IN THE SUPREME COURT OF IOWA
No. 22–1009
Submitted September 14, 2023—Filed December 1, 2023
STATE OF IOWA,
Appellee,
vs.
ROBERT CLARK GEDDES,
Appellant.
Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Boone County, Stephen A. Owen,
District Associate Judge.
The defendant appeals his convictions for trespass as a hate crime,
arguing that the evidence of guilt was insufficient and that the convictions
violated his constitutional rights of free speech and due process. AFFIRMED.
Mansfield, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which Christensen,
C.J., Waterman, McDonald, Oxley, and May, JJ., joined. Waterman, J., filed a
concurrence, in which Christensen, C.J., joined. McDermott, J., filed a dissent.
Martha J. Lucey, State Appellate Defender, and Ashley C. Stewart (argued),
Assistant Appellate Defender, for appellant.
Brenna Bird, Attorney General, and Aaron J. Rogers (argued), Assistant
Attorney General, for appellee.
2
MANSFIELD, Justice.
I. Introduction.
In recent years, in our country, the rainbow flag has come to symbolize
support for LGBTQ+ rights. Several individuals in Boone displayed that flag or a
decal of it on the front of their properties. Another person entered their premises
without permission and taped anonymous notes to the doors urging, “Burn that
gay flag.” This individual was later found out and convicted of trespass as a hate
crime. See Iowa Code § 716.8(3) (2021). He now asserts on appeal that his
conviction violated the First Amendment to the United States Constitution and
article 1, section 9 of the Iowa Constitution. We disagree. The statute in question
does not criminalize speech, but rather conduct with a specific intent—namely,
trespassing on property because of the property owner or possessor’s association
with persons of a certain sexual orientation. The individuals’ display of the
LGBTQ+ flag or flag decal on their own properties was an exercise of First
Amendment rights; the defendant’s surreptitious entry onto those properties to
post his harassing notes was not. For these reasons, and because we are not
persuaded by the defendant’s other appellate arguments that would require us
to construe the hate crime statute implausibly or to overturn a soundly reasoned
forty-year-old precedent, we affirm the defendant’s convictions and sentence.
II. Background Facts and Proceedings.
A. The June 2021 Notes and Resulting Charges. In June 2021, renters
and homeowners who displayed LGBTQ+ Pride flags or decals in Boone began
receiving handwritten notes taped on their front doors.
The first note, discovered on June 16 and shaped like a warning sign, said,
“Warning due to high levels of flaggotry an investigation has been launched to
control the spread of HIV/AIDS. We are sad to say the bare back orgy has been
canceled. Burn that gay flag.” The renters, who displayed an LGBTQ+ Pride flag
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or decal on their premises, contacted the Boone Chief of Police about the note
and filed a police report. They specifically asked for information on whether the
Boone Police Department “keep[s] track of crimes against LGBTQ people within
the City of Boone” and “how many incidents against LGBTQ people have been
reported to the Boone Police so far in 2021 and in each of the past five years.”
On June 19, four additional notes were located, omitting the opening
words and stating simply, “Burn that gay flag.” The notes had the same
handwriting. The recipients reported that they found the notes to be “alarming,
annoying, and/or threatening.”
Video surveillance footage at some of the homes revealed a man
approaching with a piece of paper in his hand and leaving a short time later.
Based on the surveillance, Robert Geddes was identified as the individual.
Geddes did not have prior permission to enter any of the five properties.
Geddes was initially charged by trial information with five counts of
trespass as a hate crime, a serious misdemeanor, in violation of Iowa Code
sections 716.7 and 716.8(3), and by complaint with five counts of harassment in
the third degree, a simple misdemeanor, in violation of Iowa Code section
708.7(4).
B. Trial on the Minutes and Conviction. Geddes moved to dismiss the
charges on free-speech grounds, alleging violations of the First Amendment to
the United States Constitution and article I, section 7 of the Iowa Constitution.
The State resisted, and the district court denied the motion, reasoning as to the
trespass-as-a-hate-crime charge:
The statutes in question criminalize actions, specifically unlawful
“entering[,]” which is enhanced due to a status of an owner or
possessor’s membership or association in a class of protection, the
statutes do not criminalize thoughts or words.
....
4
It is the defendant’s entering (or trespassing) that is
criminalized to the level of a hate crime because of the statutorily
protected status . . . or association of the owner or possessor of the
property onto which the defendant trespassed. Again, his words may
be relevant facts upon which the state may rely to prove his intent,
but the thoughts from which they spring in defendant’s mind are
not elements of the offenses under the statutes charged herein. Free
speech protects the marketplace of ideas from government
intrusion. Defendant’s ideas (however society chooses to judge them)
are not infringed or criminalized by the statutes charged.
Thereafter, Geddes waived his right to a jury trial and agreed to a trial on
the minutes; in return, the State dropped the simple misdemeanor harassment
charges and agreed to recommend probation. The court found Geddes guilty on
all counts. Geddes was sentenced to five consecutive one-year terms with credit
for time served; the jail sentence was suspended and Geddes was placed on
probation for a term not to exceed two years and fined the minimum amount.
Geddes appealed, and we retained the appeal.
Geddes raises three points on appeal. First, he argues that there was
insufficient evidence to support his conviction. In this regard, he contends that
Iowa Code sections 716.7(2)(a), 716.8(3), and 729A.2(4) require a defendant to
intend to commit a separate hate crime in addition to the underlying trespass.
Also, Geddes maintains that the State failed to prove that he targeted persons of
or associated with a certain sexual orientation. In addition to challenging the
sufficiency of the evidence, Geddes argues that his prosecution violated his free
speech rights under the First Amendment to the United States Constitution and
article 1, section 7 of the Iowa Constitution. Finally, Geddes insists that Iowa
Code section 716.7(2)(a)(1) is unconstitutionally vague and overbroad in violation
of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution and article 1,
section 9 of the Iowa Constitution.
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III. Standard of Review.
“We review the sufficiency of the evidence for correction of errors at law.”
State v. Kelso-Christy, 911 N.W.2d 663, 666 (Iowa 2018). “Pursuant to this
review, ‘we examine whether, taken in the light most favorable to the State, the
finding of guilt is supported by substantial evidence in the record.’ ” Id. (quoting
State v. Meyers, 799 N.W.2d 132, 138 (Iowa 2011)).
We review constitutional challenges de novo. State v. Aschbrenner,
926 N.W.2d 240, 245–46 (Iowa 2019).
IV. Legal Analysis.
A. Was the Evidence Sufficient to Find Geddes Guilty of Trespass as
a Hate Crime? Geddes argues that the evidence was insufficient to find him
guilty of trespass as a hate crime. Three statutes—Iowa Code sections
716.7(2)(a), 716.8(3), and 729A.2(4)—are relevant.
