State of Iowa v. Donald Leroy Steele

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedJuly 19, 2017
Docket16-0978
StatusPublished

This text of State of Iowa v. Donald Leroy Steele (State of Iowa v. Donald Leroy Steele) 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. Donald Leroy Steele, (iowactapp 2017).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

No. 16-0978 Filed July 19, 2017

STATE OF IOWA, Plaintiff-Appellee,

vs.

DONALD LEROY STEELE, Defendant-Appellant. ________________________________________________________________

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Polk County, Mary Pat Gunderson,

Judge.

A defendant challenges his judgment and sentence for possession of

marijuana with intent to deliver. AFFIRMED.

Christine E. Branstad of Branstad Law, P.L.L.C., Des Moines, for

appellant.

Thomas J. Miller, Attorney General, and Kelli Huser, Assistant Attorney

General, for appellee.

Considered by Vaitheswaran, P.J., and Tabor and Mullins, JJ. 2

TABOR, Judge.

Donald Steele pleaded guilty to possession of marijuana with intent to

deliver in return for the State’s dismissal of a similar offense involving crack

cocaine. Several days later, Steele wrote the judge a letter asking to withdraw

his guilty plea. Treating his request as a motion in arrest of judgment, the district

court took testimony from Steele. The district court did not find Steele’s

testimony credible when compared with his statements at the plea hearing and

denied his motion in arrest of judgment. On appeal, Steele contends the district

court abused its discretion in denying his motion because (1) his guilty plea was

not knowing, voluntary, and intelligent and (2) the plea lacked a factual basis as

to his intent to deliver. Because the district court properly exercised its discretion

in rejecting Steele’s request to withdraw his guilty plea, we affirm.

I. Facts and Prior Proceedings

According to the minutes of evidence, on New Year’s Eve of 2015, Des

Moines police officer Emily Shoff-Salsbery saw the Toyota Camry driven by

Steele turn without signaling. As the officer closed in on the Camry, Steele made

several abrupt turns. Steele then sped through a residential neighborhood.

Before Shoff-Salsbery could activate her lights, Steele drove down a dead-end

street, stopped the car, and fled on foot. Steele’s female passenger also left the

Camry but obeyed the officer’s command to stop. The passenger told Shoff-

Salsbery she just met Steele when he offered her a ride home after she had an

argument with her boyfriend. The passenger did not know why Steele fled and

only had her purse and “some potato chips” inside the car. In her investigation,

Shoff-Salsbery learned the Camry driven by Steele was a rental car and the 3

passenger had not rented it. When the officer approached the car, she smelled

an odor of marijuana coming from the driver’s side, and behind the driver’s seat,

she found a brown jacket containing a plastic bag of marijuana.

Meanwhile, another officer chased Steele by following his tracks in the

fresh snow for about four blocks. The footprints led to a parking lot, where the

officer heard Steele talking on his phone, asking for a ride. The officer called to

Steele, who again took off. Two officers pursued Steele until they found him

walking on a busy street. The officers ordered Steele “to drop what was in his

hand,” and Steele “threw the items to the side and stopped and slowly went to

the ground.” After arresting Steele, the officers saw the tossed items included

“several baggies including a quantity of marijuana and a quantity . . . of cocaine

base ‘crack,’ as well as a car key” to the Camry abandoned by Steele.

In her affidavit accompanying the complaint, Officer Shoff-Salsbery stated

Steele ran from the car but was caught a short distance later. The affidavit

continued: “Inside the vehicle officers found a larger plastic bag that also

contained marijuana . . . . [Steele] was also found with $767 in various bills on

his person, both the packaging of the narcotics and the amount of cash are

consistent with the sale of narcotics.”

A February 2016 lab report showed Steele possessed 7.23 grams of

cocaine. Important to this appeal, the lab report divided the marijuana into two

listed items: the first item weighed 10.43 grams and the second item weighed

4.01 grams (divided into two subparts weighing 1.42 and 2.59 grams). Steele

contends, logically, the first item was the “larger plastic bag” of marijuana found

inside the car and the smaller item was the marijuana he tossed on the ground. 4

The State does not dispute this contention but asserts the record supports

Steele’s possession of both the marijuana tossed on the ground and the

marijuana left inside the jacket in the rental car.

According to the minutes, the State expected Shoff-Salsbery, along with

the officers who chased Steele, to testify:

[T]he items found in connection with [Steele] in this case are consistent with those items found in the possession of drug dealers. [They] will further testify that the amount of cocaine base “crack” and marijuana recovered in this case, the manner in which it was packaged, the other facts and circumstances, . . . are consistent with possession of [both such drugs] for sale and inconsistent with the possession of [both such drugs] merely for personal use.

The State charged Steele in two counts: (I) possession of a controlled

substance (cocaine) with intent to deliver, in violation of Iowa Code section

124.401(1)(c)(3) (2015), a class “C” felony; and (II) possession of a controlled

substance (marijuana) with intent to deliver, in violation of Iowa Code section

124.401(1)(d), a class “D” felony. After conferring with private counsel, Steele

entered into a plea bargain with the State in which he agreed to provide a factual

basis for count II. In exchange, the State agreed to dismiss count I at

sentencing. The parties were free to argue for an appropriate sentence.

We set out the portions of the April 2016 plea hearing relevant to Steele’s

appellate challenges. The court told Steele he had a right to have a lawyer

appointed at public expense if he decided to go to trial. Steele indicated he

understood. The court also stated, “this is a class ‘D’ felony,” and set out the

penalties, including the fact Steele could spend up to five years in prison and pay

up to a $7500 fine, explaining: “I am telling you that because I want you to know 5

the maximum penalties you are subjecting yourself to by pleading guilty today.

Do you understand?” Steele responded he did. Next the court asked: “Knowing

all that, do you still want to plead guilty today?” Steele responded: “I have a

question.” The court stopped the plea hearing and went off the record. Steele

discussed his question with his attorney. When Steele was ready to proceed, the

following exchange occurred:

THE COURT: Okay. So let me ask that last question again. Knowing what you are subjecting yourself to, do you still want to plead guilty, sir? THE DEFENDANT: Yes, ma’am. .... THE COURT: Are you pleading guilty today voluntarily and of your own free will? THE DEFENDANT: Yes, ma’am.

Thereafter, the court told Steele the elements the State would have to

prove at trial, including: “[Y]ou possessed a controlled substance with intent to

deliver it, that being marijuana. And . . . intent to deliver, that means that you

either intended to sell it, share it, or give it away.” Steel responded he had no

questions about what the State would have to prove. Steele said he threw the

marijuana on the ground, he knew it was illegal to have marijuana, the marijuana

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State of Iowa v. Donald Leroy Steele, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-iowa-v-donald-leroy-steele-iowactapp-2017.