Kenneth Leroy Adams v. State of Iowa ( 2021 )


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  •                     IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA
    No. 20-0807
    Filed June 30, 2021
    KENNETH LEROY ADAMS,
    Applicant-Appellant,
    vs.
    STATE OF IOWA,
    Respondent-Appellee.
    ________________________________________________________________
    Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Cerro Gordo County, Chris Foy,
    Judge.
    Kenneth Adams appeals the denial of his request for postconviction relief.
    AFFIRMED.
    Dylan J. Thomas, Mason City, for appellant.
    Thomas J. Miller, Attorney General, and Zachary Miller, Assistant Attorney
    General, for appellee State.
    Considered by May, P.J., and Greer and Schumacher, JJ.
    2
    GREER, Judge.
    Kenneth Adams appeals from the denial of his application for postconviction
    relief (PCR) following his conviction for child endangerment resulting in death.
    Adams asserts the PCR court erred in rejecting three ineffective-assistance-of-
    counsel claims. His first claim, that trial counsel was ineffective for failing to seek
    exclusion of a medical examiner’s expert opinion testimony on cause and manner
    of death, is twofold. He argues trial counsel should have sought exclusion because
    (1) the medical examiner’s testimony was unreliable and had little scientific basis
    and (2) was based entirely on information provided by law enforcement. Next,
    Adams claims trial counsel was ineffective for failing to move for a mistrial after the
    medical examiner questioned his trial counsel’s knowledge of copyright law on
    cross-examination. Finally, Adams asserts trial counsel was ineffective for failing
    to request a jury instruction stating guilt cannot be inferred from a criminal
    defendant’s decision not to testify at trial.
    I. Facts and Earlier Proceedings.
    Adams was found guilty of child endangerment resulting in death after a jury
    trial in 2013. The following evidence was presented at trial:
    In a recorded interview, Adams told law enforcement officers
    the child got upset when his mother left, threw a tantrum, and
    “bashed [him] in the face.” Adams was angered by the child’s action.
    He told the child not to do that and instructed him to lie down. Adams
    threw a pillow on the couch, grabbed the child’s pants and “flipped
    him up” onto the couch, placing him face down on the pillow. He held
    the child’s arm and stroked his back until the child’s breathing slowed
    down. At that point, Adams “turned [the child’s] face slightly so that
    his face was sitting out” because he was concerned about sudden
    infant death syndrome. He played video games with his older son,
    cleaned the upstairs bathroom, and returned to play videogames,
    before noticing something was wrong with the child.
    3
    Adams called 911 on a recorded line. He informed the
    dispatcher his son was not breathing and his eyes were glassy.
    Law enforcement officers and paramedics arrived at the
    scene and attempted life-saving procedures, to no avail. According
    to one officer, the child “was limp, and his face was blue.”
    ....
    The State medical examiner testified the cause of the child’s
    death was suffocation. . . . He ruled the manner of death a homicide
    based on Adams’ admission to holding the child’s arm. The medical
    examiner eliminated other reasonable causes of death, including
    choking on vomit, trauma from the child’s “head butt” of his father,
    ear infection or cold, and sudden infant death syndrome.
    State v. Adams, No. 13-1852, 
    2015 WL 799542
    , 1–*2 (Iowa Ct. App. Feb. 25,
    2015). Adams appealed, challenging the sufficiency of the evidence supporting
    his conviction and asserting his trial counsel was ineffective in failing to challenge
    the medical examiner’s testimony as an improper credibility assessment.1 Id. at
    *1.   Our court affirmed his conviction, finding the verdict was supported by
    substantial evidence.     Id. at *2.   Adams’s ineffective-assistance claim was
    preserved for PCR review. Id. at *3.
    Adams then filed a PCR application in 2016, raising his first ineffective-
    assistance claim. He amended the application later that year to include his second
    claim of ineffective assistance and amended it again in 2017 to include the third
    ineffective-assistance claim. The parties agreed to forgo a trial and submitted the
    case to the PCR court based on their briefs and a stipulated record in December
    1 Adams also claimed the district court applied an incorrect standard in denying his
    motion for new trial. Our court agreed; the order denying Adam’s motion for new
    trial was vacated and remanded to the district court with instructions to apply the
    correct standard. Adams, 
    2015 WL 799542
    , at *2. On remand, the district court
    again denied his new trial motion.
