State Of Iowa Vs. Roger Paul Bentley

CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedOctober 31, 2008
Docket06–0476
StatusPublished

This text of State Of Iowa Vs. Roger Paul Bentley (State Of Iowa Vs. Roger Paul Bentley) 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. Roger Paul Bentley, (iowa 2008).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF IOWA No. 06–0476

Filed October 31, 2008

STATE OF IOWA,

Appellee,

vs.

ROGER PAUL BENTLEY,

Appellant.

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Johnson County, Patrick R.

Grady, Judge.

Defendant appeals jury verdicts of first-degree murder and first-

degree kidnapping. AFFIRMED.

Mark C. Smith, State Appellate Defender, and Theresa R. Wilson,

Assistant State Appellate Defender, for appellant.

Thomas J. Miller, Attorney General, Darrel L. Mullins, Assistant

Attorney General, and Janet M. Lyness, County Attorney, for appellee. 2

CADY, Justice.

In this direct appeal from a judgment and sentence of first-degree

kidnapping and first-degree murder, we review a variety of claims of trial

and sentencing errors. Upon our consideration of the appeal, we decline

to address one claim of ineffective assistance of counsel and reject all

other claims of error. We affirm the judgment and sentence of the

district court.

I. Background Facts and Proceedings.

J.G. was ten years of age when her life ended as a victim of

murder. The detailed events of her death are chronicled in this opinion

in order to properly address the issues raised in this appeal from the trial

where they were recounted by witnesses and memorialized as evidence.

We use the initials of the name of the victim to identify her in this

opinion in an effort to protect her memory from the brutal actions that

accompanied her death. See Iowa Code § 915.36(2) (2007).

J.G. lived with her grandmother, mother, and two younger siblings

in her grandmother’s two-story home in Cedar Rapids. J.G. was the

oldest child and maintained a bedroom in the basement of the home.

She attended a local grade school and was fond of wearing her “Chicago

Bears” jacket.

On the morning of March 25, 2005, police found J.G.’s lifeless

body in a filthy and deserted trailer home located on the Orval Yoder

Turnpike outside Cedar Rapids, several miles from her home. Her body

was inhumanely wedged into a bathroom vanity in the trailer home. She

had been brutally beaten, sexually abused, bound in plastic and

wrapped in duct tape. A plastic bag had been placed over her head and

wrapped with six rotations of tape around her neck. The cause of her 3

death was determined to be asphyxiation from the plastic bag and

compression to the neck and chest.

Roger Bentley was, ostensibly, a friend of J.G.’s family. On the

morning of March 24, 2005, the day before the grisly discovery of the

body of J.G., Bentley was at J.G.’s home for the purpose of making

repairs to the family van. Bentley worked outside the house on the van

for most of the day, but came into the house from time to time to warm

his body, especially as evening descended on the day. He stopped

working on the van at 7:30 p.m. and entered the house for the last time.

He went into the living room, sat down and engaged in conversation with

J.G.’s grandmother and the three children. J.G.’s mother was not at

home.

At 8 p.m., J.G.’s grandmother announced it was time for the three

children to go to bed. J.G. went downstairs to her bedroom by herself as

directed by her grandmother. The grandmother took the two younger

children to their upstairs bedroom and put them into bed. Bentley

accompanied J.G.’s grandmother and the two children up the stairs and

told the two children goodnight.

Bentley then left the house. However, the precise movements of

his departure are somewhat shrouded by the grandmother’s inability to

clearly articulate the events. Her testimony at trial permitted the State to

assert that Bentley left the house while she was still upstairs with the

two younger children. 1 Bentley claims her testimony can be viewed to

mean she showed him to the front door and locked the door behind him

as he left the house. Bentley did not testify at trial.

1J.G.’s grandmother testified: “Well, he went and said good night to—when I put

[J.G.’s sister] to bed, he said good night. And when I put [J.G.’s brother] to bed, he said good night. And then he went around to the front door and then—it was about 8:00 and then he left. Then I went down and locked the door.” 4

Under either view, J.G.’s grandmother locked the front door after

Bentley left the house. She later went downstairs to check on J.G. She

did not find J.G. in her bed. The fear she sensed intensified, as she was

unable to find J.G. in or around the house. She telephoned J.G.’s

mother and then the police. The police issued an AMBER alert 2 and

sought to locate Bentley.

Between 10:45 p.m. and 11 p.m. that evening, a motorist pulled to

the side of the road and stopped after he was flagged down by Bentley.

Bentley was in a pickup truck with a topper over the bed of the truck.

Bentley asked the motorist for directions to Black Diamond Road. This

road accesses Orval Yoder Turnpike. The motorist provided directions to

Bentley, but did not observe anyone in the cab of the truck with Bentley.

The topper had tinted windows, which did not allow the motorist to view

the truck bed.

The next morning, Robin Walker and Danny Hill were home getting

ready for work. They heard the AMBER alert on the morning news

broadcast. The alert announced J.G. was missing and that police were

looking for Bentley. Walker and Hill were almost immediately overcome

with suspicion that Bentley may have taken J.G. to the trailer on

Orval Yoder Turnpike. Bentley occasionally did automobile repair work

for them, and he had accompanied Walker and Hill to the trailer three

days earlier. Walker and Hill were interested in purchasing the trailer.

They promptly called police about their prophetic feeling.

A short time later, law enforcement officers converged on the

trailer. Bentley emerged from the rear door of the trailer and was taken

2“The AMBER alert program is a cooperative effort of the department of public safety, the department of transportation, the lottery authority, the Iowa association of broadcasters, the Iowa state association of sheriffs and deputies, local law enforcement agencies, and the national weather service.” Iowa Admin. Code r. 661—89.200 (2003). 5

into custody. Officers observed that he was “scruffy,” “unkempt,” and

“unshaven.” He was wearing jeans with blood on the fabric in the area of

the front zipper.

Officers entered the trailer. They found it in a general state of

disarray. In a bedroom, a youth-sized “Chicago Bears” jacket was

observed, along with a child’s pink tennis shoe. Officers also observed a

substance later determined to be blood on the mattress in the bedroom.

Officers called out for J.G., with no response. A hurried search by

the officers of the other rooms of the trailer failed to reveal her presence.

The officers did observe a filing cabinet and a large piece of wood

positioned in front of the vanity in the bathroom.

A canine unit was summoned to the trailer to search for J.G. After

an unsuccessful search of the wooded area surrounding the trailer, the

dog and his handler went into the trailer. Within a short period of time,

the dog alerted to the area of the vanity under the sink in the bathroom.

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