State of Minnesota v. Terry Izeal Heggs

CourtCourt of Appeals of Minnesota
DecidedMay 26, 2026
Docketa250785
StatusPublished

This text of State of Minnesota v. Terry Izeal Heggs (State of Minnesota v. Terry Izeal Heggs) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State of Minnesota v. Terry Izeal Heggs, (Mich. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

STATE OF MINNESOTA IN COURT OF APPEALS A25-0785

State of Minnesota, Respondent,

vs.

Terry Izeal Heggs, Appellant.

Filed May 26, 2026 Reversed Johnson, Judge

Mower County District Court File No. 50-CR-22-2267

Keith Ellison, Attorney General, St. Paul, Minnesota; and

Kristen Nelsen, Mower County Attorney, Heather Kjos Schmit, Assistant County Attorney, Austin, Minnesota (for respondent)

Cathryn Middlebrook, Chief Appellate Public Defender, Kathryn J. Lockwood, Assistant Public Defender, St. Paul, Minnesota (for appellant)

Considered and decided by Larson, Presiding Judge; Johnson, Judge; and Kirk,

Judge. ∗

SYLLABUS

The state did not prove beyond a reasonable doubt that appellant knowingly failed

to register as a predatory offender by providing an address that was both his workplace

Retired judge of the Minnesota Court of Appeals, serving by appointment pursuant ∗

to Minn. Const. art. VI, § 10. address and his secondary address without specifying that the address was his secondary

address.

OPINION

JOHNSON, Judge

A Mower County jury found Terry Izeal Heggs guilty of failing to register as a

predatory offender. The state’s theory at trial was that Heggs violated the statute by not

specifying that his workplace address, where he regularly or occasionally stayed overnight,

also was his secondary address. We conclude that the state did not prove beyond a

reasonable doubt that Heggs knowingly violated the predatory-offender-registration

statute. Therefore, we reverse the conviction.

FACTS

On November 19, 2022, at approximately 8:00 a.m., police officers were dispatched

to a restaurant in the city of Austin to investigate a 911 hang-up call. When officers arrived

and entered the restaurant, they found Heggs, who worked at the restaurant, and a woman

with whom he had been in an intimate relationship. The officers spoke with the woman

and arrested Heggs.

While inside the restaurant, officers saw a room that was furnished with a mattress,

a cushioned chair, and a television. Officers also noticed men’s clothing in the room, which

led one officer to believe that Heggs was staying overnight in the room. In a warranted

search of the premises two days later, a detective found men’s personal-care products, a

full-size bath towel hanging in an adjacent half-bathroom, and a suitcase that contained

documents bearing Heggs’s name.

2 The state charged Heggs with four offenses: (1) failure to register as a predatory

offender, in violation of Minn. Stat. § 243.166, subd. 5(a)(1) (2022); (2) violation of a

domestic-abuse-no-contact order, in violation of Minn. Stat. § 629.75 subd. 2(c) (2022);

(3) domestic assault, in violation of Minn. Stat. § 609.2242, subd. 2, (2022); and

(4) interference with an emergency call, in violation of Minn. Stat. § 609.78, subd. 2(1)

(2022).

The case was tried to a jury on three days in April 2023. The state called six

witnesses and introduced 32 exhibits. Among the state’s witnesses was a special agent

employed by the state bureau of criminal apprehension (BCA) who was responsible for

monitoring predatory-offender registrations. She testified generally about the predatory-

offender-registration system and the BCA’s record-keeping, stated that she had never met

Heggs, and stated that she had reviewed the BCA’s file on Heggs.

During the special agent’s testimony, the state introduced exhibit 21, a five-page

“Change of Information” form bearing a BCA logo. Heggs used the form to change his

registered primary address approximately one month before his arrest. The form consists

of 15 parts with various headings. Under the heading “Current Primary Address,” Heggs

handwrote his new primary address. Under the heading “Current Employment

Information,” Heggs handwrote the address of the restaurant where he worked. The part

of the form with the heading “Current Secondary and Other Addresses” was left blank.

Similarly, the state introduced exhibit 23, a five-page “Address Verification Form,”

which Heggs signed approximately three weeks before his arrest. Most of the information

in exhibit 23 is typed, including the address of Heggs’s primary residence and his

3 workplace address. The part of the address-verification form with the heading “New

Secondary Address” was left blank. Heggs also initialed 27 paragraphs that recite the

duties of a person required to register as a predatory offender, as directed by the form.

Heggs did not testify. After the state rested, Heggs moved for a judgment of

acquittal. The district court granted the motion with respect to counts 2 and 4. Counts 1

and 3 were submitted to the jury. In the prosecutor’s closing argument, she stated, with

respect to the failure-to-register charge in count 1, that the evidence showed that when

Heggs was arrested at his workplace, he had been staying overnight there for five or more

days but had not registered the workplace address as a secondary address. The jury found

Heggs guilty of the charges in counts 1 and 3.

Heggs filed a post-trial motion for judgment of acquittal. The district court granted

the motion and acquitted Heggs of the charges in counts 1 and 3. With respect to the

failure-to-register charge in count 1, the district court concluded that “the circumstantial

evidence is simply insufficient to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that Defendant

occasionally stayed overnight at” the restaurant. The state appealed. This court reasoned,

with respect to the failure-to-register charge in count 1, that “[g]iven the nature and volume

of personal property in the break room, the only reasonable inference is that a man was

regularly staying overnight in that room, had been doing so for some time, and planned to

continue doing so.” State v. Heggs, A23-1254, 2024 WL 3493817, at *3 (Minn. App.

July 22, 2024), rev. denied (Minn. Nov. 19, 2024). We further reasoned that “the only

reasonable inference is that Heggs was the man staying there regularly.” Id. Accordingly,

we concluded that the state’s evidence was sufficient to support Heggs’s conviction of

4 failure to register for the reasons stated by the district court. Id. But we concluded that the

evidence was insufficient to support Heggs’s conviction of the domestic-assault charge in

count 3. Id. Accordingly, we affirmed in part, reversed in part, and remanded for entry of

judgment and sentencing on the failure-to-register charge. Id. at *3-4. On remand, the

district court imposed a sentence of 36 months of imprisonment.

Heggs appeals. He makes four arguments for reversal of his failure-to-register

conviction, all of which are presented in the alternative. First, Heggs argues that the state

did not prove that he regularly or occasionally stayed overnight at his workplace address,

as necessary to establish that his workplace address was his secondary address. Second,

he argues that, even if the state proved that he regularly or occasionally stayed overnight

at his workplace address, the state did not prove that he began doing so five or more days

before his arrest. Third, he argues that the state did not prove that he violated the predatory-

offender-registration statute by providing an address that was both his workplace address

and his secondary address without specifying that the address was his secondary address.

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State of Minnesota v. Terry Izeal Heggs, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-minnesota-v-terry-izeal-heggs-minnctapp-2026.