State of Iowa v. Dillon Michael Heiller

CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMarch 20, 2026
Docket24-0169
StatusPublished

This text of State of Iowa v. Dillon Michael Heiller (State of Iowa v. Dillon Michael Heiller) 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. Dillon Michael Heiller, (iowa 2026).

Opinion

In the Iowa Supreme Court

No. 24–0169

Submitted February 18, 2026—Filed March 20, 2026

State of Iowa,

Appellee,

vs.

Dillon Michael Heiller,

Appellant.

On review from the Iowa Court of Appeals.

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Allamakee County, John

Bauercamper, senior judge.

The defendant appeals two theft convictions, arguing that the evidence

was insufficient to support the jury’s verdict. Decision of Court of Appeals

Vacated; District Court Judgment Affirmed in Part, Reversed in Part, and

Case Remanded.

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

joined.

Shea M. Chapin (argued), The Chapin Center, PLC, Dubuque, for

Brenna Bird, Attorney General, and Martha E. Trout (argued) and David

Banta, Assistant Attorneys General, for appellee.

Jacob A. Sarasin, Thomas D. Story, Shefali Aurora, and Rita Bettis Austen

of ACLU of Iowa Foundation, Inc., Des Moines, for amicus curiae American Civil

Liberties Union of Iowa. 2

McDonald, Justice.

Dillon Heiller was convicted of theft in the second degree and theft in the

first degree, in violation of Iowa Code sections 714.1(1), 714.2(1), and 714.2(2)

(2023), arising out of the theft of two motor vehicles. One of the convictions arises

out of the theft of an automobile in Wisconsin, and Heiller challenges the state’s

ability to prosecute him for that offense under Iowa’s criminal jurisdiction

statute. See Iowa Code § 803.1. He also challenges the sufficiency of the evidence

supporting both theft convictions. We do not have to resolve Heiller’s challenge

under the criminal jurisdiction statute because there is insufficient evidence

supporting the conviction for the theft of the car in Wisconsin. We conclude there

is sufficient evidence to sustain the second theft conviction, which undisputedly

occurred in Iowa.

I.

The trial record established the following. On the evening of June 18,

2023, Dillon Heiller went for drinks at the Waterville Bar in Waterville, Iowa.

Dave Christianson, a local resident, observed Heiller enter the bar wearing a hat

and a bandana, with one gloved hand and the other wrapped in some type of

material. Christianson was familiar with the patrons, and their respective

vehicles, that frequented the bar, and he noticed an unfamiliar white or silver

SUV with Wisconsin license plates parked outside. He assumed the SUV was

associated with Heiller.

Bartender Kaylee Sorum was working that evening. She saw Heiller pull

into the parking lot in the white or silver SUV. According to Sorum, the SUV had

a broken-out passenger window covered in plastic. She believed it had Wisconsin

plates. Sorum’s description of Heiller was similar to Christianson’s: Heiller was

wearing a black shirt, an Iowa Hawkeyes cap, a bandana, and a fingerless glove 3

on one hand, with the other hand wrapped with a black wrap. Sorum

remembered Heiller from that night because he repeatedly asked other patrons

for a ride. She informed him that no one would be driving him anywhere and

that he would need to leave the bar in whatever way he had arrived. Sorum

testified that Heiller left the bar between 11 and 11:30 p.m.

Near midnight, Allamakee County Sheriff’s Deputy Ross Kolsrud was on

patrol traveling westbound on Highway 76, near Waukon, when he encountered

a silver SUV traveling eastbound at above the posted speed limit. As the two

vehicles approached one another, Kolsrud flashed his patrol lights as a “friendly

reminder to slow down.” Instead of slowing, the SUV accelerated. When Kolsrud

checked the speed on his front radar, it clocked the SUV in the upper 60s. The

rear radar recorded the vehicle’s speed as increasing to 75 miles per hour.

Kolsrud turned around to pursue the vehicle. Despite accelerating to as high as

96 miles per hour, he lost sight of the SUV. Deputy Kolsrud searched Buckskin

Road, Sugar Road, and the surrounding areas, but the SUV never reappeared.

Between 4:15 and 4:30 a.m. on June 19 Kenneth Koozer woke up and

checked his game camera mounted near his driveway. Koozer lived on Buckskin

Road. Around midnight, Koozer’s game camera recorded a small SUV speeding

through his property. Koozer went outside to investigate and discovered tire

tracks running through his property. The tracks continued down a steep

embankment, across the narrow strip before a pond, and into some timber,

where Koozer found a silver Chevy Captiva crashed into a tree. Koozer testified

that the vehicle’s passenger-side window was broken and taped over with plastic.

The vehicle had Wisconsin plates. He identified a gas can, a cellphone, a

bandana, a hat, and a small purse-like item inside the vehicle. 4

That same morning, approximately half a mile from Koozer’s residence,

Robert Lloyd woke up, looked outside, and immediately noticed that his shed

door, which was always closed at night, was fully open. His 2023 John Deere

Gator was missing. Lloyd reported the theft to the police department. He learned

from the department that the Gator had been found totaled on Brady Drive,

approximately a mile and a half from his property. The Gator, valued at over

$30,000, had evidence of blood on the interior passenger seat and vent area, as

well as a bloodied bandana hanging from the glove compartment area. Heiller’s

DNA matched the blood on the bandana.

Not far from the location where the Gator was found on Brady Drive,

Bryton Meyer began his morning. As he stepped outside to leave for work, he

realized that his silver 2013 Chevrolet Impala, which he typically left in the

driveway, was missing. He conducted a brief search of the immediate area and

discovered a single set of footprints in the dew walking up the driveway from the

area where the car had been parked. He then reported the theft to the police.

Meyer informed officers that his Smith & Wesson nine-millimeter handgun was

in the missing car.

Deputy Steven Wilkes responded to Koozer’s call regarding the wrecked

Captiva. He ran the vehicle identification number on the Captiva. The vehicle

came back as stolen out of Campbell, Wisconsin. It was first reported stolen by

its owner on April 6, 2023. Deputy Wilkes then went and saw the wrecked Gator,

and he began to suspect that whoever crashed the Captiva went and stole the

Gator, crashed the Gator, and then went and stole Meyer’s Impala next.

Around 6:30 on the morning of the 19th Heiller arrived at a Casey’s

General Store in Monona, driving a white 2005 GMC Envoy with Minnesota

license plates. Anissa Rohde was employed by Casey’s at the time, and she 5

helped Heiller at the register. She noticed blood on Heiller’s face and arm.

Another witness saw Heiller at the Casey’s and found his appearance troubling

enough to comment on it to Rohde. Rohde and her coworker contacted law

enforcement. Heiller left before law enforcement arrived.

More than three months later, on October 1, Heiller was arrested after

being found in possession of a different stolen vehicle. His theft of that vehicle

was charged in a separate case, and that case is the subject of a different appeal.

In this case, Heiller was charged with second-degree theft relating to the Captiva,

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