              IN THE SUPREME COURT OF IOWA
                            No. 57 / 18–1947

                         Filed January 24, 2020


STATE OF IOWA,

      Appellee,

vs.

RICHARD WAYNE LEEDOM,

      Appellant.



      Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Poweshiek County, Shawn R.

Showers (trial) and Crystal S. Cronk (discovery), Judges.



      Defendant convicted of sexually abusing his granddaughter appeals

order denying his motion for a new trial and pretrial ruling denying his

motion for an in camera review of the victim’s mental health records.

DISTRICT COURT JUDGMENT CONDITIONALLY AFFIRMED; CASE

REMANDED WITH INSTRUCTIONS.



      Robert P. Montgomery and Brandon Brown of Parrish Kruidenier

Dunn Gribble Gentry Brown & Bergmann, L.L.P., Des Moines, for

appellant.



      Thomas J. Miller, Attorney General, and Darrel Mullins, Susan

Krisko, and Thomas J. Ogden, Assistant Attorneys General, for appellee.
                                    2

WATERMAN, Justice.

      In this appeal, we must decide whether the district court erred by

denying the defendant’s motion for an in camera review of the victim’s

mental health records, among other issues. The defendant was charged

with sexually abusing his granddaughter, and her credibility was a key

fighting issue. Her parents were in a bitter child custody modification

proceeding, and the granddaughter strongly preferred to live with her

father. To improve her father’s custody claim, she admittedly lied about a

car accident he caused that put her at risk. She also told an investigator

that her mother physically abused her and did nothing when told of the

maternal grandfather’s sexual abuse. The granddaughter testified in her

deposition that she had disclosed the defendant’s abuse to her therapist,

a mandatory reporter. The defendant, noting that the therapist had not

reported the alleged abuse, argued the records likely contained

exculpatory impeachment evidence and filed a motion pursuant to Iowa

Code section 622.10(4) (2018) for the court’s in camera inspection. The

district court twice denied the motion and the defendant’s request for an

ex parte hearing. The case proceeded to a jury trial in which the defendant

was convicted on all counts.    The defendant appealed raising multiple

grounds for a new trial. We retained the case.

      For the reasons explained below, we hold the district court properly

denied the defendant’s motion for an ex parte hearing but erred by failing

to conduct an in camera inspection of the victim’s mental health records.

We determine the defendant’s other grounds for a new trial lack merit.

Accordingly, we conditionally affirm his convictions, but we remand the

case for the in camera inspection consistent with this opinion.
                                    3

      I. Background Facts and Proceedings.

      On April 29, 2016, a fourteen-year-old girl, H.M., disclosed to an

investigator for the Iowa Department of Human Services (DHS) that she

had been sexually abused by her maternal grandfather, Richard Wayne

Leedom, who she refers to as “Papa.”         At that time, the DHS was

investigating H.M.’s claims that her mother, Teah Leedom, had choked her

and called her derogatory terms.        H.M.’s parents were engaged in a

contested child custody modification proceeding, and H.M. strongly

preferred to spend more time with her father.         H.M. told the DHS

investigator that “one of the reasons [H.M.] was so upset with [Teah] was

that when [she] told [Teah] what Papa had done, [Teah] didn’t do anything

about it.” H.M. reported three instances of sexual abuse, all of which

occurred at Leedom’s home in Lake Ponderosa where H.M. and her older

brother often spent the night.

      The first two instances happened when H.M. was about nine or ten

years old.   While H.M was sleeping in Leedom’s bed with him, she

awakened with her pajamas unzipped and Leedom’s finger running from

her vagina to the small of her back. H.M. left the bed for the bathroom.

When she returned, Leedom kept calling her “Susan,” the name of his

then-girlfriend, later wife. When H.M. told Teah, she was told it would

stop, but it happened again.

      The second time occurred while H.M. slept on the outside of the bed,

with Leedom in the middle, and Susan on his other side against the wall.

Leedom touched H.M.’s vagina while she faced him. H.M. again left for the

bathroom afterwards, then went to sleep in a different room on the couch.

Leedom came out and asked H.M. if she was okay with what had happened

before returning to his room. H.M. did not tell Teah or Susan at that time.
                                      4

      The third instance occurred when H.M. was eleven or twelve years

old. This time, H.M. refused to sleep in Leedom’s bed, but he told her there

was no room in the living room for her to sleep, so she laid on a cushion

on the bedroom floor next to his bed. When Leedom kneeled next to the

bed to pray, he reached over and rubbed and squeezed H.M.’s buttocks

over her clothes. She moved, and Leedom jumped and stopped touching

her. A few days later, H.M. wrote about what had happened the second

and third times on the “Notes” app in her iPad and showed Teah. No

investigation began at that time.

      This criminal case arose out of the DHS investigation commenced in

2016. On August 2 of that year, Leedom was charged with three counts

of second-degree sexual abuse in violation of Iowa Code sections 709.1

and 709.3(1)(b) and one count of indecent contact with a child in violation

of section 709.12(1)(b). On July 17, 2017, one count of second-degree

sexual abuse was dropped.

      H.M. was deposed on November 8, 2017. During her deposition,

H.M. testified that she told her therapist, Jessica Schmidt, about the

sexual abuse in approximately August 2015.            H.M. claimed she told

Schmidt that she had already informed someone else so Schmidt did not

need to report it. Specifically, H.M. stated,

      I did tell Jessica. I forgot to mention that.
            ....
            Q. Had you yet at that time shared with Jessica, your
      therapist, anything about your accusations against your
      Grandpa Rick? A. I think so.
            ....
             Q. Did you get a promise from Jessica not to reveal that
      to anyone also? A. Well, I kind of told her that I had already
      told somebody so she wouldn’t tell.
           Q. Excuse me? A. I told her that I had told somebody
      because I didn’t want her to tell because people don’t really
                                     5
      understand it. It’s not just somebody out on the street that
      did this to me, it’s somebody that I actually care about and
      somebody that I don’t want to see suffer.
            ....
            Q. And did your therapist tell you she could agree not
      to share it with anyone? A. I mean she said if it was being
      taken care of, then she didn’t have to get into it.
            Q. Well, did you tell the therapist the truth that you
      had shared it with somebody or is that a lie you had shared it
      with somebody? A. I had told my mom, but I didn’t tell, like,
      DHS or anybody.
           Q. Do you specifically remember telling Jessica?
      A. Yeah.
            Q. You do? A. I remember telling her, yeah.
            ....
           Q. Did Jessica ask you who you had shared it with?
      A. No.

