State of Iowa v. Jermaine Gregory Miller

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedJuly 26, 2023
Docket22-0832
StatusPublished

This text of State of Iowa v. Jermaine Gregory Miller (State of Iowa v. Jermaine Gregory Miller) 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. Jermaine Gregory Miller, (iowactapp 2023).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

No. 22-0832 Filed July 26, 2023

STATE OF IOWA, Plaintiff-Appellee,

vs.

JERMAINE GREGORY MILLER, Defendant-Appellant. ________________________________________________________________

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Scott County, Jeffrey D. Bert, Judge.

Jermaine Miller appeals his criminal convictions. AFFIRMED.

Jamie Hunter of Dickey, Campbell & Sahag Law Firm, PLC, Des Moines,

for appellant.

Brenna Bird, Attorney General, and Olivia D. Brooks and Thomas J. Ogden,

Assistant Attorneys General, for appellee.

Heard by Ahlers, P.J., Badding, J., and Mullins, S.J.*

*Senior judge assigned by order pursuant to Iowa Code section 602.9206

(2023). 2

MULLINS, Senior Judge.

Jermaine Miller appeals his convictions—following a bench trial—for first-

degree robbery, conspiracy to commit a forcible felony, first-degree theft, going

armed with intent, assault while participating in a felony, and assault while

displaying a dangerous weapon. He challenges the sufficiency of the evidence

supporting each conviction, argues the court erred in overruling his objection to the

admission of his seized clothing as evidence, and claims the court abused its

discretion in denying his motion for a new trial “on the ground that he did not

receive a fair trial.”

I. Background Facts and Proceedings

On December 5, 2019, Adam Dugan was working alone at a Davenport

Verizon cell phone store. At around 7:14 p.m., he “was robbed at gunpoint.” He

explained that as he was counting out the drawer, two men wearing masks came

into the store. He didn’t think much of the masks since it was cold out, but then he

“saw the gun.” The men told him to put his hands up and “cattled [him] into the

back room, in which then they opened a safe door and then told [him] to lie down

on the ground.” As the masked duo loaded up a trash bag with merchandise, “they

would double back and either put the gun to [Dugan’s] back or the back of [his]

head.” On one occasion, one of the individuals placed the gun to the back of

Dugan’s head and advised the other: “This motherfucker looks like he wants to

move.” Dugan testified he feared for his life and thought he might be shot. After

a short time, the duo exited the back door with their loot. 3

A series of videos that were captured by the store’s interior surveillance

system and admitted as evidence at trial show the following.1 The first video shows

the interior entry of the store, through which the perpetrators entered at roughly

7:14 p.m. One—who we will refer to as Mr. Green—was wearing a dark green

hooded jacket or windbreaker with the hood up, black pants, black shoes, and what

appears to be a black ski mask. The other—Mr. Blue—donned black pants; black

shoes; an unzipped black, full-zip hooded sweatshirt with the hood pulled up over

a blue hooded underlayer garment, and some sort of face covering.

The second and third videos were captured by cameras behind the counter

and over the showroom. These vantage points capture Dugan’s work space as

well as the front door area shown in the first video. The videos show that as Mr.

Green approached the counter from the entry way, he pulled a firearm from his left

pant pocket, pointed it at Dugan, and gestured him to come out from behind the

counter. Mr. Green then led the way to the back room. Mr. Blue, with one hand

on Dugan’s back and the other in his pocket, led Dugan into the back room in a

pushing fashion.

The final two videos show the back room. Consistent with the other videos,

Mr. Green, Mr. Blue, and Dugan entered the back room not long after 7:14 p.m.

Mr. Green immediately points the firearm at Dugan’s head and gestured him to the

ground. Meanwhile, Mr. Blue opened the safe, locked the door to the room,

grabbed a large black garbage bag or two, and began unloading the contents of

the safe into the bags. As Mr. Blue unloaded the safe, Mr. Green largely kept his

1 None of the videos have audio. 4

firearm pressed to Dugan’s back. Mr. Green and Mr. Blue exited the back door of

the store about a minute after they entered the back room.

Not long after they left, one of the two customers who the videos show

entered the store while the safe was being unloaded knocked on the door to the

back room, which prompted Dugan to get up off the floor and respond. After

apparently explaining the situation to the customers, Dugan called the police. The

value of the items taken from the safe totaled $22,516.70. Dispatch reported the

armed robbery and identified the suspects as two black males in ski masks.

Various officers were already nearby on a report of a shooting and responded to

the area in short order.

After responding to the area, Officers Ryan Leabo and Murphy Simms of

the Davenport Police Department were advised by dispatch that a 911 call was

received from 1725 Locust Street “that a black male was walking through yards

and that they thought it was suspicious.” Officer Leabo testified they then observed

a black male wearing a blue hooded sweatshirt, black pants, and black shoes

walking eastbound in the 1800 block of Locust Street. They pulled up next to him

and exited their squad car, upon which the subject “fled on foot.” Officer Leabo

testified the subject “ran south across Locust Street, and then, continued south in

an alley to the west of Davie Street, and then, back east through a couple houses.”

The following image depicts where Officer Leabo recalled originally seeing the

subject on the corner of Locust Street and Wilkes Avenue marked with an X, the

path he took in fleeing shown by a dotted line, and where he was apprehended

shown by a circled X on Davie Street. It also shows the location of the Verizon 5

store in the southwest corner of Locust and Division Streets, marked with a blue

icon.

The fleeing subject was identified as Miller. Officer Leabo was later directed by

detectives investigating the Verizon incident to collect Miller’s clothing when he

was booked into jail on a separate charge of interference with official acts. He did

so and placed those items in evidence. Those items included a blue Nike hooded

sweatshirt, a black tee shirt he wore underneath, a black pair of jeans, a black pair

of pajama pants he had on under the jeans, and a black pair of boots.

Officers Nate Kelling and Kevin Remley were the first to respond to the

Verizon store. Officer Kelling testified that while they were speaking with Dugan,

“[a] call came in a block away to the west, there was a male walking back and forth

in the alley.” Officer Kelling looked in that direction to see if he could see anything,

and he observed a male subject walking on the sidewalk on the north side of Locust

Street. Another squad car approached that male, apparently being Officers Leabo 6

and Simms, upon which the subject fled southeast on foot. Officer Kelling gave

chase to cut him off and was ultimately the first officer to reach the subject, Miller,

after he surrendered. Miller reported to Officer Kelling that he was just in the area

to buy marijuana. The following image depicts where Officer Kelling testified he

thought he first observed Miller,2 what direction he fled to, and where he was

apprehended on Davie Street.

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