State of Iowa v. Braedon Steven Bowers ( 2020 )


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  •                     IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA
    No. 18-1827
    Filed March 18, 2020
    STATE OF IOWA,
    Plaintiff-Appellee,
    vs.
    BRAEDON STEVEN BOWERS,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    ________________________________________________________________
    Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Cerro Gordo County, Colleen
    Weiland, Judge.
    A   defendant      appeals   his   conviction   for   voluntary   manslaughter.
    AFFIRMED.
    Martha J. Lucey, State Appellate Defender, and Theresa R. Wilson,
    Assistant Appellate Defender, for appellant.
    Thomas J. Miller, Attorney General, and Louis S. Sloven, Assistant Attorney
    General, for appellee.
    Considered by Doyle, P.J., and Tabor and Schumacher, JJ.
    2
    TABOR, Judge.
    The State charged Braedon Bowers with murder in the first degree in the
    stabbing death of Wraymond Todd. A jury convicted Bowers of the lesser included
    offense of voluntary manslaughter. He appeals that conviction, contending his trial
    counsel was ineffective for not arguing he was entitled to judgment of acquittal
    based on justification. Because the State presented sufficient evidence to disprove
    justification, Bowers cannot show prejudice. We thus affirm Bowers’s voluntary
    manslaughter conviction.
    I.       Facts and Prior Proceedings
    A frantic caller told the 911 operator: “Wraymond got stabbed in the heart.
    We need an ambulance right now.” The caller added: “Braedon stabbed him.” As
    defense counsel told the jury in opening statements, the May 2017 stabbing was
    never a “whodunit.” Rather, the key question was whether Bowers killed Todd in
    self defense.
    The bad blood between Bowers and Todd began with a young woman, T.B.
    At different points in time, T.B. maintained a romantic relationship with each of
    them. Tragically, in the fall of 2014, T.B. lost her son to SIDS. Five days before
    the stabbing, Bowers insulted T.B. in a text message, writing that her son’s death
    was “karma” and “Karma is a bitch.” The text angered T.B., who shared her
    feelings with Todd. Todd responded: “[I]f you want Braedon beat up, let me know.
    You can’t keep letting him talk to you like that.”
    On May 30, Todd, T.B., and others gathered at the home of Bowers’s
    mother to help her haul trash to the landfill. They parked two pickups in the
    driveway to fill with garbage. Bowers stopped by early that afternoon and asked
    3
    Todd and T.B.: “Why are you here? Why don’t you get your own mom?” Bowers
    then left, angry. But he came back about ten minutes later.
    When Bowers returned, Todd was sitting on the second pickup’s back
    bumper. T.B. recalled Bowers speeding toward that pickup—“It seemed he almost
    hit Wraymond. Wraymond then jumped over the [oncoming] vehicle to stop himself
    from being hit.” Another witness believed Bowers’s car would have crushed Todd
    if he hadn’t jumped onto the hood of Bowers’s car. When Bowers parked and
    opened the car door, T.B. saw a knife in his hand.
    Todd landed the first blow, striking Bowers in the head. Bowers dropped to
    his knees and then “started throwing punches” at Todd, according to another
    witness. Onlookers tried to intervene to break up the fight. By then, Todd was
    lying on the ground, bleeding. Bowers fled the scene.
    Todd—who was twenty-three years old—died at the hospital five days later.
    Bowers—who was twenty years old—faced first-degree murder charges, filed in
    June 2017. In May 2018, Bowers notified the court of his intent to rely on the
    defense of justification.
    The murder prosecution went before a jury in August 2018. In its opening
    statement, the State contended Bowers “ambushed” Todd.          To counter, the
    defense attorneys asserted Bowers acted with justification, or, at a minimum,
    responded to serious provocation from Todd. The jury accepted that second line
    of defense and returned a verdict of voluntary manslaughter. See Iowa Code
    § 707.4 (2017). Bowers appeals.
    4
    II.    Scope and Standards of Review
    We review ineffective-assistance-of-counsel claims de novo. State v. Lilly,
    
