State of Iowa v. Earnest B. Bynum ( 2020 )


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  •               IN THE SUPREME COURT OF IOWA
    No. 18–0294
    Filed January 10, 2020
    STATE OF IOWA,
    Appellee,
    vs.
    EARNEST BYNUM,
    Appellant.
    On review from the Iowa Court of Appeals.
    Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Linn County, Nicholas Scott,
    District Associate Judge.
    A defendant appeals his conviction for falsely reporting a criminal
    act. DECISION OF COURT OF APPEALS AND JUDGMENT OF DISTRICT
    COURT AFFIRMED.
    Mark C. Meyer, Cedar Rapids, for appellant.
    Thomas J. Miller, Attorney General, Sharon K. Hall, Assistant
    Attorney General, Jerry Vander Sanden, County Attorney, and Monica C.
    Slaughter, Assistant County Attorney, for appellee.
    2
    CHRISTENSEN, Justice.
    We are asked to determine whether the false report of a criminal act
    requires definitional instructions for an affirmative defense to the
    underlying criminal act. After closing arguments, the defendant requested
    the district court provide an instruction on the exceptions to the
    underlying criminal act of carrying weapons. The district court denied the
    defendant’s request. The defendant was then convicted of making a false
    report alleging the occurrence of the criminal act of carrying weapons.
    On direct appeal, the defendant raised numerous issues. The court
    of appeals affirmed the defendant’s conviction. We granted the defendant’s
    application for further review. We exercise our discretion and only address
    whether the definitional instructions to the criminal act of carrying
    weapons required inclusion of the statutory exceptions. Upon our review,
    we conclude substantial evidence did not support the defendant’s
    requested instruction on his hypothetical affirmative defense, and we
    affirm the decision of the court of appeals and judgment of the district
    court.
    I. Background Facts and Proceedings.
    The Cedar Rapids Police Department received a call on its
    nonemergency number from an unidentified caller. It was 10:17 p.m. on
    March 10, 2016, when the caller reported he witnessed a gray Chevrolet
    Suburban double park across the sidewalk of a Cedar Rapids home. Two
    males, one carrying a handgun and one carrying a rifle, then exited the
    Suburban and walked up to the house’s front door.          According to the
    caller, the individuals knocked on the front door and entered the house.
    The caller reportedly did not know who lived at the house and had not
    previously noticed the Suburban parked there. The unidentified caller did
    3
    not want to reveal his name, but he did provide Cedar Rapids police with
    his phone number.
    That same evening, prior to this report, Pamela Haskins was at her
    Cedar Rapids home. Haskins was with her youngest son, Tamir; her oldest
    son, Bilal; her granddaughter; and her friend, Judy. Haskins owned a
    Chevrolet Suburban, which Bilal used as his primary vehicle.          That
    evening, Bilal drove himself and his daughter to Haskins’s home.
    Approximately one hour after Bilal and his daughter arrived, Tamir
    planned to drive Judy back to her home. When the group stepped out on
    the front porch, they faced spotlights, police officers with drawn weapons,
    and orders to put their hands up.
    Tamir was ordered to step off the porch with hands in the air and to
    walk backwards towards the officers. He was placed on his knees and
    handcuffed. Each individual was then ordered off the porch. Because
    Haskins’s granddaughter remained in Bilal’s arms, he was not ordered to
    the ground. The officers entered Haskins’s home, indicating they were
    searching for guns. Haskins replied that she did not own any guns, and
    no guns were found in her house.
    Officer Shannon Aguero of the Cedar Rapids Police Department
    explained to Haskins the department was acting on a call reporting two
    men with guns at her address. Officer Aguero showed Haskins the number
    of the unidentified caller; Haskins immediately recognized the number as
    belonging to Earnest Bynum.
    Haskins and Bynum knew each other for years.            Bynum was
    Haskins’s on-again, off-again boyfriend who lived with Haskins and their
    son. Haskins also has two older sons, whom Bynum knew. One day prior
    to the March 10 unidentified caller report, Haskins and Bynum had a
    disagreement that resulted in Bynum shoving Haskins against the wall.
    4
    Haskins called the Cedar Rapids Police Department to report the domestic
    assault that day.
    Officer Aguero made contact with Bynum on March 24. During the
    interview, Bynum initially denied any knowledge of the phone call, but he
    later admitted to making the call on the nonemergency line.       Bynum
    indicated to Officer Aguero that he was near Haskins’s home when he saw
    a gray Suburban with a male occupant wave a gun in his direction.
    Bynum stated he identified the occupant waiving the gun as Haskins’s
    son, Bilal. When Officer Aguero asked Bynum why he did not call in the
    report at the location it happened, Bynum said that he knew where the
    vehicle was going and that the occupants were associated with Haskins’s
    home. Bynum stated he called in the report as if it happened at Haskins’s
    home and then proceeded to follow the Suburban to the location he
    reported. Bynum did not provide the identity of Haskins’s son during his
    call because he did not want to get anyone in trouble and he did not want
    to be a snitch.
    The State charged Bynum with the crime of false reports. False
    reports, as outlined in Iowa Code chapter 718, is an offense against the
    government and it states,
    A person who reports or causes to be reported false
    information to a fire department, a law enforcement authority,
    or other public safety entity, knowing that the information is
    false, or who reports the alleged occurrence of a criminal act
    knowing the act did not occur, commits a simple
    misdemeanor, unless the alleged criminal act reported is a
    serious or aggravated misdemeanor or felony, in which case
    the person commits a serious misdemeanor.
