State of Iowa v. Evan Blake Wooten

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedOctober 30, 2024
Docket23-1785
StatusPublished

This text of State of Iowa v. Evan Blake Wooten (State of Iowa v. Evan Blake Wooten) 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. Evan Blake Wooten, (iowactapp 2024).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

No. 23-1785 Filed October 30, 2024

STATE OF IOWA, Plaintiff-Appellee,

vs.

EVAN BLAKE WOOTEN, Defendant-Appellant. ________________________________________________________________

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Scott County, Tamra Roberts, Judge.

A defendant appeals his conviction for domestic abuse assault, claiming

insufficient evidence supports his conviction. AFFIRMED.

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

Appellate Defender, for appellant.

Brenna Bird, Attorney General, and Zachary Miller, Assistant Attorney

General, for appellee.

Considered by Tabor, C.J., and Chicchelly and Sandy, JJ. 2

SANDY, Judge.

Evan Wooten was seen throwing “[c]losed fist, haymakers” at his girlfriend’s

head during a violent altercation in an apartment complex parking lot. Many of

those haymakers landed, and his girlfriend was transported via ambulance to a

local hospital to treat her injuries. Wooten was charged with and convicted of

domestic abuse assault causing bodily injury in violation of Iowa Code

section 708.2A(2)(b) (2023). Wooten admitted two prior domestic abuse

convictions and two prior felony convictions, leading the district court to sentence

him as a third-time domestic abuser and habitual offender pursuant to Iowa Code

sections 708.2A(4) and 902.9. Wooten was given an indeterminate fifteen-year

prison sentence, with a mandatory three-year minimum.

On appeal, he contends the evidence was insufficient to establish he and

the victim were “family or household members,” which was defined for the jury as

“persons cohabiting with each other.” Therefore, he argues the evidence was

insufficient to convict him of domestic abuse assault causing bodily injury. After

our review of the record, we affirm Wooten’s conviction.

I. Background Facts and Proceedings

Wooten and E.M.1 began a relationship with each other in December 2022.

At the time, both lived in Milan, Illinois. Wooten lived at a residence with Taylor

Camp—the mother of his children. E.M. lived with her mother. According to E.M.,

her relationship with Wooten quickly blossomed, and the two began “seeing each

other almost every weekend.” By January 2023, E.M. and Wooten were spending

1 Out of respect for the victim’s privacy, we refer to her throughout this opinion by

her initials. 3

nights together at an apartment in Davenport rented by Wooten’s cousin. E.M.

estimated she and Wooten spent two nights a week together at his cousin’s

apartment. In February, Wooten and E.M. took a three-day vacation together in

Florida.

Sometime around March E.M. and Wooten moved into an apartment

together in Davenport. When the couple moved in, they had very little furniture.

As E.M. explained, “[w]e were both sleeping on blankets and pillows on the floor,

plus working together, and it felt like something we both wanted.” When he moved

in, Wooten brought a few bags, clothes, and shoes. While they were living together

in the apartment, E.M. described her relationship with Wooten as a “sexual

relationship.”

But friction in the couple’s relationship developed shortly after they moved

in together. E.M., after going through Wooten’s phone, discovered he was being

unfaithful. This led to increasing tension between the two. Adding to that tension

was the fact Wooten was expecting a child with Camp. In early April, Wooten

spent two nights with Camp in Illinois. Wooten told E.M. “he had to go take care

of the mother of his children because she was pregnant.” Although E.M. was

aware Wooten was living with Camp when she began seeing him, she testified

Wooten told her he was not in a relationship with Camp. She was under the

impression Wooten only lived with Camp to be with his kids.

On April 7, the friction in Wooten and E.M.’s relationship reached a boiling

point. That night at their apartment, E.M. searched Wooten’s phone and

discovered he was cheating on her with another woman. In fact, text messages

on Wooten’s phone revealed he had been with another woman that same day. 4

This upset E.M., and she attempted to leave the apartment. However, Wooten

talked her out of it. The next morning, Wooten realized E.M. had searched his

phone. In retaliation, Wooten locked E.M. out of her phone. According to E.M.,

Wooten “proceeded to lock me out of my phone to where I couldn’t even get into

it. I couldn’t call anybody. I couldn’t even get past the passcode.” After Wooten

locked E.M.’s phone, he left the apartment to attend a baby shower for Camp.

E.M. was left alone at the apartment with no phone or means of transportation.

That afternoon E.M. walked several miles to get her phone fixed at a T-

Mobile store in Davenport. As she was getting her phone fixed, she used one of

the store’s phones to call Wooten to pick her up. But Wooten told her “[he] couldn’t

talk to her right now because [he] was at my baby shower.” Wooten eventually left

the baby shower to pick up E.M. When Wooten first arrived at the T-Mobile store,

he grew impatient while waiting for E.M. He drove off from the store once but came

back when E.M. called him again. Wooten and E.M. then drove back to their

apartment.

When they arrived at their apartment, E.M. testified that:

We get home; I park the car. And it was just frustrating. I was annoyed, irritated. He was irritated, so. And then we both go to the apartment. He goes to the bathroom. I’d gone to the bedroom to change my clothes because I wanted to change my clothes. He comes out of the bathroom, goes to the kitchen, grabs a frozen pizza from the refrigerator, comes into the bedroom, and throws it at me. And then stumbles out of the hallway and tries to leave.

But as Wooten headed for the door, E.M. sprinted in front of him to prevent him

from leaving. A struggle ensued in the doorway, in which Wooten tried to remove

E.M. by repeatedly “pushing and pulling” her. In E.M.’s words, “[w]hen that didn’t

work, he picked me up and dropped me face-first in our living room.” After he 5

dropped E.M. on the floor, Wooten walked down the stairs leading from the

couple’s second-story apartment and headed for his car. E.M., in tears at this

point, chased after Wooten and followed him to the parking lot. As she was

chasing him, E.M. was “begging” Wooten not to leave her.

When E.M. caught up with Wooten in the parking lot, Wooten was sitting in

the driver’s seat in his car with the door open. E.M. placed herself between the

car and the open driver’s side door to prevent Wooten from leaving. E.M. begged

and pleaded for Wooten to stay. “But he didn’t want to do that. He told me to get

away from his car and kept saying that he hated me.” With the driver’s side door

open and E.M. in its way, Wooten attempted to drive off. As Wooten tried to drive

off, the driver’s side door “made a breaking noise.” Wooten then stopped the car,

and E.M. opened the passenger side door and hopped into the front seat.

As E.M. was sitting in the front seat with Wooten, she testified “he kept

telling me to get out of the car, that he hated me, and I was every name in the book

to him.” When E.M. refused to get out of the car, Wooten slapped her several

times. He then punched her several times in the left side of her face. At this point,

E.M. testified:

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State of Iowa v. Evan Blake Wooten, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-iowa-v-evan-blake-wooten-iowactapp-2024.