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Jerod Kurt Miller V State Of Iowa

                    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

                                    No. 24-0107
                                Filed July 23, 2025


JEROD KURT MILLER,
    Applicant-Appellant,

vs.

STATE OF IOWA,
     Respondent-Appellee.
________________________________________________________________


       Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Wright County, Blake H. Norman,

Judge.



       An applicant appeals the denial of his application for postconviction relief.

AFFIRMED.



       Robert A. Nading II of Nading Law Firm, Ankeny, for appellant.

       Brenna Bird, Attorney General, and Zachary Miller, Assistant Attorney

General, for appellee State.



       Considered without oral argument by Schumacher, P.J., and Badding and

Chicchelly, JJ.
                                            2


BADDING, Judge.

          At Jerod Miller’s trial for willful injury causing serious injury and domestic

abuse assault by strangulation causing bodily injury, the prosecutor’s opening

statement told the jury that Miller left his girlfriend, H.S., “[b]eaten, broken, and

bruised” after a brutal assault in February 2018. The jury rejected Miller’s claim

that he acted in self-defense and found him guilty as charged.1

          Miller applied for postconviction relief, raising a different theory about how

H.S. was injured—that she was intoxicated and fell down the stairs the night before

the assault. Miller claimed the prosecutor committed misconduct because he

argued “that all of [H.S.]’s injuries . . . occurred in the altercation with Jerod Miller.”

He also claimed defense counsel was ineffective for failing to present the

alternative falling-down-the-stairs theory to the jury. The district court denied these

claims and dismissed Miller’s application. We affirm on Miller’s appeal from that

ruling.

I.        Criminal Proceedings2

          Jerod Miller and H.S. were high school friends who reconnected when they

were in their late thirties. Miller moved into H.S.’s house in November 2017. By

early February 2018, their relationship had become volatile. H.S. recorded Miller

on a vicious rant, during which he repeatedly called H.S. “worthless” and a “nasty




1 We affirmed Miller’s convictions on direct appeal. See State v. Miller,
No. 18-1839, 2020 WL 1307697, at *1 (Iowa Ct. App. Mar. 18, 2020).
2 Miller’s first jury trial in July 2018 ended in a mistrial. He was retried the next

month. Although Miller’s appellate brief refers to some testimony from his first trial,
we have only considered the evidence presented at his second trial.
                                          3


fucking bitch.” He also told H.S. that she deserved to “get knocked out” and that if

she was “a dude,” he would have killed her and covered it up.

      H.S. testified that several weeks later, on February 24, she woke up to Miller

screaming at her to give him a ride somewhere. Miller came into H.S.’s bedroom,

“wanting to know where a gun was.” She told him that it was in her dresser, which

he knocked over. H.S. got out of the bedroom and walked down the hallway

towards the kitchen. Miller followed her, bent her backwards over the kitchen

counter, and shoved his thumbs into her eye sockets until she passed out. The

next thing that H.S. remembered was waking up in the hallway, surrounded by

broken glass. She had trouble standing and was very confused. H.S. made it

back into her bedroom and passed out on her bed.

      When H.S. regained consciousness several hours later, she called her

mother for help. H.S. thought that Miller was still in the house, possibly in the

basement, because all their vehicles were there. Because H.S. “didn’t want to

make him mad again,” she told her mother that she “had fallen down the stairs and

not to be alarmed but just to come out and get me.” H.S.’s mother, Candis, was

shocked by what she saw when she got to the house:

      [T]here was glass and debris all over the floor leading in, through the
      kitchen, down the hallway, and [H.S] was back in the bedroom trying
      to talk. I really couldn’t understand her. . . . I was just really shocked,
      and I was trying to decide what to do. I wanted to call 911, but it was
      obvious what had happened and I didn’t know where [Miller] was.

A video of H.S.’s home that was taken by law enforcement after the assault showed

a path of destruction. There were blood smears in the hallway, indentations in a

door, cracked drywall on the ceiling of the bedroom, a broken window in the

bedroom, broken televisions and lamps, and a bullet hole in the hallway across
                                        4


from the bedroom. Scared that Miller was hiding somewhere, waiting to “finish the

job,” Candis helped H.S. to her car and drove her to the emergency room.

