In RE the Detention of Paul Michael Blaise Paul Michael Blaise , 830 N.W.2d 310 ( 2013 )


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  •                 IN THE SUPREME COURT OF IOWA
    No. 10–0414
    Filed May 3, 2013
    IN RE THE DETENTION OF PAUL MICHAEL BLAISE
    PAUL MICHAEL BLAISE,
    Appellant.
    Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Lee (North) County,
    Michael J. Schilling, Judge.
    On appeal from his adjudication as a sexually violent predator,
    respondent contends he was denied a speedy trial and his trial should
    have been bifurcated. AFFIRMED.
    Philip B. Mears of Mears Law Office, Iowa City, for appellant, and
    Paul Blaise, Cherokee, pro se.
    Thomas J. Miller, Attorney General, and Elisabeth S. Reynoldson,
    Susan R. Krisko, and John B. McCormally, Assistant Attorneys General,
    for appellee.
    2
    HECHT, Justice.
    A respondent in Iowa Code chapter 229A proceedings alleges his
    trial counsel was ineffective in failing to argue that the respondent’s
    speedy trial rights were violated and that his trial should have been
    bifurcated. He also contends the district court inappropriately allowed
    the State to misrepresent the evidence at trial. Because we conclude the
    respondent has not established he was prejudiced by his attorney’s
    actions, we affirm the judgment of the district court.
    I. Background Facts and Proceedings.
    As S.E. walked through River View Park in Fort Madison in
    October 2005, Paul Blaise, who was collecting cans in the park,
    approached her and began asking her questions. He asked her if she
    was married, if she was sexually active, and if she would engage in anal
    sex. He wondered if she had ever been the victim of a violent crime, if
    she would use lubrication to have anal sex, if she would take her clothes
    off or have sex if someone asked her or threatened to hurt her. Although
    S.E. grew increasingly uncomfortable and quickened her pace, Blaise
    kept up with her while continuing to ask “hypothetical” questions. S.E.
    tried repeatedly to change the conversation and eventually ran away from
    Blaise and asked another pedestrian to walk her to her car.           After
    warning another female pedestrian that “there was someone in the park
    talking about rape and guns and all kinds of sexual stuff,” S.E. called the
    police.   Officers located Blaise in the park and discovered he was
    carrying a gun. Blaise ultimately pled guilty to first-degree harassment
    and received a two-year sentence.
    While Blaise was incarcerated for the harassment offense, the
    State sought to have him committed as a sexually violent predator (SVP)
    under Iowa Code chapter 229A.       After a trial in January 2007, a jury
    3
    found Blaise was an SVP and he was ordered committed for treatment.
    Blaise appealed. In December 2007, Blaise sought a stay of his appeal
    and filed a motion for a new trial in the district court, alleging the doctor
    who had testified for the State in his SVP trial was an “admitted mentally
    ill pedophile with serious difficulty controlling his behavior.”                    On
    February 28, 2008, we granted the stay and issued a limited remand
    which provided:
    The motion for limited remand is granted for a period
    of sixty days to allow the district court to address the
    respondent’s motion for new trial and the State’s resistance.
    Counsel for the parties shall promptly inform the district
    court about this order.
    The clerk of district court shall transmit a certified,
    file-stamped copy of the district court’s remand ruling to the
    clerk of the supreme court. Within fourteen days of the date
    of the district court’s remand ruling, the parties shall file
    statements with the supreme court addressing the status of
    this appeal.
    Further appellate proceedings in this case are stayed
    during the above-stated limited remand period. This court
    retains jurisdiction.
    On remand, the district court granted Blaise’s motion and set a
    new trial date for August. The State appealed from the district court’s
    grant of new trial. On July 14, Blaise executed a speedy trial waiver,
    which was filed with the district court on July 28.                 On July 31, we
    combined the two appeals, stayed the proceedings in the district court,
    and transferred the case to the court of appeals. The court of appeals
    issued its decision on April 22, 2009, affirming the district court’s grant
    of a new trial. 1 Procedendo issued on May 21.
    1Blaise had also argued that his first trial should have been bifurcated. The
    court of appeals declined to address that issue in light of its determination that a new
    trial was warranted. See In re Det. of Blaise, No. 07–0188, 
    2009 WL 1066767
    , at *8
    (Iowa Ct. App. Apr. 22, 2009).
    4
    On the day the new trial commenced, Blaise’s counsel moved to
    bifurcate the trial, basing his argument on the potential for “jury
    confusion.” The motion was denied.
    During the trial, the State offered extensive testimony from Blaise
    about his prior misconduct. The testimony included a wide range of past
    bad acts starting with behavior when he was a child, including setting a
    vehicle on fire, shooting another child in the face with a BB gun, and
    sexually assaulting a roommate while institutionalized.            The State
    questioned Blaise about his sexual fantasies, such as exposing himself to
    women, anal intercourse, sexual intercourse with virgins, and assaulting
    female prison staff members.
    The State also offered Blaise’s testimony about his conviction for
    sexual abuse of a nine-year-old girl, and burglary and criminal mischief
    charges. The details of each of these crimes were revealed to the jury,
    including how he forced himself on and held down the nine-year-old and
    digitally penetrated her vagina with enough force to cause scarring, and
    how he damaged the burglary victim’s car because she refused to have
    sex with him. The State also elicited testimony about his arrest for lifting
    a girl’s skirt on the street, as well as charges of identity theft and theft in
    the fifth degree.
    In addition, the State elicited his testimony about threats he had
    made to staff while he was in jail for sexual abuse and read from an
    extremely violent and vicious letter he wrote to a female staff member,
    which threatened to torture her unless she had sex with him.               The
    State’s questioning of Blaise covered dozens of institutional infractions,
    including harassing female staff members, defecating on the floor,
    exposing himself, threatening to rape women, throwing semen at staff,
    5
    masturbating in the presence of staff, and filing a lawsuit against a staff
    member requesting she wear different clothes so he could “see her butt.”