Iowa Code section 716.7(2)(a) sets forth the general definition of trespass.
It defines trespass to mean one or more of a series of acts. Iowa Code
§ 716.7(2)(a). One of those acts is: “Entering upon or in property without the
express permission of the owner, lessee, or person in lawful possession with the
intent to commit a public offense, to use, remove therefrom, alter, damage,
harass, or place thereon or therein anything animate or inanimate . . . .” Id.
§ 716.7(2)(a)(1). Another of those acts is: “Being upon or in property and . . .
placing thereon or therein anything animate or inanimate, without the implied
or actual permission of the owner, lessee, or person in lawful possession.” Id.
§ 716.7(2)(a)(4).1
Section 716.8(3) is part of the hate crime law. It says that “[a] person who
knowingly trespasses on the property of another with the intent to commit a hate
1The trial information does not identify a specific definition that is relied upon.
6
crime, as defined in section 729A.2, commits a serious misdemeanor.” Id.
§ 716.8(3).
And Iowa Code section 729A.2(4) is another part of the hate crime law. It
defines a hate crime as follows:
“Hate crime” means one of the following public offenses when
committed against a person or a person’s property because of the
person’s race, color, religion, ancestry, national origin, political
affiliation, sex, sexual orientation, age, or disability, or the person’s
association with a person of a certain race, color, religion, ancestry,
national origin, political affiliation, sex, sexual orientation, age, or
disability:
1. Assault in violation of individual rights under section 708.2C.
2. Violations of individual rights under section 712.9.
3. Criminal mischief in violation of individual rights under section
716.6A.
4. Trespass in violation of individual rights under section 716.8,
subsections 3 and 4.
Id. § 729A.2.
1. Does hate crime trespass require that the defendant have the intent to
commit a second trespass? Geddes’s initial argument is that the evidence to
convict him was insufficient because the law quoted above requires a defendant
to commit trespass and also to intend to commit a distinct hate crime (not the
predicate trespass) in order to be found guilty.
The State urges that Geddes did not preserve error on this issue. However,
under Iowa law, a defendant need not file a motion for judgment of acquittal to
preserve error on a challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence during a bench
trial. State v. Crawford, 972 N.W.2d 189, 197–98 (Iowa 2022).
Geddes focuses on the text of section 716.8(3), which speaks in terms of
trespassing “with the intent to commit a hate crime.” Iowa Code § 716.8(3).
According to Geddes, this means the defendant (1) must trespass and (2) must
7
do so with intent to commit a separate hate crime, in order to be found guilty.
Geddes concedes that he committed a simple trespass when he posted the notes
on the front doors but argues that he did not intend to commit an additional,
distinct crime.
Notably, section 716.8(3) is worded differently from its three other hate
crime counterparts elsewhere in the criminal code. Section 708.2C, the assault
alternative, refers to “an assault . . . which is a hate crime as defined in section
729A.2.” Id. § 708.2C(1) (emphasis added). Section 712.9, the arson alternative,
refers to an arson “which is also a hate crime as defined in section 729A.2.” Id.
§ 712.9 (emphasis added). Section 716.6A, the criminal mischief alternative,
refers to criminal mischief “which is also a hate crime as defined in section
729A.2.” Id. § 716.6A (emphasis added).
Based on the foregoing texts, three possible constructions of section
716.8(3) come to mind. One is that it only criminalizes trespass with the intent
to commit one of the other three hate crimes, i.e., assault, arson, or criminal
mischief. This could account for the different wording in sections 708.2C, 712.9,
and 716.6A as contrasted with section 716.8(3). Yet the problem with this
construction is that it runs into the contrary wording of section 716.8(3). Section
716.8(3) makes it a serious misdemeanor to commit trespass “with the intent to
commit a hate crime, as defined in section 729A.2.” (Emphasis added.) Thus,
section 716.8(3) criminalizes trespass with the intent to commit any of the four
alternatives listed in section 729A.2, not just three of them.
To avoid this problem, Geddes urges us to adopt a variant of the first
construction described above. In his view, section 716.8(3) also criminalizes
trespass with the intent to commit a second trespass. This reading would
account for all four hate crime alternatives described by the statute, but it would
also lead to an irreconcilable paradox. For his reading to work, the second
8
trespass that Geddes describes would need to be a hate crime. See id. § 716.8(3)
(referring to a “trespass[] on the property of another with the intent to commit a
hate crime, as defined in section 729A.2”). However, under Geddes’s
construction, that second trespass could only constitute a hate crime if it were
done by a defendant intent on committing another separate trespass, i.e., a third
trespass. Naturally the third trespass could only be a hate crime if the defendant
intended to commit a fourth and so on, ad infinitum. The State calls this an
“infinite loop.” Geddes’s reading makes no sense.
It is most logical in our view to adopt neither of these constructions.
Instead, we agree with the State that section 716.8(3) criminalizes any prohibited
trespass committed because of the trespassee’s protected status or their
association with someone of protected status. In other words, the intended hate
crime under section 716.8(3) can be the underlying trespass itself. This reading
isn’t foreclosed by the actual text of section 716.8(3). Moreover, it avoids the
infinite loop while giving full effect to the statutory language “a hate crime, as
defined in section 729A.2.” Id.
When interpreting a statute, we begin with the plain meaning. State v. Nall,
894 N.W.2d 514, 518 (Iowa 2017). “If the statute is unambiguous, we will apply
it as written.” Id. A statute is ambiguous “if reasonable minds can disagree on
the meaning of particular words or the statute as a whole.” State v. McIver,
858 N.W.2d 699, 703 (Iowa 2015). In cases of ambiguity, we resort to our rules
of construction. See State v. McCullah, 787 N.W.2d 90, 94 (Iowa 2010). This
means that we steer away from odd results if possible. See Iowa Code §§ 4.4(3)
(setting forth the “presum[ption] that . . . [a] just and reasonable result is
intended”), .6(5) (stating that “[i]f a statute is ambiguous, the court . . . may
consider . . . [t]he consequences of a particular construction”); Sahinovic v. State,
940 N.W.2d 357, 360 (Iowa 2020). To the extent that section 716.8(3) is
9
ambiguous, we conclude that it applies to any trespass committed with the intent
required by the general hate crime provision, i.e., section 729A.2. We therefore
reject Geddes’s first insufficiency argument.
2. Is there sufficient evidence that Geddes’s victims were targeted for their
“association with” LGBTQ+ persons because they displayed the LGBTQ+ Pride
flag? Geddes next argues that the State failed to establish that he trespassed
“because of” the sexual orientation of the property owners or lessees, or because
of their association with persons of a particular sexual orientation, as required
by Iowa Code section 729A.2(4).