    4
    2019.2 The PCR court issued its ruling in May 2020, denying all claims and
    grounds for relief presented by Adams. He appeals.
    II. Standard of Review and Error Preservation.
    We review PCR claims raising ineffective assistance of counsel de novo.
    Goode v. State, 
    920 N.W.2d 520
    , 524 (Iowa 2018).
    The State generally concedes Adams preserved error on his claim that trial
    counsel was ineffective for failing to seek exclusion of the medical examiner’s
    expert opinions on the cause and manner of death.3 Adams’s additional ineffective
    assistance claims are preserved because they were considered and rejected by
    the PCR court. However, the State argues Adams did not specifically preserve
    error on his claim that trial counsel was ineffective for failing to seek exclusion of
    the medical examiner’s testimony on the basis that he relied heavily on information
    from law enforcement in forming those opinions. See State v. Tyler, 
    867 N.W.2d 2
     According the PCR court’s written ruling, the jointly stipulated record included:
    (1) the file and trial transcript from the underlying criminal prosecution
    against Adams . . . ; (2) the evidentiary deposition taken in this case
    of . . . the attorney who represented Adams in his criminal case;
    (3) the evidentiary deposition taken in this case of [the medical
    examiner], who testified as an expert for the State at the trial in
    Adams’ criminal case; and (4) the discovery deposition taken of [the
    medical examiner] in the criminal case. Adams offered the
    transcripts of the evidentiary depositions and the curriculum vitae of
    [the medical examiner] as Exhibits 1, 2, and 3. The State offered
    Exhibit A, a transcript of the trial testimony of [the medical examiner]
    in the criminal case with those parts it believed to be most pertinent
    highlighted, and Exhibit B, a transcript of the discovery deposition
    taken of [the medical examiner] in the criminal case with those parts
    it believed to be most pertinent highlighted.
    3 The medical examiner testified cause of death is “what happened to the person
    that caused death” and “manner of death is a category of death . . . placed in one
    of five categories. And those categories are natural, accident, suicide, homicide,
    and undetermined.”
    5
    136, 162 (Iowa 2015) (finding that a medical examiner’s opinions on cause or
    manner of death are normally impermissible when based “largely on witness
    statements or information obtained through police investigation.”). We agree.
    Adams did not present the Tyler claim in any version of his PCR application or the
    PCR trial brief, and the PCR court did not address the claim or even reference
    Tyler in its final ruling. Adams presents the claim for the first time in this appeal.
    “It is a fundamental doctrine of appellate review that issues must ordinarily be both
    raised and decided by the district court before we will decide them on appeal.”
    Meier v. Senecaut, 
    641 N.W.2d 532
    , 537 (Iowa 2002). So, we decline to consider
    this argument.
    III. Analysis.
    “To succeed on a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel, [an applicant]
    must prove: (1) counsel failed to perform an essential duty; and (2) prejudice
    resulted.” State v. Maxwell, 
    743 N.W.2d 185
    , 195 (Iowa 2008) (citing Strickland v.
    Washington, 
    466 U.S. 668
    , 687 (1984)). To show prejudice, “the applicant must
    demonstrate ‘that there is a reasonable probability that, but for counsel’s
    unprofessional errors, the result of the proceeding would have been different.’”
    Ledzema v. State, 
    626 N.W.2d 134
    , 141 (Iowa 2001) (quoting Strickland, 
    466 U.S. at 694
    ).    “A reasonable probability is a probability sufficient to undermine
    confidence in the outcome.” Strickland, 
    466 U.S. at 694
    . “‘We begin with the
    presumption that the attorney performed competently’ and ‘avoid second-guessing
    and hindsight.’” State v. Brubaker, 
    805 N.W.2d 164
    , 171 (Iowa 2011) (citation
    omitted). The applicant must prove both elements by a preponderance of the
    6
    evidence; if the applicant fails to prove one of the elements the claim fails and we
    need not address the other. Ledzema, 
    626 N.W.2d at 143
    .
    A. Trial Counsel’s Failure to Seek Exclusion of the Medical Examiner’s
    Testimony.
    Adams claims trial counsel was ineffective for failing to seek exclusion of
    the medical examiner’s opinions on cause and manner of death based on the
    standard of admissibility for expert testimony discussed by the United States
    Supreme Court in Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharmaceauticals, Inc., 
    509 U.S. 579
    ,
    591–593 (1993), and our supreme court in Ranes v. Adams Laboratories, Inc., 
    778 N.W.2d 677
    , 685–686 (Iowa 2010). He argues had trial counsel objected, the
    medical examiner’s testimony would have been                inadmissible under a
    Daubert/Ranes analysis and the trial would have ended differently.
