State of Iowa v. Darriel Marcell Dean ( 2023 )


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  •                     IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA
    No. 21-1338
    Filed February 8, 2023
    STATE OF IOWA,
    Plaintiff-Appellee,
    vs.
    DARRIEL MARCELL DEAN,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    ________________________________________________________________
    Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Henry County, John Wright, Judge.
    The defendant appeals from his convictions for child endangerment causing
    serious injury and child endangerment, challenging the competency of a child
    witness as well as the weight and the sufficiency of the evidence. AFFIRMED.
    Martha J. Lucey, State Appellate Defender, and Rachel C. Regenold,
    Assistant Appellate Defender, for appellant.
    Brenna Bird, Attorney General, and Linda J. Hines, Assistant Attorney
    General, for appellee.
    Considered by Vaitheswaran, P.J., Greer, J., and Potterfield, S.J.*
    *Senior judge assigned by order pursuant to Iowa Code section 602.9206
    (2023).
    2
    POTTERFIELD, Senior Judge.
    Darriel Dean appeals his convictions for child endangerment resulting in
    serious injury and child endangerment. He challenges (1) the district court’s
    decision that five-year-old K.D. was competent to testify, (2) the sufficiency of the
    evidence to support each of his convictions, (3) and the district court’s denial of his
    motion for new trial based on the weight of the evidence.
    I. Background Facts and Proceedings.
    Dean was charged by trial information with child endangerment causing
    serious injury and child endangerment. His children, F.D. and K.D., were the
    alleged victims. The charges were based on the fact that three-year-old F.D.
    needed to be transported to the hospital due to having what appeared to be a
    seizure in the early morning hours of April 16, 2021. Further tests showed F.D.
    had a fracture in his skull in the left frontal lobe. Initial reports noted that Dean
    reported F.D. was having issues as early as 9:00 or 10:00 p.m. on April 15, but
    medical help was not sought until 1:33 a.m. on April 16. Additionally, it was alleged
    that five-year-old K.D. suffered trauma as a result of the harm done to F.D.
    Dean pled not guilty and elected to have a jury trial.
    At the two-day trial in July, K.D. and seven-year-old G.B., who were both
    present on April 15, testified about what they witnessed.            Additionally, the
    emergency room (ER) physician who was working when F.D. arrived at the ER,
    Dr. Rose Schabilion, testified. The officer who investigated F.D.’s injury and the
    mental health counselor who met with K.D. in November 2021 also testified.
    3
    The jury found Dean guilty of both counts as charged. After denying his
    motion for new trial, the district court sentenced Dean to a term of incarceration
    not to exceed ten years.
    Dean appeals.
    II. Discussion.
    1. Competency of Child Witness.
    Dean challenges the competency of K.D., the five-year-old witness who
    testified for the State at trial. He maintains the district court abused its discretion
    in finding her competent to testify. See State v. Brotherton, 
    384 N.W.2d 375
    , 377–
    78 (Iowa 1986) (reviewing ruling on witness competency for an abuse of
    discretion).
    Under Iowa Rule of Evidence 5.601, “[e]very person is competent to be a
    witness unless a statute or rule provides otherwise.” Dean urges us to use the test
    that was laid out in the prior version of the rule and argues the district court abused
    its discretion by failing to do so.1 But Dean did not ask the district court to use the
    old test. See Top of Iowa Coop v. Sime Farms, Inc., 
    608 N.W.2d 454
    , 470 (Iowa
    2000) (“[O]ne purpose of our error preservation rules is to ensure that the opposing
    1 Under Iowa Rule of Evidence 601 (1985), “a child [was] presumed to be
    competent.” But if the child’s competency was questioned, then the court was
    required to determine:
    (1) the child is mentally capable of understanding the
    questions being asked;
    (2) the child is able to formulate intelligent answers and
    communicate impressions and recollections regarding the incident
    about which the child is to testify; and
    (3) the child can understand the responsibility to tell the truth.
