Colorado v. Ojeda
Annotate this CaseIn 2013, Respondent Ray Ojeda was charged with kidnapping, sexually assaulting, and shooting a fifteen-year-old girl back in 1997. The victim, who survived, reported the crime immediately but could not identify the perpetrator. The investigation eventually stalled out. At some point in time, the Denver Police Department’s Crime Lab misplaced the victim’s rape kit. Years later, when the police found and retested evidence from the victim’s rape kit, DNA from the vaginal swab matched Ojeda. The issue this case presented for the Colorado Supreme Court's review centered on a split decision of a division of the court of appeals, which held that the trial court erred in denying Ojeda’s challenge to an allegedly discriminatory jury strike under Batson v. Kentucky, 476 U.S. 79 (1986), during the jury selection process. The Supreme Court held that because the prosecution offered an explicitly race-based reason for striking Juror R.P., it did not meet its burden of providing a race-neutral explanation for the strike, as required under step two of the Batson test. Accordingly, the Court affirmed the judgment of the court of appeals, albeit on other grounds.
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