State of Iowa v. Charles Eugene Pennington

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedJune 24, 2026
Docket25-0142
StatusPublished

This text of State of Iowa v. Charles Eugene Pennington (State of Iowa v. Charles Eugene Pennington) 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. Charles Eugene Pennington, (iowactapp 2026).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA _______________

No. 25-0142 Filed June 24, 2026 _______________

State of Iowa, Plaintiff–Appellee, v. Charles Eugene Pennington, Defendant–Appellant. _______________

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Hancock County, The Honorable Gregg R. Rosenbladt, Judge. _______________

CONVICTION AFFIRMED, SENTENCE VACATED IN PART, AND REMANDED FOR LIMITED RESENTENCING _______________

Martha J. Lucey, State Appellate Defender, and Melinda J. Nye, Assistant Appellate Defender, attorneys for appellant.

Brenna Bird, Attorney General, and David Banta, Assistant Attorney General, attorneys for appellee. _______________

Considered without oral argument by Ahlers, P.J., and Buller and Sandy, JJ. Opinion by Buller, J.

1 BULLER, Judge.

Charles Pennington appeals his convictions for sexual abuse and indecent contact with a child. He challenges a noncorroboration instruction used at trial and fines imposed at sentencing. We affirm the conviction, finding no preserved error warranting reversal on the instructional issue. Accepting the State’s concession, we vacate the fines imposed on the sex- abuse counts and remand for a limited resentencing on those fines only.

BACKGROUND FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS Pennington was in a relationship with F.F.’s mother for F.F.’s preteen and early teen years. When F.F. was thirteen, her father had physical care and she lived with her mother, her sister, and Pennington in a Garner apartment for one night each week, every other weekend, and four weeks in the summer.

That year, as described by F.F. at trial, Pennington “would start to, like, wrestle and start trying to take [her] shirt off and it slowly progressed from there.” F.F. sometimes didn’t wear a bra at that age, so when Pennington took her shirt off, her breasts were exposed. Eventually he started taking her pants off too. He groped her breasts and inner thighs, “a couple times a month or so” at the Garner apartment. And F.F. remembered that Pennington would sometimes be “aroused” while they wrestled.

The family moved to Britt before F.F. turned fourteen. F.F. and Pennington had more conflict at the Britt house, and Pennington “would start getting aggressive,” grabbing at her breasts and vagina with his hands. Before he touched F.F., Pennington would watch movies or TV shows where actors “would be naked or they would have the scene where they’re having sex or love scenes.” On multiple occasions—F.F. estimated more than once per month—Pennigton would “stick” his penis “inside” her vagina and

2 penetrate her. F.F. specifically remembered that Pennington would pull out and ejaculate into his hand instead of her body. On at least some occasions, Pennington would pin her wrists so she couldn’t physically resist.

When F.F. disclosed the “wrestling” to her mother, F.F.’s mother didn’t believe her and even told her that Pennington taking her shirt off to wrestle was “normal” and “fine.” F.F. did not think her mother would believe her about the abuse, and she was right: after they moved to Britt and the abuse increased, F.F. tried again to tell her mother, but her mother said she was lying. F.F. eventually stopped staying with her mother and Pennington.

F.F. was sure the sexual abuse all happened before she turned fifteen because she remembered visiting Pennington in prison on her fifteenth birthday; he was incarcerated for physically abusing another child. After she turned eighteen, F.F. reported the abuse to police. Her mother became marginally more supportive over time, encouraging F.F. to report the abuse in a way that didn’t make her mother or her parenting “look bad.” F.F. and her mother had essentially no relationship by the time of trial.

Garner police and the Division of Criminal Investigation (DCI) both investigated. Officers observed that F.F.’s disclosure of the abuse to them was consistent across multiple interviews. A DCI agent interviewed Pennington for about ninety minutes, and he denied sexually abusing or otherwise acting inappropriately toward F.F. Pennington admitted to police that he had photos of F.F. and her sibling’s faces digitally pasted onto swimsuit models but claimed they were a “body image” exercise for F.F. The DCI agent testified that explanation “didn’t make a lot of sense.” And when the agent pushed back on this and other claims, Pennington ended the interview.

3 F.F.’s sister testified at trial that she did not witness any sexual abuse but did corroborate the family’s living arrangements and that Pennington would wrestle F.F. (sometimes without a shirt but possibly with a bra). The sister’s statements to a forensic interviewer were similar, plus she confirmed that Pennington and F.F. were sometimes alone. The sister also testified that their mother had previously coached the sister into making false allegations against their biological father.

F.F.’s mother did not testify at trial, but police described her history of involvement with law enforcement and what was then the Department of Human Services (DHS). In a police interview, the mother corroborated portions of F.F.’s report and described additional inappropriate behavior by Pennington. First, she confirmed that Pennington and F.F. wrestled and that at times she thought it was “inappropriate.” Second, she described the photographs on Pennington’s phone, explaining that F.F. and another female sibling’s faces were “Photoshopped onto the bodies of supermodels or women in swimsuits.”

An expert witness from a child protection center organization addressed sexual abuse dynamics. She testified generally as to delayed disclosure, the memory and recall of children, and grooming. She told the jury that, as part of the grooming process, some sex offenders use progressive touch with children, starting with nonsexual touching and advancing to sexual abuse. She said they do this to gauge children’s reactions, resistance, and likelihood they will report the abuse. She also testified that it is common for children to delay disclosure or not report abuse when they fear a parent or other adult won’t believe them. And she explained that abused children frequently remain in contact with their abusers, sometimes because they have no control over which adults are in their lives.

4 After hearing this evidence, a Hancock County jury found Pennington guilty as charged, of two counts of sexual abuse of the third degree, class “C” felonies in violation of Iowa Code section 709.4(1)(b) (2017), and one count of indecent contact with a child, an aggravated misdemeanor in violation of section 709.12(1). The district court sentenced Pennington to consecutive terms in prison and imposed a fine for each count. He appeals, raising challenges to a jury instruction and the fine imposed.

STANDARD OF REVIEW We review both jury instructions and the legality of a fine for correction of errors at law. State v. Kraai, 969 N.W.2d 487, 490 (Iowa 2022) (instructions); State v. Wilbourn, 974 N.W.2d 58, 65 (Iowa 2022) (fines).

DISCUSSION Instructions informing jurors that witness testimony does not require corroboration to sustain a verdict have wound their way through our courts over the last decade. First, two panels of our court approved noncorroboration instructions in unanimous unpublished panel decisions. State v. Altmayer, No. 18-0314, 2019 WL 476488, at *5 (Iowa Ct. App. Feb. 6, 2019); State v. Barnhardt, No. 17-0496, 2018 WL 2230938, at *4 (Iowa Ct. App. May 16, 2018). Then, our court later—en banc and with some new members—disavowed that view explicitly in State v. Kraai, No. 19-1878, 2021 WL 1400366, at *6–7 (Iowa Ct. App. Apr. 14, 2021), aff’d, 969 N.W.2d 487.

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Related

State v. Morrison
368 N.W.2d 173 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1985)

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State of Iowa v. Charles Eugene Pennington, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-iowa-v-charles-eugene-pennington-iowactapp-2026.