    State v. Andrews, 
    447 N.W.2d 118
    , 120 (Iowa 1989) (citing Iowa R. Evid. 601
    (1985)). The text of the rule changed in 1990 and matches what is now rule 5.601.
    See 1990 Iowa Acts ch. 1015, § 1.
    4
    party and the district court are alerted to an issue at a time when corrective action
    can be taken . . . .”). And, even if he had, we conclude that test is no longer
    necessary. See State v. Cahill, 
    972 N.W.2d 19
    , 34 (Iowa 2022) (“The basic
    premise behind Federal Rule 601 and presumably behind the most recent Iowa
    rule is that virtually all witnesses who possess relevant evidence should be allowed
    to present it to the jury and allow the jury to determine its probative value.” (quoting
    7 Laurie Kratky Doré, Iowa Practice Series: Evidence § 5.601:1 (Nov. 2022 update)
    [hereinafter Doré, Evidence]).
    Instead, with the starting point that every person is competent to testify
    absent some other rule or law preventing them, the court should focus on whether
    other rules of evidence prevent the testimony. See Doré, Evidence § 5.601:1
    (“[M]any trial courts likely will look carefully at the requirements of Rules 5.602,
    5.603 and 5.403 when deciding child witness competency.”); see also Iowa Rs.
    Evid. 5.403 (“The court may exclude relevant evidence if its probative value is
    substantially outweighed by a danger of one or more of the following: unfair
    prejudice, confusing the issues, misleading the jury, undue delay, wasting time, or
    needlessly presenting cumulative evidence.”), 5.602 (“A witness may testify to a
    matter only if evidence is introduced sufficient to support a finding that the witness
    has personal knowledge of the matter.”), 5.603 (“Before testifying, a witness must
    give an oath or affirmation to testify truthfully. It must be in a form designed to
    impress that duty on the witness’s conscience.”).
    Here, the district court engaged in lengthy colloquy with K.D.:
    Q. What is your name? A. [K.D.]
    Q. Hi, [K.D.] How old are you? A. Five.
    5
    Q. Five years old.          Does that mean that you’re in
    kindergarten? A. Not yet.
    Q. Oh, okay. Are you going to go to kindergarten next year?
    A. Yes.
    Q. And, [K.D.], do you have any brothers or sisters? A. I
    have—Yes.
    Q. And how many brothers do you have? A. Uh—
    Q. Pardon me? A. I don’t remember.
    THE FOSTER FATHER: Who’s your brother?
    K.D.: [F.], [Z.], [T.]—
    THE FOSTER FATHER: She’s talking about her—our kids,
    but [F.] is her biological brother.
    THE COURT: Okay. Just a second, sir. I need to ask her
    these questions. So [K.D.], what is your last name? A. It’s hard to
    remember.
    Q. Yeah, it is. So let’s talk about something that might be easy
    to answer, okay? Let’s talk about when you’re telling your friends a
    story. Can you think of any stories you might have told your friends?
    A. Well—
    Q. Well, do you tell your friends any secrets? A. Uh, no.
    Q. Okay. Do you like to play with friends? A. Yes.
    Q. And when you play with friends, do you talk about things?
    A. Yes.
    Q. What would you talk about? A. I would talk about that we
    do something, to play, like Polly.
    Q. What is it? A. Polly.
    Q. Oh, okay. So I haven’t had a [five] year old around for a
    while, so I’m not up to date on those. Do you like to play games?
    A. Yes.
    Q. And when you play games, do you play by the rules?
    A. Uh, yes.
    Q. Okay. And when you are asked questions by your friends,
    do you tell them the answers? A. Yeah. It’s kind of hard to tell the
    answers.
    Q. Okay. So if I asked you, what is the color of my tie, what
    would you say? A. Blue.
    Q. Okay. And if you were to look at, say, the color of the mask
    that [the guardian ad litem] is wearing, what color is that? A. Black.
    Q. Okay. There’s a fire extinguisher right beside you. What
    color is that? A. Red.
