Lead Opinion
In this case, we consider multiple challenges to Scott Robinson’s conviction of first-degree kidnapping allegedly arising out of a sexual assault. Robinson contends that his conviction should be reversed because (1) the evidence showed insufficient confinement to support his kidnapping conviction, (2) he was denied access to barrier-free contact with his counsel prior to trial, (3) photographs of him prior to the assault were improperly admitted into evidence, (4) opinion testimony related to the credibility of the alleged victim was improperly excluded, (5) the jury instruction did not properly define the confinement, and (6) the trial information did not give him proper notice of the first-degree-kidnapping charge. We transferred the case to the court of appeals, which affirmed Robinson’s conviction.
We granted further review. When we grant further review of a decision of the court of appeals, we have discretion to select issues for our consideration. In this appeal, we consider two issues. First, whether there is sufficient evidence in the record to support the defendant’s conviction for kidnapping and second, whether the defendant is entitled to barrier-free contact with his attorney. Because we conclude the evidence was insufficient to support the conviction, we reverse the conviction. We therefore vacate the court of appeals decision related to the sufficiency-of-the-evidenee claim and the barrier-free contact claim, but as to the other issues raised in the brief, we will let the court of appeals opinion stand as the final decision of this court. See Hills Bank & Trust Co. v. Converse,
I. Factual and Procedural Background. '
In the early morning hours of October 8, 2011, Dubuque police received a complaint about screaming arising from an apartment. Police responded to the scene, heard screams from within the apartment, broke into the apartment' from which the screams arose, and found the defendant, Robinson, and B.S. half-naked in the bedroom of the apartment. Police arrested Robinson. On October 12, the State charged Robinson by trial information with kidnapping in the first degree in violation of Iowa Code sections 710.1 and 710.2 (2011) and sexual abuse in the second degree in violation of Iowa Code sections 709.1 and 709.3(1).
When Robinson’s counsel sought to meet with him prior to trial, the visiting rooms utilized at the Dubuque County Jail had a Plexiglas barrier between Robinson and his lawyer. There was no pass-through for documents. Video cameras were placed outside the visiting rooms.
The kidnapping case against Robinson proceeded to trial. Because the trial-related question we have determined to review in this appeal involves the substantiality of evidence to support Robinson’s conviction of kidnapping, we review the evidence in the light most favorable to the State. See State v. Bass,
At trial, the evidence showed that on the evening of October 7, 2011, B.S. began drinking at home with her brother and a friend. After police officers arrived at the home and asked them to quiet down, the group decided to continue drinking at downtown bars. Ultimately, they ended up at a bar in East Dubuque, Illinois, that remained open until 3:00 a.m. B.S. met Robinson at the East Dubuque bar.
Robinson invited B.S. to an after-hours party at his apartment. After B.S. and Robinson arrived at the apartment, B.S. wondered why there were no other people at the after-hours party. When B.S. took out her phone to make a call, Robinson grabbed it and threw it behind a chair. B.S. then asked Robinson for a drink. But when Robinson made a visit to the bathroom, B.S. grabbed her purse and ran out the door. B.S. realized, however, that she had left her phone in the apartment and went back to retrieve it. When she reentered the apartment, Robinson shut the front door behind her, locked it, and grabbing her neck and jaw and covering her mouth, dragged her down the hallway to the bedroom. B.S. screamed once in the hallway. After shutting and locking the bedroom door from the inside, Robinson threw her on the bed, got on top of her, and covered her mouth when she started to scream. Robinson tried to force B.S. to have oral sex with him. Robinson then flipped B.S. over on her back, and when she again started to scream, Robinson put his hand over her mouth and began to penetrate her.
Awakened by the noise, a downstairs neighbor phoned the police. When the police arrived, they heard screaming and ultimately broke down the front door and entered the apartment. The officers heard more screaming as they approached the bedroom and after being refused entry, broke down the bedroom door. When they entered the room, they saw Robinson and B.S. both naked from the waist down. B.S. was standing and visibly upset.
Based on the evidence presented at trial, the jury convicted Robinson of kidnapping in the first degree, sexually motivated.
Robinson appealed. We transferred the case to the court of appeals. On the issue of sufficiency of the evidence, the court of appeals focused on the jury instruction which posed the question of whether Robinson confined B.S. “more than what is included in the commission of the crime of sexual abuse.” See State v. McGrew,
II. Standard of Review.
On the issue of sufficiency of the evidence, we review claims for correction of errors at law. State v. McCullah,
On the issue of the defendant’s statutory right to barrier-free contact with counsel, we review the defendant’s challenge of the district court’s interpretation of Iowa Code section 804.20 for correction of errors at law. See State v. Gonzalez,
III. Discussion of Sufficiency of the Evidence to Support Finding of Confinement Under Iowa’s Kidnapping Statute.
A. Introduction. The concept of the crime of kidnapping has been with us for a long time. At common law, the misdemeanor of kidnapping required removal of the victim out of the country. See Natalie A. Kanellis, Kidnapping in Iowa: Movements Incidental to Sexual Abuse, 67 Iowa L.Rev. 773, 775 (1982) [hereinafter Kanellis]; see also 2 Charles E. Torcía, Wharton’s Criminal Law § 207, at 491-92 (15th ed.1994). Following the common law example, early state kidnapping statutes, including Iowa’s, required removal out of the state. See Kanellis, 67 Iowa L.Rev. at 775 & n. 30 (citing Iowa Code § 2588 (1851) (repealed by Iowa Acts ch. 1245, ch. 1 § 1001)). The original penalty for kidnapping was not usually severe. Id. at 776. In Iowa, the original kidnapping penalty was imprisonment for five years or a $1000 fine. Id. at 776 n. 31 (citing Iowa Code § 2588 (1851)).
