State of Iowa v. Dontrayius Eugene Carey ( 2014 )


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  •                     IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA
    No. 3-1233 / 12-1423
    Filed March 12, 2014
    STATE OF IOWA,
    Plaintiff-Appellee,
    vs.
    DONTRAYIUS EUGENE CAREY,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    ________________________________________________________________
    Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Black Hawk County, Andrea J.
    Dryer, Judge.
    The defendant appeals his conviction of assault causing serious injury.
    AFFIRMED.
    Mark C. Smith, State Appellate Defender, and Nan Jennisch, Assistant
    Appellate Defender, for appellant.
    Thomas J. Miller, Attorney General, Tyler Buller, Assistant Attorney
    General, Anthony Garcia, Student Legal Intern, Thomas J. Ferguson, County
    Attorney, and Brook Jacobsen, Assistant County Attorney, for appellee.
    Considered by Danilson, C.J., Mullins, J., and Miller, S.J.*
    *Senior judge assigned by order pursuant to Iowa Code section 602.9206 (2013).
    2
    MILLER, S.J.
    Dontrayius Carey appeals his conviction of assault causing serious injury,
    in violation of Iowa Code sections 708.1 and 708.2(4) (2011). He contends the
    district court erred in two respects: (1) in failing to instruct the jury on spoliation
    and (2) in denying his motion for new trial based upon prosecutorial misconduct.
    After concluding both claims are without merit, we affirm.
    I. Background Facts and Proceedings.
    In the early morning hours of April 7, 2011, Shane Mehmen was punched
    in the face at a Waterloo sports bar and suffered serious injuries. Because the
    incident was captured on surveillance video, there is no dispute that Carey
    delivered the blow to Mehmen. On this basis, the State charged Carey with
    assault causing serious injury, a class “D” felony.1
    A jury trial was held in May 2012.        Officer Kyle Law testified that he
    obtained the surveillance equipment from the sports bar and had approximately
    ten minutes of the video footage of the incident copied before returning the
    equipment to the sports bar’s owner on April 17, 2011. This video, depicting
    what occurred for approximately three minutes before the assault and
    approximately seven minutes after, was played for the jury.
    Mehmen testified that he was intoxicated on the night in question and had
    a confrontation with someone when he arrived at the bar around midnight.
    Mehmen recalled that he bumped into another person and said something that
    1
    Carey was originally charged on May 16, 2011, with willful injury, in violation of Iowa
    Code section 708.4(1), a class “C” felony. The charge was amended to assault causing
    serious injury on May 3, 2012.
    3
    “probably wasn’t nice.” At that point, a bouncer asked Mehmen to leave the bar.
    Mehmen was allowed to re-enter the bar minutes later in order to apologize to
    the other patron.      Mehmen recalled delivering the apology, socializing with
    friends on the dance floor, and then waking up in the hospital. Other witnesses
    testified similarly.
    Carey testified in his own defense. He stated that he was repeatedly
    confronted by Mehmen and his companions that night, and that Mehmen was
    challenging him. Carey testified that during their last encounter, Mehmen pushed
    on his left shoulder. When Carey turned around, he saw a hand and reacted by
    punching Mehmen to defend himself.
    During closing arguments, Carey’s trial counsel discussed the lack of
    context for the assault, arguing Carey acted in self-defense. His counsel stated:
    The State had the opportunity—because they have the burden of
    proof—they had the opportunity to bring in the bar owner, the
    bouncers, anybody else who might have seen that they were
    outside. I don’t have to do that. I don’t have to prove anything. It’s
    the State’s job. Why didn’t they bring those people in? I guess
    they thought three minutes and a punch would do it.
    During the State’s reply in rebuttal, the prosecutor responded:
    Could the State have subpoenaed bouncers and
    Edwin/Edo? Sure. So can the defense. You know that, because
    they already forced witnesses to come in under subpoena. If
    they’re so convinced that Edo’s going to say, “This guy was a
    danger but we let him back in anyway,” why didn’t they subpoena?
    It cuts both ways.
    The court overruled Carey’s objection to these statements.
    The jury found Carey guilty as charged. Carey filed a motion for new trial,
    arguing the district court erred in failing to give the jury a requested spoliation
    4
    instruction and in overruling his objection to the prosecutor’s statement regarding
    his failure to subpoena witnesses, which he characterized as prosecutorial
    misconduct. The district court overruled the motion. The court then sentenced
    Carey to a term of imprisonment, not to exceed five years, and assessed him
    various fines and fees. His sentence was ordered to run consecutively with a
    sentence in a separate, unrelated case.
    II. Spoliation.
    Carey first contends the court erred in failing to instruct the jury on
    spoliation of evidence.      When spoliation—the intentional destruction of
    evidence—occurs, the fact finder is permitted to draw the inference that the
    evidence destroyed was unfavorable to the party responsible for its spoliation.
    State v. Langlet, 
    283 N.W.2d 330
    , 333 (Iowa 1979).
    Because spoliation instructions should be given when supported by the
    record, the trial court does not have discretion to refuse a spoliation instruction
    when the defendant has generated a jury question on the spoliation inference.
