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State Of Iowa V Surfun Julise Boens

                      IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

                                      No. 24-0338
                                  Filed July 23, 2025


STATE OF IOWA,
     Plaintiff-Appellee,

vs.

SURFUN JULISE BOENS,
     Defendant-Appellant.
________________________________________________________________


      Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Polk County, Paul D. Scott (trial and

sentencing), Judge.



      A defendant appeals his conviction for first-degree murder. AFFIRMED.



      Martha J. Lucey, State Appellate Defender, and Josh Irwin (argued),

Assistant Appellate Defender, for appellant.

      Brenna Bird, Attorney General, and Louis S. Sloven (argued), Assistant

Attorney General, for appellee.



      Heard at oral argument by Tabor, C.J., and Ahlers and Langholz, JJ.
                                          2


TABOR, Chief Judge.

       A jury convicted Surfun Boens of first-degree murder for killing his

roommate, Russell McKeehan Jr.         Boens appeals, contending that the court

abused its discretion in granting the State’s motion to strike a prospective juror for

cause. And Boens urges that the undeserved strike prejudiced him because the

State gained disproportionate power to shape the jury’s composition—effectively

exercising an extra peremptory challenge. He asks that we reverse his conviction

and remand for a new trial.        But on this record, Boens has not established

reversible error. So, we affirm.

I.     Facts and Prior Proceedings

       Boens and McKeehan lived together in room 226 of a Des Moines motel.

In the early morning hours of January 13, 2023, Boens called 911 to report that he

found McKeehan in the bathroom when he came home and McKeehan didn’t “look

very well.” When first responders arrived at room 226, they discovered McKeehan

dead in “a large puddle of blood” on the bathroom floor. He had been shot twice

in the head.

       Motel surveillance video showed McKeehan entering room 226 for the last

time shortly after 11:00 p.m. on January 12. The video also showed Boens briefly

leaving then returning to the room shortly before midnight. Around midnight,

neighbors in adjacent rooms heard “two loud bangs,” followed by “somebody

saying ‘Fuck’ repeatedly.” The surveillance video showed Boens leaving room 226

again a few minutes after midnight and returning about thirty minutes later. In that

interval, Boens made a flurry of phone calls to friends and family. He also took a

photo with his cell phone that appeared to show McKeehan’s body in the bathroom.
                                         3


       Shortly after 1:00 a.m., Boens called a friend and “said he had done

something really bad.” About an hour later, he called 911 but hung up before the

call connected to an operator. Then around 3:00 a.m., Boens left the motel with

his brother in his brother’s car. The surveillance video showed the car returning to

the motel and Boens entering room 226 alone around 4:00 a.m. Boens called 911

again a few minutes later, requesting an ambulance for McKeehan. Boens was in

the room when first responders arrived. He said he had been drinking and smoking

marijuana that night and didn’t know what happened to McKeehan.

       Crime scene investigators found “some live rounds and some firearm

casings and what [they] believed to be one suspect bullet hole inside the room.”1

They also found “a cell phone that had been taken apart and was on the floor.”

Additionally, investigators noticed “staining” on Boens’s shoes, which DNA testing

later matched to McKeehan’s blood. And they discovered “a copper projectile” in

Boens’s coat pocket.

       The State charged Boens with first-degree murder, a class “A” felony, in

violation of Iowa Code sections 707.1 and 707.2 (2023). He pleaded not guilty.

The case went to jury trial in November 2023.

       During voir dire, a prospective juror disclosed that his uncle was convicted

of murder in Polk County in 2001. This exchange followed:

               PROSECUTOR: Do you believe your uncle was treated
       unfairly by the court system?
               JUROR: Yeah. Yeah.
               PROSECUTOR: Because of that, would you have a hard time
       sitting on a jury for a murder case today?
               JUROR: I would try to keep an open mind, but I guess that’s—
       my uncle is in the back of my mind as well.

1 Investigators never found the gun used to kill McKeehan.
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             PROSECUTOR: That’s why we have to ask the questions. It’s
      not your fault, obviously, what happened to your uncle. But if you
      can’t be fair and impartial, it’s not fair to the other side of the case.
      Based on that, do you think you could be fair and impartial in this
      case?
             JUROR: I guess I could try to keep an open mind.

      The same prospective juror also disclosed that his brother and brother-in-

law were more recently convicted of sex offenses and theft in Polk County. The

State’s questioning continued:

              PROSECUTOR: Same kind of question as to your uncle.
      Because of what happened to your brothers, do you have any
      negative opinions of the court system or the Des Moines [Police
      Department (PD)] or West Des Moines PD?
              JUROR: Not with those situations, no.
              PROSECUTOR: You don’t feel they were treated unfairly?
              JUROR: No.
              ....
              PROSECUTOR: The same line we’ve been discussing. Do
      you think you could be fair and impartial based on those if seated on
      this jury?
              JUROR: I believe so.

      Additionally, that prospective juror informed the parties he was a victim of

“several crimes” when he “was a kid.”2 This exchange with the prosecutor then

ensued:

              PROSECUTOR: Do you feel the police department
      investigated those crimes properly?
              JUROR: No.
              PROSECUTOR: Which police department were you with?
              JUROR: Des Moines.
              PROSECUTOR: And you’re going to hear from Des Moines
      PD officers in the course of this case. Do you think you could be
      open-minded to their testimony, fairly so or unfairly so, potentially
      unbiased towards them because of what happened in your own
      situations? . . .
              JUROR: I can’t say I can. Just—just with the situations, the
      way they went and such, I have my doubts, I guess.


