Price v. Bossier Parish School Board Jurisdictional Statement
Public Court Documents
September 1, 1998
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Brief Collection, LDF Court Filings. Price v. Bossier Parish School Board Jurisdictional Statement, 1998. d905838d-c19a-ee11-be36-6045bdeb8873. LDF Archives, Thurgood Marshall Institute. https://ldfrecollection.org/archives/archives-search/archives-item/8d979d19-e1dc-4e3b-b58a-bb9d1016d8c0/price-v-bossier-parish-school-board-jurisdictional-statement. Accessed November 23, 2025.
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PLEASE NOTE: MANUAL FOOTER 1st PG,
SECTION 2No.______________
Supreme Court of the United
States
October Term, 1997
George Price , etal.,
Appellants,
B o ssier Parish S chool B oard ,
Appellee.
On Appeal from the
United States District Court
for the District of Columbia
JURISDICTIONAL STATEMENT
In The
V .
Barbara R. Arnwine
Thomas J. Henderson
Edward Still
Patricia A. Brannan*
J ohn W. Borkowski
L awyers’ Committee for
Civil Rights Under Law
Hogan & Hartson l .l .p.
555 Thirteenth Street, N.W,
Washington, D.C. 20004
(202)637-8686
1450 G Street, N .W ., Suite 400
Washington, D.c. 20005
(202) 662-8600
* Counsel of Record Counsel for Appellants
George Price, et al.
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i
QUESTION PRESENTED
Does the purpose prong of Section 5 of the Voting
Rights Act prohibit the implementation of an
unconstitutionally racially discriminatory re districting
plan, even if it is not retrogressive?
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ii
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Page
OPINION BELOW............................................ 1
JURISDICTION................................................ 2
CONSTITUTIONAL AND
STATUTORY PROVISIONS
INVOLVED................................................. 2
STATEMENT......................................................2
I. INTRODUCTION....................................2
II. STATEMENT OF FACTS.....................4
A. The Effect of the Plan..................5
B. The School Board’s
History...........................................7
C. The Sequence of Events
Leading Up to Adoption of
the Plan.........................................8
D. The Plan Adopted
Compared to Traditional
Districting Criteria...................... 12
E. The Board Members’
Contemporaneous
Statements....................................13
F. The Board’s Later
Explanations of Its
Motives.......................................... 14
III. THE PRIOR PROCEEDINGS.............16
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iii
TABLE OF CONTENTS—Continued
Page
A. Administrative
Preclearance Review...................16
B. The Declaratory Judgment
Action................................... 16
1. The Initial
Proceedings.......................16
2. This Court’s
Decision.............................18
3. Proceedings on
Remand.............................18
REASONS FOR NOTING PROBABLE
JURISDICTION.........................................19
I. THIS COURT SHOULD
CORRECT THE SUBSTANTIAL
LEGAL ERROR MADE BY THE
MAJORITY BELOW IN
LIMITING THE INQUIRY
INTO THE EXISTENCE OF
DISCRIMINATORY PURPOSE
SOLELY TO A SEARCH FOR
AN INTENT TO CAUSE A
RETROGRESSION IN
MINORITY VOTING
STRENGTH...........................................19
A. The Court Below
Erroneously Declined to
Address the Issue
Squarely Presented to it
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TABLE OF CONTENTS—Continued
Page
by this Court’s Remand:
Whether Bossier Had a
Discriminatory, But
Nevertheless Non-
retrogressive, Purpose in
Enacting its Redistricting
Plan............................................20
B. The Statute and the
Decisions of this Court
Make Clear that Section
5 Prohibits a Change in
Election Procedures
Adopted with an
Unconstitutional
Discriminatory Intent
Whether or Not the
Change is Retrogressive..........22
C. By Improperly Limiting
the Section 5
Discriminatory Purpose
Inquiry, the Majority
Below Would Severely
Undermine Effective
Administration of Section
5 in Jurisdictions such as
Bossier Parish Where
Such Enforcement is
iv
Most Needed..............................28
CONCLUSION..................................................30
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v
TABLE OF AUTHORITIES
Page
CASES:
Arizona v. Reno, 887 F. Supp. 318 (D.D.C. 1995),
appeal dismissed, No. 95-299 (Mar. 1, 1996)........ passim
Barnett v. Daley, 32 F.3d 1196 (7th Cir. 1994)............... 18, 26
Beerv. United States, 425 U.S. 130 (1976)......................... 2 0 ,2 2
Buchanan v. City o f Jackson, 708 F.2d 1066 (6th Cir.
1983).......................................................................................... 18
Busbee v. Smith, 549 F. Supp. 494 (D.D.C. 1982,1,
affd, 459 U.S. 1166 (1983)................................................ 21, 23
City o f Pleasant Grove v. United States, 479 U.S. 462
(1987)......................................................................................... 2 3 ,2 4
City o f Port Arthur v. United States, 517 F. Supp. 987
(D.D.C. 1981). affd, 459 U.S. 159 (1982)...................... 23
City o f Richmond v. United States, 422 U.S. 358
(1975)......................................................................................... 23
City o f Rome v. United States, 446 U.S. 156 (1980)....... 25
Georgia x. United Slates, 411 U.S. 5 2 6 (1 9 7 3)................ 25
Johnson v. Transportation Agency, 480 U.S. 616
(1987)........................................................................................ 24
Ketchum v. Byrne, 740 F.2d 1398 (7th Cir. 1984),
cert, denied, 471 U.S. 1135 (1985)................................... 26
Miller v. Johnson, 115 S. Ct. 2475 (1995).......................... passim
Miller v. WFLI Radio Inc., 687 F. 2d 136 (6th Cir.
1982).......................................................................................... 26 ,2 7
N.L.RB. v. Great Dane Trailers, Inc., 388 U.S. 26
(1967)......................................................................................... 26
New York v. United States, 874 F. Supp. 394 (D.D.C.