      On January 4, 2018, Leedom filed a motion to release privileged

records, specifically those of Schmidt, and requested the court’s in camera

review of those records.    Leedom argued that there was a reasonable

probability that the records contained exculpatory information. His theory

was that as H.M.’s therapist, Schmidt was a mandatory reporter yet no

report had been made to the authorities, raising an inference that the

records would rebut H.M.’s testimony that she had disclosed the

allegations to Schmidt.    Alternatively, if H.M. had reported the abuse,

inconsistencies in her versions of what happened could help defense

counsel impeach her at trial.

      At a hearing on the motion, Dr. Veronica Lestina, a clinical

psychologist and licensed mental health counselor, was called by the State

to testify in support of its resistance to the motion. Dr. Lestina testified

that she would be required to report if a patient twelve years old or younger

told her about sexual abuse, but it turns into a “may report it” situation

for a child over twelve. As the State argued, “The important portion of
                                      6

[Dr. Lestina’s testimony] is that a review of [H.M.’s therapist records] is not

going to be conclusive on the issue of whether or not she did or did not

disclose.” Defense counsel pointed out that Dr. Lestina testified that she

would still report in a situation with a child a few years older than twelve

and the conversation with the child would be in her records.

      On April 3, the district court issued a ruling denying the motion,

concluding that Leedom had not showed a compelling need outweighing

H.M.’s right to confidentiality.   Leedom subsequently filed a motion to

reconsider, asserting a need for an in camera review of H.M.’s records and

requesting an ex parte hearing to educate the court on the need to review

the records without revealing his defense strategy to the State. Leedom

also filed an offer of proof to support the request for the confidential

records.

      On May 7, 2018, Schmidt testified during a hearing on this motion.

She confirmed that she is a mandatory reporter.

           [MR. MONTGOMERY:] As a licensed mental health
      counselor in Iowa, are you a general mandatory reporter?
      A. Yes.
             ....
            Q. So there are more mandatory reporting obligations
      with juveniles or children than with adults, correct?
      A. There’s mandatory reporting for children and dependent
      adults.
             ....
           Q. For children, who do you consider a child under the
      law? A. Anyone under the age of 18.
             ....
            Q. And have you had some mandatory reports, reports
      of sexual abuse that were conveyed to you by a patient during
      a therapy session? . . . A. Yes. As a mandatory reporter, we
      report if someone disclosed alleged sexual abuse.

Additionally, Schmidt stated that she documents every session.
                                    7
            Q. So without regard to any particular individual or any
      substance, is there a protocol for note-taking with clients who
      are children under the age of 18? A. We document -- we have
      to document after every session, we write a progress note.
             Q. And does the protocol include, without regard to any
      identity or any substance, documenting specifically -- protocol
      specifically involve documenting any reports of sexual abuse?
      A. We document what’s shared in the session, and then if we
      make a report, we report that to the State.

Schmidt elaborated on what she considered as an incident subject to

mandatory reporting.

             [MR. MONTGOMERY:] If someone under the age of 18
      reports to you in a therapy session that they have been
      sexually abused, is that a mandatory reporting incident? [The
      Court permitted the witness to answer after objections and a
      voir dire examination.] A. Yes.
            MR. MONTGOMERY[:] And by answering yes, does that
      mean you would have to, regardless of identity of the
      individual, regardless of any particulars, does that mean you
      would have to relay that information on to law enforcement or
      governmental authorities? A. To my knowledge it would
      depend on if there was already an established investigation
      going on or if they were told that maybe it had already been
      investigated and taken care of. So it just kind of depends on
      what is happening in that session at that moment.
           Q. Okay. If you haven’t been informed of any of that,
      what would the mandatory requirement trigger? A. If I had
      no knowledge, I would have to report it.

More specifically,

             Q. You have a therapy client who’s 17 or under who
      has reported to you sexual abuse, you’re not aware of any
      ongoing governmental or law enforcement investigation
      relative to that report of sexual abuse, would you under any
      circumstances engage in an agreement, pact or
      understanding to, nonetheless, not mandatorily report that?
      A. We don’t make pacts in counseling.

            Q. So that is a, no, you wouldn’t do anything like that
      or you would? A. I wouldn’t, no.

Schmidt concluded by stating that she shares any report of sexual abuse

by minor clients with DHS without a waiver, written or otherwise. The

district court denied the motion to reconsider.
                                     8

      During the jury trial, Leedom’s defense strategy was that H.M. had

fabricated the allegations against him to improve her chances of living with

her father, Rodney Morse, who was more permissive than Teah. Prior to

the DHS disclosure, H.M. lived with Teah but spent certain days and

weekends with her father. H.M. openly expressed her desire to live with

Rodney over Teah, even pressuring a school counselor to contact DHS to

relay her desire. H.M.’s motivation and credibility were at issue.

      H.M., who was sixteen at the time of the trial, testified about the

details of the sexual abuse and the conflict with her mom. Defense counsel

cross-examined H.M. at trial about how she had lied to improve her

father’s position in the custody modification so she could spend more time

with him.

      Specifically, H.M. had given inconsistent accounts of a rollover

accident that occurred in February 2016, when Rodney was driving with

H.M as his passenger. Rodney’s fitness as a parent was at issue in the

custody-modification proceeding.       In H.M’s deposition, she initially

minimized the accident but then changed her testimony after a break in

the deposition. At first, H.M. stated that they just went on a drive to her

grandmother’s house and that the vehicle landed on its side. She also

expressed her belief that her mom was the one who called DHS and said

that Rodney had been drinking, which made her angry with Teah. After

returning from a break where H.M. appeared to talk to her father in the

hallway, she admitted that they were actually chasing deer in a field at the

time of the accident. Additionally, she later confessed that the car actually

had flipped over completely to rest on its top, upside down. H.M. also

admitted in her deposition that she lied to a DHS investigator about the

accident.
                                     9

      H.M.’s friend, B.G., also testified about the rollover accident. B.G.

testified that she and another friend had initially been in the vehicle,

countering H.M.’s account that it had just been her and her dad. B.G.

stated that H.M. brought beer to the vehicle, and Rodney was drinking and

driving, which scared her and the other friend so she asked that he drop

them off. He did, but H.M. stayed in the vehicle with him. B.G. stated

after the accident H.M. told her to lie to DHS, which she took to mean that

she should lie about Rodney’s drinking that evening. Later, when called

again as a surrebuttal witness, she elaborated,

             Q. What did you convey to [DHS investigator] Meagan
      See, say to her there that day in the interview, that [H.M] told
      you to do in your approach to the DHS if they came to you
      calling and asking questions? A. She told me that if DHS
      talked to me, to lie straight through my teeth.