There is no evidence to indicate whether the recipients of Geddes’s notes
were themselves members of the LGBTQ+ community or whether Geddes
believed they were. The issue thus boils down to whether Geddes targeted his
victims because of their “association with” persons of a particular sexual
orientation.
Geddes argues that there is no evidence that the property owners and
lessees were involved in an actual “association” with persons of a particular
sexual orientation within the LGBTQ+ community. He invites us to apply various
dictionary definitions of “association.” But in interpreting statutory text, it is
important “not to make a fortress out of the dictionary.” Cabell v. Markham,
148 F.2d 737, 739 (2d Cir. 1945) (L. Hand, J.). The issue here is not the meaning
of the word “association” standing alone, but the meaning of the entire phrase
“because of . . . the person’s association with a person of a certain . . . sexual
orientation.” Iowa Code § 729A.2. This wording places the focus on whether the
victim was targeted because of their association, not the degree of association.
One can have “association with” persons of a protected class without being
part of a formal association. Indeed, Geddes perceived the property owners and
lessees that way. He trespassed because he objected to their flags or flag decals,
10
and he objected to them because they were “gay” flags—to quote his terminology.
In other words, Geddes connected the property owners and lessees in his own
mind to people who were gay.
This case was tried on the minutes. We review a verdict from a bench trial
on the minutes just as we would a jury verdict. See State v. Myers, 924 N.W.2d
823, 826 (Iowa 2019). “We view the evidence . . . in the light most favorable to
the State,” State v. Kern, 831 N.W.2d 149, 158 (Iowa 2013), although “[t]he
evidence must raise a fair inference of guilt and do more than create speculation,
suspicion, or conjecture,” id. (alteration in original) (quoting State v. Webb,
648 N.W.2d 72, 76 (Iowa 2002)).2 We believe that threshold of sufficiency is
crossed here.
The factfinder—here the district court—was entitled to conclude (as the
defendant himself did) that the property owners and lessees were displaying the
flags or flag decals to associate themselves with persons of lesbian, gay, and
other sexual orientations within the LGBTQ+ community. And while it’s possible
that they weren’t—e.g., it’s possible that each LGBTQ+ flag was displayed purely
for aesthetic reasons rather than to express solidarity with the LGBTQ+
community—a factfinder was certainly entitled to conclude otherwise. Here, the
factfinder presumably drew on his personal experience and understanding to
find that the targeted persons’ display of the LGBTQ+ flag or flag emblem was an
expression of their solidarity with persons of particular sexual orientations. That
is hardly a startling view. See Shurtleff v. City of Boston, 596 U.S. 243, 250, 256
(2022) (noting that “several flag raisings have been associated with other kinds
2The dissent cites no authority for its contrary view that we should conduct a de novo
review when there has been a trial on the minutes.
11
of groups or causes, such as Pride Week” and that “the Pride Flag [was] raised
annually to commemorate Boston Pride Week”).3
In State v. Hennings, we said that “[t]he legislature’s use of the words
‘because of’ in section 729A.2 requires that the defendant’s prejudice or bias be
a factual cause of the act.” 791 N.W.2d 828, 835 (Iowa 2010), overruled on other
grounds by State v. Hill, 878 N.W.2d 269, 275 (Iowa 2016). We added that “to
find a defendant guilty under section 729A.2, the jury must determine beyond a
reasonable doubt the defendant would not have acted absent the defendant’s
prejudice.” Id. Hennings emphasized that motive in a hate crime case is a
quintessential fact determination. See id. at 837 (“Juries are capable of making
determinations regarding intent and motivation . . . .”). That fact determination
went against Geddes here, and we decline to disturb it.
Accordingly, we hold that the minutes contain sufficient evidence that
Geddes acted because of the victims’ association with persons of a certain sexual
orientation, as required by Iowa Code section 729A.2(4).
B. Does the Trespass-as-a-Hate-Crime Statute as Applied to Geddes
Violate His Freedom of Speech Under the United States or the Iowa
Constitution? Geddes argues that he is being unconstitutionally punished for
exercise of his free-speech rights, in violation of the First Amendment to the
3The dissent reads Iowa Code section 729A.2, which requires that the victim was targeted
because of their “association with a person of a certain race, color, religion, ancestry, national
origin, political affiliation, sex, sexual orientation, age, or disability” as requiring proof that the
victim was targeted for associating with a specific identifiable person of a protected class. We
disagree. “Unless otherwise specifically provided by law the singular includes the plural . . . .”
Iowa Code § 4.1(17). The dissent’s unduly narrow view of Iowa’s hate crimes law would leave
uncovered many offenses that an ordinary person would view as a hate crime—e.g., painting a
swastika on the outside wall of a home displaying an Israeli flag, burning down a community
center for Afghan refugees, or ambushing and assaulting an attorney who regularly represents
the NAACP.
12
United States Constitution and article I, section 7 of the Iowa Constitution. We
begin our discussion of this issue with a review of relevant caselaw.
Over thirty years ago, in R.A.V. v. City of St. Paul, a cross-burning case,
the United States Supreme Court sustained a First Amendment facial challenge
to a St. Paul, Minnesota ordinance that provided,
Whoever places on public or private property a symbol, object,
appellation, characterization or graffiti, including, but not limited to,
a burning cross or Nazi swastika, which one knows or has
reasonable grounds to know arouses anger, alarm or resentment in
others on the basis of race, color, creed, religion or gender commits
disorderly conduct and shall be guilty of a misdemeanor.
505 U.S. 377, 380, 391 (1992).
The Court held that the ordinance amounted to an unconstitutional
content-based restriction on speech. See id. at 391. Even though the ordinance
dealt with fighting words, a category of speech that can be proscribed, it
established a content-based restriction—prohibiting only a subset of that speech
based on its content. See id. For example, the ordinance did not apply to speech
known to arouse anger, alarm, or resentment in others on the basis of political
affiliation, union membership, or sexual orientation. Id. As the Court put it, “The
government may proscribe libel; but it may not make the further content
discrimination of proscribing only libel critical of the government.” Id. at 384. Or,
to quote another illustration from the Court’s opinion: “[B]urning a flag in
violation of an ordinance against outdoor fires could be punishable, whereas
burning a flag in violation of an ordinance against dishonoring the flag is not.”
Id. at 385.
The Court acknowledged two exceptions under which content-based
discrimination might be permissible. See id. at 388–90. One is where “the basis
for the content discrimination consists entirely of the very reason the entire class
of speech at issue is proscribable.” Id. at 388. For example, “the Federal
13
Government can criminalize only those threats of violence that are directed
against the President, since the reasons why threats of violence are outside the
First Amendment . . . have special force when applied to the person of the
President.” Id. (citation omitted). Second, the government may legislate against
certain conduct even if those conduct regulations sweep up some speech
incidentally. See id. at 389. “Where the government does not target conduct on
the basis of its expressive content, acts are not shielded from regulation merely
because they express a discriminatory idea or philosophy.” Id. at 390. This
explains why, for example, antidiscrimination laws do not run into constitutional
difficulty even when the defendant’s speech is used to prove a violation.
