Cathryn Ann Linn v. State of Iowa , 929 N.W.2d 717 ( 2019 )


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  •                 IN THE SUPREME COURT OF IOWA
    No. 17–0007
    Filed June 14, 2019
    CATHRYN ANN LINN,
    Appellant,
    vs.
    STATE OF IOWA,
    Appellee.
    On review from the Iowa Court of Appeals.
    Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Muscatine County, Nancy S.
    Tabor, Judge.
    Cathryn Ann Linn seeks further review of a summary disposition in
    her postconviction-relief proceeding. DECISION OF COURT OF APPEALS
    VACATED;        DISTRICT    COURT     JUDGMENT       REVERSED          AND
    REMANDED.
    Darrell G. Meyer, Marshalltown, (until withdrawal), and then
    Thomas A. Hurd of Glazebrook & Hurd, LLP, Des Moines, for appellant.
    Thomas J. Miller, Attorney General, Louis S. Sloven, Assistant
    Attorney General, Alan R. Ostergren, County Attorney, and Korie L.
    Shippee, Assistant County Attorney, for appellee.
    2
    APPEL, Justice.
    In this case, an applicant for postconviction relief (PCR), Cathryn
    Ann Linn, claimed in the proceeding below that her trial counsel was
    ineffective for not adducing evidence of battered woman syndrome (BWS).1
    To prove the claim, she sought a court-appointed BWS expert.
    After Linn waited more than a year to learn whether the district
    court would appoint an expert, the State moved for summary disposition.
    The district court then denied Linn’s request to appoint an expert and, in
    the same order, cited her failure to provide an expert in granting summary
    judgment for the State.
    Linn appealed, assigning error to those rulings and claiming
    ineffective assistance of PCR counsel. The court of appeals affirmed, and
    we granted further review.
    We hold the district court abused its discretion in denying the
    expert. We also hold the summary disposition was erroneous. The district
    court’s errors include (1) viewing the facts in the light most favorable to
    the moving party instead of the nonmoving party as required by our law;
    (2) drawing inferences in favor of the movant instead of the nonmovant as
    required by our law; (3) relying on the lack of an expert in the very order
    that the court first addressed, and denied, Linn’s request for appointment
    of an expert; and (4) concluding the record did not show facts to support
    Linn’s claim that BWS should have been raised at her trial in spite of a
    trial transcript with evidence of physical, psychological, and verbal abuse
    of the type that causes BWS.
    This case does not call upon us to decide whether Linn suffered
    BWS. This is especially true on review of a summary disposition, when
    1Linn also raised other claims in the proceeding below, but her appeal does not
    address those claims. We express no opinion on the unaddressed claims.
    3
    the question before us is merely whether there is a genuine dispute that
    Linn’s trial counsel was ineffective. Answering that question requires us
    to consider whether Linn might be a BWS victim.
    We vacate the court of appeals’ decision, reverse the district court’s
    judgment, and remand to the district court for further proceedings.
    I. Factual Background.
    The summary disposition record shows the following facts. 2 Linn
    was approximately forty-two years old in 2006. She is from Muscatine
    County. Barry Blanchard was also from the Muscatine County area but
    moved around after high school. He returned to Muscatine County in the
    fall of 2006.
    Linn and Blanchard began dating in the fall of 2006. They had dated
    for a short while a couple decades earlier. Their more recent relationship
    began well, and they saw each other a lot. Linn felt they were in love. Linn
    told Jeff Scott, Blanchard’s friend, that she and Blanchard got along great
    and that she really liked him. Linn cared for Blanchard, gave him money,
    and let him use her food stamp card even though he would spend her
    money and not bring back change.                 During this time, Blanchard had
    access to most of Linn’s financial resources.
    2The  summary disposition record includes, among other things, the transcript of
    Linn’s criminal trial. The summary disposition record does not contain a number of
    pieces of evidence which the trial transcript suggests were admitted into evidence,
    including an audio recording of Linn’s 911 call, a video or audio recording from a police
    officer’s squad car and body camera or microphone, an audio recording of an interview
    with Linn at the police station, a portion of a video recording of that interview, a physical
    model of the crime scene, and photographs of Linn and the crime scene. When a PCR
    application is not accompanied by the record of the challenged proceedings, the State has
    the responsibility to file any material portion of that record. Iowa Code § 822.6 (2016).
    Our review of a summary disposition grant is limited to the record before the summary
    disposition court. See Iowa R. Civ. P. 1.981(3); Moon v. State, 
    911 N.W.2d 137
    , 142 (Iowa
    2018); Banwart v. 50th Street Sports, L.L.C., 
    910 N.W.2d 540
    , 544 (Iowa 2018). The State,
    however, did submit a copy of the court of appeals opinion on direct appeal into the PCR
    record without objection. Without deciding the issue, we consider the facts as stated in
    the court of appeals opinion to be part of the PCR record.
    4
    At the same time, Blanchard threatened and struck her. He warned,
    “[N]obody else [is] going to ever have you.” And, according to Linn’s trial
    testimony,
    He’d always – he had always told me that he would cut me
    from my [stem to stern and rape me] while I was still bleeding,
    and he had told me that [on] several occasions. Clotheslining 3
    me, making me repeat it to him. Probably more than 15,
    between 15 and 20 times I had to repeat it, or he would say it
    to me.
    Then he would kiss her.
    Blanchard also told Linn of previous violence, including that he
    killed someone in California, killed people in the military, and beat his ex-
    partner, Vicki Espinoza, “within an inch of her life.”                   An officer who
    responded to a domestic assault between Blanchard and Espinoza in 1999
    described Espinoza’s face as bloody and bruised.                      One year earlier,
    Blanchard was charged with simple assault for fighting with Espinoza’s
    ex-husband. In 1995, Blanchard dared a police officer, “Go ahead and
    mace me,” before being taken into police custody on a disorderly conduct
    charge. Blanchard warned Linn that knowing his history, she “better not
    f***ing piss him off.” Blanchard had a reputation for being tough and
    intimidating people.
    In the beginning of their relationship, Linn did not take Blanchard’s
    threats and potential for violence against her seriously. She thought he
    was showing her dominance because he knew that she liked to be
    dominated. Linn consented to certain rough sex acts with Blanchard; if
    3The meaning of the reference to “clotheslining” in the record is ambiguous. Based
    on the context in which it is used by Linn, it appears to refer to “[s]triking another person
    across the face or neck with an extended arm.”                 Clothesline (disambiguation),
    Wikipedia.org    (last   edited    May    25,     2015),    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/
    Clothesline_(disambiguation) [http://perma.cc/X2TV-3EML].             See generally Lee F.
    Peoples, The Citation of Wikipedia in Judicial Opinions, 12 Yale J.L. & Tech. 1, 50 (2009)
    (noting that Wikipedia can be useful to define slang terms and get a sense of a term’s
    common usage).
    5
    the two were already engaged in sexual intercourse she allowed Blanchard
    to put his hands around her throat to temporarily decrease oxygen flow.
    Still, Linn made clear to Blanchard that physical aggression when they
    were not having sexual intercourse was unacceptable. “[G]rabbing [Linn]
    in a physically aggressive manner” was not “part of a mating ritual.” Linn
    never had any type of physical encounter with Blanchard that would have
    led him to believe that coming into her room and strangling her was part
    of a sexual act.
    They drank to the point of intoxication much of the time they were
    together. At times, they also used methamphetamine.
    Linn owned a rifle that belonged to her ex-husband before he
    committed suicide. She knew how to use the weapon and was not afraid
    of it. She took weapons safety courses. Blanchard knew of the rifle and
    would often take it out to show off to his friends.
    After Linn and Blanchard began their relationship in the fall of 2006,
    Blanchard was arrested on Thanksgiving Day for an outstanding warrant.
    He was imprisoned for forty-five days.
    While Blanchard was in prison, he was “adamant” that “he would
    hurt [Linn] or any other individual if he found [her] with another
    individual” or “if [he] even [thought she was] with another individual.” Also
    during this time, Linn had gallbladder issues and complications from
    surgery which continued until at least February 6.
    When Blanchard got out of jail, he and Linn continued their
    relationship. Blanchard began residing at Linn’s house the day he got out
    of jail.
    Towards the end of January 2007, approximately two weeks before
    February 6, Linn told Blanchard that the relationship was not working and
    he had to move out. He acceded and continually told her that he would
    6
    move out. But during the two weeks before February 6, he did not do so.
    She “kept thinking okay, he said today’s the day, today’s the day, today’s
    the day. Two weeks . . . passed with today’s the day.” Linn made some
    calls to nearby shelters or gave Blanchard information to make the calls
    himself. Blanchard skipped appointments in which he was to talk with
    people at shelters. Linn asked him to stay with his friend Scott or with his
    family, but “he told [her] no . . . and he just did not leave.” Linn also tried
    to help Blanchard get a job, but he did not follow through.
    Once she told him that their relationship was at its end, Linn
    became scared and intimidated by Blanchard because of his threats and
    stories of previous violence. Linn explained that “during this last month
    period, and the last two-week period, . . . [she] just wanted to get out safe.
    [She] didn’t want it to ever turn violent. [She] just wanted [them] to part
    ways.” She “had no reason not to believe that he would kill [her]. . . . He
    was very adamant about letting [her] know that if [she] messed up, [she]
    would be dead.” Yet Linn did not like involving the police. And during the
    two weeks before February 6, they were not fighting to the point that she
    needed to call the police to have Blanchard removed from the home.
    Additionally, after she told Blanchard that their relationship was
    over, Linn began noticing that Blanchard was taking some of her
    possessions. These included her money, medicine, and cigarettes. She
    began hiding these things.
    On February 6, Blanchard called his friend Scott. Blanchard told
    Scott that he and Linn were splitting up, it was mutual, he was moving
    out, and he would go to California if he did not get a job within a week.
    Blanchard    also   called   Kim   Crees,   Scott’s   girlfriend   and   Linn’s
    acquaintance, that morning. He told her that he and Linn were splitting
    7
    up and they were not fighting; rather, it just was not working out and he
    was excited that he got a job for the day shoveling snow.
    Later that day, in the afternoon, Linn called Blanchard en route to
    her home after a visit to an Iowa City hospital. Blanchard told Linn that
    he could not move to a shelter because of something in his past.
    Upon Linn’s return to her home, she found Blanchard on the
    sidewalk near the house holding a shovel. Blanchard told Linn he had
    nowhere to stay that night and asked if he could sleep in her car or porch.
    Linn understood this request in the context that “he knew [her] persona
    well enough that [she] would not allow that to happen.” Linn believed
    “[Blanchard] knew [she] would say no” to him spending the night in the
    car or on the porch. Linn allowed him to spend the night on a couch in
    the living room of her home because it was bitter cold outside.       That
    allowance was not an invitation for him to spend the night in her bed or to
    have sex with her.
    Blanchard left in the afternoon to work a snow shoveling job and
    came back to her house later that evening. Because of her medical issues,
    Linn was experiencing “[n]ausea, pain. [She] couldn’t do a lot of walking
    around and lifting. [She] laid down, [she] was in bed a lot, laying down.
    Throwing up some. . . . Lots of pain.” She spent much of the afternoon
    while Blanchard was gone cuddling with her son on the couch. Blanchard
    returned to the house sometime between 6:00 p.m. and 6:30 p.m. He
    offered her the money he earned. She refused and said he should keep it
    because he was going to be starting out on his own. Linn took her son to
    his father’s house at 7:00 p.m. Linn retired to her bedroom to read while
    Blanchard listened to heavy metal music in the living room.
    Blanchard left to buy alcohol. When he returned, she heard him
    open a can, she asked if it was beer, and when he said yes, she went to
    8
    the refrigerator and retrieved one. Then she went back into her bedroom
    to read. At trial, Linn estimated it was between 8:15 p.m. and 8:30 p.m.
    at this point.
    Sometime later, Blanchard came into Linn’s room and offered her
    marijuana. She smoked some of the marijuana.
    Blanchard asked Linn to get drugs for them—“[p]robably coke or
    meth”—and became agitated when she refused.             Linn did not want to
    jeopardize her situation with her children and could not afford to spend
    any money on the drugs. Blanchard’s disposition changed and tension
    built. He kept asking her throughout the night to call someone for drugs,
    and she continued to refuse.
    Up until that point, according to Linn, they had not had “any cross
    words” all day. Yet they “were still real kind of cold with each other, him
    knowing that tomorrow he would be leaving.” Eventually, Linn went to the
    living room to talk to Blanchard. She said, “I’m not feeling good about us
    not even talking tonight,” and “[W]e’ve been in a short relationship.” Linn
    suggested, “Why don’t we just get some beer and get along tonight . . .
    instead of putting the last night that we’re going to be together into this
    feeling.” Linn explained at trial that “it was an ugly feeling for [her] inside”
    because she “did care for [Blanchard],” but she “played the tape a little bit
    farther down the road[] and was certain [there were] other issues relating
    to [their] relationship [that she] could not take . . . on.”
    They decided to try to end their relationship on friendly terms and
    drink alcohol together. So Blanchard left at about 9:40 p.m. to buy vodka,
    beer, and cigarettes. While he was out, Linn hid her billfold, food stamp
    card, and a cigarette. Blanchard arrived with alcohol and cigarettes but
    forgot some of the alcohol so he had to go back to the store.
    9
    After his return at 10 p.m., Blanchard left to walk the dog for about
    twenty minutes.     Linn stayed in the house drinking and preparing
    Blanchard’s first drink. Upon his return, the two began drinking heavily.
    Linn made him several more drinks. By the end of the night, each had a
    blood alcohol level above 0.18. No indication that either had used drugs
    was found.
    At 11:06 p.m., Blanchard called his friend Scott to say that he shot
    Linn, it was a big mess, and he needed Scott’s truck. This was a practical
    joke. Scott heard Linn laugh in the background. Scott also heard Linn
    remark that she could not believe Scott would not come help his best friend
    Blanchard dispose of her body.      Scott admonished Blanchard, telling
    Blanchard that it was wrong to call him like that. Scott recognized that
    Blanchard was drunk during the phone call.
    Blanchard and Linn were talking in the living room. A good friend
    of Linn’s called to borrow a drop cord. About seven to ten minutes later,
    the friend arrived to borrow the cord.    Linn teased the friend by first
    offering a six-inch telephone cord, then gave him the drop cord. The friend
    left. Linn sat at her end of the couch holding the telephone cord.
    Blanchard told Linn to stop swinging the telephone cord because it
    was bothering him. She responded by telling Blanchard that she did not
    like the heavy metal music that he was playing. She started asking him
    what he saw in the music and was subconsciously swinging the cord.
    “That’s when the pleasantries seemed to dissipate.”         The fact that
    Blanchard may have been homeless the next day could have also
    aggravated the situation.
    Irritated with her swinging the cord, Blanchard told her to “knock it
    the f*** off” and asked, “How many marks do you want in the morning,
    bitch?” He continued, “I’m going to leave you with marks, bitch. You
    10
    better stop swinging that, bitch.” “[She] was upset for the tone of voice,
    for the -- for the threat, because at this point past the first part of [their]
    relationship [she] knew that he meant he was going to put marks on [her]
    body.” Linn responded, “You’re not going to sit there and tell me what to
    do in my own house . . . . I can swing it if I want to . . . .” He called her a
    bitch a couple more times, she replied by calling him a bitch, and he
    retorted, “You don’t call me that.” Linn was upset and felt that Blanchard
    was going to beat her. At trial, Linn testified, “[I]t was just . . . two drunks
    saying the same thing back and forth.”
