State of Iowa v. Javon Joshua Jennings ( 2020 )


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  •                    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA
    No. 19-0730
    Filed November 30, 2020
    STATE OF IOWA,
    Plaintiff-Appellee,
    vs.
    JAVON JOSHUA JENNINGS,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    ________________________________________________________________
    Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Pottawattamie County, Richard H.
    Davidson, Judge.
    Javon Jennings appeals his conviction for child endangerment causing
    death. AFFIRMED.
    Katherine Kaminsky Murphy of Kate Murphy Law, P.L.C., Glenwood (until
    withdrawal), and Krisanne C. Weimer of Weimer Law, P.C., Council Bluffs, for
    appellant.
    Thomas J. Miller, Attorney General, and Bridget A. Chambers, Assistant
    Attorney General, for appellee.
    Considered by Tabor, P.J., May, J., and Vogel, S.J.*
    *Senior judge assigned by order pursuant to Iowa Code section 602.9206
    (2020).
    2
    VOGEL, Senior Judge.
    Following a jury trial, Javon Jennings was convicted of child endangerment
    causing death in violation of Iowa Code section 726.6(1)(b) and (4) (2018).1
    Jennings appeals, asserting prosecutorial misconduct, ineffective assistance of
    counsel,2 and insufficiency of the evidence supporting the verdict.
    The jury could have found the following facts admitted into the record. J.H.
    was born in December 2016. On April 18, 2018, J.H.’s mother—who was also
    Jennings’s live-in paramour—left for work a few minutes before 4:00 p.m.
    Jennings supervised J.H. alone while the mother was at work, though a friend and
    his young son visited with Jennings and J.H. at the residence until about 4:30 p.m.
    that day. When the mother came home around 11:20 p.m., Jennings told her J.H.
    was sick. The mother checked on J.H. and found the child tense and groaning,
    but the mother managed to sooth the child to sleep before she went to bed herself.
    Around 4:30 the next morning, Jennings awoke and found J.H. cold and stiff.
    Jennings called 911, and emergency medical personnel and law enforcement
    responded to the home. Resuscitation efforts on the child were futile. An autopsy
    1 Jennings was also found guilty of involuntary manslaughter by commission of a
    public offense, in violation of Iowa Code section 726.6(1)(b), (3), and (4) (2018),
    which merged into the greater offense prior to sentencing.
    2 Under legislation effective July 1, 2019, we lack authority to consider ineffective-
    assistance-of-counsel claims on direct appeal. See State v. Macke, 
    933 N.W.2d 226
    , 231 (Iowa 2019) (citing 
    Iowa Code § 814.7
     (2019)). This legislation also
    prohibits us from considering pro se filings when a defendant has counsel. See
    2019 Iowa Acts ch. 141, § 30 (codified at 814.6A(1)). However, this legislation
    does not apply retroactively. See Macke, 933 N.W.2d at 235 (“We conclude the
    absence of retroactivity language in sections 814.6 and 814.7 means those
    provisions apply only prospectively and do not apply to cases pending on July 1,
    2019.”). Because Jennings’s judgment and sentence were entered prior to July 1,
    2019, we may consider his ineffective-assistance claims, including those
    contained in his pro se brief, on direct appeal. See id.
    3
    performed later that day noted multiple blunt-force injuries to J.H.’s head, neck,
    torso, and extremities, resulting in a fractured femur and hemorrhages to several
    internal organs. The autopsy report listed the cause of death as “multiple blunt
    force injuries” and the manner of death as “homicide.”
    Jennings was arrested and charged with the child’s death. The matter came
    on for trial beginning February 5, 2019. The jury found him guilty of involuntary
    manslaughter involving a public offense and child endangerment causing death.
    Following the district court’s denial of his motion in arrest of judgment and motion
    for new trial, the court merged the two counts into a single count of child
    endangerment causing death and sentenced Jennings to an indeterminate period
    of incarceration not to exceed fifty years.
    I. Standard of Review
    “We review ineffective-assistance-of-counsel claims de novo.” State v.
    Straw, 
    709 N.W.2d 128
    , 133 (Iowa 2006). “If an ineffective-assistance-of-counsel
    claim is raised on direct appeal from the criminal proceedings, we may decide the
    record is adequate to decide the claim or may choose to preserve the claim for
    postconviction proceedings.” 
    Id.
     To prevail on his ineffective-assistance claim,
    Jennings must show: “(1) his trial counsel failed to perform an essential duty, and
    (2) this failure resulted in prejudice.” 
