IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA
No. 20-0149
Filed January 12, 2022
STATE OF IOWA,
Plaintiff-Appellee,
vs.
KYLE ANDREW HATTRUP,
Defendant-Appellant.
________________________________________________________________
Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Black Hawk County, Bradley J.
Harris, Judge.
Kyle Hattrup appeals his convictions and sentences for multiple crimes.
AFFIRMED.
Adam R. Junaid of Frerichs Law Office, P.C., Waterloo, for appellant.
Thomas J. Miller, Attorney General, and Zachary Miller, Assistant Attorney
General, for appellee.
Heard by Mullins, P.J., and Schumacher and Ahlers, JJ.
2
AHLERS, Judge.
Kyle Hattrup suffered head trauma a number of times from birth through
high school. He received mental-health treatment and medication over the years
as a result. Throughout his adult years, he had a number of episodes of explosive
anger. On December 18, 2015, Hattrup had one of those episodes. He broke
items in his house, went to his parents’ house, broke some of their property, and
returned home to go to bed. The next day, he took gasoline and matches to his
parents’ house, poured the gas in their garage, and lit it, starting a fire. His uncle,
who lived next door to his parents, called the police. When he heard his uncle
talking to the police, Hattrup tried to leave. When his mother tried to stop him, he
struck her. He returned home to find his live-in girlfriend had locked him out of the
house. As he tried to break his way in through the back door, his girlfriend left out
the front door where she met police officers arriving at the scene. Hattrup grabbed
a shotgun from his bedside, stepped onto the front porch, “racked” a shell into the
chamber, and pointed it in the direction of the police officers. The situation was
eventually resolved peacefully when Hattrup took the shotgun back in the house,
came out with his hands up, and followed police orders to lie down. After being
arrested, Hattrup apologized to the officers.
This incident resulted in multiple criminal charges against Hattrup. At trial,
he asserted defenses of diminished responsibility and insanity. The jury rejected
Hattrup’s defenses and found him guilty of assault while displaying a dangerous
weapon,1 interference with official acts while armed with a firearm,2 and reckless
1 See Iowa Code §§ 708.1(2)(c), 708.2(3) (2015) (an aggravated misdemeanor).
2 See Iowa Code § 719.1(1)(f) (a class “D” felony).
3
use of fire.3 He was sentenced accordingly. Hattrup appeals. He seeks a new
trial due to the district court’s exclusion of certain evidence he sought to admit. He
also seeks resentencing based on his claim that the district court considered
unproven facts and improper factors.
I. Evidentiary Issues
Hattrup tried to introduce testimony from himself, his mother, and his
girlfriend about improvement in his demeanor, affect, and general mental condition
over the four-year period between the events leading to the charges and his trial.4
The State objected on relevance grounds. The court sustained the objection and
excluded the evidence. Hattrup claims this was error warranting a new trial.
As noted, Hattrup asserts an insanity defense. By asserting an insanity
defense, a defendant bears the burden to prove by a preponderance of the
evidence that (1) the defendant suffered from a diseased or deranged condition of
the mind, and (2) the condition made the defendant either incapable of knowing
the nature and quality of the act the defendant was committing or was incapable
3 See Iowa Code § 712.5 (a serious misdemeanor).
4 In his briefs, Hattrup suggests he sought to admit evidence of “his behavior,
demeanor, affect, and general mental health before,” during, and after the events
that resulted in the charges, but the district court excluded the evidence. The
record does not support this suggestion. The record reveals that Hattrup sought
to admit, and the district court excluded, only evidence of Hattrup’s condition after
the events leading to the charges. To the extent Hattrup now claims error for the
exclusion of evidence of Hattrup’s condition before or during the events leading to
the charges, we decline to address the claim. The court did not exclude such
evidence. Further, Hattrup made no offer of proof and made no argument for
admission of evidence about his condition before or during the event, so error was
not preserved on that claim. See State v. Lange, 531 N.W.2d 108, 114 (Iowa 1995)
(requiring offers of proof to preserve error when evidence is excluded). We limit
our discussion to the preserved claim—the exclusion of evidence of Hattrup’s
condition since the events leading to the charges.
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of distinguishing between right and wrong in relation to the act.5 In his brief,
Hattrup asserts evidence of his improved condition after the events leading to the
charges is relevant to his insanity defense in this way:
[The evidence] is relevant because it is probative of his insanity: his
demeanor and actions during times of proper functioning—that is,
after the successful treatment—are so different than his demeanor
and actions on the day in question that it tends to make it more
probable that he was suffering from a diseased or deranged
condition at the time, and the condition was bad enough that he could
not know the nature and quality of his actions or distinguish right from
wrong. This evidence is clearly relevant to the issue of his condition
on the date of the events.