    At that point, Blanchard hit Linn in the mouth. This was not long
    after the friend came for the drop cord. Linn receded to the bedroom.
    Linn was sitting on her bed crying and scared. She did not want to
    call the police but wanted Blanchard out of the house. Blanchard was
    screaming at her from another part of the house. Among other things, he
    said, “You made me do it, you know what I’m capable of.” He also repeated
    his refrain that he would rape her dead or alive.
    At some point during the evening, Linn placed two calls to Scott.
    The trial transcript suggests the calls occurred at 11:48 p.m. One of the
    calls went to Scott’s voicemail.     Crees answered the other call.      Crees
    testified she was uncertain about the time of the calls. In the call Crees
    answered, Linn stated in a “demanding” voice that Blanchard’s friend Scott
    had to come get Blanchard. Crees asked Linn to put Blanchard on the
    phone. Linn responded that he would not get on the phone. Crees did not
    hear Blanchard say he would not get on the phone. Crees also testified,
    “[Linn] said that ‘you know me, I won’t call the’ -- I don’t know if she said
    ‘cops’ or ‘call anybody, I’ll take -- deal with it myself.’ Something to that
    effect.” Crees did not remember if there was anything more to the phone
    call or how it ended. Linn testified that those two phone calls occurred
    11
    before the shooting. Linn “was getting scared. [She] was scared.” Linn
    said that the self-help she referred to in the call was from gang members
    or other people who had previously helped her remove men from her home.
    She preferred this to involving the police, she noted, because no one would
    be arrested for drugs or drug paraphernalia.
    While Linn was seated on the bed, Blanchard abruptly entered the
    bedroom.    He sat on the bed, they talked, then he got up and began
    removing his clothing “to [rape her] dead or alive.”    The situation was
    “spinning out of control” and both were screaming.       Blanchard began
    strangling her and told Linn that he was going to have sex with her. She
    said, “No, you’re not.”
    Around this time, one of the two of them removed a rifle from the
    closet. Someone took the gun out of its case and placed it on the bed
    where both were now seated. Both began touching and handling the rifle.
    The two continued to scream and struggle with each other.
    Blanchard had one hand on Linn’s throat choking her. This was not a
    consensual sexual act, and Linn had told him on prior occasions that this
    behavior was unacceptable. She explained, “He was hurting me. It wasn’t
    the type of strangulation that we shared during intercourse. It was a more
    -- a different position of hands on my throat, a different feeling. I could
    not breathe.” Linn was frightened and tried to remove his hands so she
    could breathe. She “felt that [she] was being choked to die, or to submit.”
    She believed that Blanchard was going to kill or rape her, or both.
    Both still had their hands on the rifle. Blanchard dared Linn to
    shoot him. He said, “Do it, do it, do it, do it.” When asked on cross-
    examination whether the gun was pointed at Blanchard’s chest, Linn
    acknowledged the photos would support that conclusion. The gun went
    off and one shot was fired. Linn did not know who, if anyone, had been
    12
    struck. Linn looked and saw she had not been shot. The next thing she
    knew, Blanchard was on the floor, and she realized he was the victim of
    the weapon’s discharge.         The bullet struck Blanchard in the chest.
    Blanchard’s body had powder burns suggesting he was shot from close
    range. Linn testified, “I just wanted him out, but I didn’t intentionally kill
    him.”
    Linn called 911 at 12:02 a.m. on February 7. She testified that she
    called 911 immediately after the shooting. She was in shock. She wanted
    someone to come save Blanchard. She told the 911 operator that she shot
    Blanchard. She testified that she told this to the operator “because [she]
    was not the one laying on the ground.”
    About a minute after her 911 call, police began arriving at her house.
    Linn was still in shock and left the house screaming, “Help him, help him.”
    One police officer described Linn as “hysterical,” while another stated that
    “[s]he was very upset, crying, and appeared to be extremely confused.” She
    was outside wearing a nightgown, and officers retrieved some boots and a
    coat for her. Police entered the residence and found Blanchard’s body in
    the bedroom. The rifle and a gun case were on the bed.
    While the officers investigated, Linn was outside on the porch. An
    officer inside yelled out, “Is she saying she shot him?” The question was
    posed to Linn, who answered, “Yes.” Linn further stated, “I only had one
    gun and one bullet, and I shot him because he was not being nice to me.”
    As one officer walked Linn to the squad car,
    she was ranting about the subject not hurting her again,
    making statements that he’d hurt her in the past and was
    going to hurt her tonight, and it was all over, and she’d asked
    . . . if he was dead and [the police officer] said that [he] believed
    he was.
    13
    On the drive to the police station, Linn asked the police officer
    driving her if Blanchard had died. The officer replied that he did not know.
    Linn also stated, “My life has ended up as [a] murder.”
    At the police station, Detective Lawrence interviewed Linn for
    approximately four hours. He employed the Reid technique4 as modified
    by his prior experience and his observations of Linn. According to the
    opinion of the court of appeals, Linn asked during the interview, “Did I kill
    him?” and “Did he die?” The detective untruthfully told her that he did
    not know. The court of appeals also stated that during the interview, Linn
    admitted to threatening Blanchard with the rifle. 5
    Apparently Linn stated during the interview that she got the gun out
    of the closet and that she and Blanchard were playing around with the
    gun on the bed. At times, according to Detective Lawrence, Linn noted
    that she was not afraid of anyone and was not afraid of Blanchard. Also,
    according to the court of appeals, Linn stated that she told Blanchard no
    one was going to tell her what to do in her house. But she also averred
    that he was strangling her. Additionally, according to Detective Lawrence,
    “She also made mention during that interview that the reason why she
    knew she could have balls that big is because she knew that there was a
    gun back there that she [could] go get.” There were some things Linn
    stated she did not know to which Detective Lawrence thought she had to
    4The  Reid technique is an interrogation method that seeks to deprive the person
    being interrogated of every psychological advantage and is “designed to put the subject
    in a psychological state where his story is but an elaboration of what the police purport
    to know already—that he is guilty. Explanations to the contrary are dismissed and
    discouraged.” Miranda v. Arizona, 
    384 U.S. 436
    , 449–50, 
    86 S. Ct. 1602
    , 1615 (1966);
    see State v. Pearson, 
    804 N.W.2d 260
    , 267 n.2 (Iowa 2011) (discussing the Reid
    interrogation technique).
    5The PCR record does not contain any record of the transcript of Linn’s
    interrogation or of Linn’s 911 call to the police. As a result, no member of this court is
    in a position to determine independently the accuracy or completeness of the description
    contained in the opinion of the court of appeals on direct review.
    14
    know the answer, such as who loaded the weapon.           Throughout her
    testimony at trial, Linn repeatedly stated that she was drunk during the
    interview, did not remember the interview, and could not explain what was
    going through her mind when she made statements during the interview.
    During the interview, Detective Lawrence sought to determine
    whether there was a history of domestic abuse. To do so, he asked Linn
    what she wears to bed at night and her sexual history with Blanchard. He
    did not determine anything from his questions because, in his view, there
    were a lot of inconsistencies.
    The State charged Linn with first-degree murder. During her trial,
    Linn asserted the shooting was justified as self-defense. She also asserted
    the shooting was an accident. No BWS expert witness was called, and
    BWS was not raised as part of her defense.
    After the trial, the jurors deliberated for about three-and-a-half
    hours.   The jury found Linn guilty of first-degree murder.      She was
    sentenced to life imprisonment. Her conviction was affirmed on appeal.
    Linn v. State, No. 07–1984, 
    2009 WL 605968
    , at *1 (Iowa Ct. App. Mar. 11,
    2009).
    II. Procedural Background.
    In 2009, Linn applied pro se for postconviction relief. She asserted,
    among other claims, that her trial counsel was ineffective for not raising
    BWS in her trial or seeking to admit BWS evidence. She noted that she
    had asked the trial counsel to put BWS evidence into the trial. She also
    stated that an evaluation regarding BWS and her mental health was not
    attached to the postconviction application.
    For six years after Linn’s initial PCR application, no action was
    taken. The State never filed an answer. Meanwhile, a number of court-
    appointed attorneys were replaced.
    15
    In 2015, Linn filed an “application for authority to retain [an] expert
    on battered woman syndrome.” She cited our opinion in State v. Frei, 
    831 N.W.2d 70
    , 74 (Iowa 2013), overruled on other grounds by Alcala v. Marriott
    Int’l, Inc., 
    880 N.W.2d 699
    , 708 & n.3 (Iowa 2016), contending that the
    decision supports her position that expert BWS testimony is relevant to a
    justification defense. Linn asserted,
    [I]n order to determine whether trial counsel was ineffective in
    failing to call an expert witness to testify regarding [BWS] and
    its relevancy to [her] justification defense, it is necessary for
    PCR counsel to retain an expert to review the reports and
    transcripts relevant to this issue, and to discuss said issue
    with PCR counsel and, if requested, to provide a report setting
    out the same.
    She also stated that Lauri Schipper, a sociology professor at the University
    of Iowa, was willing to serve as her BWS expert and noted that we
    previously found Schipper to be a BWS expert in State v. Griffin, 
    564 N.W.2d 370
    , 374 (Iowa 1997).        Finally, Linn contended that it was
    necessary and in the interests of justice to grant her request to retain the
    BWS expert at public expense because Linn was incarcerated, indigent,
    and could not reasonably afford to retain the expert. Thus, she requested
    approval to retain the professor and incur costs up to $2500.
    On July 21, 2016, a few months after appointment of a new attorney,
    Linn amended her PCR application. She asserted that her trial counsel
    failed to perform an essential duty by not investigating BWS and not
    advising her on the wisdom of presenting BWS evidence, especially since
    Linn asked trial counsel to investigate BWS.       Linn asserted that trial
    counsel’s failure prejudiced her because important factors surrounding
    the circumstances of Blanchard’s death were not presented to the jury.
    Consequently, she said, she was deprived of effective counsel guaranteed
    by the Sixth Amendment. See U.S. Const. amend. VI.
    16
    The next day, the State served interrogatories on Linn. The State
    asked Linn to identify the facts that would have supported the use of BWS
    as a defense strategy. The State also asked Linn to identify any BWS
    expert who would testify in the PCR proceeding.        Linn responded on
    September 8 that her investigation was ongoing and she would
    supplement the response.
    On September 19, the State filed a motion for summary disposition.
    The State argued there were no material facts in dispute, pointing to Linn’s
    discovery responses. The State also contended that Linn would be unable
    to show that her attorney was ineffective because BWS would have been
    inconsistent with her theory at trial that the shooting was an accident and,
    therefore, the failure to present BWS was a strategic decision. Attached to
    the State’s motion were the transcript of Linn’s trial, the court of appeals
    2009 decision affirming her conviction on direct appeal, and Linn’s
    interrogatory responses.
    On November 10, Linn again moved for a court-appointed expert.
    Noting that her claim involved technical medical expertise regarding BWS,
    she explained that neither she nor her attorney had the expertise required
    to evaluate the claim. She stated that she had found another BWS expert
    willing to provide the court “an objective written assessment” for $4000.
    On December 1, Linn filed a resistance to the State’s motion. She
    argued that a genuine issue of material fact still existed.       She also
    contended that granting the State’s motion would not afford her the
    opportunity to be heard on her claims. Linn attached her amended PCR
    application, but nothing else, to her resistance.
    The State replied one day later, observing that Linn failed to present
    materials in support of her claim. The State also contended that because
    17
    she ultimately bears the burden of proof, she could not wait until the
    hearing to share her evidence.
    One week later, the trial court granted the State’s motion for
    summary disposition. The court said,
    Viewing the record in the light most favorable to the moving
    party the Court finds that the general statements in the
    Applicant’s original and amended Application for Relief do not
    set forth specific facts showing any genuine issue of material
    facts. . . . She ha[s] not provided the Court with any affidavits
    or other materials which would tend to show the existence of
    a factual dispute.
    The court then turned to specifically address Linn’s claim regarding BWS,
    stating that
    Linn’s claim that trial counsel was ineffective for failing to
    raise [BWS] fails. She provides no information as to what facts
    were available to her trial counsel to support such a claim.
    She provides no expert witness testimony by affidavit to
    explain how a jury might have been told that the syndrome
    was relevant. And, more importantly, the State of Iowa
    correctly notes that such syndrome evidence would have been
    inconsistent with her trial testimony about the nature of the
    shooting. Linn cannot demonstrate that her trial counsel’s
    performance was deficient and there is no evidence of
    resulting prejudice.
    In its decision, the court also denied Linn’s motion to retain an expert at
    state expense.       Thus, the district court must have been aware of the
    pending motion at the time of its decision. 6
    Linn appealed. She asserted the trial court erred in finding there
    was no information available to trial counsel to support BWS, granting
    summary disposition for want of an expert while simultaneously denying
    her request for court funds to retain an expert, and concluding summary
    disposition was warranted because BWS was inconsistent with her
    6Notwithstanding  the facts of this case, we believe that, in general, district court
    judges have the responsibility to be aware of pending motions or to ask the parties about
    pending motions before commencing a hearing or finally adjudicating a proceeding.
    18
    defense. She also asserted that her PCR counsel was ineffective in failing
    to set forth evidence to resist the State’s motion for summary disposition.
    The court of appeals affirmed the trial court’s order. The court of
    appeals acknowledged that the evidence could both support and disprove
    a BWS-supported claim of self-defense. Given the countervailing evidence,
    the court of appeals found Linn’s claim “unpersuasive.”            The court of
    appeals further stated Linn could not show she was prejudiced by her
    counsel’s failure and she had not “created” a material issue of fact. In
    addition, the court of appeals stated that any error in refusing to appoint
    a BWS expert in the PCR proceeding was harmless because it would not
    have changed the result of Linn’s jury trial. The court of appeals also
    rejected Linn’s claim that her PCR counsel was ineffective.
    Linn applied for further review. We granted the application.
    III. Applicable Legal Standards.
    A. Standards       of   Review.        We   ordinarily   review    summary
    dispositions of PCR applications for correction of errors at law. Moon v.
    State, 
    911 N.W.2d 137
    , 142 (Iowa 2018); Castro v. State, 
    795 N.W.2d 789
    ,
    792 (Iowa 2011).    However, our review is de novo when the basis for
    postconviction relief implicates a constitutional violation.            
    Moon, 911 N.W.2d at 142
    ; 
    Castro, 795 N.W.2d at 792
    .            PCR applications alleging
    ineffective assistance of counsel raise a constitutional claim. 
    Castro, 795 N.W.2d at 792
    . We review decisions on appointment of an expert for abuse
    of discretion. See State v. Dahl, 
    874 N.W.2d 348
    , 352 (Iowa 2016).
    B. Standard for Summary Disposition. The legislature provided
    for summary disposition of PCR proceedings in Iowa Code section 822.6.
    That provision states,
    The court may grant a motion by either party for
    summary disposition of the application, when it appears from
    the pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories, and
    19
    admissions and agreements of fact, together with any
    affidavits submitted, that there is no genuine issue of material
    fact and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter
    of law.
    