    Q. Do you know what it means to tell the truth? A. Yes.
    Q. Tell me what it means to tell the truth. A. That you don’t
    lie. You just say the truth when it’s hard, but you do it anyway.
    Q. And is it good to lie? A. No.
    Q. And if someone were to ask you a question, would you tell
    the truth or would you lie? A. Tell the truth.
    Q. So do you know what a promise is? A. Yes.
    6
    Q. Tell me what you think a promise is. A. It’s when someone
    says not to break their promise, you don’t break their promise. You
    keep the promise. When someone says not to break the promise,
    you don’t break the promise.
    Q. Are you supposed to break a promise? A. No.
    Q. And if I have you talk to the lawyers, these two men sitting
    over here, later this morning, do you think you can do that? A. Yes.
    Q. Okay. And if they ask you questions, are you going to lie or
    are you going to tell the truth? A. Tell the truth.
    Q. If you think that what you are saying might hurt a friend,
    would you still tell the truth or would you lie? A. Still tell the truth.
    Q. Okay. Do you have any questions for me? A. I like your
    clothes.
    THE COURT: Thank you. Okay. [K.D.], thank you for coming
    in. And you can go back to coloring or playing or whatever it was
    you were doing.
    Dean contends K.D. was not competent to testify because she “could not
    recall her last name or who here brothers were.” But as those questions were
    posed to a young child living in foster care, the answers may be less
    straightforward than Dean suggests. And, either way, those facts and whether
    K.D. could testify to them have no bearing on what she witnessed and could
    recollect about the April 15 incident. The issues Dean raises goes to K.D.’s
    credibility and the weight to be given her testimony rather than its admissibility See
    Cahill, 972 N.W.2d at 34 (noting the defendant did “not cite a single reported Iowa
    case holding that inconsistencies in recollection or narrative are, by themselves, a
    ground for excluding a witness” and his “challenges to the three witnesses [were]
    classic examples of jury arguments about weight rather than arguments for the
    court about admissibility”); see also Brotherton, 
    384 N.W.2d at 378
     (“Competency
    of a witness is not disproved by a witness’ ‘mere testimonial inconsistency;’ rather,
    this is a matter directed to the weight to be afforded the witness' testimony by the
    jury.” (citation omitted)). And it is “not the district court’s job to decide on witness
    7
    credibility prior to trial.” Cahill, 972 N.W.2d at 34. Nothing elicited by the court
    during the colloquy suggests another rule of evidence prevented K.D. from
    testifying, and Dean has offered no other statute or rule that was violated by
    allowing K.D. to testify. See Iowa R. Evid. 5.601.
    The district court did not abuse its discretion in finding K.D. competent to
    testify.
    2. Sufficiency of the Evidence.
    Dean challenges the sufficiency of the evidence supporting each of his
    convictions. “We review the sufficiency of the evidence for correction of errors at
    law.” State v. Crawford, 
    972 N.W.2d 189
    , 202 (Iowa 2022) (citation omitted). In
    doing so, “we are highly deferential to the jury’s verdict.” 
    Id.
     “The jury’s verdict
    binds this court if the verdict is supported by substantial evidence,” which is
    “evidence sufficient to convince a rational trier of fact the defendant is guilty beyond
    a reasonable doubt.” 
    Id.
     “In determining whether the jury’s verdict is supported by
    substantial evidence, we view the evidence in the light most favorable to the State,
    including all ‘legitimate inferences and presumptions that may fairly and
    reasonably be deduced from the record evidence.’” 
    Id.
     (citation omitted). The
    State must prove every element beyond a reasonable doubt.                See State v.
    Williams, 
    674 N.W.2d 69
    , 71 (Iowa 2004).
    A. Child Endangerment Resulting in Serious Injury.
    For the jury to properly convict Dean of child endangerment resulting in
    serious injury, the State had to prove:
    1. On or about April 15, 2020 through April 16, 2020, [Dean]
    was the parent of F.D.
    2. F.D. was under the age of fourteen years.
    8
    3. [Dean] acted with knowledge that he was creating a
    substantial risk to F.D.’s physical health or safety.