In the twentieth century, however, the relatively narrow kidnapping statutes were replaced with broader statutes. See id. at 776-77. After the kidnapping crimes of prohibition and the Lindbergh tragedy, legislatures often wanted to en
Iowa joined the national trend when revising its criminal code in 1976. As noted by one commentator, a legislative study committee “felt that the kidnapping statute ... [was] too narrow to adequately deal with present-day problems. The scope of the offense was expanded accordingly.” John J. Yeager, Crimes Against the Person: Homicide, Assault, Sexual Abuse, and Kidnapping in the Proposed Iowa Criminal Code, 60 Iowa L.Rev. 503, 526 (1975). The revised criminal code thus expanded Iowa’s kidnapping statute to apply when an accused “confines a person or removes a person from one place to another” with “the intent ... to subject the person to a sexual abuse.” Iowa Code § 710.1(3) (1979). The penalty in Iowa for kidnapping in the first degree was also increased to life in prison. Id. § 710.2; id. § 902.1.
Expanded kidnapping statutes, however, have proved problematic. Taken literally, the statutes could convert every robbery or every sexual abuse into kidnapping with significantly enhanced penalties, as these crimes invariably involve at least some confinement or removal. A substantial body of academic literature arose cautioning that the kidnapping statutes should not be allowed to swallow traditional gradations in crime. See B.E.H., Judicial Construction of Kidnapping Statutes, 15 Alb. L.Rev. 65, 73-74 (1951) (noting the harshness of application of kidnapping statute to felonies and the vesting of the prosecuting attorney with sole power to charge a person with a much harsher crime); Lonnie E. Woolverton, Note, Kidnapping and the Element of Asportation, 35 S. Cal. L.Rev. 212, 217 (1962) (noting it is for the courts to reasonably apply the statute to ensure there is a taking and carrying away of such magnitude as to warrant a kidnapping conviction); A Rationale of the Law of Kidnapping, 53 Colum. L.Rev. at 557 (noting extremely harsh penalties may be imposed for conduct of relatively little seriousness); Note, Movement Incidental to the Commission of a Crime Held Insufficient to SuppoH Indictment for Simple Kidnapping in California, 110 U. Pa. L.Rev. 293, 294 (1961) (noting convictions for “standstill” robberies); Note, Room-to-Room Movement: A Risk Rationale for Aggravated Kidnapping, 11 Stan. L.Rev. 554, 555 (1959) (observing California kidnapping statute’s sweeping inclusion of any movement in the nonransom situation or any detention for extortion has opened the door to broad interpretations that cannot be justified in terms of rationale supporting aggravated kidnapping).
The potential broad application of very serious penalties was addressed by the American Law Institute (ALI) in its Model Penal Code. In its introductory note, the ALI noted that “[m]any prior kidnapping statutes combined severe sanctions with extraordinarily broad coverage, to the effect that relatively trivial restraints carried
Courts struggled with the question of whether the new kidnapping statutes should be applied literally or whether there should be some limiting construction under the theory that the legislature did not intend to abolish the distinctions between various crimes and kidnapping that would result from the literal reading of the statutes. Some early cases took a literalist view that any movement or any confinement could be sufficient to support a kidnapping conviction under applicable state statutes. See State v. Jacobs,
A substantial line of authority emerged to the contrary. A leading case embracing the view that kidnapping statutes should be subject to a limiting construction was People v. Levy,
It is unlikely that these restraints, sometimes accompanied by asportation, which are incidents to other crimes and have long been treated as integral parts of other crimes, were intended by the Legislature in framing its broad definition of kidnapping to constitute a separate crime of kidnapping, even though kidnapping might sometimes be spelled out literally from the statutory words.
Id. The general rationale in Levy has been adopted in a number of jurisdictions and now represents the majority view. See, e.g., Daniels,
Levy is sometimes characterized as embracing what has become known as the “incidental” rule or approach to kidnapping statutes. See Bridges,
Even among courts that have departed from a literalist interpretation and adopted the incidental approach, however, there are substantial questions of scope and application. What exactly does it mean for confinement or removal to be incidental to other crimes? Where does a court draw the line between confinement or removal that is merely incidental and that which supports a conviction of both kidnapping, with its harsh penalties, and the underlying crime? See Wozniak at 355-58 (noting different tests for determining whether confinement or removal is sufficient to support conviction of kidnapping and the underlying crime). See generally John L. Diamond, Kidnapping: A Modem Definition, 13 Am. J.Crim. L. 1, 4-30 (1985) [hereinafter Diamond] (outlining various approaches in California, New York, Michigan, Kansas, and under the Model Penal Code).
In general, the approaches to kidnapping in the context of the commission of other crimes fall into five broad categories. The first category is the traditional “any movement” cases that reject the rationale of Levy and apply kidnapping statutes literally. Under this approach, any movement or any confinement, however slight, could expose a defendant to kidnapping for conduct which occurred in the course of committing another felony. See, e.g., Jacobs,
The second category of cases hold that movements or confinements intended to facilitate the commission of lesser crimes should be considered incidental to the lesser crime and thus do not give rise to kidnapping. Thus, in Levy,
The Supreme Court of Kansas in State v. Buggs,
The Buggs court developed a three-pronged test to determine
if a taking or confinement is alleged to have been done to facilitate the commission of another crime, to be kidnapping the resulting movement or confinement:
(a) Must not be slight, inconsequential, and merely incidental to the other crime;
(b) Must not be the kind inherent in the nature of the other crime; and
(c) Must have some significance independent of the other crime in that it makes the other crime substantially easier of commission or substantially lessens the risk of detection.