    Iowa Code § 718.6(1) (2016).      Bynum’s trial information was later
    amended, indicating the underlying criminal act Bynum falsely reported
    was carrying weapons (Iowa Code section 724.4), burglary (Iowa Code
    section 713.1), or going armed with intent (Iowa Code section 708.8).
    5
    This matter proceeded to trial on January 8, 2018.                    Bynum
    presented scant evidence concerning the exceptions to carrying weapons.
    After closing arguments, Bynum requested the jury instructions include
    the exceptions 1 to the underlying criminal act of carrying weapons. When
    asked by the district court to specify which exception, Bynum requested
    the court include possession of a legally issued permit. The district court
    denied Bynum’s request. It indicated the definition of carrying weapons
    was sufficient and that, in the case of a false report, Bynum would not
    know whether the exception applied at the time of his report. The district
    court then instructed the jury, in part, as follows:
    JURY INSTRUCTION NO. 13
    The State must prove . . . the following elements of False
    Reports:
    1. On or about the March 10, 2016, the defendant
    reported information to law enforcement authority
    concerning the alleged occurrence of a criminal act.
    2. When reporting the alleged criminal act the defendant
    knew, as defined in Instruction 18,[2] the information was
    false.
    3. The defendant reported the crime of Carrying Weapons,
    Burglary, or Going Armed with Intent.
    If the State has proved all of the elements, the defendant is
    guilty of False Reports alleging the crime of Carrying Weapons,
    Burglary, or Going Armed with Intent. If only the first two
    elements are met then the defendant is guilty of False Reports.
    If the State has failed to prove either of the first two elements,
    the defendant if not guilty.
    JURY INSTRUCTION NO. 14
    Carrying Weapons is defined as: A person who goes armed
    with a firearm concealed on or about the person, or who,
    1There are eleven exceptions to the criminal act of carrying weapons enumerated
    in subsections (a)–(k) of Iowa Code section 724.4(4).
    2Jury Instruction No. 18 stated, “For the defendant to know something means he
    or she had a conscious awareness that the information was false.”
    6
    within the limits of any city, goes armed with a pistol or
    revolver, or any loaded firearm of any kind, whether concealed
    or not, or who knowingly carries or transports in a vehicle a
    pistol or revolver.
    ....
    JURY INSTRUCTION NO. 17
    It is not necessary for the State to prove all the elements
    beyond a reasonable doubt for the crimes of Carrying
    Weapons, Burglary, or Going Armed with Intent.
    The matter was submitted to the jury for deliberations. The jury
    returned a verdict finding Bynum guilty of falsely reporting the alleged
    criminal act of carrying weapons. Judgment finding Bynum guilty of this
    offense was entered, and the district court sentenced Bynum to 365 days
    in jail, with all but fourteen days suspended.
    Bynum appealed his judgment and sentence arguing, among other
    things, “The jury should have been instructed not to presume that a
    person who is seen in public in possession of a firearm is committing a
    crime.” 3 We transferred the case to the court of appeals, and the district
    court’s judgment was affirmed. Regarding the jury instruction issue, the
    court of appeals concluded the district court did not err in failing to give
    Bynum’s requested instruction because it addressed a statutory exception
    rather than an element of the underlying crime.
    We granted Bynum’s application for further review.
    II. Error Preservation.
    Bynum presents two arguments regarding exceptions to the
    underlying criminal act of carrying weapons. First, Bynum argues the
    district court erred as a matter of law when it refused to provide his
    requested instruction. That argument was preserved when it was raised
    3On  direct appeal, Bynum also asserted that he was denied an impartial jury of
    his peers and that the district court abused its discretion in allowing the admission of
    prior-bad-acts evidence and photographs of the firearms used during the police response.
    7
    and decided by the district court. See Lamasters v. State, 
    821 N.W.2d 856
    ,
    862 (Iowa 2012).      Second, Bynum argues the failure to provide his
    requested instruction “violated his right to a fair trial and due process of
    law.” The State argues Bynum did not preserve a due process or other
    constitutional claim. We agree. “It is a fundamental doctrine of appellate
    review that issues must ordinarily be both raised and decided by the
    district court before we decide them on appeal.”          
    Id. (quoting Meier
    v.
    Senecaut, 
    641 N.W.2d 532
    , 537 (Iowa 2002)). This doctrine applies with
    equal force to constitutional issues. See Taft v. Iowa Dist. Ct., 
    828 N.W.2d 309
    , 322 (Iowa 2013) (“Even issues implicating constitutional rights must
    be presented to and ruled upon by the district court in order to preserve
    error for appeal.”); State v. Biddle, 
    652 N.W.2d 191
    , 203 (Iowa 2002)
    (noting   error   preservation   rule   “applies   with   equal   strength   to
    constitutional issues”); Garwick v. Iowa Dep’t of Transp., 
    611 N.W.2d 286
    ,
    288 (Iowa 2000) (en banc) (“Issues not raised before the district court,
    including constitutional issues, cannot be raised for the first time on
    appeal.” (quoting State v. McCright, 
    569 N.W.2d 605
    , 607 (Iowa 1997))).
    Bynum did not raise his constitutional argument during the jury
    instruction discussion or by motion, and it does not appear the district
    court considered that argument. See Stammeyer v. Div. of Narcotics Enf’t,
    
    721 N.W.2d 541
    , 548 (Iowa 2006) (“If the court does not rule on an issue
    and neither party files a motion requesting the district court to do so, there
    is nothing before us to review.”).          Because Bynum’s constitutional
    arguments were not preserved for our review, we restrict our discussion to
    his first argument: whether the district court erroneously refused to
    provide his requested instruction.