1994) ...........................................................................................passim
Perkins v. City o f West Helena, 675 F.2d 201 (8th
Cir.), affd, 459 U.S. 801 (1982)....................................... 18, 26
Rogers v. Lodge, 458 U.S. 613 (1982)................................. passim
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vi
TABLE OF AUTHORITIES—Continued
Page
Shaw v Reno, 113 S. Ct. 2816 (1 9 9 3 ) ............................... 11
South Carolina v. Katzenbach. 383 U.S. 301 (1 9 6 6 )..... 25
Texas Dep t o f Community Affairs v. Burdine, 450
U.S. 248 (1981)..................................................................... 27
United States v. Hinds County Sch. Bd., 417 F.2d 852
(5th Cir.), opinion supplemented, 423 F.2d 1264
(5th Cir. 1969), cert, denied, 396 U.S. 1032(1970)... 24
Village o f Arlington Heights v. Metropolitan Housing
Dev. Corp., 429 U.S. 252 (1977)...................................... passim
Washington v. Davis, 426 U.S. 229 (1976)....................... 22
Zimmer v. McKeithen, 485 F.2d 1297 (5th Cir. 1973).
aff'don other grounds sub nom., East Carroll
Parish Sch. Bd. v. Marshall, 424 U.S. 636 (1976)...... 20
CONSTITUTIONAL PROVISIONS:
U.S. Const, amend. X I V ......................................................... 2, 20
U.S. Const, amend. X V ............................................................ 2 ,2 0
STATUTES:
Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act, 42 U.S.C. § 1973 ...passim
Section 5 o f the Voting Rights Act, 42 U.S.C.
§ 1973c......................................................................................passim
RULES AND REGULATIONS:
28 C.F.R. 51.55(b)(2) (1995)................................................. 30
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In The
Supreme Court of the United
States
October Term, 1997
No.
G eo rg e Price , e t a l .,
Appellants,
v.
B o ssier Parish Sc h o o l B o a r d ,
Appellee.
On Appeal from the
United States District Court
for the District of Columbia
JURISDICTIONAL STATEMENT
OPINION BELOW
The decision of the three-judge panel of the United
States District Court for the District of Columbia
(“D.C. District Court”) is reported at __________
F. Supp.____(D.D.C. 1998). App.____ 1/
1/ In this Jurisdictional Statement, filed on behalf of
Defendant-Intervenora George Price, et al., citations are to the
Appendix (“App.”) filed with the Jurisdictional Statement of
Janet Reno, et al., on September__, 1998 in the case of Beno v.
Bossier Parish School Board.
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2
JURISDICTION
The judgment of the three-judge panel of the D.C.
District Court, which had jurisdiction pursuant to 42
U.S.C. § 1973c, was entered on May 4, 1998. The
notice of appeal on behalf of defendant-intervenors
George Price, et al. (“Defendant-intervenors”), was
timely filed on July 6, 1998, See Appendix attached
hereto at la. This Court has jurisdiction over this
appeal pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1973c.
CONSTITUTIONAL AND STATUTORY
PROVISIONS INVOLVED
Section 1 of the Fourteenth Amendment to the
United States Constitution provides in pertinent
part that “[n]o state shall. .. deny any person within
its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws.” The
Fifteenth Amendment provides that “[t]he right of
citizens of the United States to vote shall not be
denied or abridged by the United States or by any
State on account of race, color, or previous condition
of servitude.” Section 5 of the Voting Rights Act, 42
U.S.C. § 1973c, is reproduced in the Appendix. App.
165a-167a.
STATEMENT
I. INTRODUCTION
This is the second time that the redistricting plan
for the Bossier Parish School Board (“Bossier” or
“School Board”) following the 1990 census has come
before this Court. In 1997, this Court reviewed the
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grant of preclearance under Section 5 of the Voting
Rights Act by a three-judge panel of the United
States District Court for the District of Columbia.
The Court remanded this case to the District Court
to apply the standard of Village of Arlington Heights
v. Metropolitan Housing Development Corp., 429 U.S.
252 (1977), to the question of whether the Bossier
Parish School Board had met its burden under
Section 5 of the Voting Rights Act to prove that it did
not adopt its redistricting plan with “the purpose
. . . of denying or abridging the right to vote on
account of race or color.” 42 U.S.C. § 1973c. Reno v.
Bossier Parish School Board, 117 S. Ct. 1491 (1997).
This Court directed that the existence of a “non-
retrogressive, but nevertheless discriminatory
purpose . .. and its relevance to § 5, are issues to be
decided on remand.” 117 S. Ct. at 1501.
Although two judges on the District Court panel
on remand, Judges Laurence Silberman and James
Robertson, concluded that the Board acted with “a
tenacious determination to maintain the status quo”
of no elected African-American on the Bossier Parish
School Board, they, nevertheless, granted
preclearance. Maj. at 78. See also Dis. at 14. By
failing to recognize this as a “non-retrogressive, but
nevertheless discriminatory, purpose” the panel
majority effectively held that an unconstitutional
racially discriminatory purpose does not violate
Section 5 unless it actually worsens the position of
minority voters.
The third judge on the panel, Judge Gladys
Kessler, in dissent, concluded as follows, based on
her reviews of the “extensive record” both in the
3
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original proceedings and again on remand: “Not only-
does the evidence fail to prove the absence of
discriminatory purpose, it shows that racial purpose
fueled the school Board’s decision.” App. 39a. See
also Dis. at 1. Judge Kessler urged that the panel
squarely address this Court’s other question on
remand, since under the Court’s precedents an
unconstitutional purpose violates Section 5
regardless of whether it is retrogressive. App. 7.
The panel majority’s radical reworking of the
standards governing review of discriminatory
purpose under Section 5 conflicts with the plain
language of the statute and this Court’s clear
precedents. It also poses a significant threat to
effective administration of Section 5 in jurisdictions
such as Bossier where such enforcement is most
needed.
II. STATEMENT OF FACTS
The facts in this case are largely undisputed and
are nearly all either stipulated or unrebutted. The
majority and the dissenting opinions below reflect
similar conclusions on the few factual disputes. On
remand, the parties all agreed that the record should
not be reopened for the taking of additional evidence.
Maj. at 1. Thus, the dispute in this case is not about
the facts but about their legal significance in
determining whether the Board met its burden to
show that its redistricting plan was not motivated by
a discriminatory purpose in violation of Section 5.