Id. The Buggs court offered some examples to illuminate its principles. According to the Buggs court:
A standstill robbery on the street is not kidnapping; the forced removal of the victim to a dark alley for robbery is. The removal of a rape victim from room to room within a dwelling solely for the convenience and comfort of the rapist is not a kidnapping; the removal from a public place to a place of seclusion is.
Id. Applying its test, the Buggs court concluded the conduct of the defendants constituted kidnapping. Id. at 731-32. The court noted the robbery could have been accomplished outside the store, but. instead, the defendants forced the victims inside to relative seclusion. Id. at 731. The movement, though slight, substantially reduced the risk of detection. Id. at 731-32. Therefore, the court held there was a “confinement to ‘facilitate’ the commission of the robbery and rape.” Id. at 732.
The approach in Buggs was largely followed by the Florida Supreme Court in Faison v. State,
It is noteworthy, however, that the Fai-son court drew a strong dissent. According to Justice Boyd, the general principle adopted by the majority, namely, that detentions or removals that are merely incidental to the commission of other felonies should not give rise to a kidnapping prosecution, was correct. Id. at 968 (Boyd, J., concurring in part and dissenting in part). Justice Boyd, however, argued movement or confinement is incidental unless it has “sufficient independent significance to justify the [separate charge and conviction] for kidnapping.” Id. at 969. In order to make that determination, Justice Boyd urged consideration of a number of factors including “location, duration, method, manner, and purpose of the abduction or confinement.” Id. at 968. According to Justice Boyd, the factors should be considered
not only in the light of whether the abduction or confinement facilitates the commission of another crime, but also, and principally, in light of whether the factors expose the victim to a risk of physical or mental harm substantially greater than the risk of harm ordinarily encountered by the victim of the forcible felony being committed.
Id. He implicitly rejected the notion that a conviction for kidnapping could be upheld when the defendant’s action simply facilitated making the crime easier to commit or less susceptible to detection. Id. at 969. The approach of the dissent in Faison— namely, focusing on the substantial increase in the risk of harm — has been adopted in the District of Columbia. See Nelson v. United States,
A fourth line of cases adopted a multi-factored approach to determining if there is sufficient evidence independent of the underlying felony to support kidnapping. The leading case is Government of Virgin Islands v. Berry,
(1) the duration of the detention or as-portation; (2) whether the detention or asportation occurred during the commission of a separate offense; (3) whether the detention or asportation which occurred is inherent in the separate offense; and (4) whether the asportation or detention created a significant danger to the victim independent of that posed by the separate offense.
Id. The Berry approach has been followed by a number of other jurisdictions. See, e.g., Garza v. State,
Finally, a number of jurisdictions, often after legislative action, follow the approach of the Model Penal Code. These jurisdictions require that confinement occur in a “place of isolation” for a “substantial period” of time. See, e.g., State v. Bunker,
The choice of test for determining whether kidnapping may be supported when there is an underlying felony is critical to outcomes. Under the New York approach in Levy and its progeny, many if not most robberies and sexual assaults will not give rise to kidnapping charges, while, in contrast, under the Arizona approach in Jacobs, only standstill robberies and sexual assaults are outside the scope of kidnapping statutes. Compare Levy,
The selection of a particular legal framework, however, does not resolve all controversies. Regardless of the test adopted, there have been serious controversies surrounding the application of any test to particular factual settings. As noted by one court, the applicable test “is not an easy one to apply.” Berry v. State,
Today, it is our turn to consider the difficult issues related to kidnapping in the context of underlying criminal activity.
B. Iowa Precedents on Confinement.
Because this case involves the question of what quantity and quality of evidence is required to support a kidnapping conviction, a careful review of the facts of Iowa caselaw, as well as the principles established in these cases, is essential for a full understanding of the issues. We therefore review our kidnapping cases in detail.
We first considered the question of the proper approach to kidnapping in the context of the commission of another crime under our current kidnapping statute in State v. Rich,
Recognizing the question of whether to adopt the literal or incidental approach as a question of first impression under our expanded kidnapping statute,
The question remained how to determine what confinement or removal is incidental. In now oft quoted language, the Rich court concluded
that our legislature, in enacting section 710.1, intended the terms “confines” and “removes” to require more than the confinement or removal that is an inherent incident of commission of the crime of sexual abuse. Although no minimum period of confinement or distance of removal is required for conviction of kidnapping, the confinement or removal must definitely exceed that normally incidental to the commission of sexual abuse.... Such confinement or removal may exist because it substantially increases the risk of harm to the victim, significantly lessens the risk of detection, or significantly facilitates escape following the consummation of the offense.
Id. (emphasis added).
The heart of Rich was the three-pronged test used for determining whether confinement or removal exceeded that normally incident to the commission of sexual abuse. Id. at 745^6. Whether any element of this three-pronged test was satisfied would depend upon the totality of the facts. Id. at 746.
Applying our approach to the incidental rule, in Rich we concluded the confinement and removal supported the defendant’s conviction of kidnapping. Id. We noted that merely moving the victim from the mall to the restroom, in and of itself, was' not sufficient to support a kidnapping conviction. Id. at 745. We observed, however, that although the doors of the shopping center were locked, the defendant first looked into the restroom and was moving the victim to the bathroom not for comfort, but for seclusion. Id. In addition, the defendant had bound the victim, not a normal incident of a sexual attack. Id. at 745-46. Further, subsequent to the sexual attack, the confinement of the victim continued in a fashion not incidental to the sexual attack. Id. at 746. Under the totality of the facts, we concluded the State had offered sufficient evidence to engender a jury question and avoid a directed verdict of acquittal on the kidnapping charge. Id.
