United States v. David Shanks, Jr. ( 2020 )


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  •                                 In the
    United States Court of Appeals
    For the Seventh Circuit
    ____________________
    No. 18-3628
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
    Plaintiff-Appellee,
    v.
    DAVID L. SHANKS, JR.,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    ____________________
    Appeal from the United States District Court for the
    Eastern District of Wisconsin.
    No. 18-CR-18 — William C. Griesbach, Judge.
    ____________________
    SUBMITTED JUNE 9, 2020* — DECIDED JUNE 15, 2020
    ____________________
    Before KANNE, SYKES, and BRENNAN, Circuit Judges.
    PER CURIAM. David L. Shanks, Jr. did not attend his trial
    for drug-distribution offenses, for which a jury found him
    guilty and the district court entered a judgment of conviction.
    *  We have agreed to decide the case without oral argument because
    the briefs and record adequately present the facts and legal arguments,
    and oral argument would not significantly aid the court. Fed. R. App. P.
    34(a)(2)(C).
    2                                                  No. 18-3628
    Shanks challenges the judgment on two bases. First, he con-
    tends that the district court did not comply with Rule 43 of
    the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure, which he argues re-
    quires a defendant’s presence in a courtroom at the start of
    trial. Shanks’s trial began before the judge and counsel at a
    jail, not in a courtroom. Second, he argues that the court
    clearly erred in finding that, through his disruptive conduct,
    he knowingly and voluntarily waived his right to attend trial.
    Because the district court permissibly began trial at the jail
    and reasonably found that Shanks waived his right to attend
    the remainder of his trial, we affirm.
    I. BACKGROUND
    While on supervised release for a prior drug crime, Shanks
    was charged in January 2018 with participating in a drug-dis-
    tribution conspiracy. The government charged that the con-
    spiracy led to overdoses that resulted in a death and the seri-
    ous bodily injury of two others. At an arraignment in Febru-
    ary, counsel for Shanks reported that Shanks pled not guilty
    and understood the charges. But a few days later, while de-
    tained at Brown County Jail, Shanks fired that lawyer, and at-
    torney Edward Hunt was appointed to serve as his new coun-
    sel. Later, when the government filed a superseding indict-
    ment, Shanks refused to enter a plea before a magistrate
    judge. Instead, he challenged the court’s jurisdiction, denied
    understanding the charges against him, and said that he
    wished to be silent.
    After his next arraignment, Shanks continued to question
    the legitimacy of the criminal process. First, Shanks refused to
    talk with Hunt and told him that Hunt did not speak for
    Shanks, prompting Hunt to move to withdraw. Shanks told
    No. 18-3628                                                    3
    the judge: “Mr. Hunt does not speak for me, I speak for my-
    self.” The judge asked Shanks if he wanted to represent him-
    self. Shanks responded, “I don’t understand how,” so the
    judge did not grant Hunt’s motion to withdraw. At this hear-
    ing, Shanks also demanded to know “what jurisdiction I’m
    charged under.” The judge explained that he was in federal
    court and charged for federal criminal violations, adding,
    “You’ve been through the system before, don’t tell me you
    don’t know what jurisdiction you’re in.” (In 2013, the same
    judge imposed a 66-month sentence on Shanks for crack-co-
    caine crimes.) After this hearing, a deputy U.S. marshal told
    the judge that Shanks had said that he did not intend to attend
    the trial. Shanks did not appear in federal court again.
    At the final pretrial conference (which Shanks did not at-
    tend), the judge anticipated that Shanks might refuse to be-
    have at or attend trial. He noted that, under Federal Rule of
    Criminal Procedure 43, Shanks could waive his right to re-
    main in court if he became disruptive. The judge also consid-
    ered matters of public interest: if Shanks said that he did not
    want to attend trial, or threatened to disrupt proceedings if
    brought to court, the judge would not order the U.S. marshals
    to forcibly bring Shanks to court, for fear of injuring Shanks
    or the marshals. Likewise, the judge decided against postpon-
    ing the trial. The government had gathered over 50 witnesses,
    including experts, from across the country for the trial to start
    the next week, and the judge doubted that Shanks would im-
    prove his attitude if trial were delayed.
    To assess Shanks’s intentions, the judge issued an order
    for Shanks to appear at trial. When a marshal attempted to
    serve it on Shanks, Shanks refused to accept it.
    4                                                      No. 18-3628
    Because Shanks refused to accept the trial summons, the
    judge decided to come to Shanks to start the trial. The judge
    understood Rule 43 to require a defendant’s initial presence
    at trial before the defendant could waive the right to attend.
    Therefore, the judge, counsel, and a court reporter planned to
    begin the trial outside Shanks’s cell at the Brown County Jail.