    8
    III. Standard of Review.
    “We have the discretion, when we grant a further review application,
    to review any issue raised on appeal.”      State v. Lorenzo Baltazar, 
    935 N.W.2d 862
    , 868 (Iowa 2019); see State v. Effler, 
    769 N.W.2d 880
    , 883
    (Iowa 2009) (“[E]fficient use of judicial resources will sometimes prompt
    our court to rely on the disposition made by the court of appeals on some
    issues   and    address    only   those   issues   that   merit   additional
    consideration.”). We exercise that discretion here and only address the
    issue of whether the district court erred by refusing Bynum’s requested
    instruction. Thus, the court of appeals decision will stand as the final
    decision for the remaining issues. See Lorenzo 
    Baltazar, 935 N.W.2d at 868
    .
    “We review challenges to jury instructions for correction of errors at
    law.” See State v. Guerrero Cordero, 
    861 N.W.2d 253
    , 257–58 (Iowa 2015),
    overruled in part by Alcala v. Marriott Int’l, Inc., 
    880 N.W.2d 699
    , 707–08,
    708 n.3 (Iowa 2016); see also Iowa R. App. P. 6.907 (“Review in equity
    cases shall be de novo.     In all other cases, the appellate courts shall
    constitute courts for correction of errors at law . . . .”). “[W]e generally
    review a district court’s refusal to give a requested jury instruction for
    errors at law; however, if the jury instruction is not required but
    discretionary, we review for an abuse of discretion.” State v. Plain, 
    898 N.W.2d 801
    , 811 (Iowa 2017).
    IV. Analysis.
    Iowa Code section 718.6(1) punishes the conduct of a person “who
    take[s] affirmative steps to convey false information to law enforcement
    authorities.”   State v. Ahitow, 
    544 N.W.2d 270
    , 274 (Iowa 1996).        If a
    person knowingly reports false information to law enforcement authorities,
    that person commits a simple misdemeanor.            Iowa Code § 718.6(1).
    9
    Likewise, a person who reports the alleged occurrence of a criminal act,
    knowing the criminal act did not occur, also commits a simple
    misdemeanor. 
    Id. However, if
    the criminal act falsely reported is a serious
    misdemeanor, aggravated misdemeanor, or felony, that person commits a
    serious misdemeanor. 
    Id. The jury
    convicted Bynum of falsely reporting the alleged criminal
    act of carrying weapons. A person convicted of carrying weapons commits
    an aggravated misdemeanor.       
    Id. § 724.4(1).
      Because the jury found
    Bynum guilty of falsely reporting a criminal act classified as an aggravated
    misdemeanor, his conviction under the false-reports provision was a
    serious misdemeanor. See 
    id. § 718.6(1).
    The crime of carrying weapons is defined as,
    Except as otherwise provided in this section, a person who
    goes armed with a dangerous weapon concealed on or about
    the person, or who, within the limits of any city, goes armed
    with a pistol or revolver, or any loaded firearm of any kind,
    whether concealed or not, or who knowingly carries or
    transports in a vehicle a pistol or revolver, commits an
    aggravated misdemeanor.
    
    Id. § 724.4(1).
      This section further indicates the prohibition against
    carrying weapons does not apply in certain circumstances and lists eleven
    exceptions. See 
    id. § 724.4(4)(a)–(k).
    Jury Instruction No. 14 set forth the definition for carrying weapons,
    but it did not include any of the statutory exceptions. Bynum’s counsel,
    noting the omission, raised the issue before the district court:
    Instruction Number 14, which is the definitional instruction
    for Carrying Weapons, I failed to realize earlier that it does not
    include any exceptions basically. That it essentially says that
    anyone within city limits that has a firearm is committing
    Carrying Weapons. And obviously we all know that is not
    accurate in that there are exceptions, primarily there’s an
    exception for anyone who possesses a legally-issued permit to
    carry such firearms. So I would request the Court amend that
    instruction if that’s even possible.
    10
    One of the requested statutory exceptions states the crime of carrying
    weapons does not apply if,
    A person who has in the person’s possession and who displays
    to a peace officer on demand a valid permit to carry weapons
    which has been issued to the person, and whose conduct is
    within the limits of that permit. A person shall not be
    convicted of a violation of this section if the person produces
    at the person’s trial a permit to carry weapons which was valid
    at the time of the alleged offense and which would have
    brought the person’s conduct within this exception if the
    permit had been produced at the time of the alleged offense.
    
    Id. § 724.4(4)(i)
    (emphasis added).    The district court declined to add
    Bynum’s requested exception to the jury instruction, finding the
    instructional definition of carrying weapons sufficient.          The issue
    presented is whether the district court erred in denying Bynum’s requested
    exception.
    Bynum contends providing the definition of carrying weapons,
    without the statutory exceptions for possessing a permit, deprived the jury
    of its ability to evaluate whether he falsely reported the underlying criminal
    act of carrying weapons.      Essentially, Bynum argues leaving out an
    instruction on his theory of defense—that carrying weapons is not
    inherently a crime—effectively directed his verdict of guilt.
    As a threshold matter, we cannot agree with Bynum that the
    existence of one or more possible legal exceptions to the underlying
    criminal act means he did not falsely report the alleged occurrence of a
    criminal act. Courts in other jurisdictions addressing the same issue have
    determined the existence of a potential defense to the underlying criminal
    act does not decriminalize the charged offense of falsely reporting a crime.
    A Virginia court considered the argument that a defendant,
    convicted of making a false accusation of inappropriate touching against
    a police officer, did not allege the commission of any crime because there
    11
    could have been potential defenses such as consent to the hypothetical
    crime. Dunne v. Commonwealth, 
    782 S.E.2d 170
    , 173 (Va. Ct. App. 2016).
