IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA
No. 19-2029 Filed February 17, 2021
STATE OF IOWA, Plaintiff-Appellee,
vs.
JENNIFER LYNN TUCKER, Defendant-Appellant. ________________________________________________________________
Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Des Moines County, Mark E. Kruse,
Judge.
Jennifer Tucker appeals her convictions for possession with intent to deliver
drugs. REVERSED AND REMANDED.
Martha J. Lucey, State Appellate Defender, and Theresa R. Wilson,
Assistant Appellate Defender, for appellant.
Thomas J. Miller, Attorney General, and Israel Kodiaga, Assistant Attorney
General, for appellee.
Considered by Doyle, P.J., and Tabor and Ahlers, JJ. 2
DOYLE, Presiding Judge.
Written contracts with unwritten expectations spawn litigation. That’s what
we face here.
Jennifer Tucker appeals her convictions for possession with intent to deliver
drugs. Among other things, she argues the district court erred in denying her
motion to dismiss and to enforce her cooperation agreement. Under the
agreement, the State would dismiss the drug charges if Tucker worked with
members of a drug task force. Tucker claims she fulfilled her obligation and the
State breached the agreement. The State argues Tucker was the one to breach
the agreement. We find Tucker upheld her end of the bargain. Thus, we grant
specific performance and reverse the denial of Tucker’s motion to dismiss. We
vacate the drug convictions and sentences and remand for dismissal of the drug
charges in accordance with the agreement.
I. Facts and Proceedings.
Tucker admits that she has been a drug user for more than twenty years.
Methamphetamine is her drug of choice.
During the investigation of a storage unit burglary, Tucker and Jerrid
Weaver became suspects. Police obtained a search warrant to search both
Tucker’s and Weaver’s homes. Armed with the search warrant, four officers
searched Tucker’s residence. They found a digital scale in a closet along with a
baggie of heroin weighing 27.95 grams. A plastic bag containing 21.92 grams of
methamphetamine and a meth pipe were recovered from Tucker’s purse.
Tucker was charged with count I, possession of a controlled substance
(more than five grams but not more than five kilograms of methamphetamine) with 3
intent to deliver, a class “B” felony, in violation of Iowa Code
section 124.401(1)(b)(7) (2018). She was also charged with count II, possession
of a controlled substance (heroin) with intent to deliver, a class “C” felony,
enhanced as an habitual offender, in violation of Iowa Code
sections 124.401(1)(c)(1) and 902.8. She was also charged with third-degree
burglary in a separate case.
After the district court denied Tucker’s first motion to suppress, the parties
negotiated a plea agreement for the drug and burglary cases. This was done
through emails exchanged between the prosecutor and defense counsel. It was
agreed that if Tucker made a proffer to the drug task force, the State would dismiss
her drug charges. If she proffered and testified against Weaver at his burglary trial,
the State would agree to a plea and to recommend a suspended sentence in
Tucker’s burglary charge. At a February 2019 pretrial conference for both her
cases, the parties informed the district court they reached a plea agreement but
were not prepared to enter it at that time. Tucker waived her right to a speedy trial
and withdrew her second motion to suppress. She also asked the court to continue
her trial date and grant her supervised pretrial release. The district court granted
her requests and set a June trial date. Soon after, Tucker sat down with members
of the drug task force for a proffer. Tucker also testified against Weaver at his mid-
March burglary trial. Weaver’s trial ended with a hung jury.
About a month later, after violating conditions of her release (failing to report
to drug treatment and failing to submit to random drug tests), the court revoked
Tucker’s pretrial release supervision and issued a warrant for her arrest. Tucker
was not immediately found. She was a no-show at Weaver’s mid-May retrial. She 4
was a no-show at an early June pretrial conference. Her whereabouts were
unknown, but in late June she was arrested and taken into custody.
At a July 2019 pretrial conference, Tucker reasserted her right to a speedy
trial and requested a hearing date on her previously withdrawn second motion to
suppress. The district court denied the motion to suppress at a September
hearing, noting Tucker’s previous withdrawal of that motion.