    Id.
    We review sufficiency-of-the-evidence claims for correction of errors at law.
    State v. Sanford, 
    814 N.W.2d 611
    , 615 (Iowa 2012). “We will consider all the
    evidence presented, not just the inculpatory evidence.”         
    Id.
       “Evidence is
    considered substantial if, when viewed in the light most favorable to the State, it
    4
    can convince a rational jury that the defendant is guilty beyond a reasonable
    doubt.” 
    Id.
    II. Prosecutorial Misconduct
    Jennings raises several instances of what he claims to be prosecutorial
    misconduct resulting in denial of a fair trial. However, the State correctly asserts
    his claims are not preserved as Jennings did not object to them during the trial.
    See State v. Coleman, 
    907 N.W.2d 124
    , 138 (Iowa 2018) (stating claims of
    prosecutorial misconduct not raised in the trial court would be reviewed only in the
    context of ineffective assistance of counsel); State v. Radeke, 
    444 N.W.2d 476
    ,
    479 (Iowa 1989) (“[A]lleged misconduct by opposing counsel must be asserted
    before the issues are submitted to the jury.”).      Therefore, Jennings has not
    preserved his claims of prosecutorial misconduct for our review. 3
    III. Ineffective Assistance of Counsel.
    Jennings argues his attorney was ineffective for failing to advise him of his
    right to confidential clergy-penitent conversations, neglecting to even recognize
    two jail-house phone calls were consultations with someone he now claims is a
    religious leader. The two calls included brief discussions about various Muslim
    practices, dress, hair style, and observances during Ramadan. Jennings claims
    counsel should have objected to the admission of recordings of the two phone calls
    and asserted the calls were privileged communications. See 
    Iowa Code § 622.10
    3 Jennings did not ask us to consider his claims of prosecutorial conduct under an
    ineffective-assistance-of-counsel framework, but even if he had, we would find the
    record insufficient to address the claims and preserve them for postconviction
    proceedings. See State v. Coil, 
    264 N.W.2d 293
    , 296 (Iowa 1978) (“Even a lawyer
    is entitled to his [or her] day in court . . . .”).
    5
    (privileging   confidential   communications     with    clergy    and    certain   other
    professionals).      To   secure   this   privilege,    Jennings   must     show    such
    communications were: “(1) confidential, (2) entrusted to a person in his or her
    professional capacity, and (3) necessary and proper for the discharge of the
    function of the person’s office.” State v Alspach, 
    524 N.W.2d 665
    , 668 (Iowa 1994).
    However, the State at trial only referred to this other person as Jennings’s “friend,”
    and nothing in the record identifies this other person or would alert counsel that
    the person was Jennings’s religious advisor. Such an identification is necessary
    to trigger the privilege for communications with a clergy member, as opposed to a
    conversation between mere acquaintances discussing aspects of the Muslim faith.
    See 
    id.
     Moreover, during the pretrial hearing, defense counsel was concerned any
    reference to Islam or Allah may create bias in the jury and feared the jury’s
    “passions may be inflamed.” Such words were then deleted from the recording.
    Jennings’s counsel was therefore working to protect Jennings to ensure a fair trial.
    With no suggestion the person on the other end of the conversation was Jennings’s
    religious advisor, his counsel had no duty to object to the admission of the
    recordings based on an unasserted privilege.
    Furthermore, even if Jennings could show his counsel breached an
    essential duty and the redacted recordings should not have been admitted,
    Jennings can show no resulting prejudice from these conversations that only
    vaguely related to the death of the child.        In opening statements, the State
    accurately described the recordings to be admitted:
    You’re also going to hear on June fourth he made a call to a
    friend where he stated acts are judged by intentions. Went on to say
    6
    anything that would happen, if it was unintentional, they would judge
    me on that. I didn’t intentionally do nothing, you know what I mean.
    Based on the overwhelming evidence of Jennings’s guilt, as discussed below, we
    find no prejudice resulted from admitting these recordings, and we reject his
    ineffective-assistance-of-counsel claim based on the supposed privilege of these
    conversations.
    IV. Sufficiency of the Evidence
    Jennings asserts the verdict was not supported by sufficient evidence. 4 The
    State claims he failed to preserve error because he never challenged the
    sufficiency in a motion for judgment of acquittal, instead waiting until a motion for
    new trial to assert his claim. See Iowa R. Crim. P. 2.24(2)(b)(6) (allowing the
    district court to grant new trial “[w]hen the verdict is contrary to law or evidence”).