We applied the Rich tripartite test in State v. Knupp,
In Knupp, we repeated the tripartite test announced in Rich. Id. at 182-88. Applying the Rich test to the facts, we held in a somewhat conclusory fashion that the conduct of the defendant substantially exceeded that which could have been considered incidental because it substantially increased the risk of harm and significantly lessened the risk of detection. Id. at 183.
In State v. Marr,
In Marr, we held that the State failed to offer sufficient evidence to support kidnapping under the Rich tripartite test. Id. at 179-80. We emphasized the intensifiers in Rich, expressly stating that under Rich, the necessary additional confinement or removal may be present when the actions of the defendant “substantially” increased the risk of harm, “significantly” lessened the risk of detection, or “significantly” facilitated escape. Id. at 178-79. We further cited the Model Penal Code’s emphasis on preventing robbery and rape from escalating into kidnapping, id. at 180 (citing Model Penal Code & Commentaries Part II § 212.1 cmt. 1 (1980)), and a leading Iowa authority for the proposition that to be punishable for kidnapping, the removal or confinement must “ ‘add substantially to the heinousness of the sexual abuse,”’ id. (quoting John L. Yeager & Ronald L. Carlson, Iowa Practice: Criminal Law and Procedure 66 (1979) [hereinafter Yeager & Carlson]). We contrasted the facts of the case with Rich, in which the totality of evidence supported movement for purposes of seclusion, including the binding of the victim’s hands and subsequent confinement. Id. at 178-79 (citing Rich,
We also found the evidence insufficient in our next kidnapping case involving the underlying crimes of burglary and assault while committing a felony. State v. Mead,
After canvassing the evidence, we applied the Rich tripartite test in a verbatim fashion concluding that the state failed to offer sufficient evidence to support the kidnapping charge. Id. at 445. Although the mother was seized for a moment, we distinguished the seizure from a detention. Id. We observed that “unless we extend kidnapping to nearly any case involving a seizure by a defendant of another person during the commission of a crime, which we refuse to do, the instant case does not involve sufficient confinement to constitute kidnapping.” Id. Although the mother may have been briefly confined in place, such an act was insufficient to support a kidnapping conviction. Id.
Since Mart, we have considered whether the evidence supported kidnapping under the Rich tripartite test in a number of cases. In these cases, we have sometimes noted that the confinement or removal substantially exceeded that in Mart and Mead. For example, in State v. Newman,
Indeed, in all of our kidnapping cases subsequent to Marr and Mead, we have found sufficient evidence to support a kidnapping conviction under the Rich tripartite test. Most of these cases, however, have involved settings in which confinement or removal beyond that ordinarily associated with the underlying offense was clear. See, e.g., State v. Griffin,
While these cases found that kidnapping convictions were supported based on the evidence, they repeatedly endorsed Rich as providing the proper legal framework for analyzing the sufficiency of the evidence. For instance, in Misner,
C. Application of the Rich Tripartite Test. The challenge here is applying the Rich tripartite test to a case in which the evidence supporting independent confinement is markedly less than in many of our cases, but in which there is evidence showing something more than a mere “standstill offense.” Our cases have generally held that the substantially-increased-risk-of-harm prong of the Rich tripartite test may be satisfied if the duration of confinement substantially exceeds that of the underlying crime. See, e.g., Griffin,
With respect to manner of confinement,' our cases often emphasize the use of a weapon or the binding of the defendant in a fashion that exceeds confinement ordinarily incident to sexual abuse. See, e.g., Griffin,
There was, however, at least some additional evidence that may be cited as increasing the risk of harm or lessening the possibility of detection. The State offered evidence that the defendant locked the front door of the apartment and the door to the bedroom during the incident. And, the State offered evidence that prior to the alleged sexual assault the defendant grabbed the victim’s cell phone and threw it over a chair in the living room.
Overall, the evidence is less substantial than in many of our kidnapping cases. But that is not the question. The question is whether it is so insubstantial that, as a matter of law, the defendant’s kidnapping conviction cannot stand.
There are filaments in our cases that point in both directions. For instance, in Griffin,
In addition, the State offered evidence that the victim was confined while being moved from the hallway into the bedroom and that the defendant locked the doors to both the main door of the apartment and the bedroom. In McGrew,
Except for the locking of the doors, this case seems roughly analogous to Marr. While the defendant did lock the doors to the apartment and the bedroom, the victim was not locked in, rather, other persons were locked out. The doorway to the apartment was in a residential structure which would ordinarily be locked at night when there would be few curious passersby. While this action may have marginally lessened the risk of detection, the crime occurred within a short period of time in the same enclosed space. The victim was not moved from a public to a private, more secluded, environment.
While the underlying kidnapping statutes and applicable legal tests in the various states are not identical and the facts have many permutations, there is some authority from other jurisdictions for the proposition that evidence like that offered here is insufficient to support kidnapping. In Tindall,
Somewhat similar is State v. Goodhue,
Reading between the lines in Tindall and Goodhue, it appears there may be some reluctance to find the independent crime of kidnapping when the additional confinement or removal occurs within an enclosed structure. Such additional confinement or movement within an enclosed structure may not be a sufficiently significant change in the risk environment to substantially increase the risk of harm, significantly lessen detection, or significantly aid escape.
On the other hand, there is authority to the contrary.
