v. Abu-Nantambu-El , 2019 CO 106 ( 2019 )


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    ADVANCE SHEET HEADNOTE
    December 23, 2019
    
    2019 CO 106
    No. 18SC44, People v. Abu-Nantambu-El—Criminal Law—Jury—Structural
    Error.
    The supreme court affirms the judgment of the court of appeals reversing
    the defendant’s convictions where the trial court erroneously denied the
    defendant’s for-cause challenge to a juror under section 16-10-103(1)(k), C.R.S.
    (2019), the defendant exhausted his peremptory challenges, and the challenged
    juror ultimately served on the jury.       Consistent with the principle that the
    erroneous denial of a challenge for cause amounts to structural error if it results in
    an actually biased juror serving on the jury, the supreme court holds that the
    erroneous seating of an impliedly biased juror is also structural error. In other
    words, for purposes of a criminal defendant’s constitutional right to an impartial
    jury, a juror who is presumed by law to be biased is legally indistinguishable from
    an actually biased juror.
    The Supreme Court of the State of Colorado
    2 East 14th Avenue • Denver, Colorado 80203
    
    2019 CO 106
    Supreme Court Case No. 18SC44
    Certiorari to the Colorado Court of Appeals
    Court of Appeals Case No. 14CA1234
    Petitioner:
    The People of the State of Colorado,
    v.
    Respondent:
    Abdu-Latif Kazembe Abu-Nantambu-El.
    Judgment Affirmed
    en banc
    December 23, 2019
    Attorneys for Petitioner:
    Philip J. Weiser, Attorney General
    Jillian J. Price, Senior Assistant Attorney General
    Denver, Colorado
    Attorneys for Respondent:
    Johnson & Klein, PLLC
    Gail K. Johnson
    Hillary C. Aizenman
    Boulder, Colorado
    JUSTICE MÁRQUEZ delivered the Opinion of the Court.
    JUSTICE SAMOUR dissents.
    JUSTICE BOATRIGHT does not participate.
    2
    ¶1    This case presents a question left unanswered by our holding in People v.
    Novotny, 
    2014 CO 18
    , 
    320 P.3d 1194
    : What standard of reversal applies where a
    trial court erroneously denies a challenge for cause, the defendant exhausts his
    peremptory challenges, and the challenged juror ultimately serves on the jury?
    More specifically, should reversal be automatic if the challenged juror should have
    been excused because she was impliedly biased as a matter of law, even if she did
    not evince actual enmity toward the defendant?
    ¶2    It is clear that the erroneous denial of a challenge for cause amounts to
    structural error if it results in an actually biased juror serving on a jury. Consistent
    with that principle, we conclude that the erroneous seating of an impliedly biased
    juror is also structural error and requires reversal. In other words, for purposes of
    a criminal defendant’s constitutional right to an impartial jury, a juror who is
    presumed by law to be biased is legally indistinguishable from an actually biased
    juror. Here, the trial court erroneously denied a for-cause challenge to a juror who
    was presumed by law to be biased under section 16-10-103(1)(k), C.R.S. (2019)
    (requiring the court to sustain a challenge to a potential juror who is “a
    compensated employee of a public law enforcement agency or a public defender’s
    office”). The defendant exhausted his peremptory challenges, and the impliedly
    biased juror served on the defendant’s jury. We conclude that such an error is not
    amenable to analysis under a harmless error standard, regardless of the juror’s
    3
    actual bias, and the defendant’s convictions must be reversed. Accordingly, we
    affirm the judgment of the court of appeals.
    I. Background
    A. Facts
    ¶3    Abdu-Latif Kazembe Abu-Nantambu-El forced his way into the apartment
    of an acquaintance, where he fatally stabbed a visitor and forced the acquaintance
    to clean up evidence of the crime. The prosecution subsequently charged Abu-
    Nantambu-El with numerous offenses, including first degree murder (after
    deliberation), first degree murder (felony murder), second degree murder, and
    two counts of first degree burglary. Abu-Nantambu-El proceeded to trial on a self-
    defense theory.
    B. Jury Selection and Trial
    ¶4    During jury selection, Juror J, a financial grant manager for the State of
    Colorado, said that she worked for the Colorado Division of Criminal Justice 1 but
    described the connection between her duties and law enforcement as, at most,
    tenuous:
    I am currently employed with the Colorado Division of Criminal
    Justice, which is housed in the Department of Public Safety. I don’t
    feel that the division is law enforcement even though the state patrol
    1Section 24-33.5-112(1)(a), C.R.S. (2019), identifies the Colorado Division of
    Criminal Justice as a “law enforcement agency of the state.”
    4
    and [Colorado Bureau of Investigation] are in our department. I see
    state troopers down the hall because we’re in the same building, but
    I couldn’t tell you their names. That’s the kind of contact I have with
    them. We give department, federal, Department of Justice grants out
    to drug treatment and criminal history records, things like that,
    juvenile justice crime prevention programs and drug treatment. I
    don’t have any close relatives or friends in the law enforcement arena.
    I don’t have any training in law enforcement.
    ¶5    When defense counsel asked about potential bias, Juror J indicated that she
    generally was not in contact with law enforcement personnel:
    JUROR J: I don’t think it would be a problem because I don’t work
    directly with law enforcement. We fund a lot of law enforcement
    agencies and DA’s offices and things like that, but it’s on different
    kinds of projects.
    ...
    DEFENSE COUNSEL: Do you deal with the law enforcement
    agencies yourself directly?
    JUROR J: [I deal with their] [f]inance people.
