State v. Bayles

551 N.W.2d 600, 1996 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 320, 1996 WL 332976
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJune 19, 1996
Docket94-2009
StatusPublished
Cited by64 cases

This text of 551 N.W.2d 600 (State v. Bayles) 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 v. Bayles, 551 N.W.2d 600, 1996 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 320, 1996 WL 332976 (iowa 1996).

Opinion

LAVORATO, Justice.

Edgar Karrol Bayles appeals from a judgment of conviction and sentence for kidnapping in the first degree. See Iowa Code §§ 710.1(3), 710.2 (1993). He raises three issues. First, he contends the district court abused its discretion by admitting character evidence concerning other crimes, which he claims was irrelevant and unfairly prejudicial. Second, he contends the evidence was insufficient to establish his guilt on the charge. Last, he contends his trial counsel were ineffective because they failed to object to alleged instances of prosecutorial misconduct. We affirm.

1. Background Facts.

Viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the State, we think the jury could find the following facts. Bayles met J.W. in 1976 when he was thirty and she was fifteen. They moved to Colorado where J.W. *602 had Bayles’ son, whom they named Carlos. She was sixteen at the time.

Over time, Bayles increasingly exerted control over J.W. During the relationship J.W. endured Bayles’ physical and mental abuse. Things became even worse after Carlos’ birth. J.W. eventually left Bayles and returned to Des Moines with Carlos.

Bayles followed her back to Des Moines. Bayles then left for Arizona. While there, he was arrested for the kidnapping and repeated rape of a fifteen-year-old girl. He was convicted on several charges and served a fifteen-year sentence. J.W. initially corresponded with Bayles. She never went to see him and eventually severed all ties. Bayles was paroled in February 1993.

J.W.’s next contact with Bayles occurred on August 21, 1993, when he appeared unannounced at her Des Moines home. She testified that she was stunned to see Bayles. He told her he was back in town, and wanted to discuss Carlos’ future with her. At the time Carlos was residing in the Polk County Youth Shelter because of juvenile problems.

Bayles moved into J.W.’s home early in September. The couple reestablished their intimate relationship, but the situation soon began to deteriorate. Bayles again became controlling and abusive. J.W. told him to go back to his wife in Indiana, or get a job and find a place of his own. She told friends and coworkers that she was concerned Bayles would harm her.

Despite J.W.’s repeated requests, Bayles refused to leave her home. On October 10, J.W. left out of fear. She stayed overnight with a friend, returning the next day to retrieve some clothing. A neighbor accompanied her inside. They saw Bayles talking on the telephone. J.W. refused to take the phone from Bayles because she was afraid to get too close to him.

Again J.W. asked Bayles to leave and he refused. She went to a neighbor’s house and called the police. Bayles finally left J.W.’s home after talking with the responding officer. When Bayles left, his car was packed with his belongings. J.W. told Bayles she did not want him around anymore. To J.W.’s knowledge, Bayles had no keys to enter her home.

J.W. told neighbors that if they ever saw Bayles’ car at her house, they should notify the police. She told friends and coworkers that she was afraid Bayles was going to kill her.

On the night of October 11, J.W. stayed with a friend. She was afraid Bayles would come back to her home. She did not go to work the following day because she was afraid Bayles knew where she worked.

On the night of October 12, J.W. again stayed with a friend. She finally returned to work the following day. On that day, Bayles unexpectedly appeared at a convenience store where J.W. was taking a work break with eoworkers. He came up behind her and spoke to her. She turned around and saw it was Bayles; she noticed he had shaved his head. She was scared and left the store without talking to him.

That evening J.W. stayed with a friend. She worked the next day, Thursday, October 14. After work, she returned home. Because she was afraid, she asked a friend to spend the night there. He gave her a gun for protection, loaded the chamber with a live round, and told her just to point it and pull the trigger if she had to defend herself. During the evening Bayles called her; she told him she did not want to talk to him and that she was afraid of him.

The next day — Friday, October 15 — J.W. went to work. She saw a car that looked like Bayles’ pass by where she was parked. That evening she spent the night at a motel in Indianola. She chose to go to the motel instead of going to friends because she was afraid Bayles would find her.

The following day, J.W. had her brother change the locks on the doors in her home. Her son could not find his house key so she feared Bayles had taken it. She told her brother she wanted the locks changed because she was afraid of Bayles and was afraid to be in the house alone. For the first time in a week, J.W. spent the night in her own home.

The next day, Sunday, J.W. visited her son and attended to some personal matters. Be *603 fore leaving home that morning, she put a roast in the crock pot because she had invited her brother for supper. She returned home about 6:30 in the evening, checked the roast, and put the loaded gun she had been carrying on the vanity next to her bed.

She then went to the basement door to let her dog out. As she approached the door, Bayles grabbed her from behind. He held a knife to her throat, saying “Shut up or I’ll dust you right now.” The knife he was using was one that he carried all the time. He taped her mouth and wrists with duct tape, threw her purse and a coat over her arms, and led her to her car.

Bayles drove J.W.’s car to a nearby hospital parking lot where he had left his ear. He transferred J.W. to his ear. At this point he taped J.W.’s legs together with the duct tape. He drove east on Interstate 80.

On this drive, Bayles repeatedly threatened to kill J.W. Specifically, he (1) asked her whether she would like to swim in the Dubuque River, (2) warned her his car could do over 100 miles per hour and that anyone thrown out at that speed would be killed, and (3) told her he had shaved his head so that when her body was discovered there would be no hair evidence to connect him to her.

Bayles stopped the car at a Newton motel. He left J.W. bound in the car, and went inside to register. When he returned, he removed the duct tape from J.W.’s legs and took her into the motel room.

J.W. was shivering, so she asked Bayles if she could get under the covers. He let her do so but only after insisting she take off all of her clothes. Then he told her she was lucky he was only going to have sex with her because what he really ought to do is drown her in the tub.

Ultimately, J.W. and Bayles twice engaged in intercourse after he threatened to drown her in the bathtub. At all times the knife Bayles carried was on a bedside table within his reach. J.W. did not want to have sex with him but did so — in her words — “to survive.” She decided on this course of action because of the violent things Bayles told her he had done in the past. She also thought that if she would be nice to him and tell him what he wanted to hear, he might let her live.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
551 N.W.2d 600, 1996 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 320, 1996 WL 332976, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-bayles-iowa-1996.