    Id. The goal
    of that provision “is to provide a method of disposition once
    the case has been fully developed by both sides, but before an actual trial.”
    Manning v. State, 
    654 N.W.2d 555
    , 559 (Iowa 2002) (quoting Hines v. State,
    
    288 N.W.2d 344
    , 346 (Iowa 1980)).
    “We   apply   our   summary     judgment    standards   to   summary
    disposition of postconviction-relief applications.”   
    Moon, 911 N.W.2d at 142
    . “[F]or a summary disposition to be proper, the State must be able to
    prevail as if it were filing a motion for summary judgment in a civil
    proceeding.” Schmidt v. State, 
    909 N.W.2d 778
    , 784 (Iowa 2018).
    A court examining the propriety of summary judgment must “view
    the entire record in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party.” Bass
    v. J.C. Penney Co., 
    880 N.W.2d 751
    , 755 (Iowa 2016). The court must also
    indulge on behalf of the nonmoving party every legitimate inference
    reasonably deduced from the record in an effort to ascertain the existence
    of a fact question. Bagelmann v. First Nat’l Bank, 
    823 N.W.2d 18
    , 20 (Iowa
    2012); Crippen v. City of Cedar Rapids, 
    618 N.W.2d 562
    , 565 (Iowa 2000).
    Summary judgment is appropriate if the record “show[s] that there
    is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is
    entitled to a judgment as a matter of law.”       Iowa R. Civ. P. 1.981(3);
    Banwart v. 50th Street Sports, L.L.C., 
    910 N.W.2d 540
    , 544 (Iowa 2018).
    “We examine the record to determine whether a material fact is in
    dispute . . . .” Ranes v. Adams Labs., Inc., 
    778 N.W.2d 677
    , 685 (Iowa
    2010). “Even if the facts are undisputed, summary judgment is not proper
    if reasonable minds could draw different inferences from them and thereby
    20
    reach different conclusions.” 
    Banwart, 910 N.W.2d at 544
    –45 (quoting
    Clinkscales v. Nelson Sec., Inc., 
    697 N.W.2d 836
    , 841 (Iowa 2005)).
    In ruling on a motion for summary judgment, the court does not
    weigh the evidence. 
    Clinkscales, 697 N.W.2d at 841
    ; Bitner v. Ottumwa
    Cmty. Sch. Dist., 
    549 N.W.2d 295
    , 300 (Iowa 1996). Instead, the court
    inquires whether a reasonable jury, faced with the evidence presented,
    could return a verdict for the nonmoving party. 
    Clinkscales, 697 N.W.2d at 841
    ; 
    Bitner, 549 N.W.2d at 300
    . When the record taken as a whole
    could lead a rational trier of fact to find for the nonmoving party, there is
    a genuine issue for trial.   
    Bitner, 549 N.W.2d at 300
    .      The burden of
    showing undisputed facts entitling the moving party to summary judgment
    rests with the moving party. 
    Castro, 795 N.W.2d at 792
    .
    C. Standard for Ineffective Assistance of Counsel Under the
    Sixth Amendment. Where, as here, a party seeks relief under a provision
    of the Federal Constitution, our analysis turns on that federal
    constitutional provision. See State v. Prusha, 
    874 N.W.2d 627
    , 630 (Iowa
    2016). To succeed on a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel under
    the Sixth Amendment as applied to the states under the Fourteenth
    Amendment, a claimant must establish by a preponderance of the
    evidence that (1) trial counsel failed to perform an essential duty and (2)
    this failure resulted in prejudice. See State v. Thorndike, 
    860 N.W.2d 316
    ,
    319–20 & n.1 (Iowa 2015); accord Strickland v. Washington, 
    466 U.S. 668
    ,
    687, 
    104 S. Ct. 2052
    , 2064 (1984).
    “Under the first prong, ‘we measure counsel’s performance against
    the standard of a reasonably competent practitioner.’ ” 
    Thorndike, 860 N.W.2d at 320
    (quoting State v. Clay, 
    824 N.W.2d 488
    , 495 (Iowa 2012)).
    We presume counsel acted competently, but that presumption is overcome
    if we determine the claimant has proved by a preponderance of the
    21
    evidence that counsel failed to perform an essential duty. 
    Id. “We assess
    counsel’s performance ‘objectively by determining whether [it] was
    reasonable, under prevailing professional norms, considering all the
    circumstances.’ ” 
    Id. (alteration in
    original) (quoting State v. Lyman, 
    776 N.W.2d 865
    , 878 (Iowa 2010), overruled on other grounds by 
    Alcala, 880 N.W.2d at 708
    & n.3).
    “Under the second prong, the claimant must establish that prejudice
    resulted from counsel’s failure to perform an essential duty.” 
    Id. “The claimant
    must show ‘counsel’s errors were so serious as to deprive [him or
    her] of a fair trial.’ ” 
    Id. (alteration in
    original) (quoting 
    Strickland, 466 U.S. at 687
    , 104 S. Ct. at 2064).            “[T]he effect must be affirmatively
    demonstrated by showing ‘there is a reasonable probability that, but for
    counsel’s unprofessional errors, the result of the proceeding would have
    been different.’ ” 
    Id. (quoting Strickland,
    466 U.S. at 
    694, 104 S. Ct. at 2068
    ). “A reasonable probability is a probability sufficient to undermine
    confidence in the outcome.” 
    Id. (quoting Strickland,
    466 U.S. at 
    694, 104 S. Ct. at 2068
    ). “The likelihood of a different result need not be more
    probable than not, but it must be substantial, not just conceivable.” King
    v. State, 
    797 N.W.2d 565
    , 572 (Iowa 2011).           “The ultimate question is
    ‘whether there is a reasonable probability that, absent the errors, the
    factfinder would have had a reasonable doubt respecting guilt.’ ”
    
    Thorndike, 860 N.W.2d at 320
    (quoting 
    Strickland, 466 U.S. at 695
    , 104
    S. Ct. at 2068–69). We may find prejudice where, but for counsel’s breach
    of an essential duty, there is a reasonable probability that the defendant
    would have been convicted of a lesser charge or sentenced to less prison
    time. See Missouri v. Frye, 
    566 U.S. 134
    , 147, 
    132 S. Ct. 1399
    , 1409
    (2012).
    22
    IV. Overview of Battered Spouse Syndrome.
    A. Introduction. This case requires us to review the content and
    context of BWS.     The district court and the State evince fundamental
    misapprehensions about BWS. Relying on those misapprehensions, the
    district court and the State misunderstand the facts in this case and
    misapply legal requirements.
    The district court believed—in spite of a trial transcript with
    indications of Blanchard’s verbal, psychological, and physical abuse
    toward Linn—“[s]he provides no information as to what facts were
    available to her trial counsel to support” her claim that BWS should have
    been raised at her trial. Blanchard’s physical abuse includes, at least,
    choking, hitting, “hurt[ing],” and more than a dozen instances of
    clotheslining. That physical abuse is consistent with the type of abuse
    that causes BWS. Elizabeth Dermody Leonard, Convicted Survivors: The
    Imprisonment of Battered Women Who Kill 29 (2002) [hereinafter Leonard]
    (“[T]ypical battering episodes involve slaps, punches, kicking, stomping,
    and choking.”).
    Blanchard’s verbal and psychological abuse include threats to cut
    Linn up the length of her body and rape her while she was still bleeding,
    threats to “hurt [Linn] or any other individual . . . if [Blanchard] even
    think[s] [she is] with another individual,” intimations that “nobody else [is]
    going to ever have you,” warnings that she “better not f***ing piss him off”
    in light of his history of violence, and thefts of her property. That pattern
    of abuse is also the type that causes BWS. Leonard at 15–16 (explaining
    that forms of psychological abuse include threats to kill or harm a woman
    or her children, property destruction, verbal abuse, required secrecy, and
    fear arousal); Lenore E.A. Walker, The Battered Woman Syndrome 9, 21,
    92 (4th ed. 2017) [hereinafter Walker] (explaining that batterers use
    23
    jealousy to justify further abuse and “in the psychological domain, the
    significant portion of battered women experienced being cursed at,
    humiliated, and having controlling partners”).
    Although Linn’s claim does not only depend on psychological abuse,
    it is notable that courts and commentators explain that psychological
    abuse alone can cause BWS. Nguyen v. State, 
    520 S.E.2d 907
    , 908 (Ga.
    1999) (holding that psychological abuse accompanied “by other acts or
    verbal statements giving rise to a reasonable fear of imminent physical
    harm” warrants introduction of BWS testimony); Walker at 9, 21, 92
    (explaining that either psychological or physical abuse can independently
    cause BWS); Kent M. Williams, Using Battered Woman Syndrome Evidence
    with a Self-Defense Strategy in Minnesota, 10 L. & Ineq. 107, 110 (1992)
    [hereinafter Williams] (“[A] woman need not be physically injured by the
    batterer, although some sort of physical abuse usually accompanies the
    psychological harm inflicted.” (Footnote omitted.)).    An “emphasis on
    severe violence, injury, and traumatically induced dependence (or
    helplessness) would . . . miss[] the most important dimensions of [a
    battered person’s] entrapment, the deprivation of liberty due to ongoing
    intimidation, isolation, and control.” Evan Stark, Re-Presenting Woman
    Battering: From Battered Woman Syndrome to Coercive Control, 58 Alb. L.
    Rev. 973, 1005 (1995) [hereinafter Stark]. In different circumstances, we
    have noted that “scholars have opined the definition of ‘force’ should
    include psychological force” and “conclude[d] psychological force . . . may
    give rise to a conviction under the ‘against the will’ element of [sexual
    abuse in the third degree].” State v. Meyers, 
    799 N.W.2d 132
    , 145–46
    (Iowa 2011).
    Taking a different tack, the State argues that BWS testimony was
    unneeded in Linn’s trial because the jury could consider the facts of
    24
    Blanchard’s abuse without the testimony. Yet the most important role for
    BWS testimony is to contextualize such facts, U.S. Dep’t of Justice & U.S.
    Dep’t of Health & Human Servs., The Validity and Use of Evidence
    Concerning Battering and Its Effects in Criminal Trials: Report Responding
    to Section 40507 of the Violence Against Women Act vii (1996) [hereinafter
    DOJ Report], and we have previously held that trial courts properly
    admitted BWS testimony for such a purpose, see State v. Rodriquez, 
    636 N.W.2d 234
    , 245–46 (Iowa 2001); 
    Griffin, 564 N.W.2d at 374
    –75.
    Additionally, invoking what is perhaps the most common myth
    associated with battering victims—they can simply end the battering by
    leaving the relationship, see State v. Ordway, 
    619 A.2d 819
    , 827 (R.I.
    1992); Leonard at 30—the State asks us to find that BWS testimony could
    not have changed the result of Linn’s trial because she told Blanchard the
    relationship was over and allowed him to stay the night. “[S]tatistically, a
    battered woman is in the most danger when she tries to leave an abusive
    relationship.”   
    Rodriquez, 636 N.W.2d at 245
    (noting testimony by
    Muscatine County expert).
    Further, although the State concedes that “BWS evidence would
    likely have been admissible and potentially relevant to bolster a
    justification defense,” the State tells us this was “not a BWS case” on the
    ground that Blanchard’s death occurred while he was choking Linn and
    threatening her with rape, death, or both.          Contrary to common
    assumptions, BWS victims are most likely to use lethal violence against a
    batterer during an attack in which they perceive a threat of immediate
    harm, Sanford H. Kadish et al., Criminal Law and Its Processes: Cases and
    Materials 855 (9th ed. 2012) [hereinafter Kadish]; Leonard at 25, and in
    any case, “expert testimony can aid in cautioning jurors that the behavior
    of battered women should not be lightly dismissed as inherently
    25
    unreasonable,” 
    Frei, 831 N.W.2d at 75
    .        By ignoring the abundant
    literature showing that BWS victims do not fit a stereotype, Leonard at 4;
    Brenda L. Russell, Battered Woman Syndrome as a Legal Defense: History,
    Effectiveness and Implications 13–16, 74, 80–89, 96, 191, 203 (2010)
    [hereinafter Russell]; Walker at 12, 18, the State seems to “pretend to
    accept the legitimacy of a true battered woman’s self-defense, as well as
    the accompanying expert testimony, but structure[s] [its] opposition to the
    defense by asserting that the woman in question ‘does not fit the mold.’ ”
    Michael Dowd, Dispelling the Myths About the “Battered Woman’s
    Defense”: Towards a New Understanding, 19 Fordham Urb. L.J. 567, 581
    (1992) [hereinafter Dowd].
    As is evident, a proper understanding of BWS is essential to
    determine the merits of this case.       Therefore, we consider whether
    summary disposition was properly granted after reviewing the literature
    and caselaw on BWS.
    B. History of Legal Treatment of Domestic Abuse.           The law’s
    historical treatment of domestic abuse, and its response, is wretched. In
    the past, “[i]f a woman showed any signs of having a will of her own, the
    husband was expected by both church and state to chastise her for
    transgressions.” U.S. Comm’n on Civil Rights, Under the Rule of Thumb:
    Battered Women and the Administration of Justice 1 (1982) [hereinafter
    U.S. Comm’n on Civil Rights]. Hammurabi’s Code permitted a husband to
    inflict punishment on his wife for any transgression.      Russell at 29.
    Roman law permitted a husband to discipline his wife by blackening her
    eyes or breaking her nose. Dowd, 19 Fordham Urb. L.J. at 568. In many
    parts of Europe, a man could kill his wife without legal punishment well
    into the 1600s. 
    Id. 26 British
    common law allowed wife beating but, in an act of
    “compassion,” limited the husband to a “rod not thicker than his thumb.”
    Leonard at 13. Additionally, under the common law in Britain, a man who
    killed his wife was charged with homicide, while a woman who killed her
    husband was charged with treason punishable by burning at the stake
    because her act of homicide was considered analogous to murdering the
    king. Id.; Dowd, 19 Fordham Urb. L.J. at 568.
    Early American law was hardly any better, generally following the
    British tradition of allowing a husband to discipline his wife. Leonard at
    13; Russell at 30; see, e.g., Bradley v. State, 
    1 Miss. 156
    , 158 (1824)
    (allowing a husband to inflict “moderate chastisement” and “salutary
    restraints” because “vexatious prosecutions” would “result[] in the mutual
    discredit and shame of all parties concerned”); State v. Black, 
    60 N.C. 262
    ,
    267 (1864) (stating that “the law will not invade the domestic forum or go
    behind the curtain” unless there is an excess of violence). The “Pilgrims
    of Plymouth Colony in Massachusetts actually enacted the first laws in the
    world that denounced domestic violence and made battering illegal,” but
    these laws were symbolic—between the years 1633 and 1802 only twelve
    cases of domestic violence were brought to the courts while religious beliefs
    permitted moderate forms of battering. Russell at 29.
    The legal permission for a husband to beat his wife began to
    disappear in the latter part of the nineteenth century. U.S. Comm’n on
    Civil Rights at 2. But until the 1980s, the law generally continued to turn
    a blind eye. 
    Id. at ii;
    Reva B. Siegel, “The Rule of Love”: Wife Beating as
    Prerogative and Privacy, 105 Yale L.J. 2117, 2118 (1996) [hereinafter
    Siegel].   “[M]any police departments had rules expressly discouraging
    officers from making an arrest in response to a domestic violence
    complaint. The battered woman’s perception that legal authorities offered
    27
    no recourse often was well grounded in fact.” Kadish at 838. And when
    women fought back and killed their abusers, they “encountered a system
    of justice that prosecuted them with a . . . quickness and efficiency never
    provided when the circumstances were reversed.” Dowd, 19 Fordham Urb.
    L.J. at 570.   The society that tolerated wife beating did not tolerate a
    woman fighting back. 
    Id. American policing
    and prosecution of domestic abuse began to
    change in the 1970s. Russell at 31–32; see also State v. Cashen, 
    789 N.W.2d 400
    , 416 (Iowa 2010) (Cady, J., dissenting) (“While domestic abuse
    was rarely prosecuted as a crime in the not-too-distant past, it is now a
    common subject of civil and criminal enforcement in this state and
    nationwide.”). Authorities are still figuring out the appropriate way to deal
    with domestic violence. Kadish at 838–40; Leonard at 18; Siegel at 2119.
    But the problem has not gone away. “[T]he historical legacy of the
    legalized injustices of pre-modern times documents a societal ideology that
    is not easily erased.   In spite of more recent liberations, violence has
    persisted.” Russell at 30. “In the United States, women are more likely to
    be attacked, injured, raped, or killed by a current or former male partner
    than by all other types of assailants combined.” Leonard at 3. “Between
    1976 and 1996, intimates murdered 6 out of every 100 male victims and
    30 out of every 100 female victims.” 
    Id. at 8.
    “The average prison sentence of men who kill their women
    partners is 2 to 6 years. Women who kill their male partners
    are sentenced on average to 15 years, despite the fact that
    most women who kill do so in self-defense.”
    Fact Sheet on Battered Women in Prison, Purple Berets (last modified
    Mar. 19, 2003), http://www.purpleberets.org/pdf/bat_women_prison.pdf.
    The situation in Iowa is similar and in some respects worse.
    “Domestic abuse against women is a serious problem in Iowa and the
    28
    nation as a whole.” In re J.P., 
    574 N.W.2d 340
    , 344 (Iowa 1998). “In Iowa,
    statistics show that from 1990 to 1993, domestic abuse civil filings rose
    from 188 to 2677.” 
    Cashen, 789 N.W.2d at 416
    n.6. In 2010, among the
    24,000 reports of domestic abuse in Iowa, approximately eighty percent to
    eighty-five percent were crimes against women. Ashley D. Brosius, Note,
    An Iowa Law in Need of Imminent Change: Redefining the Temporal
    Proximity of Force to Account for Victims of Intimate Partner Violence Who
    Kill in Non-Confrontational Self-Defense, 
    100 Iowa L
    . Rev. 775, 784 (2015).
    That same year, abuse victims in Iowa made approximately 72,000 crisis
    calls and spent almost 100,000 nights in a domestic violence shelter. 
    Id. at 785.
    Funding cuts have resulted in the closure of eleven victim service
    programs in Iowa. 
    Id. “Iowa has
    one of the lowest funding rates for victim
    services nationwide.” 
    Id. at 786.
    C. Who Are BWS Victims? In the 1970s, battered women who
    defended themselves against their husbands’ violence began to assert that
    their actions were justified.   Cynthia K. Gillespie, Justifiable Homicide:
    Battered Women, Self-Defense, and the Law 9–10 (1989) [hereinafter
    Gillespie]. “That women killed their husbands was not new; that they
    argued they had a right to do so definitely was.” 
    Id. at 10.
    The BWS theory became part of our collective discourse with the
    1979 publication of Dr. Lenore Walker’s The Battered Woman. See Walker
    at 5. Dr. Walker conceived “battered woman syndrome” as
    the pattern of the signs and symptoms that have been found
    to occur after a woman has been physically, sexually, and/or
    psychologically abused in an intimate relationship, when the
    partner (usually, but not always, a man) exerted power and
    control over the woman to coerce her into doing whatever he
    wanted, without regard for her rights or feelings.
    