    It began on the morning of September 13, 2018, at the jail. Af-
    ter the judge put on the record his efforts to bring Shanks to
    court, Shanks denied understanding whatever the judge said
    to him:
    THE COURT: Mr. Shanks, you have indicated that you re-
    fuse to come to your trial; is that still your position?
    THE DEFENDANT: I never refused anything. I don’t un-
    derstand these proceedings.
    THE COURT: So you will come to your trial and attend your
    trial; is that right?
    THE DEFENDANT: I don’t understand what I have to come
    to trial for.
    THE COURT: You’re tried on a superseding indictment.
    We’ve had the arraignment, you’ve gone over it with your
    attorney, we’ve given you a copy of it.
    THE DEFENDANT: I haven’t went over it with my attor-
    ney. The magistrate judge read the indictment, but I did not
    understand it. And I told the magistrate judge this at the
    time he read it.
    THE COURT: Well, there’s no mystery. These are charges
    similar to others you’ve faced. You’re charged with conspir-
    acy to distribute controlled substances, multiple delivery of
    controlled substances and possession with intent to deliver
    a controlled substance.
    No. 18-3628                                                       5
    You’re also alleged to have—or it’s alleged that a death re-
    sulted from one of the deliveries within the conspiracy and
    that serious bodily injury or harm occurred as a result of
    other deliveries.
    Those are the charges you face. You understand that several
    of the counts you’re facing carry mandatory life sentences.
    Your attorney has been prepared to represent you.
    After the judge explained the charges and possible penalties,
    he asked Shanks, “Are you willing to come to court to attend
    your own trial?” Shanks refused to answer that question, no
    matter how many times the judge rephrased it:
    THE DEFENDANT: I don’t understand those charges or the
    allegations in the indictment.
    THE COURT: Regardless of whether you understand them
    or not, are you coming to your trial?
    THE DEFENDANT: I don’t understand what I have to come
    to trial for, sir.
    THE COURT: You don’t need to understand them. If you
    want to profess your lack [of] understanding, just come to
    trial, we will take you to trial. Are you ready to go?
    THE DEFENDANT: Your Honor, can someone please ex-
    plain to me the nature of and cause of this action?
    THE COURT: We’ve already explained it. It’s very clear.
    You are charged with criminal violations of the federal law.
    If you do not [] come to your trial, we will put shackles on
    you and you will proceed to have a jury decide whether the
    government has proven guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.
    THE DEFENDANT: I still don’t understand the nature and
    cause of this action or what jurisdiction you operate in.
    THE COURT: Okay. I’m not concerned—if you want to pro-
    fess your lack of understanding, that’s your right. No one
    6                                                       No. 18-3628
    believes that you do not understand it. The question I’m
    asking is, will you come to court? Can we bring you to
    court?
    THE DEFENDANT: I don’t understand what I have to come
    to court for, sir.
    THE COURT: You have to come to court for your trial.
    THE DEFENDANT: My trial for what, sir?
    THE COURT: For the crimes that I’ve already repeated to
    you.
    THE DEFENDANT: I don’t understand those crimes. I
    never hurt anyone.
    Finally, Shanks would not say if he would forcibly resist at-
    tending court:
    THE COURT: Are you going to fight us if we bring you to
    court?
    THE DEFENDANT: I don’t understand these charges, Your
    Honor.
    THE COURT: Okay. Let the record reflect that—well, the
    record will reflect the defendant’s insistence that he doesn’t
    understand and his refusal to answer the question of
    whether he will willingly come to court and cooperate in his
    trial. Will you come to court and cooperate in your trial?
    THE DEFENDANT: I don’t understand what I have to come
    to court for, Your Honor.
    In total, the judge asked Shanks more than ten times if he
    would attend trial cooperatively and received no reply. In
    light of this behavior, and knowing that Shanks refused to ac-
    cept the judge’s order to attend trial, the judge found that by
    “disruptive conduct” Shanks had waived his right to attend
    trial. To avoid harm to Shanks or others, the judge did not use
    No. 18-3628                                                   7
    force to extract Shanks. The judge warned Shanks that by re-
    fusing to come to court, he would be giving up his right to
    testify on his own behalf, to which Shanks replied: “I have
    given up nothing.” The judge also told Shanks that, though
    the judge could not provide him with live video or audio of
    the trial while he was in jail, if he changed his mind about
    coming to court, the marshals would transport him there. Be-
    fore this exchange ended, Shanks spoke off the record with
    his counsel, Hunt. Hunt then met with the prosecutor, who
    later told the court on the record that Shanks wanted to “res-
    urrect a previously withdrawn offer” that the government
    had made, but the government declined to do so.
    Jury selection began later that day, and after his four-day
    trial, Shanks was convicted of all but one charge. During the
    trial, outside of the jury’s presence, the judge regularly asked
    the marshals to report whether Shanks had changed his mind.