This Court’s prior opinion in this case makes clear
that the relevant factors are those discussed in
Arlington Heights. Unrebutted evidence of
4
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discriminatory purpose, much of it in the form of
stipulations, App. 66a-153a 1-285), addressed all
of those factors: (1) “ [t]he impact of the official action
whether it ‘bears more heavily on one race than
another;”’ (2) “[t]he historical background of the
decision;” (3) “ [t]he specific sequence of events
leading up [to] the challenged decision [including]
. . . [departures from the normal procedural
sequence;” (4) “substantive departures . . . [from]
factors usually considered important;” and (5)
“administrative history” and other “contemporary
statements by members of the decisionmaking body.”
429 U.S. at 267-68. The facts with respect to each of
these areas are summarized below.
A. The Effect of the Plan.{ TC "A. The Effect of
the Plan.” \f C \1 "3" } In 1992, in response to the
need to redistrict for one-person-one-vote purposes
following the 1990 census, the School Board adopted
a twelve single-member-district reapportionment
plan with twelve majority-white districts. The
Board’s plan during the 1980’s also had no majority
black districts. By 1990, however, Bossier Parish,
Louisiana had a population that was 20.1% black,
App. 67a (t 5), and a voting age population that was
17.6% black. Id. at 2a. No black candidate,
however, had ever been elected to the twelve-
member School Board. Id. at 67a (t 4).
As the parties stipulated below, this is because
voting in Bossier Parish is racially polarized, Id. at
122a-27a (tU 181-96).2/ The foreseeable impact of
5
21 The adverse effects of racially polarized voting on the
ability of black voters to elect candidates of their choice are
exacerbated in Bossier Parish by the effects of past
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the Board’s adoption of a redistricting plan with all
majority-white districts, therefore, was to ensure
that whenever black voters and white voters prefer
different candidates, white voters’ preferences will
prevail, App. 41a, to perpetuate a racially
“discriminatory status quo.” Dis. at 14.
It was clearly possible, however, respecting
traditional redistricting criteria, to draw a
reapportionment plan for Bossier Parish that does
not have all majority-white districts. App. 41a. The
School Board stipulated that it was “obvious that a
reasonably compact black-majority district could be
drawn within Bossier City,” id. at 76a (t 36), and
that the outlines of a second such district in the
northern part of the parish were “readily
discernible.” Id. at 114a (f 148). Admittedly, by
fragmenting or “fracturing’’ predominantly black
residential areas, however, the Board avoided
drawing any majority-black districts. Id, at 111a,
112a OH[ 137-38, 142). Indeed, on remand, Bossier
conceded that “[t]he impact of [its] plan does fall
more heavily on blacks than on whites,” and, more
specifically, that its election plan “did dilute black
voting strength.” Plaintiffs Brief on Remand at 12,
6
discrimination. App. 130a-36a (11 213-32) (past history of
denial of access to political system); id. at I36a-38a (11 234-43)
(history of discrimination in education). It was undisputed
below that the depressed socioeconomic and educational levels
of black citizens of Bossier Parish make it hard for them to
obtain necessary electoral information, organize, raise funds,
campaign, register, and turn out to vote; these factors in turn
cause a depressed level of political participation. Id. at 127a-
30a (11 197-202, 206-12).
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7
21.
B. The School Board’s History.{ TC "B. The
School Board’s History." \f C \1 "3" } The School
Board’s history of discrimination against black
citizens demonstrates why it wanted twelve majority
white districts; so long as black voters had no voice,
the School Board could safely ignore their concerns,
and for decades this has been the case. As the
majority below recognized when it examined this
evidence on remand, “the intent [this history] proves
. . . is a tenacious determination to maintain the
status quo.” Maj. at 7-8.
The dark history of voting discrimination in Bossier
Parish was undisputed below. App. 130a-36a
(1ft 213-32); id. at 42a-46a. Likewise, the School
Board admitted that it segregated its schools,
actively resisted desegregation, and has never fully
remedied its constitutional violation. In recent
years, moreover, the School Board’s student and
faculty assignment policies have made its schools
more racially isolated than they were when it
unsuccessfully applied for unitary status in 1979.
App. 136a-38a (1f1 231-43); id. at 45a-46a.
Black citizens have tried without success to alter
these policies and practices. Bossier is required by
federal court order to maintain a bi-racial committee
to “recommend to the School Board ways to attain
and maintain a unitary system and to improve
education in the parish.” App. 103a (If 111). The
Board admitted that, for decades, it simply ignored
this requirement altogether. Id. at 103a-04a (f 112).
In 1993, the Board established a committee, but
when black members made substantive suggestions,
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the Board unilaterally disbanded the committee.
App. 105a (1 116); id. at 46a. As School Board
members admitted, they did not want this committee
getting into “policy'’ questions. Id. at 46a. Even in
the face of a federal court mandate to listen to the
concerns of the black community, Bossier refused to
do so. As a result, the black citizens of Bossier Parish
are effectively cut off from any opportunity to have a
voice in the operation of their public schools.
Adopting a redistricting plan with twelve majority-
white districts continued this pattern of exclusion.
This history, as the majority found on remand,
“provides powerful support for the proposition that
Bossier . . . resisted a redistricting plan that would
have created majority black districts.” Maj. at 7.
C. The Sequence of Events Leading Up to
Adoption of the Plan.{ TC "C. The Sequence of
Events Leading Up to Adoption of the Plan." \f
C \1 "3" } The Board initially ignored requests by
black leaders to participate in the redistricting effort,
employing a process characterized by “public silence
and private decisions.” App. 50a. The redistricting
process began in May, 1991, when the Board decided
to develop its own plan rather than adopt the one
previously accepted by the Police Jury.3/ Given the
fact that the next School Board election was not
scheduled until November, 1994, there was no need
for hasty Board action. Id. at 4a. The Board hired
Gary Joiner, the cartographer who had drawn the
Police Jury plan. Id. He was hired to perform
8
3/ The Police Jury is the Parish governing body,
comparable to a county council or commission in most states.
App. 2a; id. at 67a (H 3).
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200-250 hours of work, far more time than would be
needed simply to recreate the Police Jury plan. Id.
at 94a 86-87).
On July 29, 1991, the Police Jury plan was
precleared by the Justice Department. App. 3a. The
parties stipulated, however, that the Police Jury had
provided incorrect and incomplete information in its
Section 5 submission. For example, the Police Jury
and Gary Joiner were “specifically aware that a
contiguous black-majority district could be drawn
both in northern Bossier Parish and in Bossier City.”