The district court did not find this argument persuasive and excluded the evidence
as irrelevant.
We review rulings on relevance of evidence for an abuse of discretion. 6 A
district court abuses its discretion in ruling on relevance objections when it
“exercises its discretion ‘on grounds or for reasons clearly untenable or to an extent
clearly unreasonable.’”7 The district court has broad discretion in making the call
whether evidence is relevant.8 Given this standard of review, it is not our task to
make an independent decision whether the excluded evidence was relevant.
Rather, our task is to decide whether the district court’s exclusion of the evidence
as irrelevant was clearly untenable or clearly unreasonable. Honoring the broad
discretion afforded to the district court, we conclude its decision to exclude the
evidence was not clearly untenable or clearly unreasonable. The relevant date on
which Hattrup had the obligation to prove that he was legally insane was the date
5 Iowa Code § 701.4.
6 State v. Tipton, 897 N.W.2d 653, 691 (Iowa 2017).
7 Id. (quoting State v. Buenaventura, 660 N.W.2d 38, 50 (Iowa 2003)).
8 State v. Thompson, 954 N.W.2d 402, 407 (Iowa 2021).
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that the events occurred that led to his charges. It was reasonable for the district
court to conclude that evidence of Hattrup’s mental condition and the
manifestations of it during the four-year period after the relevant date did not have
any tendency to make a fact of consequence more or less probable than it would
be without the evidence.9
Before leaving this issue, we address two cases that Hattrup contends
support his claim that events occurring after the alleged criminal acts are relevant:
State v. Wheeler10 and State v. Venzke.11 Neither case is sufficiently on point to
persuade us that it supports Hattrup’s position. Neither case involves challenges
to the admission or exclusion of evidence. Rather, the cases address the
sufficiency of evidence supporting guilty findings that rejected insanity defenses.
In finding sufficient evidence in both cases, our court considered
subsequent conduct. In Wheeler, we found adequate circumstantial evidence
supporting the finding that Wheeler understood the nature of his acts and their
wrongful nature because, after shooting and beating his father, he attempted to
stage the house to look like a burglary, hid the gun, fled from Iowa under an
assumed name, refused to divulge his whereabouts to his sister, and
acknowledged that he knew he was in trouble.12 In Venzke, we found adequate
evidence to overcome Venzke’s insanity defense based on evidence that, after
9 See Iowa R. of Evid. 5.401 (defining evidence as relevant if “[i]t has any tendency
to make a fact more or less probable than it would be without the evidence” and
“[t]he fact is of consequence in determining the action”).
10 403 N.W.2d 58 (Iowa Ct. App. 1987), overruled on other grounds by State v.
Reeves, 636 N.W.2d 22, 24–25 (Iowa 2001).
11 576 N.W.2d 382 (Iowa Ct. App. 1997).
12 403 N.W.2d at 62.
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killing his wife, he ran toward the family’s church, shed his blood-soaked clothes,
and hid them.13 He also “told authorities he assumed he would either be raptured
to heaven after the killing or be put in jail.”14
Neither of these cases convinces us any error occurred here. Here, as in
Wheeler and Venzke, the State introduced evidence of Hattrup’s conduct
immediately after the crimes were committed—specifically, evidence that Hattrup
discarded the shotgun, surrendered with his hands up, obeyed commands, and
apologized to police. That evidence was admitted to support the State’s challenge
to the second prong of Hattrup’s insanity defense by suggesting that Hattrup knew
the nature of his actions and he could distinguish between right and wrong near in
time to when he committed the acts. In contrast, the evidence Hattrup sought to
introduce—improvement of his mental health with treatment over the course of four
years following his actions—shed no meaningful light on any fact of consequence,
including whether he was legally insane at the time of the acts.
We find no error in the court’s exclusion of the evidence of Hattrup’s post-
event mental-health treatment and its effect on him. Further, even if it had been
error to exclude the evidence, the error would not warrant reversal. Error in
excluding evidence warrants reversal only when it affects a party’s substantial
rights.15 To determine whether substantial rights are affected in cases dealing with
nonconstitutional error, such as this, we employ harmless error analysis.16 This
13 576 N.W.2d at 384.
14 Id.
15 Eiesenhauer ex rel. T.D. v. Henry Cnty. Health Ctr., 935 N.W.2d 1, 19 (Iowa
2019); see Iowa R. Evid. 5.103(a).
