Smith v. State ( 2019 )


Menu:
  •                                              NOTICE
    The text of this opinion can be corrected before the opinion is published in the
    Pacific Reporter. Readers are encouraged to bring typographical or other formal
    errors to the attention of the Clerk of the Appellate Courts:
    303 K Street, Anchorage, Alaska 99501
    Fax: (907) 264-0878
    E-mail: corrections @ akcourts.us
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF ALASKA
    TEDDY SMITH,
    Court of Appeals No. A-12309
    Appellant,               Trial Court Nos. 2KB-12-603 CR
    & 2KB-12-625 CR
    v.
    STATE OF ALASKA,                                              O P I N I O N
    Appellee.                   No. 2640 — March 1, 2019
    Appeal from the Superior Court, Second Judicial District,
    Kotzebue, Timothy Dooley, Judge.
    Appearances: Kelly R. Taylor, Assistant Public Defender, and
    Quinlan Steiner, Public Defender, Anchorage, for the Appellant.
    Ann B. Black, Assistant Attorney General, Office of Criminal
    Appeals, Anchorage, and Jahna Lindemuth, Attorney General,
    Juneau, for the Appellee. Erin Dougherty Lynch, Native
    American Rights Fund, Anchorage, for Amicus Curiae
    Association of Village Council Presidents, aligned with the
    Appellant. Susan Orlansky, Anchorage, for Amicus Curiae
    ACLU of Alaska Foundation, aligned with the Appellant.
    Thomas Amodio, Reeves Amodio, LLC, Anchorage, for Amicus
    Curiae Alaska Court System, aligned with the Appellee.
    Before: Mannheimer, Chief Judge, Allard, Judge, and Suddock,
    Superior Court Judge. *
    *
    Sitting by assignment made pursuant to Article IV, Section 16 of the Alaska
    Constitution and Administrative Rule 24(d).
    Judge MANNHEIMER.
    In early September 2012, in the village of Kiana, Teddy Smith fired a
    shotgun at a group of people. He then fled into the wilderness, where he spent seven to
    ten days subsisting on berries and water. Smith became exhausted and delirious, and he
    later reported that he had been visited by “inukins” — supernatural beings who are
    reputed to live on the tundra.
    Eventually, Smith came upon a hunting cabin north of Kiana, along the
    Squirrel River. There was no one in the cabin when Smith found it, but the cabin
    contained food. Smith decided to stay in the cabin.
    While Smith was there, two brothers — Paul and Chuck Buckel — arrived
    at the cabin. Paul had lived in Kotzebue for more than twenty years, and his brother
    Chuck was visiting from out of state. The Buckels were on a bear-hunting trip, and they
    had permission from the cabin owner to use the cabin.
    Smith greeted the Buckels, identifying himself by a false name. Smith
    helped the brothers bring their gear into the cabin, and he conversed with them for about
    an hour. All of a sudden, Smith began screaming for the Buckels to “get the fuck out”.
    Smith then grabbed his pistol and shot Chuck Buckel in the chest.
    Smith forced the Buckels out of the cabin, and he ordered Paul Buckel to
    bring the brothers’ boat closer to the cabin. After Paul tied off the boat, Smith shot Paul
    in the arm. Fearing for his life, Paul ran into the woods. His brother Chuck also tried
    to run, but because of his chest wound, he had to stop and lean against a tree to catch his
    breath. Smith watched Chuck from about ten feet away, but he did not shoot Chuck
    again. Eventually Chuck made his way into the woods, where the brothers were
    reunited.
    –2–                                        2640
    In the meantime, Smith loaded most of the Buckels’ gear into their boat,
    and then he took off in their boat down the river. When the Buckels discovered that
    Smith had left, they returned to the cabin and used the cabin owner’s marine radio to call
    for help. The following morning, the state troopers arrived, and the Buckels were
    medivacked to receive care for their wounds. Both of them survived.
    The troopers found Smith down-river from the cabin, and they took him
    into custody.
    Smith was brought to trial in Kotzebue on charges of attempted murder,
    first-degree assault, first-degree robbery, and third-degree assault. He was convicted
    following a jury trial.
    Smith now seeks reversal of his convictions. He raises a series of legal
    challenges to the rules that the Alaska Court System uses for summoning prospective
    jurors for criminal trials in court locations around the state — including the authority that
    the rules give the presiding judges of each judicial district to restrict the geographic area
    from which prospective jurors are summoned.
    For the reasons explained in this opinion, we reject most of Smith’s claims
    and we affirm the rulings of the trial court. But with respect to Smith’s claim that he
    should be able to challenge a ruling made by the presiding judge of his judicial district
    to restrict the area from which jurors are summoned, we conclude that we must remand
    this case to the superior court for further proceedings on this matter.
    The law that governs the summoning of prospective jurors for trials in the
    different court locations within Alaska
    The Alaska Supreme Court has established venue districts for every court
    location in Alaska. These venue districts are defined by a venue map promulgated by
    –3–                                         2640
    the Alaska Supreme Court. 1 See Alaska Criminal Rule 18(a). The purpose of these
