In the Interest of A.P. Minor Child, A.P., Minor Child

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedOctober 26, 2016
Docket15-1697
StatusPublished

This text of In the Interest of A.P. Minor Child, A.P., Minor Child (In the Interest of A.P. Minor Child, A.P., Minor Child) 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.

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In the Interest of A.P. Minor Child, A.P., Minor Child, (iowactapp 2016).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

No. 15-1697 Filed October 26, 2016

IN THE INTEREST OF A.P. Minor child,

A.P., Minor Child, Appellant. ________________________________________________________________

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Floyd County, Karen Kaufman

Salic, District Associate Judge.

A minor child appeals his delinquency adjudication, arguing his speedy-

adjudication rights were violated, the trial court erred in ruling against his

affirmative defense of coercion, there was insufficient evidence, and his

prosecution violated the Equal Protection Clause. AFFIRMED.

Mark A. Milder, of Mark A. Milder Law Firm, Waverly, for appellant.

Thomas J. Miller, Attorney General, and Katie Krickbaum, (until her

withdrawal), Assistant Attorney General, for appellee State.

Considered by Potterfield, P.J., McDonald, J., and Goodhue, S.J.*

*Senior judge assigned by order pursuant to Iowa Code section 602.9206 (2015). 2

POTTERFIELD, Presiding Judge.

I. Background Facts and Proceedings

In July 2013, the Charles City Police Department received a report of

alleged sexual abuse. Police officers met with the complaining witness and her

parents and were told A.P. had sexual intercourse with their minor child on March

28, 2013. The complaining witness described the incident as A.P. having placed

his penis into her vagina for between two to five minutes. The complaining

witness’s parents also gave officers a condom they collected from the location of

the incident; however, later testing on the condom returned as negative for the

DNA of A.P. or the complaining witness.

Officers interviewed A.P. in September 2013. A.P. admitted to having sex

with the complaining witness, but he disputed when it occurred. A.P. maintained

the incident occurred on October 8, 2012, shortly before his fourteenth birthday.

The complaining witness stated that she remembered the incident

occurring on March 28, 2013, because she wrote the date down in her diary, and

it was also the day before an important family event. The complaining witness

disposed of the diary, and no one apparently saw it except for the complaining

witness. A.P., on the other hand, said he remembered it being October 8, 2012,

because it was only a few days before his fourteenth birthday, it was during the

fall season, he had been repairing a vehicle with his father and they had

memorialized that date on the vehicle, and because the day stayed in his

memory since it was his first sexual encounter. Under either alleged date, the

complaining witness was twelve years old; A.P. was thirteen or fourteen years

old. 3

The complaining witness wrote poems and letters to A.P. and admitted to

having a “crush” on him. A.P. asserted, and the complaining witness did not

deny, some of the poems and letters were written prior to the sexual incident

while some were written afterward.

The complaining witness alleges A.P. walked her home one day and

forced her to have sex with him in a shed off of a trail. A.P. now alleges the

complaining witness pressured him into having sex with her and threatened him

that if he refused her advances, she would report that he raped her. During the

police investigation, A.P. did not tell officers the complaining witness threatened

him.

Following the investigation, on October 28, 2013, a petition alleging A.P.

had committed the delinquent act of sexual abuse in the third degree was filed.

A consent decree was entered into on November 21, 2013, which set forth terms

and conditions for A.P.1

A.P. failed to abide by the terms and conditions of the consent decree,

and a motion to revoke the consent decree was filed on July 3, 2014. The

juvenile court revoked the consent decree on November 20, 2014, and entered

the first of two orders adjudicating A.P. delinquent on the third-degree-sexual-

abuse charge on the same day. In that 2014 order, the court found A.P. “stated

1 The court stated at the August 26, 2015 adjudicatory hearing, “[t]he court at the time of revocation was under the belief, as is the court’s practice with consent decrees, that the child had made an admission with respect to the delinquent act as part of the granting of the consent decree. The transcript of that proceeding indicates that was not done, which is unusual, but the failure for that admission was not formally addressed with the court until [defense counsel’s] motion in July.” 4

a desire to enter a plea of guilty, and engaged in a colloquy with the court.”

However, apparently neither the colloquy nor the guilty plea took place.2

The court scheduled a disposition hearing for February 12, 2015;

however, that hearing had to be continued as A.P. absconded from the shelter

where he was required to stay. After A.P. was located in June 2015, the court

rescheduled the disposition hearing for July 23, 2015.

On July 10, 2015, A.P. filed a request for an adjudicatory hearing, arguing

the first adjudicatory order did not contain any admissions or factual findings

concerning his guilt. The adjudicatory hearing was scheduled for August 26,

2015. However, on August 20, A.P. filed a motion to dismiss the petition on

grounds of violation of speedy adjudication, which the court denied. At the

August 26 adjudicatory hearing evidence was taken, including A.P.’s testimony

regarding his coercion defense. The court issued the second adjudicatory order

after the hearing, again adjudicating A.P. delinquent on the third-degree-sexual-

abuse charge. At the September 24, 2015 disposition hearing, A.P. was ordered

into a group home.

A.P. filed a notice of appeal on October 10, 2015.

II. Standard of Review

Generally, we review delinquency proceedings de novo to determine

whether the State proved beyond a reasonable doubt the child committed the

delinquent act. See In re A.K., 825 N.W.2d 46, 49 (Iowa 2013). Although we are

not bound by the juvenile court’s factual findings, we give them weight, especially

those concerning witness credibility. Id. “The primary goal of juvenile

2 The record before us does not include a transcript of the November 20, 2014 hearing. 5

proceedings is to further the best interest of the child—not to punish but instead

to help and educate the child.” Id. at 51.

III. Discussion

A.P. raises four issues on direct appeal. First, he claims the juvenile court

abused its discretion by failing to dismiss the delinquency petition on speedy-

adjudication grounds. Second, he contends the juvenile court erred when it

denied A.P.’s affirmative defense. Third, he claims there is insufficient evidence

to support the juvenile court’s adjudication. Fourth, he avers he was denied

equal protection by being charged and adjudicated delinquent for a sex act when

the complaining witness was not also charged and adjudicated.

A. Motion to Dismiss on Speedy-Adjudication Grounds

A.P. argues the juvenile court abused its discretion when it failed to

dismiss the delinquency petition on the basis that A.P. was denied his right to a

speedy adjudicatory hearing.

“While our review of delinquency proceedings is generally de novo, we will

review this issue for an abuse of discretion.” State v.

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