    State v. Hartsfield, 
    681 N.W.2d 626
    , 630-31 (Iowa 2004). The only question to
    be considered on appeal is whether the trial court accurately determined the
    requested spoliation instruction did not have adequate evidentiary support. 
    Id. at 631
    . We review such decisions for the correction of errors at law. 
    Id.
    In order to warrant a spoliation instruction, there must be substantial
    evidence of the following: “(1) the evidence was ‘in existence’; (2) the evidence
    was ‘in the possession of or under control of the party’ charged with its
    destruction; (3) the evidence ‘would have been admissible at trial’; and (4) ‘the
    5
    party responsible for its destruction did so intentionally.’” 
    Id. at 630
     (quoting
    Langlet, 
    283 N.W.2d at 335
    ). Carey argues the State only copied a ten-minute
    segment of the surveillance video rather than the entire video, and that the
    original video has since been destroyed.       He argues the State’s failure to
    preserve the video in its entirety prejudiced his ability to present a defense
    because a complete recording “would help to explain why defendant may have
    perceived Mehmen’s alleged gesture of goodwill as a threat instead.”
    The State argues that the record does not adequately disclose that the
    video was destroyed. In the alternative, it argues that the party charged with the
    destruction—the State—was not in possession of the video, since the
    surveillance equipment that contained the original video had been returned to the
    bar owner. We need not address these arguments to resolve the claim because
    Carey did not present substantial evidence that the video’s destruction was
    “intentional.”
    In order to show spoliation, it is not enough that evidence is destroyed;
    only the intentional destruction of evidence can support the rationale of the rule
    that the destruction amounts to an admission by conduct of the weaknesses of
    one’s case.      Langlet, 
    283 N.W.2d at 333
    .      Here, the State obtained the
    surveillance equipment with the video recording following the assault and
    returned the equipment on April 17, 2011. The video of the night of April 7, 2011,
    was presumably recorded over as part of the bar’s neutral record destruction
    policy. See Hartsfield, 
    681 N.W.2d at 632
     (“Ordinarily evidence destroyed under
    a neutral record destruction policy is not considered intentionally destroyed so as
    6
    to justify a spoliation instruction.”).   There is no evidence the State had
    knowledge that Carey wanted the whole video or that any portion of the video
    would have assisted in his defense prior to the filing of Carey’s notice of self-
    defense on August 24, 2011—some four months after the surveillance equipment
    had been returned. Cf. 
    id. at 632-33
     (concluding the trial court erred in failing to
    instruct on spoliation where substantial evidence supported a finding the State
    intentionally destroyed evidence by withholding it from the defendant and
    knowingly allowing it to be destroyed under a neutral record destruction policy).
    Because there is insufficient evidence to support a finding the destruction of the
    video was intentional, we affirm on this issue.
    III. Prosecutorial Misconduct.
    Carey also contends the court erred in denying his motion for new trial
    because the prosecutor engaged in misconduct. Given the trial court’s broad
    discretion on ruling on such claims, we review this ruling for an abuse of
    discretion. See State v. Jacobs, 
    607 N.W.2d 679
    , 689 (Iowa 2000). We will only
    find an abuse of discretion if (1) the prosecutor engaged in misconduct and (2)
    that misconduct prejudiced Carey such that he was deprived of a fair trial. See
    
    id.
    In closing argument, the assistant county attorney stated that Carey had
    the ability to subpoena the bar owner or any of the bouncers to testify in his
    defense. The prosecutor then asked why, if Carey was so sure those witnesses
    would have testified favorably, he failed to call them.         Carey alleges the
    statement impermissibly shifted the burden of proof to him.
    7
    A prosecutor’s argument that focuses on the lack of evidence or failure to
    produce witnesses may amount to misconduct if it shifts the burden of proof to
    the defendant. State v. Bishop, 
    387 N.W.2d 554
    , 563 (Iowa 1986). However, not
    all remarks relating to the evidence are forbidden. 
    Id.
     We view the prosecutor’s
    statements in closing argument in the context in which they were made, rather
    than in isolation. 
    Id.
     Here, the comments were made in rebuttal to Carey’s
    closing argument, which referred to the State’s failure to call the same witnesses,
    implying those witnesses would contradict the State’s theory of the case. “We
    allow a prosecutor some leeway when his remarks ‘are provoked and are offered
    in retaliation to arguments for the accused.’” Wycoff v. State, 
    382 N.W.2d 462
    ,
    468 (Iowa 1986) (quoting State v. Wright, 
    309 N.W.2d 891
    , 893 (Iowa 1981)).
    Furthermore, our supreme court has held that a prosecutor’s act of asking the
    jury in closing argument why the defendant did not call certain witnesses to
    testify “amounted to fair comment,” not misconduct. See State v. Craig, 
    490 N.W.2d 795
    , 797 (Iowa 1992).
    The prosecutor’s statement, made in response to Carey’s argument, did
    not impermissibly shift the burden of proof to Carey. Accordingly, there was no
    misconduct. The district court properly denied Carey’s motion for new trial on
    this basis, and we affirm on this issue.
    AFFIRMED.