    venue districts is to identify the court site where a defendant’s trial will presumptively
    be held if the crime is alleged to have occurred within that venue district.
    For example, as defined by the supreme court’s venue map, the Kotzebue
    venue district is a sizeable region that (1) extends east from Kotzebue approximately 250
    miles inland, (2) extends south from Kotzebue approximately 100 miles, and extends
    more than 150 miles northwest from Kotzebue along the coast of Kotzebue Sound, past
    Point Hope. When a crime is alleged to have occurred within this district, the trial will
    presumptively be held in Kotzebue.
    As might be imagined, all of the venue districts in Alaska include smaller
    towns and villages in addition to the court site itself. For example, the Kotzebue venue
    district includes approximately a dozen smaller villages in addition to the regional hub
    city of Kotzebue. But when the Alaska Court System prepares its lists of prospective
    jurors within the various venue districts — i.e., the lists of people who can be summoned
    to serve on juries at the various court locations around the state — these jury lists will
    often exclude the people living in outlying towns and villages.
    Under Alaska Administrative Rule 15(c) — a rule that was numbered
    “15(b)” at the time of the proceedings in this case — the list of prospective jurors for any
    particular court site is not drawn from the population of the entire corresponding venue
    district. Rather, the list of prospective jurors comprises only the people living within a
    50-mile radius of that court site, unless the presiding judge of that judicial district
    designates a different selection area.
    1
    This map is available at:
    https://public.courts.alaska.gov/web/rules/docs/venuemap.pdf
    –4–                                         2640
    In some venue districts, this 50-mile selection radius excludes a relatively
    small percentage of the population of that district. But in far-flung rural venue districts,
    the 50-mile radius rule can exclude the residents of many towns and villages.
    In the Kotzebue venue district, for example, only two villages (Noorvik and
    Noatak) are located within a 50-mile radius of the Kotzebue court.
    Moreover, for the past thirty years, the presiding judges of the Second
    Judicial District (the judicial district that includes Kotzebue) have concluded that the cost
    of transporting and housing prospective jurors from even these two villages is
    unreasonably high. For this reason, over the years, the various presiding judges of the
    Second Judicial District have exercised their authority under Administrative Rule 15(c)
    to alter the 50-mile jury selection radius. Instead of employing the normal 50-mile
    radius, these presiding judges have issued orders declaring that the list of prospective
    jurors for trials in Kotzebue should be confined to the people living within a 5-mile
    radius of Kotzebue.
    In other words, the list of prospective jurors for trials in Kotzebue is
    essentially limited to the people living in or nearby the city of Kotzebue itself.
    The constitutional limitations on the Alaska Court System’s authority to
    define jury selection areas based on cost and convenience
    On its face, Administrative Rule 15 gives the Court System, and the
    presiding judges of the four judicial districts, broad authority to define jury selection
    areas so as to reduce jury expenses and increase the convenience of jurors’ travel and
    lodging.
    However, the working of Administrative Rule 15 hinges in large measure
    on the boundaries of the various venue districts drawn in the supreme court’s venue map.
    –5–                                         2640
    And the driving force behind the supreme court’s selection of those venue district
    boundaries is the supreme court’s 1971 decision in Alvarado v. State, 
    486 P.2d 891
    (Alaska 1971). Alvarado is the seminal Alaska case defining a criminal defendant’s right
    to demand that prospective jurors summoned for jury service reflect the community
    where the crime is alleged to have occurred.
    The defendant in Alvarado was an Alaska Native man who was charged
    with committing a rape in the village of Chignik. 2 This village is located on the Alaska
    Peninsula, approximately 450 air miles southwest of Anchorage, and the great majority
    of its residents were Alaska Natives who primarily pursued a rural, subsistence
    lifestyle. 3 However, the city of Anchorage was the specified court site for crimes
    committed in Chignik — and, under the jury selection rules that were in force at the time,
    the prospective jurors for Alvarado’s trial were drawn from the people living within
    15 miles of Anchorage. 4
    This 15-mile jury selection radius effectively excluded not only the
    residents of Chignik but also the residents of every other Native village. And even
    though the Alaska Natives comprised nearly 30 percent of the population of the Third
    Judicial District (where Anchorage is located), Alaska Natives comprised only 3.5
    percent of the population of Anchorage. 5
    The supreme court held that the 15-mile jury selection radius — and its
    concomitant exclusion of jurors from Chignik and every other Native village — violated
    Alvarado’s right under the Alaska Constitution to have prospective jurors drawn from
    2
    