Tucker then moved to dismiss and to enforce the plea agreement. At the
hearing, Tucker argued there were two separate agreements—one for the drug
case and one for the burglary case. The hearing only concerned the drug case,
and Tucker believed she complied with the agreement in the drug case since she
met with the drug task force members and did a proffer. She argued that if the
State wanted her to do more, such as make controlled buys, those conditions could
have been included in the agreement but were not. The State viewed the
agreement as a comprehensive agreement that included both cases. Its position
was that any violation of the agreement would violate the entire agreement. The
State argued Tucker was no stranger to task force agreements and, in its opinion,
it was clear she was to work with the task force, not just meet with them. It
contended Tucker violated the agreement by not doing more, such as making
controlled buys or making phone calls to targets. By the time the task force was
ready for her to do those things, she had absconded. The State conceded Tucker
testified at Weaver’s first burglary trial but claimed Tucker violated the agreement
in failing to testify at Weaver’s retrial. Not buying Tucker’s testimony, the court
denied her motion. 5
A jury trial followed. A deputy testified that when questioned at a police
interview about the origin and purpose of the drugs, Tucker admitted that she
obtained the heroin from a dealer and was trying to “move” the heroin for him. But
because she did not have any heroin customers, she meant to return the heroin
back to the dealer. The deputy opined that based on his training and experience
the methamphetamine and heroin Tucker possessed were most likely for
distribution. He also opined that those who use methamphetamine generally use
a “tenth of a gram to half a gram at a time.” He estimated that the bag of
methamphetamine seized from Tucker could support up to hundred and fifty
doses. In regard to the heroin, it was a sufficiently large amount to satisfy at least
280 doses and was worth about $2800. He pointed out that the heroin was
separated in two baggies—a larger bag and a smaller bag—suggesting that it was
packaged for delivery.
At trial, Tucker admitted the methamphetamine found in her purse was hers,
but that it was for her own use. She testified she obtained the bag a day or two
before it was seized and that she had smoked some of it. Tucker said she usually
buys an ounce—about twenty-eight grams—at a time. She claimed she did not
use nor had she ever used heroin. As for the heroin found in the closet, she
explained that her drug dealer just included it with the methamphetamine thinking
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IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA
No. 19-2029 Filed February 17, 2021
STATE OF IOWA, Plaintiff-Appellee,
vs.
JENNIFER LYNN TUCKER, Defendant-Appellant. ________________________________________________________________
Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Des Moines County, Mark E. Kruse,
Judge.
Jennifer Tucker appeals her convictions for possession with intent to deliver
drugs. REVERSED AND REMANDED.
Martha J. Lucey, State Appellate Defender, and Theresa R. Wilson,
Assistant Appellate Defender, for appellant.
Thomas J. Miller, Attorney General, and Israel Kodiaga, Assistant Attorney
General, for appellee.
Considered by Doyle, P.J., and Tabor and Ahlers, JJ. 2
DOYLE, Presiding Judge.
Written contracts with unwritten expectations spawn litigation. That’s what
we face here.
Jennifer Tucker appeals her convictions for possession with intent to deliver
drugs. Among other things, she argues the district court erred in denying her
motion to dismiss and to enforce her cooperation agreement. Under the
agreement, the State would dismiss the drug charges if Tucker worked with
members of a drug task force. Tucker claims she fulfilled her obligation and the
State breached the agreement. The State argues Tucker was the one to breach
the agreement. We find Tucker upheld her end of the bargain. Thus, we grant
specific performance and reverse the denial of Tucker’s motion to dismiss. We
vacate the drug convictions and sentences and remand for dismissal of the drug
charges in accordance with the agreement.
I. Facts and Proceedings.
Tucker admits that she has been a drug user for more than twenty years.
Methamphetamine is her drug of choice.