Id. at 76a, 82a-83a, 84a ( t l 36, 52-53, 57). However,
they lied to the public, id. at 83a 54), to the only
black police juror, id. at 81a 47), and to the
Attorney General, id. at 87a flHj 65-66), by claiming
that drawing any majority-black district was
impossible. Despite these misrepresentations, some
black community groups opposed the plan and
specifically asked that their letter expressing
concerns about it be included in the Police Jury's
Section 5 submission. Id. at 69a, 87a OH1 11, 65-66).
Joiner and the Police Jury did not include it. Id.
Had the Police Jury made a complete and truthful
submission, the Attorney General clearly would have
denied preclearance.
School Board member Thomas Myrick participated
in several private meetings with Joiner and white
police jurors during this time. App. 5a; id. at 81a,
93a-94a 48, 85). After these meetings, Myrick,
who lives in an area that “would likely be included in
any majority black district to be drawn in the
northern part of Bossier Parish,” id. at 81a (f 48),
recommended that the School Board adopt the Police
Jury plan. Id. at 95a fll 90). On September 5, 1991,
9
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however, the School Board decided not to adopt the
Police Jury plan, largely because it would pit
incumbents against each other. App. 47a. Over the
course of the next year, School Board members
considered a number of re districting options. Id.
Mr. Joiner met privately with School Board members
and demonstrated different possibilities to them on
his computer. Id. at 97a (f 96). These meetings
were not open to the public nor were there any
recorded minutes or published notices of the
meetings. Id.; App. 47a.
While the School Board was meeting and planning
in private, the black community was trying,
unsuccessfully, to participate in pub he. Id. In
March of 1992, George Price, on behalf of a coalition
of black community groups, wrote to the School
Board asking to participate in its redistricting
process. App. 5a; id. at 96a (f 93). Neither the
Board nor the Superintendent responded to this
request. Id. In August of 1992, Mr. Price sent
another letter asking specifically to be involved in
every aspect of the redistricting process. Again, the
School Board made no response. Id. 94).
Frustrated by the School Board’s unresponsiveness,
Price contacted the NAACP Redistricting Project in
Baltimore, Maryland. App. 98a (f 98). The Project
was able to develop a partial plan for Price to discuss
with the School Board. That illustrative plan
consisted of two majority-black districts. Id. The
plan did not show the other ten districts that made
up the Parish. Id. When Price gave this information
to a school district official, he was told that it would
not even be considered because it only showed two
districts. Id. (f 99). Price went back to the NAACP,
10
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and a complete twelve-district illustrative plan was
drawn up. Id. Then, on September 3, 1992, when
Price appeared on behalf of the black community at a
Board meeting and presented a new plan showing all
twelve districts, including ten majority-white and
two majority-black districts, the Board dismissed it
summarily, claiming incorrectly that it could not
even consider any plan that split precinct lines. Id.
at 98a-100a (til 100-02). Until that time, however,
the School Board had been actively considering
alternatives to the Police Jury plan, almost all of
which would have split precincts. See App. 29a; id.
at 72a ( f 23).
At the School Board's next meeting, on
September 17, 1992, Mr. Price again presented the
NAACP’s illustrative plan. App. lOOa-lOla (1j 106).
Instead of discussing the plan with Mr. Joiner, or
asking him to further analyze the possibility of
drawing black-majority districts without splitting
precincts (the School Board’s purported reason for
rejecting the plan, but see id. at 72a (1f 23)), the
Board responded by immediately passing a motion of
intent to adopt the Police Jury plan. Id. at 48a.
On September 24, 1992, an overflow crowd
attended the state-mandated public hearing on the
redistricting plan. App. 7a. Fifteen people spoke
against the School Board’s proposed plan, most of
whom objected because it would dilute minority
voting strength. App. 8a; id. at 101a (1f 108). Not a
single person spoke in favor of the plan. Id. At this
hearing, Mr. Price also presented the Board with a
petition signed by more than 500 Bossier Parish
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citizens, asking the Board to consider an alternative
redistncting plan. Id. at 7a-8a.
Despite the one-sided input from Bossier citizens,
and despite the fact that the Board was under no
time pressure to decide the issue, the Board voted, at
its very next meeting on October 1, 1992, to adopt
the Police Jury plan. As with the meetings of
September 3 and September 17, 1992, the minutes of
this meeting reflect virtually no substantive
consideration of the Police Jury plan.
Board Member Myrick later testified that the
Board adopted the plan that evening because it was
“expedient.” App. 49a. The Police Jury plan only
became “expedient” when the School Board was
publicly confronted with an illustration that
alternatives to twelve white-majority districts were
possible. Id. Faced with the growing frustration of
the black community at being excluded from
educational policy decisions and from the electoral
process, the only way for the School Board to ensure
a plan with all majority-white districts was to adopt
the Police Jury plan quickly, despite its other
drawbacks. App. 49a; id. at 7a-8a, 28a.
D. The Plan Adopted Compared to
Traditional Districting Criteria.{ TC "D. The
Plan Adopted Compared to the Board’s
Redistricting Criteria. " \f C \1 "3" } The Board,
without explanation, adopted a plan which departs
substantively from its earlier districting plans and
ignores factors that it had previously considered
paramount. App. 50a. The plan forced incumbents
to run against one another. Id. at 8a. It also created
several districts that, according to its own
12
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cartographer, are not compact, id. at llla -12a
(11 139), including Thomas Myrick’s district which
contains almost half of the geographic area of the
Parish. Id. at 112a (f 140). These districts do not
track school attendance boundaries. In fact, some of
them do not even contain a school. App. 8a; id. at
112a (| 141). However, they do split black
communities, and all of them have a white majority.
Id. at llO a-lla (tH 135-37). The panel majority
below found that those departures from the Board’s
traditional districting criteria “establish! ] rather
clearly that the Board did not welcome improvement
in the position of racial minorities with respect to
their effective exercise of the electoral franchise.”
Maj. at 8.
