State of Iowa v. Annette Dee Cahill ( 2021 )


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  •                     IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA
    No. 19-1981
    Filed April 14, 2021
    STATE OF IOWA,
    Plaintiff-Appellee,
    vs.
    ANNETTE DEE CAHILL,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    ________________________________________________________________
    Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Muscatine County, Patrick A.
    McElyea, Judge.
    Annette Cahill appeals the judgment and sentence entered after a jury
    found her guilty of second-degree murder. AFFIRMED.
    Elizabeth A. Araguás of Nidey Erdahl Meier & Araguás, PLC, Cedar Rapids,
    for appellant.
    Thomas J. Miller, Attorney General, and Louis S. Sloven, Assistant Attorney
    General, for appellee.
    Heard by Bower, C.J., and Doyle and Mullins, JJ.
    2
    DOYLE, Judge.
    Annette Cahill appeals the judgment and sentence entered after a jury
    found her guilty of second-degree murder. She challenges the court’s rulings on
    the State’s failure to disclose evidence and the court’s refusal to exclude the
    testimony of three witnesses at trial. Cahill also challenges the sufficiency of the
    evidence to support the jury’s verdict and contends her constitutional rights were
    violated by the twenty-six-year delay between the crime and her arrest.
    I. Background Facts and Proceedings.
    Corey Wieneke died on October 13, 1992, after sustaining multiple blunt
    force injuries, including one that fractured his skull. Jody Hotz, Wieneke’s fiancé,
    saw him when he returned to their West Liberty home that morning after he had
    worked his shift as a bartender. Wieneke was asleep when Hotz left to begin her
    8:30 a.m. shift at a bank. When she returned home around 6:30 or 6:45 p.m., Hotz
    noticed some things out of the ordinary. The dog was outside and unchained. The
    screen door to the home was wide open. Wieneke’s car was in the driveway—he
    should have been at work. The main door to the house was unlocked. Hotz went
    inside and found Wieneke dead on the bedroom floor. No property was missing
    from the home. Hotz went out and dialed 9-1-1.
    At around 1:30 p.m. that day, a farmer drove by Wieneke’s house and saw
    a metal baseball bat on the side of the road near the house that had not been there
    when he drove by that morning. Traces of blood found on the bat matched
    Wieneke’s blood type. Wieneke’s injuries reflected the kind of injuries inflicted by
    a baseball bat generally, and the injury pattern on Wieneke’s back matched those
    that one could inflict with the baseball bat found near the residence.
    3
    Law enforcement investigated many possible suspects in Wieneke’s death.
    They investigated Cahill, who was one of four women Wieneke had a relationship
    with at the time of his death. But Cahill told investigators that she was shopping in
    Iowa City with Jacque Hazen, her sister-in-law, on the day of the murder, and
    Hazen produced store receipts to support the claim. And no physical evidence
    linked Cahill to the murder.
    The investigation waned until new information was disclosed during a
    chance encounter in December 2017. Iowa Department of Criminal Investigation
    (DCI) Special Agent Trent Vileta met Jessica Becker, a nurse, while at a hospital
    to interview a witness in an unrelated matter. When Agent Vileta told Becker he
    worked on “cold cases,” Becker told him about an event she witnessed in 1992,
    when she was nine years old. Becker was friends with Hazen’s daughter and
    attended a sleepover in Hazen’s home sometime after Wieneke’s murder. Becker
    and her friend left the bedroom to sneak downstairs after their bedtime. When they
    neared the bottom of the stairs, Becker heard Cahill in the dining area and saw her
    “from the back side.” Becker recalled that Cahill was facing away from the stairs
    and was “crying and sobbing” while lighting black candles. Becker heard Cahill
    make several statements like, “Corey, I never meant to hurt you,” “Corey, I’m so
    sorry,” “I never meant to kill you, Corey,” and “Corey, I love you.” Before Cahill
    could notice them, Becker and her friend turned around and went back upstairs.
    Becker told her mother about the incident shortly after, but her mother did not go
    to law enforcement because she feared retaliation.