    Regarding his conversation with S.E. in the park, Blaise testified
    he was “looking for a date” when he first began talking to her, but that as
    soon as he found out she did not have sex “on the side” he was no longer
    interested in her sexually.
    The State’s expert, Dr. Amy Phenix, testified that the conduct
    resulting in Blaise’s harassment conviction was sexually motivated. She
    also testified that Blaise suffered from various mental abnormalities and
    that he will more likely than not commit sexually violent offenses if he is
    not confined. Blaise’s expert, Dr. Stephen Hart, testified that he could
    not be sure that Blaise’s interaction with S.E. was sexually motivated.
    Dr. Hart’s opinion relied on the fact that there was no evidence that
    Blaise was sexually aroused during the conversation and on the notion
    that Blaise’s bad behavior and sexual acting out was a way for Blaise to
    express anger and frustration rather than a way to seek sexual
    gratification.
    The jury again concluded Blaise was an SVP, and Blaise was again
    ordered committed. Blaise appealed. He argues he was denied a speedy
    trial, his trial should have been bifurcated, and the prosecution
    misstated the evidence during trial.
    II. Scope of Review.
    Normally our review of a claim of a speedy trial violation is for
    correction of errors at law. State v. Miller, 
    637 N.W.2d 201
    , 204 (Iowa
    2001).   Our review of district court rulings on motions to bifurcate is
    usually for abuse of discretion.       Beeman v. Manville Corp. Asbestos
    Disease Comp. Fund, 
    496 N.W.2d 247
    , 251 (Iowa 1993).             However,
    because Blaise’s bifurcation claim and speedy trial claim are both raised
    6
    in the context of ineffective-assistance-of-counsel claims, our review is
    de novo.     See Everett v. State, 
    789 N.W.2d 151
    , 155 (Iowa 2010).                  A
    district court’s evidentiary rulings are reviewed for abuse of discretion.
    State v. Hubka, 
    480 N.W.2d 867
    , 868 (Iowa 1992).
    III. Discussion.
    A. Speedy Trial. A person subject to civil commitment pursuant
    to Iowa Code chapter 229A is entitled to a trial for the determination of
    whether the respondent is an SVP within ninety days after the probable
    cause hearing. Iowa Code § 229A.7(3) (2007); In re Det. of Fowler, 
    784 N.W.2d 184
    , 190 (Iowa 2010).                Similar to criminal cases, if the
    respondent’s speedy trial rights are violated, he is entitled to have his
    case dismissed.      In re Det. of 
    Fowler, 784 N.W.2d at 190
    –91.               Blaise
    contends his speedy trial rights were violated because his new trial was
    held more than ninety days after procedendo issued after his first
    appeal. 2 Because his attorney did not raise the speedy trial argument in
    the district court, Blaise contends his trial counsel was ineffective.
    Although Blaise executed and filed a waiver of speedy trial while
    the case was on remand in the district court after his motion for new trial
    was granted, he contends his waiver was ineffective or invalid because
    the district court did not have jurisdiction. He asserts that our limited
    remand only gave the district court the authority to hear and rule on the
    motion for a new trial—not the authority to set a new trial date or accept
    2In   criminal cases, we have concluded that a defendant is entitled to a speedy
    retrial after a successful appeal. State v. Hamilton, 
    309 N.W.2d 471
    , 475 (Iowa 1981).
    “When a case on appeal is remanded, absent waiver of the right to a speedy trial, the
    period during which the defendant must be tried commences on the date procedendo
    issues.” 
    Id. Although we
    have not applied this principle to proceedings under chapter
    229A, Blaise’s argument assumes it does apply and the State does not challenge that
    assumption.
    7
    Blaise’s waiver.      He contends that when procedendo issued after the
    conclusion of the appeal, the speedy trial clock began running again, and
    without the execution of another waiver, his speedy trial rights were
    violated because his trial was not held within ninety days.
    To succeed on a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel, 3 Blaise
    must establish that his trial counsel failed to perform an essential duty
    and that prejudice resulted. See In re Det. of Crane, 
    704 N.W.2d 437
    ,
    439 (Iowa 2005). Blaise must establish both prongs by a preponderance
    of the evidence. See State v. Straw, 
    709 N.W.2d 128
    , 133 (Iowa 2006).
    Blaise asserts his trial counsel was ineffective first for letting him sign a
    speedy trial waiver after the district court ruled on his motion for a new
    trial when he contends the district court did not have jurisdiction. He
    further argues his trial counsel was ineffective for failing to move for
    dismissal when the trial had not occurred within ninety days of
    procedendo.
    Blaise asserts our caselaw demonstrates that on a limited remand,
    the district court loses jurisdiction as soon as it completes the task it
    was assigned in the remand order.               Specifically, Blaise relies on In re
    B.L., 
    470 N.W.2d 343
    (Iowa 1991), to support his position. In that case,
    B.L. was born to unwed parents and had no contact with his father
    throughout his early life. In re 
    B.L., 470 N.W.2d at 344
    . When B.L. was
    3We    have not yet expressly held that a respondent in SVP proceedings has a
    right to “effective” assistance of counsel. In other cases, the State has conceded a
    respondent in chapter 229A proceedings has a right to effective counsel, and we noted
    that this concession was consistent with our due process jurisprudence. In re Det. of
    Crane, 
    704 N.W.2d 437
    , 438 n.3 (Iowa 2005). In this case, the State asserts we do not
    need to reach the issue because Blaise was provided adequate counsel. Because we
    conclude Blaise effectively waived his speedy trial rights we do not need to decide
    whether he is entitled to effective assistance of counsel or whether his trial counsel was
    ineffective for failing to raise the issue below.