E. The Board Members’ Contemporaneous
Statements.{ TC "E. The Board Members’
Contemporaneous Statements." \f C \1 "3"} The
School Board “left virtually no legislative history” of
its decision. App. 55a n .ll. Three School Board
members, however, made contemporaneous
statements revealing the Board’s discriminatory
purpose. App. 5a-6a n.4. School Board member
Henry Burns told a black acquaintance that while he
“personally favors having black representation on
the board, other school board members oppose the
idea.” Id. The School Board offered no evidence
denying or explaining this statement. School Board
member Barry Musgrove told a prominent black
leader that “while he sympathized with the concerns
of the black community, there was nothing more he
could do . . . on this issue because the Board was
‘hostile’ toward the idea of a black-majority district.”
Id. Finally, School Board member Thomas Myrick,
who lives in an area that could readily accommodate
13
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a black-majority district and contains two schools
(both of which have student enrollments that are
more than 75% black), told black leaders that he
would not “let [them] take his seat away from him.”
App. 5a-6a n.4.
F. The Board’s Later Explanations of Its
Motives.} TC "F. The Board’s Later
Explanations of Its Motives." \f C \1 "3" } After
the fact, the School Board sought to justify its actions
with a flurry of explanations, including several
which, even before this Court’s remand, the majority
below had found “clearly were not real reasons.”
App. 27a n.15. For example, the School Board
argued that it adopted the Police Jury plan (on
October 1, 1992) to comply with Shaw v. Reno, 113
S. Ct. 2816 (1993) (decided June 28, 1993), even
though Shaw was decided nine months after the
Board adopted its plan. Id.
The School Board also reiterated its false claim
that it could not adopt a plan without twelve
majority-white districts because any such plan would
require precinct-splitting, which it erroneously
claimed violates state law. App. 56a. Throughout
the redistricting process, however, the School Board
was willing to split precincts for the protection of
incumbents. Id. It was only after the black
community presented its alternative plan that the
School Board proffered the “no precinct-splitting”
rationale. Indeed, the majority below found that
when “the School Board began the redistiicting
process, it likely anticipated the necessity of splitting
some precincts.” Id. at 29a. Furthermore, it was
undisputed that splitting precincts does not violate
state law; while the School Board itself may not split
14
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precincts, police juries have the authority to
establish and modify precinct lines, and many do so
when requested by a school board. Id. at 69a-73a,
85a-86a 13-25, 60-61). The School Board did not
request precinct changes from the Police Jury.
Nor did the School Board voice any concern in its
initial submission to the Attorney General about a
high number of precinct splits causing higher
election costs. App. 57a. The Board never estimated
the cost of splitting precincts before it voted to adopt
the Police Jury plan. Id. Obviously, “cost” did not
actually motivate the School Board’s decision at the
time it was made. Id.
Bossier’s final proffered justification for adopting
the Police Jury plan was that it guaranteed
preclearance; that is, the Attorney General would
approve the School Board’s plan because it was
identical to the Police Jury plan which already had
been precleared. App. 57a-58a. However,
“guaranteed preclearance” was not the School
Board’s main objective; if the School Board’s
paramount concern had been preclearance, it would
not have waited until October 1, 1992 - almost 14
months later - to adopt the Police Jury plan. Id. If
guaranteed preclearance was so important to the
Board, it would have acted soon after the Police Jury
plan was precleared by the Justice Department on
July 29, 1991. Id. Moreover, adopting a plan with
one or more majority-black districts certainly would
not have made preclearance less likely.
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16
III. THE PRIOR PROCEEDINGS
A. Administrative Preclearance Review.{ TC
"A. Administrative Preclearance Review." \f C
\1 "3" } While the School Board had acted
precipitously in approving its redistricting plan on
October 1, 1992, it was not submitted to the
Department of Justice for preclearance until January
4, 1993. App. 103a (If 110). After requesting
additional information, the Attorney General
interposed a timely objection to Bossier’s plan. Id. at
154a, 106a-07a ( f t 118-19). The School Board met
in closed session and decided to seek reconsideration.
Id. at 107a ( f f 120-22). The Attorney General
denied this request on December 20, 1993. Id. at
159a, 108a (f 125).
B. The Declaratory Judgment Action.{ TC "B.
The Declaratory Judgment Action." \f C \1
"3"}
1- The Initial Proceeding's.I TC "1. The
Initial Proceedings." \f C \1 "4" } On July 8, 1994,
Bossier filed this action against the Attorney
General in the United States District Court for the
District of Columbia. A group of black voters in
Bossier Parish, George Price, et al.t intervened as
defendants in support of the Attorney General. The
Defendant-Intervenors suggested below that the
three-judge court decide this case based solely on the
issue of discriminatory purpose.
The Attorney General agreed that the evidence
clearly established an unconstitutional
discriminatory intent, but also argued that much of
the same evidence also established a clear violation
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of Section 2 and that such a violation constitutes
independent grounds for denying preclearance. The
court below ruled that Section 2 analysis may not be
incorporated into a Section 5 review. Id. at lla-24a.
The majority, then Judges Laurence Silberman and
Charles Richey, went much further, however, ruling
that no “evidence of a section 2 violation” may be
used to establish “discriminatory purpose under
section 5.” App. 23a (emphasis added). Ignoring the
fact that much of the same evidence used in
establishing a Section 2 violation is independently
probative of discriminatory intent under Arlington
Heights and other precedents of this Court guiding
the inquiry into racially discriminatory intent or
purpose, the majority flatly held that it would “not
permit section 2 evidence to prove discriminatory
purpose.” Id. at 24a (emphasis added). As a result,
the majority excluded from its consideration much of
the evidence of discriminatory intent in this case.
The majority also erred by concluding that since it
found that the School Board had “at least two . . .
‘legitimate, nondiscriminatory motives,”' Bossier had
met its burden of proof. App. 27a (quoting New York
v. United States, 874 F. Supp. 394, 400 (D.D.C.
1994)). The majority thus ignored the School Board’s
burden of producing some evidence that the proposed
changes were not also motivated in part by an
unconstitutional discriminatory purpose.
Judge Kessler, alone among the panel, considered
the entire “extensive record” below and applied the
Arlington Heights standard. She concluded that
Bossier had failed to carry its burden of proving that
it acted solely with “legitimate, nondiscriminatory
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motives.” App. 37a (quoting New York, 874 F. Supp.
at 400). Indeed, Judge Kessler, looking at all the
evidence, found that it “demonstrates
overwhelmingly” that “racial purpose fueled the
School Board’s decision.” Id. at 63a, 39a.