The above cases are only meant to illuminate the problem. The leading annotation on the subject currently boasts 549 pages of fine squibs from the caselaw. Wozniak at 283-762 & Supp. 24-94. These authorities could be endlessly sliced and diced but to little effect. That said, there are a number of cases in which room-to-room movement has been found sufficient and in which locked doors and telephone disruption have been cited. As with the Iowa cases, most of these authorities from other jurisdictions contain more florid fact patterns than this case.
In the end, the question calls for an exercise of our judgment as to whether, on the totality of the circumstances, the State offered sufficient evidence that a jury could find beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant’s confinement of the victim substantially increased the risk of harm, significantly lessened the risk of detection, or significantly facilitated escape. Phrased somewhat differently, did the evidence of the tossing of the cell phone, the locking of the doors, the covering of the victim’s mouth, and any additional confinement associated with movement of the victim from the hallway to the bedroom, all occurring within the enclosed apartment, provide a sufficient basis to allow the jury to regard the case as presenting more than sexual abuse but instead involving the
We conclude that it does not. We note in particular the potential of sliding downhill into situations in which a person with limited additional criminal culpability suffers a dramatically increased penalty. In the words of Yeager and Carlson, the underlying crime must be substantially more heinous to give rise to a kidnapping conviction. Yeager & Carlson at 66. We conclude that this heinous concept underlies the Rich tripartite test with its attendant intensifiers. While there might be some marginal increase in the risk of harm, lessening of detention, or facilitation of escape, we conclude it is not sufficient to trigger dramatically increased sanctions under our kidnapping statute in this case.
D. Disposition. In light of our disposition of the kidnapping charge, we now consider the disposition of this case. In order to determine the appropriate course on remand, we examine the jury instructions as law of the case in light of our holding on the kidnapping charge. See State v. Murray,
Because under the instructions, kidnapping in the first degree, kidnapping in the third degree, and false imprisonment all had a common confinement instruction, those charges must be dismissed for lack of sufficient evidence. See State v. Snider,
With respect to the remaining charges of sexual abuse in the second degree and sexual abuse in the third degree, the instructions told the jury not to consider these offenses independently if it found Robinson guilty of kidnapping. As a result, we do not have a specific jury verdict on the jury verdict form for sexual abuse in the second degree or sexual abuse in the third degree.
Nonetheless, the jury necessarily found that Robinson engaged in sexual abuse in the third degree when it convicted him of kidnapping because under the instructions the jury was required to find Robinson had engaged in an act of sexual abuse to convict him of kidnapping in the first degree. No claim on appeal has been made that the evidence was insufficient to find that Robinson was guilty of sexual abuse in the third degree.
We cannot determine, however, whether the jury found Robinson guilty of sexual abuse in the second degree, which requires an additional finding that during the commission of the sexual abuse, Robinson used or threatened to use force creating a substantial risk of death or serious injury to B.S. Compare Iowa Code § 709.3(1) (2011) (sexual abuse in the second degree), with Iowa Code § 709.4(1) (sexual abuse in the third degree). This element is not a prerequisite to a kidnaping in the first-degree verdict.
In light of the record, we conclude the State may pursue one of two options in this case on remand. The State has the option of standing on the jury’s necessary determination that Robinson was guilty of sexual abuse in the third degree and ask the court to enter judgment on that offense and to sentence Robinson accordingly. In the alternative, however, the State
IY. Barrier-Free Contact with Counsel.
We finally address the question of whether the defendant was improperly denied his statutory or constitutional right to effective assistance of counsel because of the existence of the Plexiglas barrier separating the defendant from his attorney at the Dubuque County Jail. While we have reversed Robinson’s conviction on other grounds, we address the question related to access to barrier-free contact between Robinson and his attorney in order to provide the district court and the parties with guidance should the State elect to retry Robinson on remand.
A. Procedural History.
1. Robinson’s motion. Prior to trial, Robinson filed a motion for barrier-free contact between counsel and defendant. In order to understand the precise scope of the issues before us, it is necessary to engage in a detailed review of the proceedings below.
We begin with a review of the substance of Robinson’s motion. The motion alleged that the visiting rooms at the jail imposed a Plexiglas barrier between Robinson and his counsel, that meetings were video and possibly audio recorded, and that conversations between Robinson and his lawyer could be overheard by persons standing outside the door of the visiting rooms. He contended the physical arrangements at the jail violated Iowa Code section 804.20, which he stated affords arrestees the right to consult with their attorney confidentially and alone and in private. See State v. Walker,
Robinson raised four specific challenges to the arrangement. First, the motion alleged the Plexiglas barrier required the parties to yell in order to be heard and that persons standing outside the room could overhear what was being said. Second, the motion emphasized there was no means for Robinson and his counsel to review documents together other than either hold the documents up against the barrier one at a time or have a jailer convey the documents. Third, the motion alleged there was no means by which Robinson and his lawyer could review video or audio recordings together. Fourth, Robinson stated he believed the rooms were video recorded and that it was unknown whether they were audio recorded. In two of the visiting rooms utilized by the jail, however, the motion alleged that jailers had a clear view of meetings between Robinson and his attorney.
The allegations in Robinson’s motion concluded by noting that there had been no showing that Robinson had been violent or disruptive at the jail. In his prayer for relief, Robinson requested an order requiring the Dubuque County Sheriff to provide a “barrier-free room that is free of video and/or audio recording devices and in which the conversations between the undersigned and the Defendant may not be observed.”
