BARKUS v. STATE
This text of 2024 OK CR 25 (BARKUS v. STATE) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
BARKUS v. STATE
2024 OK CR 25
Case Number: F-2022-1072
Decided: 08/29/2024
PHILLIP LEE BARKUS, Appellant v. THE STATE OF OKLAHOMA, Appellee
Cite as: 2024 OK CR 25, __ __
OPINION
¶1 Phillip Lee Barkus, Appellant, was tried without a jury and found guilty of Count 1, possession of a firearm after former conviction of a felony, in violation of 21 O.S.Supp.2019, § 1283; Count 2, driving under the influence of alcohol or other intoxicating substance, subsequent offense, in violation of 47 O.S.Supp.2020, § 11-902; and Count 3, carrying a firearm while under the influence of alcohol or drugs, a misdemeanor, in violation of 21 O.S.Supp.2012, § 1289.9, in the District Court of Hughes County, Case No. CF-2021-8. The Honorable Trisha D. Smith, Associate District Judge, found Appellant guilty after two or more prior convictions and assessed punishment of ten years imprisonment each in Counts 1 and 2, and six months imprisonment in Count 3, and ordered the sentences served concurrently.
Facts
¶2 Appellant was apprehended by a sheriff's deputy who observed his pickup disobey a stop sign at Allen and Broadway streets in Holdenville. The driver's identification showed he was Phillip Barkus. Noticing the smell of alcohol, several sobriety tests followed that validated the deputy's suspicions of intoxication and led to Appellant's arrest. An inventory search yielded a rifle in the cab behind the driver's seat. Appellant admitted possessing the gun. At the bench trial, counsel stipulated to eleven prior felony convictions.
Analysis
¶3 In Proposition One, Appellant asserts that he is a Seminole Indian and challenges the State's legal authority to prosecute him for crimes committed in Indian Country. McGirt v. Oklahoma, 591 U.S. 894 (2020).1 He preserved his claims in written motions and a series of hearings, with the trial court repeatedly denying relief. We review the court's factual findings for clear error and its legal conclusions on Indian status de novo. See Parker v. State, 2021 OK CR 17, ¶ 34, 495 P.3d 653, 665.
¶4 Appellant's burden was to meet the Rogers test2 of Indian status "by producing prima facie evidence that he has some Indian blood and that he was recognized as an Indian by a tribe or the federal government." Id., 2021 OK CR 17, ¶ 32, 495 P.3d at 664 (citing State v. Klindt, 1989 OK CR 75, ¶ 5, 782 P.2d 401, 403). The burden would then shift to the State to rebut Appellant's evidence of Indian blood and/or tribal recognition by the greater weight of the evidence. Id.
¶5 Prima facie evidence is that which is "good and sufficient on its face, i.e., sufficient to establish a given fact . . . and which if not rebutted or contradicted, will remain sufficient to sustain a judgment in favor of the issue which it supports." Wadkins v. State, 2022 OK CR 2, ¶ 9, 504 P.3d 605, 609-10 (internal quotations omitted).
¶6 Appellant's Seminole Freedmen3 citizenship card lists his Indian blood quantum as 0/0. He offered two DNA tests indicating he had some Native American ancestry.4 The State objected that these commercially available tests were unreliable and not properly authenticated. The trial court granted controlling weight to the tribal card's blood quantum and the lack of documented ancestry of Indian blood.
¶7 In his own testimony, Appellant admitted that he lacked any documentary evidence showing his biological relation to any person on the Seminole roll of Indians by blood. The Seminole Nation itself had previously rejected his request to alter his citizenship from Freedmen based on his Estelusti ancestry to Indian by blood.
¶8 The trial court found that while Appellant is a Seminole tribal member by virtue of his Estelusti ancestry, he was not an Indian under the Rogers test because he failed to show some Indian blood. On de novo review, we find these factual rulings were not clearly erroneous and the legal conclusions are sound.
¶9 This Court has yet to determine whether any DNA result would prove Indian blood for McGirt purposes.5 We will not do so here. Appellant offered no expert or scientific evidence on the general reliability of DNA as proof of Indian ancestry, the reliability of the specific samples' collection and preservation, or the methods for analysis and interpretation of these tests.6
¶10 Such a determination would, at minimum, require expert testimony on the current state of DNA technology for proving ethnic ancestry, the scientific validity of the specific tests, the integrity of the sample, and the acceptance of such evidence in the relevant community. See generally Taylor v. State, 1995 OK CR 10, 889 P.2d 319, 327 (applying Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals, 509 U.S. 579 (1993) to DNA profiling technology).
¶11 Appellant's Estelusti ancestry, his Freedmen citizenship, and his lifelong association with the Seminole Nation are not open to doubt. Appellant satisfies the recognition element of the Rogers test. But he has not shown the required prima facie evidence that he has some degree of Indian blood, and this disposes of his McGirt claim. Proposition One is denied.
DECISION
¶12 The judgment and sentence is AFFIRMED. Pursuant to Rule 3.15, Rules of the Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals, Title 22, Ch.18, App. (2024), the MANDATE is ORDERED issued upon delivery and filing of this decision.
APPEAL FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF HUGHES COUNTY
THE HONORABLE TRISHA D. SMITH, ASSOC. DISTRICT JUDGE
|
APPEARANCES AT TRIAL KENNETH WATSON JAMES E. TILLISON |
APPEARANCES ON APPEAL KENNETH WATSON GENTNER DRUMMOND |
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