16 Id.
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analysis presumes prejudice, and we “reverse unless the record affirmatively
establishes otherwise.”17 Upon our review of the record, we find it affirmatively
establishes a lack of prejudice. Both Hattrup’s expert and the State’s expert
testified about the improvements Hattrup made regarding his mental health
between the date of the incidents and trial. The experts based their testimony and
opinions, in part, on information provided by Hattrup, his mother, and his girlfriend.
Given that the evidence Hattrup sought to introduce—testimony from him, his
mother, and his girlfriend about his mental-health progress since the episode at
issue—was already presented to the jury through the experts, any error in the
exclusion of that evidence was harmless because it was cumulative. 18
We find no reversible error in the district court’s decision to exclude the
evidence Hattrup sought to introduce.
II. Sentencing Issues
Hattrup also seeks resentencing. He claims the district court considered
unproven facts and improper factors in determining his sentence. He targets three
comments made by the sentencing judge.
Before addressing the challenged comments, we first address our review
standards. We give a sentencing judge significant latitude in choosing a sentence
due to the discretionary nature of the sentencing decision and the respect afforded
to the judge by the appellate process.19 Honoring that latitude, we will not reverse
17 Id. (quoting State v. Russell, 893 N.W.2d 307, 314 (Iowa 2017)).
18 See State v. Windsor, 316 N.W.2d 684, 688 (Iowa 1982) (finding the
presumption of prejudice is overcome by showing that the same evidence came
into the record at another time).
19 State v. Fetner, 959 N.W.2d 129, 133–34 (Iowa 2021).
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the sentencing decision unless there is an abuse of discretion or a defect in the
sentencing procedure.20 If a sentence falls within “statutory limits, it ‘is cloaked
with a strong presumption in its favor.’”21 Hattrup does not claim the sentence he
received exceeded statutory limits, so his sentence is cloaked with that strong,
favorable presumption. Even with this strong presumption, however, resentencing
is required if the sentencing judge uses an improper consideration.22 Improper
considerations include relying on unproven facts23 and relying on the defendant’s
exercise of a constitutional right.24 Hattrup claims the district court considered both
of these categories of improper factors.
A. Facts Relied Upon
Hattrup claims the district court improperly relied on multiple unproven facts.
His first claim is based on the district court’s statement, “You were basically
chasing your girlfriend out of the house at the time that you went out there.
Whether you were chasing her or not, she had just left the house and you followed
her with the firearm.” Hattrup takes issue with the court’s characterization of his
conduct as chasing or following his girlfriend out of the house. He claims his
girlfriend’s testimony negates this characterization, so it is not supported by the
record. We find the district court’s statements supported by the record. It is true
20 State v. Damme, 944 N.W.2d 98, 103 (Iowa 2020).
21 Fetner, 959 N.W.2d. at 134 (quoting State v. Boldon, 954 N.W.2d 62, 73 (Iowa
2021)).
22 Id.
23 See id. at 135–36 (finding it improper for the sentencing judge to speculate that
the defendant was working at a day care while under the influence of drugs when
no evidence was presented that the defendant was doing so).
24 See State v. Nichols, 247 N.W.2d 249, 255 (Iowa 1976) (noting that a sentencing
judge cannot use a defendant’s exercise of the defendant’s constitutional rights
against the defendant).
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that Hattrup’s girlfriend testified she went out the front door while Hattrup was still
trying to force his way through the back door, and, when Hattrup exited the front
door, she was on the front sidewalk “kind of in front of the empty lot” right next
door. But Hattrup’s successful entry through the back door followed by his
appearance on the front porch with a shotgun was soon enough after his
girlfriend’s exit through the front door that he can be fairly characterized as
following her out of the house.25 The facts recited by the district court are
supported by the record,26 so the court committed no error in considering them.
Hattrup’s second claim challenges the district court’s statement, “Everyone
said they saw the signs that it[27] was building, and yet they allowed this firearm to
sit by your bed. They allowed you to have access to it. . . . [N]o one would stand
up to you and say that weapon, you don’t belong with that.” Hattrup claims the
record does not support this assertion and it involved speculation by the court. We
believe Hattrup takes the comment out of context by reciting only part of the court’s
comments on this topic. To address his claim, we find it important to recite the
entire comment:
And I’ve weighed all of those things, and I’ve also included
that your attorney talked about the support that you have, and it is
wonderful. But there is something that very much concerns me about
that support, and that is, everyone knew about your condition. They
didn’t know . . . the right name for it, but they knew that you could
lose control. They knew that this was coming on. Everyone said
they saw the signs that it was building, and yet they allowed this
25 See Follow, Merriam-Webster, https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/
follow (last visited Jan. 9, 2022) (defining follow to include “to go, proceed, or come
after” and “to go or come after a person or thing in place, time, or sequence”).