    4. [Dean’s] act resulted in serious injury to F.D.
    Dean challenges the evidence to support both the third and fourth element.
    First, Dean argues there is insufficient evidence that his actions led to any injury
    of F.D.; he suggests, as he did at trial, that the jury could not rule out the fact that
    F.D. may have fallen or been accidentally injured while playing. And second, he
    challenges that the State proved F.D. suffered a “serious injury.” We start with his
    first argument.
    On appeal, Dean focuses on the facts that the treating ER doctor could not
    rule out the possibility the F.D.’s injury was caused by his hitting his head on a
    “coffee table or fireplace or something like that” and that he told a police officer
    who was investigating F.D.’s injuries that he does not hit his children. But these
    handpicked facts play no role in our review of the sufficiency of the evidence. See
    State v. Williams, 
    695 N.W.2d 23
    , 28 (Iowa 2005) (“It is not the province of the
    court, in determining [whether sufficient evidence exists] to resolve conflicts in the
    evidence, to pass upon the credibility of witnesses, to determine the plausibility of
    explanations, or to weigh the evidence; such matters are for the jury.” (citation
    omitted)); see also State v. Lacey, 
    968 N.W.2d 792
    , 800–01 (Iowa 2021)
    (“Evidence is not insubstantial merely because we may draw different conclusions
    from it; the ultimate question is whether it supports the finding actually made, not
    whether the evidence would support a different finding.” (citation omitted)).
    Viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the State—as case law
    requires—we easily conclude the jury could find that Dean hit F.D., causing his
    9
    injury.2 Both five-year-old K.D. and seven-year-old G.B. were present at the time
    of F.D.’s injury. Both girls testified they were playing when F.D. spilled his juice on
    the floor. K.D. did not see what happened next because she “closed [her] eyes a
    little bit because [she] didn’t want to see what happened next because [she]
    thought something bad would happen.” While G.B. testified that after F.D. spilled,
    “[Dean] just came in and got mad.” She saw Dean go “over and hit [F.D.] three
    times.” After that, F.D. “just stopped talking”; he “was just on the couch” with his
    eyes closed. Substantial evidence supports the jury’s conclusion it was an act by
    Dean that caused F.D.’s injury.
    Second, we consider whether the State proved F.D. suffered a serious
    injury, which a jury instruction defined as “a bodily injury which creates a
    substantial risk of death or which causes serious permanent disfigurement or
    extended loss or impairment of the function of any bodily part or organ.” Dean
    2 Despite both Dean and the State discussing it in their respective appellate briefs,
    we do not consider whether there was substantial evidence to support a finding of
    guilt based on Dean’s failure to get medical treatment for F.D. See 
    Iowa Code § 726.6
    (1)(d) (defining child endangerment as “[w]illfully depriv[ing] a child . . . of
    necessary . . . health care . . . , when the person is reasonably able to make the
    necessary provisions and which deprivation substantially harms the child or
    minor’s physical, mental or emotional health”). While that is an alternative for
    convicting a person of child endangerment, the jury was never instructed on it. See
    State v. Banes, 
    910 N.W.2d 634
    , 639 (Iowa Ct. App. 2018) (“Where, as here, the
    jury was instructed without objection, the jury instruction becomes law of the case
    for the purposes of reviewing the sufficiency of the evidence.”); cf. State v.
    Leckington, 
    713 N.W.2d 208
    , 213 (Iowa 2006) (finding sufficient evidence
    supported the convicted where the jury had to find “[the defendant] knowingly acted
    in a manner creating a substantial risk to [the minor’s] physical, mental, or
    emotional health or safety, or [the defendant] willfully deprived [the minor]of
    necessary health care or supervision appropriate to [his] age when she was
    reasonably able to make the necessary provisions and which deprivation
    substantially harmed [the minor’s] physical, mental, or emotional health”
    (emphasis added)).
    10
    argues that while the treating ER physician testified F.D.’s “vitals were low, there
    was no indication . . .that there was substantial risk of death.” We disagree.
