State of Iowa v. Bret Matthew Meyer

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedFebruary 19, 2025
Docket24-0004
StatusPublished

This text of State of Iowa v. Bret Matthew Meyer (State of Iowa v. Bret Matthew Meyer) 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. Bret Matthew Meyer, (iowactapp 2025).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

No. 24-0004 Filed February 19, 2025

STATE OF IOWA, Plaintiff-Appellee,

vs.

BRET MATTHEW MEYER, Defendant-Appellant. ________________________________________________________________

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Woodbury County, James N. Daane,

Judge.

The defendant challenges both the sufficiency of the evidence supporting

his convictions and the district court’s denial of his motion for mistrial based on

alleged prosecutorial misconduct. AFFIRMED.

R. Ben Stone of Parrish Kruidenier LLP, Des Moines, for appellant.

Brenna Bird, Attorney General, and Katherine Wenman, Assistant Attorney

General, for appellee.

Considered by Greer, P.J., Langholz, J., and Carr, S.J.*

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

(2025). 2

GREER, Presiding Judge.

A jury found Bret Meyer guilty of first-degree burglary, willful injury causing

bodily injury, and going armed with intent. On appeal, Meyer challenges the district

court’s denial of his motion for mistrial based on alleged prosecutorial misconduct

during closing arguments. He also contends there is insufficient evidence to

support his convictions, arguing there was not substantial evidence he was the

person who invaded his ex-girlfriend’s home and stabbed her new boyfriend. After

our review, we find Meyer’s prosecutorial misconduct challenge fails as he could

not prove prosecutorial misconduct and there was sufficient evidence to support

the charges against him.

I. Background Facts and Proceedings.

Starting at 9:01 p.m. on July 18, 2021, Alisha Saunders received four calls

on her cell phone, with each displaying “No caller ID” during the call. Alisha

answered the first call and heard only breathing on the line. At 9:08 p.m., a second

call came through, and the same thing happened. Then, at 9:11 p.m., the third call

occurred—this time, Alisha’s boyfriend, Chase Cleveland, answered her phone.

During the third call, which Chase answered on speakerphone, Alisha heard

humming from the other end. The caller otherwise did not speak. Once the call

ended, Alisha told Chase that she recognized the humming noise as one Meyer,

her former boyfriend, would make when he was nervous. The fourth call came in

at 9:22 p.m.; again, the caller did not speak.

Chase and Alisha went to bed in Alisha’s room at approximately 11:00 p.m.

Within a few minutes, they heard two loud bangs and then glass shattering. With

the lights still off, Chase got up and looked out from the bedroom doorway. He 3

saw a masked intruder, who beelined directly from the living-room entry point to

Alisha’s bedroom. The intruder, who was armed with a wooden baseball bat,

yelled, “You motherfucker,” and used the bat to hit Chase in the jaw. Then Chase

grabbed the intruder by the torso and pinned him against the wall. While pinned,

the intruder pulled a knife from his pants pocket and stabbed Chase once in the

chest and once in the side near his armpit. At that point, it became hard for Chase

to breathe, and he released the intruder. As he went to the floor, Chase located

the bat the intruder had dropped. The two struggled over it before the intruder

pulled the bat away from Chase and fled the home.

During the scuffle between Chase and the intruder, Alisha was in the same

bedroom and on the phone with 911. Her call went through at 11:04 p.m.; she

described that someone was in the home and that they stabbed Chase. While not

providing a name to the 911 dispatcher, at one point, Alisha stated, “I know exactly

who it is.” Police officers arrived about eight minutes into Alisha’s 911 call—at

approximately 11:12 p.m. The intruder had already fled the home and surrounding

property. Almost immediately, Alisha told the officers that Meyer was the intruder;

she recognized his voice when he yelled at Chase. Alisha also described the

intruder as wearing a grey Nebraska sweatshirt, which she told officers matched

one she bought Meyer for Christmas.

As of July 18, Meyer was living with his parents in rural Nebraska about

forty-three miles from Alisha’s residence in Sergeant Bluff, Iowa. Iowa law

enforcement asked Nebraska officials to help with the investigation; two were

waiting near Meyer’s residence in Nebraska when he pulled into the driveway at

12:24 a.m. on July 19. Meyer was wearing a t-shirt and shorts—not the sweatshirt 4

and pants the intruder was described as wearing. He denied being in Sergeant

Bluff, stating he was driving around local country roads drinking beer after golfing

until approximately 9:00 p.m. Meyer allowed the officers to search his truck; they

did not find a bat, knife, blood, or clothing matching what the intruder was wearing.

Meyer also allowed the officers to look over his arms and legs; he did not have any

injuries—from scuffling with Chase, entering Alisha’s home through a broken

window, or otherwise. Meyer confirmed he had his cell phone with him all night

but denied making any calls to Alisha. He showed the officers his cell phone’s call

log, which did not list any calls as being made.

As a part of the investigation, law enforcement later obtained cell phone

records from Meyer’s service provider. Those records showed that Meyer’s cell

phone either made or received calls1 at 9:01, 9:08, 9:11, and 9:22 p.m. on July

18—the same four times as Alisha received calls. At trial, Meyer denied making

the four phone calls to Alisha, testifying, “No, I did not, because I can’t talk to her

because my phone was blocked after we broke up in June. So I can’t make phone

calls to her or receive any.” While Meyer generally challenged the reliability of the

data in the cell phone records, he admitted that a fifth call that was listed—one at

12:15 a.m. on July 19—was accurate; his father called him shortly before he

returned home.

At trial, the State introduced a visualization of tower data received from

Meyer’s cell phone service provider. Contrary to his assertion he was not in

Sergeant Bluff on July 18, Meyer’s cell phone traveled from the area of Pender,

1 The data from the service provider did not distinguish between made and received calls. 5

Nebraska to Sergeant Bluff, Iowa and then back to Pender, Nebraska. Between

10:40 and 11:19 p.m., Meyer’s phone pinged only the Sergeant Bluff cell tower.

The criminal intelligence analyst who mapped the tower data testified that, based

on the approximate distance of Meyer’s phone from the tower—as measured by

the time it took the signal from the antenna to reach the phone and back—Meyer’s

phone could have been at Alisha’s residence between 10:58 and 11:06 p.m. on

July 18.

During closing argument, the prosecutor emphasized that the only

contested issue before the jury was whether Meyer was the person who invaded

Alisha’s home and harmed Chase—nobody disputed that someone broke in and

stabbed Chase multiple times, causing a collapsed lung and other injuries. Then

the prosecutor highlighted that the records for Meyer’s phone matched Meyer’s

testimony about where he was until about 9:30 p.m. on July 18, suggesting the

records were therefore reliable to establish that Meyer was in Sergeant Bluff at the

time of the home invasion. Next, the prosecutor stated:

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