B.G. also stated that Rodney’s rules were loose, and “[h]e didn’t really care

what [H.M.] did.” B.G. also testified that H.M. had told her about Leedom

abusing her.

      Terri Leedom, H.M.’s maternal grandmother, testified about

Leedom’s home and the family dynamics.            Colleen Brazil, a forensic

interview program manager for Project Harmony in Omaha, Nebraska,

testified at trial as the State’s expert witness.     Brazil testified about

misconceptions about child sexual abuse, reasons for delayed disclosure

of abuse, information about grooming processes, and how children often

lack the capacity to describe when or how often such abuse occurred.

Meagan See, a child protection worker with DHS, testified about the

investigations into the rollover accident and Teah’s abuse of H.M.

      The jury returned a verdict on June 29. Leedom was found guilty of

both counts of second-degree sexual abuse and the count of indecent

contact with a child in violation of Iowa Code chapter 709. He moved for
                                      10

a new trial based on prosecutorial misconduct and violations of the

in-limine ruling regarding the scope of Brazil’s testimony. That motion

was denied, and Leedom was sentenced on October 15 to twenty-five years

imprisonment for each count of sexual abuse in the second degree and two

years for the indecent exposure charge, to run concurrently.

      Leedom appealed his conviction, arguing the district court violated

his statutory and constitutional due process rights to an in camera review

of H.M.’s mental health records for exculpatory evidence and erred in

denying his right to an ex parte hearing on that issue. He further argued

the court erred by denying his motion for a new trial based on

prosecutorial misconduct, improper jury selection, violations of the motion

in limine as to Brazil’s vouching for H.M.’s credibility, and denial of defense

expert testimony. We retained the appeal.

      II. Standard of Review.

      “Discovery rulings challenged on constitutional grounds are

reviewed de novo.” State v. Thompson, 836 N.W.2d 470, 476 (Iowa 2013).

“Nonconstitutional challenges to discovery rulings are reviewed for abuse

of discretion.” Id. Our review of a claim of a violation of the constitutional

right to present a defense, a Due Process Clause challenge, is de novo.

State v. Clark, 814 N.W.2d 551, 560 (Iowa 2012). We review rulings on

claims of prosecutorial misconduct for abuse of discretion.           State v.

Coleman, 907 N.W.2d 124, 134 (Iowa 2018). We review de novo Leedom’s

constitutional claim that his right to compulsory process was violated.

State v. Heard, 934 N.W.2d 433, 439 (Iowa 2019).            A district court’s

decision to excuse potential jurors is reviewed for abuse of discretion.

State v. Hobson, 284 N.W.2d 239, 241 (Iowa 1979).
                                    11

      III. Analysis.

      We retained this case primarily to review the district court’s denial

of Leedom’s motion for an in camera inspection of H.M.’s mental health

records. We conclude Leedom met the statutory requirements to trigger

the district court’s obligation to inspect the records of H.M.’s treating

therapist, Jessica Schmidt. We reverse the district court’s rulings denying

that in camera inspection and remand the case for the district court to

conduct that inspection pursuant to Iowa Code section 622.10(4)(a)(2).

      We then address Leedom’s other grounds for a new trial below and

conclude they lack merit. We therefore conditionally affirm his convictions

subject to the outcome of the in camera inspection.

      A. H.M.’s Mental Health Records.         Iowa Code section 622.10

governs access to mental health records and generally prohibits disclosure

of confidential communications between mental health professionals and

their patients. Iowa Code § 622.10(1). The legislature added subsection

622.10(4)(a)(2) in 2011, in response to our decision in State v. Cashen, 789

N.W.2d 400, 408–10 (Iowa 2010), allowing greater access by criminal

defendants to victims’ mental health records. See 2011 Iowa Acts ch. 8,

§ 2 (amending Iowa Code § 622.10 (Supp. 2011)); Thompson, 836 N.W.2d

at 481 (noting the legislature’s response to Cashen). Justice Cady had

dissented in Cashen, noting the majority’s new protocol “adopt[ed] one of

the weakest tests known to the law” for allowing an accused abuser’s

defense counsel access to a victim’s confidential therapy records. 789

N.W.2d at 411 (Cady, J., dissenting). Justice Cady warned that the new

Cashen test may “ultimately cause victims to decline to report domestic

abuse in order to [avoid] being required to disclose very personal and

private information to the alleged abusers.”      See id.   The legislature

responded the next session with a statutory protocol that substituted
                                     12

in camera review by the district court for the more intrusive review by the

accused abuser’s attorney. See Thompson, 836 N.W.2d at 482–83.

      We held “that section 622.10(4) is constitutional on its face and

supersedes the Cashen protocol.”       Id. at 490.   The amended statute

“restores protection for the confidentiality of counseling records while also

protecting the due process rights of defendants.” Id. at 481. Leedom and

the State agree that the statute governs, but they disagree whether the

requisite showing was made in this case to trigger the district court’s

in camera review.

      We begin with the text of section 622.10.

             4. a. Except as otherwise provided in this subsection,
      the confidentiality privilege under this section shall be
      absolute with regard to a criminal action and this section shall
      not be construed to authorize or require the disclosure of any
      privileged records to a defendant in a criminal action unless
      either of the following occur:
            (1) The privilege      holder   voluntarily   waives   the
      confidentiality privilege.
            (2) (a) The defendant seeking access to privileged
      records under this section files a motion demonstrating in
      good faith a reasonable probability that the information
      sought is likely to contain exculpatory information that is not
      available from any other source and for which there is a
      compelling need for the defendant to present a defense in the
      case. Such a motion shall be filed not later than forty days
      after arraignment under seal of the court. Failure of the
      defendant to timely file such a motion constitutes a waiver of
      the right to seek access to privileged records under this
      section, but the court, for good cause shown, may grant relief
      from such waiver.
             (b) Upon a showing of a reasonable probability that the
      privileged records sought may likely contain exculpatory
      information that is not available from any other source, the
      court shall conduct an in camera review of such records to
      determine whether exculpatory information is contained in such
      records.
            (c) If exculpatory information is contained in such
      records, the court shall balance the need to disclose such
      information against the privacy interest of the privilege holder.
                                      13
             (d) Upon the court’s determination, in writing, that the
      privileged information sought is exculpatory and that there is
      a compelling need for such information that outweighs the
      privacy interests of the privilege holder, the court shall issue
      an order allowing the disclosure of only those portions of the
      records that contain the exculpatory information. The court’s
      order shall also prohibit any further dissemination of the
      information to any person, other than the defendant, the
      defendant’s attorney, and the prosecutor, unless otherwise
      authorized by the court.

