State of Iowa v. Michael Lee Syperda

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedDecember 18, 2019
Docket18-1471
StatusPublished

This text of State of Iowa v. Michael Lee Syperda (State of Iowa v. Michael Lee Syperda) 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. Michael Lee Syperda, (iowactapp 2019).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

No. 18-1471 Filed December 18, 2019

STATE OF IOWA, Plaintiff-Appellee,

vs.

MICHAEL LEE SYPERDA, Defendant-Appellant. ________________________________________________________________

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Henry County, Mark Kruse, Judge.

A defendant appeals his conviction for first-degree murder. JUDGMENT

AFFIRMED IN PART, REVERSED IN PART, AND REMANDED.

Mark C. Smith, State Appellate Defender, (until withdrawal), and Maria

Ruhtenberg, Assistant Appellate Defender, for appellant.

Thomas J. Miller, Attorney General, and Kyle Hanson, Assistant Attorney

General, for appellee.

Heard by Doyle, P.J., and Tabor and Schumacher, JJ. 2

TABOR, Judge.

This is a murder case without a body. Michael Syperda does not contest

that Iowa follows the no-body-required rule in prosecuting homicides. But he

argues the State did not prove beyond a reasonable doubt his estranged wife

Elizabeth was dead or that he killed her.1 Because the totality of evidence supports

the district court’s finding that Michael acted with malice aforethought to cause

Elizabeth’s death, we affirm his murder conviction. But because the State did not

prove beyond a reasonable doubt that Michael acted with the specific intent to kill,

we reverse the first-degree murder conviction and remand for entry of judgment

and sentence on second-degree murder.

Through appellate counsel, Michael also challenges the district court’s

suppression ruling and its admission of prior-bad-acts evidence. We decline to

reverse the district court on those grounds. Finally, contrary to the State’s position,

we do not believe new legislation bars us from considering Michael’s pro se

supplemental brief. That brief raises several claims of ineffective assistance of

trial counsel—one of which we reject for lack of prejudice and the remaining claims

we preserve for possible postconviction-relief (PCR) proceedings.

I. Facts and Prior Proceedings

Elizabeth Syperda went missing on July 16, 2000. She was living in

Mt. Pleasant and had recently separated from her husband, Michael. They met

when Elizabeth was thirteen years old and lived in the same Truckee, California,

neighborhood as Michael’s family. Michael hired Elizabeth to babysit his two

1 Because the defendant and victim share a surname, for clarity’s sake, we will refer to them by their first names in this opinion. 3

children. After a few years, Michael and his family moved to Winfield, Iowa.

Michael decided to bring along then seventeen-year-old Elizabeth. Elizabeth’s

mother, Donna Forshee, was against the move and tried to dissuade her daughter

from going, even calling child-protection services. But to no avail. Donna

maintained a long-distance relationship with her daughter after the move.

In Iowa, Elizabeth graduated from high school in May 1997. Donna

attended the ceremony and gave her daughter an emerald and diamond ring as a

graduation gift. Elizabeth cherished that ring.

Meanwhile, Michael divorced his then wife, Sally Crill, and started a

romantic relationship with Elizabeth. Around the same time, Elizabeth became

friends with Harper Tracey through their church. During their friendship, Tracey

noticed injuries to Elizabeth on five or six occasions. Those injuries included finger

marks on Elizabeth’s neck and bruising on her abdomen. Tracey’s daughter,

Sadee, knew Michael’s children through church and would sometimes play at their

house in Winfield. When she was about seven, Sadee remembers visiting the

Syperda children and seeing Michael “shove” Elizabeth down a flight of stairs onto

her knees.

Tracey also recalled an incident when Elizabeth came to her trailer “frantic

and scared” after fleeing a violent altercation at Michael’s house. Elizabeth

confided she was afraid of Michael and “couldn’t take any more of the abuse.”

Tracey noticed Elizabeth’s abdomen was “very bruised” and she had marks on her

arms. Elizabeth stayed a full month with Tracey in her trailer. 4

During that month, Michael drove to the trailer almost every day to engage

in intimidation tactics. He would park his truck on the street, within ten steps of the

trailer, and “taunt” Elizabeth. Specifically, he made these threats:

He would tell her that he would keep her from the children. He told her that he would get rid of her and nobody would care and nobody would find her. He would leave notes on the doorstep. He left a torn cat collar with a note that said if she didn’t come back, she’d disappear like the cat. And threatened to hurt the animals, threatened her with videotapes and pictures that he had.

As many as six times, Tracey witnessed Michael threatening to kill Elizabeth and

dispose of her body. Tracey called law enforcement to stop Michael’s behavior

but was unsuccessful.

Elizabeth eventually left the trailer to live with Michael. They married in

January 1998. Tracey attended the wedding, despite having tried to dissuade

Elizabeth from marrying him. Michael then cut off Tracey’s contact with Elizabeth.

Elizabeth eventually told Tracey not come to Michael’s house anymore because

those were Michael’s instructions.

Tracey was not the only person worried about Elizabeth marrying Michael.

Donna did not come to Iowa for her daughter’s wedding because she did not

approve of the relationship. But Elizabeth did visit California to celebrate her

younger brother’s high school graduation in June 2000. Still in Iowa, Michael

started calling at all hours over the three days that Elizabeth stayed with her

mother. Michael was not happy because he believed Elizabeth’s mother was

pressuring her not to return to Iowa.

To placate Michael, Elizabeth decided to leave Donna’s house and stay with

her childhood friend, Shannon Gerber. Gerber had stayed in touch with Elizabeth 5

since her move to Iowa. They tried to talk monthly by “sneaking in phone calls

when Mike wasn’t around.” Michael shifted his calling to Gerber’s house, leaving

so many messages that they filled Gerber’s answering machine. Gerber recalled

the majority of the calls were threats. Michael yelled at Elizabeth and threatened

to kill her if she did not return home. Michael also threatened to kill Elizabeth’s

mother and brother as well as Gerber and her young son. The calls continued all

hours of the day and night until Gerber’s husband unplugged the phone. Gerber

implored Elizabeth not to return to Iowa:

I didn’t want her to go because I was worried I would never see her again, and I took every back road I could possibly think of to the airport . . . to get her to miss her plane. . . . And her flight was delayed and she got on the plane.

Back in Mount Pleasant, Elizabeth took a job at Experian, where she met

co-worker, Sara Thomas.2 Thomas lived two blocks from the Syperdas’ house.

Thomas would pick up Elizabeth and drop her off after work. During those

commutes, Thomas noticed bruises on Elizabeth’s face, arms, and hands.

Thomas became romantically involved with Elizabeth despite the fact

Thomas was then living with Terri Thrasher. Once when Michael was gone, his

two children peeked through the keyhole and saw Thomas and Elizabeth having

sex in Michael’s bedroom. When the women learned the children had seen them,

Elizabeth moved her belongings to Thomas’s apartment.

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State of Iowa v. Michael Lee Syperda, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-iowa-v-michael-lee-syperda-iowactapp-2019.