State of Iowa v. Kyle Anthony Sadler

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedJuly 22, 2020
Docket18-2041
StatusPublished

This text of State of Iowa v. Kyle Anthony Sadler (State of Iowa v. Kyle Anthony Sadler) 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. Kyle Anthony Sadler, (iowactapp 2020).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

No. 18-2041 Filed July 22, 2020

STATE OF IOWA, Plaintiff-Appellee,

vs.

KYLE ANTHONY SADLER, Defendant-Appellant. ________________________________________________________________

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Poweshiek County, Lucy J. Gamon,

Judge.

Kyle Sadler appeals convictions for murder in the second degree, assault

with a dangerous weapon, and leaving the scene of an accident. AFFIRMED IN

PART, REVERSED IN PART, AND REMANDED.

Peter Stiefel, Victor, for appellant.

Thomas J. Miller, Attorney General, and Genevieve Reinkoester, Assistant

Attorney General, for appellee.

Heard by Tabor, P.J., and May and Greer, JJ. 2

TABOR, Presiding Judge.

A jury found Kyle Sadler guilty of murder in the second degree and three

counts of assault with a dangerous weapon. The jury also found Sadler guilty of

operating while intoxicated (OWI) and four counts of leaving the scene of an

accident. The verdicts followed the State’s evidence showing Sadler, driving a

flatbed truck, chased a Mustang at high speeds down a gravel road. Sadler’s truck

struck the back of that car, ejecting the driver. The driver died and three

passengers sustained serious injuries.

On appeal, Sadler contends the State offered insufficient evidence to show

he intentionally struck the Mustang or that he acted with malice aforethought,

elements of the murder charge. He also argues the State failed to prove he had

the specific intent necessary for the assault counts. Beyond contesting the

sufficiency of the evidence, Sadler claims his trial counsel was ineffective in

handling two jury instructions. Finally, Sadler contends the district court erred in

failing to merge the four counts of leaving the scene of an accident. We grant relief

on the final issue only.

I. Facts and Prior Proceedings

An ongoing feud between two factions of young people, in their early twenties,

led to a fatal car crash in June 2017. The hostility centered on Shaden Wyatt and

his unrequited feelings for Hannah Sisco. Wyatt threatened Sisco’s associates Ty

Johnson and Jarrett Mitchell.1 Sadler allied himself with Wyatt, his housemate and

1Jarrett testified he also goes by the last name Bristow. But we will call him Mitchell in this decision. 3

long-time friend. Fatefully, the parties who instigated the feuding were only

tangentially touched by its wake.

Roughly a week before the deadly collision, Wyatt argued with Sisco and

threatened to kill Johnson. A few days after that threat, Wyatt chased Sisco in his

yellow S-10 pickup truck at high speeds. Sisco recalled Sadler riding in the back

of Wyatt’s pickup holding a baseball bat.2 In the same time frame, Sisco received

a “snap chat” from Wyatt’s phone saying, “the graveyard’s close.” Sisco viewed

the message as a death threat.

Then one evening in early June, Sisco, Mitchell, and Johnson—along with

their friends Riley Ely, Robert Dimit, Acacia Torbensen, and Amanda Bristow—

gathered at Dylan Sheet’s house. Witnesses testified Mitchell called Wyatt to say,

“Stop harassing Ty and Hannah.” Unrepentant, Wyatt told Mitchell “he was going

to slit his throat.” The two decided they would meet that night to settle the matter.

So the group of eight people at Sheet’s house loaded into three cars and

drove to Wyatt’s residence near Malcom, Iowa to confront him. Wyatt lived with

his friend Sadler in a house about six miles down a gravel road. Ely drove his

Mustang; his passengers were Sheets, Dimit, and Torbensen.

Most of the group expected a face-off at Wyatt’s house. But according to

their testimony, only a few envisioned the violent brawl that ensued. As Ely’s car

arrived, Wyatt appeared from behind a bush, crashing a baseball bat into the

windshield. In response, Ely left his car and began fighting Wyatt. Soon Mitchell,

2Sadler insists he was not in the vehicle with Wyatt and that he heard about this chase from his twin brother. 4

Dimit, and Sadler joined in. Most of the testimony puts Ely, Mitchell, Dimit, Sadler,

and Wyatt in the fray—the involvement of Sheets and Johnson is less clear.3

According to Sadler’s testimony, he tried to get Mitchell and Ely off Wyatt.

But when Mitchell warned—“you want some of this too”—Sadler backed off.

Sadler testified he decided on a different tact to break up the fight: “I was going to

push the brush pile with the S-10 pickup, but instead it went over it a little bit and

got stuck.” The State’s witnesses perceived Sadler’s intent as more menacing:

“He tried to aim towards Shaden and Jarrett and Riley with the truck.” They

insisted if Sadler had not become stuck, the yellow S-10 truck would have hit them.

After the brush pile stopped the truck’s momentum, someone yelled they

would call police. The State’s witnesses couldn’t recall who said it. But Sadler

and Wyatt testified it was Sadler who threatened to “call the cops.” At the mention

of police, the visitors left in their cars. The time was about 10:30 p.m. Ely’s

Mustang was the last car to leave with passengers Sheets, Dimit, and Torbensen.

A few minutes after Ely departed, Sadler climbed into a red Chevy Silverado

flatbed pickup truck and chased them.4 Sadler did so even after Wyatt and Loftin

advised him not to go.

Ely had been driving for a couple of miles before his passengers noticed

headlights approaching quickly from behind. Soon after, Sadler’s truck crested the

hill. The truck veered toward the ditch. The truck then corrected and rammed the

Mustang’s rear end, sending it into the ditch. Passenger Sheets testified: “We

3Sadler and Wyatt asserted Sadler had limited involvement. 4Garrett Loftin, a neighbor, had driven that truck to Wyatt’s residence on the night of the fight and left the keys in the ignition. 5

rear-ended so hard that it blew the back window out of the car, and the trunk lid

flew off. We went into the ditch on the east side of the road.” Flames slowly

engulfed the Mustang. The impact ejected Ely, who died at the scene. The other

three passengers were seriously injured.

Sadler’s truck also went into the ditch. After the crash, several witnesses

saw him run from the scene.5 Sadler testified he left because he did not have his

cell phone with him. He reportedly knocked on a neighbor’s door to ask for help

but received no answer. Sadler testified when he got back home, he still couldn’t

find his cell phone and the house had no landline. Sadler said he didn’t go back

to the scene because he feared someone would attack him.

A few hours after the collision, Deputy Steve Kivi found Sadler sleeping at

his home. At first, Sadler said he chased the Mustang because “he was mad” that

“these guys were beating the shit out of his buddy Shaden.” Sadler told Deputy

Kivi that Ely applied his brakes, causing Sadler to rear-end the Mustang. When

asked about leaving the scene, Sadler told the deputy that he was scared and did

not know what to do.

Sadler’s explanation varied a bit as time went on. Later that summer,

Deputy Kivi talked with Sadler again. This time, Sadler said he pursued the cars

because “he was trying to get a license plate number” so he could call the sheriff.

The deputy interviewed Sadler a third time in September. Sadler explained he

chased Ely’s car because he didn’t know what to do after the fight, he had never

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