State v. Brown

656 N.W.2d 355, 2003 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 18, 2003 WL 152325
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJanuary 23, 2003
Docket02-0076
StatusPublished
Cited by42 cases

This text of 656 N.W.2d 355 (State v. Brown) 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. Brown, 656 N.W.2d 355, 2003 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 18, 2003 WL 152325 (iowa 2003).

Opinion

CADY, Justice.

This appeal presents three issues arising from the prosecution of a criminal case involving a murder that occurred nearly twenty-six years ago. The first issue centers on the admissibility of statements by another alleged assailant, relayed by a “jailhouse snitch,” implicating the defendant in the murder. The second focuses on whether the delayed prosecution of the defendant amounts to a violation of the defendant’s due process rights. The final issue is whether trial counsel was ineffective. We affirm the judgment and sentence of the district court.

I. Background Facts and Proceedings.

On February 4, 1977, the body of A.W. “Bud” Wingler was found in the front seat of his car, which was parked at the intersection of 37th and Center Streets in Des Moines. Wingler had been shot three times with a .45 caliber weapon, once in the head and twice in the shoulder. Interviews with area residents indicated the car had been parked at the location sometime during the late evening of February 3 or the early morning of February 4. There were no witnesses to the shooting and no one saw an assailant or assailants leaving the scene. Three shell casings were found in the car. Two slugs were also recovered. The keys to the vehicle were not in the car or on Wingler’s person. Wingler’s wallet and some of his jewelry were also missing. His wallet, along with a .45 caliber handgun, a .45 caliber slug, and a brown glove were found in a wooded area in Des Moines six weeks later.

Des Moines Police Department investigators were able -to establish that Wingler had spent a portion of the evening of February 3 with a close female friend, but a clear picture of the events that followed after she left his company eluded them. Moreover, despite an extensive investigation, which included numerous interviews with various individuals, no clear suspect or suspects materialized. At the end of 1977, the case remained unsolved. In fact, aside from an occasional new lead, the case languished without any real development for over ten years.

In October 1989, James Burrows, an inmate at the Anamosa State Penitentiary, contacted the Des Moines police. Burrows indicated he had information pertinent to the long-dormant Wingler investigation. An investigator was soon sent to interview Burrows, who provided the police with a detailed description of Wingler’s murder.

Burrows explained that he and two acquaintances, Gary Thrasher and the appellant, Deny Brown, had gone to Wingler’s apartment in West Des Moines on February 3, 1977, intending to rob Wingler after he returned from dinner. Brown and Burrows later confronted Wingler in his garage upon his arrival home at the apartment complex. At that point, Burrows claimed, the men planned to rob Wingler *359 of his money and jewelry and escape to a getaway car, driven by Thrasher, which waited nearby. Brown deviated from this plan, however, by first ordering Wingler into the passenger seat of his car and then ordering Burrows to drive the car away from the apartment complex. Thrasher followed in the other vehicle. Then, as the men drove east along Interstate 235 toward downtown Des Moines, Brown shot and killed Wingler. He then ordered Burrows to exit the highway and park the car. Brown and Burrows left Wingler’s car, got in Thrasher’s car, and the three men left the scene. Later, Brown hid the murder weapon and some of Wingler’s possessions in a tree stump near Brown’s apartment. Brown and Burrows later sold a ring stolen from Wingler and combined the profit with money they had taken from his wallet. Both men took a portion of the total profit from the robbery. Burrows could not say whether Thrasher received a portion, partially because Thrasher had cut his ties with the men due to his apparent concern over Brown’s deviation from the original robbery plan. Brown and Burrows soon ended their association as well, and had little contact with each other after the robbery and murder.

Little is known about the course of events immediately after Burrows provided his story to the police. However, the new developments in the case were presented to the Polk County Attorney’s Office, which, for unknown reasons, declined to charge Brown, Burrows, or Thrasher for their alleged roles in the crime. The investigation went dormant once more.

In early 2001, the investigation into the unsolved Wingler murder was reopened, ostensibly at the behest of the victim’s daughter. The Des Moines police contacted a number of persons once again, including Burrows. The evidence in the case was reassessed. More importantly, two individuals, Kenny Bevard and Jeffrey Nall, came forward claiming Brown had made incriminating statements while incarcerated for another offense. Another inmate, Christopher Hawk, came forward claiming Thrasher also had made incriminating statements while incarcerated, including statements implicating Brown in Wingler’s murder. Bevard and Nall testified in depositions that Brown admitted to them that he shot Wingler. In particular, Bevard testified Brown told him intimate details of the crime during the period of time the men were cellmates. Hawk testified in a deposition that Thrasher told him he never would have been implicated in the crime if Brown had not confessed to a cellmate. The new information provided by Hawk, Bevard, and Nall, combined with the existing information in the case, was once again presented to the Polk County Attorney’s Office. This time, the county attorney, who was not in office in 1989, decided that a prosecution was warranted. Gary Thrasher and Deny Brown were soon arrested and charged with murder.

As Brown’s trial date approached, the parties sought a preliminary determination of the admissibility of Hawk’s testimony of Thrasher’s statement pertaining to Brown. The district court held that Hawk’s testimony was admissible. On November 5, 2001, Brown stipulated to a trial on the minutes of testimony provided in his case. The minutes included summary statements of numerous individuals interviewed between 1977 and 2001 as well as the contents of the depositions of Hawk, Bevard, and Nall. Brown was found guilty of murder in the second degree in violation of sections 690.1 and 690.3 of the 1977 Code of Iowa and was later sentenced in a manner tailored to 1977 sentencing standards. 1 *360 On January 7, 2002, Brown filed timely notice of appeal from the guilty verdict and sentencing. He raises three issues on appeal.

II. Hearsay Issues.

Brown’s first assertion on appeal is that the trial court committed reversible error by admitting and considering the statements of Gary Thrasher as relayed by Christopher Hawk. 2 Brown believes Hawk’s testimony amounted to double hearsay not within an exception to the Iowa Rules of Evidence. See Iowa R. Evid. 5.805. Moreover, he argues that the admission of the testimony violated his right to confront a witness against him in violation of the Confrontation Clause of the Sixth Amendment to the United States Constitution. U.S. Const, amend. VI. In resistance, the State first urges that Brown failed to preserve these issues for appeal. In the alternative, the State argues that Thrasher’s statement was admissible under an exception to the hearsay rule and does not violate the Confrontation Clause.

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Bluebook (online)
656 N.W.2d 355, 2003 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 18, 2003 WL 152325, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-brown-iowa-2003.