Iowa Code § 622.10(4) (2018) (emphasis added). The district court ruled

Leedom failed to meet the showing required under section 622.10(4)(2)(b).

We disagree.

      We first address a threshold issue, whether the district court erred

in denying Leedom’s request for an ex parte hearing on the motion for an

in camera review to explain his reasons for seeking H.M.’s mental health

records without disclosing the trial strategy to the State. Leedom relies on

State v. Dahl, in which the state resisted an indigent defendant’s

application under Iowa Code section 815.7 for funds to hire an

investigator. 874 N.W.2d 348, 350 (Iowa 2016). We allowed the defendant

an ex parte hearing to avoid disclosing his defense strategy to the

prosecution. Id. at 352–53. Dahl is inapposite. The State’s role under

Iowa Code section 815.7 is simply to protect the public fisc; by contrast,

section   622.10(4)(a)   protects   sensitive   confidential   mental   health

information of third parties and has no provision for an ex parte hearing.

The State should be heard to safeguard the victim’s privacy rights. See

Thompson, 836 N.W.2d at 489 (“Here, our legislature has recognized a

similar compelling interest in protecting the psychological and emotional

needs of crime victims by limiting the disclosure of their mental health

records.”).   The district court properly denied Leedom’s request for an

ex parte hearing on his section 622.10(4) motion.
                                    14

      Turning to the merits of Leedom’s motion, in our view, the district

court abused its discretion by failing to conduct an in camera review of the

Schmidt therapy records for exculpatory information. The State lacked

corroborating physical evidence of sexual abuse, and its case hinged on

H.M.’s credibility. She admittedly lied about her father’s rollover accident

in an effort to secure placement with her father. Leedom contends H.M.

falsely reported sexual abuse by the maternal grandfather for the same

reason—so that she could live with her father. H.M. testified she reported

Leedom’s abuse to her therapist Schmidt.       Yet Schmidt, a mandatory

reporter who would note any abuse in her records, did not report the

allegations to the DHS. Leedom argues the district court should have

reviewed Schmidt’s records because the absence of any mention of abuse

by Leedom would be exculpatory as evidence it never happened and would

also serve as impeachment evidence against H.M. We agree with Leedom

that a sufficient showing was made to require the district court’s in camera

review. This was a targeted inquiry rather than a fishing expedition.

      The legislature did not define the term “exculpatory” in section

622.10, so we give that term its ordinary meaning: Exculpatory evidence

tends to “establish a criminal defendant’s innocence.”         Exculpatory

Evidence, Black’s Law Dictionary (11th ed. 2019). The parties disagree

whether evidence offered solely to impeach a witness is exculpatory.

Leedom argues that impeachment evidence is necessarily exculpatory.

The State cautions that broadly defining “exculpatory” to include anything

that impeaches the credibility of a witness would undermine the

confidentiality of mental health records the legislature sought to protect

after Cashen. We note that in the analogous context of Brady disclosures

required for evidence favorable to the defendant and material to guilt or
                                          15

innocence, 1 the United States Supreme Court “has rejected any such

distinction between impeachment evidence and exculpatory evidence.”

United States v. Bagley, 473 U.S. 667, 676, 105 S. Ct. 3375, 3380 (1985).

We too have recognized that “[impeachment] evidence . . . , if disclosed and

used effectively, . . . may make the difference between conviction and

acquittal.” DeSimone v. State, 803 N.W.2d 97, 105 (Iowa 2011) (quoting

Bagley, 473 U.S. at 676, 105 S. Ct. at 3380). In DeSimone, we vacated a

conviction for sexual assault and ordered a new trial based on the state’s

failure to disclose impeachment evidence, noting that “[i]n a case that

hinges on a victim’s credibility, evidence that impeaches one of the victim’s

few corroborating witnesses is, without question, favorable to the

accused.” Id.

      We are satisfied that the absence of any reported abuse in Schmidt’s

therapy notes for H.M. would be exculpatory within the meaning of Iowa

Code section 622.10(4)(a), as would notes of H.M.’s descriptions of abuse

materially inconsistent with her testimony. Such records would be useful

in cross-examining H.M. and helpful to the jury in weighing her testimony.

Confidential mental health information that is only marginally exculpatory

can be protected by the district court under the balancing test in section

622.10(4)(a)(2)(c) (“If exculpatory information is contained in such records,

the court shall balance the need to disclose such information against the

privacy interest of the privilege holder.”).

      We encourage district court judges in close cases to examine the

records in camera. This case is the third time we have reversed rulings

that denied in camera inspections and remanded with instructions to

conduct such reviews. See State v. Edouard, 854 N.W.2d 421, 442 (Iowa


      1See   Brady v. Maryland, 373 U.S. 83, 87, 83 S. Ct. 1194, 1196–97 (1963).
                                     16

2014) (victim’s records), overruled on other grounds by Alcala v. Marriott

Int’l, Inc., 880 N.W.2d 699, 708 & n.3 (Iowa 2016); State v. Neiderbach, 837

N.W.2d 180, 198 (Iowa 2013) (codefendant’s records). But see Thompson,

836 N.W.2d at 490–91 (holding the district court correctly denied motion

for an in camera inspection of murder victim’s mental health records

because defendant failed to show nexus between her posttraumatic stress

disorder treatment and any disputed issue at trial).

      Our relief is conditional. If the district court finds no exculpatory

evidence, then Leedom’s convictions remain affirmed. See Edouard, 854

N.W.2d at 440. “If exculpatory evidence is found, the district court shall

proceed as directed in section 622.10(4)(a)(2)(c) and (d) and determine

whether [Leedom] is entitled to a new trial.”       Id. at 440–41 (quoting

Neiderbach, 837 N.W.2d at 198).

      We reiterate the “importance of maintaining confidentiality in

mental health treatment.” Id. at 441 (quoting Thompson, 836 N.W.2d at

483). The legislature chose to protect the “victim-patient’s constitutional

right to privacy in her mental health records” in part by having “a neutral

judge review the victim’s private records, rather than the advocate for the

alleged abuser.” Id. (quoting Thompson, 836 N.W.2d at 487). We trust our

trial judges to fulfill that role while protecting the rights of the criminal

defendants. See id.

      Because we reverse the district court’s ruling denying an in camera

inspection on statutory grounds, we do not reach Leedom’s constitutional

claim for access to H.M.’s treatment records.