    “[A] substantial risk of death means more than just any risk of death but
    does not mean that death was likely. If there is a ‘real hazard or danger of death,’
    serious injury is established.” State v. Anderson, 
    308 N.W.2d 42
    , 47 (Iowa 1981).
    And here, the ER doctor described F.D. as “nearly comatose” when he got to the
    hospital. The doctor intubated F.D. and placed him on a ventilator because,
    according to the doctor’s testimony, his reduced state made it uncertain whether
    he would continue to breath on his own. It was also unclear F.D. would be able to
    protect his airway from his own saliva and stomach contents, placing him “at high
    risk of sort of sucking those things into [his] lungs, aspirating.” F.D. was then sent
    by helicopter to University of Iowa Stead Family Children’s Hospital because he
    needed an intensive care unit level of care. The doctor’s testimony F.D. might not
    be able to continue breathing constitutes substantial evidence he was in real
    danger of death.
    Substantial evidence supports Dean’s conviction for child endangerment
    causing serious injury.
    B. Child Endangerment.
    For the jury to properly convict Dean of child endangerment resulting in
    serious injury, the State had to prove:
    1. On or about April 15, 2020 through April 16, 2020, [Dean]
    was the parent of K.D.
    2. K.D. was under the age of fourteen years.
    3. [Dean] acted with knowledge that he was creating a
    substantial risk to K.D.’s physical health or safety.
    11
    The theory for Dean’s child-endangerment charge was that K.D.’s mental and
    emotional health was harmed by witnessing Dean injure F.D. As he did for his
    other conviction, Dean claims the State failed to prove he did any act to F.D. And
    for the same reasons as we previously stated, we disagree. The testimony of G.B.
    and K.D. is substantial evidence that Dean hit F.D.
    Alternatively, Dean contends the State failed to establish a link between his
    action and the trauma response the licensed mental health counselor testified she
    witnessed in K.D. in November—more than six months after F.D.’s injury. Dean
    claims “any number of things could have occurred causing a trauma response in
    K.D.” But the counselor testified specifically that K.D. “demonstrated a number of
    trauma responses related to this case. She avoided certain things. She got very
    restless and needed to check on people and make sure other people were safe
    and continued to demonstrate that anxiety trauma response throughout my time
    with her.” And after that testimony, the prosecutor reconfirmed that the counselor
    was testifying the trauma response was related to the injury of F.D.—this exchange
    took place:
    Q. So to be clear, you did discuss an incident that happened
    on April 15th or 16th of 2020? A. Correct.
    Q. And [K.D.] expressed a trauma response to that incident?
    A. That is correct.
    ....
    Q. What sort of conclusions did you make from your
    assessment? A. In terms of the trauma response, I concluded that
    she evidenced a number of criteria that fit the category of a trauma
    response that she was experiencing that seemed to have been
    triggered by many events that occurred on April 16th—or about April
    16, 2020. She evidenced a number of problematic symptoms in my
    presence, including restlessness, avoidance of certain topics,
    avoidance of certain emotional responses, wanting to change topic
    when she became upset about certain things, wanting to leave the
    room and check on the individuals that had brought her, a number of
    12
    issues related to her functioning that she discussed in terms of
    behavioral problems that she was having both in the community,
    home, and school. All of that continued to meet the symptoms
    related to a significant trauma response that was impacting her
    functioning day to day, including while she was sitting with me.
    ....
    Q. . . . Based on the incident that occurred April 16th of 2020,
    did it affect [K.D.’s] mental or emotional health? A. Yes.
    Q. To what degree of certainty are you regarding that
    conclusion? A. Based upon all my education, training, and
    continuing education, it is my opinion that she was demonstrating a
    trauma response within my professional psychological certainty.
    A rational trier of fact could be convinced by the counselor’s testimony that the
    mental and emotional harm K.D. was exhibiting was linked to the injury of F.D., so
    this conviction is supported by substantial evidence. See Crawford, 972 N.W.2d
    at 202 (“Substantial evidence is evidence sufficient to convince a rational trier of
    fact the defendant is guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.”).
