State of Iowa v. Steven Eugene Kroll

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedOctober 30, 2024
Docket23-0449
StatusPublished

This text of State of Iowa v. Steven Eugene Kroll (State of Iowa v. Steven Eugene Kroll) 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. Steven Eugene Kroll, (iowactapp 2024).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

No. 23-0449 Filed October 30, 2024

STATE OF IOWA, Plaintiff-Appellee,

vs.

STEVEN EUGENE KROLL, Defendant-Appellant. ________________________________________________________________

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Monona County, Tod Deck, Judge.

A defendant appeals his convictions for sex offenses against minors.

CONVICTIONS AFFIRMED, SENTENCE VACATED IN PART, AND

REMANDED FOR FURTHER PROCEEDINGS.

Martha J. Lucey, State Appellate Defender, and Mary K. Conroy, Assistant

Appellate Defender, for appellant.

Brenna Bird, Attorney General, and Genevieve Reinkoester, Nicole L.

Leonard, and Ian McConeghey, Assistant Attorneys General, for appellee.

Heard by Greer, P.J., Langholz, J., and Gamble, S.J.*

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

(2024). 2

GAMBLE, Senior Judge.

Steven Kroll appeals his convictions for an array of sex offenses against

minors. He contests the exclusion of evidence under Iowa Rule of Evidence 5.412,

asserts the district court erred in denying his request for a voluntary-participation

instruction, challenges the sufficiency of the evidence for one offense, and claims

the district court exceeded its authority in sentencing. We find the district court did

not abuse its discretion by excluding the evidence under rule 5.412 or in denying

his requested instruction, and sufficient evidence supports Kroll’s conviction of

sexual exploitation of a minor. We sever and vacate part of Kroll’s sentence and

remand for entry of a corrected sentencing order.

I. Background Facts & Proceedings.

On June 11, 2019, the State charged Kroll with eleven criminal offenses

related to his actions with two minors. The charges arose after his daughter S.K.

(born 2003) alleged Kroll had sexual contact with her when she was thirteen years

old and again when she was fifteen years old. Another minor female, S.L., alleged

when she had been friends with S.K., Kroll had propositioned her multiple times

and had touched her breast against S.L.’s will. Before trial, the State amended the

trial information, dismissing several of the charges.

S.K.

Between 2016 and 2019, S.K. lived in Monona County, Iowa with her father,

Kroll, and her younger brother N.K. (born 2013). Although S.K. had her own

bedroom, Kroll had her sleep in the room he shared with N.K. Kroll had S.K.

perform many parenting functions for N.K., including feeding him and putting him

to bed each night. S.K. testified that when she was thirteen, Kroll’s fiancée died, 3

and he would have S.K. sleep in his bed and touch her after N.K. went to sleep.

She described an incident when Kroll took off her clothes, had sexual intercourse

with her, ejaculated on her, and told her to clean it up. S.K. testified she told Kroll

to quit multiple times, but he didn’t. Kroll told S.K. not to tell anybody or she and

N.K. would be taken away and put into foster care. S.K. testified Kroll showed

concerning behaviors before the incident and in the following years—he grabbed

her thighs occasionally, criticized her body to his friends, let his friends make

inappropriate comments to her, and told her to wear a bikini or “shorty shorts.”

S.K. then described a second incident when she was fifteen years old. Kroll

had S.K. sleep in his bed with him, and N.K. had a smaller bed in the room. Kroll

rolled over, started touching her under her sports bra, then held her down, pulled

down her pants, and had intercourse while S.K. told him to quit. When N.K. started

to stir, Kroll finished on S.K.’s stomach and walked out. Kroll again told S.K. not

to tell or she would “get taken away” and never get to see him or N.K. again. S.K.

testified she was more concerned about not seeing N.K. again than never seeing

Kroll again.

A few months later—in late February 2019—S.K. told a friend, Blake Bellis,

what had happened. They started a group chat including S.K., Bellis and S.K.’s

classmates S.L. and Ethan Gray, “saying that we needed to tell the truth.” S.K.

testified part of her motive for telling her friends was “so it wouldn’t happen again.”

At Bellis’s urging, S.K. called the sheriff’s office the next morning to report Kroll; an

officer met her at school to get her statement. A worker from the Department of 4

Human Services (DHS)1 removed S.K. from Kroll’s custody that night and took her

to stay at her great-grandmother’s house. Before she left, Kroll asked “Did you tell

them what I did? Why did you do it?”

DHS told Kroll not to have any contact with S.K. during the investigation.

But soon after the DHS worker left her at her great-grandmother’s, Kroll showed

up at the residence wanting to see S.K. Kroll again told her not to tell what

happened, then he had S.K. take her password off her phone and give it to him;

Kroll took the phone and left. Shortly after, Kroll’s mother called and said she was

going to take S.K. home with her. While S.K. was riding with her grandmother to

Sioux City, Kroll called and talked with them through the vehicle’s Bluetooth

speakers. The next night, Kroll’s mother had S.K. “write him a letter to make him

feel better saying that none of it was true, that [she] made it up, and just to tell him

that [she] love[d] him.” S.K. testified her grandmother said if she did not write the

letter, she couldn’t watch TV or do her schoolwork. Kroll’s mother had S.K. hold

the letter up, telling her “to smile and act happy,” then she took a picture and sent

it to Kroll.

The next day, S.K. had an interview at the child advocacy center (CAC).

S.K. only talked to the interviewer about the incident from when she was thirteen

“because I thought we focused on the one.” She did not mention the second

incident in that interview, although the interviewer asked if there had been “any

other times recently.” She disclosed the second incident in a later interview.

1 In 2022, DHS and the Iowa Department of Public Health merged into the Iowa

Department of Health and Human Services. Because all relevant agency actions took place before the merger, we will refer to the agency as it was then—DHS. 5

Instead, during the first interview, she spoke of Kroll’s friends mocking her body

and that Kroll was “getting too close.” After the interview, the DHS worker asked

S.K. if she wanted to write another letter to Kroll, and she did: apologizing, saying

everything will be okay and she would miss him. Although DHS recommended a

medical exam of S.K., her grandmother refused it, saying “there was no need for

one.” S.K.’s grandmother was generally uncooperative with DHS and CAC during

the interview process. A few days later, S.K. went to stay with her mother.

During S.K.’s testimony, the State asked, “Is it fair to say at times you made

statements other than [what you testified to]?” and S.K. answered, “Yeah.”

S.L.

S.L. and S.K. met their freshman year of high school in fall 2017; S.L. soon

became S.K.’s best friend. They were usually at S.K.’s house. After a while, Kroll

started making inappropriate comments that made S.L. feel uncomfortable. Kroll

would tell S.L. “she needed to have sex because she was still a virgin as a

freshman in high school” and said he or his friends “would help her do it.” Kroll

nicknamed S.L. “chicken dick” because she wouldn’t have sex and constantly

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