State of Iowa v. Craig Dewayne Lind

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedAugust 20, 2025
Docket24-1253
StatusPublished

This text of State of Iowa v. Craig Dewayne Lind (State of Iowa v. Craig Dewayne Lind) 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. Craig Dewayne Lind, (iowactapp 2025).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

No. 24-1253 Filed August 20, 2025

STATE OF IOWA, Plaintiff-Appellee,

vs.

CRAIG DEWAYNE LIND, Defendant-Appellant. ________________________________________________________________

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Scott County, Patrick A. McElyea,

Judge.

A defendant appeals his conviction for forgery. AFFIRMED.

Martha J. Lucey, State Appellate Defender, and Ella M. Newell, Assistant

Appellate Defender, for appellant.

Brenna Bird, Attorney General, and Martha E. Trout, Assistant Attorney

General, for appellee.

Considered without oral argument by Tabor, C.J., and Ahlers and

Langholz, JJ. 2

LANGHOLZ, Judge.

After presenting a fraudulent check to a bank teller, Craig Lind was

convicted of forgery. Lind appeals his conviction after a jury trial, arguing that the

State failed to prove that he knew the check was altered before presenting it to the

teller or that he had the specific intent to defraud the bank or knowledge that he

was helping to defraud the bank. According to Lind, he was duped by a third party

to cash the check and did not look at it until after presenting it to the teller. But the

jury rejected Lind’s explanation, and substantial evidence supports that verdict.

We thus affirm Lind’s conviction.

I.

In April 2023, Lind went into a branch of Quad City Bank and Trust in

Bettendorf to cash a check. The check—made payable to Lind—was for $2288.11

from the City of Davenport. As he handed the check to a bank employee, she

“noticed some inconsistencies” compared to what she usually saw with checks.

So she entered the check number into the bank’s positive pay system. That

system allows a bank customer, like the City of Davenport, to input information

about the checks it writes so that the bank can verify whether the information on a

check presented matches. Because the information in the system did not match

the check Lind presented, the bank employee told Lind that she would be unable

to cash the check for him.

The bank employee then took the check to an experienced vice president

in the bank’s treasury management department. The vice president also examined

the check and noticed four irregularities. First, in the top left-hand corner of the

check, it said “payable threw” instead of “payable thru” the bank. Second, the 3

“typewriter type font” used for Lind’s name and address on the check was

“unusual,” which she testified typically indicates a fraudulent check. Third, there

was a physical signature on the check, which was “unlikely” for a check from the

City of Davenport. And fourth, the signature did not match the signature that the

bank had in its system for the alleged signor.

After being told that the check could not be cashed, Lind called the police.

And a Bettendorf police officer responded to the bank. The officer spoke with the

bank employee who received the check, the vice president, and Lind. Lind told the

officer that a man pulled up in a car outside the motel where he lived in Moline,

Illinois, and offered to pay him a couple of hundred bucks to pick up trash. Lind

agreed and got in the car with the man. Lind described the man as “a small black

guy.” And Lind said the man—whom he had never met before—introduced himself

as Tony.

Lind told the officer that Tony stopped at a fast-food restaurant, might have

gone into a neighboring motel, and then returned with a check made out to Lind.

According to Lind, Tony told him he needed to cash the check so that Tony could

pay him in cash. And Lind claimed that Tony’s car—now driven by a different man

while Tony and a woman were also in the car—dropped him off right at the corner

of the street and entrance drive to the bank property.

Lind told the officer that he realized the check was fraudulent “when I went

to cash the damn thing.” Lind explained “I gave it to them, and I’m going something

ain’t right here” because the check said it was from the City of Davenport and made

out to him. The officer questioned why Lind still gave the check to the bank and

Lind said he thought Tony worked for the city and he “wasn’t trying to cash the 4

damn check—why would I stick around?” When the officer pressed, reminding

Lind, “You walked into the bank and gave them the check,” Lind acknowledged, “It

sounds weird to me too.”

Lind described the car to the officer as a dark blue Toyota RAV4 and gave

the officer the license plate number. At the bank, the officer reviewed video footage

but did not see Lind getting dropped off at the bank property. Rather, the video

showed Lind walking from down the street—with no sign that he was dropped off.

When Lind failed to have a satisfactory explanation for this discrepancy, and given

the other evidence, the officer arrested Lind at the bank.

Later, the officer used Bettendorf’s automatic-license-plate-reader system

to search for the license plate number that Lind gave him and separately for the

make and model of the car. He did not get any matches for the license plate

number, variations of the license plate number, or Toyota RAV4s matching the

description given that had been driving in Bettendorf at the time that Lind said he

and Tony got into town. Across the city, there are about sixty license plate reader

cameras. And around the bank alone, there are about fifteen cameras. The officer

testified that “[i]t would be nearly impossible to drive around the city without driving

through” a camera. The officer also “reviewed some traffic camera footage” and

did not see Lind getting dropped off anywhere around the bank.

Lind was charged with forgery in violation of Iowa Code section

715A.2(2)(a) (2023). At a two-day trial in May 2024, the jury heard the testimony

of the bank employee who received the check, the treasury vice president, and the

police officer. The jury also saw the officer’s bodycam video, which was admitted

into evidence, showing Lind’s conversation with the officer at the bank. For his 5

defense, Lind called one of his neighbors at the motel to testify and Lind testified

on his own behalf.

In his testimony, Lind recounted the same story he told the officer about

Tony giving him the check to cash. He again said that he was dropped off at “the

side of the bank” and walked up the sidewalk “that goes right to the bank” at the

end of the sidewalk. And in conflict with the bank employee’s earlier testimony

that the check “was not worn in any way” and “was not creased or folded,” Lind

said that when Tony gave him the check, “[i]t was folded up” and Lind put it in his

pocket until presenting it to the bank employee to cash. Only then, according to

Lind, after the bank employee “open[ed] it up” did he see the face of the check: “It

was $2,200. And I’m going, Damn. And the way she looked at me, I’m going crap.”

The jury found Lind guilty of forgery. And the district court imposed a

suspended five-year prison sentence and placed Lind on probation for two years.

Lind now appeals his conviction.

II.

We review Lind’s challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence supporting his

forgery conviction for correction of errors at law. See State v. Crawford,

972 N.W.2d 189, 202 (Iowa 2022). We are bound by the jury’s verdict “if the verdict

is supported by substantial evidence.” Id. “Evidence is substantial if it would

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Related

State v. Uthe
542 N.W.2d 810 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1996)
State v. Cox
500 N.W.2d 23 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1993)
State v. Shortridge
589 N.W.2d 76 (Court of Appeals of Iowa, 1998)
State v. Coburn
244 N.W.2d 560 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1976)
State v. Acevedo
705 N.W.2d 1 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 2005)

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State of Iowa v. Craig Dewayne Lind, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-iowa-v-craig-dewayne-lind-iowactapp-2025.