State of Iowa v. Roy Allen Doorenbos

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedJune 17, 2020
Docket19-1257
StatusPublished

This text of State of Iowa v. Roy Allen Doorenbos (State of Iowa v. Roy Allen Doorenbos) 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. Roy Allen Doorenbos, (iowactapp 2020).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

No. 19-1257 Filed June 17, 2020

STATE OF IOWA, Plaintiff-Appellee,

vs.

ROY ALLEN DOORENBOS, Defendant-Appellant. ________________________________________________________________

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

Showers, Judge.

A defendant appeals his convictions for assault with intent to commit sexual

abuse and simple-misdemeanor assault. AFFIRMED.

Matthew M. Boles and Adam C. Witosky of Parrish Kruidenier Dunn Boles

Gribble Gentry Brown & Bergmann LLP, Des Moines, for appellant.

Thomas J. Miller, Attorney General, and Louis S. Sloven, Assistant Attorney

General, for appellee.

Considered by Tabor, P.J., and May and Greer, JJ. 2

TABOR, Presiding Judge.

The State charged Roy Doorenbos with one count of sexual abuse in the

third degree and two counts of assault with intent to commit sexual abuse. The

trial information alleged each offense occurred on a different day but against the

same victim. A jury acquitted Doorenbos on the sexual abuse count but convicted

him of assault with intent and the lesser-included offense of simple-misdemeanor

assault. He appeals the two convictions, alleging he is entitled to a new trial

because the verdicts were inconsistent. He also contends his trial was unfair

because the court did not permit him to view his accuser’s mental-health records,

declined to strike two jurors for cause, and granted the State’s motion to amend

the dates in the trial information. Finally, Doorenbos alleges he should be

resentenced because the court considered improper information.

On the first issue, we find no inconsistency in the verdicts. Likewise, we

see no error in the court’s rulings on the privilege issue, jury selection, or the

amendment of the trial information. On the sentencing claims, we discern no

abuse of discretion. Thus, we affirm the convictions.

I. Facts and Prior Proceedings

Graduated from college and somewhat at loose ends, M.A.—then twenty-

five years old—moved in with Doorenbos1 and his wife in Grinnell in May 2016.

They had been long-time family friends to the point M.A. considered them to be

surrogate parents. M.A. was slow to unpack, considering the stay to be temporary

until she landed what she considered her “career job” as a teacher. A few months

1 Doorenbos is a medical doctor who had a family practice in Grinnell for more than three decades. His career is most pertinent to the sentencing issues he raises. 3

later, she started teaching at a Christian school. But because the pay was low,

M.A. continued to live in the Doorenbos home.

Also that summer, M.A. started seeing therapist Brandon Davis. She was

feeling “a bit of instability” and thought he could help her develop greater strength

in her emotions and relationships. After several months of therapy, M.A. felt like

Dr. Davis had “opened up some conflicts” she had been holding inside.2 In her

terms, “it’s kind of like when you clean the house, and it get messy before it gets

cleaned.” That winter, M.A. confided in Doorenbos that she was struggling with

thoughts of suicide. In response, he “put his arm around [her] and was crying a

little bit and prayed with [her].”

Starting then, their relationship changed. Doorenbos sought her out all over

the house for prayer sessions. During these interactions, he would drape his arm

over her shoulders or squeeze her hand, which evolved into holding her thigh.

M.A. testified, “I was a newish Christian, and he’s a well-established Christian and

he’s a Catholic, and I wasn’t a Catholic. So I sort of was wondering for a long

time . . . if the touching was like a part of prayer that I didn’t know about yet.” On

occasion, he would come into her bedroom in the early morning hours, ostensibly

to pray with her.

By March 2017, according to M.A., the visits grew more invasive. She told

the jury that just after midnight on March 9, Doorenbos came into her bedroom.

His wife was out of town. At first he sat on the edge of M.A.’s bed. He asked her

2 Before trial, defense counsel moved for access to M.A.’s privileged records kept by Dr. Davis. After an August 2018 hearing, the district court reviewed the records in camera. The court found no basis for disclosure. 4

if she liked hugs. She said yes. Doorenbos then asked M.A. to tell him something

she had never told her therapist. She felt uneasy about his commanding tone.

When she hesitated to answer, he said: “As of right then I was officially an adopted

member of the Doorenbos family, and as such, daughters obey their fathers, and

he wanted me to tell him something that I had never told my therapist.”

She eventually shared some personal information with him. In response,

he climbed under the covers with her. M.A. said she “froze” and pulled her body

away. He scooted her back to the center of the mattress. Then he started to slide

his hands under her pajamas. She started to cry. When Doorenbos finally left her

bed that morning, M.A. grabbed her phone from the dresser and texted her

therapist to schedule an appointment.

After going to work and attending her late afternoon therapy appointment,

M.A. was reluctant to return to the Doorenbos home. She did so after midnight on

March 10. As she feared, Doorenbos returned to her room and said: “We forgot

to pray for you.” They went downstairs to the living room where she settled into

an armchair. Doorenbos perched on the ottoman. He grabbed her wrists and

pulled her forward. After the prayer, he told her, “Okay back to bed.” He continued

to pull her upstairs by the wrists. At her bedroom door, she broke away and went

to shower. After her shower, she went to the attic and dressed. It was still too

early in the morning to leave for work so she laid down on a twin bed shoved

against a dormer. The attic was cold, so she burrowed under a stack of blankets.

She testified Doorenbos followed her to the attic and pinned her under the

covers. She tried to push him off the bed and told him to stop. She described his

actions as more aggressive than the night before. She testified he was on top of 5

her and grabbed her inner thigh with his hand. As she struggled to breathe under

his weight, he shifted off her body and started snoring. When the sun started to

rise, he walked out of the attic without saying anything. Terrified by what

happened, M.A. skipped work but went for another therapy session.

M.A.’s testimony did not end there. She told the jury Doorenbos came to

her bedroom again five days later. She testified she had not been sleeping well

and felt exhausted. She recalled wearing layers of clothes to bed as a defense

mechanism. She alleged Doorenbos kneeled beside her bed and prayed the

rosary. After that, according to M.A., Doorenbos forced her to engage in two

different sex acts before leaving the room. M.A. testified that she went to therapy

the next day and then moved out of the Doorenbos home.

The State offered evidence that Doorenbos contacted M.A. the next day.

At 1:53 a.m. on March 16, he texted, “You ok? Out late on a school night!” She

responded that she had let his wife know that she was staying with friends. He

texted back, “Ok. We miss you and love you! Running away—Running away,

huh?” At 10:20 a.m. Doorenbos texted, “[M.A.] don’t refuse me! Your Heavenly

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State of Iowa v. Roy Allen Doorenbos, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-iowa-v-roy-allen-doorenbos-iowactapp-2020.