Bolander v. Iowa

978 F.3d 1079
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedNovember 5, 1992
DocketNo. 91-3789
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 978 F.3d 1079 (Bolander v. Iowa) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bolander v. Iowa, 978 F.3d 1079 (8th Cir. 1992).

Opinions

BRIGHT, Senior Circuit Judge.

The State of Iowa appeals from the district court1 order granting Michael T. Bo-lander, who was previously convicted of first-degree murder in the State of Iowa, habeas corpus relief under 28 U.S.C. § 2254 (1988). The district court determined that Bolander’s attorney failed to provide competent assistance, which prejudiced Bolander. The district court directed that the State of Iowa release Bolander, retry him, or reduce his conviction to second-degree murder. We affirm.

I.

Early on the morning of April 10, 1983, Orval Stiles, Jr., was stabbed to death in his home in Council Bluffs, Iowa. Orval Stiles was sixty-one years old and had recently retired from his position as a computer analyst for the Omaha Public Power District. He had been married to Edna Marie Stiles for forty years. They had raised five children in the family home, where they had lived together for the past thirty years.

Despite their long marriage, Orval and Edna maintained an unusual relationship. They did not get along with one another and argued frequently. As a solution to the domestic unrest, Orval had moved into his youngest child’s bedroom after she left home in 1980. After this move, Orval lived almost completely apart from Edna, locking himself into the bedroom by inserting a knife in the doorjamb. One of the Stiles’s children stated that without entering Orval’s bedroom, a visitor would not know that a man lived in the house.

On the other hand, Edna Stiles, sixty years old in April of 1983, lived an active life outside of the discordant home. Three or four times a week she went to Omaha bars to dance, drink, and meet men. On these occasions, Edna held herself out as a single woman named “Marie.” She did not attempt to conceal her male companions from Orval and often received calls at home from them. During the months leading up to Orval’s death, Edna increasingly talked about either filing for divorce or Orval moving out. At one point, she had consulted an attorney about filing for divorce, but desisted when she learned it might not be in her best financial interest. Edna had no outside employment, although she did sell cosmetics from her home.

While out one evening at an Omaha bar, Edna met twenty-four-year-old Michael Bo-lander. Known as “Hobo” to his friends, Bolander had not experienced much success in life. He had been expelled from the technical school he was attending and just days before the events in question had been evicted from his apartment for not paying rent. He earned forty dollars per week working at a laundromat. A self-admitted alcohol and drug abuser, Bolan-der satisfied his alcohol habit by working at night as a bouncer at Andy’s Ark Bar, where he was paid with drinks. Bolander took advantage of his opportunity as a bouncer at Andy’s Ark Bar to meet and date a number of women.

During a conversation on Thursday, April 7, 1983, Bolander and Edna arranged a date for Saturday, April 9. Also during this conversation, Edna told Bolander she had been held hostage and beaten by her husband, son and daughter-in-law during a four-hour ordeal in the family home the previous November.

As planned, Bolander and Edna met at Andy's Ark Bar on April 9. They had dinner and drinks, and went dancing. After later having breakfast together, the two drove to the Stiles home.

Orval Stiles placed a 911 emergency telephone call at 2:28 a.m. on April 10. An emergency unit was dispatched to the Stiles home, where police found Orval lying [1081]*1081on the floor suffering from severe knife wounds. They also found a hysterical Edna, her hands loosely tied behind her back with a cloth towel. The emergency medical team tried unsuccessfully to revive Orval, who was pronounced dead a short time later as a result of the knife wounds. An autopsy revealed that Orval had received a penetrating wound to the chest that punctured his heart and a severe laceration to the stomach, from which his intestines protruded.

Edna was initially questioned at the Stiles residence. She told the police that on the eve of her husband’s death she went to the Walking Cane Bar by herself, then to the Leavenworth Cafe for breakfast by herself, and then returned to her home by herself. Upon arriving home, she was grabbed by an unknown man, who tied her up and stabbed her husband. After giving this initial statement, Edna was taken to police headquarters, where she gave two tape-recorded statements. In her first taped statement, she indicated that she went to the Walking Cane Bar by herself, saw Bolander, danced and had breakfast with him, and then went home alone. In her second statement, which is the focus of this appeal, Edna said that she picked up Bolander at Andy’s Ark Bar. They had dinner together, went dancing and drinking at the Walking Cane Bar, and then had breakfast at the Leavenworth Cafe. When asked where she went after leaving the Leavenworth Cafe, Edna stated:

ANSWER (Edna Stiles): Well I drove him [Bolander] over to Council Bluffs and then he said since I have been treated so terrible he didn’t want anybody treating me like that again. He said cause I was such a nice person to be treated that way and he said he was going to fix my husband’s car up and I do not know what he meant by that.
QUESTION: A huh.
ANSWER: And then he said to drop him off about a block from my house which I did. And I drove in my driveway by myself and I unlocked the door and I didn’t know for sure if he was coming in the house, I didn’t know this for sure, I guess he had planned that he would tie me up and make it look like a burglary and a so I opened the front door, went into the kitchen, turned the light on and went into the kitchen.
QUESTION: Now he told you these things as you were driving over?
ANSWER: Yes.
QUESTION: To Council Bluffs?
ANSWER: And he said he would fix my husband up and what he meant by that I do not know and I said don’t hurt him.
QUESTION: He told you he was going to fix your husband up?
ANSWER: Fix him up.
QUESTION: And fix your husband’s
ANSWER: Gonna fix him up and then he was going to take his car and leave and I said don’t hurt my husband.
QUESTION: And he told you he was going to tie you up to make it look like a burglary?
ANSWER: Yes. Yes.
QUESTION: Okay ... on the way over from [sic] to your house from Omaha Mike Bollander [sic] told you that he was going to fix your husband’s car and fix your husband and that he was going to tie you up and make it look like a burglary, is that right?
ANSWER: A huh, yes.
QUESTION: And then a you dropped a him off about a block from your house and then you drove on home?
ANSWER: Yes.
QUESTION: And you went in [the house] and he followed you in the door?
ANSWER: Yes.
QUESTION: And he tied you up ... tied you up in the kitchen?
ANSWER: Yes.

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