In the Interest of J.A.L., Minor Child,
J.A.L., Minor Child, Appellant.
Supreme Court of Iowa.
*750 Curtis Puеtz of Puetz Law Office, P.C., Sioux Center, for appellant.
Thomas J. Miller, Attorney General, Kevin Cmelik, Assistant Attorney General, and Coleman J. McCallister, Assistant County Attorney, for appellee.
WIGGINS, Justice.
The juvenile court adjudicated J.A.L., a minor, a delinquent child after the court concluded J.A.L. falsely reported the placement of an explosive device in violation of Iowa Code section 712.7 (2003). At the hearing, the juvenile court admitted J.A.L.'s journal entries as character evidence. J.A.L. appeals the juvenile court's decision arguing his journal entries were not admissible, and the State failed to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that J.A.L. violated section 712.7. Although we agree with J.A.L. that the journal entries were inadmissible as character or other-acts evidence, we nevertheless affirm the finding of delinquency by the juvenile court because the admissible evidence established J.A.L. violated section 712.7 beyond a reasonable doubt.
I. Proceedings.
The State filed a delinquency petition alleging on or about March 4, 2004, J.A.L. "did knowingly convey false information concerning the placement of an explosive device оr material at the West Sioux Community High School, in violation of Iowa Code section 712.7." Iowa Code section 712.7 provides:
A person who, knowing the information to be false, conveys or causes to be conveyed to any person any false information concerning the placement of any incendiary or explosive device or material or other destructive substance or device in any place where persons or property would be endangered commits a class "D" felony.
Iowa Code § 712.7.
Before trial J.A.L. filed a motion in limine. His motion asked the court to exclude his personal journals and notes *751 found by his foster mother in his foster home. These materials contained disturbing handwritten messages of blood, murder, and death. The juvenile сourt took the motion under advisement. At the hearing, the juvenile court admitted the evidence subject to the motion. In a separate ruling filed at the same time it filed its delinquency order, the juvenile court denied the motion concluding the offered exhibits constitute "`evidence of a pertinent trait of the (juvenile's) character' and are admissible" pursuant to Iowa Rulе of Evidence 5.404(a) (1).
In its delinquency order, the juvenile court concluded beyond a reasonable doubt that J.A.L. was the "author [of] the three notes (information) and that the notes concerned the placement of an explosive device at a place where people would be endangered, a public school." Therefore, the juvenile cоurt adjudicated J.A.L. a delinquent child and placed him in the custody of the department of human services for evaluation and placement in a juvenile facility.
II. Issues.
We must determine whether J.A.L.'s journal entries were admissible and whether the State established J.A.L. violated Iowa Code section 712.7 beyond a reasonable doubt.
III. Scope of Review.
Delinquency proceedings are not criminal prоceedings but are special proceedings that serve as an alternative to a criminal prosecution of the child with the best interest of the child as the objective. In re J.D.F.,
We generally review evidentiary rulings regarding other-acts evidence for abuse of discretion. State v. Rodriquez,
IV. Admissibility of the Journal Entries.
The State claims J.A.L. failed to preserve error on this issue arguing J.A.L. needed to do more thаn just file a motion in limine to preserve error. In his pre-trial motion in limine, J.A.L. argued the State could not use the journal entries as character evidence under Iowa Rule of Evidence 5.404(a)(1) to prove that he acted as alleged in the delinquency petition. In his motion, J.A.L. also argued:
while [rule] 5.404(b) [of the Iowa Rules of Evidence] does permit character evidence to be admissible for matters such as proof of motive, opportunity, intent, preparation, etc., none of these materials contain statements other than the angst and hopelessness expressed by a teenage boy who has drifted from placement *752 to placement and for whom the juvenile system has been a complete and total failure.
At the start оf the delinquency adjudication hearing, the juvenile court indicated it would take the motion in limine under advisement and ultimately file a ruling on the motion. The State then formally resisted the motion on the record and offered the journal entries as eleven separate exhibits, subject to the motion in limine, with the understanding J.A.L. was objecting to the admissibility of the journal entries for the reasons set forth in his motion. The court admitted the journal entries subject to the motion in limine. This record is sufficient to preserve error on the admissibility of the journal entries.
