Gregory C. Thompson v. State of Iowa
This text of Gregory C. Thompson v. State of Iowa (Gregory C. Thompson 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.
Opinion
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA
No. 23-0302 Filed April 10, 2024
GREGORY C. THOMPSON, Applicant-Appellant,
vs.
STATE OF IOWA, Respondent-Appellee. ________________________________________________________________
Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Polk County, Sarah Crane, Judge.
An applicant appeals the denial of postconviction relief. AFFIRMED.
Sonia M. Elossais of Carr Law Firm, P.L.C., Des Moines, for appellant.
Brenna Bird, Attorney General, and Joseph D. Ferrentino, Assistant
Attorney General, for appellee State.
Considered by Greer, P.J., and Ahlers and Buller, JJ. Tabor, J., takes no
part. 2
BULLER, Judge.
Gregory C. Thompson appeals the denial of his third application for
postconviction relief, challenging how trial counsel handled the victim’s mental-
health records. We affirm.
Because the State does not raise any procedural bar to this third
application, we need not recite the full posture of the preceding actions.1 As
pertinent here, we affirmed Thompson’s conviction on direct appeal and
summarized the facts:
Eleven-year-old K.J. ran away from a Des Moines youth shelter. She and a friend met forty-year-old Thompson on a street. Thompson approached the girls. He told them he “was staying at the Holiday Inn in room 1025.” Thompson returned to his hotel room and drank alcohol with his two roommates. That night, K.J., by herself, knocked on Thompson’s hotel room door. Thompson let K.J. in the room. His roommates left because they “were uncomfortable with the girl being there because she was a runaway and was young.” Thompson engaged in oral sex with K.J. When his roommates returned to the room, Thompson took K.J. to the bathroom of the hotel’s empty fitness room, instructed K.J. to remove her clothing, and performed vaginal intercourse. K.J. eventually left the hotel and told a maintenance worker across the street that she had been raped. The worker called 911 and police arrived shortly thereafter. An officer took K.J. back to the hotel, where she identified Thompson as the perpetrator. Swabs taken during a sexual assault examination showed the presence of Thompson’s semen in K.J.’s vagina.
State v. Thompson, No. 06-1916, 2008 WL 2901998, at *1 (Iowa Ct. App.
July 30, 2008). Thompson’s first two postconviction-relief applications were
consolidated and eventually dismissed in 2012. In 2018, Thompson again sought
postconviction relief in this case, challenging—among other now-abandoned
1 Although conviction was final in September 2008 and this application was filed in
2018, neither party nor the postconviction court raised or considered the statute of limitations. See Iowa Code § 822.3 (2018). 3
claims—trial counsel’s effectiveness in advocating to see and use the child victim’s
mental-health records. The postconviction court denied relief, and Thompson
appeals.
We review ineffective-assistance-of-counsel claims de novo. Sothman v.
State, 967 N.W.2d 512, 522 (Iowa 2021). “The benchmark for judging any claim
of ineffectiveness must be whether counsel’s conduct so undermined the proper
functioning of the adversarial process that the trial cannot be relied on as having
produced a just result.” Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668, 686 (1984). A
postconviction applicant claiming ineffective assistance must prove both
(1) counsel’s performance fell below reasonable standards and (2) if counsel had
acted differently, there would be a reasonable probability of a different outcome at
trial. Id. at 687, 694; see Sothman, 967 N.W.2d 522–23.
Thompson argues trial counsel should have done more to investigate and
possibly obtain mental-health records for K.J. According to his testimony at the
postconviction trial, a police officer told Thompson K.J. had made false reports
before. The prosecutor in the underlying criminal case also made a statement
during a status conference that K.J. had made false statements about her father
“in the past.” And, during her criminal-trial testimony, K.J. testified she “lied a lot.”
Before assessing the merits, we note a record discrepancy. The parties
told the postconviction court that an in camera review of mental-health records
took place during the underlying criminal case, and the criminal-trial court ruled
from the bench that none of the reviewed material was subject to disclosure to the
defense. The parties did not submit the relevant portion of the transcript as an
exhibit, and the postconviction court was apparently unable to locate the oral ruling 4
in its own review. But our review of the record discloses an exhibit in which an
appellate prosecutor summarized the relevant procedural history and the oral
ruling was captured in the criminal-trial transcript. Specifically, the court ruled it
was not required to disclose “any or all” of the mental-health records to the
defense. Because the postconviction court appears to have not had access to the
sealed records when it reviewed this case, we decline to review these records
ourselves for the first time on appeal. But because the parties cited the oral ruling
and it should have been considered by the postconviction court, we consider the
oral ruling.
Shifting to the merits, Thompson claims the mental-health records might
have undermined K.J.’s credibility and his trial counsel should have done
something different after the court ruled they would not be disclosed. This type of
generalized speculative claim cannot establish breach of an essential duty or the
reasonable probability of a different outcome. See Dunbar v. State, 515 N.W.2d
12, 15 (Iowa 1994).
Thompson admits in his brief that, in 2006, “mental-health records were
covered by physician-patient privilege” and the only exception at the time was for
records in the State’s possession. See State v. Stratton, 519 N.W.2d 403, 404–
05 (Iowa 1994). Even if we assume the records reviewed in camera were subject
to discovery under Stratton (and there is no evidence they were), the criminal-trial
court concluded it was not required to provide “any or all” of the reviewed records
to the defense. Thompson did not appeal or otherwise challenge that ruling. And
he offers no reason to believe trial counsel could have challenged this ruling on
any legal theory that carried a reasonable probability of success in 2006. Even 5
under today’s law, in camera review of mental-health records is permitted, and a
criminal defendant cannot demand production of documents on the theory the trial
court may not recognize evidence as exculpatory. See State v. Leedom, No. 20-
0561, 2021 WL 1904653, at *4 (Iowa Ct. App. May 12, 2021); see also
Pennsylvania v. Ritchie, 480 U.S. 39, 61 (1987) (finding no requirement
“confidential material had to be disclosed upon demand to a defendant charged
with criminal child abuse, simply because a trial court may not recognize
exculpatory evidence”). Thus, trial counsel did not breach any essential duty.
We also conclude Thompson cannot demonstrate Strickland prejudice. He
failed to prove the records contained exculpatory information or that he would have
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