State Of Iowa Vs. Jeffrey Lewis Spencer

CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedAugust 3, 2007
Docket50 / 06-0565
StatusPublished

This text of State Of Iowa Vs. Jeffrey Lewis Spencer (State Of Iowa Vs. Jeffrey Lewis Spencer) 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 Vs. Jeffrey Lewis Spencer, (iowa 2007).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF IOWA No. 50 / 06-0565

Filed August 3, 2007

STATE OF IOWA,

Appellant,

vs.

JEFFREY LEWIS SPENCER,

Appellee.

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Marshall County, Carl D.

Baker, Judge.

The State requests discretionary review of a district court ruling

granting the defendant’s motion to suppress tape-recorded evidence.

REVERSED AND CASE REMANDED FOR FURTHER PROCEEDINGS.

Thomas J. Miller, Attorney General, Karen Doland, Assistant Attorney

General, Jennifer Miller, County Attorney, and Paul G. Crawford, Assistant

County Attorney, for appellant.

Brandon Brown of Parrish, Kruidenier, Moss, Dunn, Boles, Gribble,

and Cook, L.L.P., Des Moines, for appellee. 2

WIGGINS, Justice.

The State requests discretionary review of a district court order

suppressing tape recordings of conversations allegedly containing evidence

of sexual abuse between the defendant and his alleged minor victim. The

minor’s father made the recordings without the prior consent of either the

minor or the defendant. The district court found because there was no

prior consent to record, the recordings violated Iowa Code chapter 808B

(2005). Because we interpret section 808B.2(2)(c) to allow a parent to

consent to the recording of conversations between his minor child and the

defendant under the vicarious consent doctrine, we reverse the district

court order and remand the case for further proceedings.

I. Background Facts and Proceedings.

Jeffrey Spencer was a teacher at Lenihan School. Lenihan School

houses a specialized program for students with behavioral and scholastic

problems. A.T. transferred to Lenihan about six weeks before the end of the

2005 school year. Spencer taught A.T. in the specialized program. At the

time, A.T. was thirteen years old and in the eighth grade. Spencer was

forty-two years old.

A.T. lived with her father, Arnold Thompson. During the summer of

2005, Thompson became suspicious of A.T.’s relationship with Spencer.

Thompson based this suspicion on what he described as “a bunch of little

things.” For example after school was out, Thompson picked up his home

telephone while A.T. was placing a call and heard “a man’s voice on a voice

recorder.” Thompson did not recognize the voice. Suspicious, he asked A.T.

whose voice he heard over the phone. She informed him it was Spencer’s

voice. Thompson asked A.T. why she was calling Spencer. A.T. explained

she was checking on some grades. Thompson reminded A.T. her grades 3

had already been released a week before. Thompson became even more

suspicious of the phone call after observing A.T. with her two friends. After

questioning A.T. about the phone call, Thompson testified her two friends

“piped in” and added, “Mr. Spencer’s really cool and so on and so forth.”

Thompson told A.T. not to contact Spencer while school was out.

A.T. and her friends left Thompson’s home. Shortly thereafter

Thompson received a phone call from one of the friend’s mother. The

mother informed Thompson she overheard the three girls talking about

Spencer and A.T. The mother told Thompson that his suspicions were true.

During the last week in June Thompson was unexpectedly at home.

At about ten in the morning the phone rang, Thompson answered, and

found Spencer on the other end. Spencer asked Thompson if he could

speak with A.T. Thompson thought that Spencer “sounded a little

surprised” after Thompson answered the phone instead of A.T. Thompson

also noted the number Spencer called from that morning appeared on his

caller identification for “a few weeks here and there.”

Thompson’s suspicions were also raised when he discovered Spencer

took A.T. on a second swimming field trip to a lake after the school year

ended. Finally, Thompson’s suspicions of Spencer were heightened

because, although unconfirmed, he heard rumors that Spencer had been

sexually involved with a fifteen- or sixteen-year-old girl.

On June 14, 2005, Thompson reported his concerns to the

Marshalltown police. Thompson advised the police of his fears and that “he

planned to further investigate by placing a recorder on his telephone.”

Thompson testified he began recording his home telephone on either

June 29 or 30. He never told his daughter or Spencer that he was recording

the phone calls. However, A.T. knew Thompson had a recorder and 4

previously asked her father if he had been recording her telephone

conversations. At that time, Thompson was not recording the telephone

conversations and told A.T. as much.

On July 6 Thompson called the Marshalltown police and informed the

police he had recorded several phone conversations between Spencer and

A.T. that contained inappropriate content of a sexual nature. Out of

concern for the legality of the recordings, the police did not listen to the

recordings, but instead had Thompson inform an officer of the tapes’

content.

An investigation took place, and on September 29, Spencer was

charged with sexual exploitation by a school employee in violation of Iowa

Code sections 709.15(1)(f), (g) and 709.15(3)(a); indecent contact with a

child in violation of section 709.12(1) or (2); and lascivious contact with a

minor in violation of section 709.14.

Spencer pled not guilty to all three charges. Claiming Thompson’s

recordings violated Iowa Code chapter 808B because neither Spencer nor

A.T. gave prior consent to record, Spencer filed a motion to suppress the

tape recordings of the conversations between himself and A.T. The State

resisted and urged the district court to interpret the statute to include the

vicarious consent doctrine and find Thompson can and did vicariously

consent on behalf of his daughter, A.T., to the recording.

After finding the vicarious consent doctrine had not previously been

applied in Iowa and declining to adopt the doctrine itself, the district court

granted Spencer’s motion to suppress. The district court prohibited

admission of the recordings of the conversations between A.T. and Spencer

and any testimony pertaining to these recordings. 5

The State applied for discretionary review. We granted the State’s

application and stayed the district court proceedings until the resolution of

this issue.

II. Issue and Scope of Review.

The sole issue in this case is whether chapter 808B bars the

admission of Thompson’s recordings of the telephone conversations between

A.T. and Spencer. Therefore, because this issue is one of statutory

interpretation, the standard of review is for correction of errors at law. State

v. Hornik, 672 N.W.2d 836, 838 (Iowa 2003).

III. Analysis.

A person violates the Iowa interception of communications act by

willfully intercepting oral communications that are not otherwise exempt

from or subject to an exception contained in chapter 808B. Iowa Code

§ 808B.2. If an interception is in violation of chapter 808B, the evidence is

barred from any court proceeding. Id. § 808B.7.

The State claims the recordings of the telephone conversations do not

violate chapter 808B because Thompson meets the consent exception

contained in the chapter.

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