State of Iowa v. Michael Garrick Denson ( 2023 )


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  •                     IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA
    No. 22-0139
    Filed April 12, 2023
    STATE OF IOWA,
    Plaintiff-Appellee,
    vs.
    MICHAEL GARRICK DENSON,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    ________________________________________________________________
    Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Dubuque County, Mark T. Hostager,
    District Associate Judge.
    The defendant appeals his convictions for assault on a peace officer and
    interference with official acts. AFFIRMED.
    Stuart Hoover, East Dubuque, Illinois, for appellant.
    Brenna Bird, Attorney General, and Bridget A. Chambers, Assistant
    Attorney General, for appellee.
    Considered by Greer, P.J., Ahlers, J., and Blane, S.J.*
    *Senior judge assigned by order pursuant to Iowa Code section 602.9206
    (2023).
    2
    BLANE, Senior Judge.
    Michael Denson was convicted by jury trial of assault on persons in certain
    occupations causing bodily injury and interference with official acts resulting in
    bodily injury. He contends there was insufficient evidence he was aware the
    victims were peace officers performing lawful acts within their authority. He also
    contends the State violated the motion in limine. Finding no merit in either claim,
    we affirm.
    I. Facts and Prior Proceedings
    Three officers of the Dubuque Drug Task Force—Daniel Kearney, Jeremy
    Slight, and Chad Leitzen—were conducting surveillance of a hotel where it was
    reported Denson was located. Denson had an active warrant out for his arrest.
    The officers were in plain clothes and unmarked vehicles.1
    As they were watching the hotel, the officers saw Denson leave a room and
    get into a car with a woman who was later identified as Brandy Williams. Williams
    got in the driver’s seat, and Denson got in the passenger seat. As they were on
    the hotel’s driveway, the three officers stopped the car, boxing it in with their own
    vehicles.
    Kearney and Slight drew their weapons, approached the car from the front,
    and told the occupants to put up their hands.          Williams put her hands up
    immediately. Kearney called Denson’s name, and Denson put his hands up too.
    Then Denson put his hands down and opened the passenger door. Kearney said,
    “Keep your hands up.” But Denson got out and ran toward the back of the car,
    1The officers were familiar with Denson’s appearance and knew his car, so they
    were able to identify him when he left the hotel room.
    3
    where Leitzen was approaching.         Kearney watched as Denson “lowered his
    shoulder and head” and ran right into Leitzen’s chest, taking them both down to
    the ground. Denson got up and started running across the parking lot. Slight ran
    after Denson yelling “stop, police.”      The officers chased after, but Denson
    disappeared. Leitzen had scrapes and bruises on his back, shoulder, and head.
    Denson was arrested more than two years later.
    The State charged him with assault on persons in certain occupations
    causing bodily injury, in violation of Iowa Code section 708.3A(3) (2019), and
    interference with official acts resulting in bodily injury, in violation of
    section 719.1(1)(c).    Before trial, Denson moved in limine2 to prevent any
    testimony that the officers were members of the drug task force, that any alleged
    drug offense was being investigated, or that any drugs were found in the vehicle.
    The jury found Denson guilty as charged. He appeals.
    II. Analysis
    A. Sufficiency of the Evidence
    “We review sufficiency of the evidence claims for correction of errors at law.”
    State v. Crawford, 
    974 N.W.2d 510
    , 516 (Iowa 2022). We consider whether, when
    taken in the light most favorable to the State, the verdicts are supported by
    substantial evidence. 
    Id.
     Evidence is substantial if it would convince a rational
    trier of fact that Denson is guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. 
    Id.
    To find Denson guilty of interference with official acts resulting in bodily
    injury, the jury was instructed it needed to find:
    2The State and Denson agreed to exclude several other topics from evidence that
    are not important here.
    4
    1. [Denson] knew Chad Leitzen, Dan Kearney and/or Jeremy
    Slight were peace officers who were:
    (a) detaining [Denson], or
    (b) arresting [Denson], or
    (c) serving or executing criminal process or an order of the
    court.
    It is not necessary that all jurors agree to just (a), just (b) or
    just (c). It is only necessary that all jurors agree to at least one of
    these three alternatives.
    2. [Denson] knowingly resisted or obstructed Chad Leitzen,
    Dan Kearney and/or Jeremy Slight in detaining [Denson], arresting
    [Denson], or serving or executing criminal process or an order of the
    court.
    3. [Denson’s] action resulted in bodily injury to Chad Leitzen.
    Denson contends there was insufficient evidence for this conviction:
    “nowhere in the officer’s testimony (or anywhere else) is there evidence that
    [Denson] should have known there was a lawful arrest warrant to detain him. . . .
    [T]he record does not make clear either occupant [of the car] knew why they had
    been stopped and drawn upon by officers.” He argues “proof of the defendant’s
    knowledge regarding the presence of a law enforcement officer and the knowledge
    of that officer’s execution of a lawful task are requisite elements for the marshalling
    instructions.”
