State of Iowa v. Billy D. Williams Dotson

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedApril 9, 2025
Docket24-0181
StatusPublished

This text of State of Iowa v. Billy D. Williams Dotson (State of Iowa v. Billy D. Williams Dotson) 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.

Bluebook
State of Iowa v. Billy D. Williams Dotson, (iowactapp 2025).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

No. 24-0181 Filed April 9, 2025

STATE OF IOWA, Plaintiff-Appellee,

vs.

BILLY D. WILLIAMS DOTSON, Defendant-Appellant. ________________________________________________________________

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Dubuque County,

Michael J. Shubatt, Judge.

A criminal defendant appeals his discretionary sentence, claiming the

prosecutor breached the plea agreement. AFFIRMED.

Shea M. Chapin of The Chapin Center, PLC, Dubuque, for appellant.

Brenna Bird, Attorney General, and Timothy M. Hau, Assistant Attorney

General, for appellee.

Considered without oral argument by Ahlers, P.J., and Badding and

Buller, JJ. 2

BULLER, Judge.

Billy Dotson appeals from the consecutive sentence imposed on one of his

convictions at a joint sentencing hearing concerning multiple case numbers.

Dotson claims the prosecutor breached the plea agreement because the

recommendation to run the sentence for multiple counts in another case

consecutively allegedly undermined the recommendation to run the sentence in

this case concurrently. We normally don’t spend a lot of time talking about

separate case numbers in appellate opinions, but here the particulars of what

happened in each case matter. After spending some time reviewing the role each

case number played in this joint sentencing proceeding, we affirm.

I. Background Facts and Proceedings

In FECR150717, Dotson was charged with four sex offenses as a habitual

offender for soliciting sex acts from his then-girlfriend’s six-year-old child.

Following motion practice on some evidentiary issues, Dotson pled guilty in this

case number to a single count of lascivious acts with a child by soliciting, a class

“D” felony in violation of Iowa Code section 709.8(1)(d) (2022). In exchange for

the plea, the State agreed to dismiss the other three counts (other sex offenses)

and to not pursue the habitual-offender sentencing enhancement, as well as

recommend the five-year prison sentence on the FECR150717 conviction run

“concurrently to the defendant’s other pending case.” In taking the plea, the plea

judge emphasized to Dotson that another judge would conduct the sentencing and

the recommendation for concurrent sentences would not be binding on the court.

FECR150313—the “other pending case” referred to in the

recommendation—involved convictions for third-degree sexual abuse, attempted 3

second-degree burglary, and assault with intent to commit sexual abuse, which we

affirm today by separate opinion. See State v. Dotson, No. 24-0180, 2025

WL _____ (Iowa Ct. App. Apr. 9, 2025). FECR150313 involved an entirely

different victim and factual circumstances than FECR150717.

A joint sentencing was held for both cases by agreement of the parties.

They agreed on the order of operations: the State’s recommendation on both

cases, then Dotson’s recommendation on both cases, then Dotson’s allocution on

both cases, then the victim impact statements in both cases, and then the court

would impose sentence on both cases.

The assistant county attorney argued for an aggregate seventeen-year

prison sentence, with all of the counts in FECR150313 consecutive to each other

and concurrent to the sole count in FECR150717. He emphasized the nature of

the offense, Dotson’s criminal history, the victim impact statement, and the danger

to the community as aggravating factors justifying the consecutive sentences in

FECR150313. The court asked for more detail on the concurrent-sentence

recommendation for FECR150717, and the assistant county attorney explained:

The recommendation for the sentence in FECR150717 to be concurrent to the other case is based primarily upon Mr. Dotson’s willingness to accept responsibility for that charge and plead guilty but also seek rehabilitation and avoid having to have a young victim come testify in that case. So we took that into consideration in making that recommendation.

Dotson’s attorney urged the court to run all counts concurrently across the

two case numbers. He emphasized that all of the FECR150313 counts were at

least somewhat factually related to each other, and for FECR150717 he reprised

the State’s argument that Dotson had accepted responsibility and that the child 4

victim would be spared a “stressful and traumatic” trial. In his view, these mitigating

factors warranted concurrent sentences.

The presentence investigation report (PSI) recommended consecutive

sentences “[d]ue to [Dotson’s] violent nature, as well as his complete lack of

accountability for his actions.” The PSI writer emphasized that Dotson “needs to

be held accountable for his criminal behavior” because he presented “a significant

risk to reoffend.”

In allocution, Dotson purported to “forgive” the victim in FECR150313. It’s

not entirely clear if Dotson allocuted in specific reference to FECR150717, but he

did make several statements about being “old enough to know what [he’s] doing”

and that what he had with the victim and her mother was “real” in his mind.

The court received a victim impact statement from the child victim and her

mother in FECR150717. The child’s statement expressed confusion as to how

someone she saw as her “daddy” would “hurt [her] like that.” The mother’s

statement expressed her regret over allowing Dotson into their lives because he

turned out to be “a predator and a pedophile,” and she described the traumatic

impact the abuse had on her daughter. The adult victim in FECR150313 appeared

in person and told the court that she struggled to trust people and form

relationships as a consequence of Dotson abusing her, that she would have

lifelong trauma, and that she wanted the court to impose the maximum sentence

“to protect not only [her] but in the future innocent people from becoming his

victim.” 5

The court ultimately declined to follow either party’s sentencing

recommendation and ran all counts in both case numbers consecutive, for a total

of twenty-two years in prison, based on the following rationale:

All right. I’ve now had an opportunity to take into account the [PSI] recommendation, the arguments of counsel, the allocution and the victim impact statements, so there’s been a lot of material to digest. I am familiar with the facts of the case in FECR150313 in particular having been the presiding trial judge in that case and having been present for the testimony. FECR150717 is a cold case for me because that’s a case in which defendant entered a plea. I’m only familiar with that case through the pleadings and the allegations. There are numerous counts and allegations in both cases that were either not proven or were dismissed or defendant did not admit to. There were references I think to some of those counts, some of those allegations in the victims’ impact statements. I want to make it very clear that none of my decisions are based on the fact that those allegations were made or what might have happened. The fact is they aren’t proven, they aren’t before me and they are not a factor in my decision. I’m only deciding the charges that were proven or admitted to by defendant. These are completely unrelated cases. They come before me today only because there was an agreement by the State to make a recommendation that was related to this case, but it is a little unusual having two separate cases to have to deal with and address, and it makes the analysis a little bit more complex.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

State v. Rasmus
90 N.W.2d 429 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1958)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
State of Iowa v. Billy D. Williams Dotson, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-iowa-v-billy-d-williams-dotson-iowactapp-2025.