      Leedom alternatively argues that H.M. waived the therapist–patient

privilege in her deposition testimony when she testified that she told

Schmidt about her grandfather’s abuse.          A valid waiver would allow

Leedom access to the records without the showing required for the
                                     17

in camera inspection. See Iowa Code § 622.10(4)(a)(1) (allowing defendant

access in a criminal case when the “privilege holder voluntarily waives the

confidentiality privilege”). The district court ruled that the privilege had

not been waived. We agree. Leedom cites no decision by any court holding

that a minor victim answering questions of a criminal defense attorney

waives her patient–therapist privilege by testifying, when asked, that she

told her therapist about the abuse. H.M., then age fifteen, lacked the legal

capacity to waive the privilege.    See Iowa Code § 228.3(1) (allowing an

“individual eighteen years of age or older [to] consent to the disclosure of

mental health information” (emphasis added)); cf. Harder v. Anderson,

Arnold, Dickey, Jensen, Gullickson & Sanger, L.L.P., 764 N.W.2d 534, 537–

39 (Iowa 2009) (addressing parental authority to consent to release of

minor’s mental health records).

      Moreover, H.M. was compelled to give deposition testimony, and her

interrogation by her accused abuser’s attorney is effectively a cross-

examination.    We have long recognized that a privilege is not waived by

answering questions on cross-examination. See Sprague v. Brodus, 245

Iowa 90, 97, 60 N.W.2d 850, 855 (1953) (“[T]he rule is that waiver does not

result from answering questions on cross-examination without objection

as to the privileged communication.”); Johnson v. Kinney, 232 Iowa 1016,

1023, 7 N.W.2d 188, 192 (1942) (“We have frequently said that testimony

on cross examination is not voluntary in the sense that it constitutes a

waiver of the statutory privilege.”) (collecting cases); 7 Laurie Kratky Doré,

Iowa Practice Series:™ Evidence § 5.501:6(D), Westlaw (current through

Nov. 2019 update) (“Disclosure of privileged matter on cross-examination

is generally not held to be a waiver.”); see also Brandon v. W. Bend Mut.

Ins., 681 N.W.2d 633, 642 (Iowa 2004) (rejecting “the notion that a person

waives a privilege by verifying the accuracy of answers to interrogatories
                                           18

or by participating in framing the answers”). Other courts agree. See

Murray Energy Corp. v. Cassidy, Cogan, Chappell & Voegelin, L.C.,

No. 2:18-cv-440, 2019 WL 3406543, at *5 (S.D. Ohio July 29, 2019)

(holding witnesses did not waive their attorney–client privilege by

answering questions posed by opposing counsel in their depositions); State

ex rel. Shelter Mut. Ins. v. Wagner, 575 S.W.3d 476, 481 (Mo. Ct. App.

2018) (“[A] waiver extorted under cross-examination is not voluntary.

Likewise, disclosure in response to an adverse party’s discovery inquiry is

not voluntary.” (alteration in original) (quoting State ex rel. Behrendt v.

Neill, 337 S.W.3d 727, 730 (Mo. Ct. App. 2011))); Barrier v. Beaman, 390

P.3d 1048, 1049 (Or. 2017) (en banc) (“We now conclude that, by

answering questions about his treatment at his discovery deposition,

plaintiff did not ‘offer’—and thereby voluntarily disclose—that testimony

so as to waive his privilege.”).

       Leedom relies on waiver cases that are readily distinguishable. In

State v. Demaray, we held the defendant waived the physician–patient

privilege as to his blood alcohol test results when he signed a written

consent to release his hospital records to the deputy investigating his

arrest for operating while intoxicated. 704 N.W.2d 60, 66–67 (Iowa 2005).

H.M. did not and could not execute a written release of her records, and

the district court ruled her mother’s release was ineffective. 2 In Clay v.

Woodbury County, a civil case, the plaintiff sued for her emotional distress


       2On   appeal, Leedom does not rely on the waiver signed by H.M.’s mother, Teah,
while the custody modification proceeding was pending. Schmidt’s motion to quash
argued Teah’s authorization was contrary to the best interest of the child-victim-patient,
H.M., in this intrafamily sexual abuse case in which Teah was aligned with her father,
the criminal defendant. The district court rejected the argument that Teah could waive
H.M.’s privilege under these circumstances. We agree. See Harder, 764 N.W.2d at 538
(holding a divorced, noncustodial parent could not obtain her children’s mental health
records by presenting a waiver to the mental health provider when the disclosure of the
records was not in the best interest of the children).
                                    19

after a jail strip search, disclosed copies of her psychiatric records,

executed a valid written waiver, and “testified in detail” during her

deposition regarding her psychiatric treatment sessions. 965 F. Supp. 2d

1055, 1060 (N.D. Iowa 2013). When she sought to limit the deposition of

her psychiatrist, the court found she had waived privilege and that it was

“far too late for [the plaintiff] to change her mind and reinstate the

physician-patient privilege.” Id. H.M. did not turn over Schmidt’s therapy

records, execute a waiver, or invoke the patient–litigant exception by suing

Leedom. In Miller v. Continental Insurance, the plaintiffs filed affidavits

disclosing their conversations with their lawyer about the statute of

limitations; we held they thereby waived the attorney–client privilege as to

that subject. 392 N.W.2d 500, 505 (Iowa 1986) (en banc). H.M. made no

equivalent disclosure of her communications with her therapist. In State

v. Cole, we considered implied waiver in a case in which the defendant was

asserting a diminished-capacity defense and held the defense waived the

privilege. 295 N.W.2d 29, 35 (Iowa 1980) (en banc). Cole predated Iowa

Code section 622.10(4)(a)(1). H.M. did not assert any mental infirmities,

so Cole is inapplicable. In Squealer Feeds v. Pickering, we held an insurer

waived attorney–client privilege by designating its former attorney as an

expert witness on an advice-of-counsel defense to bad-faith claims. 530

N.W.2d 678, 684–85 (Iowa 1995) (en banc), abrogated on other grounds by

Wells Dairy, Inc. v. Am. Indus. Refrigeration, Inc., 690 N.W.2d 38, 44 (Iowa

2004).   Neither H.M. nor the State designated Schmidt as a testifying

expert to put her advice at issue. Finally, in State v. Heemstra, we found

the “medical privilege [was] neither abridged nor waived” in the criminal

case. 721 N.W.2d 549, 563 (Iowa 2006). We ordered a limited in camera

inspection in Heemstra, see id., for reasons that have been superseded by

the   legislature’s   subsequent   enactment     of   Iowa   Code   section
                                    20

622.10(4)(a)(2).   See Thompson, 836 N.W.2d at 490 (holding statutory

protections supersede prior caselaw).

