State of Iowa v. Alejandro Antonio Flores

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedSeptember 27, 2023
Docket22-0426
StatusPublished

This text of State of Iowa v. Alejandro Antonio Flores (State of Iowa v. Alejandro Antonio Flores) 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. Alejandro Antonio Flores, (iowactapp 2023).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

No. 22-0426 Filed September 27, 2023

STATE OF IOWA, Plaintiff-Appellee,

vs.

ALEJANDRO ANTONIO FLORES, Defendant-Appellant. ________________________________________________________________

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Muscatine County, Tom Reidel,

Judge.

Defendant appeals his conviction of one crime and the imposition of

consecutive sentences on two counts of going armed with intent and two counts

of willful injury causing serious injury. AFFIRMED.

Elizabeth Araguas of Nidey, Erdahl, Meier & Araguas, PLC, Cedar Rapids,

for appellant.

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

General, for appellee.

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

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

(2023). 2

BADDING, Judge.

A night out at a new bar almost ended with the deaths of two of its patrons

after they were stabbed in the parking lot. Alejandro Flores was caught by police

running from the bar with a bloody knife in his pocket. He was charged with

multiple crimes for the stabbings, including two counts of attempt to commit

murder.

After hearing from more than twenty witnesses and watching videos from

cameras inside and outside the bar, a jury found Flores guilty of two counts of

assault with intent to inflict serious injury (as lesser included offenses of the

attempted-murder charges), two counts of going armed with intent, and two counts

of willful injury causing serious injury. Flores appeals, raising a sufficiency-of-the-

evidence challenge and a complaint about his sentences. We affirm.

I. Background Facts and Proceedings

On January 23, 2021, Samantha Frye and her boyfriend decided to

celebrate their birthdays together with a dinner at a local restaurant. When they

were done eating, they called Samantha’s niece, Faith, who was out on a date

herself. The couples met up at a nearby martini bar, before deciding to head to a

new bar in town.

Soon after they arrived, Faith’s ex-boyfriend, Dayton Elliott, walked into the

bar with a group of people that included Flores. No one in Samantha’s group knew

Flores. But they did know Elliott because his relationship with Faith had ended

badly. Faith felt threatened when Elliott walked in, as did Samantha. So they

made plans to leave while trying to avoid Elliott—who was staring at them from

across the bar and making hand gestures toward them. 3

As Samantha, Faith, and their dates tried to walk out of the bar, Elliott and

Flores approached them. The video from cameras inside the bar, which does not

have audio, seems to show the two groups exchanging words. An owner of the

bar moved Elliott away from Samantha’s group as they left the bar. Flores tried to

go after them, but Ashley, one of Samantha’s friends, held him back for a few

seconds, ripping his sweatshirt in the process. Flores pushed her aside and

quickly followed Samantha’s group outside. Elliott left the bar from a different exit

and went around to the parking lot.

Video from cameras outside the bar shows Samantha’s group walking to

her vehicle. Flores can be seen rushing out after them. Ashley was close behind,

trying to separate him from the group. While she was next to Flores, Ashley

testified that she heard a switchblade click open and saw the blade in his hand.

She yelled out, “Knife,” but no one heard her. Faith’s date, however, saw the knife

when he turned to look back at Flores. Ashley ran into the bar to get help, while

another bystander tried to keep Flores away from Samantha’s group.

Meanwhile, Samantha’s group made it to her car. They all got in except for

Samantha, who was standing outside the driver’s side door yelling for Ashley to

come with them. As she was doing so, Flores and Elliott advanced toward her

vehicle. Elliott split off from Flores and went around to the front of the car while

Flores approached the passenger side. The video of what happened next is dark

and difficult to see. One of the bar owners, who was standing outside, testified

that it looked like Flores “put his upper body into the vehicle.” But Samantha’s

boyfriend, who was in the front passenger seat, said that Flores never came into 4

the vehicle. He was sure that all the windows and doors, except for Samantha’s,

were closed.

According to Samantha, who was still outside the vehicle, Elliott was

“banging on the vehicle and shouting profanities . . . demanding that Faith talk to

him.” Samantha testified that she looked across the car at Elliott and heard him

say, “Fucking stab her already.” Samantha got into the car and told her boyfriend

what Elliott had said. Once she was inside, Samantha’s boyfriend saw Flores “on

the front passenger side of the car in the front.” Samantha then tried to back out

of the parking spot. She thought that her window was down while she was doing

so. As the car was backing up, some bystanders outside the bar thought it ran

over Flores’s leg. From her spot in the back, Faith remembers seeing Flores

“getting up off the ground, propping himself up on the car.”

Another camera angle outside the bar shows that as the car pulled out of

the parking spot, Flores ran toward the driver’s side in a crouched position. The

car then speeds away. Inside the car, Samantha “felt a gush” of what she thought

was warm water pouring down her back. She put her hand behind her left shoulder

blade and saw it was blood. Samantha told her boyfriend that she’d been stabbed.

While he put pressure on the wound, Samantha drove them straight to the hospital.

Back at the bar, Elliott and Flores walked up to a car parked near the front

that belonged to Dalton Manley’s fiancée. Dalton, who didn’t know either Elliott or

Flores, went outside to tell them that “it was not their vehicle and they should

probably leave” because the police had been called. Surveillance video from the

bar shows that Flores had a knife in his hand as he approached Dalton. One of

the women who was with Elliott’s group stepped in between them and then 5

punched Dalton in the face. After Dalton pushed her away, a fight broke out

between him, Flores, and Elliott. Bystanders jumped in, and one pulled Dalton out

of the melee. Dalton staggered toward the front door of the bar, soon realizing that

he had been stabbed in the abdomen. As police cars pulled into the bar’s parking

lot, Flores and Elliott took off in different directions.

One of the police officers who responded to the disturbance chased after

Flores, yelling at him to stop. Flores kept running into a rail yard behind the bar.

The officer saw Flores try to jump over a rail car but, as he was coming down,

Flores got his foot stuck in the coupling of the car. With Flores trapped, more

officers caught up to him. Knowing there had been a stabbing, an officer asked

Flores if he had any knives on him. Flores admitted that he had one in his front

pocket. The officer removed the knife before freeing Flores’s foot and placing him

in handcuffs. The knife had blood on it, which subsequent testing determined was

from Dalton. Elliott was later found hiding in a dumpster by the bar. Both victims

survived their life-threatening injuries.

Flores and Elliott were charged in a joint trial information with the two

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