    Each time, when jail staff asked Shanks if he was willing to
    attend his trial, Shanks responded that he did not understand
    why he needed to go to court. The judge instructed the jury
    not to draw any inference from Shanks’s absence or his deci-
    sion not to testify. At Shanks’s sentencing hearing, which
    Shanks also did not attend, the judge sentenced him to multi-
    ple life terms in prison.
    II. ANALYSIS
    On appeal, Shanks makes three arguments. We address
    each in turn.
    A. Criminal Rule 43
    Shanks argues that the district court violated Rule 43 by
    starting trial without his physical presence in a courtroom.
    The government responds that Rule 43 was satisfied because
    8                                                    No. 18-3628
    it does not require that a criminal trial start in a “courtroom.”
    This court reviews legal questions such as these de novo. See
    United States v. Bethea, 
    888 F.3d 864
    , 865–66 (7th Cir. 2018).
    Rule 43 sets forth requirements about a defendant’s pres-
    ence at trial and when he may waive that requirement. The
    defendant “must be present” at “every trial stage,” Fed. R.
    Crim. P. 43(a)(2), but one “who was initially present at trial”
    may waive his right to be present “when the defendant is vol-
    untarily absent after the trial has begun” or “when the court
    warns the defendant that it will remove the defendant from
    the courtroom for disruptive behavior, but the defendant per-
    sists in conduct that justifies removal from the courtroom,”
    Fed. R. Crim. P. 43(c)(1), (c)(1)(A), (c)(1)(C). The Rule does not
    specify whether a defendant must be in a courtroom to be “in-
    itially present” at trial. Notes to the Rules, however, observe
    that “intangible benefits” come from “requiring a defendant
    to appear before a federal judicial officer in a federal court-
    room.” Fed. R. Crim. P. 43 advisory committee’s note to 2011
    amendments.
    The district court complied with Rule 43. After Shanks re-
    fused to come to court, the federal judge came to him, with
    counsel and a court reporter present. The judge thus created
    at the jail—the only place that he could reliably meet
    Shanks—the features of in-person presence in a federal court-
    room. We have not previously addressed the question of
    where a defendant must be physically present to satisfy Rule
    43’s “initially present” requirement, but we have decided
    when he must be present. “[T]he phrase ‘initially present at
    trial’ in a jury trial must refer to the day that jury selection
    begins,” not to the precise moment that the first prospective
    juror enters the courtroom. United States v. Benabe, 654 F.3d
    No. 18-3628                                                      9
    753, 771 (7th Cir. 2011). Shanks’s trial started (at the jail) ear-
    lier the same day that jury selection began in court, so timing
    was satisfied.
    On the issue of where a trial may start, one circuit has held
    that a trial may start where a defendant is initially present,
    even if it is not a courtroom. In United States v. Sterling, 
    738 F.3d 228
    , 236 (11th Cir. 2013), Sterling, a combative defendant,
    refused to enter the courtroom on the day of jury selection, so
    the judge met him in an interview room. Citing Benabe, the
    Eleventh Circuit ruled that the trial started in the interview
    room (where Sterling had waived his right to attend trial any
    further) on the same day that jury selection began later. Ster-
    
    ling, 738 F.3d at 236
    –37. The court deemed it “absurd” to re-
    quire a district court “to bring a combative defendant” into
    the courtroom where he might create predictable problems
    “with his own disruptive behavior.”
    Id. at 236.
        We agree with our sister circuit’s reasoning and conclude
    that Shanks’s physical presence before the judge at the jail sat-
    isfied Rule 43’s “initially present” requirement. Although
    Sterling came to a courthouse, and Shanks did not, that dif-
    ference is immaterial. Both Shanks and Sterling received an
    informed, face-to-face encounter with the trial judge, and they
    both risked disrupting proceedings by entering the court-
    room.
    Thus, the judge adequately complied with Rule 43.
    B. Constitutional Challenge
    Shanks next argues that in two respects the district court
    violated his Fifth and Sixth Amendment rights. First, he con-
    tends that those amendments prohibited the court from start-
    ing his trial at the jail. The Constitution says nothing about
    10                                                   No. 18-3628
    whether trial must start in a courtroom. And, as already dis-
    cussed, the district court complied with Rule 43, which
    “builds on,” is “more demanding” than, and sets forth protec-
    tions that are “more expansive” than those of the Constitu-
    tion. 
    Benabe, 654 F.3d at 771
    (citing United States v. Gibbs, 
    182 F.3d 408
    , 436 (6th Cir. 1999)). Thus, because we conclude that
    the judge complied with Rule 43 when he started the trial at
    the jail, we need not conduct additional analysis to determine
    whether the relevant constitutional requirements were met.
