State of Iowa v. Andrew Joseph Harrison

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedApril 12, 2023
Docket21-0784
StatusPublished

This text of State of Iowa v. Andrew Joseph Harrison (State of Iowa v. Andrew Joseph Harrison) 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. Andrew Joseph Harrison, (iowactapp 2023).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

No. 21-0784 Filed April 12, 2023

STATE OF IOWA, Plaintiff-Appellee,

vs.

ANDREW JOSEPH HARRISON, Defendant-Appellant. ________________________________________________________________

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Johnson County, Paul D. Miller,

Judge.

A criminal defendant appeals his conviction for second-degree sexual

abuse. AFFIRMED.

Martha J. Lucey, State Appellate Defender, and Vidhya K. Reddy, Assistant

Appellate Defender, for appellant.

Brenna Bird, Attorney General, and Thomas J. Ogden, Assistant Attorney

General, for appellee.

Heard by Vaitheswaran, P.J., and Schumacher and Ahlers, JJ. 2

SCHUMACHER, Judge.

Andrew Harrison appeals his conviction for second-degree sexual abuse,

raising five arguments. He claims there is insufficient evidence to support his

conviction. He argues the victim’s out-of-court statements should have been

excluded from trial because the statements were hearsay. He contends the court

improperly denied his attempt to strike a juror for cause. He asserts the court gave

an improper jury instruction pertaining to the victim’s absence from trial. Finally,

he alleges the court improperly allowed some statements from an expert witness.

We find the conviction is supported by substantial evidence. The court properly

admitted the victim’s statements and denied Harrison’s motion to strike the juror

for cause. Harrison did not preserve his objection to the challenged jury

instruction. The expert testimony was admissible. We affirm.

I. Background Facts and Proceedings

Andrew Harrison lived in the same apartment building as C.T. and her three

children—two sons, ages twelve and nine, and a daughter, H.T., who was three

years old. C.T. generally utilized daycare for the children while she worked. But

her job required her to work one evening a week and every-other weekend, times

when her daycare was not open. On those days, C.T. left the children with friends

and neighbors.

One of those neighbors, Harrison, offered to babysit. C.T. testified that

Harrison would sometimes watch H.T. alone at his apartment while the two older

children were left unattended at C.T.’s apartment. Harrison justified this location

decision as giving the older children “a break” from their sister. 3

On July 15, 2018, C.T. dropped H.T. off at Harrison’s apartment around nine

in the morning because she had to work. Her sons were with other family

members. C.T. returned to pick up H.T. around six-thirty in the evening. C.T.,

H.T., and the two other children then ran some errands, including dropping an item

off at a friend’s home.

During the drive to the friend’s home, the family chatted, a “typical catching

up on their day conversation.” Then, unprompted, H.T. stated, “I played with

Drew’s dick today.”1 C.T. testified that the older children had taught H.T. the word

“dick,” and that she was not supposed to use the word. The older children laughed

at H.T.’s statement and C.T. chastised them. C.T. sent the older children into the

friend’s home once they arrived and walked over to H.T.’s side of the vehicle. C.T.

testified that H.T. was very quiet, timid, and would not make eye contact—behavior

that was highly unusual for her.

C.T. testified that she continued to undertake the planned errands because

she did not want to make the children think something was wrong. The family

arrived at a store. While there, the older children went to the restroom. C.T. used

the opportunity to speak to H.T. C.T. testified that she asked H.T. if Harrison had

touched her anywhere else. H.T. responded by saying he had also “licked her

down there,” gesturing to her genital area.

C.T. then dropped the older children off with a family friend and took H.T. to

the hospital. An examination by a pediatrician did not find any acute injuries. The

pediatrician did not examine H.T.’s genitals, explaining that such examination was

1 C.T. testified that the children refer to Harrison as Drew. 4

best left to someone more specifically trained. The hospital referred H.T. to the

Child Protection Center at St. Luke’s Hospital. C.T. was told not to change H.T.,

bathe her, or allow her to wipe after using the restroom prior to the examination.

H.T. arrived at the Child Protection Center the next day around one in the

afternoon. While there, staff performed two swabs for DNA. One swab covered

the area around H.T.’s vagina. The second covered the area around her anus,

including the bottom part of her buttocks. A buccal swab was also taken to obtain

a known sample of H.T.’s DNA. The swabs were sent to the Division of Criminal

Investigation (DCI) lab for testing. Police obtained a buccal swab from Harrison

after the execution of a search warrant.

A DCI criminalist, Ryan Petruccelli, testified at trial about the tests

performed on the swabs and H.T.’s underwear. After shining a blacklight on H.T.’s

underwear, Petruccelli identified four areas that fluoresced. He screened the

underwear for seminal fluid via the AP presumptive test, which was negative. He

then performed the P30 test, which suggested high levels of a protein common in

seminal fluid. The protein is also common in urine. That test was faintly positive.

As a result, Petruccelli performed a sperm search, which was negative.

Petruccelli also performed DNA tests. H.T.’s DNA was found on both sets

of swabs and her underwear. DNA analysis identified Harrison’s DNA on the inside

of H.T.’s underwear.2 Harrison’s and H.T.’s DNA were found at a ratio of about

1:5, meaning Harrison’s DNA was about five times more common than H.T.’s.

2 The record is somewhat unclear on the implication of that test. Petruccelli testified that the chance of DNA randomly matching that profile was 1 in 3.19 million. However, he then clarified that there are “approximately thirty zeroes” in 3.19 million. 5

Petruccelli testified that the ratio indicated the DNA likely came from a fluid.

Harrison’s DNA was also identified in the anal swab.3 The vaginal swab contained

DNA that likely came from a male, but was inconclusive.

Petruccelli testified to several aspects of DNA that can complicate analysis.

First, he makes no determination of how the DNA gets on the items he tests. He

testified that DNA can be moved via transfer. He also testified that the amount of

DNA left somewhere is not indicative of the amount of contact that occurred.

Instead, individuals and substances shed DNA at different rates.

Trial began on March 30, 2021. H.T. did not testify, having been found not

competent to testify by the judge prior to trial. Harrison objected to the mother’s

testimony involving the statements H.T. made to her on July 15, which the court

overruled. During jury selection, one juror indicated he would have a “tough time”

with this case because the juror had young children. Harrison sought to strike the

juror for cause, but the court denied the motion. Harrison used a peremptory strike

on that juror. An expert witness, Dr. Meidlinger, testified for the State. Some of

his testimony discussed “grooming” behaviors of sexual offenders.

The jury found Harrison guilty of second-degree sexual abuse.4 Harrison

now appeals.

II. Hearsay Statements

Harrison challenges the admissibility of two statements H.T. made to her

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State of Iowa v. Andrew Joseph Harrison, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-iowa-v-andrew-joseph-harrison-iowactapp-2023.