    Id. at 49–50.
    Walker predicted a recurring cycle of three phases to BWS.
    These are (1) tension building accompanied with rising sense of danger,
    29
    (2) an acute battering incident, and (3) loving contrition. See 
    id. at 94.
    Walker stated that the loving contrition phase would engender “learned
    helplessness” and lead a battered woman to stay in the relationship. See
    
    id. (emphasis added).
    Walker stated in 1979 that a woman had to go
    through the cycle twice before being classified as a battered woman.
    Russell at 93.
    In response to Walker’s work, many researchers urged caution in
    adopting a single notion of a BWS victim. See, e.g., 
    id. at 19;
    Phyllis L.
    Crocker, The Meaning of Equality for Battered Women Who Kill Men in Self-
    Defense, 8 Harv. Women’s L.J. 121, 137 (1985) [hereinafter Crocker];
    Dowd, 19 Fordham Urb. L.J. at 581; Brenda L. Russell & Linda S. Melillo,
    Attitudes Toward Battered Women Who Kill: Defendant Typicality and
    Judgments of Culpability, 33 Crim. Just. & Behav. 219, 219 (2006)
    [hereinafter Russell & Melillo]. They generally warned that “the syndrome
    would lead to a stereotype all battered women would be expected to fit,”
    that battered victims with characteristics and experiences considered
    atypical may be disbelieved because of that atypicality, and that “jurors
    may judge them more harshly if they do not fit their perceptions of what a
    battered woman should be.” Russell at 7.
    Later scholarship has confirmed the foresight of those warnings. In
    one study, people were less likely to find a woman guilty whose
    characteristics coincided with those of their preconceived notion of a
    battered woman: bruised, small in stature, thin or overweight, fragile,
    weary, fearful, poor, and appeasing. Russell & Melillo, 33 Crim. Just. &
    Behav. at 219, 225–26.      Another study “found that the further the
    defendant moved away from jurors’ beliefs about what a battered woman
    should be, the harsher their verdicts became.” Russell at 56.
    30
    BWS victims do not fit a stereotype. Woman battering crosses all
    racial, ethnic, religious, socioeconomic, educational, and age groups.
    Leonard at 4; Russell at 13, 74, 80–89, 191. A large number of BWS
    victims are “intelligent, well-educated, competent people, some of whom
    also h[o]ld responsible jobs” and “appear[] to be just like other people,
    when the batterers’ possessiveness and need for control [a]re contained.”
    Walker at 12, 18. Some are passive and financially dependent, Russell at
    13, while some fight back, 
    id. at 96.
    Battering afflicts women in both
    urban and rural communities. Wendy Boka, Note, Domestic Violence in
    Farming Communities: Overcoming the Unique Problems Posed by the Rural
    Setting, 9 Drake J. Agric. L. 389, 413 (2004).     A Victorian distinction
    between “respectable women” and “rough women” is inapposite because
    both can suffer BWS. See Stark, 58 Alb. L. Rev. at 1019.
    Further, Walker’s prediction that all BWS victims encounter a
    similar cycle of violence has not stood the test of time. Empirical research
    has found that “only 65% of the cases involved a tension-building stage
    prior to the battering, and in only 58% of the cases did a period of loving
    contrition follow the battering incident.” Regina A. Schuller & Neil Vidmar,
    Battered Woman Syndrome Evidence in the Courtroom: A Review of the
    Literature, 16 L. & Hum. Behav. 273, 280 (1992) [hereinafter Schuller &
    Vidmar]. As numerous commentators have observed, Walker’s prediction
    about the cycle of violence was based on a “lack of control groups,
    problems with interviewing methods and data analysis, and absence of
    data supporting some of her conclusions.” Jane K. Stoever, Transforming
    Domestic Violence Representation, 101 Ky. L.J. 483, 508 (2012) (footnotes
    omitted). The prediction “suggests there is one set of effects of battering;
    promotes an image of battered women as ‘helpless, meek, and unreliable
    agents’; and discounts the experiences of those who do not fit into the
    31
    model.”      
    Id. (footnotes omitted).
           Some prosecutors recognize the
    deficiencies in the cycle of violence theory and the presence of alternative
    explanations:
    The parameters and definition of Battered Woman Syndrome
    (BWS) have evolved since Lenore Walker’s initial definition.
    Particularly significant to the evolution of knowledge about
    battered women is the acknowledgement that each battered
    woman’s experience is different. As a result, it is understood
    that not all battered women experience a cycle of violence.
    Similarly, it is also recognized that the cycle of violence is only
    one of several theories regarding the dynamics of domestic
    violence. For example, the theories of “power and control” and
    “a continuum of violence” are both accepted as alternative
    descriptions of domestic violence dynamics. The theory of
    power and control describes the physical, psychological,
    emotional and financial ways in which a batterer controls his
    partner in a domestic violence relationship. The theory of a
    continuum of violence describes intimate partner violence
    that is constant and is expressed as verbal abuse to low level
    violence through serious assaults or possibly homicide,
    throughout the course of the relationship.
    Jennifer Gentile Long & Dawn Doran Wilsey, Understanding Battered
    Woman Syndrome and Its Application to the Duress Defense, 40-APR
    Prosecutor 36, 37 (2006).
    Walker’s cycle of violence theory is also based on, and fosters, a
    classical and wrong view of women as lacking capacity to make rational
    decisions.     The theory disregards, as further discussed below, the
    escalation in violence faced by BWS victims who try to leave their abuser,
    see 
    Rodriquez, 636 N.W.2d at 245
    , and the rational choice that women
    make to stay in the relationship because of the danger in leaving or
    economic, social, and other costs, Russell at 81; Alafair S. Burke, Rational
    Actors, Self-Defense, and Duress: Making Sense, Not Syndromes, Out of the
    Battered Woman, 
    81 N.C. L
    . Rev. 211, 266 (2002) [hereinafter Burke].
    Moreover, the notion that BWS victims will hew to a pattern of
    reconciliation and further abuse ignores that many BWS victims leave the
    32
    relationship after repeated failed attempts. Russell at 80–81. Reliance on
    Walker’s cycle of violence theory can lead courts astray by, for example,
    taking away a woman’s custody of her children under the view that the
    woman would necessarily continue to reconcile with her abusive husband
    and thereby endanger her children. In re Betty J.W., 
    371 S.E.2d 326
    , 331–
    33 (W. Va. 1988) (reversing trial court determination that BWS victim
    could not be trusted to protect children); see Rebecca D. Cornia, Current
    Use of Battered Woman Syndrome: Institutionalization of Negative
    Stereotypes About Women, 8 UCLA Women’s L.J. 99, 111–17 (1997)
    (examining similar cases).
    Further noteworthy in regard to Walker’s cycle of violence theory is
    that BWS can arise in both short-term and long-term intimate
    relationships.   “[W]omen who have experienced mistreatment during a
    short period can suffer psychological consequences as serious as those
    who have suffered in this situation for years.” Diva Estela Jaramillo et al.,
    Measurement of Psychological Distress in Battered Women, 37 Colombia
    Medica 133, 135 (2006) (translated). Roughly forty percent of individuals
    who experience intimate partner abuse are victimized “over a relatively
    short time period.” Evan Stark, Coercive Control: How Men Entrap Women
    in Personal Life 52 (2007) [hereinafter Stark, Coercive Control]. It is difficult
    to speculate, based solely on the duration of the relationship, what effect
    such abuse had on an individual. Leslie A. Sackett & Daniel G. Saunders,
    The Impact of Different Forms of Psychological Abuse on Battered Women,
    in Perspectives on Viral and Psychological Abuse 132 (Roland D. Maiuro,
    ed. 1999) [hereinafter Sackett & Saunders].         It is plausible that those
    suffering the most severe abuse ultimately have shorter relationships due
    to the intensity of the abuse.      
    Id. Even when
    incidents of abuse are
    infrequent, the mere presence of abuse can render the victim in a “state of
    33
    siege,” wherein they are in constant fear of an abusive incident arising.
    Mary Ann Dutton, Understanding Women’s Responses to Domestic
    Violence: A Redefinition of Battered Woman Syndrome, 21 Hofstra L. Rev.
    1191, 1208 (1993) [hereinafter Dutton].
    Courts have recognized that relationship duration or battering
    frequency are not good yardsticks to determine whether evidence on
    battering and its effects should be admissible. In People v. Brown, 
    94 P.3d 574
    , 575 (Cal. 2004), a woman suffered only one incident of abuse. The
    court considered whether expert testimony on the behavior of domestic
    violence victims is admissible in such circumstances. 
    Id. The expert
    had
    been allowed to testify at trial concerning the tendency of domestic violence
    victims to later recant their description of violence. 
    Id. at 577.
    The court
    held the testimony admissible without reaching the question of whether
    the testimony was admissible as evidence of BWS. 
    Id. at 575;
    cf. State v.
    Riker, 
    869 P.2d 43
    , 50 (Wash. 1994) (en banc) (finding the defendant did
    not have a sufficient basis to raise BWS where she and the victim “were
    passing acquaintances whose limited contacts occurred mainly by
    telephone and over only a brief period of time”).
    Of course, physical violence is often part of the battering
    relationship. The physical violence primarily involves “hands, fists, and
    feet, and . . . typical battering episodes involve slaps, punches, kicking,
    stomping, and choking.” Leonard at 29; see also Stark, 58 Alb. L. Rev. at
    985–86 (“Much of the assaultive behavior in battering relationships
    involves slapping, shoving, hair-pulling, and other acts which are unlikely
    to prompt serious medical or police concern.”). “Many batterers rape their
    female partners . . . .” Leonard at 15.
    But it is not just physical violence that can give rise to BWS. Many
    courts have listed psychological abuse as a type of abuse that causes BWS.
    34
    See, e.g., Bonner v. State, 
    740 So. 2d 439
    , 441 (Ala. Crim. App. 1998); State
    v. Robinson, 
    718 N.W.2d 400
    , 407 (Minn. 2006); State v. Townsend, 
    897 A.2d 316
    , 327 (N.J. 2006); Commonwealth v. Stonehouse, 
    555 A.2d 772
    ,
    783 (Pa. 1989). Forms of psychological abuse include threats to kill or
    harm a woman or her children, verbal abuse, required secrecy, and fear
    arousal. Leonard at 15–16. “Uncontrollable jealousy by the batterer was
    reported by almost all of the battered women,” “often to justify further
    abuse.” Walker at 21, 92. “It is clear that in the psychological domain,
    the significant portion of battered women experienced being cursed at,
    humiliated, and having controlling partners.” 
    Id. at 92.
    The effects of psychological abuse are dramatic.      “[P]sychological
    abuse appears to have as great an impact as physical abuse” in intimate
    relationships.   K. Daniel O’Leary, Psychological Abuse: A Variable
    Deserving Critical Attention in Domestic Violence, in Perspectives on Verbal
    and Psychological Abuse 23 (Roland D. Maiuro, ed. 1999) [hereinafter
    O’Leary].   “[P]sychological abuse is an essential component of men’s
    control and domination of their female partners.”          Leonard at 15.
    “Repeatedly, even women who have been severely injured by husbands
    describe the psychological, mental, and emotional abuse as more
    damaging and difficult to overcome than the physical trauma.” 
    Id. The Centers
    for Disease Control (CDC) explains that “psychological aggression
    is an essential component of intimate partner violence” and that its impact
    “is every bit as significant as that of physical violence by an intimate
