IN THE SUPREME COURT OF IOWA
No. 20–1000
Submitted October 20, 2021—Filed January 21, 2022
STATE OF IOWA,
Appellee,
vs.
KEVIN PLAIN SR.,
Appellant.
Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Black Hawk County, William P.
Wegman, District Associate Judge.
The defendant appeals the district court’s denial on remand of his motion
challenging the representativeness of the jury pool under the fair-cross-section
requirements under the Sixth Amendment of the United States Constitution.
AFFIRMED.
McDermott, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which all justices
joined.
Gary Dickey (argued) of Dickey, Campbell, and Sahag Law Firm, PLC, Des
Moines, for appellant.
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Thomas J. Miller, Attorney General, and Louis S. Sloven (argued),
Assistant Attorney General, for appellee.
David S. Walker (argued), Windsor Heights, and Russell E. Lovell, II, Des
Moines, for amicus curiae NAACP.
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McDERMOTT, Justice.
A jury in Black Hawk County found Kevin Plain guilty of harassment in
the first degree. Plain, an African-American, appealed his conviction, arguing
that his right to an impartial jury under the United States Constitution and the
Iowa Constitution had been violated because his jury panel contained only one
African-American out of forty-nine potential jurors that appeared for trial. On
appeal, we remanded the case to give Plain an opportunity to develop his
impartial-jury arguments in response to refinements to how a defendant must
prove a constitutional violation that we explained in his and other cases after his
trial. The district court ultimately rejected Plain’s further-developed claims. Plain
now appeals that ruling.
I. Facts Developed on Remand.
We described the underlying facts from Plain’s trial and earlier procedural
history of this case in the opinion filed in Plain’s initial appeal and will forego
restating them here. See State v. Plain (Plain I), 898 N.W.2d 801, 809–10 (Iowa
2017). Pertinent to this appeal are the facts that the parties developed on remand
related to the only remaining issue in the case: Plain’s fair-cross-section claim.
Before continuing, we offer first a few definitions for clarity and
consistency. The jury pool refers to members of the community summoned for
jury duty and reporting to the courthouse for a particular time period. Iowa Code
§ 607A.3(6) (2017). The jury panel refers to members of the pool directed to a
particular courtroom after they arrive at the courthouse to serve as possible
jurors for a specific trial. Id. § 607A.3(10). The jury refers to the group actually
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selected for a specific trial and generally given the power to decide questions of
fact and return a verdict in the case. See Iowa R. Crim. P. 2.18. One can think
of each of these groups as concentric circles: from the community, we draw the
pool; from the pool, we draw the panel; and from the panel, we draw the jury.
Evidence presented in the district court on remand showed that the jury
selection process for Plain’s trial in 2015 began with the Black Hawk County jury
manager, Billie Treloar, sending a jury summons to 100 people. If the post office
returned a summons as undeliverable, Treloar would attempt to find an updated
address using the court and Iowa Department of Transportation databases
available to her. Sometimes the post office would return undeliverable mail with
an updated address for the recipient. If Treloar could find an updated address,
she would resend the summons; if not, the summons would remain undelivered.
The jury summons instructed jurors to complete and return a juror
questionnaire within seven days. Treloar would send a reminder letter to
summoned jurors who failed to return their questionnaires after three weeks.
Summoned jurors who failed to appear at the courthouse would be summoned
again for an ensuing jury trial. Treloar would send letters to summoned jurors
who failed to appear at the courthouse after their first and second summonses,
reminding them of their legal obligation to appear. If a summoned juror failed to
appear for a third time, the court would set the matter for hearing to determine
whether the summoned juror should be held in contempt of court. The
punishment following a finding of contempt was usually a monetary fine.
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The juror questionnaire in 2015 invited summoned jurors—but didn’t
require them—to answer a question about their race. As a result, of the 100
jurors summoned, the races of only 84 could be determined. Seven of the 84
were African-American. Of the 100 potential jurors summoned, the parties agree
(despite some discrepancy in the record) that 49 summoned jurors actually
appeared at the courthouse for trial. Only 1 of the 49 was African-American.
