IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA
No. 20-1308
Filed November 3, 2021
STATE OF IOWA,
Plaintiff-Appellee,
vs.
WAYNE MICHAEL POWELL,
Defendant-Appellant.
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Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Scott County, Mark D. Cleve and
Thomas G. Reidel, Judges.
Wayne Powell appeals his convictions for third-degree burglary, third-
degree theft, and possession of burglar’s tools. AFFIRMED.
Martha J. Lucey, State Appellate Defender, and Josh Irwin, Assistant
Appellate Defender, for appellant.
Thomas J. Miller, Attorney General, and Linda J. Hines, Assistant Attorney
General, for appellee.
Considered by Bower, C.J., and Vaitheswaran and Schumacher, JJ.
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BOWER, Chief Judge.
Wayne Powell appeals his convictions for third-degree burglary, third-
degree theft, and possession of burglar’s tools, contending there is insufficient
evidence he was the perpetrator. He also asserts the court abused its discretion
in denying his motion for a new trial based on the weight of the evidence. Finding
sufficient evidence to support the convictions and no abuse of discretion in the
district court’s denial of a new trial, we affirm.
At 5:51 a.m. on April 23, 2019, Davenport Police Officer Nathaniel Thomas
was on patrol when he observed a man walking down the street carrying two weed
eaters over his shoulder in the area of a nonprofit organization called One Eighty
Zone.1 The man was wearing dark jeans, a dark jacket with the hood up, a light-
colored shirt beneath the jacket, and bright orange work gloves. Curious because
of the early hour, Officer Thomas decided to follow up and informed other officers.
He turned his vehicle around and again observed the man, who went north
between two houses still carrying the weed eaters.
Officer Thomas parked his car and continued to look for the man and then
spotted him peeking out from behind two vehicles. Officer Thomas went behind
the houses in the location in which he first observed the man and saw the two
weed eaters.2 He then encountered Powell a couple of houses away in the alley.
Powell was wearing dark jeans, an unzipped hooded jacket with the hood down,
and a light colored shirt; he was carrying bright orange work gloves. Powell denied
1 One Eighty is a “group home or rehabilitation place . . . located on the corner of
6th and Marquette.” One Eighty consists of a “campus,” including a building
referred to as the “old schoolhouse” and the Achievement Center.
2 The weed eaters were orange, the color of the Stihl brand.
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taking any lawn equipment. He told Officer Thomas he was coming from a friend’s
house and pointed to the house next to the yard where Officer Thomas found the
weed eaters. After investigating Powell’s assertion, Officer Thomas ruled out that
house as somewhere Powell had been.
Officer Thomas and Powell then went to the area of One Eighty, and Powell
was detained in Officer Thomas’s vehicle. Officer Thomas could see an enclosed
trailer with lawn care advertising on it behind a fence. The trailer’s back door was
damaged. Officer Cory Hughes arrived and searched the One Eighty area, finding
two Stihl leaf blowers outside the trailer’s fenced area. Officer Hughes jumped the
fence and went to the trailer. The door was halfway open, and Officer Hughes
discovered the door had been forced open. He found a hammer nearby that he
believed was used to pry open the trailer because scratches in the rust on the
hammer “matched with the marks on the trailer.” Inside the trailer was more Stihl
lawn care equipment.
Officer Hughes returned to the patrol car and read Powell his Miranda rights.
He asked Powell where the tools had come from and what Powell was doing with
them at that time in the morning. Powell told Officer Hughes “he was coming from
a friend’s house at 7th and Gaines and he was walking to another friend’s house
at 7th and Fillmore,” and that he had “walked past the fenced-in area that the trailer
had been broken into.” Powell did not tell Officer Hughes he had been at the
address given to Officer Thomas earlier.
Powell was charged with third-degree burglary, second-degree theft, and
possession of burglar’s tools. At trial, Matthew Griffin, the maintenance supervisor
at One Eighty, testified he did not know how many items were normally in the
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trailer, but it generally contained many types of lawn equipment. Griffin stated he
believed the missing items included “multiple weed eaters,” “edge trimmers,” “a
backpack,” and “some hedge trimmers too.” He reviewed the facility’s surveillance
video, which captured the break-in of the trailer from three different camera angles.