    ¶6    Section 16-10-103(1) lists the grounds on which a trial court “shall” sustain
    a challenge to a potential juror for cause. Abu-Nantambu-El challenged Juror J
    under section 16-10-103(1)(k), which requires the court to sustain a challenge to a
    potential juror who is a “compensated employee of a public law enforcement
    agency or a public defender’s office.” The prosecution disputed the challenge, and
    the trial court denied it, reasoning that the Colorado Division of Criminal Justice
    is a multidisciplinary agency and Juror J’s job duties as a financial grant manager
    were unrelated to law enforcement.
    5
    ¶7    Abu-Nantambu-El subsequently exhausted his peremptory challenges but
    did not excuse Juror J, who ultimately served on the jury. Among other counts,
    the jury convicted Abu-Nantambu-El of first degree murder (felony murder),
    second degree murder, and two counts of first degree burglary.2 The court
    sentenced him to life imprisonment without the possibility of parole.3
    C. Court of Appeals Decision
    ¶8    Abu-Nantambu-El      appealed,   arguing,   as   relevant   here,   that   his
    constitutional right to a fair and impartial jury was violated because his jury
    included Juror J, who should have been excused for cause under section
    16-10-103(1)(k). He contended that the error was structural. The People conceded
    that the trial court erred in denying the challenge for cause but argued that the
    proper standard of reversal was an outcome-determinative harmless error
    standard and that Abu-Nantambu-El’s claim failed because Juror J did not evince
    any actual bias. Thus, the dispute on appeal was the proper standard of reversal.
    2 The jury also convicted Abu-Nantambu-El of third degree assault (recklessly
    causing injury), second degree kidnapping, tampering with physical evidence,
    and false imprisonment.
    3 The jury found various sentence enhancers and habitual criminal counts. Abu-
    Nantambu-El received consecutive sentences of life imprisonment without the
    possibility of parole for murder, twenty-four years for kidnapping, and six years
    for tampering with physical evidence. He also received a two-year sentence for
    third degree assault to run concurrently with his other sentences.
    6
    ¶9    A divided panel of the court of appeals reversed Abu-Nantambu-El’s
    convictions and remanded for a new trial, concluding that reversal is required
    where, as here, the trial court erroneously denies a challenge for cause under
    section 16-10-103(1)(k), the defendant exhausts his or her peremptory challenges,
    and the impliedly biased juror serves on the jury. People v. Abu-Nantambu-El,
    
    2017 COA 154
    , ¶ 3, __ P.3d __. However, each judge wrote separately.
    ¶10   In Judge Booras’s view, reversal was required because the trial court’s ruling
    was an error in violation of an express legislative mandate in section
    16-10-103(1)(k) (stating that a challenge for cause “shall” be granted). 
    Id. at ¶¶
    19,
    23.
    ¶11   Judge Freyre agreed that Abu-Nantambu-El’s conviction must be reversed,
    concluding that the error was structural because it violated Abu-Nantambu-El’s
    constitutional right to trial by an impartial jury.      
    Id. at ¶¶
    51, 72 (Freyre, J.,
    concurring in part and dissenting in part). Judge Freyre noted that a defendant
    cannot be tried fairly when a biased juror serves on the jury. 
    Id. at ¶
    55. She further
    reasoned that there is no basis in section 16-10-103(1)(k) to differentiate between
    an actually biased juror and an impliedly biased juror. 
    Id. at ¶
    52. Rather, she
    reasoned, “bias is bias.”     
    Id. And because
    the harm arising from a biased
    adjudicator “pervades and infects the entire framework of the trial,” it constitutes
    structural error requiring reversal. 
    Id. at ¶
    72.
    7
    ¶12   Judge Webb dissented.       He rejected Judge Booras’s express legislative
    mandate approach because section 16-10-103 is silent on the remedy for the seating
    of a biased juror. 
    Id. at ¶
    75 (Webb, J., dissenting). He also dismissed Judge
    Freyre’s structural error approach, concluding that section 16-10-103(1)(k)
    provides broader protection than constitutional due process requires. 
    Id. at ¶
    98.
    Because, in his view, the Sixth Amendment protects against the service of an
    impliedly biased juror “in only the most extreme of situations,” 
    id. at ¶
    97 (quoting
    State v. Robertson, 
    122 P.3d 895
    , 900 n.3 (Utah Ct. App. 2005)), the error did not
    violate Abu-Nantambu-El’s constitutional rights and accordingly was not
    structural, 
    id. at ¶
    132. Instead, Judge Webb agreed with the People that the
    seating of an impliedly biased juror should be evaluated under an outcome-
    determinative analysis—specifically, ordinary harmless error. 
    Id. at ¶¶
    95, 132. In
    reaching this conclusion, he expressed concern that requiring reversal would
    encourage defendants to test their luck with a jury by not exercising a peremptory
    strike as to a challenged juror, knowing that the conviction would be reversed on
    appeal if a reviewing court determined that the challenge for cause should have
    been granted. 
    Id. at ¶
    108.
    8
    ¶13     We granted the People’s petition for a writ of certiorari to review the court
    of appeals’ decision.4
    II. Legal Principles
    ¶14     A fair and impartial jury is a key element of a defendant’s constitutional
    right to a fair trial under both the United States and Colorado Constitutions. U.S.
    Const. amends. V, VI, XIV; Colo. Const. art. II §§ 16, 25; see also Vigil v. People,
    
    2019 CO 105
    , ¶ 9, __ P.3d __; People v. Russo, 
    713 P.2d 356
    , 360 (Colo. 1986).
    Accordingly, seating a biased juror violates the defendant’s constitutional rights.
    See Nailor v. People, 
    612 P.2d 79
    , 80 (Colo. 1980).
    ¶15     Our recent opinion in Vigil addressed some of the questions left open after
    Novotny regarding jury selection and the use of peremptory challenges. There, we
    noted that, within constitutional limits, the General Assembly determines who is
    competent and qualified for jury service. Vigil, ¶ 9; see also People v. White, 
    242 P.3d 1121
    , 1124 (Colo. 2010). For instance, under the Uniform Jury Selection and Service
    4   We granted certiorari to review the following issues:
    1. Whether a violation of section 16-10-103(1)(k), C.R.S. (2018), which
    does not expressly provide for dismissal as a remedy, qualifies as
    a violation of an express legislative mandate.
