Court Opinion

ID: 9839584
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-09-13 15:07:15.336664+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:45:33.572408
License: Public Domain

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

                                      No. 22-0961
                               Filed September 13, 2023

JEROME POWER,
    Applicant-Appellant,

vs.

STATE OF IOWA,
     Respondent-Appellee.
________________________________________________________________

      Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Linn County, Paul D. Miller, Judge.

      Jerome Power appeals the denial of his application for postconviction relief.

AFFIRMED.

      Kent A. Simmons, Bettendorf, for appellant.

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

General, for appellee State.

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

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

(2023).
                                          2

DANILSON, Senior Judge.

       Jerome Power appeals the denial of his application for postconviction relief

(PCR) following his conviction for first-degree murder. Power contends his trial

counsel was ineffective in failing to “investigate and present a defense based on

the medical condition of his right hand,” and PCR counsel was ineffective in failing

to advance his claim against trial counsel. Upon our review, we affirm.

I.     Background Facts and Proceedings

       In 2012, a jury found Power guilty of first-degree murder.          This court

previously set forth the following facts surrounding the incident leading to Power’s

charge as follows:

               On September 19, 2010, just after the ten o’clock news, sixty-
       eight-year-old Doris Bevins called her friend, Phillip Bemer, to
       discuss the next day’s weather. While on the phone Phillip heard
       someone beating on Doris’s door. He advised her against answering
       it. She told Phillip she “wasn’t scared of nobody” and wanted to know
       “who in the hell was at her door at this time of night.” When Doris
       answered the door, a man asked her if she had a gas or an electric
       stove. Doris first responded: “[I]t’s a gas stove.” Then Phillip heard
       her say: “What do you want?” and “Get the hell out of here.” Doris
       next screamed: “Help. Oh, Lord help me.” After that, Phillip heard a
       gurgling noise and a loud thud, which gave him “cold chills on the
       other end of the phone.”
               Phillip called 911, and the police arrived at Doris’s apartment
       a few minutes later. When the officers arrived, they announced their
       presence before they were forced to break down the apartment door.
       When they entered, the officers found Doris on the floor with her
       nightgown pulled over her head and a pair of pajama bottoms tied
       tightly around her neck. Emergency responders tried to resuscitate
       her but with no luck. They took Doris to the hospital where she died
       two days later. The medical examiner determined the cause of death
       to be ligature strangulation.
               Soon after discovering Doris police saw Jerome Power
       standing in the doorway of Doris’s kitchen. Power and his girlfriend,
       Mary Meier, lived in the apartment upstairs from Doris. Officers
       placed Power under arrest at gunpoint. When they searched Power,
       police found a cigarette lighter, a stocking cap, a red LED light, a cell
       phone, and a charger. Power told officers at least three times he
                                            3

         wanted them to give his keys and the cell phone to Meier. The phone
         was later identified as belonging to Doris.
                 As police were taking Power to their squad car, he started
         yelling that he had seen a black male running out of Doris’s
         apartment. During an interview at the station, Power told detectives
         he saw Terry Wilson, a white man, exit the apartment. Power also
         told them he called 911 from Doris’s apartment and gave her CPR
         but later admitted those statements were not true.
                 Power later sent a letter to investigators, dated July 13, 2011,
         casting aspersions on a black male whom Power allegedly saw on
         the night in question. In his trial testimony, Power told the jury he
         went to Doris’s apartment because she asked him to inflate an air
         mattress for her. He said he locked Doris’s front door “just out of
         force of habit.” He testified he walked to the back of the apartment
         to look for the air pump and did not see Doris on the floor until after
         he heard the police pounding on the door. He said he was going to
         the door when the police knocked it down.

State v. Power, No. 13-0052, 2014 WL 2600214, at *1 (Iowa Ct. App. June 11,

2014).

         The court affirmed Power’s conviction on direct appeal, rejecting his

challenges to the sufficiency of the evidence, the trial court’s instructing the jury

with an Allen charge,1 and the trial court’s denial of Power’s request for substitute

counsel.     The court preserved Power’s ineffective-assistance-of-counsel claim

relating to counsel’s failure to “pursu[e] the theory that his hand injury left him

unable to strangle the victim” for possible PCR proceedings. See id. at *3.

         Power filed a PCR application again raising that claim.2 Following trial, the

PCR court denied the application. Power appealed.

