State of Iowa v. Drew Alan Mangler

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedNovember 4, 2020
Docket19-0469
StatusPublished

This text of State of Iowa v. Drew Alan Mangler (State of Iowa v. Drew Alan Mangler) 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. Drew Alan Mangler, (iowactapp 2020).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

No. 19-0469 Filed November 4, 2020

STATE OF IOWA, Plaintiff-Appellee,

vs.

DREW ALAN MANGLER, Defendant-Appellant. ________________________________________________________________

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Jackson County, Joel W. Barrows,

Judge.

Drew Mangler appeals following his conviction for murder in the second

degree. AFFIRMED.

Martha J. Lucey, State Appellate Defender, and Shellie L. Knipfer, Assistant

Appellate Defender, for appellant.

Thomas J. Miller, Attorney General, and Louis S. Sloven, Assistant Attorney

General, for appellee.

Heard by Mullins, P.J., and May and Schumacher, JJ. 2

MAY, Judge.

Someone killed James Remakel by stabbing him thirty-two times. The State

charged Drew Mangler. A jury convicted Mangler of murder in the second degree.

Mangler challenges his conviction on four grounds, arguing: (1) there is insufficient

evidence that he is Remakel’s killer, (2) a jury instruction was misleading and

confusing, (3) some evidence was improperly excluded, and (4) he is entitled to a

new trial because of a Brady violation.1 We affirm.

I. Facts and Prior Proceedings

James Remakel lived in Bellevue, Iowa. He had “a very serious back

condition.” For the most part, he was homebound, relying on others for help

around the house. And he received home deliveries for much of his material

needs.

On December 18, 2016, Richard Steines spoke with Remakel on the phone.

They made plans for Steines to bring Remakel a meal on Christmas Day. When

Steines arrived on December 25, he found Remakel deceased. The back door

was broken and hanging open.

A. December 25 Investigation

Bellevue Police Department Officers Josh Kilburg and Ryan Kloft

investigated Remakel’s house on Christmas Day. When they pushed open the

back door, part of the doorframe fell to the floor. They “immediately noticed the

overwhelming smell of death and decay” and believed Remakel had died from “a

medical issue.” Remakel’s body was in his bedroom. After confirming Remakel

1 See Brady v. Maryland, 373 U.S. 83 (1963). 3

was deceased though, the officers did not inspect Remakel’s body further due to

the distressing smell. When the county medical examiner saw Remakel’s body,

he advised that it was “a crime scene.” Police then contacted the Division of

Criminal Investigation (DCI) and “taped the entire lot off.” However, personnel had

already walked through the kitchen.

Investigators found “damage to the actual striker plates” on Remakel’s door

and “a possible footwear impression” on two different doors, suggesting the doors

had been kicked in. There was blood in the bedroom, the kitchen, and the

bathroom. All DNA samples from the house matched Remakel’s profile.

In Remakel’s bedroom, there were locked dresser drawers that had been

forced open. Inside, investigators found three bank bags with coins inside and

various prescription-drug bottles (some empty, some with pills inside).

No usable fingerprints were found in Remakel’s home. But investigators

did record twenty-six footwear impressions from the flooring and two doors.

Remakel’s autopsy revealed that he “sustained thirty-two sharp-force

injuries.” The medical examiner testified that “simply he bled out.” Remakel’s body

showed signs of decomposition, meaning he “had been dead a few days prior to

December 25.” The medical examiner could not “give an exact day.” But phone

records, utility records, and witness observations suggested Remakel died on

December 19 or December 20.2

2Remakel’s phone records showed that he “neither made nor answered any call after 7:26 p.m.” on December 19. Records show his water usage dropped to zero after December 19. A department-store employee spoke with Remakel on the phone on December 18 to arrange a return through FedEx. A FedEx driver received “no 4

Investigators interviewed witnesses with known connections to Remakel.

On December 27, a DCI special agent interviewed Mangler. Mangler told the

agent he used to do odd jobs for Remakel for $10 per hour in cash but quit in

March 2016. Mangler claimed he had not spoken to Remakel for months. Mangler

said he went to Bellevue on December 23 or December 24 but “those two times

were the only recent times he had been there.”

As it turns out though, Mangler was also in Bellevue on December 19 and

December 20.

B. The Night of December 19

On the night of December 19, Mangler met his friend, Brady Hutchcroft, at

the Bellevue bar where Hutchcroft worked. They took Hutchcroft’s car to Ryleigh

Perkins’s residence in Bellevue. They arrived sometime after 8:00 p.m. The three

response at all” from Remakel’s home on December 22 despite two loud attempts that day. John Hoff, one of Remakel’s acquaintances, testified that he drove by Remakel’s house on December 21 or December 22. He saw “a package on [Remakel’s] front door, front step.” Hoff knew Remakel “never used the front door,” so he picked up the package and left it inside the back porch. He did not look into the kitchen or go past the back porch. But he did find it abnormal that Remakel did not greet him in the kitchen, as that was his normal spot in the house. Remakel had an order of “thick-cut ribeyes” from Bender’s Foods that he was supposed to pick up on December 21. The meat-counter manager testified that Remakel was a regular customer who “pretty much always picked [his orders] up on the day that he said he was going to.” Peter Connolly, a volunteer in the community, was scheduled to pick up Remakel and drive him to Bender’s Foods on December 21. Remakel did not answer the door or his phone when Connolly called him. And no one picked up Remakel’s order. However, on December 20, LouAnn Scheckel attempted to deliver Remakel’s prescriptions to his house. As usual, she knocked and then walked into the house calling his name. She walked through the hallway to the bathroom. But did not find Remakel, so she left with the prescriptions. Scheckel testified that she did not see anything out of the ordinary in Remakel’s home. But there was no evidence that she went into Remakel’s bedroom, where he was found on December 25. And she admitted that she did not make detailed observations. 5

drank beer, smoked marijuana, and played video games for about two hours. Then

they went to Hutchcroft’s house—also in Bellevue—to drink more beer and hang

out.

At some point in the evening, Mangler left Hutchcroft’s house by himself on

foot. Perkins testified that he thought Mangler left around “10:00 p.m.” Perkins

told investigators he thought Mangler was going to get cocaine. And Hutchcroft

told investigators he thought Mangler was getting marijuana. But Mangler did not

return with either drug.

Laverne Jackson lives on the same block as Hutchcroft. Around 11:00 p.m.

that night, Bellevue Police Officer Brent Roling received a call from Jackson. She

said Mangler “came to her residence, came into the house, and . . . he was

unwanted at the residence at that time.” Jackson’s sister was present when

Mangler arrived. She testified that Mangler “just barged right in the door.” Jackson

yelled at Mangler that she did not want him there and pushed him out of the door.

Mangler left shortly after the encounter. So Officer Roling patrolled the area

around Jackson’s residence.

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