    Virginia’s false-reporting provision made it “unlawful for any person . . . to
    knowingly give a false report as to the commission of any crime to any law-
    enforcement official with intent to mislead.” 
    Id. at 172
    (quoting Va. Code
    Ann. § 18.2-461). The court indicated this provision did not require “that
    such false report lead to the filing of a false charge, much less result in a
    false conviction.” 
    Id. at 173.
    It explained Virginia’s provision criminalized
    the false report of a crime, not proof of each element of the underlying
    crime beyond a reasonable doubt. 
    Id. “That [defendant’s]
    false report of a
    crime might leave open hypothetical defenses to such falsely reported
    crime does not excuse or decriminalize her lie.” 
    Id. In Commonwealth
    v. Dahdah, the Appeals Court of Massachusetts
    reached a similar conclusion about whether the existence of hypothetical
    defenses would undermine a conviction for “intentionally and knowingly”
    making a “false report of a crime.” No. 12–P–1670, 
    2014 WL 470358
    , at
    *2 (Mass. App. Ct. Feb. 7, 2014) (unpublished opinion) (quoting Mass. Gen.
    Laws ch. 269, § 13A). The defendant there was a customer in a fast-food
    restaurant who created a disturbance. 
    Id. at *1.
    The court considered the
    defendant’s argument that his false report—that a restaurant manager
    “grabbed him and twisted his arm”—was not a false report of a crime
    because the manager had a privilege to remove him and thus “the
    statements he made to police, even if false, did not amount to a crime.” 
    Id. at *1–2.
        In rejecting the defendant’s argument, the appeals court
    explained,
    He posits that in the context of this case, the accusation that
    the manager grabbed him and twisted his arm does not allege
    a criminal act because the manager had a privilege to remove
    him by reasonable force.
    12
    This argument is without merit. As a threshold matter,
    it ignores that even a legitimate defense does not preclude the
    filing of a criminal charge by complaint or indictment. It is
    axiomatic that if a victim makes a minimally credible claim
    that a criminal act has occurred, the defendant has a right to
    assert the defense at trial but no right to preempt the charge.
    
    Id. at *2.
    Another court interpreted a false-report statute to apply where one
    lies about details concerning a crime. See People v. Chavis, 
    658 N.W.2d 469
    , 474 (Mich. 2003). There, the defendant argued his false statement
    concerning the commission of an actual crime did not pertain to whether
    a crime had occurred.      
    Id. at 472.
       The court explained, “[T]he plain
    language of the statute is not limited to only those situations where no
    crime has been committed; it also applies where one reports false details
    about the crime.” 
    Id. at 473.
    We agree with the authority holding that a potential defense to the
    underlying criminal act does not absolve responsibility from the charged
    offense of false reports. It is not the jury’s role to decide the law. See
    People v. Whitaker, No. 343988, 
    2019 WL 1746335
    , at *2 (Mich. Ct. App.
    Apr. 18, 2019) (unpublished opinion) (per curiam) (holding that in a false
    reporting of a crime case, the jury should not be asked to determine
    whether or not the crime reported was a felony).          There is sufficient
    evidence of guilt if the defendant falsely reports conduct that would
    establish the prima facie elements of a crime.         However, this is not
    dispositive of the issue raised here. We still must address whether Bynum
    was entitled to an instruction on his theory of defense—the existence of
    statutory exceptions.
    The rules governing jury instructions in civil cases apply to trials in
    criminal cases. Iowa R. Crim. P. 2.19(5)(f); State v. Marin, 
    788 N.W.2d 833
    ,
    837 (Iowa 2010), overruled on other grounds by 
    Alcala, 880 N.W.2d at 707
    –
    13
    08, 708 n.3. “Consequently, the court is required to ‘instruct the jury as
    to the law applicable to all material issues in the case . . . .’ ” 
    Marin, 788 N.W.2d at 837
    (quoting Iowa R. Civ. P. 1.924). While the instruction given
    need not “contain or mirror the precise language of the applicable statute,
    [the instruction] must be a correct statement of the law.” State v. Schuler,
    
    774 N.W.2d 294
    , 298 (Iowa 2009). If a defendant’s theory of defense is
    timely requested, is supported by the evidence, and is a correct statement
    of the law, the district court must provide the requested instruction. See
    Guerrero 
    Cordero, 861 N.W.2d at 260
    .           Evidence in support of an
    instruction must be substantial. State v. Ross, 
    573 N.W.2d 906
    , 913 (Iowa
    1998).   “An instruction is supported by the evidence when it ‘could
    convince a rational finder of fact that the defendant has established his
    affirmative defense.’ ” Guerrero 
    Cordero, 861 N.W.2d at 260
    (quoting State
    v. Broughton, 
    425 N.W.2d 48
    , 52 (Iowa 1988)).
    The distinction between an element of a crime and an affirmative
    defense is significant.   See State v. Delay, 
    320 N.W.2d 831
    , 834 (Iowa
    1982).   For an element of the crime, the state bears the burden of
    production and persuasion. State v. Moorhead, 
    308 N.W.2d 60
    , 62 (Iowa
    1981) (en banc). In contrast, the defendant must go forward “with evidence
    of an affirmative defense.” 
    Delay, 320 N.W.2d at 834
    . Thus, the defendant
    must produce sufficient evidence to show the exception is applicable. See
    
    Moorhead, 308 N.W.2d at 62
    –63.