      H.S.’s treating physician, Dr. Subhash Sahai, testified that H.S. was in

serious condition when he evaluated her that evening. Both of H.S.’s eyes were

swollen shut, her left eye was hemorrhaged, and she “had bruises all over her

body, including the face.” Dr. Sahai also saw “a line form bruise” on H.S.’s upper

chest that he thought was from a shoe. And she had linear marks on her neck and

throat that Dr. Sahai said were consistent with strangulation.          According to

Dr. Sahai, it was “easier to describe where she didn’t have the bruises.” An MRI

showed that H.S. also “had multiple small hemorrhages in the brain,” along with a

ligament tear to her lower lumbar area. Dr. Sahai testified that these injuries,

including the bleeding on H.S.’s brain, created a substantial risk of death. He

admitted her to the hospital, where she stayed for the next six days.

      Hospital staff contacted law enforcement to report the assault. Due to

H.S.’s injuries, Deputy Anthony Pieczko was unable to interview her until

February 26.   After speaking to H.S., and taking photographs of her injuries,

Deputy Pieczko went to her residence with two other deputies, where they found

Miller asleep in the basement with a handgun underneath his pillow. Deputy

Pieczko arrested Miller, who told him in a recorded interview that H.S. had taken

“the butt of her fucking gun and whacked me across the fucking face.” When the

deputy asked how he responded, Miller said, “I’m sure a fucking—a fight broke

out.” According to Miller, H.S. had a drinking problem and when she drinks too
                                          5


much whiskey, “she fucking flips.”3 He told the deputy that after he got the gun

away from H.S. “through force,” he walked downstairs and fell asleep. At the jail,

Miller told another deputy that although he didn’t remember exactly what happened

after H.S. hit him, he did “whatever it took to get the gun out of her hands.” Deputy

Pieczko testified that Miller did not have any visible injuries to his head when he

was arrested. But a video from Miller’s holding cell after his arrest appeared to

show Miller hit his head against the concrete wall and stagger backwards. A doctor

examined Miller on February 27 and diagnosed him with a mild concussion.

       After the State rested its case, Miller testified in his own defense. He mostly

stuck to the same story that he told the deputies when he was arrested—although

Miller added that when H.S. hit him with the butt of the gun, it discharged. Miller

said the next thing he remembered was standing over H.S. in the bathroom, yelling

for the gun. He found it under the dresser in the bedroom and went down to the

basement. When asked why he didn’t tell law enforcement about the gun firing,

Miller said that he didn’t want to get H.S. in trouble. On cross-examination, Miller

agreed there had been an altercation between him and H.S. on February 24. He

also agreed that H.S. had serious injuries that created a substantial risk of death.

But he maintained that he had “no idea” what caused those injuries.

       The prosecutor asserted in his closing argument that the “nature and the

extent and severity” of H.S.’s injuries showed that Miller did not act in self-defense.

Defense counsel did not dispute those injuries in his closing argument. Instead,


3H.S.’s toxicology screen from the hospital was positive for marijuana and
methamphetamine but negative for alcohol. H.S. admitted that she smoked
marijuana the night before the assault, but she denied ever using
methamphetamine.
                                           6


counsel argued the “issue for the case is intent” and asserted the bullet hole in the

hallway wall and Miller’s concussion supported his testimony that he acted in self-

defense. The jury did not buy that argument and found Miller guilty of willful injury

causing serious injury and domestic abuse assault by strangulation causing bodily

injury. The district court denied Miller’s post-trial motions, which were focused on

the sufficiency and weight of the evidence, and sentenced him to prison.

II.    Postconviction Relief Proceedings

       Miller applied for postconviction relief in February 2021, claiming the

prosecutor engaged in misconduct that denied Miller due process of law and that

defense counsel was ineffective. Because of the prosecutorial misconduct claim,

Miller moved to have the prosecutor who tried the criminal case removed from the

postconviction relief proceedings. The district court granted that motion.4 Before

a new attorney entered an appearance for the State, Miller served requests for

admissions on the recused prosecutor. One of the requests in support of his

prosecutorial misconduct claim asserted the prosecutor “knew or should have

known that H.S. had reported her head and face had been injured before her

altercation with [Miller] on February 24, 2018.”      Another asserted that Miller

“received ineffective assistance of counsel for many different reasons,” including

failing to offer “inconsistent statements of H.S.” about “the time and manner of her

injuries, and that she had sustained injuries to her face and head before the

altercation” with Miller.




4 We take no position on the propriety of the motion to remove the prosecutor or

the court’s ruling granting that motion.
                                          7


       When the requests went unanswered, Miller moved for summary

disposition, arguing the State “has admitted every element of the Applicant’s case.”