    We note Jennings made a motion for judgment of acquittal at the close of the
    State’s evidence. Limited to this opinion, we choose to address his sufficiency
    argument.
    Jennings’s main complaint is that there was not a specific time frame proven
    during which the fatal injuries were inflicted. Thus, he asserts he was wrongly the
    focus of the police investigation. However, the record contains ample evidence
    4   The jury instructions set forth the elements for child endangerment causing death:
    1. On or about the 18th day of April, the defendant was the
    person having custody or control over [J.H.].
    2. [J.H.] was under the age of fourteen years.
    3. The defendant intentionally committed an act, committed a
    series of acts, or used unreasonable force, torture or cruelty that:
    a. resulted in bodily injury to [J.H.], OR
    b. was intended to cause serious injury to [J.H.].
    4. The defendant’s act or acts resulted in the death of [J.H.].
    7
    J.H. was happy and healthy until Jennings took sole responsibility for the child’s
    care prior to death.
    The mother testified she often noticed scrapes and bruises on J.H. after the
    child was in Jennings’s care, but the mother reasoned the child was simply
    “adventurous and wild, climbing all the time, jumping off of things, just a wild child,
    full of fun.” Jennings claimed recent bruising on J.H.’s face resulted from the child
    climbing a chair and falling into a heater. J.H. had a virus that caused vomiting
    within a week of death, but it seemed to have passed by April 18, 2019, and was
    of no serious concern to the mother at that time. On the morning of April 18, the
    mother recorded a few short videos of J.H.—which were admitted into evidence—
    depicting a healthy child “getting up and dancing around and jumping.” Other
    witnesses testified J.H. seemed healthy and normal that day, including Jennings’s
    friend who saw J.H. as late as 4:30 p.m. and testified “[e]verything was fine” when
    they parted. The mother left J.H. in Jennings’s sole care from the time she left for
    work until around 11:20 p.m., when she returned home to find J.H. “groaning” and
    “tense.” Jennings attributed J.H.’s condition to illness. He found J.H. dead hours
    later. The State medical examiner, Dr. Dennis F. Klein, determined in the autopsy
    report that the child died of “multiple blunt force injuries” consisting of “blunt force
    injuries of head and neck, blunt force injuries of torso, blunt force injuries of
    extremities and cerebral edema,” and the manner of death was “homicide.” A
    pediatrician concluded in a report J.H.’s “injuries are the result of physical abuse.”
    With no other explanation of the multiple injuries and Jennings being the sole
    caretaker in the hours before J.H.’s death, the record contains sufficient evidence
    to uphold the verdict.
    8
    V. Pro Se Issues
    Jennings also filed a pro se brief, raising issues of ineffective assistance of
    counsel and prosecutorial misconduct. However most of his claims are general
    assertions without a specific reference to the record for us to review or are
    repetitive of his counsel’s claims already addressed. His only separate, properly
    presented claim asserts his counsel was ineffective for failing to object when the
    State made reference in closing argument to J.H.’s older sibling, T.H., being
    present at an earlier occasion when J.H. supposedly fell down stairs and sustained
    bruises to the head. The State said:
    Why did [the mother] trust the defendant to keep watching her
    child after the two prior incidents? She said I believed him every time
    when he had said he let [J.H.] fall down the stairs. By the way, that
    was at his statement [to police] when he talked about the fall down
    the stairs issue. He was over talking to—I think the statement was I
    was talking to my homey . . . . [T.H.] was there.
    (Emphasis added.) Jennings asserts this statement—“[T.H.] was there”—violated
    a motion in limine barring reference to T.H. However, the motion in limine only
    prohibited “[a]ny statements of [T.H.] offered through recording or testimony.”
    Because the State only mentioned T.H. without offering any of the child’s
    statements, the State did not violate the motion in limine. Furthermore, the State
    was only quoting Jennings from a police interview, which had already been
    admitted into record without objection when the State played a recording in open
    court. Therefore, Jennings’s counsel was not ineffective for failing to object to this
    brief reference to T.H.
    9
    VI. Conclusion
    Jennings’s claims of prosecutorial misconduct are not preserved for our
    review, we reject his claims of ineffective assistance of counsel, and we find
    sufficient evidence to support the verdict.   Therefore, we affirm Jennings’s
    conviction.
    AFFIRMED.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 19-0730

Filed Date: 11/30/2020

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 11/30/2020