State of Iowa v. Joseph Nathan Cruz

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedMarch 5, 2025
Docket24-0168
StatusPublished

This text of State of Iowa v. Joseph Nathan Cruz (State of Iowa v. Joseph Nathan Cruz) 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.

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State of Iowa v. Joseph Nathan Cruz, (iowactapp 2025).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

No. 24-0168 Filed March 5, 2025

STATE OF IOWA, Plaintiff-Appellee,

vs.

JOSEPH NATHAN CRUZ, Defendant-Appellant. ________________________________________________________________

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Woodbury County,

Zachary Hindman, Judge.

A criminal defendant appeals his conviction for murder in the second

degree. AFFIRMED.

Pamela Wingert of Wingert Law Office, Spirit Lake, for appellant.

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

General, for appellee.

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

BULLER, Judge.

Joseph Cruz appeals his conviction for second-degree murder following the

shooting of Carlos Aguirre. The jury acquitted Cruz of murder for the related

shooting of his cousin Anthony Williams. Cruz challenges the sufficiency of the

evidence, denial of a motion to suppress, an evidentiary issue regarding a rebuttal

witness, and denial of his request for a non-model instruction. We affirm.

I. Background Facts and Proceedings

A group of young adults were hanging out, listening to music, and drinking

at the Sioux City home of sisters Quianna and Qhileigh Louis and their cousin

Sarah Zavala.1 The group included Cruz, Carlos, Anthony, Quianna, Qhileigh,

Sarah, Jasmine Olsen, Natalia Guerra, Genesis Vasquez, Hector Benson, Angel

Williams, Lavontae Henderson, and others.

There were at least five guns at the house that night, which witnesses

testified was not particularly unusual for this group. At one point, five of the young

men—Cruz, Carlos, Anthony, Angel, and Lavontae—posed for a photo, with each

of the five holding a gun. They referred to Carlos’s gun as a “Shadow,” referring

to the manufacturer: Shadow Systems. Hector recalled thinking that everyone

handled the guns “with proper care” except for Cruz, who “was flaunting his shit in

front of people’s faces.”

For most of the evening, everyone got along. But at some point, the mood

in the house soured and a fight broke out. The witness accounts on the particulars

of the fight and eventual shooting differ to some degree. But there are common

1 On subsequent reference, we use first names to identify most of the lay witnesses

and the victims because of shared last names and family relationships. 3

threads. Most or all of the witnesses agreed on the following material facts and

chronology:

• Cruz and Carlos had a loud verbal disagreement in the kitchen with yelling and swearing. • The disagreement related to guns, though not all witnesses knew the specifics. • Cruz was “angry” or “upset.” • The verbal disagreement turned into a physical fight, with Cruz and Carlos punching and shoving each other. • At some point, Carlos had the Shadow Systems pistol in his hand and may have cocked2 it, but he was pointing it at the ground—not at a person. • Carlos, Cruz, and one or more of the other party attendees tussled or brawled over the gun. • The gun ended up in Cruz’s hand, and Cruz fired multiple shots. • The shots—which witnesses numbered between three and six— were largely “one after another” or “one right after the other.” • Carlos and Anthony fell to the ground, fatally wounded or already dead. • At the time Cruz fired the fatal shots, Carlos did not have a gun or any other weapon in hand.

The party attendees generally scattered after the shooting, but a few made

observations of Cruz. Qhileigh—who had gone to bed earlier and was awakened

by the gunshots—ran out to see Cruz standing in the living room “a good [thirty]

seconds and then he walked out the door.” She asked him what happened, and

Cruz shrugged his shoulders and left. Genesis saw Cruz with the gun after the

shooting and thought to herself, “Jesus Christ, you just fucking shot it off. What

2 Police testimony cast some doubt on whether anyone “cocked” the Shadow

Systems pistol, as it did not have a hammer. A detective speculated that perhaps these witnesses meant Carlos was “sliding a round by racking . . . the ejection port back,” which would have caused a live round to be ejected if a magazine was inserted. 4

makes me think you’re not going to fucking do it to somebody else?” She thought

Cruz was acting “[l]ike a ghost. Like he doesn’t understand. He’s just walking

around.” Hector ran away with similar thoughts to Genesis, fearing Cruz would kill

him “because, shit, if it were me, I would have left no witnesses.” Sarah, who left

the house before the shooting, ran into Hector on her way home and observed him

to be “very frantic, crying heavily.” Hector told her Cruz “was mad” and that Carlos

and Anthony “were shot.”

After the shooting, Cruz gave (his then-girlfriend) Jasmine the Shadow

Systems pistol, and he asked her to put it in a bag underneath a seat in his car.

Once they made it back to Cruz’s mother’s house, Cruz “started screaming that he

had gotten shot,” and his mother took him to the hospital.

When police arrived at the crime scene, they found Carlos dead and

Anthony laying on the floor with “agonal breathing,” “gasping for air.” Anthony was

pronounced dead at the hospital. Officers described the party attendees still

on-site as “hysterical,” very upset, and crying. Investigators recovered multiple

shell casings and fragments—from a couch, the floor near where Carlos and

Anthony fell to the ground, and a kitchen table. The casings were submitted to the

Iowa Division of Criminal Investigation (DCI) for testing, and forensics established

the found casings were all fired by the Shadow Systems pistol.

Police promptly secured Cruz’s mother’s house. While executing a search

warrant on the property, officers found Cruz’s Kia Soul with fresh tire tracks

outside. Officers looked into the back window and saw a bag under the

front-passenger seat containing a gun—visible from outside the vehicle. Inside the

car, they found a total of four guns plus ammunition. One of the guns was the 5

Shadow Systems pistol used to kill Anthony and Carlos. In the house, they found

an unspent round of ammunition that matched the caliber and brand of casings

found at the crime scene, as well as bloody clothing.

Officers caught up with Cruz at the hospital, where he was seeking

treatment for a gunshot wound to his upper thigh. Cruz “kept asking for his

backpack,” “at least three times to three different people or staff members.” No

one at the hospital knew what he was talking about. And while there, he never

mentioned self-defense or shooting Carlos and Anthony.

Detectives interviewed Cruz at the stationhouse after he was released from

the hospital. Initially, Cruz denied any involvement in the shooting. Then he

admitted there was a fight or a brawl over Carlos’s gun and claimed it must have

gone off while he and others were trying to disarm Carlos. Cruz said he “got more

mad” while trying to grab the gun from Carlos but maintained he didn’t shoot

anyone. And he told officers he had six or seven small beers and was “kinda

buzzed up” but not “drunk” or “fucked up.” While Cruz was giving detectives this

version of events, they asked why he didn’t “stick around” or call 911 after his friend

and cousin were shot. Cruz responded: “I didn’t think nothing of it, honestly. Like,

in other words, I didn’t think it was that serious.”

Detectives eventually confronted Cruz regarding the implausibility of his

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