The district court allowed the journal entries into evidence as character evidence under rule 5.404(a)(1). Character evidence of the accused is only admissible if offered by the prosecution to rеbut character evidence offered by the accused. Iowa R. Evid. 5.404(a)(1). On appeal, the State acknowledges the journal entries are not admissible under rule 5.404(a)(1), because J.A.L. never offered any evidence of his character. Therefore, admitting the journal entries under rule 5.404(a)(1) constituted an abuse of discretion.
The State now argues the journal entries are admissible under rule 5.404(b) on the issue of the identity of the perpetrator. See DeVoss v. State,
Iowa Rule of Evidence 5.404(b) provides:
Evidence of other crimes, wrongs, or acts is not admissible to prove the character of a person in order to show that the person acted in conformity therewith. It may, however, be admissible fоr other purposes, such as proof of motive, opportunity, intent, preparation, plan, knowledge, identity, or absence of mistake or accident.
Iowa R. Evid. 5.404(b). Journal entries can be other-acts evidence under rule 5.404(b). See Turpin v. Kassulke,
Although both sides in oral argument conceded the identity of the perpetrator was a legitimate issue at the adjudication hearing, we still must decide whether the journal entries were relevant to the issue of identity. The State maintains the journal entries were relevant to establish the author of the threats. The State points to two of the eleven exhibits referencing bombing. One exhibit uses the phrase "Justice Of Bombers," while another contains the word "bombs" several times. It further argues all eleven exhibits contain "statements and/or attacks against authority figures" and are relevant to establish the identity of the author of the threats. *753 From these journal entries, the State contends the finder of fact could infer J.A.L. wrote the threats found in the computer room at the school.
Evidence is relevant when it has "any tendency to make the existence of any fact that is of consequence to the detеrmination of the action more probable or less probable than it would be without the evidence." Iowa R. Evid. 5.401. To permit the inference that similar acts establish the same person committed both acts, we have required that the other acts must be "strikingly similar" or of a "unique nature." State v. Barrett,
A review of J.A.L.'s journal entries indicates J.A.L. was fascinated with suicide, death, and murder. The journal entries, however, do not offer any indication J.A.L. was preparing to place a bomb threat at the school. The entries do not contain any plans to place a bomb threat or to kill any of his fellow students. A reader of the journal must use his or her imagination to fill in any planning or operational aspects of a plan to place a bomb threat at the school or a plot to kill his fellow students. Although the journal entries indicated J.A.L. was a troubled young man, the journal entries do not make it more probable that J.A.L. was the author of the notes found at the high school on March 4. See Barrett,
We need not decide if the juvenile court's decision to admit the journal entries into evidence was harmless error because our review on whether the evidence established J.A.L. violated Iowa Code section 712.7 beyond a reasonable doubt is de novo on the record. We will not consider any of J.A.L.'s journаl entries in our de novo review.
V. De Novo Review on the Record.
On our de novo review, we give weight to the juvenile courts fact-findings, especially when considering the credibility of witnesses, but those findings do not bind us. J.D.F.,
Shortly thereafter, a male student informed a teacher that he knew the identity of the author of the threats. The male student told the authorities that on Februаry 26, 2004, he had sat beside J.A.L. in the computer lab during a class. After J.A.L. printed out three separate sheets on purple paper, J.A.L. told the male student to read the sheets in the printer. The student read the sheets, which contained the identical threats found by the female student on March 4. After reading the sheets, he dropped the sheets into the garbage can. As the malе student was leaving the computer lab, he observed J.A.L. alone in the computer lab, and a printer began printing.
