State of Iowa v. Dustin James Seley

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedFebruary 22, 2023
Docket22-0419
StatusPublished

This text of State of Iowa v. Dustin James Seley (State of Iowa v. Dustin James Seley) 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. Dustin James Seley, (iowactapp 2023).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

No. 22-0419 Filed February 22, 2023

STATE OF IOWA, Plaintiff-Appellee,

vs.

DUSTIN JAMES SELEY, Defendant-Appellant. ________________________________________________________________

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Adair County, Thomas P. Murphy,

Judge.

A defendant appeals his first-degree murder conviction. AFFIRMED.

Raya D. Dimitrova of Carr Law Firm, P.L.C., Des Moines, for appellant.

Brenna Bird, Attorney General, and Genevieve Reinkoester, Assistant

Attorney General, for appellee.

Heard by Tabor, P.J., and Schumacher and Ahlers, JJ. 2

TABOR, Presiding Judge.

No question, Dustin “D.J.” Seley shot his older brother, Timothy Fechter.

But Seley maintains it was not first-degree murder. And at trial, he pursued four

defenses. He first contested the State’s proof that he willfully, deliberately, and

premeditatedly killed his brother. Second, he urged that he was too intoxicated to

form specific intent. Third, he claimed the shooting was in self-defense. And

fourth, he argued Fechter seriously provoked him. A jury convicted Seley of first-

degree murder. On appeal, he insists the State provided insufficient proof for the

jury to reach that verdict. But on our review, we find the record contains substantial

evidence of Seley’s guilt for jurors to weigh against his proffered defenses. Giving

due deference to their factfinding, we affirm.

I. Facts and Prior Proceedings

Seley grew up on a family farm as the youngest of six siblings. His oldest

brother, Fechter, was sixteen when Seley was born. Growing up, Seley did not

know Fechter well because the older brother was incarcerated. But when Seley

was sixteen Fechter got out of prison. That same year, Seley’s father died. And

the family moved to the nearby town of Creston to be closer to his mother’s job.

For a while, Fechter stayed on the farm with his wife and step-children. But they

left around when Seley quit high school to take over running the farm.

Seley and Fechter did not have a good relationship. Seley recalled fearing

Fechter:

He was my big brother. I was very intimidated, very scared. He was irate most of the time. There was nothing I could ever do that [ ] was good enough for him. . . . [H]e liked . . . to hit people mentally, to keep them down, to kick them. And I always had been fearful of him . . . he could go off at any little moment. You never knew. 3

Family members agreed that Fechter was nasty. According to their sister,

“[Fechter] was very jealous of [Seley], and he put him down all the time.” When

threatened, Seley “would put his head down, usually start crying.” And he “would

never stand up” to Fechter. Their mother testified that Fechter “hated” Seley.

Their fraught fraternity was most apparent in three grievances that

preoccupied Seley. First, when Seley was nineteen, Fechter framed him for

stealing a neighbor’s four-wheeler. Second, both brothers had romantic

relationships with Nicki, the daughter of Fechter’s former wife. Seley and Nicki

raised three children together. And Seley sold the family farm when Nicki was

pregnant with the first child so they could buy a house in Creston. Soon after they

had their third child in 2007, Seley and Nicki broke up. And by 2019, Nicki and

Fechter were dating. But Seley suspected the two had been intimate while he and

Nicki were still together. The third flashpoint between the brothers came when

Seley quit his job to work for Fechter’s roofing business in 2021. Seley testified

that Fechter enticed him to change employment by professing that “he had so

many” roofing jobs but “didn’t have anybody” to help. But after only two projects,

the work dried up. And Fechter told Seley “there was nothing to do.”

That final fallout informs what happened between the brothers in the early

morning hours of June 20 that year. The night before, Seley was in Creston

“hopping from bar to bar drinking” whiskey. While bar hopping, Seley was armed

with a loaded pistol. He claimed he’d been trying to sell the gun “for at least around

five days.” During his night out, Seley ran into Billy Bird. When the bars closed 4

around 1:45 a.m., Bird suggested they walk to Fechter’s camper because Bird and

Fechter were friends. Seley testified he took “acid” before heading to the camper.1

When Bird and Seley arrived, they found Fechter with Keagan Trembley—

the boyfriend of Fechter’s oldest daughter. Trembley testified that Seley came

“stumbling” in and admitted that he was drunk. But Bird never came inside and

soon left. Trembley recalled Seley talking about “what was going good for

[Fechter], and what was going bad for him.” Fechter told Seley: “you’re drunk,”

“shut up,” and “you need to settle down.” Seley and Fechter smoked

methamphetamine. Fechter then told Seley to stay at the camper while he and

Trembley went to illegally dump some shingles Fechter had in the back of his truck.

But Seley cut in, telling Trembley: “I would like to spend some alone time with my

brother.” Seley made sure Trembley understood by pointing his gun, wrapped in

a sweatshirt, at him. As Trembley left, Seley told him: “I just saved your life

tonight.”2

During the brothers’ drive, things got “kind of heated,” according to Seley’s

testimony. Fechter told him to return to his prior employment. But Seley thought

it would be humiliating to ask for his old job back. “[I]t just wasn’t right of him to tell

me he had all this work.” Once at the dumping site, the brothers stripped a tarp off

the shingles. As they worked, Seley decided to ask Fechter if he was the father of

1 Other than mentions by Seley, the record includes no discussion of this drug. But commentators explain that “acid is the most common name for lysergic acid (LSD).” Major Catherine L. Brantley, Spice, Bath Salts, Salvia Divinorum, and Huffing: A Judge Advocate’s Guide to Disposing of Designer Drug Cases in the Military, 2012 Army Law. 15, 37 (April 2012). 2 Trembley conceded that he did not mention these damning details when

interviewed by police several times. He only brought them up once called as a witness. 5

his and Nicki’s oldest child. Fechter confirmed “that [the child] was his.” Seley

testified that upon hearing that confirmation, he became “enraged” and attacked

his brother:

I blacked out. Basically, I don’t even remember if I hit him, if I shot him or not. I know that we got into a fistfight prior, kind of like during the same time. When I pulled it, I remember falling off the tarp, tripping on the tarp. And as I was falling backwards I was pulling the trigger on the gun.

After the shooting, Seley drove off in his brother’s truck. Yet he called

Fechter nine times after: “I kept calling his phone because . . . I just wanted him to

pick up. I just wanted it to be like . . . it was just a bad dream.” Fechter had left

his cell phone, set to silent, on the dashboard of the truck. Seley testified that he

drove around much of the night “hoping to see” his brother. But the alleged search

proved difficult because he “was blacked out,” “intoxicated,” and “[t]he acid was

kicking in.” At some point, Seley tossed his gun into a ditch.

Later that morning, Trembley tried to contact Fechter with no success.

When Fechter didn’t show up for a second day, Trembley reported him missing.

Trembley found Fechter’s camper had been “ransacked.” It also reeked of bleach.

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