2. This Court’s Decision.! TC "2. This
Court’s Decision." \f C \1 "4" } This Court upheld
the District Court’s unanimous conclusion that a
Section 2 violation did not provide an independent
basis for a denial of preclearance under Section 5,
but vacated the majority’s decision and remanded for
the lower court to apply the Arlington. Heights
standard to all of the probative evidence of
discriminatory purpose. 117 S.Ct. 1491. The Court
also directed the lower court to “decide on remand”
whether there was any merit to the argument that
Section 5’s discriminatory purpose prong only
reaches voting changes enacted with an intent to
retrogress. Id. at 1501.
3. Proceedings on Remand.! TC "3.
Proceedings on Remand. " \f C \1 "4" } On
remand, the majority (now Judges Silberman and
James Robertson, who joined the panel after Judge
Richey’s death) “declined” to address the scope of
Section 5’s purpose prong, Maj. at 3, but then applied
the Arlington Heights standard only to the question
of whether the Board intended retrogression.
Applying the Arlington Heights standard to this
question the majority concluded that Bossier had no
retrogressive intent.
Judge Kessler in dissent found that the majority
erred in restricting “their § 5 purpose inquiry to a
search for intent to retrogress.” Dis. at 2. She
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concluded that this “far too limited and narrow an
inquiry” was not supported by the statute, its
legislative history or the decisions of this Court. Dis
at 3, 5-7.
19
Judge Kessler also again analyzed the voluminous
evidence of the plan’s impact and concluded that “it
overwhelmingly demonstrates” that the plan dilutes
black voting strength. Dis. at 11. Therefore, she
found that the "majority’s conclusion (that the School
Board acted with an intent to maintain the
discriminatory status quo) leads to denial of
preclearance - under the purpose prong of § 5.” Dis.
at 15.
REASONS FOR NOTING PROBABLE
JURISDICTION
I. THIS COURT SHOULD CORRECT THE
SUBSTANTIAL LEGAL ERROR MADE BY
THE MAJORITY BELOW IN LIMITING THE
INQUIRY INTO THE EXISTENCE OF
DISCRIMINATORY PURPOSE SOLELY TO
A SEARCH FOR AN INTENT TO CAUSE A
RETROGRESSION IN MINORITY VOTING
STRENGTH.
The majority below erroneously limited its Section
5 discriminatory purpose inquiry to a search for an
intent to retrogress. This unprecedented ruling
(1) evades a central issue presented by this Court’s
remand; (2) departs from the controlling precedents
of the Court; and (3) impairs Section 5 enforcement
in jurisdictions like Bossier Parish in which its
application is most vital.
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A. The Court Below Erroneously Declined
to Address the Issue Squarely Presented
to it by this Court’s Remand: Whether
Bossier Had a Discriminatory, But
Nevertheless Non-retrogressive, Purpose
in Enacting its Redistricting Plan.
As Judge Kessler pointed out in dissent, this Court
stated that, while it did not assume “that the Board
enacted the Jury plan with some non-retrogressive
but nevertheless discriminatory ‘purpose’, the
existence of such a purpose, and its relevance to § 5,
are issues to be decided on remand.” Dis. at 2
(quoting 117 S. Ct. at 1501). This instruction
required the court below (1) to address the relevance
of a “non-retrogressive, but nevertheless
discriminatory purpose” to Section 5, and (2) to
inquire into existence of such a discriminatory
purpose in this case. The majority, however, erred in
expressly “declining” to carry out the first mandate
from this Court and, as a result, failed to conduct the
second inquiry either. Maj. at 3.
This is plainly error, for this case has never been
about retrogression. As the majority acknowledged,
before trial, the parties stipulated that the
retrogression caused by the Board’s Plan was de
minimus, Maj. at 6, and, at trial, neither the
Attorney General nor the Defendant-Intervenors
sought to prove an intent to retrogress. Rather, the
parties having stipulated to facts showing the
dilutive impact of the plan on minority voting
strength; the Defendant-Intervenors and the
Attorney General focused at trial on rebutting
20
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Bossier’s weak effort to show that this vote dilution
was not intentional.
Instead, the majority misapplied Arlington Heights
by analyzing each factor tending to show
discriminatory intent solely for the purpose of
determining whether it showed an intent to
retrogress. For example, the majority found that
while “the historical background of the school board’s
adoption" of the plan “provides powerful support for
the proposition that the . . . Board in fact resisted a
redistricting plan that would have created majority
black districts” and showed a “tenacious
determination to maintain the status quo,” it does
not show the Board intended “retrogression." Maj. at
7-8 (emphasis added). Likewise, while the majority
recognized that the “sequence of events . . . does tend
to demonstrate the school board’s resistance to the
“NAACP plan; it does not demonstrate retrogressive
intent.” Id. at 8 (emphasis added). While the
Board’s departure from traditional districting
criteria also “establishes rather clearly that [it] did
not welcome improvement in the position of racial
minorities with respect to their effective exercise of
the electoral franchise,” according to the majority, “it
is not evidence of retrogressive intent.” Id.
(emphasis added). Finally, the majority disregarded
the statements of board members indicating
discriminatory purpose because “ [t]hey do not
establish retrogressive intent." Id. (emphasis added).
Thus, with respect to each type of evidence in this
case, the panel majority erroneously failed even to
undertake the central task on remand: determining
under the Arlington Heights standard whether the
Board had met its burden of proving that it did not
adopt its dilutive, but non-retrogressive, plan in part
21
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for an unconstitutional racially discriminatory
purpose. As Judge Kessler observes, it was error for
the majority to “have limited their § 5 purpose
inquiry to a search for intent to retrogress.” Dis. at
2.
22
By so limiting its inquiry, the majority misapplied
Arlington Heights and, as a result, misinterpreted
the facts. Judge Kessler, who has now twice applied
Arlington Heights to those established facts has
twice found that they “overwhelmingly demonstrate”
that Bossier acted with an unconstitutional racially -
discriminatory purpose that was not retrogressive.
App. 63a; Dis. 11.
B. The Statute and the Decisions of this
Court Make Clear that Section 5
Prohibits a Change in Election
Procedures Adopted with an
Unconstitutional Discriminatory Intent
Whether or Not the Change is
Retrogressive.