    See generally United States v. Vargas, 
    915 F.3d 417
    , 420 (7th Cir.
    2019) (federal courts should consider statutory and rule-based
    arguments ahead of constitutional ones); see also Rehman v.
    Gonzales, 
    441 F.3d 506
    , 508 (7th Cir. 2006) (“[C]onstitutional
    contentions must be set aside until their resolution is una-
    voidable.”).
    Shanks’s second argument is fact-based. He contends that
    that the district court violated his constitutional rights to at-
    tend trial by unreasonably concluding, based on Shanks’s
    conduct, that he impliedly waived his right to appear at trial.
    But, as Rule 43 reflects, the Constitution allows criminal de-
    fendants to waive—through their conduct—their right to re-
    main present at trial. See 
    Benabe, 654 F.3d at 768
    . And this
    court reviews deferentially the district court’s finding that
    through his conduct, Shanks impliedly waived his right to at-
    tend his trial. See
    id. at 769.
    Specifically, we review for clear
    error the court’s factual finding that waiver was knowing and
    voluntary; we review for abuse of discretion the court’s con-
    clusion that there was a controlling public interest to proceed
    with trial in the defendant’s absence; and we review for harm-
    lessness any error in those two decisions.
    Id. No. 18-3628
                                                      11
    Given the deferential standard of review, the court’s con-
    clusion that Shanks waived his right to attend trial must be
    upheld. To begin, before trial, Shanks refused to accept the
    order compelling his attendance. Then, after trial started at
    the jail, Shanks repeatedly refused to tell the judge if he would
    attend trial cooperatively, instead protesting that he did not
    understand the charges. And when the judge explained that
    Shanks did not need to understand the charges to say if he
    would come to court (where he could argue his lack of under-
    standing), he still refused to answer and tried to resurrect a
    dead plea offer.
    The judge also considered the public interest before pro-
    ceeding in Shanks’s absence.
    Id. (“The court
    must consider the
    likelihood that the trial could take place with the defendant
    present, the difficulty of rescheduling, the inconvenience to
    jurors, and the burden on the government and others of hav-
    ing to undertake two trials.”) The judge knew that more than
    50 witnesses were waiting to testify, so the burden of resched-
    uling was high, and the chance that Shanks would cooperate
    was very low. In light of this and Shanks’s prior experience as
    a federal criminal defendant, the judge properly found an im-
    plied waiver of the right to attend trial. Cf.
    id. at 768–71
    (de-
    fendants’ “campaign of obstreperous interruptions and frivo-
    lous legal arguments,” and refusal “to confirm that they
    would behave respectfully in front of the jury” constituted
    waiver).
    C. Harmlessness
    Finally, Shanks argues that his absence from the court-
    room during the trial affected the “fundamental nature” of
    the proceeding and is not subject to harmless-error review.
    The government counters that any error was not structural
    12                                                   No. 18-3628
    and was harmless. Because no error occurred, we need go no
    further. But even if a technical Rule 43 violation occurred by
    starting the trial at jail rather than at court, we agree with the
    government that that error would be subject to harmless-error
    review. See 
    Benabe, 654 F.3d at 773
    –74.
    Shanks relies on United States v. Thompson, 
    599 F.3d 595
    (7th Cir. 2010), to contend that his absence from the jury al-
    tered the fundamental nature of the trial, just as if a judge had
    been absent from trial. Thompson involved a hearing to revoke
    supervised release, and everyone was physically present in
    court, except for the judge who appeared from Key West,
    Florida, via video-conference, in violation of Rule 32.1(b)(2) of
    the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure.
    Id. at 599–601.
        Thompson is unhelpful for two reasons. First, it establishes
    a harmless-error standard, and Shanks has not argued how he
    was harmed by his absence. For example, he does not argue
    that any trial testimony was incorrect, nor does he proffer his
    own counter testimony. Moreover, the judge instructed the
    jury not to draw any adverse inference from Shanks’s ab-
    sence, and he gave Shanks repeated chances to change his
    mind and come to court. Second, Thompson is distinguishable.
    Because the judge there used videoconferencing, the defend-
    ant had no in-person appearance before that judge. See
    id. at 597,
    601. Here, the trial judge, counsel, and the court reporter
    all came to Shanks and appeared in his physical presence, so
    Shanks received a live, face-to-face encounter with the judge.
    Only then did the judge assess Shanks’s demeanor and find
    that Shanks waived his right to attend the rest of the trial in
    court.
    No. 18-3628                                             13
    III. CONCLUSION
    Shanks’s absence from most of his trial violated neither
    Rule 43 nor his constitutional rights. Shanks has also not
    shown prejudice from his absence. We therefore AFFIRM.