State v. Dente

2025 UT App 95
CourtCourt of Appeals of Utah
DecidedJune 26, 2025
DocketCase No. 20240688-CA
StatusPublished

This text of 2025 UT App 95 (State v. Dente) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Utah primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Dente, 2025 UT App 95 (Utah Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

2025 UT App 95

THE UTAH COURT OF APPEALS

STATE OF UTAH, Appellee, v. DAKOTA ANTHONY DENTE, Appellant.

Opinion No. 20240688-CA Filed June 26, 2025

Third District Court, Salt Lake Department The Honorable Paul B. Parker No. 211903226

Janet Lawrence, Attorney for Appellant Derek E. Brown and Aubrey Bisbee, Attorneys for Appellee

JUDGE RYAN M. HARRIS authored this Opinion, in which JUDGES MICHELE M. CHRISTIANSEN FORSTER and RYAN D. TENNEY concurred.

HARRIS, Judge:

¶1 Soon after pleading guilty to a felony sex crime, Dakota Anthony Dente sought to withdraw his plea, asserting that it had not been knowingly and voluntarily made. The district court denied Dente’s motion, and Dente appeals, claiming that when he entered the plea, he had insufficient information regarding available defenses, that he was not advised of some of the consequences of sex-offender registration, and that his attorney had pressured him into accepting the State’s plea offer. We affirm the district court’s denial of Dente’s motion because, under the circumstances presented here, Dente has failed to demonstrate that the court abused its discretion in determining that his plea was knowingly and voluntarily entered. State v. Dente

BACKGROUND 1

¶2 In September 2020, Dente, Tonya, and Madison 2 went “to a friend’s house to play games, drink wine, and get in the hot tub.” At one point during the evening, Tonya briefly walked outside of the apartment, and when she returned, she saw Dente and Madison lying on a couch, with Dente on top of Madison. Both Dente and Madison had their pants off. Tonya left the room because she did “[n]ot want[] to see that,” and she found another room where she could sleep. Later that evening, Tonya “woke up to someone taking off her swimsuit bottoms.” She recalled that the person “licked her vagina, and then . . . put his penis into her vagina.” Tonya said that the person eventually withdrew and rolled onto his back, and that when he did, she recognized the person as Dente. At that point, she “jumped out of bed and confronted” him, and in response, Dente said, “I thought you were [Madison].”

¶3 The State eventually charged Dente with two first-degree- felony counts of rape (one related to Madison and one related to Tonya) and one first-degree-felony count of forcible sodomy (related to Tonya). Later, about a week before trial, Dente accepted an offer from the State. Per the arrangement, Dente agreed to plead guilty to one third-degree-felony count of forcible sexual abuse in exchange for the dismissal of all other charges and the State’s agreement not to recommend prison at sentencing.

1. “Because there was no preliminary hearing or trial in this case, we recite the facts related to the underlying criminal activity as alleged in the charging information and contained in [the written agreement] submitted to the court at the change-of-plea hearing.” State v. Badikyan, 2018 UT App 168, ¶ 2 n.1, 436 P.3d 256, aff’d, 2020 UT 3, 459 P.3d 967.

2. Tonya and Madison are pseudonyms.

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¶4 The district court held a hearing to consider Dente’s change of plea, and during that hearing, Dente signed a written statement in support of the plea. In the statement, Dente admitted that he “touched the pubic area of [Tonya] and [Madison] with the intent to arouse [his] own sexual desire” and that he did so “[without] their consent.” Dente also affirmed that he understood the potential penalties he faced—including up to five years in prison—and the rights he was giving up by pleading guilty, and he acknowledged that he was voluntarily entering his plea. During the hearing, the district court conducted a robust colloquy with Dente. In this colloquy, Dente stated, among other things, that he had read and understood the plea agreement document, that he understood he would be put on the sex-offender registry, and that he understood the “possible penalties for a third-degree felony.” Dente also confirmed that the factual basis for his plea was correct. At the end of the colloquy, the court accepted Dente’s plea and found that it had been “knowingly, intelligently, and voluntarily made.”

¶5 A few weeks later, before he had been sentenced, Dente filed a motion to withdraw his plea through his newly obtained attorney (Counsel 4). The court held an evidentiary hearing on Dente’s motion, and Dente testified. In his testimony, Dente explained that, during the course of the case, he had been represented by four different attorneys. He stated that his first attorney (Counsel 1) had investigated possible defense witnesses and had put together an investigation report, but Dente testified that he did not ever see the results of this report. Counsel 1 later had to withdraw, and a replacement attorney (Counsel 2) then took over. But Dente “didn’t feel comfortable” with Counsel 2, so Dente hired another attorney (Counsel 3), who was Dente’s counsel of record during the plea negotiations.

¶6 Dente offered his view that Counsel 3 had failed to advise him adequately in several key respects. First, Dente recalled discussing the complainants’ allegations with Counsel 3, “but no

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possible defenses.” Dente also testified that when he asked Counsel 3 about Counsel 1’s investigation report, Counsel 3 said he knew what was in the report but Counsel 3 “never . . . show[ed Dente] the evidence.” Next, Dente testified that Counsel 3 told him he would be sentenced to probation, without any jail time. Dente acknowledged that Counsel 3 also told him that, as part of his sentence, he would be listed on the sex-offender registry for ten years, but he explained that Counsel 3 did not specifically advise him that being listed on the sex-offender registry would affect his ability to visit his son’s school or daycare.

¶7 Sometime after Dente entered his plea, he realized that— due to his placement on the sex-offender registry—he would not be permitted to attend any of his son’s school functions. He apparently also realized that he was not guaranteed to be afforded the privilege of probation. Dente then questioned Counsel 3 about those issues, and during that discussion, Dente learned that Counsel 3 didn’t have a copy of Counsel 1’s investigation report.

¶8 Dente testified that he then hired Counsel 4. Dente said that Counsel 4 obtained and reviewed a copy of Counsel 1’s investigation report and advised Dente that the report referenced a video of Madison “dancing for [Dente] in an erotic manner” on the night of the hot-tub party. The report also referenced a witness who had apparently seen Dente and Madison having consensual sex that night. However, the video was not shown at the evidentiary hearing, nor did the witness testify at the hearing. Toward the end of his testimony, Dente acknowledged that the decision to plead guilty had been “[his] own” and had been made “with . . . the advice of” Counsel 3. But Dente maintained that he would not have entered the plea if he had known that Counsel 3 did not have a copy of the investigation report.

¶9 Dente’s mother (Mother) and father (Father) also testified at the evidentiary hearing. Both Mother and Father stated that they sat in on conversations between Dente and Counsel 3, and

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they offered their views that Counsel 3 had pressured Dente to take the State’s plea offer. Father testified that Counsel 3 made statements like, “We have to take this position, it’s too risky not to,” and, “Just take the deal. You got a 50/50 chance. There’s two women. If [there was only] one woman, maybe the chance, but two women, no way.” Mother added that Counsel 3 told Dente, “You need to take this deal,” and that Counsel 3 told the family to “[g]o home and think about it.”

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Bluebook (online)
2025 UT App 95, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-dente-utahctapp-2025.