    We note our supreme court has not fully adopted the Daubert standard, and
    Iowa courts are not required to apply it. Leaf v. Goodyear Tire and Rubber Co.,
    Inc., 
    590 N.W.2d 525
    , 531 (Iowa 1999). Iowa courts take a “liberal view of the
    admissibility of expert testimony.” Ranes, 
    778 N.W.2d at 685
    . As a preliminary
    matter, courts consider whether expert testimony “will assist the trier of fact” in
    understanding “the evidence or to determine a fact in issue.”         See Iowa R.
    Evid. 5.702. This requires the court to consider “the existence of a reliable body
    of ‘scientific, technical, or other specialized knowledge’” and whether “the evidence
    is relevant in assisting the trier of fact.” Ranes, 
    778 N.W.2d at
    685 (citing Johnson
    v. Knoxville Cmty. Sch. Dist., 
    570 N.W.2d 633
    , 637 (Iowa 1997)). Next, “the court
    must determine if the witness is qualified to testify ‘as an expert by knowledge,
    skill, experience, training, or education.’” Ranes, 
    778 N.W.2d at 685
     (quoting Iowa
    7
    R. Evid. 5.702). Here, the relevancy of the medical examiner’s opinions on cause
    and manner of death is not in question, nor are his qualifications as a State certified
    medical examiner with extensive experience performing autopsies. So, our focus
    is on the medical and scientific underpinning of the medical examiner’s testimony.
    The medical examiner was asked on cross-examination how he determined
    the child died from suffocation. He testified:
    It is a combination of processes. Suffocation for the forensic
    pathologist, there is no definitive finding per se for suffocation. So
    there is no particular mark. There’s not something that we can look
    at under the microscope to say this is suffocation. What we have to
    do is look at the circumstances, what we are told, and it’s also a
    process of eliminating all other known reasonable cause of death.
    So that’s what we did in this case. And one of the reasons why we
    did a complete thorough autopsy and ran numerous different tests to
    rule out all those other possibilities, and then you’re left with what
    else could cause this death and you correlate that with what we’re
    told and the circumstances surrounding the death.
    ....
    We were told eventually that [the child] was placed in a
    position that his—he was in a prone or facedown position such that
    his face was in a pillow and that he was held in this position until he
    stopped moving.
    The medical examiner explained that the child would not have suffocated face
    down on the pillow on his own.4 Suffocation occurred “because the child [was]
    prevented from moving his head.” Trial counsel replied, “How is he prevented from
    moving his head?” The following exchange came next:
    A. If the child is held. Now, he doesn’t have to be compressing
    but if he is held in a position such that he cannot move his head
    enough to get air. Now it doesn’t have to be a complete seal. But if
    it’s enough that impairs the air exchange, that’s a homicide.
    Q. What do you see in this case in this case that makes you
    believe his head was held and he couldn’t move it? A. I saw a
    reenactment [by Adams] of the position of the child.
    4 The child, at eighteen months old, was in the eighty to ninety percentile range of
    for both height and weight with no health concerns.
    8
    Q. And you saw a demonstration of my client putting his hand
    on the head of the child? A. Does not have to be the hand on the
    head. It just has to be such that the child cannot move in such a
    position that there can be enough air exchanged.
    Q. What did you see that led you to believe the child couldn’t
    move? A. Well, the child is—by doll reenactment is placed such that
    the head is in the pillow. And that’s enough to impair air exchange.
    Now, if the child were just sleeping and their head—and they can
    turn. But even if you just prevent the child from being able to turn,
    even if you hold it with one finger, I’m not talking the whole weight
    but even just one finger and it’s preventing the child from its natural
    instinct to push away and turn and get enough air, that’s a homicide.
    The medical examiner went on to explain that in the reenactment video, Adams
    was straddling the child5 while holding him down with his hands and stroking his
    arm. “Stroking the arm is not inconsistent with holding a person in that position as
    well. You can hold the person and stroke their arm at the same time.” Trial counsel
    later asked, “And you’re saying there doesn’t have to be a sufficient force to even
    leave a bruise or some sort of physical finding for that restraint?” The medical
    examiner replied “Yes,” and when pressed for a source he cited a forensic
    pathology book by Vincent DiMaio. See DiMaio, Vincent J. and DeMaio, Dominick,
    Forensic Pathology, Chapter 8 (2nd ed. 2001). Adams claims the source
    did not provide a basis for that opinion but only generally provided
    general information on asphyxia. . . . As it was a novel situation, no
    scientific study could be cited nor error rate for same. As well, there
    was no generally accepted opinion among medical examiners for
    such a situation.
