IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA
No. 14-0945
Filed April 8, 2015
STATE OF IOWA,
Plaintiff-Appellee,
vs.
CHARLES E. WALKER JR.,
Defendant-Appellant.
________________________________________________________________
Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Scott County, Stuart P. Werling,
Judge.
Charles E. Walker Jr. appeals the denial of his motion to correct an illegal
sentence. AFFIRMED.
Courtney T. Wilson of Gomez May L.L.P., Davenport, for appellant.
Thomas J. Miller, Attorney General, Darrell Mullins, Assistant Attorney
General, and Alan R. Ostergren, County Attorney, for appellee.
Considered by Danilson, C.J., and Potterfield and Bower, JJ.
2
DANILSON, C.J.
Charles E. Walker Jr. appeals the denial of his motion to correct an illegal
sentence.
A defendant may challenge an illegal sentence at any time. State v.
Bruegger, 773 N.W.2d 862, 869 (Iowa 2009). Our review of constitutional claims
is de novo. Id.
On August 30, 1988, two criminal complaints were filed against Charles
Walker in Muscatine, Iowa. On October 7, 1988, an order was entered
transferring this matter from the juvenile court to the district court. The State filed
a trial information with attached minutes of testimony on October 11, 1988,
charging Walker with Count I—first-degree kidnapping, Count II—willful injury,
Count III—first-degree sexual abuse, Count IV—first-degree burglary, and Count
V—attempted murder. According to the minutes of testimony, on July 5, 1988,
Walker entered the home of the victim uninvited between the hours of 8:00 to
9:00 p.m. He assaulted the victim by striking her, choking her multiple times with
an electric cord, forcing her to perform sexual acts upon him, and attempting to
have intercourse with her against her will.
On November 4, 1988, defense counsel filed a motion to suspend
proceedings and application for psychological examination. Walker was fifteen
years old at the time of the offenses. The application was granted, and the
Mental Health Institute in Independence, Iowa, was ordered to evaluate Walker
to determine whether he was suffering from a mental disorder that prevented him
from appreciating the charge, understanding the proceedings, or assisting
effectively in his defense.
3
On December 23, 1988, a plea agreement was filed in the district court in
which the State agreed to dismiss the kidnapping and attempted murder charges
in exchange for Walker’s guilty pleas to the offenses of second-degree sexual
abuse, first-degree burglary, and willful injury, for which the State would
recommend consecutive sentences. The same day, the district court entered a
form order, checking the box indicating the court “accepts the plea and it will
embody in the judgment and sentence the disposition provided for in the plea
agreement or another disposition more favorable to the Defendant than that
provided for in the plea agreement.” A presentence investigation report was
prepared, which set out Walker’s social and mental health history, which we need
not reiterate here. On January 27, 1989, a court calendar entry1 indicates
Walker was sentenced to serve consecutive terms of incarceration not to exceed
twenty-five years on the burglary charge, twenty-five years on the sexual abuse
charge, and ten years on the willful injury charge. There was no mandatory
minimum prison term imposed.2
On September 3, 2013, Walker filed a pro se motion to correct an illegal
sentence, contending the consecutive sentences were disproportionate to the
crime, citing State v. Ragland, 836 N.W.2d 107 (Iowa 2013); State v. Null, 836
N.W.2d 41 (Iowa 2013); and State v. Pearson, 836 N.W.2d 88 (Iowa 2013).
On May 7, 2014, after hearing arguments, the district court dismissed
Walker’s motion, stating:
1
Nothing in the district court file indicates Walker’s sentencing was recorded or
transcribed.
2
The State asserts Walker has always been eligible for parole and could discharge his
sentence in 2017.
