Jack Pfau v. John Ault

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedJune 3, 2005
Docket04-2088
StatusPublished

This text of Jack Pfau v. John Ault (Jack Pfau v. John Ault) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jack Pfau v. John Ault, (8th Cir. 2005).

Opinion

United States Court of Appeals FOR THE EIGHTH CIRCUIT ___________

No. 04-2088 ___________

Jack Pfau, * * Appellant, * * Appeal from the United States v. * District Court for the * Southern District of Iowa. John F. Ault, * * Appellee. * ___________

Submitted: February 16, 2005 Filed: June 3, 2005 ___________

Before LOKEN, Chief Judge, RILEY and SMITH, Circuit Judges. ___________

RILEY, Circuit Judge.

After an Iowa jury found Jack Pfau (Pfau) guilty of first-degree robbery, the state trial court sentenced Pfau to twenty-five years’ imprisonment. Pfau’s appellate counsel sought direct review of Pfau’s conviction, but moved to withdraw on the grounds the appeal was frivolous. After conducting an independent review of the record, the Iowa Supreme Court dismissed Pfau’s appeal as frivolous. Pfau then sought post-conviction relief (PCR) in the Iowa state courts, and an Iowa district court denied PCR. On appeal, the Iowa Court of Appeals held Pfau had procedurally defaulted his asserted grounds for relief. Pfau then sought federal habeas relief, arguing deficient performance by both his trial counsel and his appellate counsel violated the Sixth Amendment’s guarantee of effective assistance of counsel. Rejecting Pfau’s claims, the district court1 dismissed Pfau’s habeas application. We affirm.

I. BACKGROUND On May 14, 1997, the manager of a McDonald’s restaurant and some of his employees left the restaurant just before midnight. The manager carried $1741 in a bank deposit bag. Acting on an inside tip from Gabe Delgado (Delgado), a McDonald’s employee, two or three men robbed the manager at gun point and took the cash. The State of Iowa (State) charged Pfau with first-degree robbery and conspiracy to commit first-degree robbery. The State also charged other men for their involvement in the robbery. David Brewer (Brewer) pled guilty to conspiracy to commit robbery; Christopher Larkin (Larkin) pled guilty to second-degree robbery; and a jury acquitted Steven Moore (Moore).

At trial, Pfau’s defense was he helped plan the robbery, but he decided not to participate in the robbery minutes before it took place. Despite Pfau’s defense theory, the State presented an abundance of evidence implicating Pfau in the robbery. Brewer testified Pfau put bandanas “on his head and one around his mouth” before Brewer drove Pfau, Larkin and Moore to McDonald’s on the night of the robbery. Moore testified Pfau’s role during the robbery was “[t]o get the money from the manager.” Moore testified Pfau followed through with this plan, and held “his gun up to the window on the driver’s side, and he t[old the manager] to give him the money out of his truck.” Moore testified Pfau possessed a loaded .357 handgun on the day of the robbery, and told the group he would shoot the manager to get the money if that is what it took. Moore also testified Pfau threatened to shoot Moore and Larkin if they did not participate in the robbery. Pfau’s cousin testified at trial

1 The Honorable Harold D. Vietor, United States District Judge for the Southern District of Iowa.

-2- she was surprised to see Pfau the day after the robbery with “a handful of money,” including “50s and 20s.”

A police detective testified he interviewed Pfau on the night of the robbery. According to the detective, Pfau first stated he had no knowledge of the robbery. Pfau later acknowledged he told Larkin and Delgado a few weeks before that he thought the robbery was a good idea because he needed the money. The detective testified Pfau admitted helping plan the robbery and that he went with the others on the night of the robbery, but “chickened out” at the last second.

Pfau admitted at trial he, Larkin, Brewer and Moore planned to (1) meet, and did meet, at Pfau’s house, (2) wait for the tip from Delgado, and (3) then leave Pfau’s house to a staging area near McDonald’s. Pfau also admitted the plan had him running up to the manager and taking the money.

Larkin testified at Moore’s trial, but then refused to testify at Pfau’s trial. For his failure to testify, the trial court held Larkin in contempt, fined him $500, and sentenced him to six months’ imprisonment. The State and Pfau’s trial counsel then agreed to read Larkin’s prior testimony to the jury, and, in exchange, to allow Pfau to present otherwise inadmissible hearsay evidence to the jury to impeach Larkin’s testimony. According to Larkin, Pfau possessed a .357 handgun, threatened to kill anyone who did not participate in the robbery, and twice pointed the gun at Larkin when he attempted to back out of the robbery. Larkin also testified Pfau said he planned to kill the McDonald’s manager if he did not give the money to Pfau.

Consistent with his defense, Pfau presented witnesses who testified Pfau decided on the night of the robbery not to participate in the robbery he helped plan. David Durst (Durst) and Mark Tabron (Tabron) testified Larkin told them Pfau did not participate in the robbery because he had “chickened out” on the night of the robbery.

-3- A critical witness for Pfau was Cary Rice (Rice), whose testimony is at the heart of this appeal. Consistent with the testimony of Durst and Tabron, Rice testified he roomed with Larkin in the county jail, where Larkin told him Pfau had “chickened out” of the robbery. Once Pfau’s trial counsel completed his direct examination of Rice, the State sought to question Rice on his relationship with Pfau and Rice’s association with a group called Cyco. Outside the presence of the jury, the court and the parties discussed whether the State could question Rice about Cyco. Pfau’s trial counsel objected to the evidence, arguing it was irrelevant and highly prejudicial.

To support its argument to admit the evidence, the State made an offer of proof. At the beginning of the offer of proof, the State believed Cyco was a gang; after the offer of proof, the State argued it did not want to mention gang involvement, but wanted to question Rice about Cyco to establish bias. Rice testified, outside the presence of the jury, that “Cyco is just my family and my friends. It’s not a gang.” Pfau’s trial counsel, who had successfully moved in limine to exclude all references to gang involvement, argued the Cyco evidence was an attempt to get gang evidence before the jury so the jury would convict Pfau based on his gang involvement and not his involvement in the robbery. The trial court made the following ruling:

Without any reference to gangs or the use of the term, I’m going to allow the State to in front of the jury inquire into this Cyco. If a witness belongs to the same club–4-H Club, neighborhood association, social club, or anything of the sort, that is relevant grounds probably for impeachment to show a relationship, and so that relationship, what it amounts to, can be inquired into. It is going to be direct. It is going to be relatively brief, but that association can be inquired into on the matter of relationship as it may go to bias or credibility and matters of that sort.

When the jury returned, the State briefly cross-examined Rice regarding Cyco. Rice told the jury Cyco simply referred to his family and friends, and that Pfau was not a Cyco. When asked whether Pfau sought to become a Cyco, Rice testified, “He’s

-4- not Cyco. I haven’t known him for years. So he can’t be. I can’t consider someone my friend just after a few days of talking to him after years of not seeing him.” When Pfau testified, he said he was not a Cyco, but admitted he had asked Rice’s brother what it would take to become a Cyco. Pfau testified he had considered becoming a Cyco and had written a letter to Rice’s brother stating he would “do whatever it takes to become Cyco.” Pfau described Cyco as “a bunch of friends hanging out, you know, having fun, playing basketball[,] . . .

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Jack Pfau v. John Ault, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jack-pfau-v-john-ault-ca8-2005.