A year after R.A.V., in Wisconsin v. Mitchell, the Supreme Court rejected a
First Amendment challenge to a Wisconsin hate crime law. See 508 U.S. 476,
490 (1993). The jury found the defendant guilty of aggravated battery. Id. at 480.
The jury further determined that the defendant had intentionally selected his
victim on the basis of his race—indeed, the defendant had specifically
commented on the victim’s race. Id. As a result, the defendant received a longer
sentence under Wisconsin’s hate crime enhancement statute. Id.; see also Wis.
Stat. § 939.645 (1989).
In turning aside the First Amendment challenge, the Court highlighted two
key points. First, the underlying statute targeted conduct, not expression.
Mitchell, 508 U.S. at 487. As the Court put it, “[A] physical assault is not by any
stretch of the imagination expressive conduct protected by the First
Amendment.” Id. at 484. Second, in the criminal law generally, conduct may be
punished more severely because of the defendant’s motive, which is what hate
crime laws do. Id. at 485–87. The Court distinguished R.A.V. on the ground that
the Wisconsin statute was aimed at “conduct unprotected by the First
Amendment,” not “expression.” Id. at 487.
14
A year after Mitchell, in State v. McKnight, our court tracked the Mitchell
analysis in upholding a hate crime conviction. See 511 N.W.2d 389, 396–97
(Iowa 1994). There, the defendant assaulted a person of color, “striking [the
victim] five or six times.” Id. at 390. Witnesses indicated that the defendant had
yelled explicit racial epithets at the victim. Id. The defendant was convicted of
infringement of individual rights. Id. At that time, Iowa hate crime law made it
unlawful to “maliciously and intentionally intimidate[] or interfere[] with another
person because of that person’s race” while committing an assault or an act of
criminal mischief. Id. at 391 (quoting Iowa Code § 729.5(3) (1991)). In sustaining
the conviction, we emphasized that the defendant’s actions involved nonverbal
conduct that was already proscribed in our criminal laws. Id. at 395–96. Thus,
as the Supreme Court had done in Mitchell, we found no First Amendment
violation. Id. at 396.
More recently, in Hennings, we again upheld a hate crime conviction—this
time under the current version of the law. 791 N.W.2d at 837–39. In that case,
the defendant drove his truck at a group of African-American boys who had been
walking in the street, running over one of them. Id. at 831. He had used the “n”
word beforehand and continued to use that word and other racial slurs when
interviewed by police the next day. Id. at 831–32. The defendant was convicted
of assault with intent to inflict serious injury, willful injury causing bodily injury,
and assault in violation of individual rights with the intent to inflict serious
injury (a hate crime) under Iowa Code sections 708.2C(1), 708.2C(2), and
729A.2(1). Id. at 832.
On appeal, the defendant urged that the evidence was insufficient to
sustain his hate crime conviction. See id. at 837. Specifically, the defendant
insisted that the record failed to show he had run down the boy “because of” his
race rather than because of his presence in the street. Id. at 833, 837. We
15
overruled the claim of error, reasoning that the defendant’s motivation was a fact
issue for the jury to decide. Id. at 837.
This case is different from Mitchell, McKnight, and Hennings. Geddes didn’t
violently assault anyone. Rather, he engaged in expressive conduct—entering
properties without permission to leave notes. Although we have not encountered
this kind of hate crime prosecution before, other jurisdictions have. Examples
from elsewhere have involved predicate offenses of disorderly conduct,
harassment, and defacement of property. See, e.g., People v. Rokicki, 718 N.E.2d
333, 336 (Ill. App. Ct. 1999) (disorderly conduct); People v. McDowd,
773 N.Y.S.2d 531, 532–33 (App. Div. 2004) (harassment); Lipp v. State, 227 A.3d
818, 819 (Md. Ct. Spec. App. 2020) (defacement of property); State v. Nye,
943 P.2d 96, 98–99 (Mont. 1997) (defacement of property).
In People v. Rokicki, the relevant conduct involved a customer yelling
antigay slurs at a restaurant server while pounding his fist on the counter.
718 N.E.2d at 335. This behavior went on for ten minutes; the customer left
when his money was refunded. Id. The customer was subsequently charged with
and found guilty of a hate crime based on a predicate offense of disorderly
conduct. Id. at 336.
The defendant appealed, arguing that the statute under which he had been
prosecuted was unconstitutional. Id. The Illinois hate crime statute at the time
prohibited disorderly conduct when committed “by reason of the actual or
perceived race, color, creed, religion, ancestry, gender, sexual orientation,
physical or mental disability, or national origin of another individual or group of
individuals.” Id. (quoting 720 Ill. Comp. Stat. 5/12-7.1(a) (1994)). The Illinois
Appellate Court rejected the defendant’s First Amendment argument because the
defendant was being punished for disruptive behavior, not distasteful speech.
16
See id. at 339. As the court put it, “[T]he first amendment does not give [the
defendant] the right to harass or terrorize anyone.” Id.
In People v. McDowd, the defendant threatened to burn down a house on
his street if it was sold to a person of color. 773 N.Y.S.2d at 532. He also posted
racist flyers, including one that said “N****** Beware.” Id. The defendant pleaded
guilty to aggravated harassment and aggravated harassment as a hate crime.
Id.; see also N.Y. Penal L. § 240.30 (McKinney 2003). Later, he sought to vacate
his conviction, arguing that his defense counsel had been ineffective for “fail[ing]
to raise the claim that the hate crime statute . . . violated defendant’s right to
free speech under the First Amendment.” McDowd, 773 N.Y.S.2d at 533. Yet the
New York court refused to vacate the criminal judgment, finding that the
defendant “ha[d] not established that his First Amendment claim has colorable
merit” because the defendant had “engaged in the crime of aggravated
harassment” and communicated in a threatening way. Id. at 533–34.
In Lipp v. State, the defendant and others scribbled graffiti on a school,
nearby sidewalks, and trash cans that “included swastikas, anti-LGBTQ
phrases, and other offensive writings, including ‘KKK,’ ‘n****rs,’ and ‘f*** jews.’ ”
227 A.3d at 819. The defendant was found guilty of violating a state statute
providing that one “may not deface, damage, or destroy . . . the real or personal
property connected to a building . . . if there is evidence that exhibits animosity
against a person or group, because of the[ir]” membership in a protected class.