The district court retained Paula Hannaford-Agor, the Director of the
National Center for State Courts for Jury Studies, to testify as a court-appointed
expert on jury issues. Hannaford-Agor reviewed the county’s jury composition
data from the year leading up to Plain’s trial. She found that about half of all
summoned jurors in this data set failed to identify a race on the questionnaire.
Hannaford-Agor created two different models using a method called
“geocoding”—which looks at geographic information (such as a person’s address)
to infer demographic information (in this case, the person’s race)—to extrapolate
the races of summoned jurors. Plain also offered two written reports from
statisticians that provided statistical analysis of the figures reported by Treloar
and Hannaford-Agor.
Hannaford-Agor’s first model estimated the racial composition of all jurors
based entirely on the juror’s zip code. The second model used the same method
but predicted the races of only those jurors who didn’t report their race on the
questionnaires, which she then added to the actual reported data for those who
did. Hannaford-Agor found that, under either model, African-Americans were
summoned for jury service at a rate that slightly exceeded their prevalence
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among all eligible jurors in the county. But African-American representation fell
as a percentage of those who returned questionnaires and fell even further
among those who appeared for jury service. Hannaford-Agor determined that the
decreases at each stage were likely due to disproportionately high nonresponse,
undeliverable, and failure-to-appear rates among the residents of one particular
zip code in which fifty-seven percent of all African-Americans in the county
resided.
II. The Duren/Plain Elements.
The Sixth Amendment to the United States Constitution guarantees the
right to “an impartial jury of the state and district wherein the crime shall have
been committed.” U.S. Const. amend VI. The Iowa Constitution similarly
guarantees the right to a “trial by an impartial jury.” Iowa Const. art. I, § 10. The
constitutional guarantees of an impartial jury entitle the accused to a jury
“drawn from a fair cross-section of the community.” Plain I, 898 N.W.2d at 821.
A defendant establishes a prima facie violation of the fair-cross-section
requirement by showing that (1) a group alleged to have been excluded is a
“distinctive” group in the community, (2) the group’s representation in jury pools
is not “fair and reasonable” when considered against the group’s percentage in
the community, and (3) the group’s underrepresentation “is due to systematic
exclusion of the group in the jury-selection process.” Id. at 822 (quoting Duren
v. Missouri, 439 U.S. 357, 364 (1979)). The defendant bears the burden of proof
to show a prima facie violation of the fair-cross-section requirement. Id. at 821–
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22; see also Duren, 439 U.S. at 363–64; State v. Lilly (Lilly I), 930 N.W.2d 293,
299 (Iowa 2019).
The State concedes the first Duren/Plain prong and thus that African-
Americans constitute a distinctive group in the community. The contest involves
the second and third prongs. The district court held that Plain failed to prove
either one. We review challenges alleging the denial of constitutional rights—in
this case, the right to an impartial jury—de novo and thus evaluate the evidence
anew without deferring to the district court’s findings. Lilly I, 930 N.W.2d at 298.
A. The Scope of the Remand and Our Review on Appeal. Plain asks us
to evaluate his claims under both the Sixth Amendment to the United States
Constitution and article I, section 10 of the Iowa Constitution. In Plain I, we held
that Plain hadn’t raised a claim under the Iowa Constitution in the district court.
Plain I, 898 N.W.2d at 821 n.6. We thus limited the remand to his Sixth
Amendment claims. Id. at 829. But Plain argues that the district court on
remand nonetheless analyzed his arguments under the Iowa Constitution by
addressing the second prong’s standard under Lilly I. Lilly I includes an analysis
of claims under article I, section 10 of the Iowa Constitution. From this, Plain
infers, the district court both ruled on and preserved for our review his claims
under the Iowa Constitution.