    8
    about six years old, a CINA petition was filed and B.L. was removed from
    his mother’s home and placed with his father. 
    Id. at 345.
    B.L.’s mother
    filed an application for modification requesting that B.L. be returned to
    her custody.    
    Id. The juvenile
    court denied her request, and B.L.’s
    mother appealed, contending the juvenile court relied on an inapplicable
    statute when placing B.L. with his father. 
    Id. While the
    mother’s appeal
    was pending, the child filed a motion with the juvenile court requesting
    continuing in-court review of the child’s status. 
    Id. at 346.
    The juvenile
    court denied the motion concluding it no longer had jurisdiction because
    of the mother’s appeal. 
    Id. B.L. filed
    a petition for writ of certiorari with
    our court contending the juvenile court had continuing jurisdiction
    despite the pending appeal.     
    Id. We granted
    a limited remand to the
    juvenile court to hold a hearing on the need for a status report on B.L.
    and the issue of the court’s continuing jurisdiction while the case was on
    appeal.   
    Id. at 346–47.
       After the hearing on the remand order, the
    juvenile court concluded B.L.’s father had become a suitable parent to
    B.L. and dismissed the CINA proceeding. 
    Id. at 347–48.
    B.L.’s mother
    appealed. 
    Id. at 344.
    On the issue of the juvenile court’s jurisdiction, we
    concluded the general rule is that
    the trial court loses jurisdiction over the merits of the
    controversy when an appeal is perfected. An exception to
    this rule is that a trial court can retain jurisdiction to
    proceed on collateral issues not affecting the subject matter
    of the appeal.
    
    Id. at 347
    (citation omitted). Thus, we determined it was appropriate for
    the juvenile court to receive and consider status reports on the child
    while the mother’s appeal was pending. 
    Id. However, we
    concluded the
    juvenile court exceeded its jurisdiction on the limited remand by
    dismissing the CINA proceedings. 
    Id. at 348.
    Because we had remanded
    9
    for the juvenile court only to “consider applications with respect to the
    subject child during the pendency of th[e] appeal,” we concluded the
    juvenile court’s dismissal of the underlying CINA proceedings both
    “directly involved issues on appeal” and effectively cut off the mother’s
    pending appeal. 
    Id. at 347–48.
    Blaise contends his case is similar in that the district court only
    had jurisdiction on remand to hear his motion for new trial and exceeded
    its jurisdiction when it set a new trial date. We disagree that In re B.L.
    controls this situation.   In In re B.L., the juvenile court addressed an
    issue we did not include in the order for limited remand and dismissed
    the case while the first appeal was still pending—effectively terminating
    the mother’s appeal without allowing resolution of the issues she raised.
    In this case, the district court ruled on the issue for which the case was
    remanded and did not, by setting a new trial date, do anything to
    jeopardize the appeal still pending. “ ‘On remand . . . a lower tribunal
    . . . may generally take such action as justice requires as long as it does
    nothing inconsistent with the court’s remand order.’ ” Winnebago Indus.
    v. Smith, 
    548 N.W.2d 582
    , 584 (Iowa 1996) (quoting 82 Am. Jur. 2d
    Workers’ Compensation § 720 (1992)). The district court set a trial date
    within ninety days of its ruling that Blaise was entitled to a new trial.
    Because the limited remand required the parties to report back to the
    supreme court, the district court was well aware that the trial date could
    be stayed after the supreme court decided what to do with the
    information gained from the parties’ status reports.
    Further, as described above, our caselaw clearly establishes that
    during an appeal, the district court retains jurisdiction over matters
    collateral to the appeal. Blaise’s waiver of speedy trial is such a collateral
    matter. The timing of Blaise’s new trial did not affect the merits of the
    10
    appeal that was pending.      Thus, the district court acted within its
    jurisdiction when it accepted Blaise’s waiver.
    “When a case on appeal is remanded, absent waiver of the right to
    a speedy trial, the period during which the defendant must be tried
    commences on the date procedendo issues.”           State v. Hamilton, 
    309 N.W.2d 471
    , 475 (Iowa 1981).       To the extent Blaise argues that his
    speedy trial right renewed upon the issuance of procedendo after the
    appeal   was   completed,    the   State   contends    Blaise’s   waiver    is
    distinguishable from the waiver deemed ineffective as to the new trial in
    cases such as State v. Mosley, No. 08–1437, 
    2009 WL 5125979
    (Iowa Ct.
    App. Dec. 30, 2009).    In Mosley the defendant waived his speedy trial
    rights before his first trial. Mosley, 
    2009 WL 5125979
    , at *1. After the
    case was appealed and the court of appeals remanded for a new trial,
    Mosley did not execute a written waiver of his speedy trial rights and his
    attorney asserted in each pretrial conference Mosley’s refusal to waive his
    rights. 
    Id. at *1.
    In this case, Blaise’s waiver executed on July 14, 2008,
    clearly addressed his new trial.     It was executed and filed after the
    district court granted his motion for new trial.      Although the original
    appeal   concluded   and    procedendo     issued   after   Blaise’s   waiver,
    procedendo did not restart the speedy trial clock for the retrial because
    Blaise had already waived his challenge to its timeliness. Blaise had the
    ability to revoke his speedy trial waiver after the original appeal had
    concluded. But he never exercised the ability.
    Accordingly, we conclude the speedy trial waiver was valid and
    Blaise’s counsel did not breach his duty by failing to move for dismissal
    on speedy trial grounds.