2. ■Hearing before the district court. The district court held a hearing on the motion. Robinson presented no evidence, but counsel made a statement to the court. The State offered evidence from Thomas Fitzpatrick, a Dubuque County deputy sheriff and assistant jail administrator for the Dubuque County Jail. A CD of photo
In support of the motion, Robinson’s counsel began by advising the court that the staff at the jail were very professional, but all of the visiting rooms have a Plexiglas barrier and none have a pass-through arrangement. Further, counsel asserted he had to yell to communicate with his client. Counsel told the court:
Because there’s no pass-through, and because we’re literally yelling through a hole in the wall or through another barrier, anyone standing outside of any one of those rooms, either surreptitiously or walking past, can hear the conversation, because both Mr. Robinson and I have to raise our voices. And that’s the issue that I have.... We’re trying to have confidential conversations, and I’m having to talk louder than I’m addressing the Court right now.
With respect to the passing of documents, Robinson’s counsel further noted that in one of the meeting rooms there is only a small “metal shelf, maybe 14 to 16 inches long, maybe eight inches wide.” Robinson’s lawyer argued that the physical arrangement did not allow him to go over documents, noting, “[W]e’ve got a lot of police reports to go over, things like that.”
Robinson’s counsel cited Walker,
The State offered the testimony of Thomas Fitzpatrick. Fitzpatrick described the visiting rooms at the Dubuque County Jail. With respect to video surveillance, Fitzpatrick testified there were cameras located outside the door of each visiting room, but when the door was closed, as it ordinarily was in an attorney-client meeting, the video cameras would be shut off from recording activities within the room. Fitzpatrick minimized the sound issues, noting that if someone raised his voice, that might get attention. Fitzpatrick explained that no jail staff is stationed outside the doors of the visiting rooms. Fitzpatrick further testified that while the jail has allowed, on a case-by-case basis, attorneys and their clients to meet in a barrier-free room to go over documents, they have never allowed a barrier-free visiting room “carte blanche.” While Fitzpatrick conceded he had no knowledge of Robinson having any discipline issues or issues of violence in the jail, he testified he trusted no one and he would not be able to provide appropriate security for all inmates in every case if barrier-free contact with counsel was the norm.
The State argued there was no need to provide barrier-free contact with counsel absent a specific showing of need. The State distinguished Walker, noting in that case there was a very specific need for the attorney to have barrier-free contact and here no such immediate need is present.
In response, Robinson’s counsel stated:
I agree with [the State] again the cases don’t necessarily allow for — that they don’t talk about the same contact that Mr. Robinson and I would have sitting here.
Robinson’s counsel then made a specific point:
But there’s no pass-through at all. I don’t know for sure, but I think that even some sort of pass-through so that he and I can examine documents, examine videos, listen to audio in this case as we prepare his defense is what respects his constitutional right.
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I think that under the facts of this case, we do need barrier-free contact or at least some way to pass-through so that Mr. Robinson and I can communicate so that his constitutional rights are protected.
3. Ruling of the district court. After the hearing and the district court judge’s inspection of the jail facilities, the district court entered an order on the motion. As to the facts, the district court found that none of the rooms were monitored through electronic surveillance. The district court further found that “people talking in a normal voice can hear each other through the sound grates [in the visiting rooms], although the sound is somewhat muffled.” Further, the district court found that while a guard positioned directly outside the doors would be able to overhear portions of the discussions, no staff are stationed outside the room, but instead are in a control room where they cannot hear anything other than screaming. The court further found, as conceded by the parties, there was no pass-through in any of the visiting rooms.
On legal issues, the district court found that our holding in Walker,
The district court did note that barrier-free contact may be warranted under Iowa Code section 804.20 “for specific purposes such as those cited by defense counsel— i.e. physical demonstrations and reviewing audio and video recordings together.” The district court ordered that if those situations were to arise, Robinson would be entitled to barrier-free accommodations, and if the jail refused, Robinson could file a motion with the court outlining the need for such accommodation. At that point, the burden would shift to the State to make a showing of “case-specific, individualized suspicion in order to prohibit barrier-free contact.”
The district court recognized that Robinson had raised constitutional as well as statutory claims. With respect to constitutional claims, the district court held that barrier-free access to counsel “to this point” had not violated Robinson’s right to counsel under the United States or Iowa Constitutions.
The district court order thus established a framework under which Robinson could seek barrier-free contact with his counsel upon a showing of specific needs as asserted by his lawyer in his motion and at the hearing, but denied barrier-free contact
B. Positions of the Parties on Appeal. On appeal, Robinson’s counsel reviews the evidentiary record establishing that the visiting rooms have a Plexiglas barrier and no pass-through for documents. His appellate brief summarizes the conflicting views regarding whether an attorney has to yell to communicate with a client in the visiting rooms. The appellate brief also surveys the evidence regarding security cameras located in the hallways and the intercom system that allows staff in the control room to communicate with lawyers in the visiting room.
Robinson does not, however, directly challenge the factual findings of the district court. Robinson does not claim, for instance, that the district court erred in finding that an attorney could communicate with his client in the visiting rooms in a normal tone of voice, although the sound was somewhat muffled. Robinson further did not challenge the factual finding that although a jail staff standing directly outside the door might overhear portions of a conversation, jail staff were assigned to the control room and were not stationed in a position to overhear attorney-client conversations. Finally, on appeal Robinson did not challenge the assertion that there was no video surveillance of the rooms when the doors were closed. As a result, on appeal, we do not question the undisputed fact-finding of the district court.
Robinson raises two theories on appeal. First, Robinson relies on Walker for the proposition that under Iowa Code section 804.20 and under the right-to-counsel provisions of the Iowa and United States Constitutions, a lawyer is always entitled to barrier-free access with his or her client absent an individualized showing of a threat of violence or a threat to institutional security. Second, Robinson argues that barrier-free contact with counsel is necessary to allow the attorney and the accused to develop a relationship of trust and confidence.