See Iowa R. Civ. P. 1.510(2) (deeming the matter admitted unless the responding

party answers or objects to the requests). After a hearing on Miller’s motion, the

district court ruled that although the requests would be deemed admitted, whether

Miller received ineffective assistance of counsel “still remains for the Court to

ultimately decide.” Finding genuine issues of material fact on that claim, as well

as the prosecutorial misconduct claim, the court denied Miller’s summary

disposition motion.5

       The case proceeded to a two-day evidentiary hearing in December 2022,

at which H.S.’s medical records from the assault were admitted into evidence.

Notes from a nurse practitioner who examined H.S. on February 24, 2018,

described the “history of present illness” as:

               The patient presents with fall down the steps and possible
       assault. . . . [H.S.] states that she fell down the steps last night
       around 2200. States that she was able to get into her bed. Per her
       mother, she was unable [to] get ahold of her, and went to her house
       to find her laying at the bottom of the stairs.

Miller argued this medical record contradicted testimony from H.S. and her mother

at his criminal trial about the cause of H.S.’s injuries. He also highlighted notes

from the nurse practitioner’s physical examination, which stated, “There are

numerous ecchymotic areas of different stages of healing on the face, chest, neck,



5 On appeal, Miller challenges portions of the district court’s summary disposition

ruling. We have not considered those arguments because an “order overruling a
motion for summary judgment is a nonreviewable order when the district court finds
a genuine issue of material fact exists and the case proceeds to final trial.” Estes
v. Progressive Classic Ins., 809 N.W.2d 111, 114 (Iowa 2012).
                                          8


arms, legs, chest, abdomen, back.” (Emphasis added.) But the same notes also

observed what “appears to be a shoe print on the left lateral abdomen, and finger

marks on the anterior neck.” And a note from Dr. Sahai the day after the assault

stated, “She refuses to admit but it is pretty obvious from the corroborative

evidence that she was beaten probably by her boyfriend. . . . She was beaten

once before and at that time she refused to press any charges.”

       Miller also offered a recording of Deputy Pieczko’s interview with H.S. on

February 26 into evidence, during which she said that she “got hurt the night

before” the assault and “like my face and everything it was already hurt.” But H.S.

also said, “I forget. I am kind of weird on the last few days. I am not all one hundred

percent,” and the “injuries I have right here stem from him.” Finally, Miller offered

a video of H.S.’s house into evidence that showed the steps down to the basement,

which had a concrete floor. An emergency room physician retained by Miller as

an expert witness testified that H.S.’s injuries “could have been caused by a fall or

assault or both.” But he was asked to assume the steps to the basement were

wooden, and H.S. testified at the postconviction relief hearing the steps were

carpeted. The expert also examined the photographs of H.S.’s injuries and opined,

       Because of the coloration of the bruising on her face, chin, eyes, and
       behind the ears, it is more likely those injuries or bruising were a
       result of an injury to her head that occurred at least twelve or more
       hours before she was examined in the [emergency room] at
       approximately 5 p.m. on February 24, 2018.

The photographs the expert examined, however, were taken by Deputy Pieczko

when he interviewed H.S. at the hospital on February 26.

       H.S. testified at the postconviction relief hearing that she did not fall down

the basement steps the night before the assault. She explained that she was “[j]ust
                                           9


trying to get in” to the hospital and “get safe” when she made those statements.

H.S. testified that all her injuries were caused by Miller. During his testimony at

the hearing, Miller agreed that H.S. did not have any of the injuries shown in Deputy

Pieczko’s photographs when he saw her the morning of February 24.

       Miller’s trial counsel testified that he “was aware from almost the beginning

of the case that [H.S.] had originally claimed she had fallen down the stairs.” But,

hemmed in by Miller’s statements to the deputies after his arrest and the nature of

H.S.’s injuries, counsel believed claiming self-defense “was a much stronger

defense than if she fell down the stairs.” He testified, “I don’t believe that the jury

would have considered that argument for a heartbeat.” Counsel explained “it was

to our benefit” to argue that H.S.’s injuries happened after the altercation with Miller

because it supported the self-defense claim and did not open the door to evidence

of prior assaults between the parties.6

       After hearing this evidence and reviewing the underlying criminal file, the

district court denied Miller’s application for postconviction relief. The court first

found it was not bound by the State’s defaulted admission that defense counsel

was ineffective. The court then rejected each of Miller’s claims on the merits,

finding there was no prosecutorial misconduct and concluding defense counsel

       presented a reasonable and capable defense on Miller’s behalf.
       Essentially, all of the grounds and issues raised go toward the fact
       that Miller believes the wrong trial strategy was used and a
       reasonable attorney’s trial strategy of challenging the injury element
       along with attacking the victim’s testimony and credibility should
       have been employed. Further, the theory of this relief action was to

