State of Iowa v. Stanley Lavell Donahue

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedJanuary 23, 2025
Docket23-0742
StatusPublished

This text of State of Iowa v. Stanley Lavell Donahue (State of Iowa v. Stanley Lavell Donahue) 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. Stanley Lavell Donahue, (iowactapp 2025).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

No. 23-0742 Filed January 23, 2025

STATE OF IOWA, Plaintiff-Appellee,

vs.

STANLEY LAVELL DONAHUE, Defendant-Appellant. ________________________________________________________________

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Linn County, Christopher L. Bruns,

Judge.

A criminal defendant appeals ten convictions, including attempted murder

of a peace officer. AFFIRMED IN PART, REVERSED IN PART, AND

REMANDED WITH DIRECTIONS.

Martha J. Lucey, State Appellate Defender, and Shellie L. Knipfer, Assistant

Appellate Defender, for appellant.

Brenna Bird, Attorney General, and Sheryl Soich, Assistant Attorney

General, for appellee.

Considered by Schumacher, P.J., and Buller and Langholz, JJ. 2

BULLER, Judge.

Stanley Donahue appeals ten convictions relating to the robbery of a

convenience store and the attempted murder of Linn County Deputy Sheriff William

Halverson. Donahue challenges the sufficiency of the evidence supporting his

convictions for trafficking stolen weapons, attempted murder of a peace officer,

and two counts of robbery in the first degree, as well as the district court’s

evidentiary ruling admitting a statement Deputy Halverson made while he feared

death. On our review, we affirm all of Donahue’s convictions except for trafficking

stolen weapons, which we reverse in accord with the State’s concession. We

therefore affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand with directions.

I. Background Facts and Proceedings

In June 2021, Jacob Christianson, a twenty-one-year-old “pizza artist,” was

working the night shift at the Casey’s convenience store in Coggon with his

coworker, eighteen-year-old Maddie Stepanek. Early that morning, another

employee had spotted a suspicious van and a man who tried to enter the store

even though it was closed; this other employee left a note about it to warn later

shifts. When a man in a black hoodie drove up in a van and walked into the store

around 10:00 p.m. that night, Christianson remembered the note, “got an eerie

feeling that something might happen,” and warned Stepanek to “stay down” in the

kitchen in case it wasn’t safe.

The man in the hoodie—later consistently identified by all eyewitnesses as

Donahue—got a carton of chocolate milk from the cooler, went up to the register,

and paid with cash. When Christianson went to give him change, Donahue “pulled

out the gun”—a black pistol—and said, “Give me the money.” Christianson opened 3

the register, triggered the silent alarm, and handed the cash to Donahue. Donahue

then ordered Christianson to the next register, where Christianson did the same

thing. Next, Donahue ordered Christianson into the kitchen, where Christianson

told Stepanek to call the police while he “stall[ed]”: he told Donahue that Stepanek

was washing her hands. Tucked around the corner by the sinks, Stepanek dialed

911 on her cell phone.

Donahue grabbed a variety of merchandise—including cigarettes, gift

cards, phone chargers, and headphones—as well as Stepanek’s purse and

Christianson’s wallet. Eventually Donahue directed Christianson back toward the

kitchen and followed at some distance. Stepanek hung up her 911 call when the

men approached the kitchen. Donahue asked if she “had any money or anything

back in the kitchen,” and she said she “only had the food.”

Donahue ordered Stepanek and Christianson into the walk-in cooler. They

raised their hands and complied; in Stepanek’s words, she “was scared what else

would happen if [she] didn’t.” The two sat down in the cooler, and Stepanek started

“freaking out” and “kept telling [Christianson] what if we don’t make it, what if he

comes back, what if I don’t go to college, don’t make it to college.” Stepanek was

crying, and Christianson tried to console her. Donahue told them to stay in the

cooler, asked if they had phones, and shut the cooler door. After a few minutes,

Christianson and Stepanek heard multiple gunshots.

Unbeknownst to Stepanek and Christianson, surveillance footage captured

Donahue taking proceeds of the robbery out to his van, then returning to steal more

merchandise from the store. Meanwhile, Deputy Halverson was responding to the

silent alarm in his patrol vehicle. When Deputy Halverson ran up to the store and 4

didn’t see a cashier or any employees by the registers, he entered and found

Donahue leaving with a garbage bag of stolen goods. Deputy Halverson ordered

Donahue to turn around and attempted to arrest him, but Donahue backed away,

pulled the black pistol from his pocket, and started firing rapidly at close range.

Deputy Halverson didn’t know how many times he’d been shot, but he knew he’d

been hit multiple times. Approximately ten shots can be heard on the surveillance

footage. Deputy Halverson thought he was going to die and—in his words—fell

“face first onto the ground like a pancake.” Some of the shots struck his vest, but

he was in pain and bleeding, he saw stars, and he couldn’t move his legs.

Donahue took Deputy Halverson’s service weapon from its holster, and

Deputy Halverson was too injured to stop him. Deputy Halverson said, “please

don’t kill me,” and Donahue left with Deputy Halverson’s gun and the stolen

property, got in his van, and drove off. Deputy Halverson radioed for help, using

an alert to communicate “officer down.” He told a first-responding officer

“something along the lines of . . . tell my wife and kids that I love them.”

A medivac helicopter took Deputy Halverson to the University of Iowa

Hospitals for treatment. His injuries included fractures in his femur, lower-back

vertebrae, hips, and skull, as well as crush damage to his torso from gunshots that

struck his bulletproof vest. As best as medical professionals could determine,

Deputy Halverson was hit by seven shots. Treatment required permanent

placement of several rods in Deputy Halverson’s body, and some of the bullets

could not be removed. It took six months of recovery before Deputy Halverson

could walk on his own, and he expected to have lifelong pain from the injuries

inflicted by Donahue. 5

Back in Coggon, another deputy sheriff spotted the van and was in hot

pursuit, with lights and sirens activated. The deputy identified Donahue as the

driver, and Donahue—operating the van with no lights—eluded the deputy by

swerving around the squad car and going more than double the speed limit until

he crashed into cement blocks near a closed bridge. Donahue took off on foot and

the deputy attempted to pursue but eventually lost sight of him. Another deputy

joined the search and, with the assistance of K-9 Officer Bingo, pursued Donahue

through a backyard and some fields. Bingo followed Donahue’s scent to a “grassy

area [that] looked like to be the size of a human that may have been laying down

there.” Bingo lost Donahue’s scent at a gravel road; Bingo’s handler explained

that gravel tends to interfere with a dog’s tracking.

Over the noon hour the next day, deputies found Donahue on a gravel road

not far from where Bingo had lost the scent. Law enforcement officers—including

Bingo—arrested Donahue. In a deputy sheriff’s words, Donahue “looked

disheveled, as I would describe it, and [his clothes] looked dirty with mud.

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