      The district court correctly rejected Leedom’s waiver argument. A

contrary argument would undermine the statutory protections for the

confidentiality of mental health treatment. See id. at 489–90; see also

Chung v. Legacy Corp., 548 N.W.2d 147, 150 (Iowa 1996) (“By choosing to

adopt the privilege, the legislature made the policy judgment that complete

and honest communications between a physician and patient would be

enhanced by making these communications confidential.”).

      B. Evidentiary Rulings. Leedom argues the district court violated

his constitutional right to present a defense by disallowing certain

testimony. The State responds that the district court’s preliminary rulings

on admissibility were correct and that Leedom failed to preserve error

through offers of proof. We agree with the State.

      1. Proposed testimony from the therapists and a defense expert.

Leedom sought to examine H.M.’s therapist, Jessica Schmidt, about

communications during her sessions. Leedom alternatively argued that

the State opened the door to rebuttal testimony by Schmidt to refute H.M.’s

claim she disclosed Leedom’s abuse in therapy. As noted above, Leedom

wanted to show H.M. was lying because, as a mandatory reporter, Schmidt

is required to disclose alleged abuse to DHS that would have triggered an

investigation.

      Leedom also sought to call Casie McGee, the family therapist, to

testify about the injuries and demeanor that she observed when she met

with Teah after the assaults. And Leedom asserts the trial court erred in

granting the State’s motion in limine excluding proposed defense expert

testimony on whether children lie about sexual abuse allegations.
                                      21

      Asserting the patient–therapist privilege, McGee and Schmidt filed

motions to quash Leedom’s subpoenas for their trial testimony.               The

district court concluded that Leedom could not call them to testify unless

the State opened the door.

             THE COURT: I’m not going to -- now your other
      argument that you want to bring these individuals in for an
      offer of proof, at this point, I’ll let you make your offer of proof
      whenever we get to that point. So maybe it is a little
      premature, but I just don’t see any way you get them to come
      on the stand and say what they do without the State opening
      that door.

      The district court ordered the parties to stay away from the topic

during the opening statements because it did not have the transcript of

Schmidt’s testimony during the hearing on the motion for in camera

inspection. The court indicated it would entertain an offer of proof before

the witnesses were called.

      Leedom rested without calling these witnesses and never made an

offer of proof. A ruling sustaining a motion in limine does not generally

preserve error. Quad City Bank & Trust v. Jim Kircher & Assocs., P.C., 804

N.W.2d 83, 89 (Iowa 2011). An exception exists when “the court’s ruling

on a motion in limine leaves no question that the challenged evidence will
or will not be admitted at trial, [thus] counsel need not renew its objection

to the evidence at trial to preserve error.” Id. at 90. The court made no

such unequivocal ruling as to Schmidt, McGee, or the defense expert.

Leedom failed to preserve error.

      2. Exclusion of testimony from Teah Leedom.           Leedom sought to

present evidence that Teah was attacked in her home on three occasions

during the custody dispute over H.M. The court preliminarily ruled this

evidence was irrelevant and prejudicial. The defense offered to make a

record of proof later in the case, and the court agreed to allow them to do
                                            22

so—“We can make a record at some point if you’d like,” and “I’ll allow you

to make the offer at whatever point is appropriate.” But Leedom never

made that offer of proof. As such, he failed to preserve error. Id.

       The evidence was inadmissible in any event. Leedom argues the

evidence would support his defense theory that H.M. was willing to go to

extreme lengths to live with her father given the timing and circumstances

of the assaults.        The State argues that this evidence is speculative,

irrelevant, and unfairly prejudicial and therefore inadmissible. We agree

with the State. See Iowa Rs. Evid. 5.401, .403.

       Leedom cannot point to any evidence identifying who committed the

assaults. There is no evidence that H.M. or her father had any connection

to the assaults.       The district court’s preliminary ruling excluding this

evidence was well within its discretion.

       C. Alleged Prosecutorial Misconduct.                   Leedom argues that he

“was denied a fair trial as a result of several instances of prosecutorial

misconduct that prejudiced the proceedings.”                 A defendant must show

both misconduct and resulting prejudice to prevail on a claim of

prosecutorial misconduct.           Neiderbach, 837 N.W.2d at 209.               To prove

prosecutorial misconduct, the defendant must “show the prosecutor acted

with reckless disregard . . . or intentionally made statements in violation

of an obvious obligation, legal standard, or applicable rule that went

beyond an exercise of poor judgment.”                 Coleman, 907 N.W.2d at 139

(discussing the difference between prosecutorial error and prosecutorial

misconduct). 3      Leedom asserts three acts of prosecutorial misconduct

       3In State v. Schlitter, we adopted a recommendation of the American Bar

Association to “distinguish between incidences of prosecutorial error and prosecutorial
misconduct.” 881 N.W.2d 380, 394 (Iowa 2016). Prosecutorial error can be the result of
a “mistake or error during the heat of trial.” Id. at 393. “[P]rosecutorial error is based on
human error or the exercise of poor judgment.” Coleman, 907 N.W.2d at 139. By
contrast, prosecutorial misconduct generally involves intentional or reckless violations of
                                         23

violated his right to a fair trial: eliciting expert testimony from Brazil that

amounted to vouching, arguing jury nullification, and referring to

statements made by Terri Leedom in her closing argument. We address

each in turn.

       1.   State’s expert Brazil. The Iowa Rules of Evidence allow expert

testimony to assist “the trier of fact to understand the evidence or to

determine a fact in issue.” Iowa R. Evid. 5.702. “Expert testimony in child

sexual abuse cases can be very beneficial to assist the jury in

understanding some of the seemingly unusual behavior child victims tend

to display.” State v. Dudley, 856 N.W.2d 668, 675 (Iowa 2014). Experts

may express general opinions but may not directly comment on the

veracity of the child victim. Id. at 675–77 (summarizing the applicable

legal principles for expert testimony in child sexual abuse cases). “[W]e

are committed to the legal principle that an expert witness cannot give

testimony that directly or indirectly comments on the child’s credibility.”

Id. at 677. In State v. Payton, we allowed expert testimony to explain to

the jury why child victims of sexual abuse may delay reporting the abuse,

without testifying specifically about the victim in that case. 481 N.W.2d

325, 327 (Iowa 1992).

       In our view, Brazil’s testimony did not vouch for H.M.’s credibility.