    Alvarado, 486 P.2d at 892-93
    .
    3
    
    Id. at 894.
       4
    
    Id. at 892-93.
       5
    
    Id. at 895.
    –6–                                      2640
    a pool of people that represents a fair cross-section of the community where the crime
    occurred. 6
    In reaching this conclusion, the supreme court relied on evidence presented
    to the trial court concerning the salient characteristics of Alaska Native cultures, and the
    profound differences between those Alaska Native cultures and the urban lifestyle that
    typified Alaska’s larger cities, such as Anchorage. As the supreme court observed, the
    distinguishing characteristics of Alaska Native cultures include:
    economies which rely on hunting, fishing, and gathering
    activities, strong kinship bonds, isolation from those parts of
    Alaska that approximate mainstream America, different
    seasonal activity patterns, concepts of time and scheduling
    which ... may be quite different from those of mainstream
    America, and finally, very limited participation in the cash
    economy.
    
    Alvarado, 486 P.2d at 894
    .
    The supreme court noted that, even though most Alaska Native villages are
    exposed to some extent to the Western culture of Alaska’s cities, “the gap separating
    Native villages from the mainstream of urban society is vast”:
    Examples of the unique qualities of Native culture ...
    encompass such factors as ... childhood exposure to two
    languages, cultural disorientation reflecting the imposition on
    the Native villages of the dominant society’s way of life, a
    distinct social history, ... and basic differences in family
    structure.
    
    Id. at 895.
    6
    
    Id. at 903-05.
    –7–                                         2640
    Based on all of these significant differences, the supreme court concluded
    that “the remote Native villages of the third judicial district” — villages such as Chignik
    — were “vastly dissimilar from the metropolis of Anchorage”:
    The gap stretching between these two distinct classes of
    community is of far greater magnitude than that which
    normally separates city from city or small town from city
    elsewhere in the United States. We are faced here with the
    order of differences which distinguishes one culture from
    another.
    
    Id. at 900.
    And because of this cultural divide between life in Alaska’s large urban
    centers and life in the Native villages, the supreme court held that, when a crime is
    alleged to have occurred in a Native village, it is unconstitutional to select prospective
    jurors in a manner that essentially excludes all residents of Native villages. 7 The
    supreme court declared that, in such cases, the pool of prospective jurors must include
    people who are representative of the community residing at the location of the alleged
    offense. 
    Id. at 902.
                   This rule means that a jury can be validly selected even if the pool of
    prospective jurors does not actually include people living at the location of the alleged
    offense — what the law calls the rule of “vicinage”. 8 Instead, the supreme court
    endorsed Alvarado’s suggestion that the concept of vicinage was no longer an inflexible
    requirement of jury selection — “no longer a mechanical formula which requires, in all
    cases, that the jury be selected from the precise locale of the crime”. 9
    7
    
