State of Iowa v. Brian Embree

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedDecember 23, 2015
Docket14-0709
StatusPublished

This text of State of Iowa v. Brian Embree (State of Iowa v. Brian Embree) 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. Brian Embree, (iowactapp 2015).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

No. 14-0709 Filed December 23, 2015

STATE OF IOWA, Plaintiff-Appellee,

vs.

BRIAN EMBREE, Defendant-Appellant. ________________________________________________________________

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Johnson County, Deborah Farmer

Minot, District Associate Judge.

Brian Embree appeals his conviction for indecent exposure. AFFIRMED.

Philip B. Mears of Mears Law Office, Iowa City, for appellant.

Thomas J. Miller, Attorney General, and Kelli A. Huser, Assistant Attorney

General, for appellee.

Heard by Potterfield, P.J., and Doyle and Tabor, JJ. 2

POTTERFIELD, Presiding Judge.

Brian Embree appeals his conviction for indecent exposure. His argument

is twofold. First, he argues the district court improperly excluded evidence crucial

to his defense, thus not only violating the rules of evidence but also depriving him

of his constitutional rights. Second, he argues his trial counsel was ineffective in

several respects. We find that Embree has not preserved error on the court’s

denial of the evidence in question. We preserve his claim that his counsel’s

representation was constitutionally deficient for possible postconviction

proceedings. We therefore affirm his conviction.

I. Background Facts and Proceedings

On June 11, 2013, Embree was living with his wife and his 15-year-old

stepdaughter, J.S. His wife was eight months pregnant at the time but was still

working. She left for work early that morning. J.S. was on summer break and

was still at home asleep after her mother left, so Embree woke her and told her

to let the family’s dogs out. J.S. got up, let the dogs out, and fed them. Then she

returned to her room. She was aware that Embree wanted her to get started on

additional chores, which were to include mowing the lawn, washing the dishes,

and dusting the living room. Embree came to his stepdaughter’s room a short

while later looking for her and found her watching television. It is at this point in

time that his and her accounts of the morning diverge dramatically.

According to J.S.’s testimony at trial, she was sitting on a chair and

watching television when Embree entered her room without knocking. She

thought he had come to yell at her because she was inside watching music

videos instead of doing the chores he had assigned to her. J.S. was surprised 3

when Embree instead asked her if she would like to have sex with him. He had

never done anything like that before. In fact, the two got along, and she enjoyed

living with him. Taken aback, J.S. simply responded “no.” Embree assured J.S.

that she would enjoy it and tried to coax her into performing oral sex on him, but

she again said “no.” J.S. then retreated to her bed, where she backed into the

corner and covered herself up to her neck with a blanket.

According to J.S., Embree continued to solicit her for sex, pulling his pants

down in order to expose his erect penis. At this point, J.S. turned away entirely

and covered her head with the blanket. From underneath the blanket, J.S. heard

him begin to masturbate. A short while later, Embree asked J.S. for permission

to use some of her lotion, but she kept covered and did not respond. She heard

him grab her lotion—cocoa butter—from atop her dresser, take off the cap, and

put some into his hand. He then resumed masturbating. While still hiding under

the blanket, J.S. heard “stuff dropping” onto the pink rug on her bedroom floor.

She believed that the sound she heard was Embree ejaculating. At that point,

she peeked out from underneath the blanket and saw Embree rubbing the pink

rug with a towel he had taken out of her laundry basket. After he finished,

Embree turned and left without doing or saying anything further.

Embree has always denied J.S.’s account. According to his testimony at

trial, he went to J.S.’s room immediately before leaving home for the day and

stopped momentarily to yell at her for not having begun her chores. He claims

nothing more happened: he did not ask J.S. to have sex with him; he did not ask

her to perform oral sex on him; he did not take off his clothing in her bedroom; he

did not expose his penis to her; she never hid from him underneath the covers of 4

her bed; he never ejaculated in front of her; and he never got down to clean the

rug in her room.

To simultaneously bolster his own account and discredit J.S.’s, Embree

wished to delve into evidence of electronic communications between J.S. and

A.R., a boy from school. Embree testified at trial that on the night of June 12,

2013, he caught J.S. with an electronic device—an iPod—that she had been

forbidden to use. Catching J.S. with the iPod was not particularly noteworthy, as

she had been punished for similar misbehavior in the past. However, Embree

hoped to focus at trial on the content discovered on the iPod. His primary point

of contention on appeal arises from the fact that he was not allowed to do so.

According to Embree, he discovered on the iPod a series of electronic messages

that detailed a sexually explicit conversation between J.S. and A.R. that had

taken place between June 4, 2013, and June 11, 2013. Collectively, the

messages planned a series of future sexual encounters between J.S. and A.R.

The encounters were to take place at Embree’s home at a time of day when both

he and his wife would be at work. Embree’s theory of defense was that the

content of those iPod messages was so embarrassing and damaging to J.S. that

she was willing to do anything—namely, falsely accuse him of trying to have sex

with her and, when she refused to do so, masturbating in front of her—in order to

deflect her mother’s anger and avoid the full repercussions of her planned sexual

activities.

On the morning of trial, the district court granted the State’s motion in

limine prohibiting Embree from referring to any sexual content on the iPod. The

court offered Embree an opportunity to proffer witnesses to make his record on 5

his requested evidence. Later the court ruled Embree could not tell the jury that

he believed J.S. falsely accused him because he found a series of compromising

sexual messages on the iPod; he could only say that he believed J.S. did so

because he found she had used the iPod.

Embree testified at trial that he took the iPod to his wife, who became

angry at J.S. It was at that time J.S. told her mother that Embree propositioned

her for sex. Embree’s wife became very upset and confronted him after J.S.

made the allegation. She asked Embree if what J.S. told her was true and then

slapped him across the face. She made a phone call, and the home was soon

visited by officers. The jury heard testimony that Embree told those officers he

believed J.S. made her accusation against him because he caught her with an

iPod. He even took the iPod with him to the Johnson County Sheriff’s Office

when he went in for an interview so the detective assigned to the case could

examine it.

The causal link between the iPod and J.S.’s allegation against Embree

was disputed at trial. J.S. agreed that Embree came into her room the day after

the incident and found the iPod lying on her bedroom floor, that he took it to show

to her mother, and that her mother became angry and began yelling at her. But

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