26 See State v. Grandberry, 619 N.W.2d 399, 401 (Iowa 2000) (finding that the
standard of proof at the sentencing stage is by a preponderance of the evidence);
see also Fetner, 959 N.W.2d at 135 (same).
27 Presumably, “it” refers to Hattrup’s mental-health issues or erratic behavior.
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firearm to sit by your bed. They allowed you to have access to it.
You knew it was coming, and you chose to have access to it. And—
and frankly that—that’s scary to this court that—that—that knowing
that you chose to still have this dangerous weapon there, that no one
would stand up to you and say that weapon, you don’t belong with
that. And because of that you put together all the pieces of a
disaster. And actually it is simply because of the restraint of the
Waterloo police department that we didn’t have a total disaster.
Looking at the comments as a whole, it is clear they were in response to facts
introduced by Hattrup at the sentencing hearing—specifically his claim of support
from others. The court’s responsive comments are supported by the record. The
evidence at trial shows that the people of Hattrup’s support system knew he
possessed the gun and kept it in his bedroom. They also knew about his mental-
health conditions and his explosive anger issues. In spite of Hattrup’s volatile
nature, the shotgun remained easily accessible by him in his bedroom. Given this
evidence, coupled with the lack of any evidence that any members of Hattrup’s
support system tried to limit his access to the shotgun, it was fair for the district
court to infer that no members of the support system tried to limit Hattrup’s access
to the gun, or, if they did, their efforts were unsuccessful. The record supports the
district court’s observations, and those observations were appropriate to respond
to Hattrup’s claim that his support system made him less of a danger.28 We find
no error in the court’s comments.
B. Exercising Constitutional Rights
For his final sentencing challenge, Hattrup points to the above-quoted
28 See State v. Headley, 926 N.W.2d 545, 550 (Iowa 2019) (listing factors a
sentencing court can consider to include “the nature of the offense” and “the
attending circumstances”).
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comments by the district court. Hattrup relies on District of Columbia v. Heller29 to
contend he has a right under the Second Amendment to the United States
Constitution to keep the shotgun in his home for self-protection. He asserts the
court’s comments show that the court held his exercise of his Second Amendment
rights against him and, as a result, the court considered an improper sentencing
factor.
We acknowledge that a sentencing judge cannot use a defendant’s exercise
of the defendant’s constitutional rights against the defendant.30 But we disagree
that the court did so here. Heller recognizes that Second Amendment rights are
not unlimited: “Like most rights, the right secured by the Second Amendment is
not unlimited. From Blackstone through the 19th-century cases, commentators
and courts routinely explained that the right was not a right to keep and carry any
weapon whatsoever in any manner whatsoever and for whatever purpose.”31 Our
supreme court has recognized that, while “[t]he law may be unsettled as to the
precise scope of what rights the Second Amendment protects,” it is certain it does
not protect using a firearm for criminal behavior.32 In particular, the supreme court
found there is no Second Amendment “right to be armed while interfering with
lawful police activity” in violation of Iowa Code section 719.1—one of the crimes
for which Hattrup was being sentenced.33 As always, the district court’s comments
29 554 U.S. 570 (2008).
30 See Nichols, 247 N.W.2d at 255 (noting that a sentencing judge cannot use a
defendant’s exercise of the defendant’s constitutional rights against the
defendant).
31 554 U.S. at 626
32 State v. Brecunier, 564 N.W.2d 365, 370 (Iowa 1997).
33 Id.
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must be put in context. Placed in proper context, we do not view the court’s
comments as holding it against Hattrup that he possessed a gun. Rather, the court
viewed it as dangerous behavior that, knowing he could exhibit explosive behavior
due to his mental-health condition, Hattrup continued to possess a gun that he
then used to assault another person and that he possessed while interfering with
lawful police activity. As Hattrup had no Second Amendment right to engage in
criminal behavior with his firearm, the district court did not improperly consider
Hattrup’s action with that firearm in deciding on a proper sentence.
III. Conclusion
We find no error in the district court’s exclusion of Hattrup’s post-crime
mental-health condition and treatment progress. Also, even if the evidence should
not have been excluded, the evidence had already been presented to the jury
through other witnesses, so any error was harmless.
As for sentencing, the district court did not consider any improper facts or
factors in deciding on Hattrup’s sentence. Accordingly, Hattrup is not entitled to
resentencing.
AFFIRMED.