IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA
No. 18-1465
Filed April 29, 2020
BRIAN KONCEL,
Applicant-Appellant,
vs.
STATE OF IOWA,
Respondent-Appellee.
________________________________________________________________
Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Jackson County, Kevin McKeever,
Judge.
Brian Koncel appeals the district court’s denial of his application for
postconviction relief. AFFIRMED.
Mark C. Meyer, Cedar Rapids, for appellant.
Thomas J. Miller, Attorney General, and Sheryl Soich, Assistant Attorney
General, for appellee State.
Considered by Bower, C.J., and Vaitheswaran and Doyle, JJ.
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VAITHESWARAN, Judge.
Brian Koncel appeals the district court’s denial of his application for
postconviction relief (PCR) following his 1997 conviction for first-degree
kidnapping. He challenges the court’s denial of several ineffective-assistance-of-
counsel claims.
I. Background Facts and Proceedings
This court summarized the pertinent facts in State v. Koncel, No. 98-0169,
2001 WL 98611, at *1 (Iowa Ct. App. Feb. 7, 2001).
When Marty Budde and a friend drove by his parents’ farm which
was rented by Brian Koncel’s mother they noticed lights on in an out-
building. After dropping his friend off, Budde returned to the farm.
The next morning Budde’s wife reported him missing. The search
led to the farm where a large amount of blood was found. The
officers searched the farm area and asked Brian’s brother Joseph for
permission to search the house where they found a crowbar behind
the stove, a knife behind the sofa, and wet clothing in the bathtub.
Budde’s truck and body eventually were located in a wooded area
eight miles from the farm.
During questioning, Brian Koncel told the police he heard a
noise and went outside to find Joseph hitting someone with a
crowbar. Brian said he helped Joseph load Budde in the back of his
truck and they drove to a secluded area where Joseph pulled Budde
into the surrounding woods. A short time later Joseph came back
and said Budde was not dead. Joseph returned to the woods holding
a knife and came back a short time later. The state charged Brian
with felony murder in violation of Iowa Code sections 707.1 and
707.2(2) and first-degree kidnapping in violation of Iowa Code
sections 710.1(4) and 710.2 (1997).
....
At trial the former state medical examiner testified the blows
received at the farm, if untreated, would have resulted in death within
about thirty minutes. He also opined, given the amount of blood
found in the truck, that Budde was still alive when he was moved.
He testified that the small amount of bruising near the knife wounds
indicated they were received shortly before death. The marshalling
instruction for first-degree murder said in part that the State needed
to prove “the defendant or Joseph Koncel struck Marty Lee Budde.”
(Emphasis added). The jury found Brian Koncel guilty of first-degree
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kidnapping and first-degree felony murder. The court sentenced him
to concurrent life sentences.
Koncel, 2001 WL 98611, at *1. We set aside Koncel’s first-degree murder
conviction based on instructional error. Id. at *3–4. We affirmed his conviction for
first-degree kidnapping. Id. at *3.
Koncel’s PCR application was filed in 2004 but was not heard and
considered until 2018.
II. Ineffective Assistance of Counsel
“A convicted defendant’s claim that counsel’s assistance was so defective
as to require reversal of a conviction . . . has two components. First, the defendant
must show that counsel’s performance was deficient. . . . Second the defendant
must show the deficient performance prejudiced the defense.” Strickland v.
Washington, 466 U.S. 668, 687 (1984). Koncel argues his trial attorney failed to:
(A) present a more “nuanced” defense theory; (B) object to a jury instruction that
did not include certain language on one of the kidnapping elements; (C) object to
hearsay evidence that was inconsistent with the defense theory; and
(D) adequately investigate the circumstances surrounding the state medical
examiner’s resignation.
A. Failure to present a “nuanced” defense theory
The jury was instructed the State would have to prove the following elements
of first-degree kidnapping:
1. On or between March 5 and March 6, 1997, the defendant
confined or removed Marty Lee Budde.
2. At the time the defendant began to confine or remove the
victim, Marty Lee Budde was alive.
3. The defendant did so with the specific intent to secretly
confine Marty Lee Budde.
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4. The defendant knew he did not have the consent of the
victim to do so.
5. As a result of the confinement or removal, Marty Lee Budde
suffered a serious injury.
Koncel’s trial attorney honed in on the second element. He argued Budde was not
alive at the time Koncel began to confine or remove him. Specifically, he theorized
that Budde died of wounds inflicted by Koncel’s brother before Koncel intervened
to help move the body.