    partner.”   Nat’l Ctr. for Injury Prevention & Control, Ctrs. for Disease
    Control, Intimate Partner Violence Surveillance: Uniform Definitions and
    Recommended Data Elements 15 (2015) [hereinafter CDC]. In different
    circumstances, we have noted that “scholars have opined the definition of
    ‘force’ should include psychological force” and “conclude[d] psychological
    35
    force . . . may give rise to a conviction under the ‘against the will’ element
    of [sexual abuse in the third degree].” 
    Meyers, 799 N.W.2d at 145
    –46.
    Psychological abuse can cause BWS even in the absence of physical
    violence.      Research shows that “psychological control methods are
    separate but an important part of domestic violence,” and can give rise to
    coercion “whether or not physical and sexual abuse are actually present.”
    Walker at 9–10. “[A] woman need not be physically injured by the batterer,
    although some sort of physical abuse usually accompanies the
    psychological harm inflicted.” Williams, 10 L. & Ineq. at 110 (footnote
    omitted). The abuse giving rise to BWS can take psychological, sexual, or
    physical forms and often includes multiple dimensions.               Dutton, 21
    Hofstra L. Rev. at 1204. One study revealed that “psychological abuse had
    a much stronger impact than physical abuse on fear. Ridiculing traits,
    criticizing behavior, and jealousy/control had the strongest relationship to
    fear.”     Sackett & Saunders at 132.           Another study indicates that
    psychological abuse is a stronger predictor for posttraumatic stress
    disorder (PTSD) than physical abuse.           Denise Hien & Lesia Ruglass,
    Interpersonal Partner Violence and Women in the United States: An
    Overview of Prevalence Rates, Psychiatric Correlates and Consequences
    and Barriers to Help-Seeking, 32 Int’l J.L. & Psychiatry 48 (2012); see also
    Witt v. State, 
    892 P.2d 132
    , 137 (Wyo. 1995) (noting BWS is a subset of
    PTSD); Williams, 10 L. & Ineq. at 110 (same).
    Indeed, commentators suggest a focus on a batterer’s pattern of
    coercion and control rather than his violent acts.
    Work with battered women outside the medical complex
    suggests that physical violence may not be the most significant
    factor about most battering relationships. In all probability, the
    clinical profile revealed by battered women reflects the fact
    that they have been subjected to an ongoing strategy of
    intimidation, isolation, and control that extends to all areas of
    36
    a woman’s life, including sexuality . . . . Sporadic, even
    severe, violence makes this strategy of control effective. But
    the unique profile of “the battered woman” arises as much
    from the deprivation of liberty implied by coercion and control
    as it does from violence-induced trauma.
    Stark, 58 Alb. L. Rev. at 986 (footnote omitted). An “emphasis on severe
    violence, injury, and traumatically induced dependence (or helplessness)
    would . . . miss[] the most important dimensions of [a battered person’s]
    entrapment, the deprivation of liberty due to ongoing intimidation,
    isolation, and control.” 
    Id. at 1005.
    “Battering arises out of a struggle for
    power in the home—‘the batterer’s quest for control of the woman.’ ”
    Dorothy E. Roberts, Motherhood and Crime, 
    79 Iowa L
    . Rev. 95, 114 (1993).
    The Supreme Court of Georgia has expressly held that psychological
    abuse can warrant admission of expert BWS evidence even in the absence
    of physical abuse.       
    Nguyen, 520 S.E.2d at 908
    .            “Psychological abuse
    which humiliates, embarrasses or abases an individual is deplorable,” the
    court said, and justifies admission of BWS testimony where accompanied
    “by other acts or verbal statements giving rise to a reasonable fear of
    imminent physical harm.” 
    Id. Unfortunately, however,
    the legal system often downplays or
    neglects psychological abuse.          O’Leary at 23; Walker at 529.            This is
    possibly because “[p]sychological . . . abuse . . . is not usually treated as a
    criminal offense, and greater evidentiary problems are presented
    in . . . proving psychological abuse.” U.S. Comm’n on Civil Rights at v.
    In short, BWS cannot be neatly characterized as a product of
    physical violence by males against female partners according to a certain
    pattern. 7 Rather, BWS is a complex phenomenon.
    7Courts    have allowed expert testimony on the effects of battering in myriad
    circumstances. See, e.g., State v. MacLennan, 
    702 N.W.2d 219
    , 234 (Minn. 2005) (holding
    admissible expert testimony on characteristics and probable responses of a battered male
    child); People v. Colberg, 
    701 N.Y.S.2d 608
    , 610 (Cty. Ct. 1999) (allowing male defendant
    37
    D. The BWS Victim’s Response. At the outset, it is important to
    recognize that battered women experience different psychological effects of
    abuse and each woman responds differently depending on her situation.
    Russell at 97; Regina A. Schuller, Expert Evidence and Its Impact on Jurors’
    Decisions in Homicide Trials Involving Battered Women, 10 Duke J. Gender
    L. & Pol’y 225, 234 (2003) [hereinafter Schuller]. BWS victims’ responses
    include emotional reactions like fear, anger, and sadness; attitudinal
    changes like self-blame and distrust; symptoms of psychological distress
    such as depression and sleep problems; and actions like fighting back,
    initiating violence, escaping, avoiding the batterer, and protecting
    themselves and others from violence. Russell at 96–97, 115; Schuller, 10
    Duke J. Gender L. & Pol’y at 234.
    to use BWS evidence in prosecution for murder of his adult son). Further, while battering
    of women by their male partners occurs more often than any other type of family violence,
    see U.S. Comm’n on Civil Rights at ix–v; Leonard at 39, battered persons may identify as
    women, men, gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgender, see Russell at 9, 13–16, 203; Ryiah
    Lilith, Reconsidering the Abuse that Dare Not Speak Its Name: A Criticism of Recent Legal
    Scholarship Regarding Same-Gender Domestic Violence, 7 Mich. J. Gender & L. 181, 218–
    19 (2001). Partly in response, it seems, a host of varied phrases has developed to reflect
    the different victims, aggressors, and behavior patterns involved, including “intimate
    partner violence,” “battered spouse syndrome,” and “battered person syndrome.” See
    Werner v. State, 
    711 S.W.2d 639
    , 649 (Tex. Crim. App. 1986) (en banc) (Teague, J.,
    dissenting) (collecting nomenclature)); Russell at 6, 128–29 (same). Advocates also
    recommend dropping the term “syndrome” because it may encourage reference to a
    stereotype or list of symptoms and can lead to the inaccurate perception that a sufferer
    is mentally unstable which runs counter to, among other things, properly using the
    evidence to prove that the sufferer acted reasonably in self-defense. DOJ Report at vii,
    xii–xiii; Russell at 7, 23–26, 137; Dowd, 19 Fordham Urb. L.J. at 577–78. Many of these
    advocates suggest the term “battering and its effects” is preferable because it does not
    carry those connotations. DOJ Report at vii, xii–xiii; Russell at 7, 23–26, 137. We agree
    with the Supreme Court of Louisiana that BWS may be “an inartful (and likely outdated)
    term.” State v. Curley, 
    250 So. 3d 236
    , 244–45 (La. 2018). But cf. Gena Rachel Hatcher,
    Note, The Gendered Nature of the Battered Woman Syndrome: Why Gender Neutrality Does
    Not Mean Equality, 59 N.Y.U. Ann. Surv. Am. L. 21, 23–24 (2003) (arguing for continued
    usage of BWS because the term provides for a focus on sexist stereotypes and the different
    experiences faced by battered women). We use here the term “battered woman
    syndrome,” or BWS, because it is the term used by the parties.
    38
    Many BWS victims experience psychological distress when exposed
    to stimuli associated with the battering, memory loss, and depression.
    Russell at 101, 112–13.       Those symptoms are consistent with the
    symptoms of PTSD. 
    Id. at 101,
    112–13; see also 
    Witt, 892 P.2d at 137
    (noting BWS is a subset of PTSD under state law). One study found eighty-
    four percent of seventy-seven battered women in a battered woman’s
    shelter met the clinical criteria for PTSD. Russell at 101.
    Often, persons in battering relationships are “hypervigilant to cues
    of impending danger and accurately perceive the seriousness of the
    situation before another person who had not been repeatedly abused
    might recognize the danger.”       Lenore E.A. Walker, Battered Women
    Syndrome and Self-Defense, 6 Notre Dame J.L. Ethics & Pub. Pol’y 321,
    324 (1992). “Remarks or gestures that may seem harmless to the average
    observer might be reasonably understood to presage imminent and severe
    violence when viewed against the backdrop of the batterer’s particular
    pattern of violence.” United States v. Nwoye, 
    824 F.3d 1129
    , 1137 (D.C.
    Cir. 2016).
    BWS victims’ attunement to circumstances portending violence can
    cause them to act when others might not. They may react to a batterer’s
    conduct “by initiating violence to protect themselves from what they
    perceive to be imminent danger.” Russell at 218. Battering
    creates a hypervigilance on the part of the defendant and
    attunes the defendant to recognize a threat of imminent
    danger from conduct that would not appear imminently
    threatening to someone who had not been subjected to that
    repetitive cycle of violence. It is the psychological response to
    that cycle of violence that helps explain why the defendant
    perceived a threat from objectively non-threatening conduct
    on the part of the victim and why, though apparently the
    aggressor, the defendant was actually responding to perceived
    aggression by the victim.
    State v. Smullen, 
    844 A.2d 429
    , 451 (Md. 2004).
    39
    In responding to a perceived threat, BWS victims sometimes “use
    force that might seem excessive to nonbattered women in order to protect
    themselves or their children.” Walker at 12. But ordinarily, BWS victims
    only “reach for a gun (or, sometimes it is placed in their hands by the
    batterer) because they cannot be certain that any lesser action will really
    protect themselves from being killed by the batterer.”      
    Id. at 18.
      “For
    women to kill, they generally must see their situation as life-threatening,
    as affecting the physical or emotional well-being of themselves or their
    children.”   Leonard at 25.    “Where torture appears interminable and
    escape impossible, the belief that only the death of the batterer can provide
    relief may be reasonable in the mind of a person of ordinary firmness.”
    Robinson v. State, 
    417 S.E.2d 88
    , 91 (S.C. 1992).
    There are certain circumstances that tend to distinguish BWS
    victims who kill their batterer. “Frequently, a woman’s lethal action is
    provoked by a sudden change in the pattern of violence, which signals to
    her that her death is imminent.” Leonard at 26. Risk factors for a BWS
    victim’s use of lethal action against a batterer include a man’s threats to
    kill, his frequency of intoxication, forced sexual acts, and weapons in the
    home. 
    Id. at 25–26.
    Further,
    [b]atterers most likely to be killed were the ones who
    continued to verbally degrade and humiliate a woman while
    she had the weapon in her hands. . . . So were those men who
    ordered the woman to kill them—using her, perhaps, to
    commit their own suicides.
    Lenore E. Walker, Terrifying Love: Why Battered Women Kill and How
    Society Responds 104 (1989).
    Further, a BWS victim may be stymied or dissuaded from leaving
    the relationship because of the retaliatory escalation in violence faced by
    those who leave, or try to leave, their abusers. “[S]tatistically, a battered
    40
    woman is in the most danger when she tries to leave an abusive
    relationship.”    
    Rodriquez, 636 N.W.2d at 245
    (noting testimony by
    Muscatine County expert). Studies suggest battering victims are more
    likely to be killed or attacked by their batterers after separating from them.
    
