State of Iowa v. Angres Kau ( 2024 )


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  •                     IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA
    No. 23-0743
    Filed October 30, 2024
    STATE OF IOWA,
    Plaintiff-Appellee,
    vs.
    ANGRES KAU,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    ________________________________________________________________
    Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Pottawattamie County, Margaret
    Reyes, Judge.
    A defendant appeals his conviction for attempted murder. AFFIRMED.
    Martha Lucey, State Appellate Defender, and Maria Ruhtenberg, Assistant
    Appellate Defender, for appellant.
    Brenna Bird, Attorney General, and Joshua A. Duden, Assistant Attorney
    General, for appellee.
    Considered by Greer, P.J., Badding, J., and Danilson, S.J.*
    *Senior judge assigned by order pursuant to Iowa Code section 602.9206
    (2024).
    2
    DANILSON, Senior Judge.
    A jury convicted Angres Kau of attempted murder, willful injury causing
    bodily injury, domestic abuse assault while using or displaying a dangerous
    weapon, and three counts of child endangerment. Kau appeals and challenges
    only his conviction for attempted murder. We affirm.
    I.    Background Facts
    Kau married his wife, Aleen, in Guam in 2014. They have three children.
    The couple eventually moved to Council Bluffs—Kau in December 2020 and Aleen
    in August 2021. Kau became concerned that Aleen would cheat on him. On
    October 15, 2022, Kau was drunk and struck Aleen in the face, only stopping when
    their five-year old son intervened. Kau then threatened Aleen saying, “If I ever
    catch you cheat[ing] on me, I will take your life.”
    On November 30, Aleen’s first day at her new job where Kau also worked,
    Kau found her sitting next to a male coworker while on break. Kau told her he did
    not like that she sat next to the coworker. That evening, Kau questioned Aleen
    about her interactions with her coworker and what was going on between them.
    The next morning, Kau took their daughter to school and showed up at the
    couple’s home a few hours later. Around noon, Kau left with the couple’s two sons.
    When Kau still had not returned around 3:00 p.m., Aleen got ready and left for
    work.
    While on the way to work, Aleen saw Kau and their children sitting in a
    parked car. Kau waived for her to pull over. Aleen parked and made her way over
    to the car with Kau and their children. That is when she saw Kau take a drink from
    a liquor bottle. Aleen went to the other side of the car and got the two oldest
    3
    children out of the car. One of the children told her that Kau was drunk. As Aleen
    took their youngest child out of his car seat, she felt something wet on her back.
    She felt her back with her hand and when she looked at her hand, it was covered
    in her own blood. Kau had stabbed her in the back with a knife from their kitchen.
    Aleen turned and asked him why he would stab her. Kau didn’t respond. Aleen
    started to cry, and Kau directed her to get into the car. Aleen refused to get into
    the car, but their children got in the car. Kau drove off with the children when a
    neighbor complained about the noise they were making. The neighbor refused to
    help Aleen, so Aleen walked back to their apartment to seek help from her mother
    and then they went to another neighbor to ask for help.
    About that time, Kau and their children returned home. The children ran to
    Aleen while Kau went into their apartment. Kau came back out of their apartment
    with a liquor bottle and came at Aleen, he pulled a knife from his pocket and raised
    it above his head. Their neighbor urged Kau to stop and not hurt his family. Kau
    told the neighbor that he wanted to go to jail because he had stabbed his wife.
    Aleen, her mother, the children, and the neighbor made their way into the
    neighbor’s home. Kau forced his way into the neighbor’s home. He told their
    children that he loved them and to take care of each other. Kau then wanted Aleen
    to go back to their apartment with him. She refused, and Kau eventually left.
    These events resulted in Kau’s convictions for attempted murder, willful
    injury causing bodily injury, domestic abuse assault while using or displaying a
    dangerous weapon, and three counts of child endangerment. Kau now appeals,
    challenging whether the State provided sufficient evidence to establish the intent
    element for the attempted murder charge.
    4
    II.     Standard of Review
    We review challenges to the sufficiency of the evidence for correction of
    errors at law. See State v. Lacey, 
    968 N.W.2d 792
    , 800 (Iowa 2021). “Under this
    standard, the court is highly deferential to the jury’s verdict. We will affirm the jury’s
    verdict when the verdict is supported by substantial evidence.” 
    Id.
     Evidence is
    substantial if it is sufficient to convince a rational person of the defendant’s guilt
    beyond a reasonable doubt.         
    Id.
       In making this determination, we view the
    evidence and all reasonable inferences that can be drawn from it in the light most
    favorable to the State. 
    Id.
     The question is whether the evidence supports the
    finding the jury made, not whether it would support a different finding. 
    Id.
    III.    Discussion