    2. Whether the Sixth Amendment applies to violations of section
    16-10-103(1)(k), C.R.S. (2018), which provides greater protection
    than that required by federal due process.
    9
    Act, §§ 13-71-101 to -145, C.R.S. (2019) (“UJSSA”), jurors must be U.S. citizens and,
    at the time of service, residents of the county in which they are called to serve.
    § 13-71-105(1), C.R.S. (2019). Further, prospective jurors “shall be disqualified” if
    they are under the age of eighteen; unable to read, speak, or understand English;
    or unable to render jury service because of a mental or physical disability.
    § 13-71-105(2)(a)–(c).    Additionally, “prospective grand juror[s] shall be
    disqualified if [they] ha[ve] previously been convicted of a felony . . . .”
    § 13-71-105(3).   Courts must “strictly enforce the provisions” of the UJSSA.
    § 13-71-104(4), C.R.S. (2019).
    ¶16   The legislature also requires a trial court, upon a party’s challenge, to
    remove jurors when particular circumstances implicate their ability to remain
    impartial. Vigil, ¶ 11. First, section 16-10-103(1)(j) requires a trial court to excuse
    jurors who are actually biased. Specifically, a trial court must grant a challenge
    for cause to a prospective juror who “evinc[es] enmity or bias toward the
    defendant or the state,” unless the court is “satisfied” that the prospective juror
    “will render an impartial verdict according to the law and the evidence submitted
    to the jury at the trial.” § 16-10-103(1)(j); Vigil, ¶ 11; see also Morgan v. People,
    
    624 P.2d 1331
    , 1332 (Colo. 1981) (concluding that a juror was actually biased where
    he indicated he would have “difficulty applying the principle[] that the burden of
    proof rests solely upon the prosecution to establish the guilt of the accused”).
    10
    ¶17    Second, and relevant here, the legislature has determined that prospective
    jurors with certain relationships are impliedly biased and must be excused upon
    challenge. This category includes prospective jurors who:
    • have “[r]elationships within the third degree, by blood, adoption, or
    marriage, to a defendant or to any attorney of record or attorney
    engaged in the trial of the case”;
    • stand “in the relationship of guardian and ward, employer and
    employee, landlord and tenant, debtor and creditor, or principal and
    agent to, or being a member of the household of, or a partner in
    business with, or surety on any bond or obligation for any defendant”;
    • have “been a party adverse to the defendant in a civil action or ha[ve]
    complained against or been accused by him in a criminal prosecution”;
    • have “served on the grand jury which returned the indictment, or on a
    coroner’s jury which inquired into the death of a person whose death is
    the subject of the indictment or information, or on any other
    investigatory body which inquired into the facts of the crime charged”;
    • were “juror[s] at a former trial arising out of the same factual situation
    or involving the same defendant”;
    • were “juror[s] in a civil action against the defendant arising out of the
    act charged as a crime”;
    • were “witness[es] to any matter related to the crime or its prosecution”;
    • “occup[y] a fiduciary relationship to the defendant or a person alleged
    to have been injured by the crime or the person on whose complaint the
    prosecution was instituted”; or
    • are “compensated employee[s] of a public law enforcement agency or a
    public defender’s office.”
    § 16-10-103(1)(b)–(i), (k); see also Crim. P. 24(b)(1)(II)–(XII).
    11
    ¶18   In addition to challenges for cause, the legislature has provided for
    peremptory challenges, which allow “both the prosecution and the defense to
    secure a more fair and impartial jury by enabling them to remove jurors whom
    they perceive as biased.” Vigil, ¶ 19 (quoting People v. Lefebre, 
    5 P.3d 295
    , 303 (Colo.
    2000), overruled on other grounds by Novotny, ¶ 
    27, 320 P.3d at 1203
    )); see also Ross v.
    Oklahoma, 
    487 U.S. 81
    , 88 (1988). Section 16-10-104, C.R.S. (2019), permits each
    party to exercise a certain number of peremptory challenges, depending on the
    circumstances of the case and nature of the charge. “The statute directs that such
    peremptory challenges are to be exercised ‘as provided by applicable rule of
    criminal procedure.’” Vigil, ¶ 12 (quoting § 16-10-104(2)). Rule 24(d) of the
    Colorado Rules of Criminal Procedure provides the mechanics and timing for
    exercising peremptory challenges and permits the trial court to add peremptory
    challenges to either side, or to both sides, for good cause shown.
    ¶19   Within constitutional limits,5 a party may use a peremptory challenge to
    remove a prospective juror without specifying a reason or for no reason at all.
    Novotny, ¶ 
    10, 320 P.3d at 1198
    . “[A] principle reason for permitting peremptory
    5A party may not, for example, exercise a peremptory challenge to remove a juror
    because of race or gender. Batson v. Kentucky, 
    476 U.S. 79
    , 89 (1986) (race); J.E.B. v.
    Alabama ex rel. T.B., 
    511 U.S. 127
    , 146 (1994) (gender).
    12
    challenges has always been to help secure the constitutional guarantee of trial by
    an impartial jury.” Vigil, ¶ 16. But although peremptory challenges allow litigants
    to assist the court in the selection of a constitutionally required fair and impartial
    jury, the U.S. Supreme Court has made clear that “exercising the authorized
    number of peremptory challenges is all that the parties are entitled to by the rule,”
    
    id. at ¶
    ¶ 16, 18–19 (citing United States v. Martinez-Salazar, 
    528 U.S. 304
    , 314–16
    (2000)), and that “the mistaken denial of a state-provided peremptory challenge
    does not, without more, violate the federal constitution,” 
    id. at ¶
    16 (citing Rivera v.