During the investigation of a storage unit burglary, Tucker and Jerrid
Weaver became suspects. Police obtained a search warrant to search both
Tucker’s and Weaver’s homes. Armed with the search warrant, four officers
searched Tucker’s residence. They found a digital scale in a closet along with a
baggie of heroin weighing 27.95 grams. A plastic bag containing 21.92 grams of
methamphetamine and a meth pipe were recovered from Tucker’s purse.
Tucker was charged with count I, possession of a controlled substance
(more than five grams but not more than five kilograms of methamphetamine) with 3
intent to deliver, a class “B” felony, in violation of Iowa Code
section 124.401(1)(b)(7) (2018). She was also charged with count II, possession
of a controlled substance (heroin) with intent to deliver, a class “C” felony,
enhanced as an habitual offender, in violation of Iowa Code
sections 124.401(1)(c)(1) and 902.8. She was also charged with third-degree
burglary in a separate case.
After the district court denied Tucker’s first motion to suppress, the parties
negotiated a plea agreement for the drug and burglary cases. This was done
through emails exchanged between the prosecutor and defense counsel. It was
agreed that if Tucker made a proffer to the drug task force, the State would dismiss
her drug charges. If she proffered and testified against Weaver at his burglary trial,
the State would agree to a plea and to recommend a suspended sentence in
Tucker’s burglary charge. At a February 2019 pretrial conference for both her
cases, the parties informed the district court they reached a plea agreement but
were not prepared to enter it at that time. Tucker waived her right to a speedy trial
and withdrew her second motion to suppress. She also asked the court to continue
her trial date and grant her supervised pretrial release. The district court granted
her requests and set a June trial date. Soon after, Tucker sat down with members
of the drug task force for a proffer. Tucker also testified against Weaver at his mid-
March burglary trial. Weaver’s trial ended with a hung jury.
About a month later, after violating conditions of her release (failing to report
to drug treatment and failing to submit to random drug tests), the court revoked
Tucker’s pretrial release supervision and issued a warrant for her arrest. Tucker
was not immediately found. She was a no-show at Weaver’s mid-May retrial. She 4
was a no-show at an early June pretrial conference. Her whereabouts were
unknown, but in late June she was arrested and taken into custody.
At a July 2019 pretrial conference, Tucker reasserted her right to a speedy
trial and requested a hearing date on her previously withdrawn second motion to
suppress. The district court denied the motion to suppress at a September
hearing, noting Tucker’s previous withdrawal of that motion.
Tucker then moved to dismiss and to enforce the plea agreement. At the
hearing, Tucker argued there were two separate agreements—one for the drug
case and one for the burglary case. The hearing only concerned the drug case,
and Tucker believed she complied with the agreement in the drug case since she
met with the drug task force members and did a proffer. She argued that if the
State wanted her to do more, such as make controlled buys, those conditions could
have been included in the agreement but were not. The State viewed the
agreement as a comprehensive agreement that included both cases. Its position
was that any violation of the agreement would violate the entire agreement. The
State argued Tucker was no stranger to task force agreements and, in its opinion,
it was clear she was to work with the task force, not just meet with them. It
contended Tucker violated the agreement by not doing more, such as making
controlled buys or making phone calls to targets. By the time the task force was
ready for her to do those things, she had absconded. The State conceded Tucker
testified at Weaver’s first burglary trial but claimed Tucker violated the agreement
in failing to testify at Weaver’s retrial. Not buying Tucker’s testimony, the court
denied her motion. 5
A jury trial followed. A deputy testified that when questioned at a police
interview about the origin and purpose of the drugs, Tucker admitted that she
obtained the heroin from a dealer and was trying to “move” the heroin for him. But
because she did not have any heroin customers, she meant to return the heroin
back to the dealer. The deputy opined that based on his training and experience
the methamphetamine and heroin Tucker possessed were most likely for
distribution. He also opined that those who use methamphetamine generally use
a “tenth of a gram to half a gram at a time.” He estimated that the bag of
methamphetamine seized from Tucker could support up to hundred and fifty
doses. In regard to the heroin, it was a sufficiently large amount to satisfy at least
280 doses and was worth about $2800. He pointed out that the heroin was
separated in two baggies—a larger bag and a smaller bag—suggesting that it was
packaged for delivery.
