IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA
No. 21-1160
Filed April 26, 2023
ONTERIER DIRAN BROWN,
Applicant-Appellant,
vs.
STATE OF IOWA,
Respondent-Appellee.
________________________________________________________________
Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Polk County, Michael D. Huppert,
Judge.
The applicant appeals the denial of his application for postconviction relief.
AFFIRMED.
Thomas Hurd of Law Office of Thomas Hurd PLC, Des Moines, for
appellant.
Brenna Bird, Attorney General, and Benjamin Parrott, Assistant Attorney
General, for appellee State.
Considered by Bower, C.J., Tabor, J., and Potterfield, S.J.*
*Senior judge assigned by order pursuant to Iowa Code section 602.9206
(2023).
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POTTERFIELD, Senior Judge.
Onterier Brown appeals the denial of his application for postconviction relief
(PCR). At the criminal trial, Brown’s counsel objected to statements made by the
prosecutor during closing argument, arguing the prosecutor was improperly
shifting the burden to Brown. The district court overruled the objections. Brown’s
appellate counsel did not challenge the district court’s ruling on direct appeal. In
his PCR application, Brown claimed appellate counsel provided ineffective
assistance by not raising the issue of alleged improper burden shifting. The PCR
court denied Brown’s claim, finding he failed to prove either breach of duty or
prejudice. Brown re-raises the same issue here on appeal.
I. Background Facts and Proceedings.
Brown was charged with one count of sexual abuse in the second degree,
two counts of sexual abuse in the third degree, and one count of incest.
At his criminal trial, Brown’s daughter testified Brown repeatedly had sexual
intercourse with her against her will1—more than fifteen or twenty times—
beginning when she was sixteen and over a period of about two years. She
testified as to a few specific instances, including one time when Brown came into
her room in the middle of the night while she was sleeping; she initially resisted
getting up and going with him, and Brown left before returning with a butcher knife
and pointing it at her. The daughter then complied. The daughter also testified
about another time when Brown came to her room while she was watching a
movie; he told her to “get up” and then “tried to do sexual intercourse from behind,
1 The daughter testified she told Brown that she didn’t want to and “no.”
3
but then [her] brother walked in and [Brown] told [her] brother to get out.” The
daughter eventually birthed Brown’s child.
Brown testified in his own defense. He admitted having sexual intercourse
with his daughter more than fifteen or twenty times but claimed she consented. He
maintained this position while also, upon further questioning on cross-examination,
agreeing the daughter did not affirmatively agree to have sex with him, never said
“okay,” and never initiated it. When asked how she consented, he testified she
consented by “coming along.” Then the following took place on cross-examination
of Brown:
Q. Okay. So when you told her to come, she came? A. I
never told her. I just tapped her on the shoulder.
Q. What did that mean when you tapped her on the shoulder?
A. To come have sex with me.
Q. Okay. You’ve hit her with a belt before? A. Yes, sir.
Q. And that was after she disobeyed your directions; right?
A. That’s correct, sir.
Q. The first time that the two of you had sex, did you tell her
at that point that you wanted to have sex? A. No, sir.
Q. Did you take the clothes off of her? A. No, sir.
Q. Did she take the clothes off herself? A. Yes, she did, sir.
Q. Why did she do it? A. Because she knew that’s what I
wanted.
Q. How did she know that? A. Like I said, my daughter and I,
we had a—a very close relationship and she used to talk to me about
everything. And—
Q. How did she know that you wanted to have sex with her?
A. Because we talked about it before.
Q. Because you had mentioned before that you wanted to
have sex with her? A. I mentioned it, yes, sir.
Q. And so when the first time actually came around, how did
you indicate that it was time to have sex? A. Tapped her on the
shoulder, sir.
Q. That was it? A. Yes, sir.
Q. Did you start taking your clothes off at that point? A. No, I
didn’t.
Q. She did? A. Yes.
Q. With no prompting from you? A. No prompting.
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Q. All you did was tap her on the shoulder? A. Tapped her on
the shoulder and she came out of the room.