    With the new information from Becker, investigators began looking into
    Wieneke’s death again. One potential witness they spoke to was Scott Payne,
    4
    who was friends with Hazen and her husband in 1992. A DCI report from an
    interview with Payne in 1996 detailed that “Scott Payne stated that [Cahill] was
    seen burning a bunch of stuff after Wieneke was killed,” suggesting Payne
    received the information from another source. That information concerned a rumor
    that Cahill burned a diary. When Payne was re-interviewed, he recalled seeing
    Cahill burning bloodstained clothing in a barrel at Hazen’s house one or two days
    after Wieneke’s death. Cahill claimed that she was burning the clothes because
    they were covered in paint. But Payne, who had worked butchering hogs for IBP,
    believed there was blood rather than red paint on clothing.
    In June 2018, the State filed a trial information, alleging Cahill committed
    first-degree murder by killing Wieneke willfully, deliberately, premeditatedly, and
    with malice aforethought. Cahill’s first trial resulted in a mistrial after the jury
    deadlocked. During Cahill’s second trial, the State discovered that one page of a
    DCI criminalistics lab report was captioned incorrectly and left out of the
    investigative file. A draft of the lab report, which included the missing page, states
    that the human hairs found in Wieneke’s left hand at the crime scene were not
    suitable for DNA STR analysis.1 The State conceded it could not offer the draft
    report into evidence, and so defense counsel did not think there was any “fighting
    issue” over the report.
    1 The page states: “A slide mailer from exhibit K contained two glass slides. Slide
    #1 contained animal hairs and synthetic fibers. Slide #2 contained several animal
    hairs and human hairs; however, none of the human hairs were suitable for DNA
    STR analysis.” Laboratory exhibit K was a box containing hairs from Weineke’s
    left hand.
    5
    At the close of Cahill’s second trial, the jury returned a verdict finding her
    guilty of second-degree murder. Cahill filed post-trial motions, including a motion
    to compel discovery relating to the hairs found in Wieneke’s hand. She asked that
    the State provide any other information about the testing that was performed on
    the hairs and to arrange mtDNA testing if the evidence was still in the DCI’s
    possession. If the evidence was lost or destroyed, Cahill asked the court to order
    the State to explain its loss or destruction and grant her a new trial based on a
    Brady2 violation and “the unfairness of the jury lacking a spoliation instruction
    based on this destroyed evidence.” After a hearing, the court denied Cahill’s
    motion and sentenced her to a period of incarceration not to exceed fifty years.
    II. Motion to Compel.
    On appeal, Cahill first challenges the court’s denial of her motion to compel
    testing of the four hairs found on Wieneke’s hand at the crime scene. The court
    ruled on Cahill’s post-trial motions on the record at the start of the sentencing
    hearing. In doing so, the court addressed Cahill’s claim that she is entitled to a
    new trial based on newly discovered evidence, which included the hairs. The court
    noted that Cahill knew that hair was recovered from Wieneke’s hand because the
    information was in the discovery materials3 and counsel questioned witnesses at
    trial about whether the hair was tested. Although the court recognized that Cahill
    did not learn that the DCI tried to test the hair until trial, it found the State’s failure
    2 See Brady v. Maryland, 
    373 U.S. 83
    , 87 (1963) (holding that due process requires
    the prosecution to disclose exculpatory evidence to the accused).
    3 A DCI lab report described Laboratory exhibit K as a “Box containing hairs from
    victim’s left hand.” The report stated: “Numerous hairs and fibers were recovered
    from exhibit K. An inventory of the hairs and fibers showed numerous cat hairs, 4-
    Caucasian head hairs, and yellow trilobal synthetic fibers.”
    6
    to disclose that attempt “did not impact the[] opportunity to discover the hair and to
    discover the opportunity to test the hair.” Nor did the court find the evidence was
    material or would have likely changed the outcome of trial:
    It would be reasonable to test the hairs found in Corey Wieneke’s
    hand against [Cahill]’s DNA, Corey’s DNA and Jody Hotz’s DNA.
    However, as discussed during the hearing if the results came back
    that the hair didn’t match any of those people, the jury would only be
    in a slightly better position than they were during the trial. The court
    does not find that it would probably change the result of the trial.
    There would still be more questions than answers. And the defense
    was able to create those questions by asking witnesses about the
    hairs and developing a line of questioning that indicated they hadn’t
    been tested and no one knew whose hairs they were. That would be
    the same purpose if the hair was tested and found not to be the hair
    of Annette Cahill, Jody Hotz or Corey Wieneke. And the court does
    not find that it’s reasonable or feasible for the State to test the hair
    against every possible suspect that the defense has raised
    throughout this proceeding.
