State of Iowa v. Deanna Marie Hood

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedJune 10, 2015
Docket13-1998
StatusPublished

This text of State of Iowa v. Deanna Marie Hood (State of Iowa v. Deanna Marie Hood) 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. Deanna Marie Hood, (iowactapp 2015).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

No. 13-1998 Filed June 10, 2015

STATE OF IOWA, Plaintiff-Appellee,

vs.

DEANNA MARIE HOOD, Defendant-Appellant. ________________________________________________________________

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Polk County, Arthur E. Gamble,

Judge.

Deanna Hood appeals from her convictions and sentences for murder in

the first degree and robbery in the first degree. AFFIRMED.

Susan R. Stockdale, Windsor Heights, for appellant.

Thomas J. Miller, Attorney General, Alexandra Link, Assistant Attorney

General, John P. Sarcone, County Attorney, and Daniel Voogt and Stephanie

Cox, Assistant County Attorneys, for appellee.

Heard by Vogel, P.J., and Potterfield and Mullins, JJ. 2

VOGEL, P.J.

Deanna Hood appeals from her convictions for murder in the first degree

and robbery in the first degree.1 She asserts several claims on appeal:

(1) substantial evidence does not support either conviction; (2) the district court

erred when it denied her motion for new trial; (3) the court improperly admitted

evidence of drugs found in both her residence and the vehicle used at the crime

scene; and (4) the court erred as a matter of law when it found her race-neutral

explanation for striking an African-American juror not credible and granted her

co-defendant’s reverse-Batson challenge.

We conclude substantial evidence supports the guilty verdicts.

Furthermore, the district court employed the correct legal standard when

considering Hood’s motion for new trial, and properly found the weight of the

evidence supported the guilty verdicts. The court also properly admitted into

evidence the drugs found in the vehicle and Hood’s residence pursuant to Iowa

Rule of Evidence 5.404(b). With respect to the reverse-Batson challenge, given

credibility determinations are within the province of the district court, it properly

granted the motion. Consequently, we affirm Hood’s convictions.

I. Factual and Procedural Background

From the evidence admitted at trial, the jury could have found the following

facts. The victim—Steven Harmon—and Hood previously had a romantic

relationship and remained acquainted after the relationship ended. Hood and her

1 Her codefendant, Spencer Pierce, appeals separately. See State v. Pierce, No. 13- 2004, 2015 WL _______ (Iowa Ct. App. __ __, 2015). 3

co-defendant, Spencer Pierce, were in an intimate relationship at the time of the

murder and shared an apartment.

On several occasions in the beginning of June 2013, Michelle Sanders

and her boyfriend, Tracy Stone, went to Harmon’s apartment in Des Moines to

buy methamphetamine. On these occasions, Sanders would give Harmon the

money, and Harmon would leave the apartment for ten to fifteen minutes before

returning with the drugs. On June 5, 2013, Sanders arranged with Harmon to

purchase one ounce of methamphetamine for $1700. Sanders and Stone went

to Harmon’s apartment around 6:00 p.m. After Sanders gave Harmon the cash,

Harmon stated he was waiting for a phone call. Both Sanders and Stone

remained in Harmon’s apartment for several hours, smoking methamphetamine.

Hood and Pierce were also at Harmon’s apartment on June 5. Hood and

Harmon had a private conversation in the bathroom. Sanders overheard them

saying “she” and “she has,” leading her to believe they were talking about the

money she brought to buy drugs. It was her understanding that Hood supplied

the methamphetamine and Harmon was attempting to facilitate the purchase.

Hood and Pierce then left but returned a few minutes later. The two left a second

time, after which Harmon’s cat disappeared.2 Harmon called Hood, who

admitted she took the cat. Stone testified he saw Hood and Pierce leave in a

gold Dodge Durango.

After waiting several hours without being able to purchase any

methamphetamine, Sanders and Stone left Harmon’s apartment around 11:00

p.m. A short time later, Harmon called and told them to come back because he

2 The cat was later found in Hood’s residence upon the execution of the search warrant. 4

was able to acquire the drugs. Harmon told Sanders the methamphetamine was

not coming from Hood, and Stone understood it was Pierce who would supply

the drugs they were going to purchase. Sanders gave Harmon $1700 to buy the

methamphetamine. By that time, Kimberly Frye—who had been staying in

Harmon’s apartment for several days and was Harmon’s paramour—had arrived.

Harmon left the apartment with Sanders’s $1700, and Frye accompanied him.

Sanders and Stone stayed in the apartment waiting for Harmon to return with the

methamphetamine.

Frye rode with Harmon as he drove to an industrial area where many

semi-trailers were parked. Harmon was in the process of moving out of his

apartment, and he stored property in a trailer parked at a business called Bindery

1. Harmon’s trailer also had a small living area with a couch and a refrigerator.

When they arrived around 11:30 p.m., Harmon sorted through belongings in the

front of the trailer while Frye smoked a cigarette on the couch in the rear.

Harmon walked back to the couch as he was speaking on the phone and

seemed upset. Frye could hear a female voice on the other end of the line.

Harmon said: “I’m not going to the f***ing hood,” and told the caller he was at the

trailer before hanging up.

Harmon also sent a number of text messages from his phone, after which

he walked outside to his pickup truck. Soon after Harmon left the trailer, Frye

heard a vehicle pull up that she assumed was there to complete the drug deal.

She heard what she believed was a middle-aged, African-American male’s voice 5

3 say: “Give me your stash.” Harmon responded: “Go ahead. Take it. Calm

down.” Next, Frye heard two gunshots followed by car doors slamming and the

vehicle driving away. She stated the transaction lasted no longer than two or

three minutes.

Fearing for her own safety, Frye hid in the trailer for approximately twenty

minutes. She then left the trailer, found Harmon’s body lying on the ground, and

yelled his name. Because she did not have a cell phone, she walked across the

lot to a motor home inhabited by Robert Rokitnicki to call 911. They used

Rokitnicki's phone to place the call, but Rokitnicki provided the wrong address.

Rokitnicki then agreed to drive Frye to a gas station/convenience store, where

she called 911.

Meanwhile, Sanders and Stone were still at Harmon’s apartment waiting

for him to return with the drugs. However, they grew impatient when Harmon

stopped responding to either Sanders’s text messages or phone call. They

decided to leave when they heard Harmon’s name and other identifying

information broadcast over the police scanner.

Officer Phillip Terrones responded to the 911 call and found Frye at the

gas station. Frye led the police to Bindery 1, where they found Harmon’s body

lying face down between two trailers. Patrol officers secured the scene and

summoned detectives and crime scene investigators. They recovered a spent

3 Pierce is African-American, Hood is Caucasian. 6

twelve-gauge shotgun shell and a shot cup near Harmon’s body. 4 They also

found a cooling tube that had fallen off a shotgun. Investigators further identified

a damaged spot on the trailer near Harmon's body that indicated two shots had

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