    Blaise also argues his trial counsel was ineffective for allowing him
    to execute an unnecessary speedy trial waiver because the State had
    11
    appealed from the grant of a new trial. Although Blaise’s trial counsel
    could offer no reason he would have advised Blaise to sign the waiver if
    he had known about the State’s appeal, we conclude Blaise has failed to
    demonstrate he was prejudiced by the waiver. In the proceedings below,
    all parties—the State, Blaise, and the district court—operated under the
    belief that Blaise had waived his right to a speedy retrial. What might
    have happened had the court and the parties not understood Blaise
    waived his speedy trial rights is conjecture. We cannot speculate that
    the State would not have commenced the retrial of Blaise within ninety
    days had the waiver not been executed.      Under these circumstances,
    Blaise cannot meet his burden to show by a preponderance of the
    evidence he was prejudiced by his counsel’s advice to sign the speedy
    trial waiver.
    B. Bifurcation.   To establish Blaise was subject to commitment
    under chapter 229A, the State was required to prove two elements: that
    Blaise was convicted of or charged with a sexually violent offense and
    that he suffers from a mental abnormality making him likely to commit
    further sexually violent offenses if he is not confined.   See Iowa Code
    § 229A.2(11). A “sexually violent offense” is an offense listed in section
    229A.2(10)(a) through (f) or “[a]ny act which, either at the time of
    sentencing for the offense or subsequently during civil commitment
    proceedings pursuant to this chapter, has been determined beyond a
    reasonable doubt to have been sexually motivated.” 
    Id. § 229A.2(10)(g).
    Because Blaise had recently pled guilty to first-degree harassment, a
    crime not identified in section 229A.2(10), it was the State’s burden to
    prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the harassment was sexually
    motivated. See 
    id. 12 On
    the morning of trial, Blaise’s counsel moved to bifurcate the
    trial, seeking to      separate the determination of whether Blaise’s
    harassment of S.E. was sexually motivated from the determination of
    whether Blaise has a mental abnormality which, if untreated, would
    likely cause him to reoffend.        Counsel argued that the trial should be
    bifurcated to avoid jury confusion, and the district court denied the
    motion. On appeal, Blaise contends his trial counsel was ineffective for
    failing to argue the trial should be bifurcated to avoid a due process
    violation. 4
    As discussed above, to succeed on a claim of ineffective assistance
    of counsel, Blaise must show both that his attorney breached a duty and
    that he was prejudiced by the breach.              See In re Det. of 
    Crane, 704 N.W.2d at 439
    . Because we find the relevant, admissible evidence that
    the harassment of S.E. was sexually motivated is overwhelming, we
    conclude Blaise was not prejudiced by his trial counsel’s failure to argue
    for bifurcation on due process grounds.
    We believe our resolution of this matter on the prejudice prong is
    appropriate despite the fact that the briefs of the parties appear to frame
    their appellate arguments around the breach prong. The State devotes
    the bulk of its appellate argument on the bifurcation issue to the
    proposition    that    the   other   acts      evidence   forming    the   basis   for
    Dr. Phenix’s opinion would have been admissible on the question of
    Blaise’s sexual motivation even if the trial had been bifurcated.
    Contending the district court (1) would have properly admitted evidence
    of Blaise’s other acts in a bifurcated trial, and (2) did not abuse its
    4As noted previously, because of our resolution of this issue, we assume without
    deciding that Blaise is entitled to effective assistance of counsel in chapter 229A
    proceedings.
    13
    discretion in therefore declining Blaise’s counsel’s motion to bifurcate,
    the State’s brief asserts that the manner in which the motion was made
    could not have constituted deficient performance. In a narrow sense, the
    State’s argument may be read as a specific application of the general
    principle that counsel will not ordinarily be found to have breached a
    duty for failing to raise a claim lacking merit. See In re Det. of 
    Crane, 704 N.W.2d at 439
    .      This general principle is not easily separated or
    distinguished, however, from the corollary principle that counsel’s failure
    to raise a claim lacking merit will not ordinarily be deemed prejudicial.
    See State v. McDowell, 
    622 N.W.2d 305
    , 307 (Iowa 2001) (observing both
    breach and prejudice may “depend entirely on the merit of the claim,”
    and failing to distinguish breach from prejudice in explaining that if
    evidence is sufficient to submit an issue to the jury, failure to challenge
    that submission will not constitute ineffective assistance); see also
    George C. Thomas III, History’s Lesson for the Right to Counsel, 2004 U.
    Ill. L. Rev. 543, 552–53 (discussing “just outcome” as basis for
    measuring both deficient performance and prejudice).
    The difficulty in cleanly separating the breach-of-duty prong from
    the prejudice prong is well illustrated by Blaise’s ineffective-assistance
    argument in this appeal. Recognizing the contested “other acts” evidence
    was extremely powerful, Blaise’s appellate argument, much like the
    State’s, is devoted to the question of whether the evidence would have
    been admissible on the issue of whether Blaise’s interaction with S.E. in
    the park was sexually motivated had the trial been bifurcated.
    Contending the evidence would have been inadmissible in a bifurcated
    trial, Blaise argues that effective counsel would have filed a more timely
    motion and raised the due process argument he raises in this appeal. An
    implicit premise in Blaise’s argument on the breach-of-duty prong is the
    14
    proposition that because the other acts evidence was so powerful,
    counsel’s failure to present the proper constitutional ground for the
    motion resulted in prejudice under our ineffective-assistance standard.
    Because the breach of duty and prejudice inquiries are so closely
    interrelated here, and because the parties have both implicitly addressed
    the prejudice prong, we find no unfairness in resolving the ineffective-
    assistance issue on the prejudice prong, notwithstanding the State’s lack
    of explicit argument regarding prejudice.