After receiving this information from the male student, the authorities interviewed J.A.L., who denied making any of the threats. When the police asked J.A.L. whether the police would find his fingerprints on the printed sheets containing the threats, J.A.L. responded that they could be. The pоlice never conducted any tests to determine whether J.A.L.'s fingerprints were on the paper. The fire marshal asked J.A.L. whether J.A.L. had anything to do with the threats and if J.A.L. knew of any explosive devices that might be in the school. J.A.L. denied any knowledge concerning the threats and any knowledge of any explosive devices that might be in the school. After this interview, the fire marshal seаrched the school with the assistance of a bomb-sniffing dog. The search determined there were no incendiary or explosive devices in the building.
To establish J.A.L. violated Iowa Code section 712.7, the State must prove: (1) J.A.L. conveyed or caused to be conveyed to any person false information concerning the placement of an explosive deviсe; (2) J.A.L. conveyed or caused to be conveyed that the device was in a place where persons or property would be endangered; and (3) at the time J.A.L. conveyed or caused to be conveyed information concerning the placement of an explosive device, J.A.L. knew the information to be false. Iowa Code § 712.7. For a violation of section 712.7 to occur, the legislature did not require that the person conveying the information have the actual intent to cause fear or alarm in the person or persons who receives the threat. Additionally, the legislature did not make a violation of section 712.7 dependent on causing actual fear or creating a condition of public disruрtion. Unlike the crime of terrorism, a violation of section 712.7 is complete when a person, knowing the information to be false, conveys or causes to be conveyed to any person false information concerning the placement of an explosive device regardless of the impact it may have on the person who receives it. See Iowa Code § 708A.1(3) (providing" `[t]errorism' meаns an act intended to intimidate or coerce a civilian population, or to influence the policy of a unit of government by intimidation or coercion, or to affect the conduct of a unit of government ...").
J.A.L. admits the evidence presented at trial supports the conclusion that on February 26, he typed and printed the bomb threats that he encourаged the male student to read. He argues, however, that the evidence is insufficient to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that he violated section 712.7 on March 4, when the female student noticed the threats on the back of her printed pages. The State argues the crime was complete on February 26 when J.A.L. conveyed the threat to the male student, and what happened after this date *755 is irrelevant. In response to this argument, J.A.L. contends the State should not be allowed to argue the statute was violated on a date different from the date charged in the delinquency petition.
Although J.A.L. is correct that the delinquency petition alleged on or about March 4, J.A.L. "did knowingly convey false information concerning the placement of an explosive device or material at the West Sioux High School, in violation of Iowa Code section 712.7," we have held
[t]he date or dates fixed in the indictment for the commission of a crime are not material, and a conviction can be returned upon any date within the limitations statute, if there is no fatal variance between the indictment аllegations and the proof offered.
State v. Washington,
The evidence admitted without objection showed J.A.L. conveyed information concerning the placement of an explosive device to a male student on February 26, while they were both in the computer lab. Therefore, "there is no fatal variance between the indictment allegations and the proof offered." See, e.g., Washington,
Relying on all this evidence, we find on this de novo review the еvidence established beyond a reasonable doubt J.A.L., knowing the information to be false, conveyed false information concerning the placement of an explosive device in a place where persons or property would be endangered in violation of Iowa Code section 712.7. J.A.L. conveyed false information of the placement of an explosive devise to a male student on February 26, while in the computer lab. The State does not have to prove J.A.L. actually authored the threats found on March 4 for us to find a violation of section 712.7 under this record. The State has met its burden. Therefore, we find that the juvenile court was correct when it adjudicated J.A.L. a delinquent child.
VI. Disposition.
Because we agrеe the admissible evidence establishes beyond a reasonable doubt that J.A.L. violated Iowa Code section 712.7, the juvenile court was correct in adjudicating J.A.L. a delinquent child.
AFFIRMED.
All justices concur except LARSON, CADY, and STREIT, JJ., who concur specially.
LARSON, Justice (concurring specially).
I concur in the affirmance of the delinquency adjudication, but I do not agree with the majority's conclusion that the juvenile court abused its discretion in allowing the journal entries into evidence. *756 They were clearly relevant on the issue of identity.
CADY and STREIT, JJ., join this special concurrence.