    The court then reviewed the other issues raised in the post-trial motions, denied
    the motions for new trial and in arrest of judgment, and stated, “[F]or the reasons
    previously stated regarding the hair and the DCI report and the DNA testing the
    motion to compel is also denied.”
    On appeal, Cahill argues she is entitled to DNA testing of the hair under
    Iowa Code section 81.10 (Supp. 2019). This section provides a way for those
    convicted of a felony or misdemeanor to obtain DNA profiling on a sample collected
    in the case. 
    Iowa Code § 81.10
    . Cahill’s post-trial motion did not cite to section
    81.10, the parties did not discuss it at the hearing on the motion, and the court did
    not mention it in denying Cahill’s motion. The State argues Cahill failed to preserve
    error because the court never considered or ruled on a claim under section 81.10.
    Assuming, without deciding, Cahill preserved error on this claim, we find
    she has failed to make the required showing for DNA profiling under section 81.10.
    7
    To grant an application for DNA profiling, the court must find the results would be
    “material to, and not merely cumulative of or impeaching of, evidence included in
    the trial record” and “would raise a reasonable probability that the defendant would
    not have been convicted if such results had been introduced at trial.” 
    Iowa Code § 81.11
    (1)(d), (e). In rejecting Cahill’s motion for new trial under Iowa Rule of
    Criminal Procedure 2.24(2)(b)(8), the court found Cahill was unable to prove the
    materiality of the evidence or a likelihood of a different result at trial even if DNA
    testing showed the hair belonged to someone other than Cahill, Wieneke, or Hotz.
    The court noted that defense counsel created questions about the identity of the
    perpetrator based on the hairs found in Wieneke’s hand even without DNA testing.
    This occurred during cross-examination of one of the DCI investigators who
    investigated Wieneke’s death in 1992:
    Q. So it appears to me that we can conclude that there were
    hairs collected from the victim’s hand and . . . placed into a custody
    bag or something like that and sent to the DCI lab. Would that be a
    fair conclusion from this document? A. It appears that that’s correct.
    Q. . . . [Was] there testing of the Caucasian head hairs that
    you’re aware of? A. I do not know that.
    Q. You don’t know whether they were compared to Annette
    Cahill or any other suspects? A. I do not know that.
    ....
    Q. And as an experienced detective do hairs in the hand of a
    dead man who has been beaten in his bedroom with 13 blows tell
    you anything? A. Well, certainly they’d be collected as evidence to
    see what they did show.
    Q. But despite any testing you don’t have to be Columbo to
    figure out that hairs in the hand might indicate a struggle, right? A.
    Well, that’s possible. They may also be the hair from the individual,
    the hair from someone else sleeping in the bed. It appears from the
    report that there’s also cat hairs, so I don’t know.
    Q. Are you familiar with any followup investigation of those
    human hairs that were found in the left hand of the victim? A. I am
    not.
    Defense counsel then referred to this testimony during closing argument:
    8
    Let’s revisit the human hair evidence. There were four human
    hairs in the victim’s left hand. State has presented no evidence that
    the human hairs matched Annette’s hair either by microscopic
    comparison with known hairs through slides or by DNA comparison.
    Moreover, the hairs tell us it is unlikely Corey was unaware of his
    assault. The fact he was an experienced fighter, weighed 230
    pounds and was a football player make it unlikely that there was only
    one assailant unless that was someone powerfully built.
    The evidence seems to indicate a struggle. There were 13
    blows, not 12. They were all inflicted while Corey was alive. There
    was a mark above the door. There was splatter and you’ve seen the
    pictures. So none of this evidence that we do have comports with
    Annette Cahill going over and pummeling or however you want to
    describe it, killing the man she loved with a bat. None of it. Nor with
    all of this blood, the hairs, the clothing, the tennis shoes, everything
    examined is there a scintilla of actual evidence that proves beyond a
    reasonable doubt element one of the checklist the County Attorney
    promised he would check off for you that Annette Cahill struck Corey
    Wieneke.
    Even if DNA profiling showed the hairs belonged to someone other than Cahill, the
    evidence would be cumulative and unlikely to have changed the result of trial. The
    district court did not err in denying Cahill’s post-trial motion to compel DNA testing
    of the hairs.