    This court has held the absence of a permit is not an element of the
    criminal act of carrying weapons. State v. Bowdry, 
    337 N.W.2d 216
    , 218
    (Iowa 1983). The question presented in Bowdry was whether the state had
    the initial burden of proving Bowdry did not have a permit to carry or
    transport a weapon. 
    Id. at 217.
                                         14
    Bowdry was arrested and tried for carrying a weapon in his car. 
    Id. At trial,
    “[t]he State did not introduce evidence that Bowdry did not have a
    permit” or that the officer asked Bowdry to produce a permit. 
    Id. The precise
    question in Bowdry was “whether the absence of a permit is or is
    not an element of the offense itself which the State must initially
    prove under In re Winship, 
    397 U.S. 358
    , 364, 
    90 S. Ct. 1068
    , 1073, 
    25 L. Ed. 2d 368
    , 375 (1970).” 
    Id. at 218.
    We noted prior Iowa law provided,
    “No person shall carry a pistol or revolver concealed on or about his person
    or   whether   concealed   or   otherwise   in   any   vehicle occupied   by
    him . . . without a permit therefor as herein provided.” 
    Id. at 217
    (quoting
    Iowa Code § 695.2 (1977) (repealed Jan. 1, 1978)). Under the prior version,
    the burden was on the state to prove absence of a permit. 
    Id. at 218.
    However, under the modern version applicable in Bowdry’s case, we
    concluded the legislature’s structural change to the statute “did not intend
    to make the absence of a permit an element of the offense.” 
    Id. We further
    explained,
    In the initial paragraph of new section 724.4, defining
    the crime, the drafters did not include the language, “without
    a permit . . . .” Instead, they added a proviso that the section
    should not apply in eight situations which they then listed.
    One of the situations involves the permit issue. Our first
    reaction to the section is that the Assembly probably did not
    intend the State must initially negate the several exceptions
    in every prosecution under section 724.4. Cf. State v. Delay
    at 834 (“It is unreasonable to think that the legislature
    intended to place upon the State the burden of laboriously
    disproving each of those forms of justification in every
    prosecution for assault, no matter how unrelated to the facts
    of the case they may be.”).
    
    Id. In Bowdry’s
    case, where no permit was produced at the scene or at the
    trial, the issue of the permit was not in the case unless substantial
    evidence appeared in the record, either from the state or from Bowdry, that
    he had a valid permit at the time. 
    Id. 218–19. 15
    Two years later, we made clear the statutory exceptions provided in
    section 724.4 “are affirmative defenses,” State v. Erickson, 
    362 N.W.2d 528
    , 531 (Iowa 1985) (citing 
    Bowdry, 337 N.W.2d at 218
    ), and “[t]he State
    need not negate the exception unless substantial evidence is produced
    from some source that the exception applies,” State v. Leisinger, 
    364 N.W.2d 200
    , 202 (Iowa 1985) (citing 
    Bowdry, 337 N.W.2d at 218
    ; State v.
    Wilt, 
    333 N.W.2d 457
    , 461 (Iowa 1983); 
    Delay, 320 N.W.2d at 834
    ; State
    v. Boland, 
    309 N.W.2d 438
    , 440 (Iowa 1981)).
    The rule expressed in Bowdry and then reiterated in Erickson
    applies to Bynum’s case. Bynum’s requested exception, a valid permit, is
    not an element of the carrying-weapons offense. See Iowa Code § 724.4(1)
    (2016) (defining the criminal act of carrying weapons); 
    Erickson, 362 N.W.2d at 531
    (stating exceptions to carrying weapons are affirmative
    defenses). Therefore, the State is not required to prove the absence of that
    exception. See 
    Leisinger, 364 N.W.2d at 202
    ; 
    Delay, 320 N.W.2d at 834
    .
    If Bynum’s theory of defense on the underlying falsely reported crime is
    the existence of a valid permit, he must convince a rational finder of fact
    that he has established his affirmative defense before the district court will
    give the requested jury instruction. See Guerrero 
    Cordero, 861 N.W.2d at 260
    .
    In this case, Bynum did not produce any evidence, let alone
    substantial evidence, to support his legal theory concerning the existence
    of a permit. Bynum points to nothing in the record suggesting that when
    he made his false report he said the two men had or might have permits
    to carry their weapons.      Bynum does point to the testimony of the
    responding officer to support his contention that possession of a firearm
    is not inherently illegal.   See 
    Bowdry, 337 N.W.2d at 218
    (stating a
    defendant may rely on the state’s case for substantial evidence of the
    16
    existence of a valid permit). The cross-examination by defense counsel
    elicited the following:
    Q. And, Officer, would you agree it isn’t necessarily
    illegal for someone to possess a handgun or a rifle? A. No,
    it’s not.
    Q. And, in fact, would you agree that there are probably
    hundreds of thousands of Iowans who possess licenses
    allowing them to carry firearms? A. Yes.
    Based on our review of the entire record, this is the only evidence to
    support Bynum’s theory the reported individuals possessed valid
    permits—an exception to carrying weapons. However, the officer’s broad
    statements do not concern the individuals Bynum reported. We conclude
    the evidence is insufficient to support Bynum’s requested jury instruction.
    A rational finder of fact could not be convinced the evidence established
    Bynum reported individuals carrying weapons who possessed valid
    permits. See Guerrero 
    Cordero, 861 N.W.2d at 260
    . Because the evidence
    does not support Bynum’s affirmative-defense exception to carrying
    weapons, the district court was not required to instruct the jury on this
    theory.   See 
    Marin, 788 N.W.2d at 837
    . Therefore, the district court’s
    refusal to give Bynum’s requested instruction was not erroneous.
