreme Court erred when it concluded that the prosecution did not discriminate against black prospective jurors at petitioner's jury selection. The court held, however, that the prosecution in petitioner's case did what it was supposed to do; when it struck individual black prospective jurors, it gave specific race-neutral reasons for the strikes; and the state court found on multiple occasions that the prosecution did not invidiously discriminate against black prospective jurors. The court held that neither statutory ground for granting federal habeas relief applied to petitioner's case. View "Chamberlin v. Fisher" on Justia Law