Section 5’s discriminatory purpose inquiry clearly
extends beyond the search for retrogressive intent.
Section 5 prohibits any unconstitutional
discriminatory intent. Such an intent may take the
form of an intent to retrogress, but on the facts of
particular cases, such as this case, it can take other
forms. The plain language of the statute and the
consistent caselaw interpreting it leave no doubt that
the “purpose” inquiry under Section 5 should be co
extensive with the Arlington Heights analysis.
Indeed, there is no support for the proposition that
Section 5 was intended to provide less protection
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against racial discrimination than does the
Constitution.
By its terms, Section 5 forbids any voting change
unless the covered jurisdiction establishes that the
change “does not have the purpose and will not have
the effect of denying or abridging the right to vote on
account of race or color.” 42 U.S.C. § 1973c. These
words echo the language of the 15th Amendment:
“The right of citizens . . . to vote shall not be denied
or abridged . . . on account of race or color . . . . ”
Congress’ use of constitutional language indicates
that one purpose forbidden by Section 5 is the
purpose of unconstitutionally diluting minority
voting strength. See Bossier, 117 S. Ct at 1505
(Breyer, J., concurring). There is nothing in the
plain and unambiguous language of Section 5 to
suggest that Congress intended a Section 5 court or
the Attorney General to preclear a dilutive plan
adopted with an unconstitutional purpose.
Given that the “starting point” for assessing
discriminatory purpose under Arlington Heights is
the impact of the proposed action, 429 U.S. at 266
(citing Washington v. Davis, 426 U.S. 229, 242
(1976)), limiting the Section 5 discriminatory
purpose inquiry to the existence of “retrogressive
intent” would make that analysis redundant. What
jurisdiction intending to retrogress would adopt a
non-retrogressive plan? Likewise, since any plan
with a retrogressive impact also would violate the
effect prong of Section 5, the purpose prong would be
superfluous.
This Court also has held repeatedly that
intentional minority vote dilution is a harm against
23
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which Section 5 guards and that a prohibited
discriminatory purpose need not be retrogressive. As
Justice Breyer wrote, in his concurrence in this case,
“the ‘purpose’ inquiry does extend beyond the search
for retrogressive intent.” 117 S. Ct. at 1505.
While the majority opinion purported to “leave
open for another day” that question, the Court has
answered already, repeatedly and consistently. In
1966, the Court upheld the constitutionality of the
Voting Rights Act in South Carolina v. Katzenbach,
383 U.S. 301, and recognized that Section 5 and the
Fifteenth Amendment were coextensive. Id. at 334
(Section 5 requires a determination whether voting
changes “would violate the Fifteenth Amendment”).
See also Allen v. State Bd. of Elections, 393 U.S. 544,
556 (1969). Subsequently, in cases like City of
Pleasant Grove v. United States, 479 U.S. 462, 469-
72 (1987), Busbee v. Smith, 459 U.S. 1166 (1983),
and City of Richmond v. United States, 422 U.S. 358
(1975), the Court has been presented directly with
and rejected the argument that Section 5 does not
prohibit nonretrogressive voting changes enacted
with an unconstitutional discriminatory intent.
In the first of these cases, City of Richmond v.
United States, 422 U.S. 358 (1975), the Court
remanded for a determination of discriminatory
purpose where the election change had
discriminatory effect. In rejecting the argument that
such a remand was unnecessary, the Court explained
the obvious logical implication of its prior
observations in Katzenbach and Allen:
The answer is plain, and we need not labor it. An
official action, whether an annexation or otherwise,
24
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taken for the purpose of discriminating against
Negroes on account of their race has no legitimacy
at all under our Constitution or under the statute.
Section 5 forbids voting changes taken with the
purpose of denying the vote on the grounds of race
or color. . . . An annexation proved to be of this
kind and not proved to have a justifiable basis is
forbidden by § 5, whatever its actual effect may have
been or may be.
422 U.S. at 378-79 (emphasis added).
Later in Busbee u, Smith, 959 U.S. 1166 (1983), the
Court summarily affirmed a three-judge court’s
denial of Section 5 preclearance to a redistricting
plan that was not merely nonretrogressive but
actually ameliorative, in that it increased black
voting strength. 549 F. Supp 494, 516 (D.D.C. 1982).
The district court explained that “ [s] imply
demonstrating that a plan increases black voting
strength does not entitle the state of Georgia to the
declaratory relief it seeks; the state must also
demonstrate the absence of discriminatory purpose.”
Id. In its appeal to this Court, the state claimed that
this was legal error,4/ but this Court rejected that
argument and summarily affirmed the district court.
25
4/ The questions presented in Busbee were:
A. Whether a Congressional reapportionment plan that has
no discriminatory effect, that enhances black voting strength,
and that provides blacks with equal access to the political
process can be deemed to violate Section 5 of the Voting Rights
Act.
B. Whether a Congressional reapportionment plan that does
not have the purpose of diminishing the existing level of black
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Yet again in Pleasant Grove, the Court rejected the
argument that a nonretrogressive change could not
violate the purpose prong of Section 5. The Court
found that the city had failed to prove that its
annexation of certain white areas lacked a
discriminatory purpose. Despite the fact that the
annexation lacked a retrogressive effect, the Court
denied Section 5 preclearance. Id.; see also id. at
474-75. (Powell, Jj, dissenting)(contending that the
majority erred in holding that a discriminatory
purpose could be found even though there was no
intent “to have a retrogressive effect”). Thus, the
limitation that the panel below set for itself of
reviewing the evidence only for intent to retrogress is
contrary to this Court’s decisions rejecting the
argument that Section 5 does not prohibit a
nonretrogressive voting change enacted with an
unconstitutional, discriminatory intent.
This Court’s more recent decision in Miller v.
Johnson, 515 U.S. 900 (1975), confirms this long
standing view of the purpose prong of Section 5. In
Miller, the Court expressly acknowledged its
previous decisions, see e.g. Pleasant Grove, 479 U.S.
at 469, which recognize discriminatory purpose as a
distinct basis for the denial of preclearance under
Section 5. See also Busbee, 549 F. Supp. at 516-17;
26
voting strength can be deemed to have the purpose of denying
or abridging the right to vote on account of race within the
meaning of Section 5 of the Voting Rights Act.
