State of Iowa v. Frederick Lee Hawkins III

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedDecember 4, 2024
Docket23-1468
StatusPublished

This text of State of Iowa v. Frederick Lee Hawkins III (State of Iowa v. Frederick Lee Hawkins III) 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. Frederick Lee Hawkins III, (iowactapp 2024).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

No. 23-1468 Filed December 4, 2024

STATE OF IOWA, Plaintiff-Appellee,

vs.

FREDERICK LEE HAWKINS III, Defendant-Appellant. ________________________________________________________________

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Story County, Steven P. Van Marel,

Judge.

The defendant appeals his convictions and sentences for three counts of

assault with intent to commit sexual abuse. CONVICTIONS AFFIRMED;

SENTENCES REVERSED IN PART AND REMANDED WITH DIRECTIONS.

Martha J. Lucey, State Appellate Defender, and Vidhya K. Reddy, Assistant

Appellate Defender, for appellant.

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

General, for appellee.

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

GREER, Presiding Judge.

After investigating reports of unwanted behavior involving three different

women, Frederick Lee Hawkins III was charged of three counts of assault with

intent to commit sexual abuse for his conduct on May 13, 2022. After a bench trial,

the district court found him guilty and sentenced him to three consecutive two-year

terms, one term for each count. He now appeals, claiming (1) there was

insufficient evidence he intended to commit a sex act to find him guilty of two of

the charges against him, (2) given his mental-health issues, he was incapable of

forming the specific intent to commit any of the three charged counts, (3) the

arresting officers violated Hawkins’s Miranda rights so his statements during his

interrogation should have been suppressed, and (4) the court failed to articulate

adequate reasons for imposing consecutive sentences. We affirm the convictions,

reverse the sentences in part, and remand for the limited purpose of addressing

the consecutive sentence component of the court’s sentencing decision.

I. Background Facts and Proceedings.

Food at First, an organization dedicated to feeding the hungry in Ames,

operates out of a church that is located directly across the street from the Ames

Police Department. On May 13, 2022, Officer Dilok Phanchantraurai was

dispatched to the church after receiving reports that a man inappropriately touched

three women. Upon arrival, the director of the organization described what

occurred and directed the officer to an upstairs alcove, where Hawkins was

standing, sandwiched between an open door and a wall. The officer and an

unidentified volunteer requested that Hawkins move from behind the door and sit

on a nearby pew or bench. There, Officer Phanchantraurai asked Hawkins several 3

questions, confronted him with the general allegations against him, and called for

backup. A second officer arrived on scene. After their conversation, Officer

Phanchantraurai proceeded to go downstairs, gathering general information and

obtaining statements from two of the three women involved. The third woman had

already left for work but gave a statement later that night.

Those statements and the investigation were described at trial as follows.

Hawkins first approached M.B. M.B. entered a stairwell to leave, holding a cup of

coffee and two bags, after finishing her meal. She immediately felt another

individual behind her, later identified as Hawkins. After asking Hawkins to go in

front of her, which he declined, she started to climb the stairs. At the top step,

Hawkins falsely told M.B. she had “chocolate or something” on her pants. He then,

without consent, started rubbing her buttocks. After taking one more step to the

landing, Hawkins grabbed M.B. around her waist, in a tight bearhug. She said

something along the lines of, “Don’t. Don’t. Stop. Stop,” with an escalating sense

of urgency, ultimately yelling in the stairwell. Hawkins continued to hold her

against himself, repeating “please,” and started “humping” her. M.B. could feel his

erection against her buttocks. Hawkins, while thrusting against her, stuck his

hands down her pants, inside her underwear, to her “hair line.” At this time, a

witness, Rofin, walked into the stairwell and ascended to the stairway landing; yet

Hawkins continued to hump M.B. It was only after another women, C.C.,

responding to “a commotion,” came into the stairwell that Hawkins stopped the

“humping.”

But as C.C. passed Hawkins on the stairs, Hawkins “slapped” her on the

buttocks with either an open hand or his forehand. C.C. testified that Hawkins 4

remained quiet before, during, and after the slap; he simply “stood there.” After

the nonconsensual touching or “slap,” C.C. told him to “stop it.” C.C. walked away

with M.B., helping her leave to get to work. After C.C. left Hawkins’s presence,

she reported the incident to the director of the food program.

Shortly after, the director confronted Hawkins as he was attempting to enter

the elevator occupied by a third woman, E.M. The director stopped the elevator

door from closing and entered, all while admonishing Hawkins for his earlier

behavior. As she was admonishing Hawkins, Hawkins brushed from E.M.’s upper

thigh to the small of her back with his fingertips, touching her buttocks from the

bottom to the top. When the director realized what was happening, she told him

to stop. Hawkins responded in a quiet voice, described as “sad or scared,” and

repeating the words “Help me. Help me. Help me.” At the time, the director

observed Hawkins with his hand on his crotch.

After Officer Phanchantraurai questioned the women and witnesses, he

placed Hawkins under arrest. At no point in the questioning, before the arrest, or

while Hawkins was walking to the police station was Hawkins advised of his

Miranda rights. See Miranda v. Arizona, 384 U.S 436, 444 (1966).

Before trial, on August 25, 2022, Hawkins moved to suppress information

gained from the officer’s questioning, arguing the officer violated the principles

articulated in Miranda. The officer’s body camera video showing the exchange

between the officers and Hawkins was also made a part of the record. At the

conclusion of the suppression hearing, the court found the officers did not violate

Miranda because Hawkins had not yet been taken into custody when he made

statements to the police. 5

In September, Hawkins moved for a competency hearing, as his counsel

alleged that Hawkins was acting in an irrational manner, unable to fully appreciate

the nature of the charges against him and the proceedings and could not fully

participate in his defense. After a hearing, the court ordered a psychiatric

competency evaluation, pursuant to Iowa Code section 812.3 (2022). After the

evaluation was completed, on December 9, Hawkins was found not competent to

stand trial but capable of restoration. After completing the court-ordered treatment,

in April 2024, the court found Hawkins was competent and proceedings should

resume.

At trial, Hawkins called two expert witnesses, Dr. Tracy Thomas, a forensic

psychologist, and Dr. Gary Keller, a psychiatrist at the Iowa Medical and

Classification Center where Hawkins had been treated for three weeks. Neither

could provide a definitive final diagnosis, but as a differential diagnosis,1 Dr. Keller

opined Hawkins had a psychotic disorder, not otherwise specified. Dr. Keller

acknowledged that one of the doctors involved in the competency restoration did

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