    We acknowledge cases standing for the proposition that harmless-
    error arguments in criminal cases may generally be waived if not raised
    by the state. 5 See, e.g., United States v. Williams, 
    627 F.3d 324
    , 329 (8th
    Cir. 2010); United States v. Hilton, 
    386 F.3d 13
    , 18 n.5 (1st Cir. 2004);
    United States v. Varela-Rivera, 
    279 F.3d 1174
    , 1180 (9th Cir. 2002);
    United States v. Giovannetti, 
    928 F.2d 225
    , 226–27 (7th Cir. 1991). That
    approach ordinarily makes sense given the nature of the harmless-error
    inquiry. It is typically the state’s burden to establish harmlessness of a
    claimed error and we would not lightly shoulder that burden for it. State
    v. Elliott, 
    806 N.W.2d 660
    , 669 (Iowa 2011). Whether and when, if ever, a
    court may raise the harmless-error inquiry on its own is a different
    question. In Giovannetti, the Seventh Circuit explained that in making
    5We  examine the treatment of harmless error on appeal in other jurisdictions as
    part of our inquiry as to how to treat the State’s ineffective-assistance argument here.
    We recognize our harmless-error standard for criminal cases may differ substantively
    from our ineffective-assistance prejudice standard depending on the context. Some
    authority suggests the standards are substantively the same, diverging only insofar as
    the harmless-error test places the burden of showing lack of harm on the beneficiary of
    an alleged error, while the ineffective-assistance prejudice test places the burden of
    showing prejudice on the party requesting relief. See State v. Sanchez, 
    548 N.W.2d 69
    ,
    74 (Wis. 1996) (“The only difference between the two applications of the prejudice test is
    the burden.”); 3 Wayne R. LaFave, et al., Criminal Procedure § 11.10(d), at 993 n.168
    (3d ed. 2007). But see 7 LaFave, Criminal Procedure § 27.6(b), at 111 n.51 (discussing
    other approaches to burden allocation). We have not addressed and need not address
    here the substantive relationship between the standards under our precedent.
    15
    harmless-error determinations it will consider “[1] the length and
    complexity of the record, [2] whether the harmlessness of the error or
    errors found is certain or debatable, and [3] whether a reversal will result
    in protracted, costly, and ultimately futile proceedings in the district
    court.”    
    Giovannetti, 928 F.2d at 227
    .              Numerous jurisdictions have
    followed or cited the Seventh Circuit approvingly in concluding they
    retain discretion to consider harmless error even when not otherwise
    raised. 6 See United States v. Gonzalez-Flores, 
    418 F.3d 1093
    , 1100 (9th
    Cir. 2005); United States v. Torrez-Ortega, 
    184 F.3d 1128
    , 1136 (10th Cir.
    1999); United States v. McLaughlin, 
    126 F.3d 130
    , 135 (3d Cir. 1997);
    United States v. Rose, 
    104 F.3d 1408
    , 1414 (1st Cir. 1997); Horsley v.
    Alabama, 
    45 F.3d 1486
    , 1492 n.10 (11th Cir. 1995); Lufkins v. Leapley,
    
    965 F.2d 1477
    , 1481–82 (8th Cir. 1992); United States v. Pryce, 
    938 F.2d 1343
    , 1347–48 (D.C. Cir. 1991) (Williams, J., opinion announcing
    judgment of the panel); Heuss v. State, 
    687 So. 2d 823
    , 824 (Fla. 1996);
    State v. McKinney, 
    777 N.W.2d 555
    , 561 & n.14 (Neb. 2010); see also
    United States v. Dolah, 
    245 F.3d 98
    , 107 (2d Cir. 2001) (“We have
    discretion to consider the harmlessness of an alleged error even though
    the Government has not argued this line of defense.”), abrogated on other
    6The    federal courts of appeals have often grounded this authority in the
    mandatory language of Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 52(a), and its statutory
    counterpart, 28 U.S.C. § 2111, which state that errors not affecting substantial rights
    shall be disregarded. See, e.g., United States v. Rose, 
    104 F.3d 1408
    , 1414–15 (1st Cir.
    1997); United States v. Pryce, 
    938 F.2d 1343
    , 1348 (D.C. Cir. 1991) (Randolph, J.,
    concurring). Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 61 and Criminal Rule 52 share their origin
    in the language of the former 28 U.S.C. § 391 (repealed 1948) (“On the hearing of any
    appeal . . . the court shall give judgment . . . without regard to technical errors, defects,
    or exceptions which do not affect the substantial rights of the parties.”). That language
    is consistent with the legislative directive of Iowa’s harmless-error statutes. Iowa Code
    § 619.16 (“The court, in every stage of an action, must disregard any error or defect in
    the proceeding which does not affect the substantial rights of the adverse party . . . .”);
    
    id. § 624.15
    (“No exception shall be regarded in an appellate court unless the ruling has
    been on a material point, and the effect thereof prejudicial to the rights of the party
    excepting.”).
    16
    grounds by Crawford v. Washington, 
    541 U.S. 36
    , 
    124 S. Ct. 1354
    , 
    158 L. Ed. 2d 177
    (2004).     Various courts, in addition to finding the
    Giovannetti analysis persuasive and the factors helpful, have expanded
    upon the approach. Rose observed that a proper exercise of discretion
    will necessarily involve the balancing of many elements. 
    Rose, 104 F.3d at 1415
    . Several circuits have noted that chief among those elements is
    generally the second Giovannetti factor—the extent to which the
    harmlessness of the error is open to question. 
    Gonzalez-Flores, 418 F.3d at 1101
    ; 
    Lufkins, 965 F.2d at 1482
    –83; 
    Pryce, 938 F.2d at 1348
    . The
    court in Rose also found it useful to evaluate the extent to which the
    arguments the government expressly made assisted the court on the
    harmlessness issue. 
    Rose, 104 F.3d at 1415
    . At the same time, courts
    have been mindful of concerns that sua sponte consideration of
    harmlessness may burden reviewing courts, may give the state needless
    and unfair opportunities to show harmlessness, and may be inequitable
    in allowing reviewing courts to construct the state’s best harmlessness
    arguments without providing appellants an opportunity for response.