At trial, Tucker admitted the methamphetamine found in her purse was hers,
but that it was for her own use. She testified she obtained the bag a day or two
before it was seized and that she had smoked some of it. Tucker said she usually
buys an ounce—about twenty-eight grams—at a time. She claimed she did not
use nor had she ever used heroin. As for the heroin found in the closet, she
explained that her drug dealer just included it with the methamphetamine thinking
Tucker would be interested in purchasing it. She said she planned to return the
heroin to her dealer so she would not have to pay for it.
The jury found Tucker guilty as charged. The court sentenced her to twenty-
five years in prison on count I and fifteen years on count II. The sentences were
to run consecutively. 6
Tucker now appeals and raises three arguments: (1) the district court erred
in denying her motion to dismiss and to enforce the plea agreement; (2) the
evidence was insufficient to establish she had the intent to deliver the drugs; (3) the
district court abused its discretion in failing to give reasons for imposing
consecutive sentences.
II. Scope of Review.
When faced with a motion to dismiss as a sanction for the State’s alleged repudiation of a plea agreement, the district court has the same limited discretion it has ‘when ruling on a motion to dismiss for failure to provide a speedy trial under Iowa Rule of Criminal Procedure [2.33(2)].’
State v. Beres, 943 N.W.2d 575, 582 (Iowa 2020) (alteration in original) (citation
omitted). “If the district court abused its limited discretion by finding the State did
not repudiate the plea agreement, we will reverse its finding.” Id. (citation omitted).
III. Analysis
A. Motion to Dismiss and Plea Agreement.
On appeal, Tucker maintains she is entitled to specific performance of the
plea agreement because she complied with its terms. We agree.
“Plea bargains are akin to contracts.” Beres, 943 N.W.2d at 582 (citation
omitted). “It is well established that ‘when a plea rests in any significant degree on
a promise or agreement of the prosecutor, so that it can be said to be part of the
inducement or consideration [for the plea], such promise must be fulfilled.’” State
v. Horness, 600 N.W.2d 294, 298 (Iowa 1999) (alteration in original) (citation
omitted). And, “[b]ecause a plea agreement requires a defendant to waive
fundamental rights, we are compelled to hold prosecutors and courts to the most 7
meticulous standards of both promise and performance.” Id. (alteration in original)
(citation omitted).
“If a defendant fails to uphold his or her end of the agreement, the State has
no obligation to provide the defendant the anticipated benefits of the bargain.”
State v. Foy, 574 N.W.2d 337, 339–40 (Iowa 1998). But it is the State’s “burden
to show [a] defendant has failed to live up to his or her end of the bargain.” Id.
“‘[V]iolations of either the terms or the spirit of the plea agreement’ require reversal
of the conviction or vacation of the sentence.” Horness, 600 N.W.2d at 298
We begin with the agreement itself. The email from the prosecutor to
defense counsel states:
I’ve spoken with [members of the drug task force] and the victim in the burglary. We are prepared to give the following offer. Ms. Tucker has expressed interest in working with the Task Force. If she is still willing to follow through on that, the State is willing to dismiss the charges in the drug case. As for the Burglary, if she agrees to proffer and testify against Jerrid Weaver, we can agree to a plea to Burglary in the 3rd Degree where each side will recommend a suspended sentence, contingent on her cooperation and testimony against Mr. Weaver. She will also be responsible for restitution, joint and severally, with Jerrid Weaver, and I want to warn you that the restitution number is going to be high based on the items that were taken. If Ms. Tucker is receptive to this offer, I propose that instead of doing depositions on Friday, she instead will sit down with [drug task force deputies] and do the proffer/Task Force agreement. After that, the State would be fine with proceeding to a plea and then taking up the issue of release pending sentencing. Please let me know what you and your client think of this offer.