    Id. at 895,
    903.
    8
    
    Id. at 896.
       9
    
    Ibid. –8– 2640 Nevertheless,
    the supreme court declared that the concept of vicinage
    “serves primarily as a guide” to assessing whether the people who live in the jury
    selection area are properly “representative” of the community that lives at the location
    of the alleged offense. 10 Thus, even though the jury selection area does not include the
    residents of the place where the crime occurred, the people living in that jury selection
    area may “still reasonably represent a cross-section of the community [residing at] the
    scene of the offense” if the population of the jury selection area does not differ
    significantly from the population of the place where the crime occurred. 11
    In order to facilitate jury pools that comply with Alvarado, the supreme
    court promulgated Alaska Criminal Rule 18 and an accompanying series of venue district
    maps. 12 The current venue district map divides Alaska into 25 superior court venue
    districts, with each venue district containing a city or town designated as a suitable site
    for felony trials. As this Court explained in John v. State, “The supreme court’s goalwas
    that, by using Rule 18(b) in combination with the venue map, judges would be able to
    identify a presumptive trial site where the composition of the jury pool could be expected
    to satisfy Alvarado.” 13
    However, if it is shown that the pool of prospective jurors prescribed by the
    provisions of Criminal Rule 18 and Administrative Rule 15(c) does not satisfy Alvarado,
    10
    