    Illinois, 
    556 U.S. 148
    , 158 (2009)).
    ¶20    That is, where a defendant is compelled to use a peremptory challenge to
    correct a trial court’s erroneous failure to dismiss a juror for cause, so long as the
    defendant receives both an impartial jury and the number of peremptory
    challenges specified by state statute, the defendant’s constitutional rights remain
    unaffected. See 
    id. ¶21 Such
    was the case in Novotny. There, the trial court erroneously denied the
    defendant’s challenge for cause under section 16-10-103(1)(k) to a potential juror
    who worked as an assistant attorney general.           The defendant subsequently
    exercised a peremptory challenge to excuse the juror. Novotny, ¶ 
    1, 320 P.3d at 1196
    . We identified three potential standards of reversal: (1) structural error
    requiring automatic reversal; (2) error requiring reversal for violation of an express
    13
    legislative mandate; and (3) trial error requiring reversal under an outcome-
    determinative analysis only if the error was not harmless. 
    Id. at ¶
    27, 320 P.3d at
    1203
    .
    ¶22     In Novotny, we focused on the jurisprudential developments in the
    understanding of trial error and structural error that followed our 1992 decision in
    People v. Macrander, 
    828 P.2d 234
    (Colo. 1992), which held that reversal is automatic
    where a trial court erroneously denies a challenge for 
    cause, 828 P.2d at 243
    . We
    noted that the distinction between “trial error, which can be harmless, and
    structural error, which cannot, was . . . in its infancy” when we decided Macrander.
    Novotny, ¶ 
    18, 320 P.3d at 1200
    .        But in the decades that followed, the
    understanding of harmless error and structural error “developed so as to
    substantially erode the premises upon which [Macrander] rest[ed].” 
    Id. at ¶
    17,
    320 P.3d at 1200
    . In that time, the Supreme Court confined structural error to a
    “limited class of fundamental constitutional error[s] [that] could ‘defy analysis by
    “harmless error” standards.’” 
    Id. at ¶
    20, 320 P.3d at 1201 
    (quoting Neder v. United
    States, 
    527 U.S. 1
    , 7 (1999)). We also observed that the Supreme Court had rejected
    the notion that peremptory challenges are of constitutional dimension. 
    Id. at ¶
    22,
    320 P.3d at 1201 
    (citing 
    Ross, 487 U.S. at 88
    ).     We therefore reasoned that a
    defendant does not suffer constitutional harm merely by being deprived of a
    statutorily granted peremptory challenge as a result of a court’s good-faith error.
    14
    
    Id. at ¶
    23, 320 P.3d at 1202
    . Rather, in light of legal developments after Macrander,
    we held that error that results in no more than the loss of a statutorily granted
    peremptory challenge is not structural error. 
    Id. In so
    holding, we overruled our
    earlier decision in Macrander. 
    Id. at ¶
    27, 320 P.3d at 1203
    . Notably, while we did
    “not imply . . . that every violation of our statutes and rules prescribing the use of
    peremptory challenges must be disregarded as harmless,” we held that a
    reviewing court should apply “the proper outcome-determinative test” when
    analyzing an error that merely deprived the defendant of a peremptory challenge,
    “as distinguished from an actual Sixth Amendment violation.” 
    Id. at ¶¶
    23, 
    27, 320 P.3d at 1202
    –03.
    III. Analysis
    ¶23   Our decision in Novotny left open the question of what standard of reversal
    applies when a trial court erroneously denies a challenge for cause and the
    impliedly biased juror ultimately serves on the jury. That is the situation before
    us now.
    ¶24   We first conclude that a violation of section 16-10-103(1)(k) does not require
    reversal under an express legislative mandate. In Novotny, we gave two examples
    of express legislative mandates requiring reversal. ¶ 
    26, 320 P.3d at 1203
    . The first
    was Zedner v. United States, 
    547 U.S. 489
    , 507 (2006). There, the Supreme Court
    declined to apply harmless error analysis to a violation of a federal speedy trial
    15
    statute, which mandated that “[w]hen a trial is not commenced within the
    prescribed period of time, ‘the information or indictment shall be dismissed on
    motion of the defendant.’” 
    Id. at 508
    (quoting 18 U.S.C. § 3162(a)(2) (2000)). The
    Court reasoned that to excuse the error as harmless “would be inconsistent with
    the strategy embodied” in the statute. 
    Id. at 509.
    The second example we pointed
    to was Colorado’s speedy trial statute, section 18-1-405(1), C.R.S. (2019). Like the
    federal statute at issue in Zedner, section 18-1-405(1) states that
    [e]xcept as otherwise provided in this section, if a defendant is not
    brought to trial on the issues raised by the complaint . . . within six
    months from the date of the entry of a plea of not guilty, he shall be
    discharged from custody . . . , the pending charges shall be dismissed,
    and the defendant shall not again be indicted, informed against, or
    committed for the same offense . . . .
    (Emphases added.)
    ¶25   Section 16-10-103(1)(k), by contrast, is silent on the remedy for a violation.
    Absent any indication that the statute dictates a particular remedy, we cannot
    conclude that a violation of section 16-10-103(1)(k) is a violation of an express
    legislative mandate.
    ¶26   But that still leaves the question of whether a violation of section
    16-10-103(1)(k) implicates the Sixth Amendment.
    ¶27   Certain constitutional rights are so basic to a fair trial that their violation can
    never be harmless. Gray v. Mississippi, 
    481 U.S. 648
    , 668 (1987). Among these is a
    16
    defendant’s Sixth Amendment right to “an impartial adjudicator, be it judge or
    jury.” 