Q. Laid down on the cushions? A. Yes, sir.
Q. With the blanket? A. Yes, sir.
Q. Took her clothes off? A. Yes, sir.
Q. All from just a tap on the shoulder from her father? A. All
because we talked about it prior, beforehand. And her and I—we
will—we was what her mom—I blame her mom for nothing, but her
mom considered her as sneaky around the house. And like I said,
[the daughter] and I, we talked about everything when she was—her
mother didn’t even know that she was dating and going out with boys,
but only I knew. And we came—[the daughter] didn’t come to no
agreement. I came to an agreement that was my way of getting what
I wanted by tapping her on the shoulder and she knew what it was
all about after that.
Q. So you told her ahead of time, “I’m going to come tap you
on the shoulder, and that means we’re going to have sex”? A. I said
when you’re ready, that’s what I would do.
Q. Okay. Did she tell you she was ready? A. No, she didn’t.
Q. So you had no indication that she was ready? A. No. At
that time, the first time, no, sir.
Q. But you did it anyway? A. Yes, sir.
During closing argument, trial counsel questioned the State’s evidence, stating:
You only have the testimony of [the daughter] saying that
[Brown used a knife to threaten her one time]. That’s the only
evidence you have. Where is the knife? Where is the knife? Where
is this knife? Why didn’t they bring it so that she could say, “Oh,
yeah, that’s the one”? That would have been easy to do. Not a hard
task to do.
Where is the son who came in and interrupted one of these
events that she described? They didn’t have sex because the
brother walked in in the living room this time—in the bedroom. That
was the only time in the bedroom, my recollection. Only time in the
bedroom, the brother walked in. Brother was old enough to know.
He didn’t testify. He didn’t testify that that happened.
There’s things missing from this—from the State’s case that
you can consider, and there’s an instruction that tells you that.
During the State’s rebuttal, the prosecutor said:
Now, speaking of the knife, as I said, we bear the burden of
proof in this case. We have to prove the defendant’s guilt. We do
not have a burden to bring in every single bit of evidence that there
is out there. The defendant is entitled to review the evidence that we
have. The defendant is given subpoena power to bring in witnesses
5
that he thinks would be beneficial to him. It’s not his burden to do
so, but it’s not just me that can bring evidence in. He can do it too.
If it’s actually going to be beneficial to him, then maybe he should.
DEFENSE COUNSEL: May we approach, Your Honor?
THE COURT: Sure.
(A sidebar was held.)[2]
PROSECTUOR: Again, I’d like to emphasize the defendant
doesn’t have any burden to do that, but it’s not really fair for him to
stand up here and say, “What about this piece of evidence and what
about that piece of evidence? Why didn’t the prosecutor bring those
things in,” with the implication that the reason I didn’t bring them in is
because it would have been bad. That’s just not a fair argument,
ladies and gentlemen.
DEFENSE COUNSEL: Objection, shifting the burden, Your
Honor.
THE COURT: Overruled.
On the charge for second-degree sexual abuse, the jury found Brown guilty
of the lesser-included offense of sexual abuse in the third degree.3 The jury found
Brown guilty as charged of two additional counts of third-degree sexual abuse and
one count of incest. Brown was later sentenced to a period of incarceration not to
exceed thirty-five years.
Brown challenged his convictions on direct appeal, raising issues with an
evidentiary ruling made by the district court and the court’s decision to allow the
State to present evidence Brown had sexual intercourse with his daughter on more
occasions than the charged offenses. Brown also argued there was not substantial
evidence the sex acts were “by force or against the will” of his daughter. A panel
2 After the jury left the courtroom to deliberate, the court made further record about
defense counsel’s “object[ion] to burden shifting . . . at two points during the State’s
rebuttal.” As the PCR court did, we presume the first objection took place during
this sidebar after defense counsel asked to approach.
3 To convict Brown of second-degree sexual abuse, the jury needed to find that
“[d]uring the commission of sexual abuse, [Brown] displayed in a threatening
manner a dangerous weapon,” while sexual abuse in the third degree does not
contain this element.
