State of Iowa v. Teara Ann Monique Cole

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedJanuary 9, 2025
Docket24-0303
StatusPublished

This text of State of Iowa v. Teara Ann Monique Cole (State of Iowa v. Teara Ann Monique Cole) 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. Teara Ann Monique Cole, (iowactapp 2025).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

No. 24-0303 Filed January 9, 2025

STATE OF IOWA, Plaintiff-Appellant,

vs.

TEARA ANN MONIQUE COLE, Defendant-Appellee. ________________________________________________________________

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Polk County, Tabitha Turner, Judge.

The State appeals from a dismissal of the State’s prosecution based on the

district court’s determination that the State violated the defendant’s right to a

speedy indictment. REVERSED AND REMANDED.

Brenna Bird, Attorney General, and Aaron Rogers, Assistant Attorney

General, for appellant.

Martha J. Lucey, State Appellate Defender, and Josh Irwin, Assistant

Appellate Defender, for appellee.

Heard by Schumacher, P.J., and Badding and Chicchelly, JJ. 2

SCHUMACHER, Presiding Judge.

The State appeals the dismissal of its prosecution against Teara Cole for

theft in the third degree, granted after the district court concluded the trial

information was untimely and violated Cole’s right to speedy indictment. The

success of the State’s challenge hinges on whether the event triggering the

speedy-indictment window was Cole’s arrest or her initial appearance. With the

benefit of recent guidance from our supreme court, we conclude the district court

erred in its calculation of the speedy-indictment window using the date of Cole’s

arrest rather than the date of Cole’s initial appearance.

I. Background Proceedings

The facts below are undisputed. On October 12, 2023, Cole was arrested

pursuant to a warrant and released on bond the same day. Eight days later, on

October 20, Cole made an initial appearance before the magistrate. The State

charged Cole by trial information on November 30, fifty days after her arrest and

forty-one days after her initial appearance.

Cole moved to dismiss, arguing the State was required by Iowa Rule of

Criminal Procedure 2.33(2)(a) (2023) to file a trial information or indict Cole within

forty-five days after her arrest. By that standard, the deadline for the trial

information would have been four days earlier than the trial information was filed.

The State resisted Cole’s motion, citing the same rule but claiming an amendment

to the speedy-indictment rule, which became effective on July 1, 2023, instructs

that the forty-five-day window does not begin until after a defendant’s initial

appearance. Thus, the State asserts the trial information was filed within the forty-

five-day window. The district court held an unreported hearing on the motion. 3

Following hearing, the district court concluded the date of arrest controlled the

deadline for the State’s trial information filing and granted Cole’s motion to dismiss.

The State appeals.

II. Standard of Review

“We review interpretations of the speedy indictment rule for errors at law.”

State v. Harris, 12 N.W.3d 333, 335 (Iowa 2024) (citation omitted).

III. Analysis

Iowa’s speedy-indictment rule is codified at Iowa Rule of Criminal Procedure

2.33(2)(a). This rule states:

When an adult is arrested for the commission of an offense . . . and an indictment is not found against the defendant within 45 days, the court must order the prosecution be dismissed unless good cause to the contrary is shown. For purposes of this rule, the 45-day period commences for an adult only after the defendant has been taken before a magistrate for an initial appearance or a waiver of the initial appearance is filed.

Iowa R. Crim. P. 2.33(2)(a).

The question of when the forty-five-day window to indict or file a trial

information turns on the interpretation of this rule.1 The second sentence of the

rule is “explicit” that “the initial appearance . . . start[s] the forty-five-day period.”

Harris, 12 N.W.3d at 334, 337. The second sentence was added by a 2022

amendment, which became effective July 1, 2023. See Harris, 12 N.W.3d at 337–

38.

1 Regarding the speedy-indictment rule, a trial information is equivalent to an indictment. Iowa R. Crim. P. 2.5(5). 4

Before that second sentence was added, courts needing to determine when

the forty-five-day window began running faced some uncertainty.2 Id. at 336.

Those courts had to fill in the rule’s textual gaps with guidance from caselaw. Id.

at 334. Such precedent “explain[ed] that under the pre-amendment rule, the forty-

five-day period starts when the police either arrest the defendant or issue a citation

in lieu of arrest, which our law treats as equivalent to an arrest.” Id.; see also State

v. Berg, 12 N.W.3d 583, 587 n.3 (Iowa 2024) (“As we recently clarified in State v.

Harris, . . . under the pre-amendment rule . . . the clock started on the date of [the

defendant’s] arrest, not the date of her initial appearance.”). And recently the Iowa

Supreme Court advised that the amended rule went beyond “clarify[ing] Iowa’s

speedy-indictment law,” it “changed the law by selecting a different event—the

initial appearance—to start the forty-five-day period.” Harris, 12 N.W.3d at 337.

The State challenges the district court’s conclusion that the date of arrest

controlled the start date for the forty-five-day indictment window. Both parties

present arguments under the post-amendment rule. Indeed, Cole’s motion to

dismiss relied on the post-amendment rule, and she does not argue the pre-

amendment rule applied.3 So the question before this court is whether the district

2 Before the amendment, the same relevant text of rule 2.33(2)(a) read:

When an adult is arrested for the commission of a public offense . . . and an indictment is not found against the defendant within 45 days, the court must order the prosecution to be dismissed, unless good cause to the contrary is shown or the defendant waives the defendant’s right thereto. 3 In its ruling on Cole’s motion to dismiss, dated January 24, 2024, the district court

quoted the language of pre-amendment rule 2.33(2)(a). Nowhere in the ruling does the court mention the second sentence added by the amendment. The district court’s ruling also does not contain any parenthetical indicating the year in which the rule it applied took effect. 5

court should have denied Cole’s motion to dismiss, as measuring the speedy-

indictment window from Cole’s initial appearance, the trial information was filed on

the forty-first day and within the forty-five-day period.

Recognizing the district court lacked the guidance in Harris that we now

consider, we read the text of the amended rule with our supreme court’s

commentary in Harris to settle this issue. Rule 2.33 now says “the 45-day period

commences for an adult only after the defendant has been taken before a

magistrate for an initial appearance or a waiver of the initial appearance is filed.”

Iowa R. Crim. P. 2.33(2)(a). In Harris, the Iowa Supreme Court discussed the

importance of the amendment to rule 2.33. 12 N.W.3d at 337; see Iowa Sup. Ct.

Supervisory Order, In the Matter of Adopting Revised Chapter 2 Iowa Rules of

Criminal Procedure (Oct. 14, 2022). “[T]he amended version of rule 2.33 operates

differently than the pre-amendment rule.” Harris, 12 N.W.3d at 337. The

amendment changed the event from which courts measure the forty-five-day

speedy-indictment window. Id.

So when the amended rule applies, our prior decisions that have historically

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