    Id. ¶28 Accordingly,
    the Supreme Court has held that when an actually biased juror
    sits on the jury, the resulting violation of the defendant’s constitutional right to an
    impartial jury requires reversal. 
    Martinez-Salazar, 528 U.S. at 316
    (“Nor did the
    District Court’s ruling result in the seating of any juror who should have been
    dismissed for cause. As we have recognized, that circumstance would require
    reversal.”); cf. 
    Ross, 487 U.S. at 85
    (“Had [the biased juror] sat on the jury that
    ultimately sentenced petitioner to death, and had petitioner properly preserved
    his right to challenge the trial court’s failure to remove [the juror] for cause, the
    sentence would have to be overturned.”).
    ¶29   Our own decisions have likewise established that “if the jury included a
    biased juror, then the defendant’s right to a fair trial was violated and his
    convictions must therefore be reversed.” Morrison v. People, 
    19 P.3d 668
    , 670 (Colo.
    2000) (analyzing whether the juror in question was actually biased under section
    16-10-103(1)(j)).
    ¶30   As Judge Freyre observed in her opinion below, the harm arising from a
    biased adjudicator “pervades and infects the entire framework of the trial,” such
    that it defies analysis by harmless error standards. Abu-Nantambu-El, ¶ 72 (Freyre,
    J., concurring in part and dissenting in part). Thus, if a trial court error results in
    17
    the seating of a juror who is actually biased against the defendant, the defendant’s
    right to an impartial jury is violated, the error is structural, and reversal is
    required. See 
    Martinez-Salazar, 528 U.S. at 316
    ; 
    Ross, 487 U.S. at 85
    ; 
    Morrison, 19 P.3d at 670
    .
    ¶31   The dispute in this case is whether jurors who are presumed by law to be
    biased under section 16-10-103(1)(k) are legally distinguishable from jurors who
    are actually biased under section 16-10-103(1)(j). We conclude that they are not.
    ¶32   We see no grounds in the statutory framework for drawing such a line. The
    plain language of section 16-10-103(1) makes no distinction between potential
    jurors who evince actual bias and those who are conclusively presumed by law to
    be biased. Further, to apply harmless error review and require a showing of actual
    bias where an impliedly biased juror sits would render section 16-10-103(1)(k)
    redundant: Why require a trial court to grant challenges to jurors based on
    statutorily implied bias if such jurors must be actually biased? Such jurors would
    be disqualified anyway under section 16-10-103(1)(j).
    ¶33   Rather, the General Assembly has identified certain jurors whose bias is
    implied as a matter of law and has required trial courts to excuse such jurors when
    a party challenges them for cause. People v. Bonvicini, 
    2016 CO 11
    , ¶ 10, 
    366 P.3d 151
    , 154–55. Nothing in section 16-10-103(1) suggests that the presumption of bias
    for such jurors is rebuttable. In other words, an impliedly biased juror “is not
    18
    susceptible to rehabilitation through further questioning because implied bias,
    once established, cannot be ameliorated by the juror’s assurances that she
    nonetheless can be fair.” 
    Lefebre, 5 P.3d at 300
    .
    ¶34   Accordingly, by enacting section 16-10-103(1)(k), the General Assembly has
    determined that compensated employees of public law enforcement agencies and
    public defender’s offices cannot serve as jurors if they are challenged because “one
    who is employed by a law enforcement agency will favor, or will be perceived to
    favor, the prosecution side of a criminal case,” Ma v. People, 
    121 P.3d 205
    , 210 (Colo.
    2005), and a “compensated employee of a public defender’s office will favor, or
    will be perceived to favor, the defendant,” Mulberger v. People, 
    2016 CO 10
    , ¶ 12,
    
    366 P.3d 143
    , 147.
    ¶35   In determining that these potential jurors are subject to dismissal for cause,
    Colorado has been more protective of a defendant’s right to a jury free of implied
    bias than the federal courts or other jurisdictions without a comparable statute.6
    We are not free to alter the General Assembly’s legislative judgment about the
    6E.g., State v. Benedict, 
    148 A.3d 1044
    , 1050–51 (Conn. 2016) (concluding that an
    active police officer’s service on a jury, standing alone, did not violate the
    defendant’s constitutional rights where the state had no statute or common-law
    rule to that effect); see also United States v. Mitchell, 
    690 F.3d 137
    , 149–50 (3d Cir.
    2012) (declining to categorically impute bias to co-workers of key witnesses where
    no controlling authority presumed such bias).
    19
    types of relationships that carry significant risk of actual bias or the appearance of
    bias, nor may we read a distinction into the statute that does not exist. See
    Scoggins v. Unigard Ins. Co., 
    869 P.2d 202
    , 205 (Colo. 1994) (noting that a court “will
    not judicially legislate by reading a statute to accomplish something the plain
    language does not suggest”). Unlike those jurisdictions without a comparable
    statute, we therefore do not undertake a case-by-case analysis to see whether the
    implied bias of a juror necessitates granting a challenge for cause. Cf. State v.
    Benedict, 
    148 A.3d 1044
    , 1051 (Conn. 2016) (in the absence of a statute or common-
    law rule that an impliedly biased juror must be excused, the “circumstances of
    [the] particular case” determine whether the juror should be excused because bias
    is likely). Rather, jurors who fall under section 16-10-103(1)(k) are conclusively
    presumed to be biased as a matter of law.
    ¶36   We do not suggest that the service of a juror employed by law enforcement
    or the public defender’s office necessarily violates a defendant’s Sixth Amendment
    right to an impartial jury in the absence of section 16-10-103(1)(k). Nor do we
    suggest that the General Assembly could not, should it wish to do so, amend this
    provision to narrow its scope or repeal it altogether. However, where the General
    Assembly has exercised its legislative authority to determine that certain
    relationships render a potential juror impliedly biased as a matter of law, we are
    bound by that legislative determination. The result of that determination is that
    20
    the juror is deemed as a matter of law to be biased, period. Accordingly, a trial
    court’s erroneous denial of a challenge for cause to such a juror requires reversal
    if that impliedly biased juror sits on a defendant’s jury.