Five days later, after meeting with Tucker in jail, defense counsel accepted the
offer:
I spoke to Jennifer Tucker and she is agreeable to the plea offer. Therefore I agree that we not take depositions on Friday and that the officers meet with Jennifer on Friday. We have a hearing 8
scheduled March 1st at 2:30 and a plea can be entered at that time. Please let me know if this is acceptable and if so I will call off the court reporter and your office will need to contact the witnesses regarding Friday.
The next day, the prosecutor responded:
I did everything but respond to you. I called off the witnesses for tomorrow, and I told [the drug task force members] to instead go to the jail tomorrow at 1:00 to speak with Ms. Tucker. I agree that we can do the plea on that March 1st date.
Defense counsel emailed back: “Ok. Sounds good. I will call off the court
reporter.”
Here both parties claim the other party did not uphold their end of the
bargain. Tucker asserts she fulfilled what the prosecutor specifically asked of her
in the plea agreement—she made a proffer to representatives of the drug task
force and she testified against Weaver at his trial. The State claims Tucker failed
to fully perform her obligations. The State expected more than just a proffer from
Tucker—the typical task force agreement requires one to continue to provide
information, participate as a confidential source, and participate in controlled buys.
When the task force needed Tucker’s services, it was unable to reach her.
The court held:
[The defendant] absconded from supervision almost immediately after her release, failed to appear for a pretrial conference, there were warrants out for her arrest. . . . [H]er assertion of cooperation in those circumstances is at least circumspect right at the beginning. Regarding the statement . . . in the burglary case with Mr. Weaver, she did not know she had to come back and testify after a hung jury. The court does not find that credible, that she did not know she had to keep in contact until that matter was resolved. When you simply take off, don’t abide by court orders, again, . . . there’s an almost automatic presumption that you’re just not following through with what you agreed upon. 9
Further, the court does find from the language in the . . . email by [the prosecutor], that this was together, comprehensive, not apart, not separate. There were two things. Not doing one thing takes away from the other. The third thing in—or a couple other things is that the defendant, again, is no novice to this from the testimony of [drug task force deputy]. There was already an existing cooperation agreement which she had already violated. To sit there and say she didn’t know what was expected of her, just expected to meet with you and say this and that and I’m done, dismiss the charges, is simply not credible. The email states she is to work with the task force, which doesn’t mean just meet, tell them something and then leave. The court finds it’s very clear. I don’t find anything unambiguous regarding what was agreed upon here. She was supposed to show up, she was supposed to do certain things for the task force, which she never did. She didn’t do them before, she didn’t do them this time, so the motion in . . . both cases are overruled. We’ll proceed to trial tomorrow.
We disagree.
Although the State may have had certain expectations of Tucker, they were
not spelled out in the agreement. To be fair, the prosecutor expected that a task
force agreement for the drug case would be entered into between Tucker and the
State. That did not happen due an omission on the part of a task force deputy who
met with Tucker at her proffer. He explained that he did not bring the usual task
force agreement when he met with Tucker because he thought the previous
agreement he had with her, for working as a confidential informant, would be
sufficient. This was an erroneous assumption for nothing in the record shows the
previous agreement applies here. And nothing in the present agreement provided
that Tucker would be bound by terms of a previous agreement. In any event, even
if a previous agreement were somehow applicable here, its terms are not a part of
our record. That Tucker may have been familiar with terms of a previous task force
agreement is of no consequence. Tucker cannot be bound by terms she may have 10
only anticipated but were not specifically agreed to. Indeed, that the previous
terms were not imposed here could lead a reasonable person to believe they did
not apply this time around. We consider what the parties agreed to, not what they
could have agreed to.
The only agreement is the email exchange between the prosecutor and
defense counsel. The plain language of the agreement requires Tucker working
with the task force by “sit[ting] down with [drug task force deputies] and do the
proffer/Task Force Agreement.” She did do the proffer. Through no fault of Tucker,
the State failed to follow through with execution of a task force agreement. So the
typical task force agreement terms do not apply here.
