STATE OF MONTANA v. FELICIA MARIE HINKLE
DA 24-0206
Supreme Court of the State of Montana
March 3, 2026
2026 MT 42
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF MONTANA
2026 MT 42
STATE OF MONTANA,
Plaintiff and Appellee,
v.
FELICIA MARIE HINKLE,
Defendant and Appellant.
APPEAL FROM: District Court of the Eighth Judicial District,
In and For the County of Cascade, Cause No. BDC-22-242
Honorable Elizabeth A. Best, Presiding Judge
COUNSEL OF RECORD:
For Appellant:
Britt Cotter, Cotter Law Office, P.C., Polson, Montana
For Appellee:
Austin Knudsen, Montana Attorney General, Mardell Ployhar,
Assistant Attorney General, Helena, Montana
Joshua Racki, Cascade County Attorney, Stephanie Fuller, Deputy
County Attorney, Great Falls, Montana
Submitted on Briefs: November 19, 2025
Decided: March 3, 2026
Filed: 03/03/2026
Bowen Greenwood, CLERK OF THE SUPREME COURT STATE OF MONTANA
¶1 Felicia Marie Hinkle (Hinkle) appeals the Sentencing Order and Judgment entered by the Eighth Judicial District Court, Cascade County, after a jury trial, convicting her of the charges of criminal possession of dangerous drugs and criminal possession of drug paraphernalia. She chаllenges the District Court’s denial of her motion to discharge the jury panel without conducting a hearing. Thus, we consider:
Whether the District Court erred by denying Hinkle’s motion to discharge the jury panel without conducting a hearing.
We affirm.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
¶2 On April 15, 2022, after police found large quantities of illegal drugs and drug paraphernalia at Hinkle’s home, she was charged with criminal possession of dangerous drugs and criminal possеssion of drug paraphernalia. Hinkle’s trial was scheduled for August 22, 2023, but after an emergent hearing the previous day concerning the process of empaneling the jury, the District Court entered an оrder vacating the trial, noting that “it was undisputed that several serious errors in providing notice to jurors and, therefore, in empaneling the jurors have occurred in Cascade County.” The District Court’s order directed the Clerk of Court and Cascade County Sheriff to follow a list of detailed instructions for empaneling jurors for future trials. The District Court then rescheduled Hinkle’s trial for November 28, 2023.
¶3 On November 20, 2023, Hinklе filed a motion to again discharge the jury, on the grounds that two people listed on the panel had moved from Cascade County. She
¶4 In its order, the District Court noted that the empaneling instructions outlined in its earlier order were completed by mid-October 2023, and that a hearing concerning the modified process that was thereafter utilized had been conducted before a different district judge in the Eighth Judicial District Court, Judge Kutzman, in State v. Burden, Cause No. DC-19-350, wherein Judge Kutzman had detеrmined that the Clerk of Court and Sheriff had substantially complied with the governing statutes. Noting that Judge Kutzman had “made multiple well-reasoned findings of fact and conclusions of law,” the District Court took judicial notice “of the record of proceedings at that hearing, including the testimony and evidence taken,” reasoning that it was “not necessary to take the same evidence again cоncerning the process the Clerk and Sheriff now use to form the jury pool (the same ‘pool’ used in this case) or the Sheriff’s service of jurors.” The District Court stated that “[t]he statutory process used to form the pool necessarily results in a two year old list, with the predictable incidental result that some of the citizens on the list will have moved before the Clerk receives the list,” from which individual case panels are drawn, and further reasoned:
[T]his is a predictable but non-prejudicial and insubstantial consequence of the process of collecting names by the Secretary of State. However, the Court is satisfied that the process used to identify the large pool of jurors for the term . . . substantially complied with relevant statutes. The Court is further satisfied that the panel оf potential trial jurors for this case was drawn in accordance with statutory requirements.
¶5 After a jury trial оn November 28, 2023, Hinkle was convicted of the charges. She appeals, challenging the District Court’s failure to conduct a hearing on her motion to discharge the jury.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
¶6 A trial court’s decision to strike the venire is a question of law which we review for correctness. State v. LaMere, 2000 MT 45, ¶ 14, 298 Mont. 358, 2 P.3d 204 (citation omitted).
DISCUSSION
¶7 Whether the District Court erred by denying Hinkle’s motion to discharge the jury panel without conducting a hearing.
¶8 The jury pool selectiоn process covers a considerable period of time due to detailed statutory procedures. See
¶9 A person who is not a resident for at least 30 days of the county in which they are called for jury duty is not competent to act as a juror in said county.
¶10 On March 25, 2025, this Court decided State v. Hillious, 2025 MT 53, 421 Mont. 72, 565 P.3d 1218. The Court explained that, “we are not required to ‘reverse every case where a violation occurs in the statutory process governing the formation of a trial jury.’” Hillious, ¶ 17 (quoting LaMere, ¶ 55). Rather, we apply a “substantial compliance” standard, which requires reversal only “if the lack of compliance affects the randomness and objectivity of the jury pool selection.” Hillious, ¶ 17 (citation omitted). A substantial failure impacts a defendant’s “right to a fair and impartial jury--which is what the statutes are designed to protect.” Hillious, ¶ 18. Conversely, “[t]echnical departures from the jury selection statutes and violations which do not threaten the goals of random selection and objective disqualification dо not constitute a substantial failure to comply.” Hillious, ¶ 18
¶11 Hinkle argues that her motion to discharge the jury panel was sufficiently pled to necessitate a hearing because the inclusion of individuals in the pool who no longer lived in the county “was not a minor procedural defect but an alleged structural error affecting the fundamental integrity of jury selection.” She takes exception to the District Court’s reliance on Burden, because that case involved different summoning issues, and argues that the District Court violated
¶12 The District Court considered Hinkle’s objection concerning the two members of the pool who had moved from the county, the statutes, and the decision in Burden, to
¶13 Affirmed.
/S/ JIM RICE
We Concur:
/S/ CORY J. SWANSON
/S/ JAMES JEREMIAH SHEA
/S/ INGRID GUSTAFSON
/S/ LAURIE McKINNON