    ¶37      We are unpersuaded that the remedy of automatic reversal in these
    circumstances will encourage gamesmanship by incentivizing defense counsel to
    fail to challenge a juror for cause based on implied bias. The plain language of
    section 16-10-103(1) requires defense counsel to challenge an allegedly biased juror
    to preserve the issue for appellate review; a trial judge is not required to excuse a
    prospective juror sua sponte. See People v. Coney, 
    98 P.3d 930
    , 934 (Colo. App.
    2004).
    ¶38      As the Supreme Court observed in Martinez-Salazar, “[c]hallenges for cause
    and rulings upon them . . . are fast paced, made on the spot and under 
    pressure.” 528 U.S. at 316
    .       Counsel under these circumstances have little time for
    gamesmanship. See id.; cf. Bondsteel v. People, 
    2019 CO 26
    , ¶ 28, 
    439 P.3d 847
    , 852
    (“The assumption that any competent attorney would withhold a meritorious
    argument at trial in the hope of having something to argue on appeal if the trial
    goes badly belies reality.”). Moreover, nothing prevents the prosecution from
    21
    using a peremptory challenge to remove a juror who should have been excused
    for cause.7
    IV. Conclusion
    ¶39   In sum, because the trial court erroneously denied a for-cause challenge to
    a juror who was presumed by law to be biased under section 16-10-103(1)(k), the
    defendant exhausted his peremptory challenges, and the impliedly biased juror
    served on the defendant’s jury, the error is structural, and Abu-Nantambu-El’s
    convictions must be reversed. We therefore affirm the judgment of the court of
    appeals.
    JUSTICE SAMOUR dissents.
    7 This case does not present the question of whether Abu-Nantambu-El waived
    appellate review of his claim or invited any error. The People do not argue that
    any error was invited, nor does the record suggest that defense counsel purposely
    failed to use a peremptory challenge to remove Juror J. See People v. Garcia,
    
    2018 COA 180
    , ¶ 14, 
    446 P.3d 922
    , 926. We therefore do not opine on what the
    result would be had Abu-Nantambu-El not exhausted his peremptory challenges
    or the record suggested that defense counsel invited the error.
    22
    JUSTICE SAMOUR, dissenting.
    ¶40   The majority throws out Abu-Nantambu-El’s multiple convictions
    (including for first degree murder, assault, and burglary), invalidates his
    adjudication as a habitual criminal, and vacates his sentence to life imprisonment
    without the possibility of parole. Of course, an appellate court must sometimes
    take such actions to address an error in a jury trial. In this case, though, the
    majority does so based solely on the trial court’s denial of Abu-Nantambu-El’s
    challenge for cause with respect to Juror J, a juror Abu-Nantambu-El subsequently
    chose not to excuse with one of his twelve peremptory challenges.              If,
    notwithstanding Juror J’s employment as a financial grant manager in the criminal
    justice division of the Department of Public Safety, Abu-Nantambu-El decided not
    to excuse her, why should we automatically reverse? Because I believe that the
    appellate claim was waived or that the error was invited, and because I disagree
    with the analytical framework the majority adopts, I cannot join the decision to
    automatically reverse. I therefore respectfully dissent.
    ¶41    In People v. Novotny, 
    2014 CO 18
    , 
    320 P.3d 1194
    , this court adopted a “case
    specific, outcome-determinative analysis,” which requires a defendant to show
    prejudice to obtain reversal based on the trial court’s erroneous denial of his
    challenge for cause. 
    Id. at ¶¶
    2, 
    27, 320 P.3d at 1196
    , 1203. Since Novotny had
    exercised a peremptory challenge to excuse the prospective juror the trial court
    1
    had mistakenly failed to excuse pursuant to his challenge for cause, we concluded
    that automatic reversal was not warranted. 
    Id. ¶42 Here,
      it   is   undisputed   that       the   trial   court   erred   in   denying
    Abu-Nantambu-El’s challenge for cause with respect to Juror J. As the majority
    notes, Juror J was a compensated employee of a public law enforcement agency
    and was thus impliedly biased as a matter of law.                     Maj. op. ¶ 2.    But
    Abu-Nantambu-El avoids Novotny’s fate because, unlike Novotny, he elected not
    to use one of his peremptory challenges to excuse the impliedly biased juror as to
    whom his challenge for cause was incorrectly denied. In other words, whereas we
    refrained from automatically reversing Novotny’s convictions because he excused
    the problematic prospective juror with one of his peremptory challenges, the
    majority automatically reverses Abu-Nantambu-El’s convictions because he left
    the problematic prospective juror on his jury. This feels counterintuitive to me.
    ¶43   I cannot join my colleagues in the majority because I don’t believe reversal
    is justified where, as here, a defendant complains on appeal about an impliedly
    biased juror he chose to keep on his jury despite having twelve opportunities to
    excuse her. In its analysis, the majority focuses on whether Juror J ended up
    serving on the jury and whether Abu-Nantambu-El exhausted his peremptory
    challenges on other prospective jurors. I don’t think it’s that simple.