    3. Motion for New Trial.
    Dean moved for new trial, claiming the verdict was contrary to the greater
    weight of the credible evidence. See Iowa R. Crim. P. 2.24(2)(b)(6). At the hearing
    on the motion, Dean asserted “one the witnesses testified to the fact that she did
    not see how the injury occurred” and “[t]he second witness was problematic in that
    she agreed that she had previously stated that she had not [seen what occurred],
    regardless of what she testified to in trial.” The court denied Dean’s motion and,
    ruling orally from the bench, stated:
    Well, the Court would note that this case presented facts that
    are not unusual in that there aren’t a lot of witnesses, and the State
    brought forth two children as witnesses in this case.
    The Court would point out to support [Dean’s] motion, one of
    the victims, the victim under Count II, [K.D.], testified that she did not
    see [Dean] hit her brother [F.D.]
    On the other hand, [G.B.], who is 7 years old, was called to
    the stand and she said that she saw [Dean] hit [F.D.] three times, and
    13
    this was as a result of [F.D.] spilling his juice. She then saw or
    observed that [F.D.]was not able to get up, and he was on the couch
    with his eyes closed.
    On cross-examination by the defense counsel, she testified
    that she saw what happened, but she had told the Department of
    Human Services and a police officer a different story when they first
    interviewed her. She reiterated on redirect that she did see [Dean]
    hit the child three times.
    . . . I pointed out at the beginning of this that this is not unusual
    that there are only a few witnesses to a crime. Sometimes there’s
    only one witness. But the testimony that was brought forth at the
    time of trial was testimony that convinces me that any motion for new
    trial should be overruled.
    I recognize, Mr. Dean, that the evidence does not seem to be
    overwhelming or coming from people who would be of majority age.
    But the State brings forth those witnesses it believes have personal
    information, and I’m satisfied that the evidence is such that a new
    trial is not warranted.
    We review the court’s ruling for an abuse of discretion. State v. Linderman, 
    958 N.W.2d 211
    , 218 (Iowa Ct. App. 2021). Our “review is limited to a review of the
    exercise of discretion by the trial court, not of the underlying question of whether
    the verdict is against the weight of the evidence.” 
    Id.
     (citation omitted). “Abuse of
    discretion occurs if the district court ‘exercised its discretion on grounds or for
    reasons clearly untenable or to an extent clearly unreasonable.’” 
    Id.
     (citation
    omitted).
    On appeal, Dean argues the district court wrongly denied his motion for new
    trial because it failed to take into account what occurred during G.B.’s testimony.
    After testifying that she saw Dean hit F.D. three times, outside the presence of the
    jury G.B. was shown a portion of a video from when she spoke with a social worker
    and police officer shortly after the incident.3 The video reminded G.B. that when
    3 F.D. was taken to the hospital around 2:00 a.m. on April 16. It is not clear from
    the record whether G.B. talked to the social worker and officer later the same day
    or on April 17.
    14
    asked if she saw what happened to F.D., she initially reported she “didn’t see it.”
    As Dean’s attorney attempted to pin down whether someone told G.B. that Dean
    hit F.D., the court interrupted and the following took place:
    THE COURT: Just a minute. Come forward, ma’am.
    (The mother of the witness approached the bench.)
    THE COURT: You’re going to wait outside.
    MOTHER OF WITNESS: That’s my child.
    THE COURT: Stop. You will not try to lead this witness into—
    MOTHER OF WITNESS: I’m not leading her into nothing
    because I told her what she knows.
    THE COURT: Take her outside.
    MOTHER OF WITNESS: And my daughter can come with me.
    THE COURT: Now.
    MOTHER OF WITNESS: She shouldn’t even be a part of this.
    (The mother of the witness was escorted from the courtroom.)
    THE COURT: Proceed, [defense counsel].
