Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

Former Trump Impeachment Lawyer Previously Removed Black Jurors Using Blatantly Racist Stereotypes

Former Trump Impeachment Lawyer Previously Removed Black Jurors Using Blatantly Racist Stereotypes
Greg Harris/Facebook

One of the core attorneys in former President Donald Trump's now disbanded legal team for his second impeachment trial had a history of using racial stereotypes to remove Black citizens from serving on juries.

The attorney in question, Greg Harris of South Carolina, was one of four leading attorneys who were part of Trump's second impeachment legal team. The team of attorneys abruptly quit Saturday with just over a week to go before the trial.


Harris—who confirmed his hiring to the Associated Press this past Thursday—had given racial stereotypes as reasoning to remove one juror going so far as to say they "shucked and jived" as they walked. A telling fit for a President who has called White supremacists "fine people" and shouted out to the Proud Boys, a known hate group, during the recent Presidential debates.

In 1989, when Harris served as an assistant solicitor for the 5th Judicial Circuit Solicitor's Office, the South Carolina Supreme Court ruled Harris used racist stereotypes against two Black jurors in a DUI case.

The attorney for the defendant in the DUI case, Phillip Mace, told HuffPost through the two trials 9 out of 10 strikes used by Harris were against potential jurors who were Black.

Mace recalled Harris response to him. He said:

"When I challenged him on it, Greg said he didn't have a racist or [discriminatory] bone in his body. I remember that."

In this case Harris struck one Black man from the jury pool because he said he walked slow, talked low, and was older. When striking another potential juror in the same case Harris told the trial judge it was because the man was unemployed, disinterested and "shucked and jived".

Harris stated:

"I watched him as he walked from the jury panel to the microphone and I have noted that he ― he shucked and jived is what I had. That's just my analysis of the way he walked up here."

After the trial court failed to substantiate the claim Harris displayed a pattern of racial bias the South Carolina Supreme Court ruled on the case calling Harris' use of racial stereotypes "troublesome."

The South Carolina Supreme Court said in the ruling:

"The trial court failed to inquire into or comment on the prosecutor's explanation that the juror was struck because he 'shucked and jived.' The use of this racial stereotype is evidence of the prosecutor's subjective intent to discriminate."

Mace applauded the Supreme Court's decision saying it started a "sea change" in a state with a history of violent racism.

Twitter users were unsurprised at Trump's choice of Harris for his legal team.






Greg Harris had not responded to inquiries for comment as of this writing.

More from People/donald-trump

Screenshot of George Santos; Zohran Mamdani
@MrSantosNY/X; Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images

George Santos Announced He's Leaving New York After Mamdani's Win—And The Responses Are Brutal

Disgraced former New York Republican Representative George Santos was widely mocked after he announced he will leave New York City now that Zohran Mamdani has won the mayoral election.

Mamdani has sent shockwaves around the world with his win; an unapologetic democratic socialist, he took on the establishment and won despite months of Islamophobic and racist attacks from the right-wing.

Keep ReadingShow less
Screenshot of man collapsing and Robert F. Kennedy Jr. preparing to walk out
@atrupar/X

RFK Jr. Dragged For Bolting Out Of Oval Office The Moment A Man Collapsed During Press Briefing

Health and Human Services (HHS) Robert F. Kennedy Jr. was criticized after hurrying out of a press briefing in the Oval Office on Thursday after a man had a medical emergency and suddenly collapsed.

Kennedy was on hand alongside President Donald Trump, Dr. Mehmet Oz—the current Administrator for the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services—and health aides for a press briefing announcing lower costs for weight loss drugs.

Keep ReadingShow less

Times People Saw Someone Almost Die Due To Their Own Actions

All actions have consequences, some more negative and severe than others.

But sometimes, someone will do something so extreme or stupid, it could almost cost them their life.

Keep ReadingShow less

Cancer Patients Explain Which Symptoms Ultimately Led Them To See A Doctor

Cancer has taken far too many lives and affected far too many people.

Where is a cure?

Keep ReadingShow less
Close-up shot of the number 30 painted on asphalt.
Photo by Markus Spiske on Unsplash

People Over 30 Share Their Biggest Regrets In Life

Life goes by in a flash.

When we're young, we tend to laugh off that statement.

Keep ReadingShow less