    2
    ¶44   The majority fails to consider one of the two reasons why Juror J served on
    this jury. True, had the trial court granted Abu-Nantambu-El’s challenge for cause
    as to Juror J, as it should have, then Juror J would not have served. However, there
    is a second reason why Juror J served: Abu-Nantambu-El thereafter decided not
    to excuse her with one of his twelve peremptory challenges. To my mind, this is a
    classic example of waiver or invited error: After arguing that Juror J was biased
    and should not be allowed to serve, Abu-Nantambu-El turned around and elected
    not to excuse her with one of his twelve peremptory challenges. The doctrine of
    waiver precludes appellate review of an intentionally relinquished known right or
    privilege. People v. Rediger, 
    2018 CO 32
    , ¶¶ 39–40, 
    416 P.3d 893
    , 902. The invited
    error doctrine prevents a party from complaining on appeal about an error that
    the party either invited or injected into the proceedings. People v. Wittrein, 
    221 P.3d 1076
    , 1082 (Colo. 2009).
    ¶45   In his partially dissenting opinion in Novotny, my colleague, Justice Hood,
    anticipated the situation we confront today. Novotny, ¶ 
    31, 320 P.3d at 1204
    (Hood,
    J., concurring in part and dissenting in part).       Justice Hood concluded that,
    following the incorrect denial of a defendant’s challenge for cause, “if the
    defendant chooses not to use a peremptory” challenge to excuse the biased juror,
    “any error is arguably invited and not reviewable on appeal.” 
    Id. Although acknowledging
    that the Supreme Court’s opinion in United States v.
    3
    Martinez-Salazar, 
    538 U.S. 304
    (2000), contains language suggesting that the
    approach taken by defense counsel here may be acceptable, Justice Hood was
    quick to stress that “under Colorado law . . . such an approach . . . arguably raises
    the specter of invited error, which precludes appellate review of any error the
    defendant ‘invited or injected into the case.’” Novotny, ¶ 
    47, 320 P.3d at 1206
    –07
    (quoting 
    Wittrein, 221 P.3d at 1082
    ) (Hood, J., concurring in part and dissenting in
    part).1
    ¶46       Another colleague, Justice Gabriel, reached a similar conclusion in his
    opinion concurring in the judgment in People v. Bonvicini, 
    2016 CO 11
    , 
    366 P.3d 151
    (Gabriel, J., concurring in the judgment), which Justice Hood joined. 
    Id. at ¶
    31,
    366 P.3d at 159
    .      There, Justices Gabriel and Hood found unpersuasive the
    defendant’s contention that, had he foreseen our decision in Novotny, he would
    have left on the jury the biased juror the trial court had refused to excuse for cause.
    1 Morrison v. People, 
    19 P.3d 668
    (Colo. 2000), contains dicta similar to that in
    Martinez-Salazar. See 
    id. at 670.
    But, like Justice Hood, I don’t see the invited error
    question as settled under Colorado law. Neither, apparently, does Justice Gabriel.
    See infra at ¶ 7.
    4
    
    Id. They aptly
    observed that “such a strategy would arguably have failed under
    the invited error doctrine.”2 
    Id. ¶47 Yet,
    the majority essentially ignores the elephant in the room. It mentions
    the waiver and invited error doctrines—almost as an afterthought—in the last
    footnote on the very last page of its opinion.        The majority simply says, in
    conclusory fashion, that the record before us does not suggest that
    Abu-Nantambu-El invited the error or “purposely” left Juror J on the jury. Maj.
    op. ¶ 38 n.7. I beg to differ.
    ¶48   To be sure, the majority’s position is consistent with Abu-Nantambu-El’s
    contention during oral argument that he did not use a peremptory challenge on
    Juror J because there were other prospective jurors who were more concerning to
    him. But the record belies this claim.
    2 Justice Scalia likewise suspected that this tactic would be prohibited under
    principles of waiver or, more fundamentally, the principle that a party cannot
    complain about an error that he, himself, allows. 
    Martinez-Salazar, 528 U.S. at 318
    (Scalia, J., concurring in the judgment). In his alternate opinion in Martinez-Salazar,
    Justice Scalia pointed out that he “would not find it easy to overturn a conviction
    where, to take an extreme example, a defendant had plenty of peremptories left
    but chose instead to allow . . . a person to whom he had registered an objection for
    cause, and whose presence he believed would nullify any conviction,” to serve on
    the jury. 
    Id. at 318–19.
    5
    ¶49   First, Abu-Nantambu-El was allotted twelve peremptory challenges in this
    case because he was charged with first degree murder. That’s twice the number
    of peremptory challenges defendants are given in most felony trials. Second, only
    one of the twelve prospective jurors Abu-Nantambu-El excused with peremptory
    challenges had been previously challenged by him for cause. I find it unpersuasive
    that each of the remaining eleven prospective jurors was somehow more
    concerning to Abu-Nantambu-El than Juror J, even though Abu-Nantambu-El
    challenged Juror J, but not any of those eleven, for cause.            And finally,
    Abu-Nantambu-El did not ask for an additional peremptory challenge. As the
    majority acknowledges, Rule 24(d)(3) of the Colorado Rules of Criminal Procedure
    allows the trial court to give additional peremptory challenges to either side, or to
    both sides, for good cause shown. 
    Id. at ¶
    18. If, as Abu-Nantambu-El asserts now,
    the only reason he did not exercise a peremptory challenge on Juror J is that the
    twelve prospective jurors he peremptorily excused were more troublesome than
    Juror J, he presumably would have asked the trial court for another peremptory
    challenge. At a minimum, he would have attempted to establish good cause to
    obtain an additional peremptory challenge pursuant to Rule 24(d)(3).
    ¶50   This record compels the conclusion that Abu-Nantambu-El waived his
    appellate claim or invited the error. Indeed, if this record doesn’t show the
    intentional relinquishment of a known right or the invitation of an error, I don’t
    6
    know what jury selection record will.3              I would therefore hold that
    Abu-Nantambu-El is precluded from obtaining relief on appeal.4
    ¶51   Surprisingly, the majority declares that it is not worried that today’s
    decision will lead to “gamesmanship.” 
