State of Iowa v. Jordan Dee Andrews Webb

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedOctober 2, 2024
Docket23-0969
StatusPublished

This text of State of Iowa v. Jordan Dee Andrews Webb (State of Iowa v. Jordan Dee Andrews Webb) 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. Jordan Dee Andrews Webb, (iowactapp 2024).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

No. 23-0969 Filed October 2, 2024

STATE OF IOWA, Plaintiff-Appellee,

vs.

JORDAN DEEANDREW WEBB, Defendant-Appellant. ________________________________________________________________

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Webster County, Angela L. Doyle

(pretrial ruling) and Christopher C. Polking (motion in limine, trial, and sentencing),

Judges.

A defendant appeals his convictions for second-degree sexual abuse,

incest, and child endangerment. AFFIRMED.

Martha J. Lucey, State Appellate Defender, and Joshua Irwin, Assistant

Appellate Defender, for appellant.

Brenna Bird, Attorney General, and Louis S. Sloven, Assistant Attorney

General, for appellee.

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

TABOR, Chief Judge.

A jury found Jordan Webb guilty of sexual abuse in the second degree,

incest, and child endangerment for committing a sex act with his four-year-old

daughter, E.W., in the spring of 2022. Webb appeals, contesting the sufficiency of

the evidence supporting his convictions. He also renews his hearsay objection to

the admission of E.W.’s statements to a nurse practitioner at a child protection

center. In another evidentiary challenge, he urges that any probative value of that

testimony was substantially outweighed by the danger of unfair prejudice. Next,

he claims that the district court abused its discretion in denying his mistrial motion

after the prosecutor made improper comments during closing arguments. Lastly,

he contends that his convictions were contrary to the weight of the evidence. After

a careful review of Webb’s claims, we find no grounds to reverse his convictions

or grant a new trial.

I. Facts and Prior Proceedings

E.W.’s mother, Abigail, noticed that her daughter had unusual vaginal

discharge on about April 1, 2022. She took E.W. to her primary care provider,

Shannon Fecher, for an examination on April 4. During the examination, Fecher

observed discharge in E.W.’s inner labia and took a culture swab for testing. Four

days later, the test results came back positive for gonorrhea. Fecher notified

Abigail of the diagnosis and reported it to the Iowa Department of Health and

Human Services.

Larry Hedlund, an investigator with the Webster County Attorney’s Office,

interviewed Webb on April 11. Webb told Hedlund that he, his wife Abigail, their

daughter E.W., and their younger son were in St. Lucia doing missionary work until 3

March 1. The family was then in California for three weeks before Abigail and the

children flew home to Iowa on March 21. Webb joined them on March 22.

Webb also told Hedlund that he tested positive for gonorrhea in his throat

and rectum. He thought he became infected when he spent the night “with some

random person” in Salt Lake City on March 21, after he separated from his family

on the way home to Iowa from California and his flight was delayed. Webb

explained that he was sick on March 26 and within the next couple days he

developed painful sores in his mouth. He was tested on April 1, and he received

positive test results for gonorrhea on April 5. Webb stated that he did not know

how E.W. became infected, denied ever having inappropriate contact with her, and

speculated that she may have been infected by shared towels.

The State charged Webb with sexual abuse in the second degree in

violation of Iowa Code sections 709.1, 709.3(1)(b), and 903B.1 (2022); incest in

violation of Iowa Code sections 726.2 and 903B.2; and child endangerment in

violation of Iowa Code section 726.6(1)(a), (4), and (8). Webb pleaded not guilty

and proceeded to jury trial.

The State decided not to call E.W. to testify. But her mother, Abigail,

testified that Webb was often around E.W. between March 22 and March 29 after

they had returned to Iowa. The family lived together, and Webb was sometimes

alone with E.W. The family took a trip to Nebraska from March 29 to March 31.

They stayed overnight with family members on March 29 and at a motel on

March 30. Abigail stated that Webb, E.W., and their son took a bath together while

wearing swimsuits on March 30 after swimming in the motel pool in Nebraska. The

family returned to Iowa on March 31. 4

Webb first told Abigail that he thought he was infected with gonorrhea “by

sharing water bottles with people he played sports with in St. Lucia.” Then on

April 10, Webb confessed to Abigail that “he had been unfaithful.” Abigail was

tested for gonorrhea the next day. Their son was also tested. Abigail and the son

both tested negative.

Julie Ritland, a nurse practitioner, conducted a medical examination of E.W.

at a child protection center (CPC) on April 11, 2022. She knew that E.W. had

tested positive for gonorrhea. At the beginning of the examination, Ritland asked

E.W. why she was at the CPC to see her. Over Webb’s objection, Ritland testified

that E.W. replied: “God knows. You can ask God. He knows everything.” E.W.

also “described her underwear being wet.” When Ritland asked E.W. “if anything

happened to that part of her body,” E.W. replied: “I don’t know, but if you pray about

it, God might tell you, but I can’t tell you.” To follow up, Ritland asked why she

could not tell; E.W. replied: “because I can’t tell.” After that, E.W. “wouldn’t engage

in any further discussion about her [genital/urinary] system.” Ritland then

performed a “head to toe” examination of E.W.—noting no other areas of concern.

Ritland testified that she wore gloves during the exam, per protocol, but she was

not worried about contracting gonorrhea because “[i]n its typical form it’s sexually

transmitted, and I did not fear that.”

Dr. Regina Torson, the medical director of another CPC, provided expert

testimony for the State about the sexual transmission of gonorrhea.1 Dr. Torson

also testified about the incubation period for gonorrhea infections:

1 Webb did not call an expert witness. 5

[T]here’s an incubation period from the time of contact to becoming infective, and also when symptoms might develop. Generally speaking, within a couple of weeks someone would develop symptoms if they’re going to develop symptoms. Infectivity can occur in as little time as a day, but it usually does take two to five days before someone can then transmit the infection to another person.

Dr. Torson noted that if Webb and E.W. became symptomatic around the same

time, it was “more likely . . . there’s some proximity in time of when they both

contracted it.”

Webb did not testify. At the end of his case-in-chief, the defense introduced

video excerpts of a deposition of E.W. taken on February 24, 2023. During closing

arguments, the prosecutor commented on E.W.’s statements to Ritland at the CPC

compared to her statements in the deposition. Webb did not object at that time.

Webb objected during the State’s rebuttal when the prosecutor argued that E.W.’s

deposition testimony “was months after [her CPC examination]. And we have no

idea who [E.W.] was around, if anyone told her what to say, told her how to act.”

The court then instructed the jury to “make your decision based on the evidence

as you remember it and instructions of law given to you by the court and not upon

any speculation.” Webb moved for mistrial based on the prosecutor’s comments,

which the court denied.

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State of Iowa v. Jordan Dee Andrews Webb, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-iowa-v-jordan-dee-andrews-webb-iowactapp-2024.