Brazil’s testimony was general in nature describing why children delay

disclosure, the grooming process, why children have an inability to recall

specific dates, and the possibility that others can be in the room when

abuse occurs. Brazil did not treat H.M. or meet with her on any occasion.

Brazil never used H.M.’s name or referenced her. Brazil did not offer her

the law. Id. We reiterate our admonition that a “prosecutor who has committed error
should not be described as committing misconduct.” Schlitter, 881 N.W.2d at 394.
Leedom has shouldered the burden of establishing prosecutorial misconduct rather than
prosecutorial error.
                                       24

opinion regarding H.M.’s truthfulness or specifically testify that H.M.’s

behavior was consistent with the behavior of abuse victims generally.

Brazil did not connect H.M.’s experience to the research that she relayed

in her testimony. Brazil’s generalized testimony is permissible under our

precedent. Therefore, the prosecutor’s elicitation of Brazil’s testimony did

not amount to prosecutorial misconduct.

      2. Arguing jury nullification.    Leedom seizes on the prosecutor’s

closing argument referring to the term “hesitate” as used in different

instructions. Jury Instruction No. 7 stated in part,

            A reasonable doubt is a doubt based upon reason and
      common sense, and not the mere possibility of innocence. A
      reasonable doubt is the kind of doubt that would make a
      reasonable person hesitate to act. Proof beyond a reasonable
      doubt, therefore, must be proof of such a convincing character
      that a reasonable person would not hesitate to rely and act
      upon it. However, proof beyond a reasonable doubt does not
      mean proof beyond all possible doubt.

During her closing argument, the prosecutor said this about Jury

Instruction No. 7,

      [T]he part that strikes me the most is we have this idea that if
      you hesitate to act, if this information would make you
      hesitate to act, but yet you’re going to be instructed -- and I
      think it’s No. 26, but you will see that also -- that when you
      deliberate, you’re supposed to hesitate.

In doing so, the prosecutor referenced another jury instruction, No. 29,

which stated in part,

      During your deliberations, do not hesitate to re-examine your
      view and change your opinion if convinced it is wrong. But do
      not change your opinion as to the weight or effect of the
      evidence just because it is the opinion of the other jurors, or
      for the mere purpose of returning a verdict.

Defense counsel objected unsuccessfully. The prosecutor continued,

      As I was saying, that instruction -- and if you look at the other
      instruction, and its number, so I make sure, is 29. And it tells
                                     25
      you when you go into the jury deliberation -- into your jury
      deliberation, you are supposed to hesitate.

Defense counsel again objected, stating that the prosecutor was urging
jury nullification on the reasonable doubt instruction. The court overruled

the objection but stated, “I would just remind the jury that the arguments

of counsel are not evidence.” The prosecutor then argued, “[H]esitation

means that you stop and think, that’s not what they’re telling you in

reasonable doubt. And we know that, because you’re supposed to stop

and think.” The court left it open for defense counsel to object again, which

he did not do.

      Leedom contends the prosecutor’s comments on the jury instruction

deprived him of the right to a fair trial. We disagree. The comments fell

short of seeking juror nullification, which is the jury’s “right to acquit a

defendant even if its verdict is contrary to the law and evidence.” State v.

Hendrickson, 444 N.W.2d 468, 472 (Iowa 1989).

      The prosecutor confused the use of the word “hesitate” in two

different instructions. This could be viewed as an attempt to water down

the meaning of “hesitate” in the reasonable doubt instruction and was an

improper form of argument. But the district court reminded the jury that

the closing arguments are not evidence, and jurors were told to read the

instructions together. The district court found no misconduct warranting

reversal. We find no abuse of discretion and affirm.

      3. Referring to statements made by Terri Leedom. Leedom further

argues the prosecutor crossed the line into misconduct with her closing

argument about Terri Leedom’s testimony.         Terri, Teah’s mother and

Leedom’s ex-wife, testified about Leedom’s home in Lake Ponderosa and

the family dynamics. Terri testified that she was on speaking terms with

Teah, but that changed after she talked with police about the alleged
                                     26

abuse.   There was no objection to Terri’s testimony.        In her closing

argument, the prosecutor stated,

             So let’s talk a minute about Terri Leedom. She,
      obviously, came in here, and she talked about some of the
      general stuff. But some of the really important stuff about
      Terri Leedom -- that’s Teah’s mom -- is that knowing that
      promise that you had, Terri came in here and said, “After I
      was called and gave evidence” -- or not evidence, I’m sorry,
      “After I was called and gave an interview to the police and told
      the police things, my daughter cut myself out of -- cut me out
      of her life. I don’t have a relationship with my daughter or my
      granddaughter” -- I’m sorry -- “my daughter or my grandson.”
      That’s after she talks to the police.
              You can infer, especially from the lack of Teah coming
      in here and talking to you, that Teah didn’t like what she had
      to tell the police. Teah talked to her mother about the charges,
      but [H.M.] never talked to her mother about the specifics.
            So, again, a lot of evidence that you have, you have to
      follow the evidence, and you have to see how it fits together
      for you. If you have a problem with this -- with this idea that,
      you know, Teah talks to her mom and, obviously, talks about
      something, because she did talk to her mom about the
      charges, and [H.M.] doesn’t talk to her mom about specifics,
      [H.M.] must not have really -- or Terri must not really have
      had much to tell the police in regards to [H.M.]

      Counsel can draw inferences from the evidence in closing

arguments, but they cannot misstate or create the record. State v. Carey,

709 N.W.2d 547, 554 (Iowa 2006).          The prosecutor was drawing on a

reasonable inference from the evidence that one of the reasons that Terri’s

relationship with Teah deteriorated was that Teah did not like what Terri

said to the police. The district court found no prosecutorial misconduct.

We find no abuse of discretion and affirm.

      D. Order Quashing Subpoena for Prosecutor’s Testimony.

Leedom subpoenaed the prosecutor, Assistant Attorney General Susan

Krisko, to testify at the hearing on his motion for new trial. He alleged his

right to compulsory process under the Federal and State Constitutions

allowed him to compel the testimony of the opposing counsel to support
                                     27

his claims of her prosecutorial misconduct during her closing argument

and in her examination of Brazil.         Leedom never explained why her

testimony was required to adjudicate the claims of prosecutorial

misconduct. Like the trial court, we examine the record of her conduct

itself to determine if lines were crossed, regardless of what she was

thinking at the time.

       Leedom cites no Iowa authority compelling a prosecutor to testify.