    See, e.g., 
    Gonzalez-Flores, 418 F.3d at 1101
    .
    Even if we could not conclude as we do here that the parties’
    arguments raise the prejudice issue implicitly, we think an approach
    analogous to that taken by the courts cautiously exercising discretion in
    sua sponte harmless-error review illustrates the propriety of addressing
    prejudice in this case. Blaise bears the burden of showing prejudice and
    thus concerns we may have about shouldering a burden for the State are
    diminished. Moreover, we are convinced the State’s strongest argument
    for the absence of prejudice is, if not explicitly made, an intimately
    related variant of the argument it actually raised. Goals of fairness and
    conservation of judicial resources compel consideration of prejudice here.
    17
    With that in mind, we turn to the substance of Blaise’s ineffective-
    assistance argument.
    Blaise contends that had the trial been bifurcated much of the
    evidence used to establish that he suffered from a mental abnormality
    and was likely to reoffend would not have been admitted when the jury
    considered whether his conversation with S.E. in the park was sexually
    motivated.   He argues the testimony of the State’s expert that Blaise
    suffered from a mental abnormality and the extensive evidence of his
    prior bad acts were exceptionally prejudicial and would have been nearly
    impossible for the jury to disregard when considering whether the
    harassment was sexually motivated.
    We agree that some of the evidence of Blaise’s criminal history and
    misbehavior while institutionalized was not relevant to the determination
    of whether his harassment of S.E. was sexually motivated and created a
    risk of prejudice.   However, when we consider the evidence of Blaise’s
    interaction with S.E.—standing alone and apart from any evidence of
    Blaise’s prior conduct—we are convinced that any reasonable person
    could only find Blaise’s conversation with S.E. was sexually motivated.
    The entire focus of Blaise’s conversation with S.E., a complete stranger to
    him, was sexual. He asked her whether she engaged in sex “on the side,”
    whether she would engage in anal intercourse, and whether she would
    take her clothes off and engage in sexual activity if she were threatened
    with violence.   She testified that she tried to steer the conversation to
    topics more comfortable for her but that Blaise only asked more sexual
    questions.
    Although there is no direct evidence that Blaise was sexually
    aroused at the time of his interaction with S.E., this does not undermine
    our confidence in the determination that Blaise acted with sexual
    18
    motivation. In this context, “sexually motivated” means that “one of the
    purposes for the commission of [the] crime is the purpose of sexual
    gratification of the perpetrator of the crime.”   Iowa Code § 229A.2(9).
    Blaise’s own testimony revealed he was sexually interested in S.E. when
    he began speaking to her.      Although he claimed to have lost sexual
    interest immediately when S.E. told him that she did not have sex “on
    the side,” the evidence shows Blaise pressed forward with his explicitly
    sexual interrogation. We are not persuaded that the “purpose” specified
    in section 229A.2(9) must result in instantaneous or contemporaneous
    sexual reward or consequence for the respondent. See State v. Patterson,
    
    963 P.2d 436
    , 439–40 (Kan. Ct. App. 1998) (concluding the actor’s
    purpose of achieving eventual gratification was sufficient to establish act
    was sexually violent under Kansas Sex Offender Registration Act).
    At least one other jurisdiction has examined the related question of
    whether sexual intent must accompany conduct as a result of statutory
    language requiring “intent to arouse or satisfy the sexual desires” and
    concluded that in certain circumstances, the intent must coincide with
    the act. See DeBruhl v. State, 
    544 N.E.2d 542
    , 546 (Ind. Ct. App. 1989)
    (noting intent to gratify required by the statute must coincide with the
    conduct and that removal of clothing and kissing of neck did not provide
    immediate sexual desire, but only facilitated eventual sexual desire);
    Clark v. State, 
    695 N.E.2d 999
    , 1002 (Ind. Ct. App. 1998) (declaring state
    must show act of touching was accompanied by a specific intent to
    arouse or satisfy sexual desire); Ind. Code § 35-42-4-3(b) (West, Westlaw
    current through all 2012 legislation) (“A person who, with a child under
    fourteen (14) years of age, performs or submits to any fondling or
    touching, . . . with intent to arouse or to satisfy the sexual desires of
    either the child or the older person, commits child molesting . . . .”). But
    19
    see Nuerge v. State, 
    677 N.E.2d 1043
    , 1049 (Ind. Ct. App. 1997)
    (explaining DeBruhl “should not be extended to mean that under no
    circumstances can acts such as [kissing and clothing removal] be done
    with the intent to satisfy sexual desires”). Those cases, however, dealt
    with language from Indiana’s sex crimes statute, as opposed to Indiana’s
    sexually violent predator statute.      Compare Ind. Code § 35-42-4-3
    (entitled “Sex crimes: Child molesting”), with 
    id. § 35-38-1-7.5
    (entitled
    “Findings regarding sexually violent predators”). Those courts were thus
    tasked, as we often are in the criminal context, with determining whether
    the proscribed conduct was temporally linked with the requisite criminal
    intent. See, e.g., State v. Schminkey, 
    597 N.W.2d 785
    , 789 (Iowa 1999)
    (explaining that demonstrating defendant acted with specific purpose of
    depriving owner of his property required determination of what defendant
    was thinking when act was done).
    By contrast, we confront our sexually violent predator statute here.