Id. (first omission in original) (quoting Md. Code Ann. Crim. Law § 10-305(2)
(West 2018)). On appeal, the defendant argued that his First Amendment rights
had been violated. Id. at 820. The Maryland Court of Special Appeals disagreed,
reasoning that “the analysis of Mitchell is not limited to bias-motivated assaults.”
Id. at 825. Once the defendant “defac[ed] [the] property of another, his criminal
activity was not protected by the First Amendment.” Id. at 828.
17
Finally, in State v. Nye, the defendant “affixed bumper stickers [on road
signs and mailboxes] that read ‘NO I do not belong to CUT,’ ” referring to the
Church Universal and Triumphant. 943 P.2d at 98. After the defendant’s motion
to dismiss had been denied, the defendant conditionally pleaded guilty to the
hate crime of “defac[ing] any property of another” because of the person’s
religion. Id. at 99 (quoting Mont. Code Ann. § 45-5-221(1)(c) (1995)). He then
appealed the prior legal ruling. Id. The Supreme Court of Montana upheld the
trial court’s refusal to dismiss the charge, reasoning that “Nye lost his First
Amendment protection when he coupled the message on the bumper sticker with
defacement of the property of others.” Id. at 101.
We think this is a similar case to Nye. If one can be prosecuted for defacing
property by posting notes that target a protected class, it seems logical that one
can also be prosecuted for trespassing in order to post notes that target a
protected class. The conduct may be communicative, but the statute is aimed at
a broader scope of conduct, whether communicative or not. “Where the
government does not target conduct on the basis of its expressive content, acts
are not shielded from regulation merely because they express a discriminatory
idea or philosophy.” R.A.V., 505 U.S. at 390; see also People v. Barrigar,
134 N.Y.S.3d 144, 149 (City Ct. 2020) (holding that the defendant could be
prosecuted for criminal tampering when he removed an LGBTQ+ Pride flag from
the city hall flagpole and deposited it in the city hall drop box).
Geddes complains that he received felony convictions and a harsher
sentence based only on what his notes said. But that isn’t quite true. It is
Geddes’s motive or intent, the fact that he trespassed “because of . . . the
person’s association with a person of a certain . . . sexual orientation,” that led
to the more serious criminal consequence. Iowa Code § 729A.2. To borrow from
the Supreme Court phrasing in Mitchell: “[M]otive plays the same role under the
18
[Iowa hate crime] statute as it does under [Iowa] antidiscrimination laws . . . .”
508 U.S. at 487. Our criminal law provides many examples where conduct is
punished more harshly depending on the defendant’s motive—possession of a
controlled substance with intent to distribute, going armed with intent, etc. See
Iowa Code § 124.401(1); id. § 708.8.
Geddes also argues that “Burn that gay flag” does not amount to “fighting
words” whose utterance the government can punish. In that regard, he relies on
the following passage from McKnight:
Had McKnight limited his attack on Rone to mere words, the First
Amendment would have protected his right to do so. He lost that
protection when his racial bias toward blacks drove him to couple
those words with assaultive conduct toward Rone, who is black. In
these circumstances, the words and the assault are inextricably
intertwined for First Amendment purposes.
511 N.W.2d at 395. But the issue here is not whether Geddes could have posted
a note saying “Burn that gay flag” on his own property or even displayed it on
public property. Geddes entered the property of others without permission to
place an object thereon without their permission. See Iowa Code § 716.7(2)(a)(1),
(4). What Geddes did was not protected conduct.
For these reasons, we hold that Iowa Code sections 716.7(2)(a), 716.8(3),
and 729A.2(4), as applied to Geddes in this case, do not violate the First
Amendment to the United States Constitution or article 1, section 7 of the Iowa
Constitution.4
C. Is Iowa Code Section 716.7(2)(a)(1) Unconstitutionally Vague or
Overbroad Under the United States or the Iowa Constitution? Geddes argues
4Geddes does not argue that article I, section 7 provides greater protection in this area
than the First Amendment. Section 7 contains an “abuse” clause: “Every person may speak,
write, and publish his sentiments on all subjects, being responsible for the abuse of that right.”
Iowa Const. art. I, § 7 (emphasis added); see also Bierman v. Weier, 826 N.W.2d 436, 452–53
(Iowa 2013) (discussing the abuse clause).
19
that Iowa Code section 716.7(2)(a)(1) is void for vagueness and overbroad under
the Due Process Clauses of both the United States and Iowa Constitutions.
The void-for-vagueness doctrine centers on the concept of fair notice. State
v. Baker, 688 N.W.2d 250, 255 (Iowa 2004); see also State v. Millsap, 704 N.W.2d
426, 436 (Iowa 2005) (“[T]he statute gives fair warning of the prohibited conduct
and [therefore] does not violate the void-for-vagueness doctrine.”).
There are three components to this doctrine:
First, a statute cannot be so vague that it does not give persons of
ordinary understanding fair notice that certain conduct is
prohibited. Second, due process requires that statutes provide those
clothed with authority sufficient guidance to prevent the exercise of
power in an arbitrary or discriminatory fashion. Third, a statute
cannot sweep so broadly as to prohibit substantial amounts of
constitutionally-protected activities, such as speech protected under
the First Amendment.
State v. Nail, 743 N.W.2d 535, 539 (Iowa 2007). The third facet is also
characterized as “overbreadth.” Formaro v. Polk County, 773 N.W.2d 834, 841–42
(Iowa 2009) (“[O]verbreadth claims are derived from the Due Process Clause of
the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution and article I,
section 9 of the Iowa Constitution. Overbreadth analysis applies where a statute
sweeps too broadly and substantially chills First Amendment rights.” (citation
omitted)).
Void-for-vagueness challenges to our criminal laws have been raised
repeatedly, usually without success. For example, notwithstanding such
challenges, we have upheld laws (1) prohibiting loitering by certain sex offenders,
(2) requiring sex offenders to register when they change residence,
(3) authorizing “a civil penalty of an amount not less than the amount of any
criminal fine authorized by law for the offense” for a deferred judgment, and
(4) prohibiting sexual exploitation by a counselor or therapist. State v. Coleman,
20
907 N.W.2d 124, 146–47 (Iowa 2018); State v. Showens, 845 N.W.2d 436, 448
(Iowa 2014); Nail, 743 N.W.2d at 537, 544; State v. Gonzalez, 718 N.W.2d 304,
310 (Iowa 2006).
We have stated that “[d]ue process merely requires that a standard of
conduct be reasonably ascertainable ‘by reference to prior judicial decisions,
similar statutes, the dictionary, or common generally accepted usage.’ ” Baker,
688 N.W.2d at 255 (quoting State v. Sullivan, 298 N.W.2d 267, 270 (Iowa 1980)).
We have also said that the concept of “objective reasonableness” may give fair
warning and constrain governmental discretion. See Showens, 845 N.W.2d at
445–48.