    First, although the offense requires proof Denson “knew [the officers] were
    peace officers,” Denson inserts an additional element. The instruction submitted
    did not require that Denson knew the officers were executing a “lawful arrest
    warrant,” nor that they were “executing a lawful task.” (Emphasis added). Denson
    failed to request this element, so the jury instruction is the law of the case. See
    State v. Canal, 
    773 N.W.2d 528
    , 530 (Iowa 2009); but see Crawford, 974 N.W.2d
    at 521 (distinguishing the general rule that jury instructions are law of the case
    5
    when the defendant fails to object to the court “failing to fully define a term” and
    concluding the reviewing court can “apply[] the correct law”).
    On appeal, Denson cites State v. Buchanan, 
    549 N.W.2d 291
    , 293 (Iowa
    1996), and State v. Sullivan, No. 08-0541, 
    2009 WL 250287
    , at *2 (Iowa Ct. App.
    Feb. 4, 2009), as requiring that the defendant know the officer is “acting within the
    scope of his lawful duty or authority.” Neither of those cases expound on what
    constitutes an officer’s lawful duty or authority. But one of the prohibited acts is
    “knowingly resist[ing] or obstruct[ing] the service or execution . . . of any civil or
    criminal process[3] or order of any court.” 
    Iowa Code § 719.1
    (1)(a); see also State
    v. Legg, 
    633 N.W.2d 763
    , 772 (Iowa 2001) (finding the defendant interfered with
    the officer’s “lawful performance of his duty to issue her a ticket” for a traffic
    offense). And Denson does not deny the officers were executing a valid warrant.
    The State also contends there is no requirement that Denson knew the
    officers had a lawful arrest warrant. The State cites State v. Thomas, which held
    a defendant cannot resist even an unlawful arrest by one whom they know or have
    good reason to know is a peace officer. 
    262 N.W.2d 607
    , 610–11 (Iowa 1978).
    So the jury could find Denson guilty if he knew any of the men were peace officers
    and knew they were doing any one of three things: detaining him, arresting him, or
    either serving or executing criminal process or an order of the court.4
    3 “Criminal process” is “[a] [‘summons or writ’] (such as an arrest warrant) that
    issues to compel a person to answer for a crime.” Process, Black’s Law Dictionary
    (11th ed. 2019)
    4 We affirm a guilty verdict if substantial evidence supports any of the theories
    presented. See 
    Iowa Code § 814.28
    .
    6
    We find there was sufficient evidence both that Denson knew the individuals
    were peace officers and that he knew they were trying to detain him. Although the
    officers were in unmarked vehicles and plain clothes, two of the cars were flashing
    emergency lights associated with law enforcement. Slight pulled his car nose-to-
    nose with Denson’s car with red and blue emergency grille lights flashing. Leitzen
    stopped immediately behind Denson’s car with his emergency lights on as well.
    And Kearney pulled his car up to the driver’s side, boxing Denson’s car in against
    the curb and a rock wall. Kearney and Slight were wearing police badges on neck
    straps and bullet-proof vests. Leitzen was not wearing his badge, but his vest was
    labeled with a “POLICE” patch in large block print. The officers testified they
    identified themselves as police officers verbally.
    The officers’ actions and verbalizations would also convince a juror that
    Denson understood the officers were trying to detain him. The three officers
    physically blocked Denson from escaping and communicated verbally and
    physically that they were stopping him. Kearney testified he walked up to the car
    with his weapon drawn and pointed at Williams and Denson, identified himself as
    a police officer, and told the occupants to put their hands up. He estimated he was
    seven to ten feet away.      The driver’s side window was down fully, and the
    passenger window was halfway down. Slight also approached from the front of
    the vehicle with his weapon drawn, identified himself as a police officer, and told
    the occupants to put their hands up. He estimated he was a car length away from
    the vehicle. Both Denson and Williams responded to the requests at first and
    raised their hands. From outside the vehicle, Kearney testified Denson looked
    “right at” him as the deputy stood in front of him, pointing his gun. When Denson
    7
    ran, he had to do so by bowling over Leitzen with enough force to knock them both
    down. Leitzen testified he grabbed hold of Denson, but Denson tore himself away.
    After Denson ran away, Slight yelled after him “police, stop” several times. The
    officers testified it all happened very quickly. And Leitzen testified, “I definitely
    think he was trying to get away. . . . [H]e ran directly at me. . . . I was in the way.
    I was the only thing preventing him from getting away which is why he ran me
    over.”
    Although Denson complained at trial about the lack of body cam or dash
    cam corroboration of the officers’ stories, the jury was entitled to credit their
    accounts and perceptions of Denson’s reactions to them. See State v. Fox, 
    810 N.W.2d 888
    , 891 (Iowa Ct. App. 2011) (“The jury is free to give each piece of
    evidence the weight it deserves, ‘to place credibility where it belongs,’ and to
    accept or reject any witness’s testimony.” (citation omitted)). There is ample
    evidence in the record, including the officers’ stopping the car, the tangible markers
    of what the officers were wearing, and Denson’s own reactions to the officers’
    actions and commands, to convince a rational jury beyond a reasonable doubt that
    Denson knew the officers were peace officers who were trying to detain him. So
    substantial evidence supports the conviction for interference with official acts.