Leedom’s right to compulsory process is subject to the rules of evidence,

and what Krisko was thinking during trial is off-limits. See Iowa R. Civ.

P. 1.503(3) (protecting an attorney’s mental impressions); Keefe v.

Bernard, 774 N.W.2d 663, 674 (Iowa 2009) (discussing scope of protection

for attorney mental impressions); see also Shelton v. Am. Motors Corp., 805

F.2d 1323, 1327 (8th Cir. 1986) (describing limited circumstances for

compelling nonprivileged testimony from opposing counsel during

litigation).   In State v. Brewer, we affirmed a ruling that quashed a

subpoena for the prosecutor’s testimony as to why a witness was granted

immunity.      247 N.W.2d 205, 211–12 (Iowa 1976).       We recognized the

defendant’s right to compel testimony of the state’s witnesses but pointedly

observed, “A prosecutor is not a State witness.” Id. at 212.

       In Chatman v. State, the Indiana Supreme Court held the defendant

had no right to compel the testimony of a prosecutor regarding his alleged

misconduct for his questioning of a witness during the trial. 334 N.E.2d

673, 681–82 (Ind. 1975). The Chatman court noted, “It is elementary that

counsel is not ordinarily subject to call to the witness chair” and viewed

the defendant’s “attempt to put the prosecutor upon the witness stand [as]

an ill-concealed effort to turn the proceedings into a trial of the prosecutor

and thus divert attention from the real issues of the case.” Id. at 682. We

reach the same conclusion here, and having resolved the misconduct
                                      28

claims on the merits, we now affirm the district court’s ruling quashing

the subpoena of the prosecutor.

      E. Dismissal of Three Prospective Jurors.            Finally, we must

determine whether a new trial is required because the district court, over

Leedom’s objection, excused three prospective jurors for work-related

reasons. Leedom’s trial began on June 26, 2018. The parties estimated

that the trial could end as late as July 9. At the start of the jury selection,

eight prospective jurors stated they had scheduling conflicts. The court

excused five without objection for specified reasons (a funeral, medical

appointment, scheduled surgery, and a long-planned vacation out-of-

town).

      Leedom challenges the district court’s dismissal of three others. One

described her conflict as “I’m to start a new job in one hour, and I take

care of my disabled husband.”       Another stated he had a work trip on

July 9. A third stated she was covering for two physical therapists at their

locations who were out during that week.        The State did not object to

excusing those three, but defense counsel sought to develop a record and

explore their reasons for avoiding jury duty.          Without any further

questioning, the district court dismissed those three prospective jurors.

      Leedom contends that the trial court’s dismissal of these three

prospective jurors without allowing defense counsel to probe their reasons

to avoid jury duty violated his Sixth Amendment right to a fair trial and a

fair jury and his Fifth Amendment right to due process. Leedom urges our

court to follow two Texas cases he cites for the proposition that the trial

court cannot sua sponte excuse a juror unless he or she is “absolutely
                                            29

disqualified,” without mentioning that both those cases have been

overruled. 4 We instead apply Iowa law.

       The district court may dismiss a juror “upon a finding of hardship,

inconvenience, or public necessity.”             Iowa Code § 607A.6.          Reversal is

warranted if there is “a material departure from the statutory requirements

for drawing or returning the jury.” State v. Chidester, 570 N.W.2d 78, 83–

84 (Iowa 1997) (quoting former Iowa R. Crim. P. 17, now r. 2.18(3)). A

material departure is one of “real importance or great consequence.” Id.

at 84 (quoting Webster’s Third New International Dictionary 1392 (unabr.

ed. 1993)). “We think a departure from statutory requirements is of real

importance or of great consequence only when the defendant’s rights have

been prejudiced.” Id.

       Juror service is an important civic duty that should be the norm for

those summoned. “[W]e are mindful that persons should not be excused

from their public responsibility of jury service for mere inconvenience,

distaste for service, or even the threat of some loss of income.” Hobson,

284 N.W.2d at 241.            We strongly encourage trial judges to question

prospective jurors on their claimed hardships before excusing them. In

Leedom’s trial, the judge should have probed the three prospective jurors’




       4Leedom   cites to Payton v. State, 572 S.W.2d 677 (Tex. Crim. App. 1978) (en banc),
without noting it was overruled by Jones v. State, 982 S.W.2d 386, 394 (Tex. Crim. App.
1998) (en banc); and also cites to Nichols v. State, 754 S.W.2d 185 (Tex. Crim. App. 1988)
(en banc), without noting it was overruled by Harris v. State, 784 S.W.2d 5, 19 (Tex. Crim.
App. 1989) (en banc). Insanity, indictment, and criminal convictions are grounds for
“absolute disqualification” under the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure article
35.16(a)(2)–(4) and article 35.19. The Harris court recognized a different provision, article
35.03, confers discretion on judges to excuse jurors for a variety of reasons including
work, travel, and weddings. 784 S.W.2d at 18–19. The court later affirmed the release of
a prospective juror because she was apprehensive over being away from work. Butler v.
State, 830 S.W.2d 125, 127–28, 132 (Tex. Crim. App. 1992) (en banc) (per curiam).
                                          30

reasons or allowed defense counsel to question them before excusing

them. 5

       But we decline to find that this shortcoming requires a new trial.

The district court determined that each prospective juror had a work-

related hardship, a valid basis for dismissing a juror. Id. Leedom has not

shown the court’s dismissal of these jurors constituted a material

departure from statutory requirements or that he was prejudiced.

       IV. Disposition.

       For the foregoing reasons, we reverse the district court’s ruling

denying Leedom’s motion for an in camera review of the records of H.M.’s

therapist, Jessica Schmidt. We remand the case for the district court to

conduct that review pursuant to section 622.10(4)(a)(2) to determine

whether those records contain exculpatory information.                 If the district

court finds no exculpatory evidence in those records, Leedom’s conviction

remains affirmed. If exculpatory evidence is found, the district court shall

proceed as directed in section 622.10(4)(a)(2)(c) and (d) and determine

whether Leedom is entitled to a new trial. We affirm on all other issues.

       DISTRICT COURT JUDGMENT CONDITIONALLY AFFIRMED;

CASE REMANDED WITH INSTRUCTIONS.




       5The Committee on Jury Selection has recommended a “liberal deferral policy . . .
to reduce the number of outright excusals. Potential jurors should be able to reschedule
their service once without any questions asked.”           Comm. on Jury Selection,
Recommendations of the Committee on Jury Selection 7 (March 12, 2018),
https://www.iowacourts.gov/for-the-public/reports/.