4
It’s the ruling of the court that in this case the sentencing
court did, in fact, give individualized attention to the sentence
involved. The court had before it the option of sentencing the
defendant to twenty-five, thirty-five, fifty, or sixty years, and in its
discretion chose the maximum sentence. The fact that the
defendant will have served the sentence in full and be released,
without further violation, by the board of parole within two to three
years is an indication to the court that it is not, in fact, a life
sentence disproportionate to the crime committed. And in that
regard, the court notes that having read the victim impact
statements, the trial information, and the minutes of testimony, that
the alleged offense in this case was very heinous. The court also
would indicate that having read the original trial information, as part
of the plea agreement an attempted murder charge was dismissed.
The court is not taking into consideration any charges to which the
defendant did not plead guilty, but that was part of the plea
agreement, which—the benefit to which this defendant received by
pleading guilty twenty-six years ago.
Accordingly, it’s the ruling of the court that there is no illegal
sentence to be corrected.
Walker now appeals. His challenge to his original sentence does not
focus on disproportionality. Rather, he contends his sentence was illegal
because:
Although we do not have access to a transcript to reflect what was
considered by the court at the time of Walker’s sentencing all the
way back in 1989, it is apparent that Walker, and every juvenile
offender sentenced in adult court prior to Miller [v. Alabama, 132 S.
Ct. 2448 (2012)], was deprived of the type of individualized
sentencing hearing envisioned by its ruling, and recognized by the
Iowa Supreme Court. Because the sentencing judge did not have
access to Miller in 1989, it is unquestionable that consideration was
not given to the factors set forth in Miller. Our Iowa Supreme Court
has held that Miller applies retroactively. Therefore, Walker is
entitled to be resentenced under an individualized process in the
district court.
In Miller, 132 S. Ct. at 2463, the United States Supreme Court held that a
mandatory life-without-parole sentence for juveniles violates the Eighth
Amendment of the United States Constitution.
5
In Pearson, the defendant challenged her seventy-percent mandatory
minimum sentence as cruel and unusual punishment under the Eighth
Amendment to the United States Constitution and article I, section 17 of the Iowa
Constitution. 836 N.W.2d at 89. Pearson, then seventeen years old, was
convicted of two counts of first-degree robbery and two counts of first-degree
burglary. Id. The district court sentenced her to serve concurrent sentences for
the convictions arising from each transaction—one count of first-degree robbery
and one count of first-degree burglary—but ordered those two sentences be
served consecutively. Id. Because each first-degree robbery conviction carried
a sentence of twenty-five years imprisonment subject to a seventy percent
mandatory minimum, Pearson received a fifty-year sentence and would not be
eligible for parole until she served thirty-five years. Id. Our supreme court ruled,
“[W]e think a minimum of thirty-five years without the possibility of parole for the
crimes involved in this case violates the core teachings of Miller.” Id. at 96.
And in a case decided after the district court ruled in Walker’s case, State
v. Lyle, 854 N.W.2d 378, 382 (Iowa 2014), our supreme court examined whether
the seventy percent mandatory minimum of a ten-year sentence for second-
degree robbery was constitutional in light of Ragland, Pearson, and Null. The
supreme court “conclude[d] that the sentencing of juveniles according to
statutorily required mandatory minimums does not adequately serve the
legitimate penological objectives in light of the child’s categorically diminished
culpability.” Lyle, 854 N.W.2d at 398.
But there was no mandatory minimum imposed in Walker’s case, and our
supreme court has observed “[t]here is nothing cruel and unusual about
6
punishing a person committing two crimes more severely than a person
committing one crime, which is the effect of consecutive sentencing.” State v.
August, 589 N.W.2d 740, 744 (Iowa 1999). Moreover, we reject Walker’s
argument made here that Walker was deprived of an individualized sentencing
determination. The district court here concluded the sentencing court “did, in
fact, give individualized attention to the sentence involved.” Walker has given us
no information to rule otherwise.3
Agreeing with the district court that no illegal sentence was imposed, we
affirm the district court’s dismissal of Walker’s motion to correct an illegal
sentence.
AFFIRMED.
3
Walker only raised on appeal the cruel and unusual punishment claim, and cursorily
suggests that individualized sentencing hearings should be afforded all juveniles given
long sentences—a requirement not yet imposed by the Iowa Supreme Court.