State of Iowa v. Quarian Deonte Moore

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedJuly 3, 2024
Docket22-1794
StatusPublished

This text of State of Iowa v. Quarian Deonte Moore (State of Iowa v. Quarian Deonte Moore) 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. Quarian Deonte Moore, (iowactapp 2024).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

No. 22-1794 Filed July 3, 2024

STATE OF IOWA, Plaintiff-Appellee,

vs.

QUARIAN DEONTE MOORE, Defendant-Appellant. ________________________________________________________________

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Polk County, Scott D. Rosenberg,

Judge.

A defendant appeals his convictions and sentences for first-degree murder

and attempted murder. AFFIRMED.

Martha J. Lucey, State Appellate Defender, and Theresa R. Wilson and

Ashley Stewart (until withdrawal), Assistant Appellate Defenders, for appellant.

Brenna Bird, Attorney General, and Timothy M. Hau, Assistant Attorney

General, for appellee.

Heard by Bower, C.J., and Tabor and Greer, JJ., but decided by Tabor, P.J.,

Greer, J., and Bower, S.J.*

*Senior judge assigned by order pursuant to Iowa Code section 602.9206

(2024). 2

TABOR, Presiding Judge.

A jury convicted Quarian Moore of first-degree murder and attempted

murder for shooting two people at a Des Moines intersection in November 2021.

Moore was just shy of his eighteenth birthday at the time of the crime. The district

court imposed a mandatory minimum term of incarceration of twenty-five years.

Moore now argues the State failed to present sufficient evidence that he was the

shooter and that the court improperly applied the juvenile sentencing factors.1

Finding substantial evidence that Moore shot and killed Dean Deng and wounded

B.C., and observing no abuse of discretion in Moore’s sentencing, we affirm.

I. Facts and Prior Proceedings

Security footage of the drive-by shooting in the early morning hours of

November 14—coupled with Moore’s suspicious actions before and after—led

police to probe his involvement. Three hours before the shooting, Moore was

hanging out at his friend Ryan’s apartment. Around midnight, Ryan recorded a

Snapchat video that showed Moore wearing a distinctive sweatshirt and pointing

a black and brown handgun2 at the phone camera.

A few hours later, Moore left that apartment—carrying a black bag. He was

seen on the building’s camera at 3:49 a.m. getting into the passenger seat of a

Toyota Sienna van driven by his girlfriend, R.P.-H. Just ten minutes before the

shooting, the van left the parking lot on Hubbell Avenue.

1 In his appellant’s brief, Moore also asks our supreme court to reconsider its

stance on mandatory minimums for juveniles under the Iowa Constitution. But the case was transferred to us. We must follow precedent. See State v. Zarate, 908 N.W.2d 831, 856 (Iowa 2018). 2 Detectives never found that gun, but the State asserted that it was “consistent

with the murder weapon.” 3

From there, detectives pieced together evidence that Moore was the

shooter. They used video surveillance from around the city, tracing his path from

the apartment building with footage captured from businesses and private homes.

That footage showed the van speeding by, at intervals, until it reached a redlight

camera near East Fifteenth Street and Maple Street, a few blocks south of where

the shooting happened. A camera at the nearby Subway restaurant showed two

other vehicles—a silver Chrysler 200 and a silver Cadillac—come into frame at

3:59 a.m. Deng drove the Chrysler with three other occupants—B.C., in the front

passenger seat, and G.B. and N.G. in the back seat.3 Two other friends of Deng,

S.A. and P.T., followed in the Cadillac. R.P.-H.’s van let the Chrysler and Cadillac

pass so that it could follow behind them.

All three vehicles then stopped for a red light at the intersection of East

Fourteenth Street and University Avenue. The van pulled into the turning lane to

the left of the Chrysler, with the Cadillac slightly behind to the right. There is no

video of the shooting. But at 4:00 a.m., a neighborhood doorbell camera recorded

the sound of six shots being fired.

