Amended August 9, 2017 State of Iowa v. John David Green

CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJune 9, 2017
Docket15–0871
StatusPublished

This text of Amended August 9, 2017 State of Iowa v. John David Green (Amended August 9, 2017 State of Iowa v. John David Green) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Amended August 9, 2017 State of Iowa v. John David Green, (iowa 2017).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF IOWA No. 15–0871

Filed June 9, 2017

Amended August 9, 2017

STATE OF IOWA,

Appellee,

vs.

JOHN DAVID GREEN,

Appellant.

On review from the Iowa Court of Appeals.

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Sac County, Gary L.

McMinimee, Judge.

John David Green seeks further review of a court of appeals

decision affirming his conviction of murder in the second degree.

AFFIRMED.

Mark C. Smith, State Appellate Defender, Joseph A. Fraioli (until

withdrawal) and Melinda J. Nye, Assistant Appellate Defender, for

Thomas J. Miller, Attorney General, and Bridget A. Chambers and

Douglas D. Hammerand, Assistant Attorneys General, for appellee. 2

CADY, Chief Justice.

In this case, we consider the right to counsel under article I,

section 10 of the Iowa Constitution. We also consider the court’s use of a

malice-inference jury instruction. The district court held John David

Green did not have a right to counsel under the Iowa Constitution when

he voluntarily participated in a noncustodial police interview under the

supervision of an Iowa county attorney, even though the State’s homicide

investigation had by then focused on Green as the primary suspect. The

district court also instructed the jury that it could infer Green acted with

malice aforethought from his use of a baseball bat, despite Green’s

objection that he did not bring the bat to the fatal encounter. The court

of appeals affirmed the district court on both the claimed errors, finding

article I, section 10 could not apply to the preaccusation stage of a

criminal investigation, and the jury could infer malice aforethought from

the intentional use of a deadly weapon. We conclude the level of

prosecutorial involvement at the time of the interview did not create a

prosecution or case that would trigger the right to counsel under article

I, section 10. We further conclude the jury could properly infer malice

aforethought from Green’s use of a deadly weapon. Therefore, we affirm

the decision of the court of appeals.

I. Factual Background and Proceedings.

Mark Koster lived in a one-bedroom house in Sac City. In 2009, he

seemingly disappeared from the area without notice. Police were alerted

after mail began to accumulate in the mailbox at his house and he

stopped paying his utility bills. Police found a handwritten note attached

to the back door of Koster’s house. The note indicated he had gone to

Florida for the winter and would return in the spring. A phone number

on the note was the number of a Florida resort, but the resort had no 3

record of Koster. As a result, police entered and searched the home.

Nothing looked suspicious, except Koster’s clothes and personal

belongings had not been removed from the home.

After Koster failed to return to his house in the spring, police

continued to investigate his disappearance. They learned from neighbors

and others that a man had been staying with Koster. The man was

described as tall. The investigation, however, led no further. Two years

passed with no answers or information. Koster was subsequently

presumed dead, and his house was sold.

The new owner of the home discovered a decomposed body buried

under a pile of debris in the basement. The state medical examiner

identified the body as Koster. A renewed law enforcement investigation

eventually located the man who had stayed with Koster prior to his

disappearance. His name was John David Green, and police located him

in a camper near Jacksonville, Florida.

The Sac County attorney, two police officers, and an agent from the

Iowa Department of Criminal Investigation traveled to Florida. They

approached Green at his camper. Green agreed to accompany them to a

nearby police station for an interview. Green was told he was not under

arrest and was free to leave. He was not informed of his Miranda rights

prior to or at any time during the interview or told of a right to counsel.

The interview was conducted in an unlocked room of the police

station. Green sat on a couch, and law enforcement officers sat on

chairs. The county attorney was not in the interview room, but watched

from another room in the station. Multiple times throughout the

interview, one of the officers would leave the interview room to consult

with the county attorney. During these consultations, the county 4

attorney would direct the officers to ask specific questions. The interview

was recorded.

Green eventually confessed to killing Koster after the two men had

an altercation in Koster’s Sac City home one evening in 2009. Green

said Koster became upset with him and started a fight by striking him

with a baseball bat. During the fight, the two fell onto a table and then

the ground, struggling over the bat. Green, much larger in size than

Koster, gained control and pressed the bat against Koster’s throat until

he could no longer breathe. Green held it there until Koster died.

Green then wrapped Koster’s body in blankets and placed it in the

basement of the home. He covered the body with cat litter and piled a

variety of items over it, including an old, heavy water heater. He propped

up the broken table next to the pile of debris. Green then cleaned the

house, attached the note to the back door, and left town.

Law enforcement officers initially returned Green to his camper

after this confession, but arrested him after the county attorney obtained

an arrest warrant. He was returned to Iowa and charged with first-

degree murder. See Iowa Code §§ 707.1, .2 (2009).

Prior to trial, Green moved to suppress the interview with police in

Florida. Pertinent to this appeal, he claimed the State obtained his

confession in violation of his right to counsel. Green asserted that his

right to counsel had attached at the time of the interview because the

case had effectively transformed from an investigation into a prosecution

based on the active role of the county attorney during the interview. The

district court overruled the motion.

At trial, the State introduced the entire interview as evidence. The

State also used portions of the interview during cross-examination of

Green and in closing arguments. 5

The medical examiner testified that an autopsy of Koster’s body

showed the cause of death was consistent with Green’s version of the

events. The medical examiner also testified it would have taken

approximately two minutes to asphyxiate a person by applying pressure

to the neck with a straight object. Green testified he acted in self-

defense.

The district court instructed the jury, over Green’s objection, that if

a person had an opportunity to deliberate and used a dangerous weapon

against another resulting in death, the jury may infer “the weapon was

used with malice, malice aforethought, premeditation, and specific intent

to kill.” The district court also instructed the jury that a dangerous

weapon was an instrument actually used in a way to indicate “the user

intended to inflict death or serious injury, and when so used is capable

of inflicting death.”

The jury found Green guilty of murder in the second degree. In

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Amended August 9, 2017 State of Iowa v. John David Green, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/amended-august-9-2017-state-of-iowa-v-john-david-green-iowa-2017.