Benaiah Mablin v. State of Iowa

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedSeptember 11, 2019
Docket18-1612
StatusPublished

This text of Benaiah Mablin v. State of Iowa (Benaiah Mablin v. State of Iowa) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Benaiah Mablin v. State of Iowa, (iowactapp 2019).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

No. 18-1612 Filed September 11, 2019

BENAIAH MABLIN, Applicant-Appellee,

vs.

STATE OF IOWA, Respondent-Appellant. ________________________________________________________________

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Clinton County, John D. Telleen,

Judge.

The State appeals the district court’s grant of postconviction relief to

Benaiah Mablin. REVERSED AND REMANDED.

Thomas J. Miller, Attorney General, and Timothy M. Hau, Assistant Attorney

General, for appellant State.

John J. Wolfe, Clinton, for appellee.

Considered by Mullins, P.J., Bower, J., and Vogel, S.J.*

*Senior judge assigned by order pursuant to Iowa Code section 602.9206 (2019). 2

BOWER, Judge.

The State seeks reversal of the district court’s ruling granting postconviction

relief (PCR) to Benaiah Mablin on the ground the court failed to properly analyze

the ineffective-assistance-of-counsel claims. Because we conclude Mablin has

failed to prove the requisite prejudice, we reverse the district court and remand for

dismissal of the PCR application.

I. Background Facts and Proceedings.

On December 13, 2007, at 5:02:57 p.m., a 9-1-1 caller reported finding

blood in the building elevator leading to an apartment (Apartment #3) where

neighbors found a bloody body after the resident’s child opened the door for them.

Officers were dispatched to the apartment, found Sandra Chambers-Singh dead,

and took statements from the neighbors.

Neighbors Jeff Howard and Shelia Grant informed the officers they believed

Chambers-Singh was selling or using crack cocaine. Howard also told the officers

to speak with the tenants of Apartment #1 because they were friends with

Chambers-Singh. Howard also informed the officers he had seen the male tenant

who lived in Apartment #1, Corey Campbell, knock on Chambers-Singh’s door

earlier in the day around 1:00 or 2:00 p.m. Another neighbor, Janet Domer,

informed police that if Chambers-Singh was dead then “either C-Note or Ren killed

her.” C-Note—Carley Campbell Sr.—was Corey Campell’s uncle. Ren—Lorenzo

Dodd—was Chambers-Singh’s ex-boyfriend.

An officer interviewed Ginger Noble, who stated that at about 4:00 p.m. on

December 13, she entered the elevator on the second floor of the apartment

building and encountered a black male bleeding from his facial area. She stated 3

the black male was approximately six feet tall, wore a red stocking cap, and a blue

“puffy” winter coat.

Corey Campbell gave a statement to Officer Michael Adney, whose report

provides, in part:

On 12/13/07, I interviewed Corey Campbell at . . . Apartment #1. Corey told me he lived with his grandmother in that apartment since October 2007. Corey told he left the apartment at 1700 hrs. Corey said he got back to his apartment somewhere between 1730 and 1800 hrs. He said he went out to get his hair braided, but did not find anyone to braid it. I asked Corey if he knew who lived in apartment #3. He said a black girl named “Sandra”. He said he knew Sandra since about December 2006. He met her through a girl named “Jasmine”, Corey Campbell’s uncle Carley Campbell’s girlfriend. I asked Corey Campbell if he heard any yelling or noises. Corey said between 1630 and 1640 hrs., he heard arguing and went to his apartment door. The yelling came from Sandra’s apartment, so he knocked on her door. Corey said he knocked on Sandra’s Apartment, #3, between 1640 or 1650 hrs. He felt unsure on the time. When he knocked on the door, Sandra’s son . . . opened the door. Corey saw Sandra sitting on her bed in the bedroom, crying. Corey said he walked in the apartment and stood by the refrigerator while he spoke with Sandra. Corey said he did not see anyone else in the room at the time and did not see any blood. Sandra told Corey she was fine. Corey left. Corey said he returned between 1730 and 1800 hrs. As he passed by #3, he knocked on the apartment and no one answered, so he assumed no one remained in the apartment. .... I asked Corey if he knew if Chambers-Singh owned a vehicle. Corey said she drove a white or tannish minivan.

Carley Campell Jr. (son of Carley Campbell Sr.) was interviewed by

Officer Dannie Howard at about 7:45 p.m. Carley stated he arrived at

Apartment #1 at about 5:00 p.m. and used the stairs to get to the second floor.

He stated he did not remember seeing anyone in the hallway or the stairway

when he arrived. He told the officer he visited with Corey and another person 4

and, when he was leaving at about 6:08 p.m., police asked him to remain in

the apartment. Carley stated he had not seen Chambers-Singh on December

13.

Meanwhile, at 5:03 p.m., Officer Dan Sager was dispatched to a hospital to

investigate a man who claimed to have been assaulted. Officer Sager met the

man, Mablin. In his report, Officer Sager notes:

Mablin said he was an informant for the police department, which I knew from previous encounters. He told me, he was out near the railroad tracks by Hy-Vee on 11th Avenue South and 4th Street and said he was picked up in a gray Cadillac and was going to purchase some cocaine from a guy he knew as “B.” .... Mablin said he got into the car, sat in the rear passenger seat, was told to get out and get up in the front driver’s side. Mablin said at this point, they drove under an underpass, under the tracks. He said it was out past Hy-Vee, going into south Clinton. He told me once they made it under the under pass, they took an immediate left and then took another immediate left into a curve. He said they drove slowly back here. He said the driver was on the cell phone the whole time and the subject he knew as “B” was calling him a “snitch”, calling him a “cop” and said “F him up like this”. Mablin told me at this point he was in fear of his safety as they were going into an area he wasn’t familiar with in Clinton. .... Mablin said the driver grabbed at his arm. I asked which arm and he said it was the left. I did not see any marks on his arm. He then said somebody grabbed his neck. Mablin then opened up the passenger side door and he told me he rolled out. I asked him how he got the marks on his face and the cut on his hand. He said he did not know.

Mablin told Officer Sager he had $347 with him and had given it to one of

the people in the car because he was going to buy crack. The officer “asked if it

was okay if l could take his clothes with me as they were part of the assault scene

and I thought there may be blood on from the suspects on the clothes.” Mablin 5

agreed, and Officer Sager “placed them into some bags I had from the hospital

and took them to my squad car.”

Mablin’s aunt, Sharon Holmes, had accompanied Mablin to the hospital and

told Officer Sager that Mablin arrived at her home at 4:30 p.m. and was bloody.

Mablin told her he was in a car with some people, had some money taken, and

was pushed out of the car. Holmes said that when Mablin entered he asked to

wash his clothes, which included a blue “puffy” winter coat, an orange swimsuit,

tan pants, blue polo shirt, underwear, and a pair of socks. Holmes gave Mablin

clothes to wear and took him to the hospital.

Mablin was taken to get x-rays. While Officer Sager was in the waiting

room, he received a call from Officer Dean Ottens, “telling me Mablin may be

involved in an incident on South 3rd Street.”

Officer Brian Pohl arrived at the hospital about 7:30 p.m. and spoke with

Mablin’s aunt. Holmes told Officer Pohl that Mablin arrived at her house about

4:30 p.m.

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