All three vehicles then took off west on University Avenue. The van sped

away first. The Chrysler gave chase for about five blocks before slowing to a halt

near Iowa Lutheran Hospital. The Cadillac did not make it that far, slamming into

a curb near the shooting scene. A patrol officer happened to be driving west on

University Avenue and saw the Cadillac hit the curb. Passenger P.T. bolted from

3 Deng’s mother said at the sentencing hearing that Deng was driving his friend’s

car home because his friend was too intoxicated to drive. 4

the Cadillac, stumbling a bit before running off. The patrol officer tried to talk to

the driver, S.A., but he would not cooperate.

Meanwhile, from the Chrysler, backseat passenger G.B. called police.

When officers arrived, they found the driver, Deng, unconscious; he “was slumped

over so his head was towards the . . . front passenger side of [the] vehicle.” The

bullet went through his left arm into his chest. The officers tried in vain to

resuscitate him. Medics transported Deng to the hospital, where he was

pronounced dead. Front-seat passenger B.C. had also been shot. Police later

learned that B.C. ran to the Lutheran Hospital emergency room where medical

personnel treated an injury to his left forearm.

A hunt for the shooter ensued. Two and a half hours after the shooting,

crime scene investigators found six round casings on the ground at East

Fourteenth Street and University Avenue; the casings formed an arc between the

left-turn lane and the center lane on the northbound side of the intersection.

Ballistics analysts determined they were all discharged by the same gun.

Investigators also noted “multiple . . . bullet holes on the driver side and front of the

[Chrysler].” But they found no bullets inside either the Chrysler or the Cadillac. As

for the third vehicle, around 9:00 a.m., police received a call from R.P.-H.’s mother

reporting the Toyota van, registered to her daughter, had been stolen. R.P.-H. told

her mother that the van was stolen between 4:00 and 9:00 that morning.

Police eventually identified R.P.-H.’s boyfriend, Moore, as the person

entering her van at the Hubbell apartment complex. Armed with that information,

police obtained footage from the doorbell camera at the house where Moore lived

with his mother. It showed R.P.-H. and Moore going inside about one hour after 5

the shooting, Moore having changed his clothes. They left after only four minutes.

Moore carried the same black bag as before.

The next day, police located the Toyota van behind a dumpster in a parking

lot across from R.P.-H.’s apartment building. No round casings were found inside

the van. But police could see that the passenger seat was fully reclined, and the

back windows could not open wide enough to accommodate a shooter.4 Believing

that Moore, as the van’s front-seat passenger, was the shooter, police sought to

arrest him. They found him at his friend Ryan’s apartment. When Moore spotted

the police, he fled, throwing a loaded nine millimeter Ruger under a car in the

parking lot. He was soon apprehended by detectives. The discarded handgun

was not the murder weapon. In fact, the murder weapon was never found.

The State charged Moore with first-degree murder, a class “A” felony in

violation of Iowa Code section 707.2(1)(a) (2021) and attempted murder, a

class “B” felony in violation of section 707.11.

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Related

State v. Formaro
638 N.W.2d 720 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 2002)
State v. Truesdell
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State v. Casady
491 N.W.2d 782 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1992)
Miller v. Alabama
132 S. Ct. 2455 (Supreme Court, 2012)
State of Iowa v. John Arthur Wilson
878 N.W.2d 203 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 2016)
State of Iowa v. Christopher Ryan Lee Roby
897 N.W.2d 127 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 2017)
State of Iowa v. Rene Zarate
908 N.W.2d 831 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 2018)
State of Iowa v. Michael Cory Kelso-Christy
911 N.W.2d 663 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 2018)
State of Iowa v. Keyon Harrison
914 N.W.2d 178 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 2018)
State of Iowa v. Evan Paul Headley
926 N.W.2d 545 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 2019)
State v. Lyle
854 N.W.2d 378 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 2014)

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State of Iowa v. Quarian Deonte Moore, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-iowa-v-quarian-deonte-moore-iowactapp-2024.