State of Iowa v. Vester Matthew Rawlins

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedAugust 30, 2023
Docket22-1259
StatusPublished

This text of State of Iowa v. Vester Matthew Rawlins (State of Iowa v. Vester Matthew Rawlins) 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.

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State of Iowa v. Vester Matthew Rawlins, (iowactapp 2023).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

No. 22-1259 Filed August 30, 2023

STATE OF IOWA, Plaintiff-Appellee,

vs.

VESTER MATTHEW RAWLINS, Defendant-Appellant. ________________________________________________________________

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Polk County, Coleman McAllister

(preliminary questions of admissibility) and Jeanie Vaudt (motion in limine, trial,

and sentencing), Judges.

A defendant appeals his criminal convictions, challenging the admission of

evidence and failure to merge the convictions. REVERSED AND REMANDED.

Martha J. Lucey, State Appellate Defender, and Josh Irwin, Assistant

Appellate Defender, for appellant.

Brenna Bird, Attorney General, and Timothy M. Hau, Assistant Attorney

General, for appellee.

Considered by Ahlers, P.J., Badding, J., and Potterfield, S.J.*

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

(2023). 2

BADDING, Judge.

Faced with unavailable witnesses in a domestic-violence prosecution, the

State relied on a 911 call recording and body-cam footage from a responding

police officer to prove its case against Vester Matthew Rawlins. With that

evidence, a jury convicted Rawlins of simple assault and domestic abuse assault

causing bodily injury. Rawlins appeals both convictions,1 raising several claims,

including that the district court erred in admitting the body-cam footage because it

contained testimonial statements that violated his right to confrontation. We

reverse and remand for a new trial.

I. Background Facts and Proceedings

On November 23, 2021, at 2:17 a.m., an unidentified female called 911 and

provided the address of an apartment as it was being told to her by someone else.

After receiving the address, the dispatcher questioned: “What’s going on there?”

The caller responded in a hushed and hurried voice: “I—it’s just—it’s bad, uhm.”

The dispatcher told the caller that she could barely hear her, and the caller

responded: “I know, I—I need you guys to be here real soon.” The dispatcher

asked what was happening, and the caller answered that “someone is assaulting

someone else.” Faint yelling could be heard in the background. When asked

whether any weapons were involved, the caller said that she didn’t know for sure.

In response to further questions, the caller explained it was “male versus

female,” the suspect’s name was “Matt,” and he was assaulting his wife, who had

asked her to call 911. The dispatcher then asked for a description of “Matt” in case

1 Rawlins was granted discretionary review as to his conviction for simple assault. 3

he took off. The caller said he was white and 6’2”. After the dispatcher asked what

he was wearing, the yelling in the background got louder. There was a long pause,

and then the caller said, “I have to go.” The yelling escalated, continuing until the

call ended.

The dispatcher classified the call “as a priority one, domestic fight,” which

meant it would be “dispatched immediately” because the caller “said there was an

assault currently taking place.” Officer Tyler Kelley got to the apartment around

2:20 a.m., about three minutes after the call came in. Footage from the officer’s

body cam shows that he was met at the front door of the apartment by a black

male. Officer Kelley immediately asked: “Anybody yelling in here or anything?”

The male calmly responded, “Uh, yeah, there was a little bit of shouting going on,”

as he led the officer into the apartment. Officer Kelley followed the male into the

living room, where one female was sitting on a couch and another was sitting on a

chair in the corner with a towel over her mouth. Officer Kelley asked, “Is the

problem still here?” The male and one of the females simultaneously responded.

The female stated: “I think he went out the door, I think he went out the downstairs

door,” while the male said: “Uh, no, he went out the back door. Like right when he

saw a car pull up, man he just wigged out.”

Officer Kelley then questioned: “So what happened I guess, or what’s, just

yelling or what’s going on?” The female in the corner with the towel over her mouth

responded: “No, he physically—he knocked my tooth out, he busted me in the

face.” The other female stated: “Her nose is all bruised.” Officer Kelley responded,

“Oh, okay,” and pulled out his pen and notepad while another officer asked:

“What’s he wearing?” The group collectively responded jeans and a green hoodie. 4

Officer Kelley asked the injured female her relationship with the suspect, and she

said they were husband and wife. He then asked for her name, date of birth, and

phone number, as well as “his name,” date of birth, and residence. She gave the

officer that information, identifying Rawlins by name. Officer Kelley wrote the

information down as it was given to him and asked again, “Alright so what

happened tonight?” Rawlins’s wife described the assault in more detail, with some

input from the other two witnesses.

A warrant was issued for Rawlins’s arrest, and he was caught about one

week later. In late December, Rawlins’s wife moved to terminate the no-contact

order issued after his arrest. She stated, “I have thought long and hard and have

decided to recant any previous statements I have made. I will not testify against

my husband in any further proceedings.” The State proceeded with its

prosecution, filing a trial information in January 2022 that charged Rawlins with

assault without intent causing serious injury, first-degree harassment, and

domestic abuse assault causing bodily injury. The trial information was later

amended to remove the harassment charge.

After the three witnesses at the apartment failed to appear for defense

depositions, the State moved for a preliminary determination of the admissibility of

the 911 call and body-cam footage under Iowa Rule of Evidence 5.104. The State

argued the statements made in those recordings would not violate the

Confrontation Clause if the witnesses were unavailable for trial because they were

“made during an ongoing emergency investigation” and were therefore

nontestimonial. As for the hearsay obstacle to admissibility, the State argued the

statements qualified as present sense impressions, excited utterances, and 5

residual hearsay. Rawlins resisted, asserting the statements were testimonial

hearsay not subject to an exception.

An evidentiary hearing was held in May, at which the 911 call, the full thirty-

minute version of the body-cam footage, and Officer Kelley’s deposition were

admitted. The court also admitted the State’s redacted body-cam video, clocking

in at about twelve minutes, that omitted the parts where the officer was “sitting in

his car or walking back and forth.” After considering this evidence, the court ruled

that the statements made during the 911 call and the first 2:25 minutes of the

State’s redacted body-cam video—up until Officer Kelley asked a second time,

“Alright so what happened tonight?”—were nontestimonial. The court deferred

ruling on whether those statements met a hearsay exception, but definitively

excluded any statements after the 2:25 mark “absent production by the State of

the declarants at trial so that they are available for cross-examination.”

On the morning of trial a few weeks later, Rawlins filed a motion in limine

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State of Iowa v. Vester Matthew Rawlins, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-iowa-v-vester-matthew-rawlins-iowactapp-2023.