Donzell Lindsey, applicant-appellee/cross-appellant v. State of Iowa, respondent-appellant/cross-appellee.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedFebruary 11, 2015
Docket13-2042
StatusPublished

This text of Donzell Lindsey, applicant-appellee/cross-appellant v. State of Iowa, respondent-appellant/cross-appellee. (Donzell Lindsey, applicant-appellee/cross-appellant v. State of Iowa, respondent-appellant/cross-appellee.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Donzell Lindsey, applicant-appellee/cross-appellant v. State of Iowa, respondent-appellant/cross-appellee., (iowactapp 2015).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

No. 13-2042 Filed February 11, 2015

DONZELL LINDSEY, Applicant-Appellee/Cross-Appellant,

vs.

STATE OF IOWA, Respondent-Appellant/Cross-Appellee. ________________________________________________________________

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Johnson County, Marsha A.

Bergan, Judge.

The State appeals from the district court’s grant of Donzell Lindsey’s

application for postconviction relief, and Lindsey cross-appeals. AFFIRMED ON

APPEAL, REVERSED ON CROSS-APPEAL.

Thomas J. Miller, Attorney General, and Forrest Guddal, Assistant

Attorney General, for appellant/cross-appeellee.

Mark Smith, State Appellate Defender, Patricia Reynolds, Assistant

Appellate Defender, and Angela O’Kane, Student Legal Intern, for

appellee/cross-appellant.

Heard by Vogel, P.J., and Vaitheswaran and Potterfield, JJ. 2

VAITHESWARAN, J.

We must decide whether the Iowa Department of Corrections has

authority to refer an inmate to its sex offender treatment program where the

district court did not make a finding that the crimes to which he pled guilty were

sexually motivated.

I. Procedural Background

The State and Lindsey stipulated to the pertinent procedural history. The

State charged Lindsey with first-degree burglary, domestic assault (second

offense) and third-degree sexual abuse. Lindsey pled guilty to second-degree

burglary, in violation of Iowa Code sections 713.1 and 713.5 (2009), and

domestic abuse assault, second offense, in violation of section 708.2A(1) and

(3)(a). The State dismissed the sexual abuse charge. The district court did not

make a finding that the crimes to which Lindsey pled guilty were “sexually

motivated” for purposes of the sex offender registration requirements and did not

require Lindsey to register as a sex offender for this case. See Iowa Code

§ 692A.126.

On Lindsey’s confinement, the director of the Iowa Department of

Corrections sex offender treatment program, Gail Huckins, notified Lindsey she

had reviewed his crime and determined there was a “sexual component” which

required referral to an administrative law judge for a determination as to whether

Lindsey needed to participate in the Sex Offender Treatment Program. Following

an unreported hearing, the administrative law judge ordered participation in the

program. 3

Lindsey filed an application for postconviction relief challenging the

decision. At a hearing on the application, Huckins identified several groups of

inmates as suitable candidates for the sex offender treatment program:

(1) inmates convicted of sex offenses, (2) inmates with completely nonsexual

crimes who acted out sexually in prison, and (3) inmates having “sexual

components” to their offenses. She placed Lindsey in the third category. Her

testimony was consistent with the parties’ stipulation concerning the reason for

the referral.

The district court preliminarily concluded the department had “the

authority—subject to a due process hearing—to direct an offender in Lindsey’s

shoes to complete [the sex offender treatment program], despite the fact that the

offender is not convicted of a sex offense.” The court nonetheless granted

Lindsey’s postconviction relief application after concluding the administrative law

judge inappropriately applied a “harmless error analysis” and “went outside the

record provided to him for the hearing without notice to Lindsey before the

hearing,” thereby violating Lindsey’s due process rights. The court vacated the

decision and ordered the State to “restore the earned time credits (if any there

be) of [Lindsey] retroactive to the date on which earned time credit accrual was

suspended.”

The department appealed and Lindsey cross-appealed. In our view, the

cross-appeal issue is dispositive: whether the department has the authority to

determine if Lindsey’s offenses were sexually motivated for purposes of referral

to the sex offender treatment program. Accordingly, we find it unnecessary to

address the department’s appeal issues. 4

II. Authority for Referral

Lindsey bases his cross-appeal on the interplay between two statutes:

Iowa Code chapter 903A, governing reduction of sentences, and Iowa Code

chapter 692A, governing the sex offender registry.

Chapter 903A allows inmates to earn reductions of their sentences based

on their conduct in prison. Iowa Code § 903A.2(1)(a) (2013). For sentences like

Lindsey’s second-degree burglary sentence, the reduction is “equal to one and

two-tenths days for each day the inmate demonstrates good conduct and

satisfactorily participates in any program or placement status identified by the

director to earn the reduction.” Id. Pertinent to this appeal, “an inmate required

to participate in a sex offender treatment program shall not be eligible for a

reduction of sentence unless the inmate participates in and completes a sex

offender treatment program established by the director.” Id. at § 903A.2(1)(a)(5).

Iowa Code section 692A.103(1) requires a person to register as a sex

offender if the person has “been convicted of any sex offense classified as a tier

I, tier II, or tier III offense.” The statute lists as a tier III offense “[b]urglary in the

second degree in violation of section 713.5, if a determination is made that the

offense was sexually motivated pursuant to section 692A.126.” Iowa Code

§ 692A.102(1)(c)(19). Section 692A.126, in turn, authorizes registration only if “a

judge or jury makes a determination, beyond a reasonable doubt, that any of the

following offenses for which a conviction has been entered on or after July 1,

2009, are sexually motivated” including “[b]urglary in the second degree in

violation of section 713.5.” Sexually motivated” means “one of the purposes for

commission of a crime is the purpose of sexual gratification of the perpetrator of 5

the crime.” Iowa Code § 692A.101(29) (defining term as it is defined in Iowa

Code section 229A.2). Before July 1, 2009, this determination was vested with

the department of public safety. See Iowa Code §§ 692A.1, .2 (2007) (repealed

by 2009 Iowa Acts Ch. 119, section 31).

Lindsey essentially asserts he was not an inmate “required to participate

in a sex offender treatment program” because the district court declined to make

the finding necessary to classify him as a sex offender subject to the registry

requirements of chapter 692A and the Iowa Department of Corrections lacked

authority to make the finding in the district court’s stead. The department

counters that “the requirements of either chapter are not necessarily contingent

on the other, and the district court correctly determined that the absence of a

duty to register on the [sex offender registry] does not preclude [the

department’s] requirement of [sex offender treatment program] participation by

Lindsey.”

We have no quarrel with the department’s argument, in principle. We can

envision circumstances in which the department may have authority to refer an

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