State of Iowa v. Nelson Carlos Flores

CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJanuary 26, 2024
Docket21-1676
StatusPublished

This text of State of Iowa v. Nelson Carlos Flores (State of Iowa v. Nelson Carlos Flores) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court 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. Nelson Carlos Flores, (iowa 2024).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF IOWA

No. 21–1676

Submitted October 11, 2023—Filed January 26, 2024

STATE OF IOWA,

Appellee,

vs.

NELSON CARLOS FLORES,

Appellant.

On review from the Iowa Court of Appeals.

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Crawford County, Zachary

Hindman, Judge.

The defendant seeks further review of a court of appeals decision affirming

his convictions for sexual abuse of a child. DECISION OF COURT OF APPEALS

AFFIRMED IN PART AND VACATED IN PART; DISTRICT COURT JUDGMENT AFFIRMED. Waterman, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which all justices joined.

Tyler D. McIntosh (argued) and Christopher J. Roth of Roth

Weinstein, LLC, Omaha, Nebraska, for appellant.

Brenna Bird, Attorney General, and Benjamin Parrott (argued), Assistant

Attorney General, for appellee. 2

WATERMAN, Justice. In this appeal, we revisit the recurring issue of the admissibility of video

recordings of forensic interviews of child sex abuse victims. Our recent decisions

have addressed the admissibility of such videos under several exceptions to the

hearsay rule.1 But in today’s case, the district court admitted the video under

the rule of completeness, Iowa Rule of Evidence 5.106. The defendant was

charged with eleven counts of sexual abuse of his girlfriend’s daughter,

beginning when she was age nine. The State called the child as a witness at the

jury trial and mentioned her forensic interview during its direct examination.

Defense counsel cross-examined the child about inconsistencies between her

trial testimony and select portions of her prior statements in the recorded

forensic interview. The State on redirect offered the video into evidence. Over the

defendant’s hearsay objection, the district court admitted the video for the

limited purpose of deciding whether the interview statements “were inconsistent

with the testimony given at trial” in evaluating the child’s credibility. The district

court relied on State v. Austin, 585 N.W.2d 241, 243–44 (Iowa 1998) (allowing

forensic interview video into evidence under prior version of the rule of

completeness after defense counsel “opened the door” by using “very specific points” from a summary of the interview which, if “[t]aken out of the context of

the entire interview,” would have allowed the jury to “conclude[] that [the child’s]

statements at the interview were inconsistent with her testimony at trial”). The

jury found the defendant guilty on all sexual abuse counts.

1See, e.g., State v. Skahill, 966 N.W.2d 1, 8–15 (Iowa 2021) (addressing the admissibility

of the child victim’s forensic interview videos under the medical diagnosis and residual exceptions to the hearsay rule); State v. Fontenot, 958 N.W.2d 549, 561–564 (Iowa 2021) (addressing the admissibility of the child victim’s forensic interview video under the hearsay exception for prior consistent statements); State v. Veverka, 938 N.W.2d 197, 200–04 (Iowa 2020) (addressing the admissibility of the child victim’s forensic interview video under the residual exception to the hearsay rule). 3

The defendant appealed, raising multiple issues, and we transferred the

case to the court of appeals, which affirmed his convictions. The court of appeals

distinguished Austin because “the State rather than the defense opened the

door.” Without deciding whether the video was correctly admitted under

rule 5.106, the court of appeals determined that any error in admitting the video

was harmless because the State established overwhelming evidence of the

defendant’s guilt. We granted the defendant’s application for further review.

On our review, we affirm the district court under Austin and rule 5.106.

The rule of completeness applies regardless of which party opens the door. The

defense extensively cross-examined the child by asking her about specific

statements she made during her forensic interview, highlighted inconsistencies

with her trial testimony, and implied that the defendant had touched her only

once and only in a certain manner. Yet, other portions of the interview—not

asked about during cross-examination—were more consistent with her trial

testimony about other incidents. The defendant objected to allowing the video

into evidence, but he did not challenge the court’s ruling that the entire video

would be allowed if he opened the door under rule 5.106. On this record, we

conclude that the district court did not abuse its discretion by allowing the jury to view the video to put into context the statements from the interview elicited

during cross-examination as part of evaluating the child’s credibility. We let the

court of appeals decision stand as final on the other issues raised in the

defendant’s appeal and affirm his convictions.

I. Background Facts and Proceedings.

In 2016, Nelson Carlos Flores lived with his girlfriend Wendy H., their son

E.H., and Wendy’s nine-year-old daughter W.R. Flores is not W.R.’s biological

father. One morning after her mother left for work, W.R. awoke to find Flores touching her vagina over her clothes. Flores moved his hand under her clothes 4

before he raped W.R. vaginally and anally. She screamed while this was

happening. W.R. later told her mother and grandmother, who disbelieved her

after Flores denied raping her. But Wendy took W.R. to a hospital in Denison,

where the child told a nurse that Flores raped her; the nurse called the police.

W.R. was taken to Omaha for a forensic interview at Project Harmony, a child

advocacy center. This 2016 interview was videotaped and later became the focus

of this appeal.

Flores was questioned by the police, and a no-contact order was entered.

Flores was arrested in June 2016 and charged with sexual abuse in the second

degree, in violation of Iowa Code sections 709.1, 709.3(1)(b), and 903B.1 (2016);

lascivious acts with a child, in violation of sections 709.1, 709.8(1)(a),

709.8(2)(a), and 903B.1; and assault with intent to commit sexual abuse, in

violation of sections 709.11 and 903B.2. Flores was released on bond and waived

his right to a speedy trial. His criminal case was delayed at his request a dozen

times over the next several years.

Meanwhile, W.R. moved in with her grandmother, but frequently stayed

with her mother, half brother, and Flores despite the no-contact order. The adult

family members began pressuring W.R. to deny the rape and say she made it all up. They threatened W.R. to recant her story, telling her that otherwise she

would be sent to foster care, someone (or Flores) would hurt her, and she would

never see her family again. W.R. recanted. In 2019, Flores reached a tentative

plea agreement with the State, but further proceedings were continued several

more times before Flores rejected the State’s plea offer.

Flores’s no-contact order remained in effect. Yet W.R. returned to living at

her mother’s home with Flores, and he raped her multiple times in 2020 when

she was age fifteen. In September of that year, W.R. reported the abuse at school and moved in with a great-aunt. The State brought additional charges against 5

Flores in 2021, and his cases were consolidated for trial. Proceedings were

delayed several more times while Flores was in federal custody for immigration

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