The State contends on appeal, among other things, that Iowa Code section 804.20 is not implicated in this case, as it applies only to situations in which a defendant is in custody but has not yet been charged with a crime. More narrowly, the State asserts that even if section 804.20 applies, under Walker there must be a specific showing of need in order for the defendant to be entitled to barrier-free contact with counsel. On the constitutional issues, the State argues that caselaw subsequent to the federal eases cited in Walker indicate there is no “carte blanche” right to barrier-free contact with counsel. Finally, the State generally argues that before we reverse a criminal conviction on grounds of lack of barrier-free contact with counsel, the defendant must show that he or she has been prejudiced by the denial of his or her right to counsel. According to the State, Robinson simply cannot make that showing.
C. Analysis. On appeal, Robinson argues that he has a broad right to barrier-free contact with counsel under Iowa Code section 804.20. We do not agree. While there is language in Iowa Code section 804.20 that seems to suggest a broad application (“any person arrested or restrained of the person’s liberty for any reason whatever”), the statute also emphasizes that the right to call family or consult counsel should occur “without unnecessary delay after arrival at the place of detention.” Further, the statute must be interpreted in context. See Andover Volunteer Fire Dep’t v. Grinnell Mut. Reins. Co.,
That leaves Robinson’s constitutional claim on appeal, namely that barrier-free contact with counsel is required in order to ensure a “relationship and a level of trust and comfort.” See Adams v. Carlson,
As a result, we conclude Robinson has not preserved any claim under the United States or Iowa Constitutions that he is entitled to barrier-free contact with his attorney in order to develop a relationship of trust and comfort. See Meier v. Senecaut,
V. Conclusion.
For the above reasons, the decision of the court of appeals is vacated in part and the judgment of the district court is reversed and the case remanded for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
DECISION OF COURT OF APPEALS AFFIRMED IN PART AND VACATED IN PART; DISTRICT COURT JUDGMENT REVERSED AND CASE REMANDED.
Notes
. The district court dismissed this charge pri- or to the start of trial.
. A few months prior to Rich, in State v. Holderness,
. In Hardin,
. In most of the incidental rule cases, the defendant is convicted of an underlying crime such as robbery or sexual abuse. Here, the underlying crime of sexual abuse was dismissed prior to trial. There is a question whether the incidental rule applies when the underlying charge is dismissed. Cf. People v. Salimi,
. Like the confinement cases, the cases considering whether there was sufficient removal to support a kidnapping charge when a victim is moved from one room to another within an existing structure have reached differing results. In some cases, the movement from one room to another within a structure has been held insufficient removal to support a kidnapping charge. See, e.g., Buggs, 547 P.2d at 731 ("The removal of a rape victim from room to room within a dwelling solely for the convenience and comfort of the rapist is not a kidnapping.”); Goodhue,
. In addition, there are cases in which the locking of a door to keep others out has been cited, with mixed results. See, e.g., Lewis v. State,
There are also cases in which the disruption of telephone communications has been cited. See, e.g., People v. Zamora,
Concurrence Opinion
(concurring specialty).
I concur wholeheartedly with the majority opinion. I write separately because the district court’s confinement instruction constituted reversible error. Jury instruction number 23 on confinement provided in relevant part:
No minimum time of confinement or distance of removal is required. It must be more than slight. The confinement must have significance apart from the sexual abuse.
In determining whether confinement exists, you may consider whether:
1. The risk of harm to [B.S.] was increased.
2. The risk of detection was reduced.
3. Escape was made easier.7
The defendant in his pro se brief contends, among other things, he received ineffective assistance of counsel because his counsel did not object to the instruction that failed to include the intensifiers for the three factors mentioned in State v. Rich,
The defendant asserts although the jury instruction required the jury to find the confinement in the case had significance beyond the underlying sexual assault, the three-factor Rich test was included without its intensifiers. Specifically, in order to support a kidnapping conviction, the confinement must “substantially increase[ ] the risk of harm ..., significantly lessen[ ] the risk of detection, or significantly facilitate[ ] escape.” Id. at 745 (emphasis added). By failing to include this language, the defendant argues, a jury could conclude the requirement that confinement be significant beyond the underlying sexual assault is supported by any increase in the risk of harm, lessening of the risk of detection, or facilitation of escape, however slight. '
I. Iowa Precedents.
We have never approved the instruction given in this case. In State v. Hardin, the jury instruction stated:
“One of the essential elements which the State is required to prove beyond a reasonable doubt in either kidnapping in the first degree or kidnapping in the third degree or false imprisonment is that [the victim] was confined or removed.
In that regard, you are instructed that this requires more than confinement or removal that is inherent within the commission of the offense of sexual abuse.
A person is ‘confined’ when that person’s freedom to move about is substantially restricted by force, threat, or deception. The person may be confined either in the place where the restriction commences or in a place to which the person has been removed.
Although no minimal period of confinement or distance of removal is required, such must exceed that which is normally incidental or dependent upon the commission of a sexual abuse and must be more than slight, inconsequential, or as an incident inherent in the offense of sexual abuse so that the confinement or removal has a significance separate and apart from a sexual abuse.
Such confinement or removal may exist because it substantially increases the risk of harm to the victim or significantly lessens the risk of detection.”
In State v. Doughty, we quoted at length from Rich, concluding an instruction that did not outline the Rich tripartite test was flawed and required a new trial under the circumstances.