2 The prospective juror was born in 1978.
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               PROSECUTOR: You don’t feel like you could trust their
       testimony?
               JUROR: I know every situation is different, but knowing how
       the situations in the past were treated. Like I said, I would definitely
       keep an open mind, but I can’t say that I wouldn’t, you know, recall
       those other incidents in my past.

       After that last response, the prosecutor moved to “strike this [juror] because

of his opinions of police.” Defense counsel then asked the juror, “If you were

listening to the testimony of police officers you don’t know that were not involved

in your case, do you think you can evaluate that with an open mind?” The juror

answered, “I could with an open mind, yeah.”

       The prosecutor moved again to strike the juror for cause, explaining:

             Your Honor, I do believe that the [juror] has indicated he
       cannot be fair and impartial given all the circumstances he spoke to.
       I know he wavered in his determination of the officer’s statements
       when asked by defense counsel, but therein lies the problem. If
       someone can’t say they can be fair and impartial and determinate,
       we have to be cautious.

Defense counsel objected:

              . . . I don’t believe the State established any of the grounds
       under Rule 2.18 that would constitute the grounds for a strike for
       cause. I don’t believe [the juror] has told us he has formed or
       expressed an opinion about the innocence of the defendant that
       would prevent him from rendering a true verdict. I don’t believe his
       statements indicate that he would have an actual bias for or against
       a party, as Subsection O sets out, so I would resist the challenge for
       cause.

The court granted the State’s motion and excused the prospective juror without

explanation.

       The jury found Boens guilty as charged. The district court sentenced him

to life in prison without the possibility of parole. Boens appeals.
                                           6


II.    Scope and Standard of Review

       “We review the district court’s rulings on challenges to potential jurors for

cause for abuse of discretion.” State v. Jonas, 904 N.W.2d 566, 571 (Iowa 2017).

“The district court is vested with broad discretion in such rulings.” Id. The court

abuses its discretion if it “exercises its discretion ‘on grounds or for reasons clearly

untenable or to an extent clearly unreasonable.’” State v. Tipton, 897 N.W.2d 653,

690 (Iowa 2017) (citation omitted). “If we find an abuse of discretion, we will only

reverse if prejudice is shown.” Id.

III.   Analysis

       Boens argues that the district court abused its discretion in striking the

potential juror for cause because the State did not establish a valid basis for

dismissal under Iowa Rule of Criminal Procedure 2.18(5).3 As for prejudice, he

reasons that granting the State’s strike for cause freed the prosecutor to exercise

a peremptory challenge on another prospective juror. That luxury, in Boens’s view,

gave the State greater influence over the jury’s makeup.

       But Boens does not claim that the court’s error forced him to “waste” a

peremptory strike to remove an objectionable juror. See State v. Neuendorf, 509

N.W.2d 743, 747 (Iowa 1993). Nor does he allege that the court wrongly denied

one of his peremptory strikes.        See State v. Mootz, 808 N.W.2d 207, 225

(Iowa 2012) (presuming prejudice when court erroneously refuses to allow

defense to exercise peremptory challenge). And he does not try to show that the

court’s error resulted in a biased or incompetent juror being seated.


3 At trial, neither the prosecutor nor the court identified which of the rule’s specific

causes for dismissal applied. See Iowa R. Crim. P. 2.18(5)(a)–(o).
                                          7


       Under long-standing precedent, we do not presume prejudice when a juror

is improperly excluded. Summy v. City of Des Moines, 708 N.W.2d 333, 339

(Iowa 2006), overruled on other grounds by Alcala v. Marriott Int’l, Inc., 880 N.W.2d

699, 708 n.3 (Iowa 2016). Instead, “a party claiming prejudice must establish that

the resulting jury was not impartial and competent.” Id. Our supreme court recently

reaffirmed that standard and rejected the prejudice argument Boens now raises.

See State v. Booker, 989 N.W.2d 621, 633 (Iowa 2023) (“Booker does not attempt

to show that his petit jury was partial or incompetent.        Rather, his prejudice

argument maintains that if the court erred in allowing the strike, then it effectively

granted the prosecutor an additional peremptory strike by sparing him from using

one to remove Juror 24.”).

       In Booker, the court explained:

       Although we have recently eased the burden on a party seeking to
       establish prejudice from an erroneous denial of a for-cause
       challenge, it has been long-settled in Iowa (and across the country
       generally) that in order to establish prejudice from the erroneous
       grant of a for-cause challenge a party must show that “the resulting
       jury was not impartial and competent.”

Id. (citations omitted). Thus, the court rejected the defendant’s claim “that it was

enough to show he was prejudiced because the State effectively received an extra

strike.” Id. And it found no reversible error because “the district court’s decision

to excuse Juror 24 for cause did not prejudice Booker absent evidence that the

seated petit jury was partial or incompetent.” Id. at 634.

       Boens criticizes the supreme court’s reasoning in Booker, insisting that a

“per se prejudice approach to situations where one party has more power to shape

the jury than the other due to the district court’s error is the only way to give teeth
                                          8


to the rule limiting the number of strikes available to parties.” But we cannot

overturn supreme court precedent. See State v. Hastings, 466 N.W.2d 697, 700

(Iowa Ct. App. 1990). Even if the district court abused its discretion in granting the

State’s challenge for cause, Boens has not established prejudice under Booker.

See 989 N.W.2d at 633–34. So, we affirm.

       AFFIRMED.