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of this court affirmed. See State v. Brown, No. 17-2045, 2018 WL 5291336, at *2
(Iowa Ct. App. Oct. 24, 2018).
Brown initiated a timely PCR action and, after several amendments to his
application, brought one claim that “appellate counsel was ineffective for failing to
argue that the trial court erred in overruling [trial] counsel’s objection to prosecutor
burden shifting in rebuttal closing arguments.”
At the evidentiary hearing, Brown’s appellate counsel testified she reviewed
the entire trial transcript and noted trial counsel’s unsuccessful objection to burden
shifting. Appellate counsel decided not to raise the issue on appeal because she
did not believe it would be successful; she noted the prosecutor’s repeated
statements that the State had the burden of proof and that the defendant had the
ability (but not the burden) to bring in other witnesses and evidence if he chose.
Instead, she focused the appeal on what she believed were stronger issues.
In a written ruling, the PCR court denied Brown’s application. The court
held:
Given the context of the prosecutor’s comments and the abuse of
discretion standard [the appellate court would have used], it was not
likely that appellate counsel could have proved the trial court was in
error when it overruled [trial counsel’s] objection. Furthermore, there
is a strong presumption that counsel was competent. The appellate
attorney did not perform below professional standards by not
appealing the trial court’s ruling on the objection as it had a low
probability of prevailing.
(Internal citation omitted.) Relying on trial counsel’s deposition testimony, stating
defense strategy was to avoid a guilty verdict on the second-degree sexual-abuse
charge, which was successful, the PCR court also found Brown failed to establish
prejudice. Brown appeals.
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II. Standard of Review.
We generally review PCR actions for correction of errors at law. Goode v.
State, 920 N.W.2d 520, 523 (Iowa 2018). But we review constitutional issues, like
the alleged ineffective assistance of appellate counsel, de novo. Id.
III. Discussion.
Brown alleges he received ineffective assistance from appellate counsel,
claiming he was prejudiced by appellate counsel’s failure to challenge on direct
appeal the district court’s overruling of his objection the prosecutor was improperly
shifting the burden during the State’s rebuttal closing argument. “[A]ll
postconviction relief applicants who seek relief as a consequence of ineffective
assistance of counsel must establish counsel breached a duty and prejudice
resulted.” Castro v. State, 795 N.W.2d 789, 794 (Iowa 2011). “We start with the
presumption that the attorney performed competently and proceed to an
individualized fact-based analysis.” Lamasters v. State, 821 N.W.2d 856, 866
(Iowa 2012). “Even if [the applicant] can show his counsel made a professionally
unreasonable error, the judgment shall not be set aside unless it can be shown the
error had an effect on the judgment.” Id. “We may affirm the district court’s
rejection of an ineffective-assistance-of-counsel claim if either element is lacking.”
Id.
Because counsel does not have a duty to raise an issue that is without merit,
State v. Dudley, 766 N.W.2d 606, 620 (Iowa 2009), we start by considering
whether appellate counsel would have obtained a ruling in Brown’s favor if she
challenged the district court’s ruling on direct appeal. To obtain a new trial for
Brown based on the alleged error, appellate counsel would have needed to show
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“both misconduct on the part of the prosecutor and prejudice resulted.” See State
v. Bishop, 387 N.W.2d 554, 562 (Iowa 1986) (recognizing improper burden shifting
is an issue of prosecutorial misconduct). The reviewing court would have
considered whether the district court abused its discretion in overruling Brown’s
objections. See State v. Adams, No. 11-1210, 2013 WL 4502303, at *1 (Iowa Ct.
App. Aug. 21, 2013) (providing that review of claims of prosecutorial misconduct
“where there is a proper objection is for an abuse of discretion”).
Brown focuses on these statements of the prosecutor:
Now, speaking of the knife, as I said, we bear the burden of
proof in this case. We have to prove the defendant’s guilt. We do
not have a burden to bring in every single bit of evidence that there
is out there. The defendant is entitled to review the evidence that we
have. The defendant is given subpoena power to bring in witnesses
that he thinks would be beneficial to him. It’s not his burden to do
so, but it’s not just me that can bring evidence in. He can do it too.