As we noted earlier, Iowa Code section 726.2(2)(a)(1) makes it unlawful,
without express permission, to enter someone’s property with the intent to place
something there. Forty years ago, in State v. Chase, we upheld this statute
against void-for-vagueness and overbreadth challenges. 335 N.W.2d 630,
633–34 (Iowa 1983). We rejected an overbreadth challenge because the statute
did not “invade[] the area of protected freedoms.” Id. at 633. We also “perceive[d]
no lack of fair notice of the conduct that is prohibited.” Id. at 634. Although the
analysis in Chase was brief—mercifully so, some current-day readers of our
opinions might say—Geddes does not ask us to overrule Chase.
Significantly, Geddes doesn’t even tell us what language in section
726.2(2)(a)(1) he considers too vague. This isn’t a case like City of Chicago v.
Morales, where an ordinance prohibited certain loitering, defined as “remain[ing]
in any one place with no apparent purpose.” 527 U.S. 41, 47 (1999) (alteration
in original). The United States Supreme Court condemned that ordinance
“because its application depends on whether some purpose is ‘apparent’ to the
officer on the scene.” Id. at 61–63; see also id. at 65–66 (O’Connor, J., concurring
in part and concurring in the judgment) (noting that the ordinance “lacks
21
sufficient minimal standards to guide law enforcement officers” and “fails to
provide police with any standard by which they can judge whether an individual
has an ‘apparent purpose’ ”). It is noteworthy that in State v. Showens, we
discussed and distinguished Morales in upholding a loitering statute that
prohibited a sex offender from:
remaining in a place or circulating around a place under
circumstances that would warrant a reasonable person to believe
that the purpose or effect of the behavior is to enable a sex offender
to become familiar with a location where a potential victim may be
found, or to satisfy an unlawful sexual desire, or to locate, lure, or
harass a potential victim.
845 N.W.2d at 440, 442–48 (quoting Iowa Code § 692A.101(17) (2011)).
Geddes does argue that “[i]n American society, it is often assumed by its
citizens that a person has implied permission to approach a residential home to
leave an object, often a piece of paper, such as a note or a flyer, on [the front]
door or main entrance of a home.” He gives the examples of a Girl Scout leaving
an advertisement for a cookie sale or a neighbor leaving a notice of an upcoming
garage sale. See Florida v. Jardines, 569 U.S. 1, 8 (2013) (discussing the implied
license of a visitor to approach the front door of a home and knock).
We think Geddes carries this argument too far. For one thing, the relevant
question for vagueness and overbreadth purposes is not whether others engage
in the prohibited conduct without being prosecuted, but whether the statute
provides fair notice or intrudes substantially on protected freedoms. Nail,
743 N.W.2d at 539. The statute indicates that trespass consists of entering
private property without express permission in order to place something thereon.
Iowa Code § 716.7(2)(a)(1). This is not the same as mere door-knocking or
soliciting.
Moreover, as we noted earlier, there is an alternative definition of trespass
that outlaws “[b]eing upon or in property and . . . placing thereon or therein
22
anything . . . without the implied or actual permission of the owner, lessee, or
person in lawful possession.” Id. § 716.7(2)(a)(4). The State suggests that we may
want to reconcile the two subparts because subpart (1) requires “express
permission,” whereas subpart (4) allows an object to be left behind so long as
there is “implied or actual permission.” Id. § 716.7(2)(a)(1), (4) (emphasis added).
We don’t think reconciliation is required here. Geddes didn’t have either
form of permission. He didn’t leave an invitation at the doorstep for the resident
to engage in a transaction, such as voting for a candidate, purchasing goods, or
attending an event. Rather, he taped a scurrilous note to each front door. A
reasonable person would not believe that someone else’s front door is their own
bulletin board. Thus, whether we treat Geddes’s argument as a backdoor effort
to get us to overrule Chase or simply another argument for why he should have
been acquitted, it does not persuade us. See State v. Paye, 865 N.W.2d 1, 6 (Iowa
2015) (concluding that the front steps of a home are not a public place for
purposes of Iowa’s public intoxication law because people can only use those
stairs “to approach [the] home for limited purposes—for example, to sell a
product, to talk about important civic issues, or to borrow a cup of sugar”).
Geddes also argues that section 716.7(2)(a)(1) “allows authorities to make
arbitrary, discriminatory decisions about which inanimate objects warrant
prosecution.” Many laws can be discriminatorily enforced, traffic laws for
example. But the void-for-vagueness doctrine focuses on whether the law
“provide[s] those clothed with authority sufficient guidance.” Nail, 743 N.W.2d at
539. For reasons discussed above and in Chase, we believe the trespass law
provides sufficient guidance. That it may be infrequently enforced does not mean
it is inherently vague.
Lastly, Geddes urges that section 716.7(2)(a)(1) is overbroad because it
intrudes on personal freedoms and encroaches on free speech. But Chase said
23
otherwise, and Geddes offers no reason why its overbreadth analysis should be
reconsidered. See 335 N.W.2d at 633–34. Our trespass law only comes into play
upon entry onto someone else’s property, and there is generally no constitutional
freedom to express one’s self on someone else’s private property. See State v.
Lacey, 465 N.W.2d 537, 539 (Iowa 1991) (“The Constitution does not protect
against a private party who seeks to abridge free expression of others on private
property.”).
It is true that the First Amendment prevents the State from banning
certain core First Amendment activities even on private property such as
door-to-door canvassing and pamphleteering, Watchtower Bible & Tract Soc’y of
New York, Inc. v. Village of Stratton, 536 U.S. 150, 168–69 (2002), and perhaps
information-gathering, see Animal Legal Def. Fund v. Reynolds, 630 F. Supp. 3d
1105, 1121 (S.D. Iowa 2022) (appeal pending). See also City of Osceola v. Blair,
2 N.W.2d 83, 83 (Iowa 1942) (finding that an ordinance prohibiting solicitation
violated article I, section 9 of the Iowa Constitution).
But the trespass law, unlike the St. Paul ordinance in R.A.V., is not a
targeted restriction on First Amendment activity. As relevant here, it is a general
ban against leaving objects on private property without permission, whether the
object happens to be a posted handwritten note or a load of waste that the
defendant prefers not to take to the dump. Geddes cites no authority that such
a law raises First Amendment concerns. We therefore decline to adopt Geddes’s
void-for-vagueness and overbreadth arguments.
V. Conclusion.
For the reasons stated, we affirm Geddes’s convictions and sentence.
AFFIRMED.
24
Christensen, C.J., Waterman, McDonald, Oxley, and May, JJ., join
this opinion. Waterman, J., files a concurrence, in which Christensen,
C.J., joins. McDermott, J., files a dissent.