    V. Conclusion.
    We affirm the judgment of the district court and the court of appeals
    decision addressing Bynum’s requested instruction. The court of appeals
    decision for the remaining issues stands as the final decision.
    DECISION OF COURT OF APPEALS AND JUDGMENT OF
    DISTRICT COURT AFFIRMED.
    All justices concur except Appel, J., and Wiggins, C.J., who dissent.
    17
    #18–0294, State v. Bynum
    APPEL, Justice (dissenting).
    The majority expresses its disapproval of the conduct of Earnest
    Bynum by affirming his conviction of falsely reporting a criminal act under
    Iowa Code section 718.6 (2016). While there is no doubt that Bynum is
    guilty of making a false report, the question of whether Bynum is guilty of
    the greater offense of false report of a criminal act is another matter. For
    the reasons expressed below, I dissent from the majority’s conclusion
    affirming Bynum’s conviction of the more serious crime.
    I. Historical Context of False-Crime Reports.
    A. The Notorious False-Crime-Reporting Case of Rex v. Manley.
    The starting point in analysis of modern criminal liability for false reports
    is the English case of Rex v. Manley, [1933] 1 KB 529 (C.C.A.). In Manley,
    a woman falsely reported that she had been robbed. 
    Id. at 529.
    Her report
    resulted in a futile search for a fictitious robber and innocent persons were
    investigated as a result. 
    Id. The English
    court was offended by Manley’s
    action, but there was no statute prohibiting her conduct.        
    Id. at 534.
    Nonetheless, the English judges declared that the defendant was guilty of
    the offense of “public mischief.” 
    Id. at 534–35.
    As noted by Professor Wayne LaFave, the Manley decision “caused
    quite an uproar in legal circles in England in the 1930’s.” 1 Wayne R.
    LaFave, Substantive Criminal Law § 2.1(b), Westlaw SUBCRL (3d ed.
    database updated Oct. 2019).          The commentary in England was
    unfavorable.    See R.M. Jackson, Common Law Misdemeanors, 6
    Cambridge L.J. 193, 198–201 (1937); W.T.S. Stallybrass, Public Mischief,
    49 L.Q. Rev. 183, 183–87 (1933). Similarly, a contemporaneous American
    authority cited Manley as violating the doctrine that a penalty cannot be
    imposed without express authorization in law, or nulla poena sine lege, a
    18
    doctrine that stands as a bulwark against the spread of authoritarianism.
    Jerome Hall, Nulla Poena Sine Lege, 47 Yale L.J. 165, 179 (1937).
    More recently, Professor John Jeffries canvassed the problems with
    Manley.     John Calvin Jeffries Jr., Legality, Vagueness, and the
    Construction of Penal Statutes, 
    71 Va. L
    . Rev. 189, 224–26 (1985).
    Professor Jeffries attacked the open-ended nature of common law creation
    of criminal offenses, viewing Manley as a continuing invitation to law
    enforcement “to vindicate their own notions of appropriate social control
    by criminal arrest and prosecution.” 
    Id. at 226.
    The Manley case is likely to be the last example of common law
    development of criminal law in England. As noted more recently by Lord
    Bingham, “There are . . . powerful reasons of political accountability,
    regularity and legal certainty for saying that the power to create crimes
    should now be regarded as reserved exclusively to Parliament, by statute.”
    R. v. Jones, [2006] UKHL 16, [23], [2007] 1 AC 136 (appeal taken from
    EWCA).
    In Iowa, we long ago abandoned the notion of common law crimes.
    Estes v. Carter, 
    10 Iowa 400
    , 401 (1860). (“Whilst, therefore, the principles
    of the common law do enter into all our criminal adjudications when the
    jurisdiction of our courts over criminal offenses has been established by
    law, still they do not confer upon the courts in this State the power to try
    and punish an offense that is such at common law, but which has not
    been ordained as such by the supreme law making power of the State.”).
    But the lesson arising from Manley remains powerful today. Courts do not
    have the province or authority to extend or create crimes in the name of
    public policy.
    19
    B. Legislative Responses to Manley.
    1. Introduction. In light of the perceived need to address the issue
    of false reporting but the overwhelmingly negative response to Manley, a
    number of proposals for legislative action arose. The Model Penal Code,
    with drafting beginning in 1951 and promulgation following in 1962, was
    the first modern concerted effort to comprehensively address legal issues
    like false reporting in Manley. Paul H. Robinson & Markus D. Dubber,
    The American Model Penal Code: A Brief Overview, 10 New Crim. L. Rev.
    319, 320–25 (2007) (outlining the context of the Model Penal Code and
    previous attempts to create cohesive model codes). Indeed, it has been
    observed that “[w]hen the Model Penal Code project was launched . . . the
    vast majority of American criminal codes were in a sorry state.” 
    Id. at 322.
    A number of states followed by enacting a wide variety of state statutes
    adopting the Model Penal Code, in whole or in part, including provisions
    criminalizing false reports. 
    Id. at 326.
    An examination of the Model Penal
    Code and other state legislation sets the framework for consideration of
    Iowa Code section 718.6.
    2. Model Penal Code. The Model Penal Code included section 241.5,
    a provision related to false reports. Section 241.5 provides,
    (1) Falsely Incriminating Another. A person who
    knowingly gives false information to any law enforcement
    officer with purpose to implicate another commits a
    misdemeanor.
    (2) Fictitious Reports.       A person commits a petty
    misdemeanor if he:
    (a) reports to law enforcement authorities an
    offense or other incident within their concern knowing
    that it did not occur; or
    (b) pretends to furnish such authorities with
    information relating to an offense or incident when he
    knows he has no information relating to such offense or
    incident.