The black-and-white recordings showed a man in dark jeans and hoodie with a
lighter shirt under the hoodie and lighter gloves. Another angle shows the person
walking down the sidewalk toward the camera, carrying what appears to be two
weed eaters over their shoulder. The person’s face is not clearly visible.
Bryan Green, “lawn care, landscape, [and] snow removal supervisor” at One
Eighty, testified he was familiar with the equipment taken during the incident. He
testified the items taken were “two Stihl weed eaters, two hand-held blowers, a
backpack blower and a Stihl edger.” He testified the replacement value of the
items was $1920 and fair market value would be about $300 less.
The defense’s motions for judgment of acquittal and directed verdict were
denied. The jury found Powell guilty of third-degree burglary, third-degree theft,3
and possession of burglar’s tools. The court denied Powell’s motion for new trial
asserting the verdicts were against the weight of the evidence. Powell appeals.
Sufficiency of the evidence.
“We review the sufficiency of the evidence for correction of
errors at law.” We consider all evidence, not just the evidence
supporting the conviction, and view the evidence in the light most
favorable to the State, “including legitimate inferences and
presumptions that may fairly and reasonably be deduced from the
record evidence.”
In evaluating the sufficiency of the evidence, we consider
whether “the finding of guilt is supported by substantial evidence in
the record.” Substantial evidence “means a person may not be
3 A lesser-included of the charged offense of second-degree theft.
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convicted based upon mere suspicion or conjecture.” “Substantial
evidence exists when the evidence ‘would convince a rational fact
finder the defendant is guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.’”
State v. Ernst, 954 N.W.2d 50, 54 (Iowa 2021) (internal citations omitted). We do
not distinguish between direct and circumstantial evidence. Id. at 57.
Powell argues this case is like State v. Martinez, a case in which this court
found insufficient evidence to support burglary and theft convictions. No. 17-1373,
2018 WL 3060270 (Iowa Ct. App. June 20, 2018). Martinez is distinguishable.
There we held, “Because the only evidence placing Martinez at the scene was an
identification by police officers from a surveillance video that did not show the
burglars’ faces or any other distinctive features, we find insufficient evidence to
sustain his convictions.” Id. at *1.
Here we are not only presented with surveillance video showing a man
wearing similar clothing to Powell’s breaking into the trailer and removing items.
Before 6:00 a.m., Officer Thomas observed a man with a similar gait to the man in
the surveillance video, wearing bright orange gloves, and carrying two distinctive
weed eaters. In both the surveillance video and the officer’s body cam, only one
person is visible on the street at the time. The two weed eaters were located
behind the house where Officer Thomas saw the man cut between two houses.
Officer Thomas then encountered Powell, who was wearing dark jeans, a hooded
sweatshirt, a light colored shirt under the sweatshirt, and carrying bright orange
gloves—all consistent with the person in the surveillance video. Powell’s story
about where he had been did not pan out upon investigation. See State v. Cox,
500 N.W.2d 23, 25 (Iowa 1993) (“A false story told by a defendant to explain or
deny a material fact against him is by itself an indication of guilt.”). We conclude
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a reasonable jury could find Powell was the perpetrator beyond a reasonable
doubt.
Motion for new trial. “A district court should grant a motion for a new trial
only in exceptional circumstances.” State v. Ary, 877 N.W.2d 686, 705 (Iowa
2016). A district court may grant a motion for new trial based on the weight of the
evidence “only if more evidence supports the alternative verdict as opposed to the
verdict rendered.” Id. at 706. We review the district court’s ruling on a motion for
new trial asserting the verdict is contrary to the weight of the evidence for an abuse
of discretion. Id.
This is not an “extraordinary case in which the evidence preponderates
heavily against the verdict rendered.” See id. We cannot say the district court
abused its discretion in denying Powell’s motion for a new trial on the basis his
conviction is against the weight of the evidence. We therefore affirm.
AFFIRMED.