State of Iowa v. Robert Anthony Howard

825 N.W.2d 32, 2012 WL 6662639, 2012 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 112
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedDecember 21, 2012
Docket10–1742
StatusPublished
Cited by38 cases

This text of 825 N.W.2d 32 (State of Iowa v. Robert Anthony Howard) 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. Robert Anthony Howard, 825 N.W.2d 32, 2012 WL 6662639, 2012 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 112 (iowa 2012).

Opinion

WATERMAN, Justice.

After the police detective questioning him promised treatment and implied he would go free if he completed treatment, defendant, Robert Howard, confessed to sexually abusing his girlfriend’s son. Howard contends his confession is inadmissible under our caselaw prohibiting the use of confessions obtained following a promise of leniency. The district court denied Howard’s motion to suppress his confession, and the jury that heard his confession convicted him of second-degree sexual abuse and child endangerment. A divided court of appeals affirmed his convictions and twenty-five-year sentence. We granted Howard’s application for further review.

For the reasons explained below, we conclude the detective’s questioning crossed the line into an improper promise of leniency under our long-standing precedents, rendering Howard’s subsequent confession inadmissible. The exclusionary rule we enforce again today protects the innocent from a police tactic that can induce false confessions. The error in admitting his confession was not harmless. Accordingly, we vacate the decision of the court of appeals, reverse the judgment of the district court, and remand the case for a new trial.

I. Background Facts and Proceedings.

On January 14, 2010, Howard and his girlfriend, Jessica, took her then seventeen-month-old son, A.E., to the doctor’s office after discovering blood in his diaper. Dr. Colette Hostetler examined the baby. ’Howard and Jessica told Dr. Hostetler that they believed A.E.’s injuries may have been caused by a hard stool. During her examination of the infant, Dr. Hostetler observed a laceration near the top of A.E.’s anus, bruising, swelling, and signs that the blood flow to that area had recently increased. As Dr. Hostetler later testified, she determined to a reasonable degree of medical certainty that the cause of the bleeding was blunt penetration trauma to AE.’s anus. She also determined the injuries occurred within several hours of A.E. being brought to the clinic and that, “[bjecause of the pattern of bruising, ... [the penetrating object] was bigger than a pencil or a finger but small enough to fit in that area.”

In reaching her conclusions regarding the cause of the injuries, Dr. Hostetler specifically rejected the claim that the injuries were caused by a hard bowel movement

[b]ecause of the pattern of the injury being mostly external to the anal canal, where stools cause an injury that is in the anus or just a little ways beyond that. And the braising that was present was indicating that there was a blunt force externally.

Dr. Hostetler also noted that bleeding caused by a hard bowel movement is more common with adults than children.

Howard and Jessica had been in a relationship for approximately six months. Howard was spending three to four nights a week at Jessica’s parents’ home, where she lived with A.E. He spent January 13 there, the night before they took A.E. to the clinic. On the morning of January 14, Howard went to court for a traffic ticket and then he, Jessica, and A.E. drove to Illinois to deliver some clothes to Howard’s cousin. Before returning home, they stopped at a friend’s house and picked up some food and soda.

*35 After running these errands, Howard and Jessica returned with A.E. to Jessica’s parents’ home. No one else was there. The home’s power went out while they were there. The fuse box was located in a locked room. Jessica did not have a key for this room, so she called her mother, who was working about five to six minutes away. Jessica decided she would go to get her mother’s key. About thirty minutes before leaving, Jessica changed A.E. and saw no blood in his diaper or anything abnormal. She put A.E. down for a nap in his crib in the living room.

Jessica was away from the house for around twenty minutes. After she arrived at her mother’s workplace, Jessica stayed for about ten minutes talking with her mother. While there, Jessica received a call from Howard. Howard told Jessica he had discovered blood in AE.’s diaper while he was changing him. Jessica returned home to find A.E. lying on his stomach, in his crib, screaming. Howard was lying on the floor.

Jessica checked A.E.’s diaper and found blood in it. Jessica called Howard’s mother to ask her what could be the cause of the blood. Howard’s mother indicated that the blood may have been caused by a hard stool, but recommended that they contact a doctor. A.E. had not had any bloody stools before this day. Jessica called the clinic where she usually took A.E. and was told to bring him. Before they left the house together to take the baby to the doctor, Howard took a shower and changed his clothes. On the way to the clinic, Howard stopped at a friend’s house for a few minutes. Jessica and A.E. stayed in the truck during this stop.

After Dr. Hostetler finished examining A.E., she contacted the Iowa Department of Human Services (IDHS) as a mandatory reporter under Iowa law because she suspected AE.’s anal penetration injuries were caused by child abuse. Dustin Krueger of the IDHS and Detective Tim Hull of the Muscatine Police Department responded and arrived at the clinic to investigate the report. Detective Hull and Krueger interviewed Jessica and Howard separately. Detective Hull did not read Howard his Miranda rights and did not tell Howard he was recording their conversation.

Early in their recorded conversation, Howard told Detective Hull he has a pending charge for assault that resulted from a physical altercation he had with an eighteen-year-old who “told [Howard’s] 13-year-old sister to suck his dick.” In response, Detective Hull said, “You know, I can see how that would make you angry because if you have sex with a 13-year-old, it’s actually a 25-year prison sentence .... ”

Howard initially told Detective Hull and Krueger that he did not know what caused A.E.’s injuries, but suspected it could have been caused by a hard stool. According to Howard’s initial account, shortly after Jessica left, Howard had checked on A.E. and found he was not sleeping, so he took A.E. out of his crib and let him run around and play with his toys. At some point, Howard noticed that AE.’s diaper needed to be changed. While he was changing A.E., Howard found blood and a hard stool in his diaper. Howard called Jessica to tell her.

As Detective Hull and Krueger continued their interview, Howard told them he did not see A.E. get hurt, cry, or otherwise suggest that he had been hurt at any time that day or while A.E. was up running around. Howard also confirmed that the only people who had come into contact with A.E. between noon and 3 p.m. were Jessica, a friend, and himself, and the friend was never alone with A.E. After Howard admitted that he and Jessica were the only two people who had been alone *36 with A.E. during that time, the following exchange occurred:

MR. KRUEGER: Do you think Jessica would do something like this?
[HOWARD]: No. To be honest, Jessica don’t even yell at that kid. To be honest, she’s one of the most perfect mothers I ever seen.

As the interview continued, Detective Hull began discussing the proper punishment for someone who abuses a child.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
825 N.W.2d 32, 2012 WL 6662639, 2012 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 112, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-iowa-v-robert-anthony-howard-iowa-2012.