If it’s actually going to be beneficial to him, then maybe he should.
....
Again, I’d like to emphasize the defendant doesn’t have any
burden to do that, but it’s not really fair for him to stand up here and
say, “What about this piece of evidence and what about that piece of
evidence? Why didn’t the prosecutor bring those things in,” with the
implication that the reason I didn’t bring them in is because it would
have been bad. That’s just not a fair argument, ladies and
gentlemen.
And he points to State v. Hanes, 790 N.W.2d 545, 556–57 (Iowa 2010), in which
our supreme court called these statements by the prosecutor improper:
Now, the—the defense brought up Paul McGonigle. And I mentioned
Paul McGonigle in my opening. I also mentioned Willie Brown. You
didn’t see them; did you? No, we didn’t call them. You know who
else didn’t call them? The defense didn’t call them. The defense
called witnesses. The defense can call any witness they so desire.
If there was anything helpful for the defendant, the defense could
have called Paul McGonigle or Willie Brown.
....
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. . . If there was anything the defense really wanted from either
one of these individuals that they felt was beneficial or helpful to the
defendant, they could have called them.
The Hanes court found “it was not proper for the State to attempt to shift the burden
to the defense to call the witnesses or to suggest the jury could infer from the
defense’s failure to call the witnesses that they would not have said anything
helpful to the defense.” 790 N.W.2d at 557. But because the court reversed on
other grounds, it did not decide the defendant’s ineffective-assistance claim
regarding the prosecutor’s statements. See id.
Highlighting the defendant’s “right to put on evidence,” when not suggesting
the defendant “had the burden to put on evidence” is allowed. See Bishop, 387
N.W.2d at 564.4 We think the closer issue is the prosecutor’s suggestion that if
the evidence Brown pointed out was missing was “actually going to be beneficial
to him, then maybe he should [bring it in].”
But we cannot say Brown’s appellate counsel would have obtained a
favorable ruling if she raised the issue on direct appeal. Even after Hanes, this
court has decided “the ‘correct rule’ regarding a prosecutor’s comment on a
defendant’s failure to call witnesses as follows: ‘A prosecutor may properly
comment upon the defendant’s failure to present exculpatory evidence, so long as
it is not phrased to call attention to the defendant’s own failure to testify.’” State v.
Hill, No. 12-0860, 2013 WL 2370714, at *5 (Iowa Ct. App. May 30, 2013); but see
id. at *6 (Potterfield, J., dissenting) (asserting that the rule “the State may not
comment on the defendant’s failure to testify[] was expanded in Hanes to prohibit
4 Because Brown testified in his own defense, this is not a case where the
defendant’s right not to testify is implicated by the prosecutor’s remarks.
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a prosecutor’s arguments that the defense should have called witnesses”). In Hill,
this court restricted the dicta statement of the Hanes court to the facts of that
case—where the State had mentioned the jury would hear from two witnesses and
then, when it did not call them and the defendant pointed it out in closing, “shifted
the burden” by telling the jury the defendant could have done so. 2013
WL 2370714, at *5.
Plus, we view a prosecutor’s comments “in the context they were made,
rather than in isolation.” State v. Carey, No. 12-1423, 2014 WL 955917, at *3 (Iowa
Ct. App. Mar. 12, 2014). And here, it was Brown who first implied that the State
failed to call the brother because he would contradict the State’s case. “We allow
a prosecutor some leeway when his remarks ‘are provoked and are offered in
retaliation to arguments for the accused.’” Wycoff v. State, 382 N.W.2d 462, 468
(Iowa 1986) (citation omitted). We cannot say appellate counsel would have
obtained a favorable ruling if she raised the burden-shifting issue on appeal. So,
she had no duty to do so, and Brown’s claim of ineffective assistance fails. We
affirm the denial of his PCR application.
AFFIRMED.