State of Iowa v. Brianna Sue Watson

CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedFebruary 18, 2022
Docket20-1423
StatusPublished

This text of State of Iowa v. Brianna Sue Watson (State of Iowa v. Brianna Sue Watson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court 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. Brianna Sue Watson, (iowa 2022).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF IOWA

No. 20–1423

Submitted October 21, 2021—Filed February 18, 2022

STATE OF IOWA,

Appellee,

vs.

BRIANNA SUE WATSON,

Appellant.

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Chickasaw County, Richard D.

Stochl, Judge.

Defendant appeals an interlocutory order denying motion to dismiss under

the speedy indictment rule. REVERSED AND REMANDED.

Waterman, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which all justices

joined.

Robert W. Winterton and Judith M. O’Donohoe of Elwood, O’Donohoe,

Braun & White, LLP, New Hampton, for appellant.

Thomas J. Miller, Attorney General, Thomas J. Ogden, Assistant Attorney

General, for appellee. 2

WATERMAN, Justice.

In this interlocutory appeal, we must decide whether the issuance of

citations in lieu of arrest, or rather the defendant’s subsequent initial

appearance, starts the forty-five-day1 speedy indictment time clock in Iowa Rule

of Criminal Procedure 2.33(2)(a) (2020). On July 5, 2020, the defendant was

issued citations in lieu of arrest for several misdemeanors. Her initial appearance

before a magistrate did not happen until September 21. The State filed its trial

information on October 6. The defendant filed a motion to dismiss, alleging the

State violated the speedy indictment rule because over ninety days transpired

between her citations and indictment without good cause for the delay. The

defendant relied on Iowa Code section 805.1(4) (2020), which equates citations

with arrests for purposes of rule 2.33(2)(a). The State resisted, arguing the clock

started with the initial appearance. The State did not argue good cause existed

for the delay.

The district court denied her motion, incorrectly applying State v. Williams,

895 N.W.2d 856, 867 (Iowa 2017), to conclude that the forty-five-day period was

measured from the date of the initial appearance rather than the date the

citations issued. The district court also found the COVID-19 pandemic

1Our court’s May 22, 2020 supervisory order, then in effect, extended that deadline to

sixty days. The order provides: “Commencing March 17, 2020, for any defendant who is arrested and makes an initial appearance on or before August 3, 2020, the 45-day speedy indictment deadline in Iowa R. Crim. P. 2.33(2)(a) is extended to 60 days.” Iowa Sup. Ct. Supervisory Order, In the Matter of Ongoing Provisions for Coronavirus/COVID-19 Impact on Court Services 6 (May 22, 2020) [hereinafter May 22, 2020 supervisory order], https://www.iowacourts.gov/ collections/499/files/1093/embedDocument/ [https://perma.cc/36JN-52SS]. The validity of that extension is not at issue in this appeal because the State missed the extended sixty-day deadline. 3

constituted good cause for the delay. We granted the defendant’s application for

discretionary review and retained the case.

On our review, we reverse the district court’s ruling. Applying section

805.1(4), we hold that the speedy indictment deadline ran from the date that the

citations in lieu of arrest were issued. We also determine that on this specific

evidentiary record, the district court erred by ruling that COVID-19 restrictions

constituted a good cause for the delay. The trial information was filed

electronically. The State did not argue good cause in resisting dismissal, and no

record was made to establish why the defendant’s initial appearance could not

have happened earlier by video or telephone, as our applicable supervisory order

allowed.2

I. Background Facts and Proceedings.

On July 5, 2020, Chickasaw County Deputy Sheriff Adam Hanson pulled

over a vehicle for speeding. Hanson detected “the odor of raw marijuana coming

from [the] vehicle.” The driver, Brianna Watson, “had very bloodshot and glassy

eyes” and “displayed a distinct lack of convergence in her left eye.” She admitted

to using marijuana in the morning, about seven hours earlier, and the deputy

found marijuana in the vehicle. Watson was transported to Chickasaw County

2The May 22, 2020 supervisory order provides: Through December 31, 2020, magistrates and other judicial officers may conduct initial appearances by video conference or telephone. As before, the defendant may waive initial appearance by executing a written waiver that provides the information that the defendant is entitled to receive at the initial appearance. See Iowa R. Crim. P. 2.2(1)–(4)(a). Through December 31, 2020, written waivers of initial appearance need not be under oath.” May 22, 2020 supervisory order at 5–6. 4

Sheriff’s Office where she consented to a DataMaster breathalyzer test that

detected no alcohol in her blood but then refused to provide a urine sample that

could be tested for marijuana metabolites.

In lieu of arrest, Watson was cited and released to her family, presumably

because of the limited capacity of the Chickasaw County jail and the sheriff’s

policy to issue citations for misdemeanors to reduce the risk of COVID-19

transmission. She was cited for operating while under the influence, first offense;

possession of marijuana, second offense; and speeding. Criminal complaints for

the operating while under the influence and possession charges were

electronically filed the same day. Because the COVID-19 pandemic had limited

the availability of in-court proceedings, Watson’s initial appearance was

scheduled for September 21, seventy-eight days later. She appeared in person

before a magistrate that day. On October 6, fifteen days after her initial

appearance, the State electronically filed the trial information.

Watson had already filed a motion to dismiss on September 17, alleging

the State violated the speedy indictment rule, Iowa Rule of Criminal Procedure

2.33(2)(a), which requires an indictment within forty-five days of arrest. After the

State filed the trial information, Watson filed an amended motion to dismiss, and

the State resisted. On October 27, the court held a hearing in person on the

motion to dismiss. The parties presented legal arguments but no evidence.

Watson argued the charges against her should be dismissed because,

under Iowa Code section 805.1(4), a citation in lieu of arrest triggers the speedy

indictment rule and the State failed to timely file the trial information within 5

forty-five days of her citations issued July 5, or even within the sixty-day

extended deadline under our court’s supervisory order. Watson also argued the

COVID-19 pandemic alone cannot qualify as good cause for the State’s violation

of the speedy indictment rule. The State argued it complied with the speedy

indictment rule because under Williams the speedy indictment rule is triggered

when the arrest, or citation in lieu of arrest, is completed by an initial

appearance, and the State filed the trial information within forty-five days of

Watson’s initial appearance. The State did not argue good cause existed for any

delay and made no record to establish good cause. During oral argument on the

motion to dismiss, the district court brought up the pandemic:

[THE COURT:] This is -- this court has faced several of these motions since COVID-19.

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