6 Miller was charged with domestic abuse assault of H.S. in January 2018.     H.S.
later stated in an affidavit to cancel the no-contact order that Miller “has never
assaulted me.” That charge was still pending when Miller went to trial for the
February assault.
                                        10


       raise as many possible mistakes, no matter how minor, with the hope
       that cumulatively it would be found that [trial counsel] committed a
       breach of duty and prejudice resulted. Even with the benefit of
       hindsight and a thorough review of the record, there is nothing in the
       record presented to the Court that shows [trial counsel] should have
       acted substantively different. . . .

Miller appeals.

III.   Standard of Review

       Postconviction-relief proceedings are normally reviewed for correction of

errors at law. See Iowa R. App. P. 6.907; Krogmann v. State, 914 N.W.2d 293,

306 (Iowa 2018). But when the application raises a constitutional claim, such as

ineffective assistance of counsel, we review the proceedings de novo. Sothman

v. State, 967 N.W.2d 512, 522 (Iowa 2021).

IV.    Analysis

       A.      Requests for Admissions

       We start with the preliminary matter of the unanswered requests for

admissions. Miller claims the district court erred “by holding that the admission by

the State that Miller had ineffective assistance of counsel was not binding on the

court.” We disagree. As the State points out, our supreme court has held that

default procedures authorized in our rules of civil procedure “are inconsistent with

and would serve no useful purpose in our postconviction review process.”

Furgison v. State, 217 N.W.2d 613, 618 (Iowa 1974) (denying applicant’s request

for a default judgment against the State for its failure to timely answer the

postconviction relief application). “Even if the State never filed an answer to an

application for postconviction relief, the court would still address the case on the

merits.”    Ciric v. State, No. 15-1860, 2017 WL 936087, at *2 (Iowa Ct. App.
                                            11


Mar. 8, 2017); see also Thomas v. State, 220 N.W.2d 874, 877 (Iowa 1974)

(observing postconviction relief “is not akin to a private suit on a note in which the

plaintiff is entitled to his judgment if the defendant defaults”).

         While all “rules and statutes applicable in civil proceedings including pretrial

and discovery procedures are available to the parties” in postconviction relief

proceedings, Iowa Code § 822.7 (2021), “a collateral review of criminal judgments

should be tailored to the purpose thereof without characterization as criminal or

civil.   It must encompass some attributes of each where appropriate to the

objective, at the same time eliminating those inappropriate to the remedial

process.” Furgison, 217 N.W.2d at 617. The intent of postconviction relief is to

“get at the merits of the controversy.” Thomas, 220 N.W.2d at 877 (emphasis

added). Allowing the State to default on discovery requests and admit the ultimate

issues would “breathe life into an otherwise meritless application”—which is

exactly what Furgison warns us not to do. 217 N.W.2d at 618.

         Because postconviction relief proceedings must be decided on their

merits—not on defaults by the State—we conclude that the district court properly

determined it was not bound by the default admissions.

         B.     Prosecutorial Misconduct

         Miller claims the prosecutor committed misconduct by arguing that “H.S.

received all of her injuries the morning of February 24, 2018, during a beating

inflicted by Miller, then causing all her injuries.”      “[T]o prevail on a claim of

prosecutorial misconduct, the defendant must show both the misconduct and

resulting prejudice.”    State v. Krogmann, 804 N.W.2d 518, 526 (Iowa 2011).

Miller’s appellate brief focuses exclusively on arguments about the alleged
                                         12


misconduct. While he recites the factors considered in determining prejudice, see

id., Miller does not advance any argument about how those factors apply here.

See Hyler v. Garner, 548 N.W.2d 864, 876 (Iowa 1996) (“In a case of this

complexity, we will not speculate on the arguments [a party] might have made and

then search for legal authority and comb the record for facts to support such

arguments.”). In any event, we agree with the State that Miller “failed to prove that

the prosecutor committed misconduct by knowingly presenting false testimony.”

See Jones v. State, 479 N.W.2d 265, 275 (Iowa 1991) (setting out the elements of

a prosecutorial misconduct claim based on presentation of false testimony).