    Ibid. 11 Id. at
    902 n. 29.
    12
    John v. State, 
    35 P.3d 53
    , 55 (Alaska App. 2001); see also Dana v. State, 
    623 P.2d 348
    , 351 (Alaska App. 1981) (stating that a former version of Criminal Rule 18 was “directly
    aimed at avoiding the type of situation which gave rise to Alvarado”).
    13
    John v. State, 
    35 P.3d 53
    , 55 (Alaska App. 2001).
    –9–                                        2640
    then the trial court must use a different pool of prospective jurors — because the
    constitutional requirements of Alvarado take precedence.
    The litigation of Smith’s jury claims in the superior court
    As we explained earlier, Administrative Rule 15(c) normally calls for the
    list of prospective jurors to be drawn from the people living within a 50-mile radius of
    the court location, but over the years the presiding judges of the Second Judicial District
    have issued orders limiting the jury selection area for Kotzebue to a 5-mile radius. Thus,
    as a practical matter, the pool of prospective jurors included only the people living in and
    nearby Kotzebue itself.
    Prior to Smith’s trial, Smith’s attorney filed a motion asking the superior
    court to expand the jury selection area to include everyone living in the entire Kotzebue
    venue district. (As we have explained, there are about a dozen villages scattered
    throughout the Kotzebue venue district.)
    Smith’s attorney argued that any smaller pool of prospective jurors would
    violate Smith’s constitutional right under Alvarado to have the group of prospective
    jurors drawn from a pool that included a fair cross-section of the community where
    Smith’s crimes allegedly occurred — i.e., the village of Kiana and the surroundingareas.
    The defense attorney also argued that any smaller poolof prospective jurors
    would violate the rights of all the village residents within the Kotzebue venue district —
    specifically, the right of these village residents to serve on juries. Smith’s attorney noted
    that the total population of these outlying villages was significantly greater than the
    population of Kotzebue. Thus, jury pools in Kotzebue were being drawn from a
    minority of the residents of the venue district.
    – 10 –                                       2640
    In support of Smith’s Alvarado claim (i.e., his claim that a jury pool drawn
    solely from the residents of Kotzebue would not represent a fair cross-section of the
    community where the crimes occurred), Smith’s attorney argued that each and every
    village in the Kotzebue venue district had its own distinct characteristics, and thus it was
    especially important for the jury selection area to include the village of Kiana. However,
    the defense attorney’s fall-back claim was that the dozen outlying villages, considered
    as a whole, constituted a distinct cultural group that was not fairly represented by the
    residents of Kotzebue.
    With regard to this latter claim (that the outlying villages, taken as a whole,
    constituted a distinct cultural group for purposes of an Alvarado analysis), Smith’s
    attorney argued that these villagers were far more likely than the residents of Kotzebue
    to practice a subsistence hunting lifestyle. According to the defense attorney, this was
    important because it meant that these villagers would be more familiar with firearms, and
    they would more readily understand that Smith would have been able to kill the Buckels
    if he had wanted to.
    The defense attorney also argued that the villagers living in Kiana and
    along the Squirrel River would be more familiar with people who believed in inukins —
    and, therefore, these villagers would be more likely to credit Smith’s statements about
    encountering inukins while he was wandering in the wilderness, rather than immediately
    concluding that Smith was either lying or delusional.
    The superior court, in a lengthy written decision, rejected the defense
    attorney’s contention that the residents of the outlying villages constituted a group whose
    culture was distinct, for Alvarado purposes, from the culture of the residents of
    Kotzebue.
    The superior court noted that, even though Kotzebue was a hub city, almost
    75 percent of the residents of Kotzebue were Alaska Natives, with an additional
    – 11 –                                       2640
    5 percent identifying themselves as having an Alaska Native heritage. (In Kiana, the
    percentage of Alaska Natives was 90 percent.) Perhaps more importantly, the superior
    court also found that the “attitudes[,] ideas, [and] experience” of Kotzebue residents
    exhibited a “basic similarity” to the attitudes, ideas, and experience of the people living
    in the other villages within the Kotzebue venue district.
    The superior court explained that Smith was essentially asking the court to
    assume that, because Kotzebue was a city, the people living in Kotzebue must have a
    materially different culture and lifestyle from the people living in the smaller villages.
    But the court declined to make this assumption in the absence of evidence.
    The court noted that even though Smith’s attorney had made several
    assertions about the purported culturaldifferences between the residents of Kotzebue and
    the residents of the outlying villages, Smith’s attorney “present[ed] no evidence that
    hunting or the subsistence lifestyle [was] any less prevalent in Kotzebue than in other
    communities [within the venue district]”.     Nor did Smith present any evidence that
    Kotzebue residents would not reflect “the same attitudes, ideas, and experiences as other
    residents of the [venue] district.”
    Apparently on its own initiative, the superior court examined census
    information comparing the residents of Kotzebue to the residents of Kiana, the residents
    of House District 40, and residents of the Second Judicial District as a whole. This data
    included information as to what percentage of residents identified themselves as Alaska
    Natives, or as having an Alaska Native heritage. The data also included information
    regarding how many people had salaried employment, how many people were
    unemployed, how many people were receiving food stamps, and how many households
    were multi-generational.
    The court found that this data supported the conclusion that the residents
    of Kotzebue “[fell] squarely within the same culture as Kiana [and] House District 40”,
    – 12 –                                      2640
    and that there was “no cognizable group ... present in Kiana [or] House District 40” that