    Cahill also argues the failure to produce the lab report about the hair testing
    violated her due process rights under Brady. The State again contests error
    preservation. Cahill moved for new trial in part based on a violation of her right to
    receive a fair and impartial trial. Though she did not cite Brady, she argued the
    State’s failure to provide the DCI lab report until after trial began impeded her ability
    to present a complete defense.        The district court never addressed a Brady
    violation in denying her post-trial motions.
    Again, assuming, without deciding, Cahill preserved error, we are unable to
    find a violation of Brady. “In order to establish a Brady violation, the defendant had
    to prove ‘(1) the prosecution suppressed evidence; (2) the evidence was favorable
    9
    to the defendant; and (3) the evidence was material to the issue of guilt.’”
    Harrington v. State, 
    659 N.W.2d 509
    , 516 (Iowa 2003) (citation omitted). Evidence
    is suppressed under Brady when information is discovered after trial that had been
    known to the prosecution but not the defense. See 
    id.
     But Cahill knew hairs were
    found in Wieneke’s hand at the crime scene, as shown by discovery materials and
    her counsel’s cross-examination of the DCI investigator. The information not
    disclosed until after trial began was the fact that the State did not conduct DNA
    STR testing because the hairs were not suitable for that type of analysis. The
    information was not evidence but a basis for Cahill to argue the State’s
    investigation was subpar and that additional DNA testing of the evidence was
    necessary. In any event, we do not find the information favorable to Cahill nor
    material to the issue of her guilt. Cahill has not established a Brady violation
    regarding the laboratory report disclosed by the State mid-trial.
    III. Admissibility of Witness Testimony.
    Cahill next challenges the district court’s rulings on motions brought under
    Iowa Rule of Evidence 5.104. That rule requires that “the court must decide any
    preliminary question about whether a witness is qualified, a privilege exists, or
    evidence is admissible.” Iowa R. Evid. 5.104(a). We review the court’s preliminary
    ruling on the question of admissibility for correction of legal error. See State v.
    Veverka, 
    938 N.W.2d 197
    , 202 (Iowa 2020). But we give deference to the court’s
    fact findings and uphold those findings if supported by substantial evidence. See
    
    id.
    Before her first trial, Cahill moved the court to exclude the testimony of
    Becker and Becker’s mother. When the State identified Payne as a witness before
    10
    her second trial, Cahill also moved the court to exclude Payne’s testimony. Cahill
    sought to exclude the testimony of all three witnesses on the same ground, arguing
    their claims are so impossible, absurd, and self-contradictory that they should be
    deemed a nullity by the court. The court denied both motions. Cahill challenges
    those rulings on appeal.
    Cahill’s argument touches on an important distinction between the roles of
    the court and jury. The job of determining witness credibility and assigning weight
    to the evidence generally falls to the jury, not the court. See State v. Musser, 
    721 N.W.2d 758
    , 761 (Iowa 2006) (“It is not the province of the court . . . 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)); State v. Thornton, 
    498 N.W.2d 670
    , 673 (Iowa 1993) (“The jury
    is free to believe or disbelieve any testimony as it chooses and to give weight to
    the evidence as in its judgment such evidence should receive.”). And “a court must
    be careful not to usurp the role of a jury by making credibility determinations that
    are outside the proper scope of the judicial role.” State v. Paredes, 
    775 N.W.2d 554
    , 567 (Iowa 2009). But there is an exception:
    The rule that it is for the jury to reconcile the conflicting testimony of
    a witness does not apply where the only evidence in support of a
    controlling fact is that of a witness who so contradicts himself as to
    render finding of facts thereon a mere guess. We may concede that,
    ordinarily, contradictory statements of a witness do not make an
    issue of fact; and that such situation may deprive the testimony of all
    probative force.
    State v. Mitchell, 
    568 N.W.2d 493
    , 503 (Iowa 1997) (citation omitted).