25
#22–1009, State v. Geddes
WATERMAN, Justice (concurring).
I fully join the well-reasoned majority opinion in this case of first
impression in Iowa but want to further explain First Amendment protection
under the U.S. Constitution in trespass prosecutions. I agree that Robert Geddes
lost his First Amendment protection for speech when he walked onto the
properties of persons displaying Pride flags and attached his hostile notes
(“Burn that gay flag.”) to their front doors without their permission. Like the
majority, I view this case as similar to State v. Nye, where the Montana Supreme
Court affirmed a hate crime conviction of a defendant who affixed a disparaging
bumper sticker on church property without permission. See 943 P.2d 96, 100–01
(Mont. 1997). The Nye court drew the line where we do:
Nye fails to recognize that the difference between his conduct and
that of others in the Gardiner community is that the others he refers
to placed the stickers on their own property while Nye placed the
stickers on other people’s property without their permission. As the
State asserts in its brief, if Nye had limited his attack on [the church]
to the display of a bumper sticker on his car or living room window,
the First Amendment would have protected his right to do so. Nye
lost his First Amendment protection when he coupled the message
on the bumper sticker with defacement of the property of others.
Id. at 101. The Iowa trespass statute is content neutral, and Geddes’s offensive
notes affixed to other persons’ front doors—like the hostile bumper stickers
attached to the church property in Nye—can be regarded as defacement of
property committed during a trespass.5
5See Iowa Code § 716.1 (“Any damage, defacing, alteration, or destruction of property is
criminal mischief when done intentionally by one who has no right to so act.” (emphasis added));
id. § 729A.2(3) (including criminal mischief in hate crime enhancement). “Defacement,”
constituting conduct unprotected by the First Amendment, may include messages that are easily
removed, such as the sticker in Nye or Geddes’s notes taped to front doors. See, e.g., Mahoney v.
Doe, 642 F.3d 1112, 1114, 1119 (D.C. Cir. 2011) (rejecting First Amendment challenge to
defacement statute brought by protestor intending to use sidewalk chalk and determining that
“the defacement at issue is temporary and can be cured” but “[t]he government can proscribe
26
I also agree with the majority that persons flying Pride flags are
“associated” with the LGBTQ+ community within the meaning of Iowa’s hate
crime statute; indeed, that is exactly why Geddes admittedly targeted them. Our
court’s reasoning likewise would allow a hate crime prosecution of a defendant
who tapes a swastika or a note depicting a Hamas paraglider to the front door of
a home that displays an Israeli flag.
I write separately to emphasize that the majority’s fact-bound decision
rejecting Geddes’s constitutional claims does not preclude other as-applied First
Amendment challenges to Iowa’s trespass statute. Many Iowans would be
surprised to learn it is a crime under the trespass statute to leave a flyer at the
front door of a home without the “express permission” of the homeowner, see
Iowa Code § 716.7(2)(a)(1) (2021) (defining criminal trespass to include
“[e]ntering upon or in property without the express permission of the owner . . .
to . . . place thereon or therein anything animate or inanimate” (emphasis added)),
or without the owner’s “implied or actual permission,” see id. § 716.7(2)(a)(4).
Under the plain meaning of this statute, it could be argued that political
campaign volunteers canvassing a neighborhood commit a criminal trespass
simply by leaving behind a pamphlet supporting their candidate when no one
answers the door to give permission.
The majority opinion accurately observes that “[f]orty years ago, in State v.
Chase, we upheld this statute against void-for-vagueness and overbreadth
even temporary blight”); id. at 1122 (Kavanaugh, J., concurring) (“No one has a First Amendment
right to deface government property.”); United States v. Nieves, No. 18-CR-835 (OTW),
2019 WL 1315940, at *1, *3 (S.D.N.Y. Mar. 22, 2019) (holding that use of “instantly removable”
marker to write “Kill N-----s” on African Burial Ground National Monument constituted
defacement violating vandalism law and rejecting First Amendment defense); In re Nicholas Y.,
102 Cal. Rptr. 2d 511, 512–13 (Ct. App. 2000) (affirming vandalism conviction for writing “RTK”
(or “Right to Crime”) with Sharpie marker on private business’s glass window and finding that
“[t]his [statutory] definition does not incorporate an element of permanence [and so] it appears
that a marring of the surface is no less a defacement because it is more easily removed”).
27
challenges.” See 335 N.W.2d 630, 633–34 (Iowa 1983). The majority applies
Chase to reject Geddes’s overbreadth challenge. That case, however, is no
insurmountable obstacle to other constitutional challenges to this trespass
statute. First, as the majority pointedly observes, Geddes did not ask us to
overrule Chase. “We do not ordinarily overrule our precedent sua sponte.”
Goodwin v. Iowa Dist. Ct., 936 N.W.2d 634, 645 n.4 (Iowa 2019) (quoting Est. of
McFarlin v. State, 881 N.W.2d 51, 59 (Iowa 2016)).
Second, Chase is easily distinguished on its facts: the defendant in that
case did not leave a note or flyer at a doorway; rather, he removed property that
wasn’t his from an unoccupied home without the owner’s permission.
335 N.W.2d at 631. In my view, if the trespass statute is enforced against
common door-to-door activities such as delivering flyers for political campaigns,
local church services, new restaurants, or Girl Scout cookie sales, the First
Amendment may very well prevail on an as-applied challenge. Importantly, all
the decisions cited by the majority that affirmed hate crime convictions involved
underlying conduct constituting a separate criminal violation (assault, disorderly
conduct, harassment, or property damage or defacement). Without some other
criminal conduct, leaving an object at a doorway without permission ordinarily
would not be actionable.
Door-to-door canvassing has long enjoyed constitutional protection.
Eighty years ago, in City of Osceola v. Blair, we held that a municipal ordinance
prohibiting door-to-door sales solicitations violated the due process clause of the
Iowa Constitution because it “impose[d] an unreasonable restraint upon a lawful
business.” 2 N.W.2d 83, 83–84 (Iowa 1942). More recently, the United States
Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit held that a municipal ordinance imposing
a 7:00 p.m. curfew on door-to-door sales violated the First Amendment. Aptive
28
Env’t, LLC v. Town of Castle Rock, 959 F.3d 961, 968, 986–87 (10th Cir. 2020)
(holding in favor of door-to-door seller of pest control services).
The majority recognizes that Geddes “engaged in expressive conduct” by
affixing his notes on front doors. In Watchtower Bible & Tract Society of New York,
Inc. v. Village of Stratton, the United States Supreme Court addressed a
municipal ordinance requiring a permit from the mayor’s office before canvassers
could go on private property to promote any “cause.” 536 U.S. 150, 154 (2002).