    930 N.W.2d 293
    , 298 (Iowa 2019). But when the defendant contends counsel was
    ineffective for failing to move for judgment of acquittal on a certain ground, that
    contention implicates the question whether such a motion would have been
    meritorious, which turns on the sufficiency of evidence. 
    Id. We review
    sufficiency-
    of-the-evidence claims for corrections of errors at law. 
    Id. III. Analysis
    Bowers contends the State failed to offer sufficient proof to overcome his
    justification defense. Bowers acknowledges counsel did not argue justification as
    part of the motion for judgment of acquittal.1 But he claims counsel was ineffective
    for not doing so.2 To succeed, Bowers must prove by a preponderance of the
    evidence counsel failed to perform an essential duty and that failure prejudiced his
    case. See Strickland v. Washington, 
    488 U.S. 668
    , 687 (1984).
    Bowers cannot show he was prejudiced by counsel’s omission when
    moving for judgment of acquittal because the State presented ample evidence to
    1 In moving for judgment of acquittal, defense counsel argued the State had not
    proven the elements of first-degree murder, second-degree murder, or attempted
    murder. Counsel did not mention justification in his motion to the court. But in his
    closing argument, counsel told the jury, “[Y]our starting point is voluntary
    manslaughter. . . . But I’m not asking you to find him guilty of voluntary
    manslaughter. What I’m telling you is he was justified.”
    2 We often preserve such claims for postconviction-relief proceedings. See State
    v. Tompkins, 
    859 N.W.2d 631
    , 637 (Iowa 2015). But, for now, we may address
    them on direct appeal when the record is adequately developed to do so. 
    Id. Our supreme
    court decided recent amendments to Iowa Code section 814.7
    (prohibiting resolution of ineffective-assistance-of-counsel claims on direct appeal)
    apply only prospectively and do not apply to cases, like this one, pending on July 1,
    2019. See State v. Macke, 
    933 N.W.2d 226
    , 228 (Iowa 2019).
    5
    counteract his justification defense. See State v. Crone, 
    545 N.W.2d 267
    , 273
    (Iowa 1996) (rejecting claim counsel was ineffective for failing to challenge certain
    elements in motion for judgment of acquittal when record revealed sufficient
    evidence). A defendant cannot prevail on a self-defense claim if the State proves
    any of these elements: (1) the defendant started or continued the incident which
    resulted in death, (2) an alternative course of action was available to the defendant,
    (3) the defendant did not believe he was in imminent danger and the use of force
    was unnecessary, (4) the defendant did not have reasonable grounds for the belief,
    or (5) the force used was unreasonable. State v. Shanahan, 
    712 N.W.2d 121
    , 134
    (Iowa 2006).
    Here, the State offered evidence Bowers started the violent confrontation
    by trying to crush Todd against the truck’s bumper. A reasonable fact finder could
    also determine from the State’s evidence that Bowers had an alternative course of
    action available—leaving the scene in his car. Beyond that initial foray, as the
    State contends, “The biggest problem with Bowers’s challenge is that he brought
    a knife to a fistfight—he used lethal force without any indication that he faced
    danger that made it reasonably necessary to stab Todd.” See State v. Hall,
    No. 15–0628, 
    2016 WL 2748358
    , at *4 (Iowa Ct. App. May 11, 2016) (finding “jury
    was entitled to conclude from the evidence that Hall escalated the level of force
    beyond what was reasonable under the circumstances”). The evidence the State
    offered amply shows the force Bowers used under the circumstances was
    unreasonable.     On this record, Bowers cannot show he was prejudiced by
    counsel’s handling of the motion for judgment of acquittal. We find no basis to
    disturb the jury’s verdict.
    6
    In addition, Bowers maintains he was prejudiced by counsel’s failure to
    argue the instructions mistakenly informed the jury that justification was not a
    defense to involuntary manslaughter.        But because the State disproved his
    justification defense beyond a reasonable doubt, he suffered no prejudice from
    excluding that defense from the jury’s consideration of the lesser included offense
    of involuntary manslaughter.
    AFFIRMED.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 18-1827

Filed Date: 3/18/2020

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 3/18/2020