State of Iowa v. Adriana Bernice Herrera Paez

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedNovember 8, 2023
Docket22-0948
StatusPublished

This text of State of Iowa v. Adriana Bernice Herrera Paez (State of Iowa v. Adriana Bernice Herrera Paez) 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
State of Iowa v. Adriana Bernice Herrera Paez, (iowactapp 2023).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

No. 22-0948 Filed November 8, 2023

STATE OF IOWA, Plaintiff-Appellee,

vs.

ADRIANA BERNICE HERRERA PAEZ, Defendant-Appellant. ________________________________________________________________

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Marshall County, Kim M. Riley,

District Associate Judge.

A defendant appeals her convictions for child endangerment, possession of

controlled substance, and possession of drug paraphernalia. AFFIRMED.

Daniel M. Northfield, Urbandale, for appellant.

Brenna Bird, Attorney General, and Israel Kodiaga, Assistant Attorney

General, for appellee.

Considered by Ahlers, P.J., Badding, J., and Scott, S.J.*

*Senior judge assigned by order pursuant to Iowa Code section 602.9206

(2023). 2

BADDING, Judge.

Adrianna Herrera Paez, a mother of two young children, appeals her

convictions for possession of methamphetamine, possession of drug

paraphernalia, and two counts of child endangerment. In a skeleton brief,1 Paez

challenges the sufficiency of the evidence supporting the jury’s verdicts, raising the

same argument for each—she did not know there was methamphetamine or drug

paraphernalia in the hotel room she lived in with the children and their father.

Our review of this claim is for correction of errors at law. State v.

Crawford, 974 N.W.2d 510, 516 (Iowa 2022). In evaluating the sufficiency of the

evidence, we look at the evidence in the light most favorable to the State and make

all inferences that can be fairly drawn in favor of the verdicts. Id. Paez’s challenge

fails under this standard.

On December 29, 2020, at around 10:25 a.m., police officers went to a hotel

on a warrant check for Manuel Rodriguez—Paez’s boyfriend and the father of her

children. They were directed to room 168 and knocked on the door. A very young

child answered, throwing the door open pretty wide. Inside the room, the officers

saw a woman on the bed farthest from door. The officer who knocked on the door

1 While Paez’s brief has the basic framework required by our rules of appellate

procedure, it’s missing the meat. The routing statement does not reference the applicable criteria in Iowa Rule of Appellate Procedure 6.1101, the statement of the case does not mention the crimes for which Paez was convicted or the sentence imposed, and the statement of facts is a five-sentence recitation of the case’s procedural history. See Iowa R. App. P. 6.903(2)(d), (e), (f). “We do not mention the transgressions out of a fit of crankiness,” because “[r]ule infractions are not a trivial matter.” State v. Lange, 831 N.W.2d 844, 847 (Iowa Ct. App. 2013). They can, as the State requests here, “lead to summary disposition of the appeal.” Id. at 847. Despite the shortcomings of Paez’s brief, we decline that request and address her claims because doing so does not require us to assume a partisan role. Id. But we caution against this bare-bones approach. 3

started saying, “Police department. Police department,” trying to rouse that adult.

Getting no response, the officer stepped into the room because she was

concerned the “person on the bed may be deceased or desperately in need of

medical attention.”

The room was a mess, with toys, clothes, slices of bread, and open yogurt

containers scattered throughout, and it smelled like spoiled food. As the officer

went into the room, she could see the bathroom door was open. On the counter—

strewn among makeup, hairspray, and other toiletries—the officer saw two “bong-

type pipes” that she knew from her training and experience “are utilized for illicit

drugs.” Once the officer got further into the room, she saw another young child

sitting on the second bed in the room.

Turning her attention to the woman on the first bed, who was partially

covered by a comforter, the officer kept repeating, “Police department. Are you

okay?” When the officer was a couple of feet away, the woman started to wake

up, startling the officer who thought she was dead. The woman had a black eye,

a tissue in one nostril—“similar to what a person would do to stop a nose bleed,”

and open sores on her face. The officer asked for her name, and the woman told

her it was Victoria Ruiz. But when another officer called that name into dispatch,

they learned it was an alias Paez used. Upon further questioning, Paez told the

officer her children’s names and ages. The little boy who answered the door was

three years old, and the toddler on the bed was one year old. Once Paez got out

of bed, the officer could see that she had been laying on top of a “small plastic bag

tied off containing a small amount of like a white powdery, white crystal powder.”

The substance inside the baggie was later identified as methamphetamine. 4

After obtaining a search warrant for the room, law enforcement found eight

or nine glass pipes,2 including the two on the bathroom counter; a second baggie

of methamphetamine inside a manicure case that was in a green gym bag; and a

small scale. The pipes and scale had what officers believed to be

methamphetamine residue on them. Several of the pipes and the scale were found

inside purses hanging in the hotel room’s open closet.

At Paez’s jury trial in March 2022, Rodriguez testified that the

methamphetamine, pipes, and scale were his, even though he was not in the hotel

room when the police came in. He explained that he, Paez, and their two children

had been living at the hotel where he did maintenance work. Rodriguez testified

that in December 2020, he was using methamphetamine multiple times a week.

Although he stored the drugs and paraphernalia in the hotel room, Rodriguez said

that he didn’t use them there. He was worried that Paez would leave him if she

knew about the drugs, so Rodriguez testified that he kept everything hidden from

her. But on cross-examination, Rodriguez admitted that after the first day of trial,

Paez called him from jail, told him some of the details about where the drugs and

paraphernalia had been found, and instructed him “to say that she didn’t know

anything about what was found because nothing was where she was or with the

kids.”

Keeping with that story, Paez testified that she did not know there were

drugs or paraphernalia in the room. If she had known, Paez asserted, she would

have “gotten [the children] out of there” because their safety was at risk. To explain

2 The crime scene technician testified that she was not sure whether two glass

pieces recovered at the scene were separate pipes or if they went together. 5

the baggie of methamphetamine in the bed, Paez testified that she was actually

standing up and eating yogurt when the officer came into the room. As for the

pipes on the bathroom counter, Paez claimed the door was always closed. And

she denied using purses, insisting the ones in the room were not hers. On cross-

examination, Paez was asked about a phone call she made to another man from

jail during the three-day jury trial. The prosecutor questioned Paez, “You told [that

man] if you’re out there and you run into [Rodriguez], you don’t know me. He will

definitely change his mind. That would really suck at this point. Did you tell [him]

that?” Paez responded, “I did not say that.” On rebuttal, the State played that

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Related

State v. Millbrook
788 N.W.2d 647 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 2010)
State v. Thornton
498 N.W.2d 670 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1993)
State of Iowa v. Tremayne Latoine Thomas
847 N.W.2d 438 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 2014)
State of Iowa v. John Arthur Wilson
878 N.W.2d 203 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 2016)
State of Iowa v. Donald Benjamin Earl Reed
875 N.W.2d 693 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 2016)
State v. Lange
831 N.W.2d 844 (Court of Appeals of Iowa, 2013)

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State of Iowa v. Adriana Bernice Herrera Paez, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-iowa-v-adriana-bernice-herrera-paez-iowactapp-2023.