As an initial matter, the district court’s analysis in its ruling of Lilly I
doesn’t mean that the district court ruled on the merits of Plain’s claims under
the Iowa Constitution. The district court, in any event, lacked the authority to
rewrite our remand order to address claims that we rejected and refused to
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remand. See City of Okoboji v. Iowa Dist. Ct., 744 N.W.2d 327, 331 (Iowa 2008).
“[W]e have repeatedly observed that a district court, on remand of a case for some
special purpose, ‘is limited to do the special thing authorized by this court in its
opinion, and nothing else.’ ” Id. (quoting Kuhlmann v. Persinger, 154 N.W.2d 860,
864 (Iowa 1967)). We specified, in the clearest of terms, the law to be applied on
remand: “[W]e conditionally affirm Plain’s conviction and remand to the district
court for development of the record on the Sixth Amendment challenge. Following
proper development of the record pertaining to that challenge, the district court
shall determine whether Plain’s right to a representative jury under the Sixth
Amendment was violated.” Plain I, 898 N.W.2d at 829 (emphases added).
Plain needed to raise a fair-cross-section challenge under the Iowa
Constitution before trial. State v. Williams, 929 N.W.2d 621, 629 n.1 (Iowa 2019).
As we already determined, he didn’t. Plain I, 898 N.W.2d at 821 n.6. The district
court lawfully could not—and, in fact, did not—venture beyond the scope of its
charge on remand. We thus will address Plain’s claims under the Sixth
Amendment of the United States Constitution only.
B. Plain’s Proof of Causation Under Duren/Plain’s Third Prong. We will
begin our analysis on the third prong, since an inability to establish any one of
the three Duren/Plain elements is fatal to a defendant’s fair-cross-section
challenge. To establish the third prong, a defendant must prove that the
underrepresentation resulted from a particular feature (or features) of the jury
selection system. Plain I, 898 N.W.2d at 823–24. The defendant, in other words,
“must establish the exclusion is ‘inherent in the particular jury-selection process
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utilized’ ” and show that the practice caused the systematic exclusion of the
distinctive group in the jury selection process. Id. at 824 (quoting Duren, 439
U.S. at 366).
Plain identifies three practices that he argues caused the
underrepresentation of African-Americans in his jury pool: (1) the failure to
update addresses when summonses were returned as “undeliverable,” (2) the
failure to follow up with jurors who didn’t respond, and (3) the failure to hold
jurors accountable through enforcement proceedings for failing to respond or
appear. The district court addressed each argument on the merits, finding that
Plain failed to prove “causation” as required on any of the claims.
In State v. Veal, we held that to prove a Sixth Amendment fair-cross-
section violation, the defendant “must identify some practice or combination of
practices that led to the underrepresentation, and it must be something other
than the ‘laundry list’ the Supreme Court declined to condemn in Berghuis [v.
Smith].” 930 N.W.2d 319, 330 (Iowa 2019) (quoting Berghuis v. Smith, 559 U.S.
314, 332 (2010)). Challenges to “run-of-the-mill” jury management practices, we
said, are insufficient to show systematic exclusion under the Sixth Amendment.
Id. at 329. We described run-of-the-mill jury management practices in Lilly I as
“the relatively commonplace” practices that might include, for instance, “the
updating of address lists, the granting of excuses, and the enforcement of jury
summonses.” Lilly I, 930 N.W.2d at 308. These common jury practices fall within
a state’s “broad discretion,” according to the Supreme Court in Berghuis, and
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will not sustain a cross-section challenge under the Sixth Amendment. Berghuis,
559 U.S. at 333 (quoting Taylor v. Louisiana, 419 U.S. 522, 537–38 (1975)).
Two of the three practices that Plain advances as causing the alleged
systematic exclusion not only meet the definition of a “run-of-the-mill jury
management practice” that we set out in Lilly I, but in fact are practices that we
offered as exemplars of run-of-the-mill jury management practices. Lilly I, 930
N.W.2d at 308. Plain’s claim that Black Hawk County failed to update addresses
when summonses were returned as “undeliverable,” and failed to hold jurors
accountable through enforcement proceedings for not responding or appearing,
thus don’t help him. They are, by straightforward application of our own
illustrations, run-of-the-mill practices that we previously said will not constitute
evidence of causation.