    20
    Model Penal Code § 241.5, 10A U.L.A. 631 (2001). Notably, under the
    Model Penal Code, false incrimination arises when a person knowingly
    gives false information “to implicate another.” 
    Id. And, a
    fictitious report
    may arise not only from a false report related to “an offense” but also more
    broadly to a false report related to an “incident.” 
    Id. Plainly, under
    the
    Model Penal Code, a crime or criminal act is not required.
    3. False-report legislation in other states. A number of states have
    enacted false-report statutes.    In general, there are two approaches to
    false-report statutes.   Some false-report statutes, like the Model Penal
    Code, do not require false report of a criminal act to establish liability. For
    example, Pennsylvania’s statute provides that a misdemeanor in the third
    degree arises when a person “pretends to furnish [law enforcement] with
    information relating to an offense or incident when he knows he has no
    information relating to such offense of incident.” 18 Pa. Stat. & Cons. Stat.
    Ann. § 4906(b)(2) (West, Westlaw current through 2019 Reg. Sess. Act 91).
    Similarly, Tennessee makes it unlawful to falsely “[i]nitiate a report or
    statement to a law enforcement officer concerning an offense or incident.”
    Tenn. Code Ann. § 39-16-502(a)(1) (West, Westlaw current through 2019
    1st Extraordinary Sess.). Following the pattern, the South Dakota false-
    reporting statute provides that a person who falsely reports a crime “or
    other incident within [the] official concern [of law enforcement]” is guilty of
    the offense. S.D. Codified Laws § 22-11-9 (Westlaw current through 2019
    Sess. Laws). The false-reporting statute in Hawai’i provides for criminal
    liability for a false report to law enforcement agencies related to “a crime
    or other incident within their concern.” Haw. Rev. Stat. Ann. § 710-1015
    (West, Westlaw current through Act 286 of the 2019 Reg. Sess.).
    These false-reporting statutes, like the Model Penal Code, are
    broadly framed and do not require the commission of a crime. Under these
    21
    statutes, it is enough to provide information to authorities that leads
    officers to suspect a third party has committed a crime or cause police to
    investigate. Commonwealth v. Soto, 
    650 A.2d 108
    , 110 (Pa. Super. 1994)
    (noting defendant was not guilty of false reporting since statement did not
    lead officers to suspect third party had committed crime); State v. Smith,
    
    436 S.W.3d 751
    , 773 (Tenn. 2014) (finding defendant’s false statements
    that wife went shopping with substantial amounts of cash was sufficient
    to constitute false reporting under statute).
    On the other hand, other false-claim statutes are more narrowly
    drawn and require a false report of a crime or criminal act to give rise to
    the crime. For example, in Arkansas, the crime of filing a false report
    arises when a person files a false report with law enforcement of “any
    alleged criminal wrongdoing.”        Ark. Code Ann. § 5-54-122(b) (West,
    Westlaw current through 2019 Reg. Sess.).               Similarly, Michigan law
    provides for the crime of false reporting when the person makes “a false
    report of the commission of a crime.”             Mich. Comp. Laws Ann.
    § 750.411a(1) (West, Westlaw current through P.A.2019, No. 146, of the
    2019 Reg. Sess.). Ordinarily, a report of criminal activity means a report
    of a crime. See, e.g., Boveia v. State, 
    228 S.W.3d 550
    , 554 (Ark. Ct. App.
    2006) (“In addition, there are no Arkansas cases clearly defining ‘criminal
    activity,’ although the language from several cases suggests that ‘criminal
    activity’ is a criminal act as defined by statute.”).
    A number of states have enacted false-reporting civil statutes
    permitting the government to recover expenses related to official responses
    to false reports. By way of example, California law provides that a person
    who makes a false report that “proximately causes an appropriate
    emergency response by a public agency[] is liable for the expense of the
    22
    emergency response.” Cal. Gov’t Code § 53153.5 (West, Westlaw current
    through ch. 870 of 2019 Reg. Sess.).
    Similarly, Arizona law provides that a person convicted of the crime
    of false reporting and the false report “results in an emergency response
    or investigation . . . is liable for the expenses that are incurred incident to
    the emergency response or the investigation.” Ariz. Rev. Stat. Ann. § 13-
    2907(B) (Westlaw current through 2019 1st Reg. Sess.). In Michigan, if a
    person is found guilty of the crime of false reporting,
    the court may order the person convicted to reimburse the
    state or a local unit of government for expenses incurred in
    relation to that incident including, but not limited to,
    expenses for an emergency response and expenses for
    prosecuting the person.
    Mich. Comp. Laws Ann. § 769.1f(1) (West, Westlaw current through
    P.A.2019, No. 146, of the 2019 Reg. Sess.). Under false-reporting civil
    statutes that permit the government to recover expenses, the government
    must show the nature of its response to the false report.          Ordinarily,
    however, the crime of false reporting, under both statutes that require a
    criminal act and those that don’t, do not require the government to make
    any showing of the nature of its response.
    II. Application of Iowa’s False-Reporting Statute.
    A. The Text of the Iowa Statute. Iowa’s false-reporting statute
    provides that
    [a] person who reports or causes to be reported false
    information to a fire department, a law enforcement authority,
    or other public safety entity, knowing that the information is
    false, or who reports the alleged occurrence of a criminal act
    knowing the act did not occur, commits a simple
    misdemeanor, unless the alleged criminal act reported is a
    serious or aggravated misdemeanor or felony, in which case
    the person commits a serious misdemeanor.
    Iowa Code § 718.6(1).