    was not “also present in Kotzebue”.
    And with particular respect to the belief in “inukins”, the court noted that
    Smith presented no evidence regarding how many residents of Kiana believed in these
    supernatural beings. Rather, Smith’s only evidence of this cultural belief was a decades-
    old Kotzebue newspaper article which stated that some residents of Kotzebue believed
    in inukins.
    Based on allthis, the superior court concluded that Smith had failed to show
    that a jury pool drawn from the residents of Kotzebue would not adequately represent
    the “attitudes, ideas[,] and experiences” of the residents of Kiana and the other villages
    within the Kotzebue venue district.
    After the superior court issued this ruling, Smith’s attorney separately
    challenged the presiding judge’s decision to reduce the Kotzebue jury selection area from
    the normal 50-mile radius to a smaller 5-mile radius. As we have already explained, the
    Administrative Rules give presiding judges the authority to reduce a jury selection radius
    if the transportation and housing of prospective jurors from this normal 50-mile radius
    would pose an unreasonable expense.
    Smith’s attorney noted that, in the case of the Kotzebue jury selection area,
    the presiding judge’s order declared that a 50-mile jury selection radius would pose an
    unreasonable expense, but the judge’s order did not provide any of the data or financial
    information that the judge relied on when reaching this conclusion. The defense attorney
    asked the superior court to give him an opportunity to show that the presiding judge’s
    conclusion was wrong, so that the Kotzebue jury selection area could at least be
    expanded to the normal 50-mile radius — a radius that would include the two villages
    of Noorvik and Noatak.
    The superior court summarily denied the defense attorney’s motion.
    – 13 –                                      2640
    Smith’s claims on appeal
    On appeal, Smith asserts that all residents of Alaska have a right to serve
    on juries. Based on this assertion, Smith suggests that Administrative Rule 15(c) is
    unconstitutional, at least as it is applied in many areas of Alaska, because the 50-mile
    jury selection radius prescribed by Rule 15(c) often excludes significant numbers of rural
    residents, and because there are many areas of the state where these excluded rural
    residents are predominantly Alaska Native.
    Smith did not raise this generalized, state-wide attack on Administrative
    Rule 15(c) in the trial court. Nor is it clear that Smith has standing to attack the method
    of jury selection that is employed in other areas of Alaska. We therefore will address
    Smith’s contentions only as they apply to the method of jury selection in the Kotzebue
    venue district.
    Smith contends that allresidents of the Kotzebue venue district have a right
    to serve on juries, and that Administrative Rule 15(c) unlawfully abridges this right.
    But while courts often speak of jury service as a “right”, such statements are generally
    made in the context of ensuring that all adults within a legally defined vicinage have an
    equal chance of being included in the lists of prospective jurors drawn from that
    vicinage.
    As the Supreme Court of California has explained, citizens have no free­
    standing right to serve on juries:
    While trial by jury is constitutionally implanted in our
    system of justice, an individual’s interest in serving on a jury
    cannot be held a fundamental right. The [jury trial] guarantee
    of the Sixth Amendment is primarily for the benefit of the
    litigant — not persons seeking service on the jury; and even
    though [a citizen is] lawfully qualified, a citizen may not
    – 14 –                                     2640
    demand to serve on a jury. At most, the citizen is entitled to
    be considered for jury service. His interest in becoming a
    juror is clearly secondary to the interests of the litigants in
    securing an impartial jury, as shown by the traditional
    exclusion of prospective jurors for cause or upon peremptory
    challenge. Jury service is commonly viewed more as a
    combination of duty and privilege than as a right, sanctions
    being imposed for failure to appear.
    Adams v. Superior Court of San Diego County, 
    524 P.2d 375
    , 379 (Cal. 1974).
    Moreover, because Smith’s argument implicitly rests on the concept of
    vicinage (i.e., the assertion that all adults within a vicinage should have an equal chance
    of being included in the lists of prospective jurors), his argument is fundamentally at
    odds with our supreme court’s decision in Alvarado.
    As we have explained, Alvarado expressly holds that Alaska law does not
    incorporate the traditional notion of vicinage — and, thus, juries need not be drawn from
    the geographic locale where the crime was allegedly committed, so long as the pool of
    prospective jurors includes people who are representative of the community residing at
    the location of the alleged offense. 
    Alvarado, 486 P.2d at 902
    . Thus, the decision in
    Alvarado implicitly rejects the idea that all citizens within a venue district have an equal
    right to be included in that district’s lists of prospective jurors.
    For these reasons, we reject Smith’s argument that Administrative Rule
    15(c) is unconstitutional because it authorizes the Alaska Court System to compile lists
    of prospective jurors that do not include all residents of the Kotzebue venue district.
    We now turn to Smith’s argument that the Alaska Court System is violating
    his rights under Alvarado by limiting the pool of prospective jurors to those people living
    within a 5-mile radius of the Kotzebue court.
    – 15 –                                     2640
    To prevail on this claim, Smith must show (1) that the residents of the
    community where his crime occurred (Kiana and its environs) are members of a culture
    that is materially distinct from the culture of the residents of Kotzebue under the test
    announced in Alvarado, and (2) that a jury pool drawn from the residents of Kotzebue
    will fail to fairly and reasonably represent the culture of the residents of Kiana (in
    proportion to the number of Kiana residents within the venue district). See Tugatuk v.
    State, 
    626 P.2d 95
    , 100 (Alaska 1981). See also Wyatt v. State, 
    778 P.2d 1169
    , 1170-71
    n. 2 (Alaska App. 1989) (clarifying that Alvarado does not invariably require that the