The third practice that Plain points to as causing the
underrepresentation—failing to follow up with jurors who didn’t respond—isn’t
one of the explicit examples of run-of-the-mill practices that we previously
offered. But it, too, unquestionably falls within the category. In Berghuis, the
Supreme Court, when describing the defendant’s “laundry list” of commonplace
jury management practices, included the county’s alleged “failure to follow up
on nonresponses” from summoned jurors. Berghuis, 559 U.S. at 332.
All three of the practices that Plain presents as “causing” the alleged
underrepresentation under the third prong amount to run-of-the-mill practices
that the Supreme Court has declined to condemn. Veal, 930 N.W.2d at 330
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(citing Berghuis, 559 U.S. at 332). He thus has not proved a fair-cross-section
violation under the Sixth Amendment.
Because Plain failed to deliver on his burden under the third prong, which
on its own is sufficient to affirm the district court’s denial of his claim, we need
not take up his arguments relating to the second prong’s requirement to
establish actual underrepresentation of African-Americans in his jury pool.
C. The “Run-of-the-Mill” Limitation in Veal. Plain argues that our
refusal to consider run-of-the-mill jury management practices to establish the
third prong’s systemic exclusion under the Sixth Amendment hinges on a
misreading of Berghuis, and he asks us to overrule our holding in Veal on this
point. Plain argues that Berghuis was an appeal from a federal habeas corpus
petition and that the question presented turned on whether the lower court’s
denial of the defendant’s fair-cross-section claim “resulted in a decision that was
contrary to, or involved an unreasonable application of, clearly established
Federal law, as determined by the Supreme Court of the United States.”
28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(1). Plain contends that the Berghuis Court applied the
deferential analysis required under the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty
Act of 1996 and thus simply looked at whether the lower court unreasonably
applied clearly established federal law. Under Plain’s reading, Berghuis doesn’t
address whether the challenged jury management practices could be offered to
establish systematic exclusion.
But this characterization reads Berghuis too narrowly, particularly in its
limited treatment of the Court’s reliance on Duren. The “unreasonable
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application of federal law” question centered on the application of Duren itself.
Duren is among the Supreme Court’s leading cases on the issue of systemic
exclusion. See Plain I, 898 N.W.2d at 821–24 (analyzing Duren’s three-part test
for establishing a violation of the fair-cross-section requirement). The Supreme
Court first noted that the defendant “catalogs a laundry list of factors” that, he
claims, “rank as ‘systematic’ causes of underrepresentation of African-
Americans in Kent County’s jury pool.” Berghuis, 559 U.S. at 332. Jury
management practices such as those on the defendant’s “laundry list,” according
to the Court in Berghuis, were unlikely, based on the holding in Duren, to sustain
a fair-cross-section challenge under the Sixth Amendment. Id. at 333 (citing
Duren, 439 U.S. at 370). The Court noted that it “has never ‘clearly established’
that jury-selection-process features of the kind on [the defendant]’s list can give
rise to a fair-cross-section claim.” Id. On the contrary, the Court stated that these
practices fall within the “broad discretion” already granted to the states to
establish juror qualifications and to implement their own jury management
processes. Id. (quoting Taylor, 419 U.S. at 537–38).
We thus find no error in our prior interpretation—or current application—
of Duren and Berghuis to bar Sixth Amendment challenges that allege systemic
exclusion as a consequence of run-of-the-mill jury management practices.
III. Conclusion.
In Plain I, we conditionally affirmed Plain’s conviction and remanded for a
determination on his fair-cross-section challenge. We now affirm the district
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court’s holding on remand that Plain failed to prove a violation of his Sixth
Amendment right to an impartial jury, and affirm his conviction.
AFFIRMED.