State of Iowa v. Denise Susanna O'Brien

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedOctober 11, 2023
Docket22-0114
StatusPublished

This text of State of Iowa v. Denise Susanna O'Brien (State of Iowa v. Denise Susanna O'Brien) 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. Denise Susanna O'Brien, (iowactapp 2023).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

No. 22-0114 Filed October 11, 2023

STATE OF IOWA, Plaintiff-Appellee,

vs.

DENISE SUSANNA O’BRIEN, Defendant-Appellant. ________________________________________________________________

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Black Hawk County,

Joel Dalrymple, Judge.

A defendant appeals two convictions for murder in the first degree, claiming

the evidence is insufficient. AFFIRMED.

Christopher A. Clausen of Clausen Law Office, Ames, for appellant.

Brenna Bird, Attorney General, and Richard J. Bennett, Special Counsel,

for appellee.

Heard by Greer, P.J., and Schumacher and Badding, JJ. 2

BADDING, Judge.

At 5:21 a.m. on April 22, 2018, Denise O’Brien texted her cheating

boyfriend, Willie Traymone Phillips: “Karma comin 4 u. Hope u redy n i hope it

hurt. . . . MONSTER.” By 6:30 a.m., the house where Phillips was sleeping with

his new girlfriend, Teryn, was engulfed in flames. Phillips and Teryn escaped, but

a mother and child who lived in the home did not.

A jury found O’Brien guilty of two counts of first-degree murder for their

deaths. O’Brien appeals, claiming the evidence is insufficient to support the

convictions because it was “circumstantial in nature.” We affirm.

I. Background Facts and Proceedings

A. Prologue

The murder charges against O’Brien stemmed from a house fire at 536

Dawson Street in Waterloo on April 22, 2018. The home was occupied by Teryn,

her best friend Ashley, and Ashley’s two children—nine-year-old J.S. and twelve-

year-old A.S. Ashley and J.S. perished in the fire, though they weren’t its intended

targets.

O’Brien had been in a relationship with Phillips since 2014. About six weeks

before the fire, Phillips started sleeping with Teryn. He was at her home daily,

including the morning of the fire and the night before. Although Phillips and O’Brien

lived together, Phillips described their relationship as “[u]p and down” and testified

he saw other women. While Teryn was the only other woman he was seeing at

the time of the fire, O’Brien knew that a third woman was pregnant with Phillips’s

child. And just nine days before the fire, on April 13, O’Brien knew that Phillips

was at Teryn’s place. 3

Teryn testified that on the morning of April 13, she was in bed with Phillips

when she heard loud banging at her front door. As Teryn cracked the door open,

O’Brien said, “This is Denise,” and swung something metal at her. Teryn pushed

the door shut and yelled for Phillips to call the police. O’Brien then busted out the

front four windows to the home. According to Phillips, this all happened because

Teryn—in an effort to “stir up the pot”—told O’Brien that Phillips was with her.

B. The Night Before the Fire

Despite that drama, Phillips kept seeing Teryn and living with O’Brien. On

April 21, the day before the fire, Phillips was hanging out with O’Brien at their

shared apartment, along with his friend Chuck Newman. Phillips and Newman

were drinking and using marijuana and cocaine. Texting O’Brien that he would

“[b]e back in 20,” Phillips and Newman went to Teryn’s just after 10:00 p.m., where

they continued drinking and using drugs with Teryn. Ashley and her kids were in

bed sleeping.

Once it became clear that Phillips was not coming “back in 20,” O’Brien

walked to Teryn’s house. According to Phillips, O’Brien texted him at

around 12:30 a.m. on April 22, telling him that she was outside. There was

conflicting evidence about what happened next, but what is clear is that there was

a contentious altercation. Without saying anything to Teryn, Phillips went outside

to talk to O’Brien and calm her down. But then Teryn came outside, and O’Brien

tried to take a swing at her. Phillips stepped in between the two women, pushing

O’Brien and telling her to “get the fuck away from here.” O’Brien kept trying to get

at Teryn, hitting Phillips in the process. So Phillips testified that he “popped her

ass back.” Neighbors who were woken up by the argument said that Phillips did 4

more than just “pop” O’Brien. One recalled seeing “a woman on the ground and a

man punching her and kicking her and they were yelling and screaming,” while

another woman was standing on the side of the street nearby. Another neighbor

testified that Phillips was “beating the crap out of” O’Brien. That neighbor said

when the fight was over, O’Brien told Phillips, “I hope this bitch can take care of

you better than I did.” The other neighbor remembered O’Brien saying, “You will

never find somebody like me.”

After the altercation, Newman drove O’Brien back to the apartment she

shared with Phillips. O’Brien was not happy about going home, according to

Phillips, because he wouldn’t go with her. She repeatedly called Phillips’s phone,

but he blocked her number because he didn’t want to talk to her. Newman

described O’Brien as “still very upset, screaming. She was punching my

dashboard, just very upset” during the ride home. According to Newman, after

O’Brien threatened to kill herself several times, she “said that she should go up

there and kill everyone at the house.”

Newman went back to Teryn’s after dropping O’Brien off. After doing some

more drugs, Phillips, Teryn, and Newman went to a party at around 2:00 a.m.

Newman left after about thirty minutes, but Phillips and Teryn stayed until 4:30 or

5:00 a.m. Teryn didn’t remember leaving the party because she drank too much.

Newman testified that he picked Phillips and Teryn up from the party and drove

them back to Teryn’s place on Dawson Street. He remembered that Teryn had

her shoes in her hand. Data extracted from O’Brien’s cell phone shows that at

5:19 a.m., which would have been around the time Newman dropped Teryn and

Phillips off, O’Brien texted Phillips: “Why that nasty bitch got her ass fucked up 5

outside walkin around barefeet. Lol u nasty.” Phillips testified that once he and

Teryn got home, they went to bed in Teryn’s room, which was on the second floor

in the northwest corner of the house. With no response from Phillips, O’Brien

texted him again at 5:21 a.m.: “Karma comin 4 u. Hope u redy n i hope it hurt oms

u aint the traymone I fell in luv wit.” And then seconds later, “MONSTER.”

C. The Fire

As Phillips was “dozing off,” he noticed “[i]t started getting smokey.” All of

a sudden, the bedroom door blew open and black smoke came billowing into the

room. Phillips said that he kicked the door shut and climbed out the bedroom

window onto the roof of the back porch. All Teryn remembered was waking up to

the fire and Phillips yelling at her to get out the window. A.S., the twelve-year-old

child in the room next to them upstairs, testified that she woke up to the sounds of

smoke alarms, her mother’s voice, and her brother screaming. Teryn, Phillips, and

A.S. all made it out of their second-story windows in the back of the house and to

the ground without serious injury.

A neighbor was driving home at about 6:30 a.m. when he saw the fire on

Dawson Street, roughly two blocks away from where he lived. He called 911 and

reported the fire, noting “it’s burning bad.” Video and photographic evidence taken

by another witness who lived nearby shows the front of the house was engulfed in

flames.

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State of Iowa v. Denise Susanna O'Brien, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-iowa-v-denise-susanna-obrien-iowactapp-2023.