       Miller’s prosecutorial misconduct claim assumes that H.S.’s testimony at his

criminal trial was false because of statements she made in the aftermath of the

assault about falling down the stairs. See id. (finding a similar “assumption falls

far short of the affirmative proof required to merit a new trial”). But H.S. never

recanted her trial testimony that her injuries were from Miller, not from falling down

the stairs. The prosecutor testified that “it’s certainly not uncommon for victims of

domestic abuse to claim that the cause of their injuries was something other than

the person who has abused them.” Because of the nature and extent of H.S.’s

injuries—including the strangulation-type bruises around her neck and the shoe-

shaped bruise on her chest—he was skeptical of H.S.’s initial claims at the hospital

that she fell down the stairs.     H.S.’s medical providers were also skeptical,

indicating throughout their treatment notes that her injuries were from a “possible

assault.” And while H.S. made some inconsistent statements about when her

injuries occurred, the prosecutor testified that as H.S. recovered, her memory

about the date of the assault became clearer. We accordingly agree with the
                                          13


district court that there was “no false evidence presented or denial of a fair trial”

and affirm its denial of Miller’s prosecutorial misconduct claim.

         C.    Ineffective Assistance of Counsel

         To establish his claim of ineffective assistance, Miller must prove that

(1) counsel failed to perform an essential duty and (2) prejudice resulted. State v.

Lopez, 907 N.W.2d 112, 116 (Iowa 2018); see also Strickland v. Washington, 466

U.S. 668, 687 (1984). We “may consider either the prejudice prong or breach of

duty first, and failure to find either one will preclude relief.” State v. McNeal, 897

N.W.2d 697, 703 (Iowa 2017) (citation omitted). Miller’s claim fails on the prejudice

prong.

         To prove “constitutional prejudice,” Miller was required to “show that there

is a reasonable probability that, but for counsel’s unprofessional errors, the result

of the proceeding would have been different.” Smith v. State, 7 N.W.3d 723, 727

(Iowa 2024) (quoting Strickland, 466 U.S. at 694). Miller’s appellate brief does not

address that standard, arguing only that he was “clearly prejudiced” by counsel’s

alleged errors. Such “‘conclusory claims of prejudice’ are not sufficient to satisfy

the prejudice element.” State v. Tate, 710 N.W.2d 237, 241 (Iowa 2006) (citation

omitted).

         Miller’s structural-error argument does not save his claim for two reasons.

First, “[w]hen a defendant fails to preserve a claim of structural error and instead

raises the error in the context of an ineffective-assistance-of-counsel claim,” as

Miller did here, “the defendant must still establish constitutional prejudice.” Smith,

7 N.W.3d at 727; see also Weaver v. Massachusetts, 582 U.S. 286, 299 (2017)

(“[I]n the case of a structural error where there is an objection at trial and the issue
                                          14


is raised on direct appeal, the defendant generally is entitled to ‘automatic reversal’

regardless of the error’s actual ‘effect on the outcome.’”). Second, Miller was not

“essentially without counsel,” as he argues on appeal. See Lado v. State, 804

N.W.2d 248, 252 (Iowa 2011) (describing three categories of structural error).

       The record shows that defense counsel pursued a self-defense claim that

acknowledged the physical evidence, Miller’s statements to police, and his

purported recollection of what happened on February 24, 2018.                  This is

considerably different from Lado, where counsel failed to take any action at all.

804 N.W.2d at 252–53; see also Rickey v. State, No. 16-1212, 2017 WL 2461560,

at *3 (Iowa Ct. App. June 7, 2017) (“Unlike Lado, in which counsel took no action

at all, Rickey was not completely denied counsel, actually or constructively, at any

point in the proceeding.”). We agree with the district court that

               Miller was never deprived of counsel as any action (or
       inaction) was related to a reasonable and deliberate trial strategy.
       [Defense counsel] provided thoughtful responses regarding each of
       his alleged deficiencies of evidence and argument at trial as well as
       in his depositions. [Counsel’s] decisions were explained in a
       reasonable, strategy-related manner.

       For these reasons, we affirm the court’s denial of Miller’s ineffective

assistance claim.

V.     Conclusion

       We conclude the district court was correct in determining that it was not

bound by the State’s defaulted admissions that defense counsel was ineffective.

The court was also correct in finding that Miller failed to prove his prosecutorial
                                          15


misconduct and ineffective-assistance claims. We accordingly affirm the court’s

dismissal of Miller’s application for postconviction relief.

       AFFIRMED.