Kevin Willie McGee, Jr. v. State of Iowa

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedNovember 13, 2024
Docket22-1993
StatusPublished

This text of Kevin Willie McGee, Jr. v. State of Iowa (Kevin Willie McGee, Jr. v. State of Iowa) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kevin Willie McGee, Jr. v. State of Iowa, (iowactapp 2024).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

No. 22-1993 Filed November 13, 2024

KEVIN WILLIE McGEE, JR., Applicant-Appellant,

vs.

STATE OF IOWA, Respondent-Appellee. ________________________________________________________________

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Dallas County, Michael Jacobsen,

Judge.

An applicant appeals the denial of postconviction relief on multiple grounds.

AFFIRMED.

Heidi Miller of The Law Office of Heidi Miller, Pleasantville, for appellant.

Brenna Bird, Attorney General, and Louis S. Sloven, Assistant Attorney

General, for appellee State.

Considered by Ahlers, P.J., and Chicchelly and Buller, JJ. 2

BULLER, Judge.

Kevin Willie McGee, Jr. appeals from the denial of postconviction relief. He

raises challenges asserting his trial and appellate counsel were ineffective,

claiming he has newly discovered evidence, and urging his actual innocence. We

affirm, finding McGee failed to meet his respective burdens on each claim.

I. Background Facts and Proceedings

In 2017, McGee messaged a teenaged girl on social media and asked her

to meet up at a West Des Moines hotel. McGee picked up this girl and one of her

also-teenaged friends and drove them to the hotel. Once there, the group “hung

out” in a hotel room. McGee sat on a counter with a handgun nearby, and later

moved the handgun underneath the hotel mattress. McGee raped one of the girls,

who told him “no” but explained she did not physically resist because she was

afraid of the gun that McGee “could have reached for . . . any time.” A Polk County

jury found McGee guilty of one count of sexual abuse in the third degree and one

count of possession of a firearm as a felon; the jury acquitted on two additional

counts of sexual abuse in the third degree. We affirmed on direct appeal, rejecting

McGee’s challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence concerning the firearm

charge. See State v. McGee, No. 18-0635, 2019 WL 1055851, at *3 (Iowa Ct.

App. Mar. 6, 2019).

McGee sought postconviction relief in 2019 and, through counsel, amended

his application in 2020 and again in 2022. McGee called five witnesses at his

postconviction trial, other than himself and trial counsel:

• a former childhood friend of the victim, who claimed the victim made false allegations in elementary school and more recently stopped talking to her after online bullying; 3

• a private investigator who collected affidavits excluded as hearsay;

• another former friend of the victim who thought the victim “always had too much drama” and believed she made other false statements;

• another person who “used to be friends” with the victim but now disliked her and thought she was “two-faced”; and

• another private investigator who unsuccessfully tried to subpoena the victim and certain other witnesses for the postconviction trial.

McGee’s trial counsel testified he learned at the jury trial about certain

social-media messages allegedly exchanged between the victim and the friend

who had been in the hotel room, but he could not remember the specific content

of the messages or exactly how he became aware of them. He also opined that,

to the extent he did not timely receive the messages from the county attorney’s

office, he did not feel it “amounted to, like, a Brady violation or something like that.”

He testified that he thought he could have used some of the postconviction

witnesses’ testimony, if it had been available at trial, to impeach the victim. But he

also testified he thought the victim’s testimony was consistent throughout the case.

McGee, who did not testify at his criminal trial, testified in postconviction

relief that he and the victim had generally consensual sex—except she told him

not to ejaculate in her and he did so anyway. He also testified the victim and

friend’s trial testimony that he had a firearm in the hotel room and placed it under

the bed was “truthful.”

The postconviction court denied relief, finding McGee had not proven his

ineffective-assistance, newly-discovered-evidence, or actual-innocence claims.

McGee appeals. 4

II. Discussion

We consider the three buckets of McGee’s appellate challenges separately,

given differences in the standard of review and applicable burdens of proof.

A. Ineffective Assistance

We review ineffective-assistance claims de novo. Sothman v. State, 967

N.W.2d 512, 522 (Iowa 2021). “The benchmark for judging any claim of

ineffectiveness must be whether counsel’s conduct so undermined the proper

functioning of the adversarial process that the trial cannot be relied on as having

produced a just result.” Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668, 686 (1984). A

postconviction applicant claiming ineffective assistance must prove both

(1) counsel’s performance fell below objectively reasonable standards and (2) if

counsel had acted differently, there would have been a reasonable probability of a

different outcome at trial. Id. at 687–88, 694.

McGee’s first claim is that his trial counsel was ineffective for not presenting

the alleged social-media messages between the victim and her friend from the

hotel room. McGee contends these messages would have shown the victim tried

to coerce the friend to change her testimony. But that information was already

generally known to McGee and his counsel from the friend’s deposition, and

counsel elicited testimony on that issue at trial. To the extent McGee suggests

there may have been more to these social-media messages, the messages

themselves are not in the record, and trial counsel did not recall anything specific

about “the substance” of the messages when questioned at the postconviction trial.

Absent competent evidence establishing the content of these messages, we

cannot find breach of an essential duty or the reasonable probability of a different 5

outcome. Cf. Nichol v. State, 309 N.W.2d 468, 470 (Iowa 1981) (“Ordinarily

complaints about failure to call witnesses should be accompanied by a showing

their testimony would have been beneficial.”). And we cannot fault trial counsel for

not doing more to obtain these social-media posts, as he did not have access to

them before trial nor did he believe the State had committed any misconduct in not

providing them.

McGee next contends trial counsel was ineffective for not obtaining or

seeking to introduce certain evidence that the victim had allegedly made prior false

allegations of sexual abuse. Even taking much or all of McGee’s

postconviction-trial evidence at face value, we are not convinced it would have

been admissible at trial. The comparatively strongest witness among those who

testified at the postconviction trial described the victim allegedly making a false

allegation “a really long time ago” during “elementary school,” which is at minimum

five years before McGee raped the victim when she was sixteen years old. This

evidence was based on a second- or third-hand report about what the victim

allegedly told others—not something the friend heard the victim say. In the criminal

case, McGee would have had to follow an extensive pretrial procedure, including

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Related

Strickland v. Washington
466 U.S. 668 (Supreme Court, 1984)
Jones v. State
479 N.W.2d 265 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1991)
Osborn v. State
573 N.W.2d 917 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1998)
State v. Ellis
578 N.W.2d 655 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1998)
Schrier v. State
347 N.W.2d 657 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1984)
Nichol v. State
309 N.W.2d 468 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1981)
State of Iowa v. Kenneth Osborne Ary
877 N.W.2d 686 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 2016)
Glendale More Jr. v. State of Iowa
880 N.W.2d 487 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 2016)
Daniel King v. State of Iowa
797 N.W.2d 565 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 2011)
Jacob Lee Schmidt v. State of Iowa
909 N.W.2d 778 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 2018)
Martin Shane Moon v. State of Iowa
911 N.W.2d 137 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 2018)

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