We then declared the standards by which a jury could determine whether the evidence supported a kidnapping charge:
1. No minimum period of confinement or distance of removal is required for conviction of kidnapping.
2. The period of confinement or distance of removal must exceed what is normally incidental to the commission of sexual abuse.
3. The confinement or removal must have significance independent from the act of sexual abuse itself in one of the following ways:
a. Substantially increase the risk of harm to the victim.
b. Significantly lessen the risk of detection.
c. Significantly facilitate escape following the consummation of the sex abuse offense.
Id. We reaffirmed that “[tjhese standards are unquestionably the law in Iowa today with respect to cases involving a kidnapping charge generated out of a sexual abuse charge.” Id.
In State v. Hatter, we laid out in detail the instruction given by the district court.
“One of the essential elements of Kidnapping which the State must prove beyond a reasonable doubt is that (the victim) was confined or removed or both. This requires more than the confinement or removal that is inherent within the commission of the offense of sexual abuse, as it is alleged to have occurred in this case.
Although no minimal period of confinement or distance of removal is required, it must exceed that which is incidental or dependent upon the commission of any sexual abuse and must be more than slight, inconsequential or as an incident inherent to any sexual abuse so that the confinement or removal or both has a significance separate and apart from any sexual abuse.
Such confinement or removal or both may exist because it substantially increases the risk of harm to the victim or significantly lessens the risk of detection or significantly facilitates escape. However, it is for you, the jury, after a full and impartial consideration of the evidence admitted during the trial, to determine whether there is confinement or removal or both as defined herein.”
Id.
Finally, in State v. McGrew, we stated, “[A] jury question was presented on whether this type of confinement significantly increased [the victim’s] risk of further harm.”
The Iowa Court of Appeals, however, declined to reverse a kidnapping conviction when the Iowa State Bar Association (ISBA) kidnapping instruction was given in State v. Ripperger,
We do not preapprove or give a presumption of correctness to the instructions published by the ISBA. I understand the ISBA committee appointed to formulate these instructions is industrious and does its best to get the law right. However, we can never delegate the formulation of the law to the instruction committee. This is not only my view, but also a view held by the United States Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit. See United States v. Jones, 28 F.Sd 1407, 1409 (8th Cir.1994) (explaining the Eighth Circuit’s model instructions are suggestions not binding on lower courts); United States v. Norton,
Typically district courts in the Eighth Circuit derive their criminal jury instructions from the Manual of Model Criminal Jury Instructions for the District Courts of the Eighth Circuit. See generally Judicial Comm, on Model Jury Instructions for the Eighth Circuit, Manual of Model Criminal Jury Instructions for the District Courts of the Eighth Circuit (2014). The committee prepares the instructions. See id. The process in the Eighth Circuit is similar to the process in Iowa.
Commenting on these instructions in one opinion, the Eighth Circuit has taken the view that it has not preapproved these instructions and it needs to look at the instructions on a case-by-case basis. Ri-dinger,
Accordingly, we are required to scrutinize the ISBA’s instructions and will not hesitate to disapprove faulty jury instructions. See, e.g., State v. Beets,
The jury instruction given in this case is inconsistent with our holding in this case— that the defendant’s confinement of the victim must have substantially increased the risk of harm, significantly lessened the risk of detection, or significantly facilitated the risk of escape. Thus, the instruction as given unduly waters down our approach to kidnapping when there is an underlying criminal offense.
Although the instruction accurately indicates the confinement must be significant apart from the sexual abuse, it does not clearly state the Rich tripartite test. The risk of harm beyond sexual abuse must be substantial, and the decreased risk of detection or facilitation of escape must be significant in order to support a kidnapping conviction. The purpose of these intensifiers is to prevent the swallowing up of the crime of sexual abuse by the much more serious crime of kidnapping. Compare Iowa Code § 709.3(2) (2011) (defining
As indicated above, virtually all of our kidnapping cases have included these important words, describing the proper standard in evaluating the evidence in kidnapping cases involving underlying crimes. See, e.g., Hatter,
Under the instruction given by the court in this case, however, a jury could have concluded a relatively slight increase in the risk of harm or relatively slight decrease in the risk of detection or ease of escape was sufficient to support a kidnapping conviction. Cf. Doughty,
II. Ineffective Assistance Analysis.
The pro se defendant does not suggest an approach to evaluating effectiveness of counsel other than that announced in Strickland v. Washington,
I think it is apparent that a challenge to the instruction, particularly in a case where the evidence supporting confinement in excess of that incidental to sexual abuse was thin, a challenge to a jury in-, struction as not conforming with Rich and its clear progeny applying the tripartite test was a claim worth raising. See State v. Schoelerman,
I further conclude the faulty instruction prejudiced the defendant. Our precedents emphasize that while in some cases the evidence clearly establishes the prerequisites for kidnapping independent of the underlying crimes and in others, the evidence is clearly lacking, the cases in the middle category between these extremes are cases for the jury to decide. In making the necessary determination, it is axiomatic the court properly instruct the jury. In a factually close case such as this, the failure of the district court to give a completely accurate instruction under the Rich tripartite test undermines my confidence in the verdict.
Further, I think trial courts should reformulate the ISBA’s instruction to conform with the holding in this case and include the concept that the defendant’s confinement of the victim substantially increased the risk of harm, significantly lessened the risk of detection, or significantly facilitated the risk of escape to avoid reversible error.
. Jury instruction number 23 was adopted from Iowa State Bar Association (ISBA), Iowa Criminal Jury Instruction 1000.5 (2012).
. The proper treatment of such claims is discussed in State v. Halverson,