    Nwoye, 824 F.3d at 1138
    ; Leonard at 8; Russell at 111. Many BWS victims
    try to stay in the relationship because leaving may impose physical,
    emotional, economic, familial, and cultural costs. See Russell at 81. “In
    light of individual factual circumstances that vary from woman to woman,”
    a BWS victim may make a “reasoned decision” to stay “based upon an
    evaluation of her viable escape options and the value she assigns to
    competing priorities.” Burke, 
    81 N.C. L
    . Rev. at 266.
    Walker postulated that BWS victims would exhibit “learned
    helplessness” in response to battering.      According to Walker, learned
    helplessness is not meant to imply that a BWS victim is helpless, but
    rather that a BWS victim loses the ability to predict whether actions will
    lead to a particular outcome. Walker at 75. Walker suggested that learned
    helplessness explains why BWS victims do not leave the relationship. 
    Id. at 76.
    Walker’s learned helplessness theory has come under withering
    criticism.   “Experts in the field have largely abandoned the theory of
    learned helplessness and its conception of women who experience violence
    as passive non-actors.”    Leigh Goodmark, Reframing Domestic Violence
    Law and Policy: An Anti-Essentialist Proposal, 31 Wash. U. J.L. & Pol’y 39,
    44 (2009), accord Sarah Gibbs Leivick, Use of Battered Woman Syndrome
    to Defend the Abused and Prosecute the Abuser, 6 Geo. J. Gender & L. 391,
    393–94 (2005).
    Commentators raise a number of problems with Walker’s learned
    helplessness theory.    First, approximately half to two-thirds of abused
    41
    women ultimately leave their abusers after repeated failed attempts. See
    Russell at 80–81.
    Second, “not all battered women experienced the same psychological
    effects of abuse and . . . each woman responds differently depending on
    her situation.” 
    Id. at 97.
    BWS victims’ responses include fighting back,
    initiating violence, escaping, avoiding the batterer, and protecting
    themselves and others from violence. 
    Id. at 96–97,
    115. Additionally, as
    noted, many battering victims choose to stay in a relationship, temporarily
    or indefinitely, for rational reasons such as the emotional, economic,
    familial, and cultural costs of leaving. 
    Id. at 81.
    “A woman’s participation
    in an abusive relationship can be understood without depicting domestic
    violence victims as homogenous, irrational, and cognitively impaired.”
    Burke, 
    81 N.C. L
    . Rev. at 266. Further,
    [t]he medical, psychiatric, and behavioral problems presented
    by battered women arise because male strategies of coercion,
    isolation, and control converge with discriminatory structures
    and institutional practices to make it difficult, sometimes
    impossible, for women to escape from abusive relationships
    when they most want to or need to.
    Leonard at 46. “[T]he difficulty women have in freeing themselves from
    violent relationships has more to do with ‘the intransigence of their
    husbands’ penchant for domination and the lack of support from
    traditional institutions,’ than ‘the woman’s passivity or helplessness.”
    Schuller, 10 Duke J. Gender L. & Pol’y at 234. Yet the terminology of
    learned helplessness wrongly evokes a woman’s passivity and creates a
    stereotype of the BWS victim. Russell at 137.
    E. Myths, Misconceptions, and Assumptions Affecting Trials
    Involving BWS Victims. A number of myths and misconceptions about
    BWS victims affect our criminal justice system. Some affect jurors. See
    People v. Wilson, 
    487 N.W.2d 822
    , 824 (Mich. Ct. App. 1992); State v.
    42
    Hennum, 
    441 N.W.2d 793
    , 798 (Minn. 1989); 
    Townsend, 897 A.2d at 327
    ;
    
    Ordway, 619 A.2d at 827
    .        Myths and misconceptions affecting jurors
    include “(1) a belief that battered women can and should leave their
    abusers; [and] (2) a belief that if the woman on trial does not fit the person’s
    stereotype of a battered woman, she is not a ‘real battered woman.’ ”
    Leonard at 30.
    Empirical research has shown that jurors harbor such myths and
    misconceptions. A survey of jurors awaiting jury duty found that,
    compared to the experts, the laypersons were less likely to
    believe that a battered woman would be persuaded to remain
    in the relationship by an abuser’s promises to reform, that she
    would believe that using deadly force was the only way for her
    to protect herself, and that she would believe that her
    husband could kill her. Compared to the experts, the jurors
    were also more likely to indicate that battered women are
    probably abused because they are emotionally disturbed or
    masochistic.
    Schuller & Vidmar, 16 L. & Hum. Behav. at 282–83.                Such studies
    “suggest[] that lay knowledge regarding wife abuse may be contextually
    bound to the degree of similarity to the ‘prototypical’ battering
    relationship.” Russell at 191.
    The attorneys in a trial involving a BWS victim are not immune from
    harboring or invoking misapprehensions. Defense attorneys often do not
    understand the psychological response to chronic violence or the methods
    to introduce a defendant’s life experiences into evidence. Leonard at 30.
    When a BWS victim presents evidence of a record of past abuse,
    “prosecutors turn it into a motive for the woman’s crime of revenge—she
    is hysterical and out-of-control or she is cold-blooded and calculating.”
    Leonard at 31, accord Gillespie at 24–25; Russell at 21–22. “[A] prosecutor
    who has benighted notions about women—or is willing to pander to the
    43
    worst possible prejudices of the jurors—can cause great injustice . . . .”
    Gillespie at 19.
    Indeed, misconceptions about BWS victims can affect all legal
    actors.   Stereotypes of BWS victims “can affect legal decision making,
    particularly when the defendant does not fit into [stereotypical] general
    beliefs.” Russell at 16.
    Some courts seem to treat battered woman syndrome as a
    standard to which all battered women must conform rather
    than as evidence that illuminates the defendant’s behavior
    and perceptions. . . . Unless she fits this rigidly-defined and
    narrowly-applied definition, she is prevented from benefiting
    from battered woman syndrome testimony.
    Crocker, 8 Harv. Women’s L.J. at 144.
    Also, the law on self-defense imposes numerous hurdles to a BWS
    victim. “Current laws of self-defense are based largely on assumptions
    that apply best to situations of adult males fighting adult males and often
    do not reflect the reality most battered women experience.” Leonard at 32.
    A battered woman “is generally not on equal physical grounds with the
    batterer,” so “her actions cannot be the same as a fight between ‘two
    equals.’ ” Schuller & Vidmar, 16 L. & Hum. Behav. at 276; accord Gillespie
    at 7. In addition, the violence faced by a BWS victim is continual and at
    the hands of an intimate partner, a context scholars assert is necessary
    when a jury weighs the imminence requirement in self-defense cases.
    Gillespie at 7–8; Schuller & Vidmar, 16 L. & Hum. Behav. at 276.
    Battered women in particular may perceive danger and
    imminence differently from men. Because they become
    attuned to stages of violence from their husbands, they may
    interpret certain conduct to indicate an imminent attack or a
    more severe attack. A subtle gesture or a new method of
    abuse, insignificant to another person, may create a
    reasonable fear in a battered woman.
    44
    Crocker, 8 Harv. Women’s L.J. at 127 (footnote omitted). Consequently,
    scholars explain, a BWS victim may reasonably and honestly use a deadly
    weapon in self-defense to ward off an unarmed attacker. Russell at 117;
    Schuller & Vidmar, 16 L. & Hum. Behav. at 276. But cf. State v. Nunn,
    
    356 N.W.2d 601
    , 604 (Iowa Ct. App. 1984) (finding sufficient evidence of
    no justification because “the argument had ended several minutes before
    the stabbing” and “the victim was not armed at the time”), overruled on
    other grounds by State v. Reeves, 
    636 N.W.2d 22
    , 25–26 (Iowa 2001).
    Researchers have discovered that jurors also harbor misconceptions
    when a BWS victim asserts self-defense. One study found that “when the
    defendant was portrayed as passive, mock jurors were more likely to
    believe that the defendant’s belief of fear of imminent danger was more
    plausible.” Russell at 192. “Beliefs such as these may make it difficult for
    jurors to understand how a woman might have a perception of imminent
    fear” or to understand why she did not simply leave the relationship.
    Schuller & Vidmar, 16 L. & Hum. Behav. at 276. Jurors “may ask: Why
    didn’t she leave? Why didn’t she call for help? Why did she resort to a
    deadly weapon when she could have left instead?” 
    Id. at 276–77.
    F. Role of Expert Witnesses in BWS Cases. Expert witnesses can
    help address the issues plaguing trials of BWS victims.         “[T]he most
    important effect of such evidence is to assist the factfinders in considering
    or understanding other evidence presented in the case.” DOJ Report at
    14.
    With respect to the deliberation process, the major purposes
    of introducing evidence about battering and its effects are to
    assist the triers of fact in their deliberations about the
    ultimate issues or to dispel common myths and
    misunderstanding about domestic violence that may interfere
    with the factfinders’ ability to consider issues in the case.
    45
    . . . [E]xpert testimony concerning battering and its
    effects can help the factfinder more effectively evaluate the
    evidence in criminal cases involving a battered woman.
    
    Id. at xii.
    Expert testimony can address a number of issues. Experts may
    elucidate the BWS victim’s state of mind and her perception of danger,
    dispel misconceptions about the patterns of abuse and response, and
    explain the risks in leaving a battering relationship. 
    Id. at viii;
    Dowd, 19
    Fordham Urb. L.J. at 578–79; Schuller & Vidmar, 16 Law & Hum. Behav.
    at 277. They may also opine on
    the effect of abuse on women; they give support to a woman’s
    perception that her life was in jeopardy at the time of the
    homicide; and they show that her actions were reasonable for
    a person repeatedly subjected to assaults by her husband.
    Leonard at 33. Indeed,
    [t]he reasonableness of the woman’s fear and the
    reasonableness of her act are not issues which the jury knows
    as well as anyone else. The jury needs expert testimony on
    reasonableness precisely because the jury may not
    understand that the battered woman’s prediction of the likely
    extent and imminence of violence is particularly acute and
    accurate.
    Elizabeth M. Schneider, Describing and Changing: Women’s Self-Defense
    Work and the Problem of Expert Testimony on Battering, 9 Women’s Rts. L.
    Rep. 195, 211 (1986).
    Additionally, expert BWS testimony provides jurors a perspective or
    framework “for interpreting the woman’s beliefs and actions—an
    interpretive social schema from which to view her actions as reasonable
    rather than aberrant.” Schuller & Vidmar, 16 L. & Hum. Behav. at 277.
    “If one just considers isolated incidents, it is difficult to understand if a
    woman has acted in self-defense.” Russell at 103. In addition, “[m]ost
    people are incapable of intuitively understanding what it is like to live
    46
    within a violent home” and “evaluate normalcy or reasonableness of
    response based upon their own perceptions of reasonable, which are
    created out of their own often limited experience.” 
    Id. at 139.
    An expert
    can make “it . . . easier to understand the overall context and dynamics of
    the fear that surrounds the victim’s life.”     
    Id. at 103.
       Experts “offer
    evidence that addresses research on domestic violence and link that
    evidence to supporting data on social contexts associated with the
    defendant,” thereby “provid[ing] a richer context of the situation for jurors
    to evaluate whether the defendant’s perceptions and actions were
    reasonable at the time of the killing.” 
    Id. at 134–35.
    BWS evidence can
    help the jury understand that “what happened to one woman can happen
    to anybody under similar circumstances” and “transform[] the battered
    woman into ‘everywoman,’ a reasonable person who uses force in self-
    defense.” Dowd, 19 Fordham Urb. L.J. at 574.
    The National Association of Women Judges agrees that testimony on
    the effects of battering is important when a battered person asserts self-
    defense.
    In many cases involving battered women, it is . . . necessary
    to bring in an expert witness to testify about battering and its
    effects to help jurors and judges understand the experiences,
    beliefs, and perceptions of women who are beaten by their
    intimate partners—information that the common lay person
    usually does not possess. Generally, in a self-defense case,
    this testimony is introduced to help the jurors better
    understand why, given this woman’s experience of violence at
    the hands of her abuser, she was reasonable in her belief that
    she was in imminent danger.
    Nat’l Ass’n of Women Judges, Moving Beyond Battered Women’s Syndrome:
    A Guide to the Use of Expert Testimony on Battering and Its Effects iv (1995).
    It is essential that we increase understanding in the lay and
    legal communities about the role of an expert in supporting
    established defenses used by battered women, such as self-
    defense. In any self-defense case, the jury needs to have
    47
    information about why the defendant believed she had to
    defend herself—why, to use generic self-defense language, the
    defendant was reasonable in her belief that she was in
    imminent danger of death or great bodily harm.           Any
    defendant claiming self-defense would want to bring in
    information about the deceased’s history of violence against
    her or him; obviously this evidence would help the jury to
    better understand why the person was so afraid at the time of
    the incident.
    Janet Parrish, Nat’l Ass’n of Women Judges, Trend Analysis: Expert
    Testimony on Battering and Its Effects in Criminal Cases 1–2 (1996).
    Expert testimony can also explain why BWS victims make false
    confessions.   For instance, some individuals are vulnerable to certain
    interrogation techniques, like the Reid technique, in ways that put those
    individuals at a higher risk of falsely confessing.        Brief for Am.
    Psychological Ass’n as Amicus Curiae Supporting Appellant at 14–16, 23,
    People v. Thomas, 
    8 N.E.3d 308
    (N.Y. 2014). Many battered women have
    those vulnerabilities. Walker at 456–60. False confessions and BWS share
    similar legal backdrops; both are complicated areas of social psychology
    that are “beyond the common experience of the ordinary person.” United
    States v. Whittle, No. 3:13-CV-00170-JHM, 
    2016 WL 4433685
    , at *3 (W.D.
    Ky. Aug. 18, 2016). As a result, these linked doctrines should be carefully
    explained to jurors to refute commonly held assumptions and make jurors
    aware of these social circumstances. 
    Id. More generally,
    expert BWS testimony helps jurors assess credibility
    of a battered person who makes inconsistent statements. 
    Brown, 94 P.3d at 583
    ; Earl v. United States, 
    932 A.2d 1122
    , 1128–29 (D.C. 2007). In
    2016, every member of this court joined one of two opinions recognizing
    that victims of domestic violence exhibit a tendency to recant statements
    made before trial. State v. Smith, 
    876 N.W.2d 180
    , 187–88 (Iowa 2016);
    
