State of Iowa v. Richard Wayne Leedom

CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJanuary 24, 2020
Docket18-1947
StatusPublished

This text of State of Iowa v. Richard Wayne Leedom (State of Iowa v. Richard Wayne Leedom) 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. Richard Wayne Leedom, (iowa 2020).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF IOWA No. 57 / 18–1947

Filed January 24, 2020

STATE OF IOWA,

Appellee,

vs.

RICHARD WAYNE LEEDOM,

Appellant.

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Poweshiek County, Shawn R.

Showers (trial) and Crystal S. Cronk (discovery), Judges.

Defendant convicted of sexually abusing his granddaughter appeals

order denying his motion for a new trial and pretrial ruling denying his

motion for an in camera review of the victim’s mental health records.

DISTRICT COURT JUDGMENT CONDITIONALLY AFFIRMED; CASE

REMANDED WITH INSTRUCTIONS.

Robert P. Montgomery and Brandon Brown of Parrish Kruidenier

Dunn Gribble Gentry Brown & Bergmann, L.L.P., Des Moines, for

Thomas J. Miller, Attorney General, and Darrel Mullins, Susan

Krisko, and Thomas J. Ogden, Assistant Attorneys General, for appellee. 2

WATERMAN, Justice.

In this appeal, we must decide whether the district court erred by

denying the defendant’s motion for an in camera review of the victim’s

mental health records, among other issues. The defendant was charged

with sexually abusing his granddaughter, and her credibility was a key

fighting issue. Her parents were in a bitter child custody modification

proceeding, and the granddaughter strongly preferred to live with her

father. To improve her father’s custody claim, she admittedly lied about a

car accident he caused that put her at risk. She also told an investigator

that her mother physically abused her and did nothing when told of the

maternal grandfather’s sexual abuse. The granddaughter testified in her

deposition that she had disclosed the defendant’s abuse to her therapist,

a mandatory reporter. The defendant, noting that the therapist had not

reported the alleged abuse, argued the records likely contained

exculpatory impeachment evidence and filed a motion pursuant to Iowa

Code section 622.10(4) (2018) for the court’s in camera inspection. The

district court twice denied the motion and the defendant’s request for an

ex parte hearing. The case proceeded to a jury trial in which the defendant

was convicted on all counts. The defendant appealed raising multiple

grounds for a new trial. We retained the case.

For the reasons explained below, we hold the district court properly

denied the defendant’s motion for an ex parte hearing but erred by failing

to conduct an in camera inspection of the victim’s mental health records.

We determine the defendant’s other grounds for a new trial lack merit.

Accordingly, we conditionally affirm his convictions, but we remand the

case for the in camera inspection consistent with this opinion. 3

I. Background Facts and Proceedings.

On April 29, 2016, a fourteen-year-old girl, H.M., disclosed to an

investigator for the Iowa Department of Human Services (DHS) that she

had been sexually abused by her maternal grandfather, Richard Wayne

Leedom, who she refers to as “Papa.” At that time, the DHS was

investigating H.M.’s claims that her mother, Teah Leedom, had choked her

and called her derogatory terms. H.M.’s parents were engaged in a

contested child custody modification proceeding, and H.M. strongly

preferred to spend more time with her father. H.M. told the DHS

investigator that “one of the reasons [H.M.] was so upset with [Teah] was

that when [she] told [Teah] what Papa had done, [Teah] didn’t do anything

about it.” H.M. reported three instances of sexual abuse, all of which

occurred at Leedom’s home in Lake Ponderosa where H.M. and her older

brother often spent the night.

The first two instances happened when H.M. was about nine or ten

years old. While H.M was sleeping in Leedom’s bed with him, she

awakened with her pajamas unzipped and Leedom’s finger running from

her vagina to the small of her back. H.M. left the bed for the bathroom.

When she returned, Leedom kept calling her “Susan,” the name of his

then-girlfriend, later wife. When H.M. told Teah, she was told it would

stop, but it happened again.

The second time occurred while H.M. slept on the outside of the bed,

with Leedom in the middle, and Susan on his other side against the wall.

Leedom touched H.M.’s vagina while she faced him. H.M. again left for the

bathroom afterwards, then went to sleep in a different room on the couch.

Leedom came out and asked H.M. if she was okay with what had happened

before returning to his room. H.M. did not tell Teah or Susan at that time. 4

The third instance occurred when H.M. was eleven or twelve years

old. This time, H.M. refused to sleep in Leedom’s bed, but he told her there

was no room in the living room for her to sleep, so she laid on a cushion

on the bedroom floor next to his bed. When Leedom kneeled next to the

bed to pray, he reached over and rubbed and squeezed H.M.’s buttocks

over her clothes. She moved, and Leedom jumped and stopped touching

her. A few days later, H.M. wrote about what had happened the second

and third times on the “Notes” app in her iPad and showed Teah. No

investigation began at that time.

This criminal case arose out of the DHS investigation commenced in

2016. On August 2 of that year, Leedom was charged with three counts

of second-degree sexual abuse in violation of Iowa Code sections 709.1

and 709.3(1)(b) and one count of indecent contact with a child in violation

of section 709.12(1)(b). On July 17, 2017, one count of second-degree

sexual abuse was dropped.

H.M. was deposed on November 8, 2017. During her deposition,

H.M. testified that she told her therapist, Jessica Schmidt, about the

sexual abuse in approximately August 2015. H.M. claimed she told

Schmidt that she had already informed someone else so Schmidt did not

need to report it. Specifically, H.M. stated,

I did tell Jessica. I forgot to mention that. .... Q. Had you yet at that time shared with Jessica, your therapist, anything about your accusations against your Grandpa Rick? A. I think so. .... Q. Did you get a promise from Jessica not to reveal that to anyone also? A. Well, I kind of told her that I had already told somebody so she wouldn’t tell. Q. Excuse me? A. I told her that I had told somebody because I didn’t want her to tell because people don’t really 5 understand it. It’s not just somebody out on the street that did this to me, it’s somebody that I actually care about and somebody that I don’t want to see suffer. .... Q. And did your therapist tell you she could agree not to share it with anyone? A. I mean she said if it was being taken care of, then she didn’t have to get into it. Q. Well, did you tell the therapist the truth that you had shared it with somebody or is that a lie you had shared it with somebody? A. I had told my mom, but I didn’t tell, like, DHS or anybody. Q. Do you specifically remember telling Jessica? A. Yeah. Q. You do? A. I remember telling her, yeah. .... Q. Did Jessica ask you who you had shared it with? A. No.

On January 4, 2018, Leedom filed a motion to release privileged

records, specifically those of Schmidt, and requested the court’s in camera

review of those records. Leedom argued that there was a reasonable

probability that the records contained exculpatory information. His theory

was that as H.M.’s therapist, Schmidt was a mandatory reporter yet no

report had been made to the authorities, raising an inference that the

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