Johnny Lee Johnson, applicant-appellee/cross-appellant v. State of Iowa, respondent-appellant/cross-appellee.

860 N.W.2d 913, 2014 Iowa App. LEXIS 1205, 2014 WL 7343239
CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedDecember 24, 2014
Docket13-1554
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 860 N.W.2d 913 (Johnny Lee Johnson, applicant-appellee/cross-appellant v. State of Iowa, respondent-appellant/cross-appellee.) 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
Johnny Lee Johnson, applicant-appellee/cross-appellant v. State of Iowa, respondent-appellant/cross-appellee., 860 N.W.2d 913, 2014 Iowa App. LEXIS 1205, 2014 WL 7343239 (iowactapp 2014).

Opinion

VOGEL, P.J.

The State appeals from the postconviction court’s grant of Johnny Johnson’s application for postconviction relief, which vacated his two convictions for first-degree murder and ordered a new trial. After finding trial counsel breached an essential duty by not objecting to Johnson being in leg shackles, the postconviction court then shifted the burden onto the State to prove — beyond a reasonable doubt — the *915 shackling did not contribute to the guilty verdict. Within the ineffective-assistance-of-counsel framework, and citing Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668, 104 S.Ct. 2052, 80 L.Ed.2d 674 (1984), the State asserts the burden should have remained with Johnson to show there was a reasonable probability the result of the trial would have been different had trial counsel objected to the leg shackles.

Johnson cross-appeals, arguing the post-conviction court erred when it denied his request for a state-funded expert for the postconviction hearing, who would theoretically testify about Johnson’s level of intoxication at the time of the killings. Johnson also claims the court was in error when it denied -his request for a protective order regarding attorney-client privilege from the underlying criminal case. Johnson’s final claim asserts appellate counsel was ineffective for failing to raise the issue of Johnson’s shackling on direct appeal.

On the State’s appeal, we conclude the postconviction court erred in its burden-shifting analysis. Consequently, we reverse the grant of Johnson’s application for postconviction relief and remand the case to the postconviction court to apply the proper standard. On Johnson’s cross-appeal, we conclude his motion for a protective order and his request for a state-funded expert were both properly denied. However, because Johnson’s claim that appellate counsel was ineffective for failing to bring the shackling claim on direct appeal will either be rendered moot or be subsumed within the postconviction court’s ruling, we deny this claim.

I. Factual and Procedural Background

Our court, in affirming Johnson’s two convictions for first-degree murder, summarized the underlying facts of the case in the following manner:

Sometime in March 2007, Johnson’s wife, Kim Johnson, left the family’s home in Coon Rapids and moved to an apartment in nearby Bayard. Johnson’s teenage daughter, Jessica, moved in with Kim, and his teenage son, Josh, remained with him. In early April 2007, Johnson ran into an acquaintance, Mark Bonney, at the lumberyard in Bayard. Johnson asked Bonney if he knew that Kim had begun dating Greg White, and stated that he would like to get “his hands on” White. Bonney warned Johnson that White was strong and that he carried knives, but did not give serious consideration to Johnson’s comment.
On the evening of April 29, 2007, Johnson built a bonfire at his home and drank “four or five” cans of beer. He then retrieved a loaded handgun from inside his home and drove to Kim’s apartment in Bayard. Johnson parked about a block away from the apartment at just after 10:00 p.m. He was wearing a black sweatshirt with the hood pulled up over his head. As Johnson approached the apartment he noticed the wooden front door was open. Through the screen door, Johnson saw White in the kitchen, wearing only pajama pants. White did not notice Johnson outside the door.
Johnson knelt and shot White three times through the screen door. He then entered the apartment and shot White once more. Kim ran from Jessica’s bed-, room, saw White on the floor, and ran back into the bedroom screaming and trying to shut the door behind her. Johnson followed Kim into the bedroom and shot her four times. He then went back into the hall and beat White on the head with the butt of his gun to make sure he was dead, crushing his skull. Johnson reentered the bedroom and beat the back of Kim’s head with his gun, also crushing her skull. At that *916 point, Jessica tried to push him off Kim, but he shoved her back to the bed. Johnson’s hood fell away from his face, and Jessica realized he was her father. Johnson told her, “It is over. She was fing him. I’m going to jail, and I don’t care.” Johnson then left the apartment.
Jessica checked her mother for a pulse and tried to call 911. A neighbor, Shanda Thomas, heard the gunshots and ran outside. Jessica told Thomas that “her fucking dad shot her mom.” As they waited for police to arrive, Jessica called her grandmother. Thomas heard Jessica tell her grandmother, “You need to get over here. Your fucking son shot my mom.” Jessica then called her uncle, Joseph Johnson, and said, “Your fucking brother shot my mom.”
Soon after receiving the call from Jessica, Joseph also received a call from Johnson. Johnson asked, “Did you hear what I did?” to which Joseph responded, “Yes, Jessie told me.” Joseph talked his brother into meeting him at the Guthrie County Sheriff’s Office to turn himself in. When they arrived at the sheriffs office, Johnson noticed a scrape on his hand and told Joseph that he must have gotten it while “beating them ... to make sure they were dead.”
Johnson was handcuffed and brought inside the sheriffs office. Officer Jeremy Long read Johnson his Miranda rights, asked him a few questions, booked him, and placed him in a jail cell. At 1:27 a.m. Johnson submitted to a breath test, which measured his blood alcohol at .019. Johnson also gave a DNA sample. At 1:39 a.m. Special Agent Mitch Mortvedt began to interview Johnson. The interview concluded at 3:88 a.m. Mortvedt interviewed Johnson again later that morning, from 10:02 to 11:31 a.m. During the course of these interviews, Johnson confessed to the shootings of Kim and White. Johnson explained the marital problems he and Kim had been going through, his discovery that Kim was dating someone else, and what led him to shoot the victims earlier that evening. Johnson also described exactly where he had thrown his gun on his drive home.

State v. Johnson, 08-0320, 2009 WL 4842480, at *1-2 (Iowa Ct.App. Dec. 17, 2009).

Johnson was convicted of the two first-degree-murder charges following a jury trial that commenced on January 8, 2009. Johnson’s defense consisted of disputing the first-degree murder requirement that the killings be “willful, deliberate, and with premeditation.” See Iowa Code §§ 707.1, .2(1) (2007). Instead, while not disputing he killed two people, Johnson argued he was guilty of voluntary manslaughter.

Prior to trial, a discussion was held in chambers regarding Johnson’s shackling during trial. The State did not request that Johnson be shackled and trial counsel did not object. Although Johnson had made no threats and was cooperative with law enforcement and court personnel, Johnson indicated that the manner of shackling was agreeable to him. No record was made with respect to whether there was a specific need that Johnson be shackled, though the trial court did make a record noting how the jury was to be informed of Johnson’s shackling.

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860 N.W.2d 913, 2014 Iowa App. LEXIS 1205, 2014 WL 7343239, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnny-lee-johnson-applicant-appelleecross-appellant-v-state-of-iowa-iowactapp-2014.