State of Iowa v. Carl Allen Castillo II

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedJanuary 28, 2026
Docket24-1262
StatusPublished

This text of State of Iowa v. Carl Allen Castillo II (State of Iowa v. Carl Allen Castillo II) 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. Carl Allen Castillo II, (iowactapp 2026).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA _______________

No. 24-1262 Filed January 28, 2026 _______________

State of Iowa, Plaintiff–Appellee, v. Carl Allen Castillo II, Defendant–Appellant. _______________

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Polk County, The Honorable Lawrence McLellan, Judge. _______________

AFFIRMED _______________

Gary Dickey of Dickey, Campbell, & Sahag Law Firm, PLC, Des Moines, attorney for appellant.

Brenna Bird, Attorney General, and Sheryl A. Soich and Anagha Dixit (until withdrawal), Assistant Attorneys General, attorneys for appellee. _______________

Considered without oral argument by Tabor, C.J., Badding, J., and Telleen, S.J. Opinion by Tabor, C.J.

1 TABOR, Chief Judge.

An unhoused individual challenges his convictions for failing to register as a sex offender and providing false information to the sex offender registry. He contends that the State failed to offer sufficient proof that he did not pitch his tent under the Grand Avenue bridge in West Des Moines, as he told authorities. Viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the district court’s verdicts, we find substantial evidence to support the convictions.

I. Facts and Prior Proceedings

Carl Castillo moved to Iowa from California in the summer of 2022. Three years earlier, he pleaded guilty to sexual battery. That California felony conviction required him to register as a sex offender in Iowa.

In May 2023, Castillo informed the Polk County Sheriff’s Office that he “got kicked out” of the place where he was staying. He reported being unhoused and staying in “a brown or camo tent underneath the bridge area” just off 22nd Street in West Des Moines.

Both housed and unhoused sex offenders are required to register under Iowa Code chapter 692A (2024). State v. McCullough, No. 08-1380, 2009 WL 2185549, at *4 (Iowa Ct. App. July 22, 2009) (finding purpose of statute was “to facilitate monitoring of those offenders by law enforcement and the public”). To that end, the definition of residence in the sex offender registry chapter includes “any mobile or transitory living quarters.” Iowa Code § 692A.101(24).

Geoff Herselius, an identification technician, explained how the Polk County Sheriff’s Office typically keeps track of sex offenders who do not have a permanent residence:

2 [W]e pull up a Google Maps image and we zero down the area that they’re saying that they’re at. We have them point out where the general location is and we have them circle it, and that’s kind of how we have a baseline of the general area of where they’re going to be—their campsites are—so the street detectives have a shorter area to look in.

To monitor these unhoused sex offenders, Herselius said, “[W]e block off a two-hour increment every Wednesday morning for them to come in.” During Castillo’s weekly check-ins, he did not report a change in the location of the campsite that he originally circled on the map.

More monitoring fell to Deputy Ian Cory, who conducted compliance checks as part of his regular duties. He testified, “[W]e will go around and verify the residency of the 1,000-plus sex offenders that we have in Polk County. We do spend a little bit of extra time on anybody that’s registered as homeless just because they’re transient in nature.” Castillo was on Cory’s compliance check list. In December 2023, Deputy Cory made eighteen trips to the Grand Avenue bridge area where Castillo said he was camping.1 The first check was at 8:00 p.m. on December 7 and the last check was at 11:15 p.m. on December 28. The trips between occurred on twelve dates, generally during daytime hours. Deputy Cory testified that he started all the compliance checks from a sloped area on the side of a bike trail. From that

1 Deputy Cory’s partner Nicholas Smith also did one compliance check for a total of nineteen visits.

3 vantage point he could “see pretty well” down through the brush toward the creek.2

None of the compliance checks confirmed that Castillo had been camping in that area. Castillo was never present. And Deputy Cory saw no tent, no campfire, nor any remnants of a campfire. Cory said he would have expected “some to probably have a fire, since most of those nights were below freezing.” Even if Castillo had packed up his belongings during the day, the deputy saw no signs of a campsite, no clearing for a tent to be set up, nor any evidence of “flattened grass” where a tent had been pitched. Deputy Cory checked both sides of the bridge and both banks of the creek at the location identified by Castillo but saw no trace that anyone had camped there. On cross-examination, the deputy acknowledged that he did not gather any evidence that Castillo was living somewhere else.

The State charged Castillo with two aggravated misdemeanors, violating the sex offender registry and providing false information to the registry. See id. §§ 692A.104(2), .111(1), .112. At his bench trial, Castillo testified that he had been sleeping near the bridge that he reported as his residence every night that December. But beyond sleeping, he maintained that he did not spend much time there. He told the court that he packed up his tent every morning and repitched it every night. He offered a photo

The State presented Cory’s body cam footage from the checks conducted on 2

December 21 and 28 so the court could see what the deputy saw.

4 exhibit of a green camo carrier case for the tent and a video exhibit of him setting up the tent in less than five minutes.3

In his testimony, he described an average day: I would wake up between four and six a.m., go for a walk, maybe wash my face in the river, relax for a little bit, wait until the nearest coffee shop opens, grab a cup of coffee, and relax for a good hour or so give or take. Then I would go out and look for work. . . . About six to eight p.m. I usually stop looking for work because hiring managers don’t work about that time. So I spend time with my girlfriend. We go to the mall, go out to eat, stuff like that.

Castillo testified that he would eventually make it back to the campsite between 11:00 p.m. and 2:00 a.m. Addressing the deputy’s testimony that he didn’t find any traces of a campfire, Castillo denied starting fires. In his words, “I know the fire safety and I don’t like to litter fire and spread fire, because I don’t want to burn the forest down. I’m not really experienced with fire. So to keep myself warm, I layered myself up with coats and pocket warmers.”

After the bench trial, the court found Castillo guilty on both counts. It found “no evidence the area Castillo claimed he lived was inhabited.” The court did not find credible Castillo’s testimony that “he was simply not there when the nineteen compliance checks were conducted.” The court merged

3 At trial, the State pointed to the pristine look of the tent in the defense exhibits. [Castillo] testified that the tent in Defense Exhibit B was the tent he used to sleep in every night from June through December, outside at the location near the bridge at 2120 Grand Avenue. In reviewing Defense Exhibit B, [Castillo’s] tent appears in very good (nearly new) condition. In fact, it still has creases as though it was just taken out of the box for the first time. This does not look like a tent that was outside every night for six-plus months; exposed to the wind, rain, and snow.

5 the two counts for purposes of judgment and sentence. Castillo received a suspended two-year sentence. He appeals those verdicts.

II. Scope and Standard of Review

We review “challenges to the sufficiency of the evidence for the correction of legal error.” State v.

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Related

Elkins v. United States
364 U.S. 206 (Supreme Court, 1960)
State v. Dohlman
725 N.W.2d 428 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 2006)
State v. McCullough
772 N.W.2d 270 (Court of Appeals of Iowa, 2009)
State of Iowa v. William Arthur Dewitt
811 N.W.2d 460 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 2012)

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Bluebook (online)
State of Iowa v. Carl Allen Castillo II, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-iowa-v-carl-allen-castillo-ii-iowactapp-2026.