Jurisdictional Statement at i, Busbee v. Smith, 459 U.S. 1166
(1983).
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City of Port Arthur v. United States, 517 F. Supp. 987
(D.D.C. 1981), aff’d, 459 U.S. 159 (1982).
While the Court in Miller also quotes Beer v.
United States, 425 U.S. 130, 141 (1975), for the
proposition that “the purpose of § 5 always has been
to insure that no voting-procedure changes would be
made that would lead to a retrogression in the
position of racial minorities with respect to their
effective exercise of the electoral franchise,” 515 U.S.
at 926, the Court’s decision in Beer addresses only
the meaning of “discriminatory effect” under Section
5.
27
In both Beer and Miller, moreover, the Court
expressly reaffirmed that purposeful racial
discrimination remains an independent basis for a
Section 5 objection. In Beer, the Court held that “a
legislative reapportionment could be a substantial
improvement on its predecessor in terms of lessening
racial discrimination, and yet nonetheless continue
so to discriminate on the basis of race or color as to
be unconstitutional.” 42 U.S. 142 n.14. The Court in
Miller reiterated that even an “ameliorative” plan
can violated Section 5 if “the new apportionment
itself so discriminates on the basis or race or color as
to violate the Constitution.” Id. at 923 (citations
omitted). By now, therefore, it is well-settled that in
analyzing discriminatory purpose under Section 5
the question is whether the jurisdiction has
established the absence of any unconstitutional
discriminatory intent, not merely an intent to
retrogress.
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C. By Improperly Limiting the Section 5
Discriminatory Purpose Inquiry the
Majority Below Would Severely
Undermine Effective Administration of
Section 5 in Jurisdictions Such as
Bossier Parish Where Such Enforcement
is Most Needed.
In jurisdictions, like Bossier Parish, with poor
disenfranchised minority communities, neither
Section 2 nor the effect prong of Section 5
consistently provides an effective remedy against
discrimination in voting. Therefore, to limit Section
5’s purpose inquiry only to cases already involving
retrogression would insulate the intransigent and
damaging racial discrimination of Bossier Parish.
Congress’ fundamental purpose in enacting Section
5 was to keep jurisdictions, like Bossier, with a long
history of voting discrimination from finding new
ways to perpetuate their discriminatory ways. H.R.
Rep. No. 89-439, at 8-9 (1965; S. Rep. No. 89-162, pt.
3, at 13-15 (1965). To accomplish this Congress
shifted to covered jurisdictions the burden of proving
the absence of discriminatory purpose or effect.
During the course of the hearings and debate on
the Act, Congress found that prosecuting cases to
enforce constitutional prohibitions against voting
discrimination was lengthy and time-consuming.
H.R. Rep. No. 89-439, at 9-11 (1965); S. Rep. No. 89-
162, pt. 3, at 6-9 (1965). Moreover, even when cases
were successfully prosecuted, effective relief was
difficult to obtain; when discriminatory voting
devices were eliminated, many of the jurisdictions
found new ways to discriminate. H.R. Rep. No. 89-
28
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439, at 10-11 (1965); S. Rep. No. 89-162, pt. 3, at 8,
12 (1965).
Bossier Parish is precisely such a jurisdiction in
which discriminatory patterns have been
successfully perpetuated in voting, as in other areas,
in part because of the inability of the local minority
community to bring and maintain successful legal
challenges. In such jurisdictions Section 2 does not
provide a remedy that most victims of voting
discrimination can use effectively. As Congress
recognized, the process is lengthy, time consuming
and expensive, and the burden of proof rests on the
plaintiffs, who like the Defendant - Intervenors here
are often excluded from the redistricting process and
denied accurate information. See supra Statement
II.C.
Moreover, in Bossier Parish, such complex civil
rights litigation has proven prohibitively expensive.
The record here shows, for example, that the local
black community was unable to maintain counsel to
force the Board to comply with outstanding
desegregation orders. [Direct Testimony of S.P.
Davis]. As a result, the Board was able to ignore and
to violate its court-ordered desegregation obligations.
J.A. at 90-91 (Davis). Likewise the Bossier Parish
Police Jury was able to enact a discriminatory
redistricting plan and falsely claim that it was
impossible to draw any election districts containing a
majority of black voters; no one in the local black
community had the resources to unmask this lie. See
supra Statement II.C. In a poor, rural, racially-
divided community like Bossier Parish, Section 5 is
our best hope for electoral justice, and fair elections
29
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are our only real hope for racial justice and equal
educational opportunity.
In Bossier Parish, moreover, it would be virtually
impossible to oppose preclearance if such opposition
required a demonstration of a retrogressive effect.
Most obviously, in terms of the number of majority-
minority election districts or successful minority
candidates, it is impossible to retrogress from zero.
Moreover, for elected officials bent on
discrimination, if minority voters already can elect
no candidates of their choice, there is no need for
further retrogression. Even if minority voting
strength could have been more diluted
mathematically, it could not have been diluted any
more effectively. To condone the intentional
perpetuation of such a situation would transform the
Board’s “extraordinary success in resisting
integration . .. [into] a shield for further resistance.”
Pleasant Grove, 479 U.S. at 472. And, as this Court
has held, “ [n]othing could be further from the
purposes of the Voting Rights Act.” Id.
CONCLUSION
The evidence below, when fully considered as
Judge Kessler did, “demonstrates overwhelmingly”
that Bossier’s action “was a thinly veiled effort to
deny black voters a meaningful opportunity for
representation on the School Board.” App. 63a, 64a.
This action is unconstitutional and, therefore,
violates Section 5.
30
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31
The majority’s contrary interpretation of Section 5’s
purpose prong, as prohibiting only the intent to
retrogress, contradicts this Court’s clear precedents.
Therefore, the Court should note probable
jurisdiction and correct this substantial legal error.
Barbara R. arnwine
Thomas J. Henderson
Edward still
Respectfully submitted,
Pa tricia a . Brannan*
John W. Borkowski
Lawyer’s Committee for
Civil Rights Under Law
Hogan & Hartson l .l .p.
555 Thirteenth Street, N.W.
Washington, D.C. 20004
(202) 637-8686
1450 G Street, N.W., Suite 400
Washington, D.C. 20005
(202) 662-8320
* Counsel o f Record Counsel for Appellants
George Price et at.
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