On appeal, Koncel contends counsel should have argued in the alternative
that if Budde was not dead before he intervened to help move the body, he was at
the very least “irreversibly injured.” The alternative argument, he asserts, would
have countered evidence of the potential for Budde to recover from his injuries with
medical intervention. In his view, “[i]f the victim is dead or about to die prior to the
confinement or removal, then the confinement or removal of the body is merely
incidental to the killing of the victim and no conviction for kidnapping lies.”
Koncel’s attorney testified by deposition that he generally did not like
making either/or arguments. In his words:
I thought your case is never stronger than your weakest argument.
And thought that would have been a weaker argument if I had made
it. I guess if you are asking me to Monday morning quarterback
myself, I don’t know—I don’t recall having that thought process.
But having it now, I would not want to weaken my argument
on element 2 by making an alternative argument on element 5. That
would have been—that would be my thought process today. And
perhaps that was my thought process at the time, or maybe it didn’t
even occur to me at the time. I don’t recall. But I don’t—I never liked
either-or argument[s].
Counsel’s strategy was reasonable. He retained an expert witness, who opined
“to a reasonable degree of medical certainty” that Budde’s death occurred “at the
completion of the head injuries.” The expert reasoned that “[t]he configuration of
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the fracture lines” and “the relatively scant amount of bleeding that one finds in the
brain and surrounding soft tissues” indicated “a very rapid cessation of heart and
respiratory functions.” He stated “the injuries as sustained here and the rapid
collapse” were “irreversible.”
The expert opined on Budde’s specific injuries as follows: (1) “there [was]
really comparatively little bleeding in the scalp compared to what one would expect
to see in somebody who had lived a while with this particular injury”; (2) “circulation
ceased very rapidly after” certain tears to his liver “were sustained”; and (3) “blood
pressure and blood circulation had ceased very early on, and was minimal at the
time . . . injuries [to Budde’s ribs] were sustained” and the state medical examiner’s
use of the term “agonal” in characterizing the rib injuries meant they were
“sustained at the time of death or during the process of dying.”
As for evidence of blood in the truck used to transport Budde, the expert
testified there were no “signs of arterial spurting” or “signs of significant
splattering,” which “would [have] be[en] definite proof of . . . circulation”; the blood
on the vehicle screen could have occurred after death; and Budde “was not actively
bleeding” in the woods where his body was found, meaning “[h]e was dead.”
The expert acknowledged “individual respiratory functions” might “have
occurred for a considerable time later,” but he did not find those functions
inconsistent with his opinion on the time of death. In his view, movement of a dead
body could “force a small amount of air out through the windpipe and into the
surrounding air.”
In sum, counsel presented and supported what he believed to be the most
cogent defense to the kidnapping charge—a challenge to the element requiring
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Budde to have been alive before he was removed or confined. Counsel’s theory
that Budde died before he was moved necessarily subsumed an argument that he
was “irreversibly injured” before he was moved. Although counsel’s theory failed
to win the day, we are not to consider “whether defense counsel’s actions were
successful, but whether they were ‘justifiable.’” Anfinson v. State, 758 N.W.2d 496,
501 (Iowa 2008) (quoting Pettes v. State, 418 N.W.2d 53, 57 (Iowa 1988)). On our
de novo review, we are persuaded that Koncel’s trial attorney acted competently
when he limited his defense theory to death-before-the-kidnapping rather than
death-or-irreversible-injury before the kidnapping. See Strickland, 466 U.S. at 688
(“The proper measure of attorney performance remains simply reasonableness
under prevailing professional norms.”).
Our conclusion effectively resolves Koncel’s related assertion that his
attorney was ineffective in failing to call the Jackson County medical examiner to
testify about Budde’s serious injuries. Death was the ultimate serious injury and,
as discussed, the defense expert testified at length about the timing of Budde’s
death and the injuries leading up to it. Additionally, calling the local medical
examiner to the stand carried risks. Koncel’s trial attorney testified by deposition
that he spoke to the medical examiner before trial, and “he was kind of coy.” In
counsel’s words, “I remember him saying very explicitly . . . don’t call me, you are
not going to like what I have to say. And so I took him at his word and didn’t call
him.” Counsel also explained that he did not depose him because “if [he] listed
him and he was deposed,” then he “was going to add a witness to the state’s list
that they didn’t have.” Counsel’s strategy was reasonable. See Ledezma v. State,
626 N.W.2d 134, 143 (Iowa 2001) (“[S]trategic decisions made after ‘thorough
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investigation of law and facts relevant to plausible options are virtually
unchallengeable.’” (citation omitted)).
B. Failure to object to jury instruction
As discussed, the second element of the marshalling instruction for
kidnapping required the defendant to “confine or remove” Budde. The trial court
defined the terms as follows:
Concerning element number 1 of instruction Nos. 28 and 33,
confinement or removal requires more than what is included in the
commission of the crime of murder.