1 “The common name for verdict-urging or ‘dynamite’ instructions comes from Allen

v. United States, 164 U.S. 492, 501 (1896).” See Power, 2014 WL 2600214, at *1
n.1.
2 Power also raised additional claims of ineffective assistance of counsel, which

were rejected by the PCR court. But he does not challenge those findings on
appeal.
                                           4

II.    Standard of Review

       “We generally review a district court’s denial of an application for

postconviction relief for errors at law.” Doss v. State, 961 N.W.2d 701, 709 (Iowa

2021). However, our review is de novo “[w]hen the basis for relief implicates a

violation of a constitutional dimension,” including claims of ineffective assistance

of counsel. Id. (alteration in original) (quoting Moon v. State, 911 N.W.2d 137, 142

(Iowa 2018)); see Sothman v. State, 967 N.W.2d 512, 522 (Iowa 2021).

III.   Discussion

       To prevail on a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel, Power must show

(1) counsel breached an essential duty and (2) prejudice resulted. See Strickland

v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668, 687 (1984). “We may affirm the district court’s

rejection of an ineffective-assistance-of-counsel claim if either element is lacking.”

Anfinson v. State, 758 N.W.2d 496, 499 (Iowa 2008).

       On appeal, Power challenges the PCR court’s denial of his claim that trial

counsel was ineffective in failing to present evidence showing it was physically

impossible for him to have committed the crime and PCR counsel was ineffective

in failing to advance his claim of trial counsel’s ineffectiveness. Specifically, he

contends: “[P]ostconviction trial counsel failed to effectively prepare, litigate, and

argue the claim that [he] could not have tied the knot used to inflict ligature

strangulation and failed to call an expert witness who could have provided material

testimony to demonstrate the ineffective assistance of counsel in the criminal trial.”

The following facts are relevant to this claim.

       At Power’s criminal trial, his girlfriend testified that “in the last five or six

years,” Power was hospitalized for “an infection in his knuckle and it went up his
                                           5

arm.” As a result of the infection, “[h]e couldn’t make a fist.” Power also testified

about his infection, stating it “fused bones together, the joints together” resulting in

“permanent damage” to his hand. He demonstrated the function of his hand for

the jury, stating, “I can’t bend this finger. I can’t bend this finger. Sometimes my

thumb, it locks up. See, I have to unlock it.”

       At the scene of the crime, police discovered Doris lying on the floor with “a

pair of pajama pants which were tied tightly around her neck.” Officer Sarah Lacina

testified, “I reached out to untie them” and “[i]t was tied tightly enough that I had to

kind of get a good grip and dig my fingers in to release the tie of the pajama pants

and then check for a pulse.”

       On appeal, Power contends, “It was highly unlikely [he] could have so tightly

tied that knot in the way Officer Lacina found it” due to his lack of hand function.

Power claims his trial and PCR counsel were ineffective in failing to investigate

and present a defense based on the medical condition of his right hand. 3 He

acknowledges counsel “did get his medical records” but states “they did not obtain

an expert for him.” According to Power, “So basically what it came down to, [trial

counsel] Steve Addington and Jason Dunn only obtained the medical records, but

3 Power acknowledged his girlfriend testified that he could not make a fist.    He also
testified as follows:
                 Q. And did you mention your injury and not being able to make
        a fist to the jury? A. To my recollection, I believe I did. I even showed
        the jury my whole hand, my hand, the injuries.
                 Q. When you testified do you remember saying anything to
        the effect of there’s no way I could have done this, anything like that?
        A. That’s correct.
                                        6

they would not call the doctors that I requested that treated me.” Power believed

“a medical opinion would have actually weighed a lot.”

      Dunn testified he and Power discussed Power’s hand condition “at length,”

but “it wasn’t anything that we could hang our hat on.” Dunn explained:

              So Jerome had brought this to our attention early on and
      indicated, you know, it was physically impossible for him to strangle
      this victim. We did do a deposition of the state medical examiner,
      Dr. Thompson. And I believe during that deposition I posed the
      question to him, you know, how much pressure or strength—I forget
      exactly how I put it—would it take, you know, to—you know, to
      basically cut someone’s air off in a manner such as Doris was
      believed to have been killed. And that was, I think, pajama bottoms
      around her neck and being strangled to death. And the medical
      examiner, I believe his testimony was it was like ten pounds or less,
      so not very much.
              And, again, it wasn’t ever a serious—to me it was never a
      serious point of contention or really something that we would want to
      pursue because of just the—again, it wouldn’t take very much
      pressure, and you could do it with your off hand. And Jerome had
      told the police at some point that he had tried to provide CPR to
      Ms. Bevins as part of his testimony I think either when he was
      arrested or at trial, trying to help her.
              So this whole idea that he wasn’t physically capable of doing
      this was—I mean, did not comport with the facts that—or just what it
      would take to actually get that done. And despite his—you know, it
      was something he repeated. I don’t want to minimize that at all. But
      it was just never a—it was never a strategy that I thought was wise
      or something that would ever gain any—there’s more pitfalls to that
      idea than there was any benefit that we might get, again, because it
      doesn’t take hardly any pressure at all to strangle someone,
      apparently . . . .