    23
    As is apparent, the Iowa statute distinguishes between a report with
    “false information” and a report of “the alleged occurrence of a criminal
    act.”   If the “alleged criminal act reported” is a serious or aggravated
    misdemeanor or felony, the crime is a serious misdemeanor; otherwise,
    false reporting is a simple misdemeanor. In short, Iowa has incorporated
    into its statute two types of false-reporting crimes: one broadly triggered
    by “false information” and another narrowly triggered by a false report of
    “a criminal act,” which, under certain circumstances, can lead to an
    enhanced criminal penalty.
    B. Application of Iowa’s False-Reporting Statute to the Facts of
    This Case. There is no dispute that Bynum violated Iowa Code section
    718.6(1) by providing false information to law enforcement.          But the
    question in this case is not whether he made a false report to law
    enforcement. He obviously did. The question is whether he reported a
    “criminal act” that was a serious or aggravated misdemeanor or felony,
    thereby leading to an enhanced criminal penalty under the statute.
    It seems to me that while Bynum reported that persons were
    carrying firearms in public and that such a report implicated the parties
    in a potential crime, it was not the report of a “criminal act” but rather the
    report of facts that, if investigated, might show a criminal act. Iowa Code
    section 724.4(1) outlines the crime of going armed with a dangerous
    weapon. The prefatory words are “[e]xcept as otherwise provided in this
    section, a person who goes armed with a dangerous weapon” commits a
    crime. 
    Id. One of
    those exceptions is possession of a valid permit. 
    Id. § 724.4(4)(i)
    .
    The persons who Bynum falsely claimed were at large reportedly
    carried guns, but that could be perfectly legal under Iowa law if they had
    24
    the required permit. Merely reporting that someone is carrying a gun in
    public is not the report of a crime, only a potential crime.
    Some might say this is hairsplitting, but I think it is the result of
    careful and correct interpretation of the words employed in the statute by
    the legislature and its two-tiered classification system.      It is not our
    province to rewrite the statute. The broad approach to false reporting, as
    demonstrated by the Model Penal Code and the Pennsylvania, Tennessee,
    South Dakota, and Hawai’i statutes is embraced in the first part of Iowa
    Code section 718.6. The legislature, however, chose to use different and
    narrower language requiring a false report of “a criminal act” for the
    enhanced false-reporting crime.     In construing the scope of a criminal
    statute, words matter. See Marcus v. Young, 
    538 N.W.2d 285
    , 289 (Iowa
    1995) (finding that judicial interpretation of statutory language is based
    upon what the legislature actually said rather than on what it might have
    said); State v. Brustkern, 
    170 N.W.2d 389
    , 392 (Iowa 1969) (“We do not
    inquire what the legislature meant. We ask only what the statute means.”
    (quoting In re Wiley’s Guardianship, 
    239 Iowa 1225
    , 1232, 
    34 N.W.2d 593
    ,
    596 (1948))).
    No doubt there is plenty of reason to disapprove of Bynum’s conduct.
    Certainly the false report resulted in a misuse of police resources. But the
    nature of the police response has nothing at all to do with whether the
    statute has been violated.    The enhanced crime is false reporting of a
    criminal act not false reporting of an incident with criminal implications.
    And the nature of the police response to the false report, which may be
    relevant in a statutory framework that authorizes recovery of expenses, is
    wholly irrelevant under Iowa Code section 718.6(1).
    The overbroad approach to the statute utilized by authorities below
    is illustrated by the admission of photographic exhibits of a handgun and
    25
    AR-15 rifle offered into evidence at trial. These photographs have nothing
    to do with the elements of the statute. Instead, their sole purpose was to
    inflame the jury. I reject the trial court’s contention that such exhibits
    would not be prejudicial “because we see guns all the time on TV and
    photographs.” The photographs are indeed prejudicial and should have
    been excluded.
    In this case, the relief sought by Bynum is reversal on the ground
    that his requested jury instruction, which would have informed the jury
    that a person does not commit a crime if he or she has a valid permit when
    carrying a gun, should have been given. Under the proposed instruction,
    the jury would have had to consider whether Bynum made a false report
    of a criminal act in a context which included the fact that if the persons
    were carrying with a permit, no criminal act would occur. Instead, we have
    a case in which the defendant is charged with falsely reporting a “criminal
    act” but the full definition of that “criminal act” is not provided to the jury.
    No one doubts that the instruction sought by Bynum was a correct
    statement of law. And no one doubts that carrying a weapon as reported
    by Bynum might, or might not be, a crime.               But by limiting the
    instructions, the district court in effect ruled that, as a matter of law, a
    false report of what might be a criminal act, is “close enough for
    government work” under the statute to qualify for enhanced punishment.
    This approach is consistent with Manley, perhaps, but not our ordinary
    approach to criminal liability.
    The majority confuses matters by turning this false-reporting case
    into a trial on the merits of the hypothetical person reported by Bynum on
    the possession charge. In such a trial, whether the defendant had a permit
    might well be an affirmative defense. But that is not the posture of this
    case. This is not a trial on the charge of the crime of illegal possession of
    26
    a weapon. It is a trial on the charge of falsely reporting a criminal act.
    Was the hypothetical person reported by Bynum committing the crime of
    possession? Maybe, but maybe not. The jury was entitled to an accurate
    instruction on exactly what crime Bynum allegedly falsely reported and
    may well have decided that the report of a person carrying a weapon,
    without more, was too ambiguous to support the enhanced charge. In my
    view, it was error not to give the requested instruction.
    III. Conclusion.
    For the above reasons, I would reverse the conviction and remand
    the case to the district court.
    Wiggins, C.J., joins this dissent.