    Does the testimony at issue fall into this exception? Cahill claims Becker’s
    testimony is “impossible” for the following reasons: (1) Becker could not have
    11
    viewed Cahill in the dining area while standing on the stairs because the stairway
    was fully enclosed and with a door at the base that opened out and away from the
    stairs; (2) Becker was unable to recall other details of the home’s layout even
    though she claimed to have spent the night there many times over the years;
    (3) and Becker did not recall the date of the sleepover or whether other children
    were present that night.4 As for Payne’s testimony, Cahill cites contradictions
    between statements he made to law enforcement in 1996 and 2019 and claims
    Payne was biased because he gave the Hazen family a $5000 loan that they never
    repaid.   But these concerns are more appropriately weighed by the jury in
    determining the credibility of their testimony. See State v. Frake, 
    450 N.W.2d 817
    ,
    819 (Iowa 1990) (“When determining the credibility of the testimony of witnesses,
    the [trier of fact] may consider whether the testimony is reasonable and consistent
    with other evidence, whether a witness has made inconsistent statements, the
    witness’s appearance, conduct, memory and knowledge of the facts, and the
    witness’s interest in the trial.”); see also State v. Tyler, 
    830 N.W.2d 288
    , 296-97
    (Iowa 2013) (“In making credibility determinations, we examine extrinsic evidence
    for contradictions to that witness’s testimony.        We also examine a witness’s
    testimony for internal inconsistencies in making credibility determinations.”
    (internal citation omitted)). And the limitation on the jury’s ability to determine
    4 Although Becker could not recall a door at the bottom of the stairs in 1992, she
    testified that if it was there it was open on that night. And Becker’s inability to recall
    the entire layout of the home of a friend she had when she was nine years old—
    especially details likely inconsequential to her at the time, like the location of the
    parents’ bedroom—is unsurprising considering the time that has passed. Finally,
    though Becker could not recall whether any other friends were at the sleepover on
    that night, she was sure that only she and Hazen’s daughter witnessed Cahill in
    the dining room.
    12
    witness credibility does not apply if there is corroboration of the testimony or when
    there is an explanation for conflicting statements. See State v. Frank, 
    298 N.W.2d 324
    , 329 (Iowa 1980). The court did not err in refusing to exclude the witnesses’
    testimony.
    IV. Sufficiency of the Evidence.
    Cahill also challenges the sufficiency of the evidence to support the jury’s
    finding she committed second-degree murder.           We review such claims for
    correction of errors at law. See State v. Benson, 
    919 N.W.2d 237
    , 241 (Iowa
    2018). We will uphold the verdict if it is supported by substantial evidence. See
    
    id.
     Evidence is substantial if, when viewed in the light most favorable to the State,
    it could convince a rational factfinder that the defendant is guilty beyond a
    reasonable doubt. See 
    id.
    In arguing there is insufficient evidence to show she committed the murder,
    Cahill notes that she never confessed to the crime and the State never produced
    (1) physical evidence connecting her to the scene of the crime; (2) an eyewitness
    to the crime; (3) an eyewitness placing her with the murder weapon; and (4) a
    witness who was aware of any plan she had to kill Wieneke. The only evidence
    connecting Cahill to the crime was Becker’s testimony that she witnessed a
    distraught Cahill make statements of her guilt, which was corroborated by Becker’s
    mother, and Payne’s testimony that he saw Cahill burning bloody clothing within
    days of the murder.
    Although the evidence of Cahill’s guilt is not overwhelming, when it is
    viewed in the light most favorable to the State, we are unable to find that it falls
    short of the substantial-evidence threshold. Cahill was one of several women with
    13
    whom Wieneke was romantically involved. The night before his murder, Cahill was
    at the bar where Wieneke worked as a bartender. After his shift, Wieneke intended
    to go home with another woman but found Cahill sitting in his car. Eventually,
    Wieneke decided to drive Cahill home. Cahill became upset during the drive and
    tried to get out of the car as it was moving. Wieneke stopped the car, and he and
    Cahill got out and had a conversation. Both got back in the car, and Wieneke
    drove back to the bar where the other woman’s car was parked. Wieneke said he
    would take Cahill home and then go to the woman’s home. He later stopped at
    the other woman’s home. By morning, Wieneke was back at the home he shared
    with Hotz, who last saw Wieneke asleep when she left for work that morning.
    When Hotz returned home that evening, she found Wieneke dead on the bedroom
    floor. The window of time in which the murder occurred is narrowed by the
    testimony of a farmer who drove past Wieneke’s home that day. When he drove
    by after 9:00 a.m., he saw two people standing outside the home by a car. When
    he drove by around 1:30 p.m., he noticed a metal baseball bat on the side of the
    road that had not been there that morning. The baseball bat matched Wieneke’s
    injuries, and trace amounts of blood that matched Wieneke’s blood type was found
    on it.