    As we have acknowledged on multiple occasions, our “procedures
    regarding sexually violent predators should reflect legitimate public
    safety concerns, while providing treatment services designed to benefit
    sexually violent predators who are civilly committed.”        Iowa Code
    § 229A.1 para. 2; see also In re Det. of Betsworth, 
    711 N.W.2d 280
    , 286,
    288 (Iowa 2006). The goal of treatment is echoed in section 229A.7(5)(b),
    which provides that a sexually violent predator must be committed for
    “control, care, and treatment until such time as the person’s mental
    abnormality has so changed that the person is safe to be placed in a
    transitional release program or discharged.” Iowa Code § 229A.7(5)(b);
    see also In re Det. of 
    Betsworth, 711 N.W.2d at 288
    . Given the special
    purpose of our statute, we think it reasonable to conclude that our
    legislature intended a different contemporaneousness requirement for
    20
    the phrase “purpose of sexual gratification” than the standard that has
    been applied in criminal cases interpreting the phrase “intent to arouse
    or satisfy.” 7   Compare 
    Patterson, 963 P.2d at 439
    –40 (interpreting sex
    offender registration statute’s “sexual gratification” language more
    broadly), with State v. Halstien, 
    857 P.2d 270
    , 274–75, 277 (Wash. 1993)
    (interpreting criminal statute’s “sexual motivation” language more
    narrowly, in light of statute’s directive that “court shall make a finding of
    fact of whether . . . sexual motivation was present at the time of the
    commission of the offense” (citation, emphasis, and internal quotation
    marks omitted)).       Accordingly, we believe our legislature intended the
    provision to require proof of “purpose” of sexual gratification—a broad,
    forward-looking term encompassing the concept of intent—instead of
    proof of a respondent’s achievement of actual or immediate gratification.
    Thus, even in the absence of proof of Blaise’s contemporaneous sexual
    arousal, we believe no reasonable fact finder could conclude Blaise’s
    purposes in engaging S.E. did not include either immediate or eventual
    sexual gratification.
    Further, although Blaise contends that “most” of the State’s
    expert’s testimony would have been excluded had the question of sexual
    7We also note that our statute’s recognition that “sexually violent predators’
    likelihood of engaging in repeat acts of predatory sexual violence is high,” Iowa Code
    § 229A.1 para. 1, is consistent with an understanding of paraphilia as ongoing atypical
    behavioral expression and may compel a broader temporal understanding of sexual
    gratification. See, e.g., Andrei Dandescu & Roger Wolfe, Considerations on Fantasy Use
    by Child Molesters and Exhibitionists, 15 Sexual Abuse: J. Res. & Treatment 297, 303
    (2003) (“It is possible that a type of behavior/fantasy loop gets established, in which
    sexually deviant behaviors trigger more sexually deviant fantasies, which in turn trigger
    more behaviors, and so on.”); John Matthew Fabian, The Risky Business of Conducting
    Risk Assessments for Those Already Civilly Committed as Sexually Violent Predators, 32
    Wm. Mitchell L. Rev. 81, 143–44 (2005) (summarizing literature describing paraphilia
    as successive attempts to recreate an underlying fantasy); Dion G. Gee, et al., The
    Content of Sexual Fantasies for Sexual Offenders, 16 Sexual Abuse: J. Res. & Treatment
    315, 326–28 (2004) (observing that current research suggests offense-specific sexual
    fantasies occur throughout an “offense process,” which includes a postoffense phase).
    21
    motivation been bifurcated for trial purposes, 8 the State argues the
    expert testimony of Dr. Phenix, based in part on Blaise’s other bad acts,
    was directly relevant to the question of whether the harassment of S.E.
    was sexually motivated.            Further, the State contends the basis of
    Dr. Phenix’s opinion as to whether Blaise’s harassment of S.E. was
    sexually motivated—her diagnosis of Blaise, her interviews with him, her
    review of his past sexual behavior—was also relevant and helpful to the
    jury in assessing her credibility.
    To    establish     that   the    harassment       was     sexually    motivated,
    Dr. Phenix testified that “to a reasonable degree of professional certainty”
    the harassment of S.E. “was a sexually motivated offense.” She testified
    that her review of Blaise’s history and her interviews with him convinced
    her that he was sexually excited or aroused by his interaction with S.E.
    because he was asking S.E. about the type of sexual behaviors—anal sex
    and rape—that were the subject of fantasies he described during her
    interview with him.           Her opinion was also partially based on the
    diagnosis of “paraphilia not otherwise specified, nonconsenting persons,”
    (indicating Blaise is aroused by nonconsensual sex), as well as the
    attempted rape of the nine-year-old.
    We acknowledge that Blaise offered evidence to counter the State’s
    evidence that the harassment was sexually motivated, including
    testimony from Blaise and Dr. Hart.               Blaise testified that although he
    was initially looking for a date with S.E., once he found out she did not
    8The State’s expert testified both on the issue of whether the harassment was
    sexually motivated and whether Blaise suffers from a mental abnormality. No objection
    was made to her testimony, although Blaise now asserts on appeal that it was
    inappropriate for the State’s expert to testify as to an ultimate issue in the case—that
    the harassment was sexually motivated. However, Blaise does not argue that his trial
    counsel was ineffective for failing to object to the State’s expert’s testimony, and indeed,
    the defense presented expert testimony on the same “ultimate” issue. Under these
    circumstances, we assume without deciding that the expert testimony was admissible.
    22
    “fool around on the side” he was no longer sexually interested in her. He
    characterized the rest of the conversation as a “religious” discussion, in
    which the questions were meant to be parables and stated that he did
    not think she would be offended by the questions about anal sex because
    she was a nurse. Notably, Dr. Hart did not testify that the harassment
    was not sexually motivated, but rather that he “was not able to conclude
    with a reasonable degree of certainty that [the harassment] was sexually
    motivated.” (Emphasis added.) His conclusion was based on a lack of
    evidence that Blaise was aroused during the interaction with S.E. or that
    he behaved sexually shortly before or after the conversation. Dr. Hart
    opined that Blaise’s bad behavior, sexual and otherwise, was motivated
    by a desire to shock others or make them angry, and not by sexual
    desire.