    Common sense would seem to dictate that the medical
    conclusion that a child of that age could not suffocate from the
    position he was in on the pillow, but that touching the on the arm with
    no significant pressure exerted on the body would make the
    5 The medical examiner explained straddling “could be anything that’s going to
    inhibit the person to being able to fully turn and have the adequate amount of
    access to air that they would need in order to survive.” He determined Adams
    straddled the child from watching the reenactment as well as from law enforcement
    reporting of Adams’s own statements.
    9
    difference and could cause the child to suffocate is absurd. No
    scientific methodology could support such a conclusion.
    We agree with the PCR court that our holding in State v. Garcia-Miranda is
    instructive here. No. 05-1870, 
    2007 WL 1345848
    , at *2-3 (Iowa Ct. App. May 9,
    2007). The defendant in Garcia was on trial for first-degree-murder and objected
    to the admissibility of opinion testimony of three medical experts over the time
    frame between injury and death. Id. at *1. The defendant argued “there were no
    existing studies giving reference to a child’s possible survival time after suffering
    certain injuries; sufficient data . . . [did] not exist.” Id. at *2. In rejecting his claim,
    our court found “it would be impractical to require the doctors to base their opinions
    on published data or research in the present case. As the doctors testified, it was
    impossible to conduct controlled scientific studies on the topic because it would
    involve intentional infliction of serious injuries on human subjects.” Id.
    Such was the case here. The medical examiner acknowledged his opinions
    were not the sort that could be tested other than on a child-sized doll. He reached
    his conclusion based on the autopsy, his knowledge and expertise, the video
    reenactment, and information from law enforcement regarding Adams’s own
    statements in a recorded interview. Even though he admitted he did not watch the
    entire seven-hour interview or read the full transcripts of the interviews, the medical
    examiner noted objective findings supporting his opinions. During the autopsy, the
    medical examiner observed external bruising behind the child’s ear along with a
    “total of eleven different discrete areas of hemorrhage or bleeding into that fatty
    tissue just beneath the scalp.” He attributed those marks to some sort of trauma
    requiring blunt force, such as a deep squeeze or pressure. Along with those
    10
    observations, he stood by his opinion that the child died from suffocation due to
    Adams holding him face down in the pillow: “Yes. It’s a high degree of medical
    certainty. I think that is what happened.”
    The defendant in Garcia also argued the district court erred in failing to
    conduct a Daubert “preliminary assessment of whether or not the reasoning or
    methodology underlying the testimony was scientifically valid and whether or not it
    could be properly applied to this case.” Id. at *3. Our court rejected that claim as
    well, finding:
    [T]he doctors were not introducing new theories or explaining
    complex methodologies. Testimony regarding forensic pathology
    has been widely used in court proceedings. The doctors’ testimony
    concerned the mechanism of injury, their observation of the injuries,
    the cause of death, and the blood collection process. It was quite
    plain and easy to understand. The jury would have sufficient
    knowledge and personal experience to decide the credibility of the
    testimony and to give it proper weight. It [was] unnecessary to
    require a preliminary assessment.
    Id. We think the district court would have reached the same conclusion had trial
    counsel objected or otherwise tried to exclude the medical examiner’s testimony
    on cause and manner of death. Trial counsel had no duty to raise a meritless
    objection. State v. Greene, 
    592 N.W.2d 24
    , 29 (Iowa 1999). In the words of the
    PCR court:
    The testimony of [the medical examiner] was admissible to help the
    jury understand all the evidence presented by the State regarding
    the circumstances of [the child’s] death. It is the opinion of the Court
    that the testimony given by [the medical examiner] falls within the
    scope of admissible expert testimony under Iowa R. Evid. 5.702.
    [Trial counsel] did not breach an essential duty by failing to seek the
    exclusion of the testimony of [the medical examiner] . . . .
    11
    We agree. We find trial counsel did not breach an essential duty on this basis, and
    we reject Adams’s claim.
