State of Iowa v. Edward Deandre Ash

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedJanuary 25, 2023
Docket22-0012
StatusPublished

This text of State of Iowa v. Edward Deandre Ash (State of Iowa v. Edward Deandre Ash) 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. Edward Deandre Ash, (iowactapp 2023).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

No. 22-0012 Filed January 25, 2023

STATE OF IOWA, Plaintiff-Appellee,

vs.

EDWARD DEANDRE ASH, Defendant-Appellant. ________________________________________________________________

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Linn County, Casey D. Jones

(Discovery Ruling) and Russell G. Keast (Trial), District Associate Judges.

A defendant appeals his conviction of domestic abuse assault causing

bodily injury. AFFIRMED.

Webb L. Wassmer of Wassmer Law Office, PLC, Marion, for appellant.

Brenna Bird, Attorney General, and Thomas J. Ogden, Assistant Attorney

General, for appellee.

Considered by Bower, C.J., and Greer and Badding, JJ. 2

BADDING, Judge.

Edward Ash was convicted of domestic abuse assault causing bodily injury

after he head-butted his former girlfriend in the mouth. On appeal from that

conviction, Ash claims the district court abused its discretion in denying his pretrial

request for a subpoena to obtain the victim’s mental-health records, the evidence

is insufficient to support his conviction, and the verdict is contrary to the weight of

the evidence. We affirm.

I. Background Facts and Proceedings1

Ash and M.H. had been in a decade-long relationship when M.H. decided it

would be best if they went their separate ways. In November or December 2020,

M.H. told Ash her feelings—that she was not “invested in the relationship” anymore

and wanted to move forward on her own. But they decided to keep living together

until the lease on their apartment expired in May 2021. M.H. started sleeping alone

in one of the bedrooms, and Ash slept in the living room.

On March 12, 2021, M.H. was just waking up around 9:00 a.m. because

she did not have to go into work that day. While she was still in bed, looking at her

cell phone and watching television, Ash came in and said: “I just want to know why

you’re being like this, why are you acting like this.” He started cursing at her and

asking why she was “acting like the B word.” M.H. got up and told him, “I’m not

doing this this morning.” She tried to go to a different room, but Ash was standing

in her way with his finger in her face, pushing her head back. She started to get

upset and words were exchanged when, according to M.H., “out of nowhere he

1 We note that Ash’s appellate brief does not include a statement of facts as required by Iowa Rule of Appellate Procedure 6.903(2)(f). 3

reared back and head-butted me in my face.” M.H. fell back and “immediately felt

pain in [her] mouth area.”

Once she got up, M.H. reached for her cell phone off the bed. But Ash

grabbed it instead and would not let her have it. M.H. gathered some of her things

and then went to get her car keys to leave, but they were gone. She found Ash

walking from the kitchen to the living room and saw her phone in his hand. She

reached for it and asked for her keys, but Ash refused and kept “snatching [the

phone] out of her reach as [she] was trying to get it.” When M.H. made a last grab

at her phone, Ash pushed her to the ground, and they started “tussling,” with M.H.

explaining: “He was holding me down as I was trying to reach up to grab my

phone.” M.H. got free after screaming for help. She left the home and sought

assistance from neighbors, who called the police.

Officer Josh Marroquin of the Cedar Rapids Police Department was the first

officer on the scene. When he arrived, he saw Ash standing in the street a couple

of houses down from where they were called. Ash approached the officer, who

asked him what had happened. Ash explained he got into an argument with M.H.,

“she ended up getting into his face, yelling at him and he ended up head-butting

her in the face.” Ash also said M.H. took a swing at him, “possibly hit or clipped

his head,” and took his debit card and other property. But Officer Marroquin did

not see any injuries on Ash, and M.H. did not have any of Ash’s property.

Officer Garry Idle arrived shortly after Officer Marroquin. When Officer Idle

spoke with M.H., “[s]he was upset in regards to what had happened that morning.”

M.H. reported she had been head-butted and thought she had a loose tooth. After

having M.H. lift her upper lip, Officer Idle observed “some swelling, bruising and 4

redness.” Pictures showed she had an abrasion on the inside of her lip. When

Idle spoke with Ash, he confirmed “things had gotten physical between the two this

morning,” though by then, he was denying having head-butted M.H. According to

both officers, Ash had M.H.’s cell phone and car keys on him when they arrived.

Ash testified on his own behalf. He explained that, on the morning he was

arrested, he had wanted to go get something for breakfast but couldn’t because

his phone was gone. He asked M.H. for her phone so that he could try to find his

by calling it from M.H.’s phone. Ash gave up looking after a few minutes and then

went to get his debit card, identification, and keys. But those were missing too.

M.H. got up to help Ash look for his missing items. While they were looking, Ash

still had M.H.’s phone and saw a notification come through on it. So he began

reading through her text messages. When M.H. noticed Ash scrolling through her

phone, he said that “she got upset and she . . . runs toward me like, hey, you’re

looking through my phone.” Ash continued:

So when she come towards me, I’m at the bottom step [to the living room]. She’s at the top step. She stumbled. I duck . . . and when I did, I came up with my head. . . . That’s when she tried to grab her phone. And when she’s falling, the bottom of her mouth hit my head.

He agreed they then “tussle[d]” over the phone. But Ash denied ever pushing M.H.

in the head with his finger, intentionally head-butting her, or pushing her to the

ground. He also denied having M.H.’s car keys or cell phone when she left the

house.

Ash was charged by trial information with domestic abuse assault causing

bodily injury. Before trial, Ash applied for a subpoena for M.H.’s mental-health

records so that the court could conduct an in camera review. In support of his 5

application, Ash stated he believed that M.H.’s “mental health contributed to her

behavior and statements made on or about March 12, 2021.” The State resisted,

arguing that Ash had not met the threshold requirements of Iowa Code section

622.10(4) (2021) for an in camera review of privileged records in a criminal case.

A hearing set for August 19 was continued to the next week “to allow the

defendant time to attempt to try to find some specific records.” At the hearing, the

defense simply submitted that M.H. had been diagnosed with depression after

visiting a hospital, for which she was prescribed citalopram hydrobromide; she did

follow-up visits with a nurse practitioner; and she was later prescribed alprazolam.

Based on that, the defense argued:

[W]e do believe at this point in time that we have shown that we know that there is mental health issues at play; that we know where this is at and we do believe at this point in time that based on looking at the—at the documents that the court could find exculpatory evidence that we would not be able to get without the court doing an in camera review.

In response, the State explained the referenced hospital visit was in 2009, and the

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