    B. Motion in Limine
    Denson next contends the State breached the motion in limine by letting the
    officers testify that they were involved with drug investigations and make other
    8
    allegedly prejudicial statements.5 We review an evidentiary decision for an abuse
    of discretion. State v. Thoren, 
    970 N.W.2d 611
    , 620 (Iowa 2022).
    Generally, a ruling on a motion in limine does not preserve error for
    appellate review, unless it was a final ruling. 
    Id.
     at 620–21. “Error arises when the
    evidence is introduced at trial, not from ruling on the motion in limine.” 
    Id. at 621
    .
    After a hearing on Denson’s motion, the court said:
    [M]y order on this, and I’m going to take it under advisement, I’m not
    going to rule right now, but my order is going to be a protective order,
    all right, on all of this.
    It’s not—it’s not a final ruling on the admissibility of evidence.
    It’s an order, a protective order that—that would say the State and
    its witnesses can’t bring this up unless you first go to the judge
    outside the presence of the jury and ask for permission, so it’s not a
    final ruling on evidence that says you can’t do this no matter what,
    it’s a ruling that says if you’re gonna get into this you can’t do it
    without first getting permission from the judge, and that’s why I say a
    protective order is different than a final ruling on evidence because
    the judge can hear the arguments during trial.
    If some of the things you’re worried about come up it could—
    the—the defense could lose the protection, they could open the door
    to something, all right?
    5 Denson also contends this was a form of prosecutorial misconduct. See State v.
    Plain, 
    898 N.W.2d 801
    , 818–819 (Iowa 2017) (explaining the standard and scope
    of review for prosecutorial error and misconduct). But he did not raise the claim
    below, so we do not address it. See State v. Krogmann, 
    804 N.W.2d 518
    , 526
    (Iowa 2011) (finding Krogmann failed to preserve error on a claim of prosecutorial
    misconduct when at trial he objected to a question only on the basis that the
    question was argumentative).
    Denson also faults the court for not granting a mistrial sua sponte, or on its
    own motion, based on prosecutorial misconduct. A sua sponte mistrial should be
    granted only in the face of “manifest necessity.” State v. Harrison, 
    578 N.W.2d 234
    , 238–39 (Iowa 1998). Denson does not cite this standard or explain how the
    conduct rises to that level, so he waives the argument. See Midwest Auto. III, LLC
    v. Iowa Dep’t of Transp., 
    646 N.W.2d 417
    , 431 n.2 (Iowa 2002) (holding random
    mention of an issue without elaboration or supporting authority fails to preserve a
    claim for appellate review). Even if not waived, the alleged violations of the limine
    order are few and do not reference drug charges or suspicions that Denson was
    involved with drugs. So they do not create a manifest necessity for mistrial
    warranting a sua sponte mistrial.
    9
    Again, I’m not—I’m not ruling on this right now, but I guess
    what I’m saying is my ruling is not a final ruling on evidence. It would
    be up—it would be up to the attorneys to take it up during the trial if
    there’s further need to do so.
    The court’s written order said:
    [T]he State and its witnesses shall make no reference to any of the
    law enforcement personnel being members of the Dubuque Drug
    Task Force or any reference to a drug investigation or the finding of
    any drugs in this case in the presence of the jury without first
    approaching the court out of the presence of the jury to seek
    permission to do so.
    The State shall also inform its witnesses of this order in limine
    prior to their testimony.
    As stated on the record, the parties are reminded this order is
    a protective order and not a final ruling on the admissibility or
    exclusion of evidence.
    Although Denson now asserts the State violated the motion several times
    through references to the officers being in a “specialized unit,” police training that
    included drug investigation, familiarity with Denson’s physical appearance, and
    statements that Denson had a nickname, he raised no objection during trial.6 On
    appeal he asserts he did not have to because the limine ruling was final. But as
    the court stated repeatedly in its verbal and written rulings, its decision on the
    motion in limine was not final and it intended to rule during testimony on a case-
    by-case basis. Even if the limine motion was sustained, that ruling “excludes
    reference or introduction of this evidence until its admissibility is determined by the
    trial court, outside the presence of the jury, in an offer of proof.” 
    Id.
     (citation
    6 The State carefully phrased questions that elicited answers to avoid violation of
    the limine order. The State walked an evidentiary tight rope of proving the officers
    in plain-clothes were identifiable as peace officers with knowledge of Denson’s
    identity because of his prior criminal activity without disclosing the drug nature of
    that activity.
    10
    omitted). Denson still had to object at trial. He did not preserve his claims for
    review.
    AFFIRMED.