We want to emphasize a few key facts specific to this case that drive the
outcome. We acknowledge the email from the prosecutor making the plea offer
contemplated a future agreement being executed that would spell out in more
detail what was expected of Tucker. We also acknowledge it may have taken
some time after Tucker’s initial proffer to put together such an agreement, as the
details to include in the agreement may have been determined by the information
Tucker revealed at her proffer—although the email from the prosecutor seems to
imply that a task force agreement would be presented to Tucker at the proffer. Had
the evidence presented at the hearing on Tucker’s motion to dismiss established
Tucker was informed that she would be required to sign a task force agreement
sometime after her proffer, and law enforcement worked diligently to prepare such
an agreement after the proffer and, by the time it was completed, Tucker was
nowhere to be found to sign it, the outcome may be different. However, the
evidence in this case established that Tucker was not told at her proffer that she 11
would be required to sign a task force agreement at a later date, and no such
agreement was in the works before she disappeared approximately two months
after the proffer. The detective involved acknowledged he had not made any effort
to prepare an agreement to present to Tucker at the time of the proffer or to prepare
one after the proffer. Instead, he incorrectly assumed Tucker would be operating
under the terms of a previous task force agreement Tucker had signed in another
case when neither Tucker nor the prosecutor had agreed to be bound by the terms
of the previous agreement. Given the lack of evidence that a task force agreement
was in the process of being prepared or preparation of such an agreement was
even being contemplated, we find no violation of the plea agreement by Tucker.
We conclude Tucker performed as required on the drug case, so the State should
have dismissed the drug charges. But, of course, there is more.
The State contends Tucker failed to hold up her end of the bargain in the
burglary case. Although Tucker testified against Weaver in his first trial, the State
complains Tucker failed to testify in Weaver’s retrial and therefore reneged on the
deal. The State argues the agreement required “full performance” by Tucker. In
other words, the agreement’s drug case and burglary case requirements were tied
together and Tucker’s failure to perform in one case “vitiates any claim of full
performance.” Without full performance on Tucker’s part, the State asserts Tucker
is in breach and the State has no duty to perform. We see nothing in the
agreement that ties together Tucker’s drug case and burglary case obligations.
Even if the agreement could be construed as ambiguous on the point, ambiguities
in the plea agreement are to be construed against the State. See Iowa Fuel &
Minerals, Inc. v. Iowa State Bd. of Regents, 471 N.W.2d 859, 862–63 (Iowa 1991) 12
(“When a contract is not ambiguous, it will be enforced as written, but when there
are ambiguities in a contract, they are strictly construed against the drafter.”
(internal citation omitted)); see also Beres, 943 N.W.2d at 588 (Appel, J.,
concurring specially) (recognizing “an emerging rule of interpretation dictates that
plea bargains should be construed against the government, with ambiguities in the
plea agreement to be construed against the state”). Because the plea agreement
did not unambiguously state fulfillment of Tucker’s obligations in the burglary case
were necessary to fulfill her obligations in the drug case, we view the plea
agreements as separate agreements. Therefore, whether Tucker fulfilled her
obligations under the plea agreement in her burglary case is inconsequential to
resolution of the question whether Tucker fulfilled her obligations under the plea
agreement in the drug case. Having concluded Tucker met her obligations in the
drug case, the State was obligated to dismiss the drug charges regardless of
whether Tucker fulfilled her obligations in the separate burglary case.
To sum up, the State did not carry its burden to show that Tucker was asked
to perform additional duties with the drug task force. The devil is in the details,
and here there were no details. Although Tucker did not perform as the State
wished, Tucker performed as required under her agreement with the State. In
repudiating the agreement, the State breached the agreement. For these reasons,
we grant specific performance here and reverse the denial of Tucker's motion to
dismiss. We vacate the drug convictions and sentences and remand for dismissal
of the drug charges in accordance with the agreement.
In view of our disposition, we need not address Tucker’s sufficiency of the
evidence and consecutive sentences arguments. 13
IV. Conclusion.
We grant specific performance and reverse the denial of Tucker’s motion to
dismiss. We vacate the drug convictions and sentences and remand for dismissal
REVERSED AND REMANDED.