    id. at 194
    (Waterman, J., dissenting) (explaining that “[t]he rate of
    48
    recantation among domestic violence victims has been estimated between
    eighty and ninety percent”).
    Empirical research backs up the idea that expert testimony on BWS
    is useful to jurors. “Research has consistently found that the use of expert
    testimony regarding [BWS] leads mock jurors to render more lenient
    verdicts and find women who kill their abusers generally more credible.”
    Russell at 57, 219; see Schuller, 10 Duke J. Gender L. & Pol’y at 227. For
    instance, one study concluded that mock jurors were more likely to find
    mitigating circumstances when such testimony was introduced. Walker
    at 527.   Other researchers have “found that individuals who are less
    informed about the dynamics of abuse often assign harsher sentences
    than   their   informed   counterparts   to   battered   women    homicide
    defendants,” Russell at 55, while better informed individuals find a BWS
    victim more credible, 
    id. at 190.
    Similarly, “[r]esearch has demonstrated
    that informing jurors of their potential biases can help mock jurors to
    recognize their biases and evaluate cases in a more objective manner.” 
    Id. at 215.
      In a survey of self-reporting jurors, eighty percent of jurors
    exposed to expert BWS testimony “reported it was influential, and the more
    believable these subjects found the testimony, the more likely they were to
    render not guilty verdicts.” Schuller & Vidmar, 16 L. & Hum. Behav. at
    284.
    Introduction of expert BWS testimony, of course, is not a panacea.
    Some studies have found that the circumstances of the abuse and
    homicide, along with the demographic characteristics of the woman and
    her batterer, may have a greater effect on jurors. See 
    id. at 284–86.
    And
    researchers caution that mock jurors provided with expert evidence on
    BWS may find women who do not fit their preconceived stereotypes of BWS
    victims to be less credible than those who fit the stereotype. Russell at 8,
    49
    56; Russell & Melillo, 33 Crim. Just. & Behav. at 219, 225–26, 229–30. In
    addition, “use of the syndrome in court comes with perceptions that
    women are psychologically damaged in some way,” even though it also
    leads to more lenient verdicts. Russell at 99, 193, 209. Those problems
    can be minimized “when [BWS] is used as a descriptive term to explain the
    experiences of some battered women,” 
    id. at 189,
    and potentially by
    focusing on PTSD or the effects of battering, 
    id. at 214.
    G. Iowa Caselaw on Use of BWS Experts. Our first case dealing
    with a BWS expert appears to be 
    Griffin, 564 N.W.2d at 374
    –75. In that
    case, we held that Laurie Schipper had credentials we considered
    “impressive and [which] easily qualify her status as an expert on battered
    women.” 
    Id. at 374.
    We also held that Schipper properly testified to the
    medical and psychological syndrome present in battered women generally.
    The prosecution called Schipper to explain why BWS victims may be
    reluctant to testify against their batterer and why they may make a pretrial
    statement inconsistent with testimony at trial. 
    Id. at 374–75.
    Schipper
    explained that BWS victims perceive further battering as inevitable,
    encounter “psychological terrorism,” and as a result, convince the batterer
    she will not testify against him as “a life-saving coping skill.” 
    Id. We said
    that the testimony did not cross the line into testifying on the ultimate fact
    of an accused’s guilt or innocence or the truthfulness of a complaining
    witness. 
    Id. at 375.
    In 
    Rodriquez, 636 N.W.2d at 246
    , we held that a trial court properly
    admitted the prosecution’s expert BWS testimony. On trial for assault and
    other charges, the defendant sought to prove that he did not intend to
    seriously injure his domestic partner, that he and the victim “did have
    some ‘good times’ together,” and that he did not confine the victim against
    her will. 
    Id. at 245–46.
    The prosecution introduced the BWS testimony to
    50
    rebut the arguments. See 
    id. We said
    that the testimony gave the jury
    “context of the nature of their relationship” and “information that it needed
    to understand the significance and meaning of the defendant’s conduct
    and to understand the victim’s reaction to that conduct.” 
    Id. at 246.
    We
    concluded that BWS assisted the jury in resolving the disputed issues of
    confinement and intent and was therefore not erroneously admitted. 
    Id. In State
    v. Shanahan, 
    712 N.W.2d 121
    , 127 (Iowa 2006), we
    considered a direct appeal from a defendant’s conviction of second-degree
    murder for killing her husband. Among the defendant’s claims was that
    her trial counsel was ineffective for failing to reasonably investigate the
    defendant’s mental health by obtaining a mental health examination as
    recommended by the director of the Iowa Coalition Against Domestic
    Violence. 
    Id. at 143.
    The defendant contended that “the testimony of such
    a professional would have explained why she behaved in ways seemingly
    contradictory to her defense, as she believe[d] she suffered from post-
    traumatic stress syndrome and battered wives syndrome.”             
    Id. We preserved
    the claim for PCR because “[t]he record [was] devoid of any such
    recommendation, trial counsel’s reasons for not obtaining an examination,
    and the results or benefits the trier of fact would have gleaned from such
    an examination.” 
    Id. Our most
    recent decision on BWS, and the only one in which we
    addressed the merits of employing expert BWS testimony in aid of a
    justification defense, is 
    Frei, 831 N.W.2d at 74
    –75. The defendant argued
    that to make out a claim of self-defense, she only needed to prove that she
    subjectively believed that her actions were justified. 
    Id. We rejected
    the defendant’s argument for a purely subjective
    standard in BWS self-defense cases but acknowledged the objective
    component should take into account the circumstances faced by the BWS
    51
    victim. 
    Id. at 75.
    “As applied to a battered woman,” we explained, “an
    appropriately specific reasonableness inquiry might consider objective
    facts about the batterer, any history of violence, any failed attempts to
    escape abuse, and any other facts relevant under the circumstances.” 
    Id. We further
    stated that “expert testimony can aid in cautioning jurors that
    the behavior of battered women should not be lightly dismissed as
    inherently unreasonable.” 
    Id. In summary,
    our decisions permit introduction of expert BWS
    testimony to contextualize the circumstances faced by a BWS victim. Such
    context is important, we have indicated, to assist the fact finder in
    evaluating the reasonableness of a BWS victim’s actions and the credibility
    of associated testimony.
    H. Other Jurisdictions’ Approach to Use of BWS Experts in the
    Context of Self-Defense. Our view on BWS experts is generally shared
    by many jurisdictions. Expert testimony can help a jury assess whether a
    battered woman’s actions were reasonable. 
    Nwoye, 824 F.3d at 1136
    .
    “[E]xpert testimony on BWS may be relevant to contextualizing testimonial
    and documentary evidence regarding the relationship between the victim
    and the defendant.”    State v. Curley, 
    250 So. 3d 236
    , 247 (La. 2018).
    “Although a jury might not find the appearances sufficient to provoke a
    reasonable person’s fear, they might conclude otherwise as to a reasonable
    person’s perception of the reality when enlightened by expert testimony on
    the concept of hypervigilance.” People v. Humphrey, 
    921 P.2d 1
    , 17 (Cal.
    1996).   Indeed, expert testimony is “critical in permitting the jury to
    evaluate [defendant’s] testimony free of the misperceptions regarding
    battered women.”    
    Id. at 11
    (alteration in original).   Expert testimony
    dispelling common myths and misconceptions concerning BWS “may have
    a substantial bearing on the woman’s perceptions and behavior.” State v.
    52
    Allery, 
    682 P.2d 312
    , 316 (Wash. 1984) (en banc).         The Pennsylvania
    Supreme Court explained,
    [B]ecause of the unique psychological condition of the
    battered woman and because of the myths commonly held
    about battered women, it is clear that where a pattern of
    battering has been shown, the battered woman syndrome
    must be presented to the jury through the introduction of
    relevant evidence.
    
    Stonehouse, 555 A.2d at 785
    .
    Every jurisdiction accepts expert BWS testimony to support claims
    of self-defense. Lauren Champaign, Battered Woman Syndrome, 11 Geo.
    J. Gender & L. 59, 59–60 (2010); see 
    Curley, 250 So. 3d at 246
    n.11
    (collecting cases). “Battered woman’s syndrome evidence [is] . . . relevant
    to defendant’s credibility.   It would . . . assist[] the jury in objectively
    analyzing defendant’s claim of self-defense by dispelling many of the
    commonly held misconceptions about battered women.” 
    Humphrey, 921 P.2d at 9
    . Expert BWS testimony is admissible to “help the jury not only
    to understand the battered woman syndrome but also to determine
    whether the defendant had reasonable grounds for an honest belief that
    she was in imminent danger when considering the issue of self-defense.”
    State v. Koss, 
    551 N.E.2d 970
    , 973 (Ohio 1990).
    Moreover, courts have found the failure to present BWS expert
    testimony can be ineffective assistance of counsel. See, e.g., People v. Day,
    
    2 Cal. Rptr. 2d 916
    , 917 (Ct. App. 1992), abrogated on other grounds by
    
    Humphrey, 921 P.2d at 8
    , 10; State v. Zimmerman, 
    823 S.W.2d 220
    , 226–
    27 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1991).      In Nwoye, the court held that failure to
    present expert testimony on BWS was prejudicial because such testimony
    would have entitled the defendant to an instruction on duress and, taking
    the testimony and instruction together, there was a reasonable probability
    53
    the jury would have had a reasonable doubt respecting defendant’s 
    guilt. 824 F.3d at 1135
    .
    In Peterson, the court held that failure to present expert testimony
    on BWS was ineffective assistance of counsel because without that
    testimony there was no foundation for the asserted defense of imperfect
    self-defense. State v. Peterson, 
    857 A.2d 1132
    , 1154 (Md. Ct. Spec. App.
    2004). The Peterson court explained that although there was evidence
    adduced at trial regarding the abuse suffered by the defendant at the
    hands of the victim, that evidence alone could not establish the predicates
    necessary for imperfect self-defense.    
    Id. Consequently, trial
    counsel’s
    decision to not introduce BWS evidence could not be said to have been
    strategic; rather, it was based on a misunderstanding of law. 
    Id. In Curley,
    trial counsel rendered deficient performance, the
    Supreme Court of Louisiana said, because of his admitted ignorance in
    how to present a BWS claim and his failure to consider how expert
    testimony would be helpful to his client’s 
    case. 250 So. 3d at 249
    . The
    court found prejudice because expert testimony could have helped
    establish either a state of mind supporting a justification defense or
    circumstances warranting a conviction of manslaughter instead of second-
    degree murder. 
    Id. at 249–50.
    In Stonehouse, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court reversed a
    conviction and remanded for a new trial upon holding that trial counsel
    was ineffective in failing to present BWS 
    evidence. 555 A.2d at 784
    –85.
    The court said,
    Had trial counsel introduced expert testimony about the
    battered woman syndrome, the actions taken by
    appellant . . . would have been weighed by the jury in light of
    how the reasonably prudent battered woman would have
    perceived and reacted to [her batterer’s] behavior. Trial
    counsel proceeded to trial on the theory that appellant had
    54
    experienced psychological and physical abuse inflicted upon
    her by the victim and that at the time she shot [her batterer]
    she was acting in self-defense. There was no reasonable basis
    for trial counsel not to call an expert witness to counter the
    erroneous battered woman myths upon which the
    Commonwealth built its case.          Thus, trial counsel was
    ineffective, and the absence of such expert testimony was
    prejudicial to appellant in that the jury was permitted, on the
    basis of unfounded myths, to assess appellant’s claim that
    she had a reasonable belief that she faced a life-threatening
    situation when she fired her gun at [her batterer].
    
    Id. V. Discussion.
          A. Whether the District Court Erred in Denying a Court-
    Appointed Expert. We must determine whether the district court had
    authority to appoint an expert at public expense in the PCR proceeding. If
    so, we must then decide whether the court abused its discretion in not
    appointing the expert.
    Section 822.5 provides that, except in certain situations not relevant
    here, “the costs and expenses of legal representation shall . . . be made
    available to the applicant in the preparation of the application, in the trial
    court, and on review if the applicant is unable to pay.” Iowa Code § 822.5.
    We believe that provision necessarily authorizes appointment of an expert
    at state expense to those unable to pay because an expert may be required
    for the legal representation provided for under the provision.
    Here, Linn moved twice for a court-appointed expert within the PCR
    proceeding.   Each time, she explained that her court-appointed PCR
    counsel needed to retain a BWS expert in order to evaluate whether trial
    counsel was ineffective and BWS’s relevancy to her justification defense.
    Her motion thus fits squarely within the authority under Iowa Code section
    822.5 for appointment of experts.
    55
    In order for the PCR court to grant a motion for appointment of an
    expert, there must be a reasonable need for expert services. See 
    Dahl, 874 N.W.2d at 352
    (discussing court’s discretion in appointment of
    investigator); Wise v. State, 
    708 N.W.2d 66
    , 69 (Iowa 2006) (discussing
    discretionary appointment of PCR counsel under Iowa Code section 822.5).
    In analogous circumstances relevant here, our cases have explored the
    contours of the right to expert services at state expense during criminal
    trials. Compare State v. Coker, 
    412 N.W.2d 589
    , 593 (Iowa 1987) (holding
    that trial court abused its discretion in denying motion for appointment of
    intoxication expert where intoxication was a central trial issue and,
    although there was a minimal factual record in support of the motion, the
    “request was not demonstrably frivolous, unreasonable, or unsupported
    factually”), with State v. McGhee, 
    220 N.W.2d 908
    , 914 (Iowa 1974)
    (holding that district court did not abuse discretion in denying request for
    psychiatric expert if “[n]o history as to any prior psychological imbalance
    on defendant’s part was shown,” “[n]o evidence was presented by
    defendant regarding any past mental aberration on his part,” and defense
    counsel never specified why he needed a psychiatric expert to adequately
    defend or assure defendant a fair trial). As we have explained regarding
    appointment of PCR counsel, PCR courts would ordinarily be well advised
    to appoint an expert “because such appointment ‘benefits the applicant,
    aids the trial court, is conducive to a fair hearing, and certainly helpful in
    event of appeal.’ ” 
    Wise, 708 N.W.2d at 69
    (quoting Furgison v. State, 
    217 N.W.2d 613
    , 615 (Iowa 1974)).       Still, we also believe that “[w]hen the
    accused is merely embarking on a ‘random fishing expedition’ in search of
    a defense[,] courts are discouraged from allowing [s]tate funds for experts.”
    State v. Leutfaimany, 
    585 N.W.2d 200
    , 208 (Iowa 1998).
    56
    We remain “committed to the liberal view on the admission of
    psychological evidence.”     State v. Dudley, 
    856 N.W.2d 668
    , 676 (Iowa
    2014). “[E]xpert witnesses may express opinions on matters explaining
    the pertinent mental and physical symptoms of the victims of abuse.”
    State v. Allen, 
    565 N.W.2d 333
    , 338 (Iowa 1997). When a woman suffered
    one incident of sexual assault, we held expert testimony on PTSD relevant
    and admissible because “[i]ndependent evidence showed that the
    complainant had experienced some of the symptoms of PTSD.” State v.
    Gettier, 
    438 N.W.2d 1
    , 6 (Iowa 1989).       Likewise, we have upheld the
    admissibility of expert BWS testimony in a number of cases. 
    Frei, 831 N.W.2d at 74
    –75; 
    Rodriquez, 636 N.W.2d at 246
    ; 
    Griffin, 564 N.W.2d at 374
    –75.
    Other courts have approved state funding for BWS experts.           In
    People v. Evans, 
    648 N.E.2d 964
    , 968–69 (Ill. App. Ct. 1995), on appeal
    from a criminal conviction, the Illinois court held that a trial court erred
    in refusing to award fees for a BWS expert. The defendant was a woman
    on trial for killing her abusive husband as he approached her. 
    Id. at 965.
    She asserted self-defense.    
    Id. The court
    determined that the expert’s
    assistance was necessary in proving a crucial issue in the case—her
    mental state—and that the lack of funds for the expert would therefore
    prejudice the defendant. 
    Id. at 968–69.
    In Dunn v. Roberts, 
    963 F.2d 308
    , 310 (10th Cir. 1992), the
    defendant, Dunn, had dated her boyfriend for less than two months. She
    went on trial for aiding and abetting a series of crimes committed by her
    boyfriend.    
    Id. at 309.
         The boyfriend inflicted various forms of
    psychological abuse on the defendant: “he . . . threatened to kill [her] many
    times, . . . he . . . subjected her to Russian Roulette with the .357
    magnum, and . . . he . . . advised her that her family or other innocent
    57
    parties would be in danger if she contemplated leaving him.” 
    Id. at 310.
    The boyfriend also physically abused Dunn by choking her, though the
    nature of other physical abuse is unclear from the opinion. 
    Id. at 310,
    313.
    Before trial, Dunn sought fees for an expert to investigate whether
    she suffered from BWS. 
    Id. at 310–11.
    The expert’s testimony, Dunn
    argued, was relevant to whether she had specific intent to aid and abet.
    
