State of Iowa v. Eric Chandler Parmenter

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedDecember 18, 2019
Docket18-1997
StatusPublished

This text of State of Iowa v. Eric Chandler Parmenter (State of Iowa v. Eric Chandler Parmenter) 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. Eric Chandler Parmenter, (iowactapp 2019).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

No. 18-1997 Filed December 18, 2019

STATE OF IOWA, Plaintiff-Appellee,

vs.

ERIC CHANDLER PARMENTER, Defendant-Appellant. ________________________________________________________________

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Dallas County, Gregory A. Hulse,

Judge.

Defendant Eric Parmenter appeals from the judgment and sentence

imposed following his conviction on two counts of sexual abuse in the third

degree in violation of Iowa Code sections 709.1 and 709.4(1)(a) (2010).

AFFIRMED IN PART, REVERSED IN PART, AND REMANDED.

Matthew M. Boles and Adam C. Witosky of Parrish Kruidenier Dunn Boles

Gribble Gentry Brown & Bergmann, Des Moines, for appellant.

Thomas J. Miller, Attorney General, and Tyler J. Buller, Assistant Attorney

General, for appellee.

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

POTTERFIELD, Judge.

Defendant Eric Parmenter appeals from the judgment and sentence

imposed following his conviction on two counts of sexual abuse in the third

degree in violation of Iowa Code sections 709.1 and 709.4(1)(a) (2010).1 On

appeal, Parmenter argues (1) the State’s abandonment of the charged timeframe

for both counts deprived him of his due process rights; (2) the State committed

prosecutorial misconduct by telling the jury to ignore the dates of the alleged

incidents specified in the jury instructions; (3) Parmenter’s right to a fair trial was

violated when the district court admitted the testimony of a non-sequestered

rebuttal witness; and (4) the verdict was contrary to the weight of the evidence.

I. Factual Background

In 2010, Parmenter lived with his parents and sibling in Perry. He was

twenty-one years old at the time. The complaining witness, K.G., also lived in

Perry with her family. She was seventeen. Parmenter’s father and K.G.’s father

had become friends working together at the local Hy-Vee, and the two families

began spending time together in 2005. These interactions included getting

together to play board games, swimming in the Parmenters’ pool, and having

campfires. Parmenter and K.G. began a dating relationship that lasted from

September 2008 to August 2009. The two kept the relationship a secret because

K.G.’s parents had disapproved K.G. dating an older boy before and they

believed K.G.’s parents would not approve her dating someone four years older

1 Parmenter was also charged with two additional counts of sexual assault in the third degree in regard to two incidents alleged to have occurred in 2008. The district court granted the State’s motion to dismiss these two counts at the close of discovery. 3

than her. The relationship “was mostly physical” and ended when Parmenter’s

parents found out about it. The two remained on good terms.

The first alleged sexual assault happened sometime in the summer of

2010. At trial, K.G. testified it happened “sometime in July” because she recalled

her then-boyfriend was away on vacation at the time. Parmenter had asked K.G.

to come over to his parents’ house to talk “in private.” When K.G. arrived at

Parmenter’s parents’ house, he took her to his room in the basement. There, he

laid her on his bed and proceeded to sexually assault her. K.G. testified

Parmenter told her to “at least pretend like I was enjoying myself.”

The second alleged assault occurred later that same summer. K.G. was

working at a Hy-Vee in Perry at the time. Parmenter came into Hy-Vee to speak

with K.G. He handed her a letter and informed her that he was going to hang

himself. K.G. did not act on that information during her shift. After returning

home, K.G. received a text message from Parmenter in which Parmenter stated

he was going to kill himself. K.G. begged him not to, and ran to his house—

which was only a few miles away—to stop him. Parmenter had moved out of his

parents’ house in July 2010 and was in the process of renovating his new home.

She arrived to find him standing on a stool with a noose around his neck. When

Parmenter saw K.G., he kicked the stool out from under his feet. K.G. supported

his legs and talked him into getting back on the stool. Exhausted, K.G. sat down

in Parmenter’s living room. K.G. smelled alcohol on Parmenter’s breath when he

came and sat down next to her. Parmenter proceeded to “d[o] the same thing

that he in . . . the bedroom at his parents’ house.” He again told her to “at least

act like I liked it.” 4

K.G. did not tell anyone about either incident until 2013, when she told a

counselor about both incidents. K.G. told her brother D.G. about the incidents in

late 2016 or early 2017. D.G. decided to confront Parmenter about the

allegations in April 2017. D.G. invited Parmenter to a park in Perry and secretly

recorded Parmenter on his cellphone. A redacted version of the recording was

played for the jury. In the recording, Parmenter does not admit to any

wrongdoing but states at various points “I’m not saying what I did was right” and

when asked about what he believed K.G. told the police said “knowing your

sister, she’d probably say the truth.”

K.G. contacted the Perry Police Department in June 2017. Detectives

interviewed K.G., D.G., their father, Eric. Parmenter and his family declined to

give interviews. During D.G.’s interview with Perry police, he informed them that

he had the recording of the conversation with Parmenter but he had lost it when

he broke his phone. D.G. was able to recover the recording and turned it over to

Perry police in November 2017. Parmenter was arrested in March 2018.

II. Procedural Background

Leading up to the jury trial, Parmenter moved to exclude D.G.’s recording.

He challenged the recording’s foundation and argued it constituted hearsay and

was unfairly prejudicial. The district court denied Parmenter’s motion, instead

redacting the forty-four minute recording to the ten-and-a-half minute clip that

was ultimately played to the jury. Parmenter does not challenge that evidentiary

ruling on appeal.

At trial, Parmenter challenged a number of the details in K.G.’s account of

both sexual assaults including when they allegedly happened. The trial 5

information gave specific date ranges for both sexual assaults: it stated the

sexual assault at Parmenter’s parents’ house happened “between July 15, 2010

and July 31, 2010”; the sexual assault at his house happened “between August

15, 2010 and August 31, 2010.” Parmenter challenged these dates throughout

trial. Parmenter testified that he had moved his bed from his parents’ house to

his house in Perry in early July, and no bed was moved in to replace it,

contradicting K.G.’s allegation that he had laid her down on the bed before

sexually assaulting her at his parents’ house. His account was further

corroborated by his mother, who testified there was no bed in the basement

bedroom after Parmenter moved his bed out. In regard to the second alleged

incident, Parmenter offered evidence about an incident occurring July 29; K.G.

had informed law enforcement. Parmenter was hospitalized as a result. At the

close of the State’s case in chief, Parmenter moved for directed verdict on both

counts, arguing the State had not shown the alleged sexual assaults occurred in

the date ranges specified in the trial information. The district court denied the

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