    Due to the mother’s apparent interference and G.B.’s inconsistent answers
    regarding whether she witnessed Dean hit F.D., Dean asserts G.B. “lacks any
    credibility.” According to Dean, this combined with K.D. testifying she did not see
    Dean hit F.D. means the greater weight of the evidence supports acquittal.
    In its evaluation of Dean’s motion, the district court recognized that G.B.
    was inconsistent in that she told the social worker she did not see Dean hit F.D.
    but then repeatedly testified she witnessed him hit F.D. three times. It seems the
    district court found G.B.’s trial testimony credible in spite of the inconsistency and
    her mother’s apparent interference.4 And the district court is in a better position to
    4During her testimony, G.B. seemed to be trying to explain that she saw Dean hit
    F.D. out of the corner of her eye or in her periphery vision rather than straight on.
    On cross-examination, she testified:
    Q. And do you agree with me that at least at that point in time, you
    told someone that you didn’t actually see what happened to [F.D.]?
    A. I mean, sometimes my eye goes, like, away and I can see still.
    ....
    15
    evaluate witness credibility. See Johnson v. Kaster, 
    637 N.W.2d 174
    , 178 (Iowa
    2001) (“[W]e are especially deferential to the district court’s assessment of witness
    credibility.” (alteration in original) (citation omitted)).
    Additionally, in arguing whether a credible witness testified as to actually
    seeing Dean hit F.D., Dean ignores all of the circumstantial evidence that supports
    a finding he caused the injury. See Iowa R. App. P. 6.904(3)(p) (“Direct and
    circumstantial evidence are equally probative.”). While K.D. did not report seeing
    a hit, she testified that she shut her eyes after F.D. spilled his juice because she
    sensed that “something bad would happen.” Similarly, whether she actually saw
    Dean hit F.D., G.B testified that Dean was angry at F.D. for spilling his juice and,
    after that, F.D. stopped talking and laid on the couch unmoving. According to the
    ER doctor, when Dean came in with F.D., Dean repeatedly refused to answer
    questions about what happened to F.D.; he offered no explanation of what
    occurred. But the statements he did give corroborate the testimony of K.D. and
    G.B.; he told Dr. Schabilion that around 10:00 p.m., he “found [F.D.] lying on the
    couch making a—he used the word ‘weird cry’ and [F.D.] was not responding to
    [him].” Additionally, Dean told the doctor he thought F.D. might have a headache
    so he put a cold wash cloth on his head. But when she asked a follow up about
    Q. Do you agree that you said that you don’t know because
    you weren’t looking? A. I mean, because my eye, like, moved this
    way, so I can still see.
    Q. Do you agree with me that you told the lady that someone
    else said— A. Okay, well, yeah.
    Q. Right? A. Yes.
    Q. So you heard someone else say that Mr. Dean hit [F.D.];
    correct? A. Yes.
    Q. You didn’t see it yourself? A. I mean, I could still see with
    my eyes so basically—
    16
    why he would believe F.D. had a headache since “[i]t’s not the most common
    complaint in children,” Dean again reverted to silence. By his own reported action,
    it seems Dean was aware that F.D. had suffered a head injury by about
    10:00 p.m—a fact he was unlikely to know if he did not cause it since bruising was
    just starting to form when F.D. arrived at the hospital around 2:00 a.m. See State
    v. Cox, 
    500 N.W.2d 23
    , 25 (Iowa 1993) (“Admissions may be implied by the
    conduct of the defendant subsequent to a crime . . . .”).
    The district court did not abuse its discretion in denying Dean’s motion for
    new trial. See State v. Benson, 
    919 N.W.2d 237
    , 243 (Iowa 2018) (“[A] district
    court should only grant a motion for new trial ‘in the extraordinary case in which
    the evidence preponderates heavily against the verdict rendered.’” (alteration in
    original) (citation omitted)).
    III. Conclusion.
    The district court did not abuse its discretion in finding a five-year-old
    witness competent to testify or in denying Dean’s motion for new trial.       And
    substantial evidence supports both of Dean’s convictions. So, we affirm.
    AFFIRMED.