    B. Failure to Seek a Mistrial.
    Adams claims trial counsel breached an essential duty by failing to move
    for a mistrial after the following exchange with the medical examiner on cross-
    examination:
    Q. I asked you to provide two copies of articles or studies. Did
    you do that? A. I provided you the citations, and I didn’t want to
    photocopy against copyright law.
    Q. Did you give the copies to [the State]? A. I gave you the
    citations.
    ....
    Q. You didn’t tell me in deposition that it would be in violation
    of copyright law.
    ....
    A. I think what I said is that I provided you the citations and
    that I would not do your job, and that basically is that I can’t
    photocopy something that is copyrighted.
    On redirect, the State asked the medical examiner, “Did you feel the need to tell a
    lawyer the laws of copyright?” He replied, “No, I didn’t. I felt that she would have
    been more versed than I.” Adams argues that this exchange undermined trial
    counsel’s credibility with the jury, and as a result the jury would have been unable
    to render a fair and impartial verdict. The PCR court held:
    In the opinion of the Court, Adams exaggerates the significance of
    the comments made by [the medical examiner]. While the tone of
    those comments was not respectful, they did not address and had
    no bearing on any substantive issue in the case against Adams. . . .
    [T]he Court views the comments . . . as fairly typical of those any
    witness might make out of frustration or irritation after undergoing
    cross-examination. It would not characterize these comments as a
    challenge to the competence of [trial counsel]. Further, the Court
    does not believe that the jurors would have viewed the comments . . .
    as an attack on the professional qualifications of [trial counsel]. In
    any event, Adams did not cite, and the Court is not aware of any case
    in which a mistrial was granted in a criminal prosecution based on
    12
    disrespectful or disparaging comments made by a witness about
    defense counsel. Without such legal authority, there is no basis for
    the Court to find that [trial counsel] breached an essential duty by
    failing to seek a mistrial.
    We agree with the PCR court. Now on appeal, Adams again cites no persuasive
    authority to support his claim that trial counsel’s decision not to seek a mistrial
    amounted to breach of an essential duty. Trial counsel explained in her deposition
    that she did not seek a mistrial because she did not think the exchange affected
    her defense. Judgment calls such as this are rarely a basis for finding ineffective
    assistance, absent a lack of diligence or investigation by trial counsel. Ledzema,
    
    626 N.W.2d at
    142–43. We find trial counsel did not breach an essential duty by
    failing to move for a mistrial.
    C. Failure to Request a Jury Instruction.
    Lastly, Adams claims trial counsel provided ineffective assistance by failing
    to request an instruction informing the jury they could not infer guilt based on
    Adams’s decision not to testify at trial. During the record on the jury instructions
    at trial, the district court asked: “I was going to ask, . . . just for the record, there is
    an instruction about the defendant not testifying. That has to be given only when
    the defendant requests that. Do you request that, or do you want to make any
    additional record on that point?” Trial counsel indicated “I do not, your Honor.
    Since the Esse[6] instruction is given, I don’t believe it’s necessary.”
    6 See State v. Esse, No. 03-1739, 
    2005 WL 2367779
    , at *3-4 (Iowa Ct. App. Sept.
    28, 2005) (requiring a limiting instruction regarding the proper use of recorded
    interrogations). Here, the district court instructed the jury: “Statements and
    questions by law enforcement officers during interviews with the defendant are not
    evidence to be-considered for their truth. The defendant's answers and responses
    to those questions and statements are evidence.”
    13
    Trial counsel confirmed she strategically decided not to request the
    instruction because she wanted to refer to Adams’s statements in the recorded
    police interview as his testimony rather than put him on the stand. In closing
    argument, trial counsel pointed to Adams’s conduct and comments during the 911
    call and the video interviews as if it were his testimony. In a similar manner, the
    State also commented on Adams’s statements but never referenced his choice to
    not testify during trial. “Whether counsel breaches an essential duty by failing to
    offer or object to a particular instruction ‘must be determined with regard to the
    theory of defense which is being employed in the case.’” State v. Virgil, 
    895 N.W.2d 873
    , 879 (Iowa 2017) (citation omitted). Because the decision to forego
    this particular instruction was a reasonable trial strategy, we find no breach of an
    essential duty by trial counsel.
    IV. Conclusion.
    Adams fails to demonstrate breach of an essential duty in any of his
    ineffective-assistance claims. We affirm the PCR court’s denial of relief.
    AFFIRMED.