A person is “confined” when his or her freedom to move about
is substantially restricted by force, threat or deception. The person
may be confined either in the place where the restriction began or in
a place to which he or she has been removed.
No minimum time of confinement or distance of removal is
required. It must be more than slight. The confinement or removal
must have significance apart from the murder. In determining
whether confinement or removal exists, you may consider whether:
1. The risk of harm to Marty Budde was increased.
2. The risk of detection was reduced.
3. Escape was made easier.
Koncel argues the instruction “included a watered-down version of” certain
language required by our case law. See State v. Albright, 925 N.W.2d 144, 152–
53 (Iowa 2019) (“The three prongs [of the confinement-or-removal test] include
confinement or removal that (1) ‘substantially increases the risk of harm to the
victim,’ (2) ‘significantly lessens the risk of detection,’ or (3) ‘significantly facilitates
escape of the perpetrator.’”); State v. Robinson, 859 N.W.2d 464, 481 (Iowa 2015)
(“In the end, the question calls for an exercise of our judgment as to whether, on
the totality of the circumstances, the State offered sufficient evidence that a jury
could find beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant’s confinement of the
victim substantially increased the risk of harm, significantly lessened the risk of
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detection, or significantly facilitated escape.”); State v. Rich, 305 N.W.2d 739, 745
(Iowa 1981) (“Such confinement or removal may exist because it substantially
increases the risk of harm to the victim, significantly lessens the risk of detection,
or significantly facilitates escape following the consummation of the offense.”
(emphasis added)). In his view, “[c]ounsel acting within the range of normally
competent counsel would not have failed to object to an instruction that diminished
the State’s burden of proving that confinement or removal was more than incidental
to the underlying offense.”
The jury instruction clearly failed to include the italicized language adopted
in Rich and reaffirmed in subsequent opinions. Assuming without deciding counsel
had a duty to object to the absence of that language, Koncel failed to establish
Strickland prejudice.
According to a report of a law enforcement interview, Koncel told the
investigator the brothers went south from their home “for possibly five miles,”
“turned right,” proceeded “approximately two miles,” “turned left on a gravel road
that went up hill,” “made a left turn and then made a right turn into a grassy area.”
They “drove along the tree line” before coming to a stop. It was “very dark that
night.” Koncel’s brother went “into the woods” and appeared to be “pulling [Budde]
into the woods.”
Based on the report, this court characterized the site where Budde’s body
was found as a “secluded area.” Koncel, 2001 WL 98611, at *1. This
characterization together with the underlying evidence lead us to conclude that
there was no reasonable probability of a different outcome had counsel succeeded
in having the jury instruction changed from “[t]he risk of detection was reduced” to
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“significantly lessened the risk of detection.” See Harper v. State, No.17-0435,
2018 WL 4360892, at *9 (Iowa Ct. App. Sept. 12, 2018) (“Assuming without
deciding trial counsel had a duty to object to the instruction without the intensifiers,
we cannot say Harper suffered prejudice. We find no reasonable probability the
jury would have returned a not-guilty verdict on the first-degree kidnapping charge
had the intensifiers been included in the instruction.”); Gailey v. State, No. 15-2183,
2017 WL 3077915, at *3 (Iowa Ct. App. July 19, 2017) (“Even assuming Gailey’s
trial counsel had a duty to object to the confinement instruction without the
intensifiers, we cannot find Gailey suffered prejudice as a result of his counsel’s
omission.”); State v. Ronnau, No. 14-0787, 2016 WL 351314, at *10 (Iowa Ct. App.
Jan. 27, 2016) (“Assuming Ronnau’s trial counsel had a duty to object to the
confinement instruction without the intensifiers, we cannot find Ronnau suffered
prejudice as a result of his counsel’s omission.”); State v. Norem, No. 14-1524,
2016 WL 146237, at *7 (Iowa Ct. App. Jan. 13, 2016) (“Assuming Norem’s trial
counsel had a duty to object to the confinement instruction without the intensifiers,
we cannot find Norem suffered prejudice as a result of counsel’s omission”.); cf.
State v. Chamberlain, No. 17-1426, 2018 WL 6719730, at *8 (Iowa Ct. App. Dec.
19, 2018) (“[A]lthough the jury could have found that Chamberlain’s confinement
and removal of Robin was not merely incidental to the crime of intimidation with a
dangerous weapon with intent, we cannot say the record contains overwhelming
evidence to compel the jury to reach that result.”).
C. Failure to object to hearsay statement
Koncel next contends counsel was ineffective in failing to object to hearsay
evidence that undermined his theory of the case. He points to an investigator’s
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testimony about the interview with Koncel and, specifically, Koncel’s statement that
his brother returned from the woods and “told him that [Budde’s] not dead,
[Budde’s] not dead.” He also challenges the division of criminal investigation report
containing the statement.