    jury selection pool include residents of the place where the crime occurred, so long as
    the jury selection pool includes a reasonable number of people who share the culture of
    that place).
    Here, it was Smith’s burden to affirmatively demonstrate to the superior
    court that the residents of Kiana and its environs were members of a separate, cognizable
    cultural group whose interests could not be adequately protected by a jury pool whose
    members were drawn from the residents of Kotzebue. See Hampton v. State, 
    569 P.2d 138
    , 148 (Alaska 1977); Dana v. State, 
    623 P.2d 348
    , 351-52 (Alaska App. 1981).
    In Alvarado, the supreme court found that the defendant met this burden
    through census and sociological data of the kind that the superior court examined in
    Smith’s case, as well as through the testimony of a professor of sociology and the
    affidavits submitted by a cultural anthropologist and by the former director of the Alaska
    Human Rights Commission. 14
    But as we have already explained, Smith relied on arguments and
    assumptions that were supported by very little evidence.
    14
    Alvarado v. State, 
    486 P.2d 891
    , 894-95 (Alaska 1971).
    – 16 –                                     2640
    Unlike the defendant in Alvarado, Smith did not provide the superior court
    with testimony or other evidence to back up his assertion that the residents of Kotzebue
    and the residents of the outlying villages constituted two distinct cultural groups. Indeed,
    the only evidence pertinent to Smith’s claim was the census data that the superior court
    provided sua sponte. And based on the record in front of it, the superior court concluded
    that Smith had failed to meet his burden of proof.
    To the extent that the superior court’s ruling rested on questions of fact —
    for example, findings regarding the general attitudes, experiences, and lifestyles of the
    residents of Kiana versus the residents of Kotzebue — we conclude that the superior
    court’s findings are not clearly erroneous.
    The superior court’s ruling also rested on its legal conclusion that, whatever
    differences might exist between life in Kiana and life in Kotzebue, those differences did
    not amount to a “cognizable” cultural difference for purposes of Alvarado, Hampton,
    Tugatuk, and Wyatt. We review this aspect of the superior court’s ruling de novo.
    But given the superior court’s ultimate finding of fact — its finding that
    Smith failed to establish any significant differences between the attitudes, ideas, and
    experience of Kotzebue residents and the attitudes, ideas, and experience of the people
    living in the other villages within the venue district — we affirm the superior court’s
    legal conclusion that Smith failed to demonstrate any cognizable cultural difference for
    purposes of Alvarado, Hampton, Tugatuk, and Wyatt.
    We therefore reject Smith’s claim that the Alaska Court System violated his
    rights under Alvarado by limiting the jury selection area to a 5-mile radius of Kotzebue.
    Finally, Smith argues that even if the 5-mile jury selection radius did not
    violate his rights under Alvarado, this jury selection area was nevertheless unlawful
    because the presiding judge of the Second Judicial District lacked a sufficient factual
    – 17 –                                      2640
    basis for reducing the Kotzebue jury selection to a radius of 5 miles, rather than using
    the normal 50-mile jury selection radius prescribed by Administrative Rule 15(c).
    As we have explained, the presiding judge’s order was based on a finding
    that the transportation and housing of prospective jurors from Noorvik and Noatak (the
    two villages within a 50-mile radius of Kotzebue) would pose an unreasonable expense.
    In the superior court, Smith argued that the facts did not support the presiding judge’s
    finding, or (alternatively) that conditions had changed since the presiding judge made
    this finding, and the finding was now outdated. But the superior court refused to grant
    Smith an evidentiary hearing on this issue.
    We conclude that it was error for the superior court to refuse Smith a
    hearing on this issue. In reaching this conclusion, we express no opinion as to whether
    the facts support the presiding judge’s finding that it would be unreasonable for the Court
    System to bear the cost of transporting and housing prospective jurors from the villages
    of Noorvik and Noatak. Nor do we express any opinion as to what remedy Smith would
    be entitled to, even if he could show that the presiding judge’s finding was not supported
    by the facts.
    Conclusion
    Based on the findings of the superior court, we reject Smith’s claim that the
    jury selection pool in his case failed to represent a fair cross-section of the community
    living where the crime occurred. We also reject Smith’s claim that all adult citizens
    living in the Kotzebue venue district have a right to serve on juries, and that Alaska
    Administrative Rule 15(c) is unconstitutional because it restricts the jury selection area
    to a 50-mile radius of the court location.
    – 18 –                                     2640
    But with respect to Smith’s claim that the facts do not support the presiding
    judge’s decision to restrict the Kotzebue jury selection area to a 5-mile radius (rather
    than the normal 50-mile radius prescribed by Administrative Rule 15(c)), we conclude
    that it was error for the superior court to deny Smith a hearing on this issue.
    We therefore remand Smith’s case to the superior court, to give Smith the
    opportunity to make his case that the costs of transportingand housingprospective jurors
    from Noorvik and Noatak — the two villages within a 50-mile radius of Kotzebue —
    would not be unreasonable. If Smith establishes that the cost of summoning prospective
    jurors from these two villages would not be unreasonable, then the superior court should
    decide the further issue of whether Smith is entitled to any relief.
    The superior court shall conduct these additional proceedings within 90
    days of the issuance of this opinion. After the superior court issues its decision on these
    matters, the parties (either or both of them) shall have 30 days to seek our review of the
    superior court’s decision. We retain jurisdiction of this appeal for that purpose.
    – 19 –                                      2640
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 2640 A-12309

Judges: Mannheimer

Filed Date: 3/1/2019

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/19/2024