    Kau claims that the State failed to establish he acted with the specific intent
    to kill Aleen. He argues that he “was clearly extremely drunk and unable to form
    the intent necessary for a conviction of attempted murder.” In order to convict Kau
    of attempted murder, the marshaling instruction required the jury to find:1
    1. On or about the 1st day of December 2022, the defendant
    assaulted Aleen Kau.
    2. By his acts, the defendant expected to set in motion a force
    or chain of events, which could have caused or resulted in the death
    of Aleen Kau.
    3. When the defendant acted, he specifically intended to
    cause the death of Aleen Kau.
    1 As Kau did not object to the quoted jury instructions, they become the law of the
    case for purposes of reviewing the sufficiency of the evidence. See State v.
    Schiebout, 
    944 N.W.2d 666
    , 671 (Iowa 2020) (“Jury instructions, when not
    objected to, become the law of the case for purposes of appellate review for
    sufficiency-of-evidence claims.”).
    5
    A definitional instruction explained,
    “Specific intent” means not only being aware of doing an act
    and doing it voluntarily, but in addition, doing it with a specific purpose
    in mind.
    Because determining the defendant’s specific intent requires
    you to decide what he was thinking when an act was done, it is
    seldom capable of direct proof. Therefore, you should consider the
    facts and circumstances surrounding the act to determine the
    defendant’s specific intent. You may, but are not required to,
    conclude a person intends the natural results of his acts.
    Another instruction informed the jury,
    The defendant claims he was under the influence of alcohol
    at the time of the alleged crime. The fact that a person is under the
    influence of alcohol does not excuse or aggravate his guilt.
    Even if a person is under the influence of alcohol, he is
    responsible for his act if he had sufficient mental capacity to form the
    specific intent necessary to the crime charged or had the specific
    intent before he fell under the influence of the alcohol and then
    committed the act. Intoxication is a defense only when it causes a
    mental disability which makes the person incapable of forming
    specific intent.
    The defendant does not have to prove intoxication; rather, the
    burden is on the State to prove the defendant was able to, and did,
    form the specific intent required.
    Intoxication serves as a defense to specific-intent offenses, such as
    attempted murder. See State v. Gurerro Cordero, 
    861 N.W.2d 253
    , 259 (Iowa
    2015), overruled on other grounds by Alcala v. Marriott Intern., Inc., 
    880 N.W.2d 699
    , 707–08 (Iowa 2016). However, “[w]e have traditionally required a high level
    of intoxication to support a finding of no specific intent.” 
    Id.
     So intoxication in itself
    does not preclude an individual from forming specific intent. 
    Id.
     “[T]he ‘intoxication’
    or ‘drunkenness’ must be to the extent that the designing or framing of such
    [criminal] purpose is impossible.” 
    Id.
     (quoting State v. Patton, 
    221 N.W. 952
    , 952
    (Iowa 1928)). One must be “so intoxicated that he or she could no longer reason
    and [be] incapable of forming a felonious intent.” 
    Id.
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    We conclude a reasonable jury could find that Kau had the ability to form
    the specific intent to kill Aleen when he stabbed her and did have that specific
    intent. The evidence established that about a month and a half prior to the
    stabbing, Kau had threatened to kill Aleen should she cheat on him. He exhibited
    jealous behavior the day prior, when he was upset that she sat next to a coworker
    while on break. Kau waited along the road Aleen would take to work and got her
    to pull over and approach the car. Kau got out of the car and silently snuck up on
    Aleen while she was distracted trying to remove their youngest child from the car
    seat. Then he stabbed Aleen with a knife from their kitchen—and the jury could
    properly infer that when he left their apartment earlier that day he took the knife
    with him as part of a plan to stab Aleen. Kau fled the area when the neighbor came
    out to complain about the noise. Kau was then able to return to their apartment
    complex with their children. After finding Aleen at the neighbor’s home, he told the
    children he loved them and to take care of each other—seemingly telling them
    goodbye—before trying to get Aleen to leave with him.
    While Kau may have been under the influence of alcohol that day, his
    movements and statements make clear that his actions were goal oriented; they
    reveal that he was able to plan, act, and respond in the moment. In other words,
    the State provided substantial evidence that Kau was capable of acting with
    specific intent. And the substantial evidence supports that Kau did act with the
    specific intent to kill Aleen given his recent threat to kill her, his jealousy the day
    before at work, his pre-planning to take the large kitchen knife with him when he
    7
    left the home, and from the act of sneaking up on her and stabbing her in the back
    with the knife.
    AFFIRMED.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 23-0743

Filed Date: 10/30/2024

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/30/2024