The State acknowledges Koncel’s attorney could have lodged hearsay
objections to this evidence but argues Koncel was not prejudiced because
“compelling medical and physical evidence establish[ed] the same fact.” On our
de novo review, we agree.
The State medical examiner, Dr. Thomas Bennett, opined that “Mr. Budde
did not die immediately.” He stated, “[T]here was definite bleeding going into the
soft tissues, indicating that he had blood pressure when those injuries were
sustained, he was still alive when these injuries were sustained.” He further opined
Budde “lived for at least several minutes and could perhaps have lived for thirty
minutes or longer before finally, because of these injuries, those vital functions
stopped and he died.” He reiterated, “[A]t least he could have lived at least thirty
minutes or so.” When asked about blood in the truck, he testified, “You don’t get
that much drainage from an individual that has received fatal head wounds after
they’re dead. It indicates to me that he was alive and bleeding to allow his body
to push blood to the outside through these many wounds into this area.” Finally,
he testified to knife wounds inflicted after Budde was taken to the woods, stating,
“[H]e still had evidence of circulatory function.”
Based on this evidence, there is no reasonable probability of a different
outcome had counsel succeeded in excluding the statements of Koncel’s brother
that Budde was not dead when he was taken to the woods. See Linn v. State, 929
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N.W.2d 717, 731 (Iowa 2019) (“The ultimate question is whether there is a
reasonable probability that, absent the errors, the factfinder would have had a
reasonable doubt respecting guilt.”).
D. Failure to adequately investigate resignation of medical examiner
Koncel challenges his trial attorney’s failure to question Dr. Bennett in
greater detail “about the circumstances of his departure from the state medical
examiner’s office.” Counsel made a strategic decision to limit his cross-
examination to the facts of the case. See State v. Rice, 543 N.W.2d 884, 888
(Iowa 1996) (“Counsel did not breach any essential duty to the defendant by failing
to pose specific cross-examination questions defendant would prefer him to ask.”).
He elicited inconsistencies between Dr. Bennett’s trial and deposition testimony
about the time of Budde’s death which, as discussed, was the crux of Koncel’s
defense. Although he conceded in his deposition testimony, that he “wishe[d] [he]
would have explored” the circumstances surrounding Dr. Bennett’s resignation “a
little more,” he noted Dr. Bennett was a “very charismatic witness” and he would
have only questioned him if, for example, he “knew there was demonstrated proof
that he had lied at a criminal trial.” We conclude his failure to delve into the
resignation did not amount to ineffective assistance.
III. Issues Sought to Be Preserved
Koncel raises several claims of ineffective assistance of PCR counsel he
would like to have this court preserve for another PCR action as well as a claim of
actual innocence under Schmidt v. State, 909 N.W.2d 778 (Iowa 2018). He
concedes recent legislation “nullifies [precedent] which . . . held that the proper
mechanism for resolving claims of ineffective assistance of PCR counsel raised
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for the first time on appeal is for an applicant to file a separate PCR application in
the district court.” See 2019 Iowa Acts ch. 140, § 34; Iowa Code § 822.3 (2019)
(“An allegation of ineffective assistance of counsel in a prior case under this
chapter shall not toll or extend the limitation periods in this section nor shall such
claim relate back to a prior filing to avoid the application of the limitation periods.”);
Allison v. State, 914 N.W.2d 866, 891 (Iowa 2018) (“In order to avoid the difficult
constitutional position that would result in denying a remedy where defense
counsel allegedly provided ineffective assistance at trial and postconviction
counsel is ineffective in raising that claim, we think the best approach is to hold
that where a PCR petition alleging ineffective assistance of trial counsel has been
timely filed per section 822.3 and there is a successive PCR petition alleging
postconviction counsel was ineffective in presenting the ineffective-assistance-of-
trial-counsel claim, the timing of the filing of the second PCR petition relates back
to the timing of the filing of the original PCR petition for purposes of Iowa Code
section 822.3 if the successive PCR petition is filed promptly after the conclusion
of the first PCR action.”). For that reason, he asks us to either remand the case
for hearing on the claims or decide all but one of the claims at this time.
We decline to follow either suggested course or weigh in on the effect of the
recent legislation should Koncel elect to file another PCR action raising ineffective-
assistance-of-counsel claims against his PCR attorney. With respect to the actual-
innocence claim, Koncel concedes the record would require “more development.”
Again, we decline to decide how Koncel should raise the claim or whether the claim
is viable.
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We affirm the denial of Koncel’s postconviction-relief application.
AFFIRMED.