State of Iowa v. Nicholas Lee Campie

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedJuly 2, 2025
Docket24-0902
StatusPublished

This text of State of Iowa v. Nicholas Lee Campie (State of Iowa v. Nicholas Lee Campie) 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. Nicholas Lee Campie, (iowactapp 2025).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

No. 24-0902 Filed July 2, 2025

STATE OF IOWA, Plaintiff-Appellee,

vs.

NICHOLAS LEE CAMPIE, Defendant-Appellant. ________________________________________________________________

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Clinton County, Mark R. Lawson,

Judge.

A criminal defendant appeals his discretionary sentence following a guilty

plea. AFFIRMED.

Kent A. Simmons, Bettendorf, for appellant.

Brenna Bird, Attorney General, and Joshua Henry, Assistant Attorney

General, for appellee.

Considered without oral argument by Schumacher, P.J., and Buller and

Sandy, JJ. 2

BULLER, Judge.

Nicholas Campie appeals from the discretionary sentence imposed

following his guilty plea to lascivious acts with a child, a class “C” felony in violation

of Iowa Code section 709.8(1)(b) (2020), and enticing a minor, a class “D” felony

in violation of section 710.10(2). The sentence at issue in this appeal was imposed

at re-sentencing following our decision in State v. Campie, No. 22-1075, 2023

WL 7391665 (Iowa Ct. App. Nov. 8, 2023). There, this court reversed and

remanded because the panel concluded the district court improperly considered

the minutes of testimony. See id. at *3–5. Campie appeals his new sentence,

complaining that the re-sentencing court erred by sentencing him to prison despite

the hired defense expert’s statistical analysis suggesting he was at low actuarial

risk of reoffending.

I. Background Facts and Proceedings

The facts of the underlying offense are that Campie—then eighteen years

old—used Snapchat to solicit sex from a girl twelve or younger. He admitted she

touched his penis. And he claimed to not know she was underage.

At re-sentencing, the parties stipulated to not updating the existing

presentence investigation report (PSI). The PSI “strongly recommended”

incarceration based in part on Campie’s lack of remorse, his minimization, and the

danger he posed to public safety. The county attorney recommended

incarceration based on the nature of the offenses, the impact on the victim, general

deterrence, and the recommendation of the PSI writer citing Campie’s lack of

remorse, failure to recognize the seriousness of his crimes, and dangerousness. 3

Campie’s attorney filed a lengthy written sentencing recommendation that

summarized the case from the defense perspective, attacked the PSI

recommendation, criticized previous counsel’s performance, and emphasized a

defense expert opined Campie was at “very low” risk of re-offense based on

actuarial instruments. In allocution, Campie vaguely apologized for the “wrong

actions that I’ve done or misjudged or just the bad situation that’s here.” His father

also testified, insisting “everybody knows he’s a good kid.”

The court received, without objection, an updated victim impact statement

from the child victim’s mother. In her original statement, the victim’s mother

detailed how Campie lacked remorse and had contacted her family trying to

convince them to support a lenient charge. Her updated statement read:

Along with the previous statement that still stands true to this day, I would like to add this. I would like to start off by saying how disappointed in the justice system I am having to deal with it firsthand. While Mr. Campie is ou[t] enjoying his life, going on vacation, spending time and holidays with his family like nothing ever happened, [m]y daughter is living with the fact that she was sexually abused and her abuser can get away with it because he has parents who coddle him and has connections in the justice system. This case has drug on for 4 long years now, and still to this day we can’t put it behind us and try to move on. So how are we able to ever move on, especially if he thinks he can get away with it and live his life like nothing ever happened? Mr. Campie, nor any of his family have shown any remorse. He never took any of the pre requirements seriously and put them off until he[] couldn’t anymore. His parents go around victim shaming (very small town, we hear things). ln the previous statement, I provided where he reached out to us when he wasn’t supposed to, not with an apology, but to talk about his future and how it’s going to affect it. What about my child and her future, and how it is going to affect her for the rest of her life, every relationship that she has. His excuse was that he didn’t know how young she was, and he couldn’t tell. His sister, living in the same house, at the same time that this happened is the same age as my daughter. His sister is actually 1 month older than my daughter, and he couldn’t tell? He failed her, so he could get what he wanted. My daughter has to live with the 4

fact that she was sexually abused for the rest of her life, us as parents have to live with the fact that we failed our daughter, because we[’]re supposed to be there to protect her and we failed. But we should all forgive that because he wants a future and he wants kids? I’m asking you to please take everything into consideration and to please stand by the same punishment that he received in the first place. Please make him pay for his actions. Please do not fail my daughter more than she has already been failed. Please let him pay for his actions, and help us move on from this nightmare that we have been living for the past 4 years.[1]

In rendering sentence, the court cited the nature of the offense, the impact

on the victim and community, and Campie’s prospects for rehabilitation. The court

expressly disclaimed reliance on statements in the PSI which Campie had not

admitted and explained that it reviewed the victim impact statements but would not

consider any unproven allegations. As mitigating factors, the court acknowledged

Campie’s age at the time of the offense, his family support, his employment and

behavioral history while on appeal bond, his lack of other criminal history, and his

compliance with the sex-offender registry. On the aggravating side of the ledger,

the court noted the seriousness of the offense, Campie’s statements minimizing

his conduct even at re-sentencing, his request for a “minimal” sentence and belief

“a sentencing is unnecessary,” and his lack of recognition that his actions were

wrong. Based on this, the court reasoned that the hired defense expert’s statistical

evidence probably underestimated Campie’s risk of re-offense:

That leads me to believe that you have the potential to be in that small category of persons that [the hired defense expert] indicated may reoffend. Statistically, he felt you were not likely to. And I agree with that. But because of your lack of understanding of this, in my view, I think you fall at the more likely to reoffend end of that comment. Because you don’t seem to recognize the

1 We have corrected a few typographical issues in the statement without brackets

because we can tell the statement was scanned in from a printed copy and cut off portions of some words. 5

seriousness of what you’ve—you’ve done or the impact that it had on the victim in this case and the fact that she was the minor and that you were the adult.

Or, as the court put it later, “[E]ven though I do believe the defendant is,

statistically, unlikely to reoffend, his failure to recognize the seriousness of the

offense raises concerns.” And the court emphasized the need for specific and

general deterrence, as well as its consideration of the unobjected-to portions of the

PSI.

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Related

State v. Knight
701 N.W.2d 83 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 2005)
State v. Formaro
638 N.W.2d 720 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 2002)
State of Iowa v. Bradley Elroy Wickes
910 N.W.2d 554 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 2018)

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State of Iowa v. Nicholas Lee Campie, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-iowa-v-nicholas-lee-campie-iowactapp-2025.