State of Iowa v. Ivan Samuel Brammer

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedJanuary 9, 2025
Docket24-0127
StatusPublished

This text of State of Iowa v. Ivan Samuel Brammer (State of Iowa v. Ivan Samuel Brammer) 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. Ivan Samuel Brammer, (iowactapp 2025).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

No. 24-0127 Filed January 9, 2025

STATE OF IOWA, Plaintiff-Appellee,

vs.

IVAN SAMUEL BRAMMER, Defendant-Appellant. ________________________________________________________________

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Pottawattamie County,

Richard H. Davidson, Judge.

A criminal defendant appeals his convictions for murder in the second

degree, abuse of a corpse, and theft in the second degree. AFFIRMED.

Krisanne C. Weimer of Weimer Law, P.C., Council Bluffs, for appellant.

Brenna Bird, Attorney General, and Kevin Cmelik, Special Counsel, for

appellee.

Heard by Greer, P.J., and Buller and Langholz, JJ. 2

BULLER, Judge.

Ivan Brammer appeals his convictions for second-degree murder, abuse of

a corpse, and second-degree theft, related to the killing of his on-and-off girlfriend

Ilene Gowan. Brammer argues prosecutorial misconduct deprived him of a fair

trial, that the jury instructions on territorial jurisdiction misstated the law, and that

the district court abused its discretion when imposing consecutive sentences.

Limiting our review to the errors preserved for review, we affirm.

I. Background Facts and Proceedings

The day before Valentine’s Day in 2023, Ilene1 went missing. Brammer and

Ilene had been in a relationship described by Ilene’s daughter as “very unhealthy”

and “on and off.” Ilene’s manager similarly described the relationship as a “roller

coaster, [with] ups and downs.” Before Ilene’s disappearance, she and Brammer

had been fighting so much that Ilene’s daughter—who the two were living with—

asked them to move out. Brammer and Ilene moved in with Brammer’s adult

granddaughter, but then Ilene and Brammer had a fight. Brammer asked Ilene to

leave, and she stayed for a couple days with Michael Brockman, a male

acquaintance.

Ilene and Brammer both worked at Sugars, a Council Bluffs lounge and

diner. The day Ilene disappeared, Ilene’s manager saw her leave at 8:30 a.m.

following her morning cleaning shift; surveillance video shows Ilene leaving the

parking lot in Brammer’s truck. Ilene was normally a very dependable worker and,

when she didn’t show up on time for her 2:00 p.m. shift later that day, her manager

1 We refer to Ilene by first name because of the shared surnames and family

relationships of trial witnesses. 3

sent a text message to Ilene’s phone number. Ilene didn’t reply, so the manager

reached out to Brammer. “Very quickly” after messaging Brammer, the manager

received a reply from Ilene’s number: “I’m done, leave me alone.” The manager

didn’t think this sounded like Ilene at all and, when Ilene never came in for her shift,

the manager grew suspicious someone else had texted her using Ilene’s phone.

Ilene’s daughter reported her missing that night. Brammer made inconsistent

statements to his family about when he last saw Ilene, initially telling his son that

“some girl” picked Ilene up from Sugars, then that he dropped her off at

Brockman’s, and later that he dropped her off on the side of the road near

Brockman’s but not at his house.

Police first spoke with Brammer on February 15, and he told officers he

picked Ilene up at Sugars and took her straight to Brockman’s. In a second

interview two days later, Brammer said he took Ilene to her mother’s house and

then to Brockman’s. But police were not able to verify Brammer’s claim he dropped

Ilene off at Brockman’s, despite checking video from public works, traffic, and

security cameras. In a third interview a week later, Brammer said he took Ilene to

Carter Lake before taking her back to Brockman’s. Despite being confronted with

evidence during these interviews, Brammer denied any recollection of driving

across the river into Omaha or driving into rural Pottawattamie County near

Treynor. There were inconsistencies among Brammer’s statements. As police put

it, whenever they reinterviewed him, Brammer’s “story changed again.”

Surveillance video and cell-tower data aligned with bits and pieces of

Brammer’s version of events, while also placing him in Omaha and near Treynor

where Ilene’s body was later found. On February 13, video surveillance footage 4

spotted Brammer picking Ilene up at Sugars at 8:32 a.m., with Ilene at her mother’s

apartment at 8:45 a.m., at apartments near Sugars at 9:10 a.m., and then

westbound toward Omaha at 9:28 a.m. There was about an hour-long gap in the

footage between Brammer and Ilene going westbound toward Nebraska at 9:28

a.m. and then eastbound back into Council Bluffs at 10:24 a.m. Cell-tower data

established that, during this gap, Ilene’s phone and Brammer’s phone were

traveling together across the river to a park area near Carter Lake, bordering

Nebraska and Iowa, where they remained until 10:17 a.m. At about 10:30 a.m.,

surveillance footage showed Brammer in the drive-thru of a Council Bluffs Burger

King. Ilene can be seen in the passenger seat, but police described her as

“unnatural and unmoving” while Brammer was breathing heavily. Footage then

captured Brammer driving eastbound with Ilene still unnaturally positioned in the

passenger seat, before heading north, stopping at a gas station, and driving out

on the highway near Treynor at 11:46 a.m. and back at 12:34 p.m. Ilene and

Brammer’s phones were traveling together, and both were in use around Treynor

for about half an hour starting at 12:34 p.m. Brammer was seen on surveillance

footage back at his apartment by 12:59 p.m., tossing something in the apartment

dumpster. And both phones were again together at Brammer’s residence—at one

point connected to the same tower—during the evening of February 14.

The subsequent police investigation revealed that, two days after Ilene

disappeared, Brammer deposited $1200 cash into his bank account. Brammer

told a deputy sheriff the money came from “selling tools on Facebook

marketplace,” but Brammer’s son testified he was responsible for storing

Brammer’s tools and they hadn’t sold any around the time Ilene disappeared. 5

Brammer eventually admitted in a police interview that a small black safe Ilene was

seen carrying in surveillance footage on February 13 contained several hundred

dollars cash.

On February 19, Brammer’s granddaughter called police for a welfare check

on him. In her words:

he kept telling me how he was going to kill himself, and so he gave me a hug and kiss goodbye and then he walked out the door. And I started freaking out and then he sent messages to the whole family saying I love you, and stuff like that, and so we called because we thought he would commit suicide.

Brammer’s granddaughter also observed that he was abusing alcohol and

“angrier” since Ilene disappeared. At some point around this time—after Ilene went

missing—Brammer’s granddaughter also saw him with Ilene’s phone, which she

had never observed before.

A few days after the welfare check, police attempted to approach Brammer

to follow up on Ilene’s investigation. Brammer eluded officers in a high-speed

chase through a residential neighborhood, traveling in excess of fifty miles per

hour. He was arrested a few days later, but his granddaughter posted his bond.

The day after he bonded out, Brammer asked his granddaughter to follow

him to a salvage yard because he “wanted to crush his truck.” He said it was

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State of Iowa v. Ivan Samuel Brammer, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-iowa-v-ivan-samuel-brammer-iowactapp-2025.