    Id. at ¶¶
    36–37. But that strikes me as little
    more than whistling past the graveyard. The majority should be worried about
    gamesmanship given the system it sets up today.
    3 Given today’s decision, the record is likely to be the same in all future cases: It
    will show that the defendant exhausted his peremptory challenges and did not
    exercise one of them on the prospective juror in question. Thus, if the record in
    front of us doesn’t suffice for waiver or invited error, it is unlikely that any record
    will.
    4 The Attorney General does not urge us to find that the appellate claim was
    waived or that the error was invited, apparently because Novotny was not yet on
    the books when Abu-Nantambu-El’s trial took place.                    See People v.
    Abu-Nantambu-El, 
    2017 COA 154
    , ¶ 109 n.3, __ P.3d __, __ n.3 (Webb, J.,
    dissenting). This position is a head-scratcher. Whether there was waiver or
    invited error is not tethered to the timing of our Novotny opinion. The point is not
    that Abu-Nantambu-El opted to forego peremptorily challenging Juror J to
    circumvent Novotny. Rather, the point is that Abu-Nantambu-El waived his claim
    or invited the error by purposely allowing Juror J to serve on the jury despite
    having twelve peremptory challenges available, exercising all of them on other
    prospective jurors (only one of whom he had challenged for cause), and failing to
    ask for an extra peremptory challenge. The waiver and invited error doctrines
    were certainly around before we decided Novotny. In any event, regardless of the
    Attorney General’s flawed presupposition, the majority does not cabin today’s
    ruling to trials that preceded Novotny. And, as mentioned, the majority concludes
    that the record before us does not suggest that Abu-Nantambu-El invited the error
    or purposely left Juror J on the jury. See maj. op. ¶ 38 n.7. Hence, I feel compelled
    to address the waiver/invited error question.
    7
    ¶52      To be clear, I don’t fault defense counsel; they must operate within the
    analytical framework our court has established. I place the blame at the feet of our
    court.    The rules we have instituted incentivize gamesmanship: If, after the
    incorrect denial of a challenge for cause, a defendant exercises a peremptory
    challenge on the prospective juror in question, the error will be harmless; but if, in
    the same situation, the defendant exhausts his peremptory challenges but does not
    exercise one of them on that prospective juror, there will be an automatic reversal
    in the event of a conviction.5
    ¶53      So, is there a better approach? After all, if a defendant like Novotny loses
    on the ground of lack of prejudice and a defendant like Abu-Nantambu-El loses
    based on waiver or invited error, defendants would always lose. And that’s not
    fair.
    ¶54      Here’s what I would propose. I would rely on the provision in Rule 24(d)(3)
    that permits requests for additional peremptory challenges.           I would then
    encourage our trial court judges to grant a defendant’s request for an additional
    peremptory challenge whenever they deny a colorable challenge for cause—i.e.,
    5The majority’s analytical framework may also unfairly place defense counsel in
    an ethical catch-22. See Novotny, ¶ 
    47, 320 P.3d at 1207
    (Hood, J., concurring in part
    and dissenting in part).
    8
    one that is difficult to resolve and presents a close call. 6 The defendant can then
    use that extra peremptory challenge on the prospective juror in question. If an
    appellate court later determines that the challenge for cause was mistakenly
    denied, there would not be an issue because the defendant either would have
    excused the prospective juror with the additional peremptory challenge or, in the
    event he elected not to do so, would be barred from raising the claim by waiver or
    invited error. Of course, automatic reversal would still be warranted if the trial
    court denied the defendant’s request for an additional peremptory challenge—the
    waiver and invited error doctrines would not apply in such a case based on the
    defendant’s attempt to obtain an additional peremptory challenge.
    ¶55   This methodology would have the added benefit of disincentivizing the
    prosecution from opposing colorable challenges for cause. And it would give trial
    court judges some comfort in knowing that the additional peremptory challenge
    could cure the erroneous denial of such a challenge for cause.7 It is worth pointing
    6In my experience, it is rare to have more than one such challenge for cause come
    up in a single trial. But the rule allows the trial court to grant the defendant more
    than one additional peremptory challenge if appropriate.
    7Even after today’s decision, trial court judges would do well to offer a defendant
    an additional peremptory challenge after denying a colorable challenge for cause.
    In my view, denial of such a challenge for cause would constitute good cause
    within the meaning of Rule 24(d)(3).
    9
    out that ruling on a colorable challenge for cause is among a trial court judge’s
    most difficult tasks. These decisions have to be made in the moment, on the bench,
    with little time for research or contemplation, and often in a courtroom full of
    individuals summoned for jury service who loathe delays. 8
    ¶56   Because I believe the majority errs in failing to conclude that
    Abu-Nantambu-El waived the appellate claim or invited the error here, and
    because I cannot in good conscience support the system the majority sets up today,
    I do not join in its opinion.    Inasmuch as I don’t see a reason to overturn
    Abu-Nantambu-El’s convictions, invalidate his habitual criminal adjudication,
    and vacate his life sentence, I would reverse the judgment of the court of appeals.
    Accordingly, I respectfully dissent.
    8 As our jurisprudence reflects, trying to discern whether a prospective juror is a
    compensated employee of a public law enforcement agency under section
    16-10-103(1)(k), C.R.S. (2019), can be particularly daunting even for an appellate
    court with ample time to research and analyze the issue. See, e.g., Ma v. People,
    
    121 P.3d 205
    , 214 (Colo. 2005) (Coats, C.J., dissenting) (observing that the
    majority’s conclusion that the prospective juror at issue was a compensated
    employee of a public law enforcement agency “betray[ed] a fundamental lack of
    appreciation for military organization and command structure by classifying the
    military police corps, or branch, as such an agency”). Indeed, it is no coincidence
    that this is the ground that proved to be tricky for the trial court in Novotny and
    now rears its ugly head in this case.
    10