    As Blaise’s claim is one of ineffective assistance of counsel, the test
    we must apply is whether there is a reasonable probability the result of
    the proceeding would have been different but for the claimed ineffective
    assistance of counsel.    See State v. Cromer, 
    765 N.W.2d 1
    , 11 (Iowa
    2009). A “reasonable probability” is one that is sufficient to undermine
    our confidence in the outcome. 
    Id. In this
    case, when we disregard the
    evidence of Blaise’s prior bad acts and consider only the remaining
    evidence, our confidence in the outcome of the proceeding is not shaken.
    The graphic sexual nature of the statements made by Blaise to S.E. is
    overwhelming evidence that the statements were sexually motivated,
    especially considered in conjunction with Dr. Phenix’s testimony that
    Blaise was aroused by and admittedly fantasized about nonconsensual
    sex. Blaise’s expert testimony presented to contradict the testimony of
    the State’s expert on the issue of sexual motivation does not preclude our
    determination that Blaise has failed to establish prejudice. See Kenley v.
    23
    Bowersox, 
    275 F.3d 709
    , 712–14 (8th Cir. 2002). Because in our view
    the evidence of Blaise’s statements to S.E.—standing alone and apart
    from any other acts evidence—overwhelmingly established Blaise’s sexual
    motivation in the harassment offense, we find no room for debate
    regarding whether Strickland prejudice resulted from any breach of duty
    by counsel. Accordingly, we conclude Blaise was not prejudiced by his
    trial counsel’s failure to adequately argue the trial should have been
    bifurcated to protect Blaise’s due process rights.
    Despite our conclusion that Blaise was not prejudiced in this case,
    we do not wish to be understood as disapproving of bifurcation of trials
    under chapter 229A. The dissent in Barker v. State, 
    877 So. 2d 59
    (Fla.
    Dist. Ct. App. 2004), explains the wisdom and value of bifurcating a trial
    in cases requiring the state prove both mental abnormality and sexual
    motivation:
    After the jury has been subjected to considerable expert
    testimony about defendant’s long propensity to seek sexual
    gratification through violence, a primary force in his life, it
    would hardly be surprising if the ordinary juror found
    enormous difficulty in ascertaining and assessing this past
    conduct solely by reference to fact evidence from the past.
    Given the intended effect of the expert opinion propensity
    evidence, the reliability of any jury determination that the
    past non-sexual crime was in fact sexually motivated is
    called profoundly into question.
    
    Barker, 877 So. 2d at 67
    (Farmer, C.J., dissenting).
    The Barker dissent, after “weigh[ing] the interest of [the] defendant,
    his right to liberty, against the burden imposed on the state by denying
    bifurcation,” and “assess[ing] the risk that a denial of bifurcation might
    lead to an erroneous determination” on the sexual motivation issue,
    concluded due process required bifurcation of the trial. 
    Id. at 70.
    We
    believe bifurcation is a relatively low cost way to ensure fair adjudication
    24
    in SVP proceedings and should be favored by district courts when
    requested in appropriate circumstances.
    C.   Prosecution’s Misstatement of the Evidence.         Blaise also
    argues that the district court erred in allowing the prosecutor to tell the
    jury that Blaise’s interaction with S.E. took place at gunpoint.
    Specifically he points to the following exchange between the prosecutor
    and Blaise’s expert:
    Q: So even when he was discussing rape and doing it
    at gunpoint, you felt that that was still fishing around for
    possible dates? It’s a yes or no question, Doctor. A: I saw—
    [DEFENSE COUNSEL]: I’m going to object. It can’t be
    a yes-or-no question. It’s a misstatement of the evidence.
    There’s no doing it at gunpoint.
    [PROSECUTOR]: Actually that was the testimony, what
    she would do if he—if someone held a gun to her and raped
    her.
    THE COURT: Doctor, you can answer the question.
    Do you want it read back?
    DR. HART: No, I think I remember.
    THE COURT: All right.
    DR. HART: Thank you. I saw no evidence that he—
    when he approached the victim, that he did so at gunpoint.
    Blaise argues that the court’s error was compounded when the
    prosecutor made this statement during closing argument.
    Common sense would say that if you’re walking up to a
    woman and you have a gun or something that looks like a
    gun, and you are telling her, hey, you know, what would you
    do if somebody raped you, would you call the police? What
    if—what if somebody asked you to take your clothes off,
    would you do it? Well, what if they had a gun, . . . would
    you fight them?
    Blaise concedes no objection was made to the prosecutor’s
    statement but argues this misrepresentation of the evidence exacerbated
    the damage caused by the court’s earlier failure to rule on the objection
    to the prosecutor’s question suggesting Blaise had brandished a gun
    while committing the crime.
    25
    We conclude the initial exchange among the two attorneys, the
    expert, and the court, as a whole, demonstrates that although the
    prosecutor’s initial question was subject to two meanings, she clarified
    that she meant Blaise had asked S.E. what she would do if threatened
    with a gun, and that she did not mean Blaise had himself expressly
    threatened S.E. with a gun. We further conclude the prosecutor’s later
    statement during her closing argument was not a misstatement of the
    evidence.     When Blaise was arrested shortly after his interaction with
    S.E. he was in possession of a gun. Although he did not reveal a gun to
    S.E., and despite his testimony that he found the gun after talking to
    S.E., a reasonable jury could find on this record that Blaise was in
    possession of the gun while he talked to S.E. We find no abuse of the
    district court’s discretion on this issue.
    D.   Blaise’s Other Arguments.      We have also considered the
    arguments raised by Blaise in his pro se brief and find them without
    merit.
    IV. Conclusion.
    For the reasons stated above, we affirm Blaise’s adjudication and
    commitment pursuant to Iowa Code chapter 229A.
    AFFIRMED.