    During the time frame of Wieneke’s murder, Cahill spent time at a
    construction jobsite but left when Hazen picked her up after between one hour and
    one and one-half hours later. Hazen testified she picked Cahill up at the jobsite
    around 10:00 a.m. and that they stopped at Wieneke’s house on the way to Iowa
    City. She said Cahill wanted to drop something off, but no one answered the door.
    Cahill and Hazen claimed they went to Iowa City to run errands, and Hazen
    14
    provided receipts of purchases she made for corroboration. But the only receipt
    with a timestamp showed a purchase made at 1:25 p.m.
    The strongest evidence of Cahill’s guilt is Becker’s testimony about the
    events she witnessed when she was nine. The defense tried to discredit her
    testimony by emphasizing every possible inconsistency, as well as Becker’s
    inability to recall certain details. Even so, the jury found her credible—perhaps
    based on the accidental way in which she crossed paths with Agent Vileta while
    he was investigating an unrelated crime twenty-six years later. The defense tried
    to discredit Becker by portraying her as biased based because Cahill had an
    extramarital relationship with Becker’s stepfather when Becker was young. But it
    is hard to conceive that Becker invented a story to portray Cahill as a murderer in
    the hope that she could one day share it during a coincidental meeting with a law
    enforcement officer. And Becker’s mother testified that Becker told her about the
    incident not long after, which corroborates her claim.        Her testimony is also
    corroborated by Payne, who saw Cahill burning clothing two days after Wieneke’s
    murder. The evidence was sufficient to support the jury’s verdict, so the district
    court did not err in denying Cahill’s motion for new trial.
    V. Delay in Prosecution.
    Cahill’s final claim on appeal concerns the twenty-six years that passed
    between when the crime occurred and her arrest. Cahill argues that the delay in
    her prosecution violated her due process rights. We review her claim de novo.
    See State v. Brown, 
    656 N.W.2d 355
    , 362 (Iowa 2003).
    Although the State need not arrest and charge the accused “at the precise
    moment probable cause comes into existence,” it cannot delay the filing of criminal
    15
    charges against the accused to gain a tactical advantage. 
    Id.
     (citation omitted).
    To prove a delay in prosecution violated her due process rights, Cahill must show
    that the delay in prosecution caused her actual prejudice and was unreasonable.
    See 
    id.
     Actual prejudice occurs when the delay leads to a loss of evidence or
    testimony that meaningfully impairs the ability to present a defense.       See 
    id.
    Generalized claims of prejudice based on loss of memory, witnesses, or evidence
    will not suffice. See 
    id.
    Even assuming the delay caused prejudice, Cahill cannot show the delay
    was unreasonable. The State did not delay prosecution to gain tactical advantage.
    Rather, the State lacked sufficient evidence of Cahill’s involvement until December
    2017, when Agent Vileta spoke to Becker. The State did further investigation and
    filed charges against Cahill six months later. Under the circumstances, there was
    no unreasonable delay in prosecution. A defendant cannot complain about a delay
    in prosecution of a crime when that delay is attributable to the defendant’s success
    in concealing guilt.        Delaying prosecution to allow full investigation differs
    fundamentally from delaying prosecution for tactical advantage. United States v.
    Lovasco, 
    431 U.S. 783
    , 795 (1977). By waiting to prosecute a defendant until guilt
    beyond a reasonable doubt can be established promptly, the prosecutor is abiding
    by standards of fair play and decency rather than deviating from them. See 
    id.
    Penalizing prosecutors who defer action for these reasons would
    subordinate the goal of “orderly expedition” to that of “mere speed.”
    This the Due Process Clause does not require. We therefore hold
    that to prosecute a defendant following investigative delay does not
    deprive [the defendant] of due process, even if [the] defense might
    have been somewhat prejudiced by the lapse of time.
    16
    
    Id.
     (internal citation omitted). Cahill’s due process rights were not violated by the
    pre-accusation delay in prosecution.
    For all the above reasons, we affirm Cahill’s second-degree murder
    conviction.
    AFFIRMED.