    Id. The trial
    court denied the requested fees, and Dunn was convicted. 
    Id. at 311.
    Dunn brought a federal habeas challenge. 
    Id. at 312.
    The United States Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit explained
    its “focus [was] on whether Petitioner made a sufficient showing to the trial
    court that her mental condition at the time of the crimes would be a
    significant factor at trial.” 
    Id. at 313.
    The court found Dunn carried her
    burden of proof. 
    Id. The court
    said,
    [T]he state trial judge was made aware in general terms of [the
    boyfriend’s] threats against and physical abuse of [Dunn] and
    that evidence of battered woman’s syndrome would likely have
    bearing on whether [Dunn] had the state of mind necessary to
    commit the crime of aiding and abetting. [Dunn’s] counsel
    explained clearly that the state’s case against [Dunn] rested
    heavily on an aiding and abetting theory; that specific intent
    to assist . . . is a necessary element of the crime of aiding and
    abetting; that [Dunn’s] case rested on her ability to show that
    she lacked the requisite intent; and that [Dunn] could not
    develop an effective rebuttal of that element without the
    assistance of an expert. We conclude that [Dunn] made a
    compelling showing that her mental state would be a central
    issue at trial. Given the facts before the state trial judge and
    the defense counsel’s explanation for requesting expert
    assistance, we conclude the state trial court should have
    known that a refusal of [Dunn’s] request for expert assistance
    would deny [Dunn] an adequate opportunity to prepare and
    present her defense.
    
    Id. Some courts
    have denied state funding for a BWS expert.             For
    instance, in two appeals from criminal convictions, courts upheld denials
    58
    when a defendant had a previous opportunity for an expert psychological
    examination. Ledford v. State, 
    333 S.E.2d 576
    , 576–77 (Ga. 1985); State
    v. Aucoin, 
    756 S.W.2d 705
    , 714 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1988).
    We believe Linn demonstrated a reasonable need for an expert to
    evaluate trial counsel’s ineffectiveness and understand BWS’s relevancy to
    her justification defense. In her 2015 motion for a court-appointed expert,
    she explained,
    [D]uring the trial, [Linn] testified on her own behalf that (a)
    her older sister had been murdered by her (i.e., the older
    sister’s) boyfriend; (b) that Blanchard had told [Linn] that he
    had killed someone in the past, that he had brutally beat his
    prior girlfriend and that [Linn] better not piss him off; and (c)
    that she was scared of Blanchard and she “just wanted to get
    out (of the relationship) safe. I didn’t want it to ever turn
    violent.”
    [I]n speaking with law enforcement immediately following the
    shooting [Linn] made comments about Blanchard not hurting
    her anymore, and that she was tired of being hurt and
    Blanchard wasn’t going to do it anymore.
    [T]rial counsel failed to call an expert witness to testify
    regarding “battered woman syndrome,” despite the fact that
    [Linn] raised that issue with trial counsel prior to trial.
    By the time the district court ruled on Linn’s motion, and after another
    motion for a court-appointed expert, the record contained further facts on
    the psychological, verbal, and physical abuse Blanchard inflicted on Linn.
    Blanchard’s pattern of abuse is consistent with the type of abuse
    that causes BWS. Blanchard committed verbal and psychological abuse—
    including repeated threats to cut Linn up the length of her body and rape
    her while she was bleeding, adamant threats that “he would hurt [Linn] or
    any other individual . . . if [he] even [thought] [she was] with another
    individual,” warnings that she “better not f***ing piss him off” in light of
    his history of violence, intimations that “nobody else [was] going to ever
    have [her],” and thefts of her property—consistent with that which gives
    59
    rise to BWS. Leonard at 15–16 (explaining that forms of psychological
    abuse include threats to kill or harm a woman or her children, verbal
    abuse, required secrecy, and fear arousal); Walker at 9, 21, 92 (explaining
    that batterers exhibit jealousy, cursing, and controlling behavior). Even if
    Blanchard had not physically abused Linn, she still might have been a
    BWS victim as a result of the psychological abuse. See 
    Nguyen, 520 S.E.2d at 908
    ; Dutton, 21 Hofstra L. Rev. at 1204; Stark, 58 Alb. L. Rev. at 986,
    1005; Williams, 10 L. & Ineq. at 110. We have “conclude[d] psychological
    force . . . may give rise to a conviction under the ‘against the will’ element
    of [sexual abuse in the third degree].” 
    Meyers, 799 N.W.2d at 146
    .
    Evidence was presented that Blanchard did physically abuse Linn
    during their relationship. Linn testified that Blanchard clotheslined her.
    Additionally, according to a police officer’s testimony, Linn stated after the
    shooting that Blanchard “hurt her in the past and was going to hurt her
    tonight.” These indications of physical violence are also consistent with
    the type of abuse that causes BWS. Leonard at 15–16; Walker at 22.
    Moreover, Linn’s concern about violence once she tried to end the
    relationship—she “just wanted to get out safe” and “didn’t want it to ever
    turn violent”—along with the physical and psychological violence and
    thefts she faced at that time, are all consistent with the heightened danger
    faced by BWS victims who try to leave their abusers. See 
    Nwoye, 824 F.3d at 1138
    ; Leonard at 8; Russell at 111.       As our precedent establishes,
    previous BWS experts have testified that “statistically, a battered woman
    is in the most danger when she tries to leave an abusive relationship.”
    
    Rodriquez, 636 N.W.2d at 245
    .
    The duration of Linn’s relationship with Blanchard cannot be used
    as a yardstick to measure whether she has a reasonable need for a BWS
    expert.   It is difficult to speculate based solely on the duration of the
    60
    relationship what effect such abuse had on an individual. Sackett &
    Saunders at 132. Roughly forty percent of individuals who experience
    intimate partner abuse are victimized “over a relatively short time period.”
    Stark, Coercive Control at 52. In 
    Dunn, 963 F.2d at 309
    –10, the Tenth
    Circuit held the state erroneously deprived a defendant of funding for a
    BWS expert when she dated her boyfriend for less than two months. In
    
    Brown, 94 P.3d at 575
    , the California Supreme Court approved of expert
    testimony akin to BWS when a woman suffered only one incident of abuse.
    Further, the State concedes that “BWS evidence would likely have
    been admissible” at Linn’s criminal trial.             Seemingly contrary to its
    concession, however, the State also suggests that Linn’s trial was “not a
    BWS case” because, according to the State, “Linn described an ongoing
    physical confrontation as the incident that made her fear for her life and
    led to the fatal shooting.” But as we have explained, contrary to common
    assumptions, BWS victims are most likely to use lethal violence against a
    batterer during an attack in which they perceive a threat of immediate
    harm. 8 Kadish at 855; Leonard at 25. At the time of Blanchard’s death,
    he was threatening to rape and kill her and was choking her with one hand
    around her throat. She “felt that [she] was being choked to die, or to
    submit.”
    Indeed, many aspects of BWS are not within lay knowledge. 
    Wilson, 487 N.W.2d at 824
    ; 
    Hennum, 441 N.W.2d at 798
    ; 
    Townsend, 897 A.2d at 327
    ; 
    Ordway, 619 A.2d at 827
    ; Leonard at 30; Russell at 191; Schuller &
    Vidmar, 16 L. & Hum. Behav. at 282–83. Defense attorneys are often
    unfamiliar with how to approach BWS. Leonard at 30. Those facts bolster
    8Our observation does not imply that BWS testimony is irrelevant or unuseful in
    cases lacking a physical confrontation at the time a BWS victim acts in purported self-
    defense. See 
    Frei, 831 N.W.2d at 75
    ; 
    Robinson, 417 S.E.2d at 91
    ; see also Leonard at 45
    (explaining why some battered women kill their batterer while he is asleep).
    61
    Linn’s asserted need for an expert to help her and her PCR counsel to apply
    specialized knowledge to the facts of her claim. And, in this case, her need
    for an expert is inextricably tied to her claim—PCR counsel cannot rely on
    the record to evaluate or advocate Linn’s claim precisely because BWS
    evidence was not presented at trial.      Without a BWS expert in this
    proceeding, PCR counsel is adrift in pressing the claim.
    Therefore, Linn’s request is no random fishing expedition.        The
    factual matters in the record and her asserted need reasonably
    demonstrate that a BWS expert is required to guide her, her PCR counsel,
    and the courts in evaluating her claim. See 
    Dunn, 963 F.2d at 313
    ; 
    Evans, 648 N.E.2d at 968
    –69.     There is no indication in the record that she
    previously had a psychological examination concerning BWS. See 
    Ledford, 333 S.E.2d at 576
    –77; 
    Aucoin, 756 S.W.2d at 714
    . In short, by seeking
    expert BWS testimony, she is “fishing in the right pond.” Consequently,
    by denying her request, the PCR court abused its discretion.
    B. Whether the District Court Erred in Granting Summary
    Disposition. We now consider whether the district court erred in granting
    summary judgment in this case.
    The goal of summary disposition in PCR proceedings “is to provide
    a method of disposition once the case has been fully developed by both
    sides.” 
    Manning, 654 N.W.2d at 559
    (quoting 
    Hines, 288 N.W.2d at 346
    ).
    Yet the district court granted summary disposition while Linn was waiting
    to learn whether the district court would approve her request for a court-
    appointed expert. The failure to appoint an expert cannot be cited as a
    basis for summary judgment when the court erroneously denied the
    appointment of such an expert.
    In addition, we do not agree with the district court’s determination
    that the undisputed record established that counsel made a strategic
    62
    decision not to pursue BWS. Trial counsel was not deposed in the PCR
    proceeding, so the record does not reveal what strategic judgments might
    have been coursing through the mind of counsel. In any event, at trial,
    Linn asserted two defenses—accident and self-defense. To the extent there
    is an inconsistency between the two theories, Linn already presented that
    inconsistency by asserting both theories at trial. Introduction of BWS
    testimony to support either or both defenses would not have compounded
    the purported inconsistency.   Counsel had already made the strategic
    judgment exactly the opposite of that now claimed by the State, and
    determined by the district court, to be undisputed.
    Attempting to support the district court’s order on this point, the
    State argues that Linn’s claim resembles the claim considered in State v.
    Sallie, 
    693 N.E.2d 267
    , 270 (Ohio 1998).     We disagree.   In Sallie, the
    defendant’s trial theory was that the shooting was an accident. 
    Id. The Sallie
    defendant did not claim self-defense. 
    Id. The court
    concluded that
    BWS evidence was immaterial because “trial counsel might reasonably
    have determined evidence explaining and rationalizing why Sallie might
    intentionally shoot Brown would appear inconsistent with the theory of
    accident, thereby diminishing Sallie’s credibility.” 
    Id. By contrast,
    Linn
    already claimed accident and self-defense.
    Courts have determined that BWS is relevant to either, or both, of
    the defenses Linn asserted at trial. We have explained that BWS testimony
    is relevant to both the subjective and objective components of a self-
    defense claim. See 
    Frei, 831 N.W.2d at 75
    ; see also State v. Kelly, 
    478 A.2d 364
    , 378 n.13 (N.J. 1984) (collecting cases holding BWS is relevant
    to objective and subjective components of self-defense).    The Supreme
    Court of West Virginia held that BWS is relevant to a defendant’s state of
    mind even when accident, as opposed to self-defense, is asserted. State v.
    63
    Stewart, 
    719 S.E.2d 876
    , 880, 888 (W. Va. 2011). Likewise, the California
    Court of Appeals held that a defendant who relied on a defense of accident
    at trial was prejudiced by her trial counsel’s failure to introduce BWS
    testimony. In re Walker, 
    54 Cal. Rptr. 3d 411
    , 414 (Ct. App. 2007). That
    decision overruled the court’s previous holding to the contrary. See 
    id. at 413–14.
    And the Supreme Court of New Jersey explained, in a case where
    the defendant grabbed a pair of scissors trying to scare away the victim
    but instead stabbed him, that BWS is relevant when self-defense is
    asserted to a criminal charge in which recklessness suffices to establish
    culpability. 
    Kelly, 478 A.2d at 369
    , 376 n.12. Linn’s jury, like that of the
    defendant in Kelly, considered a charge of reckless manslaughter as a
    lesser included offense. As a result, the district court’s conclusion that
    counsel must have necessarily made a strategic choice does not support
    the grant of summary judgment in this case.
    VI. Conclusion.
    For the reasons expressed above, we vacate the court of appeals
    decision and reverse the trial court judgment. We remand to the trial court
    for further proceedings. 9
    DECISION OF COURT OF APPEALS VACATED; DISTRICT COURT
    JUDGMENT REVERSED AND REMANDED.
    All justices concur except McDonald, J., who takes no part.
    9Because  we reverse the trial court’s judgment and remand for further
    proceedings, we need not consider Linn’s argument that her PCR counsel was ineffective.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 17-0007

Citation Numbers: 929 N.W.2d 717

Judges: Appel

Filed Date: 6/14/2019

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/19/2024

Authorities (46)

Wise v. State , 2006 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 1 ( 2006 )

State v. McGhee , 1974 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 1114 ( 1974 )

State v. Hennum , 1989 Minn. LEXIS 153 ( 1989 )

State v. Griffin , 1997 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 154 ( 1997 )

Crippen v. City of Cedar Rapids , 2000 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 190 ( 2000 )

State v. Rodriquez , 2001 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 212 ( 2001 )

Manning v. State , 2002 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 255 ( 2002 )

Clinkscales v. Nelson Securities, Inc. , 2005 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 80 ( 2005 )

State v. Peterson , 158 Md. App. 558 ( 2004 )

State v. Allery , 101 Wash. 2d 591 ( 1984 )

State v. Ordway , 1992 R.I. LEXIS 216 ( 1992 )

Robinson v. State , 308 S.C. 74 ( 1992 )

State v. Reeves , 636 N.W.2d 22 ( 2001 )

In Re Walker , 147 Cal. App. 4th 533 ( 2007 )

People v. Wilson , 194 Mich. App. 599 ( 1992 )

State v. Allen , 1997 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 178 ( 1997 )

Hines v. State , 1980 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 791 ( 1980 )

State v. Gettier , 1989 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 57 ( 1989 )

State v. Leutfaimany , 1998 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 222 ( 1998 )

Bonner v. State , 1998 Ala. Crim. App. LEXIS 42 ( 1998 )

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