      Dunn then reiterated, “[I]t was certainly something that I would want to stay

away from because, again, ten pounds isn’t very much. It wasn’t a fact that I was

interested in highlighting at all,” where “the proper response would be, well, you

could use your other hand.” In short, Dunn stated “it was never a serious theory

for us to pursue” because “I don’t think we could have even, had we tried, gotten
                                          7

any medical expert to come in and say what Mr. Power wanted him to say just from

the mere fact, I guess, less than ten pounds is all it takes to strangle someone out.”

       In ruling on Power’s claim, the PCR court found:

       At his jury trial, both Power and his girlfriend testified that Power’s
       hand injury (difficulty bending two fingers on his right hand) would
       prevent him from strangling someone. The jury obviously found this
       testimony unconvincing. Power argues that trial counsel should
       have offered medical testimony to support this contention. At this
       hearing, the Court admitted Power’s medical records (Petitioner’s
       Exhibit 1) and x-ray scans of his hand (Petitioner’s Exhibit 3). The
       medical records show limited motion in his PIP joint, mild coronal
       plane abnormality, passive flexion limited to sixty-five degrees and
       flexion to fifty degrees. Power contends that a doctor could have
       given opinion testimony confirming his claim. However, at the post-
       conviction trial, Power did not present expert testimony confirming
       that his hand injury would have prevented or impeded his ability to
       strangle someone.
               ....
               It is undisputed that Power had finger injuries. He testified to
       them in detail at trial and this hearing. At this PCR hearing, he
       presented no expert medical testimony to support his assertion that
       his injury physically precluded him from strangling another. I also
       note that at the underlying criminal trial, the state medical examiner,
       Dr. John Thompson, testified that the cause of death was ligature
       strangulation and that “it doesn’t actually take that much force to
       occlude the blood vessels in the neck” (to strangle someone)
       (Respondent’s Exhibit B, pgs. 13-14). At this hearing, trial counsel
       testified that he discussed with Power his finger injury at length and
       didn’t feel the injuries were severe enough to preclude use of his
       hand. Based on the medical examiner’s testimony that it did not take
       much force to occlude the blood vessels in the neck and strangle
       someone, trial counsel made a strategic decision to not present
       medical testimony. Trial counsel also felt this potential medical
       evidence was inconsistent with Power’s claim (and trial testimony)
       that he was trying to help the victim by administering CPR. Finally,
       trial counsel testified that “We vetted that concern of Mr. Power (the
       use of medical testimony) pretty thoroughly and made sufficient
       record, I believe, regarding our decision not to go that route. And I
       believe that decision is sound today.”
               ....
               Under the record before me and considering the medical
       examiner’s testimony, the fact that Power did not present medical
       testimony at this hearing and trial counsel’s strategic decision, I FIND
       that Power has failed to meet his burden of proof and establish that
                                          8

       he was prejudiced by trial counsel’s alleged breach. In the
       alternative, I FIND that Power has failed to meet his burden of proof
       and establish that trial counsel violated an essential duty.

       We concur in the court’s assessment.               Under these facts and

circumstances, even with a medical expert the result of the trial would not have

changed.    Nor would a different result have been reached if the expert was

presented at the PCR hearing. In sum, there is no probability of a different result

had trial or PCR counsel attempted to further Power’s hand-function claim with

expert testimony. As this court previously observed, “The State’s evidence did not

leave much room for the jury to wonder ‘whodunit.’”          Power was in Doris’s

apartment when police arrived, the door was locked, and he did not respond to the

police at the door nor was he observed lending any aid to Doris. Power also had

Doris’s cell phone in his pocket and asked police to give the phone to his girlfriend,

Doris’s friend overheard much of the attack on the phone, Power lied to police

about calling 911, and Power’s claim that a person by the name of Terry Wilson

was to blame proved false.      Power’s claimed inability to tie a knot does not

overcome the overwhelming evidence of his guilt. We affirm the court’s denial of

Power’s PCR application and conclude Power has failed to prove he was

prejudiced by PCR counsel’s failure to present testimony of a medical expert.

       AFFIRMED.