Members of Jehovah’s Witnesses sought to go door-to-door without getting a
permit to proselytize and distribute religious materials. Id. at 153. The Court
prefaced its review of precedent by noting that “[f]or over 50 years, the Court has
invalidated restrictions on door-to-door canvassing and pamphleteering.” Id. at
160 & n.10 (collecting cases). The Court reiterated that the “hand distribution of
religious tracts is an age-old form of missionary evangelism—as old as the history
of printing presses,” and it is protected under the First Amendment. Id. at
161–62 (quoting Murdock v. Pennsylvania, 319 U.S. 105, 108–09 (1943)). The
Court further emphasized “the important role that door-to-door canvassing and
pamphleteering has played in our constitutional tradition of free and open
discussion.” Id. at 162. The Court held that the ordinance was unconstitutional
under the First Amendment, reasoning:
The mere fact that the ordinance covers so much speech
raises constitutional concerns. It is offensive—not only to the values
protected by the First Amendment, but to the very notion of a free
society—that in the context of everyday public discourse a citizen
must first inform the government of her desire to speak to her
neighbors and then obtain a permit to do so.
Id. at 165–66. In my view, criminalizing the general distribution of flyers on
private property could well implicate the First Amendment.
29
But Geddes wasn’t “canvassing” a neighborhood in a manner protected by
the First Amendment. He did not go to every house to proselytize, campaign,
advertise an event, or sell a product or service.6 Rather, he visited only houses
with Pride flags that he associated with a protected group to leave a message
attacking the owners’ symbolic speech. His conduct—targeted trespassing to
deface their doorways—fell outside First Amendment protection.
The Iowa trespass statute, however, will not always avoid a First
Amendment defense simply based on the content-neutral requirement that a
physical object be left on the property of another without permission. To the
contrary, the Iowa trespass statute goes even further than the ordinance
invalidated in Watchtower Bible by facially prohibiting Iowans from leaving any
pamphlets on front doorsteps without the homeowner’s express permission,
regardless of whether the canvasser first obtained a permit from a government
official. More should be required for criminal sanctions.
Notably, the hate crime enhancement in Iowa Code section 729A.2 is
triggered when the underlying trespass is “because of the person’s . . . political
affiliation . . . or the person’s association with [another’s] political affiliation.”
First Amendment protections are at their zenith when a law infringes on political
speech. See Mills v. State of Alabama, 384 U.S. 214, 218 (1966) (“[T]here is
practically universal agreement that a major purpose of that Amendment was to
protect the free discussion of governmental affairs. This of course includes
discussions of candidates . . . .”). Iowa enjoys first-in-the-nation caucus status
6The Supreme Court has broadly defined “canvassing” as “to go from home to home and
knock on doors or ring doorbells to communicate ideas to the occupants or to invite them to
political, religious, or other kinds of public meetings.” Martin v. City of Struthers, 319 U.S. 141,
141 (1943); see also Edenfield v. Fane, 507 U.S. 761, 765 (1993) (holding that door-to-door
solicitation for commercial purposes is “commercial expression to which the protections of the
First Amendment apply”).
30
for presidential elections. Many Iowans already see political campaigners leaving
flyers at their front doors. Isn’t it reasonable to assume that most Iowans believe
that activity is protected by the First Amendment?
The majority correctly concludes that Geddes’s overbreadth and
void-for-vagueness challenges fail because the trespass “statute provides fair
notice” of what is prohibited: leaving an object on another’s property without
permission. But there is force to Geddes’s related argument raising the specter
of selective enforcement. What if local officials only prosecuted canvassers for a
rival political party? What if only those leaving pro-life flyers were criminally
charged with trespass and not those advocating reproductive rights, or vice
versa?
The First Amendment doesn’t prevent private property owners from
requiring unwanted visitors to leave. See People v. Goduto, 174 N.E.2d 385, 390
(Ill. 1961) (“We hold that freedom of speech and press guaranteed to defendants
by the first and fourteenth amendments to the Federal constitution and by
section 4 of article II of [the Illinois] constitution . . . did not give them the right
to remain on the [private] parking lot after they were ordered to leave.”).
But the First Amendment can protect canvassers who deposit flyers at
front doors without the owner’s prior order to leave or a “no trespassing” or “no
soliciting” sign. In Virginia v. Hicks, the Supreme Court rejected an overbreadth
challenge to a local housing authority’s trespass policy but emphasized that the
defendant was not engaged in expressive conduct and had previously been
ordered to leave and barred from returning. 539 U.S. 113, 117–18 (2003). No one
apparently was prosecuted for trespass under the policy at issue without first
receiving a “barment notice.” Id. at 122–23. The Hicks Court concluded,
“Applications of the [no-trespass policy] that violate the First Amendment can
still be remedied through as-applied litigation . . . .” Id. at 124. I reach the same
31
conclusion in this case: The majority opinion leaves the door open to other
as-applied First Amendment challenges to Iowa Code sections 716.7(2)(a)(1) and
(4).
In my view, Iowa’s trespass statute remains vulnerable under an
as-applied First Amendment challenge by canvassers engaged in expressive
political or commercial speech who leave behind flyers. With the foregoing
explanation, I join the majority opinion in full.
Christensen, C.J., joins this concurrence.
32
#22–1009, State v. Geddes
MCDERMOTT, Justice (dissenting).
The Iowa Code states that a crime becomes a “hate crime” when it is
committed because of either “[(1)] the person’s [(i.e., the victim’s)] race, color,
religion, ancestry, national origin, political affiliation, sex, sexual orientation,
age, or disability, or [(2)] the [victim]’s association with a person of a certain race,
color, religion, ancestry, national origin, political affiliation, sex, sexual
orientation, age, or disability.” Iowa Code § 729A.2 (2021) (emphasis added).
The record in this case tells us almost nothing about the people on whose
doors Geddes posted his notes except for one key fact: they each displayed a
Pride flag or flag decal on their property. The court thus cannot find that Geddes
committed a hate crime under (1) since we have no information about any of the
homeowner’s characteristics. We have nothing that tells us, in other words, the
homeowner’s race, religion, sexual orientation, or any other characteristic to
show that the crime was committed because of the homeowner’s own
characteristics. As the majority correctly concludes, “There is no evidence to
indicate whether the recipients of Geddes’s notes were themselves members of
the LGBTQ+ community or whether Geddes believed they were.”
So we turn to whether Geddes committed a hate crime under the
alternative presented in (2). For this, the State must prove that Geddes left the
note because of the homeowner’s “association with a person of a certain race,
color, religion, ancestry, national origin, political affiliation, sex, sexual
orientation, age, or disability.” Id. (emphasis added). So we must ask: Who is the
other “person” (or other “persons” since we assume singular nouns can be plural,
see id. § 4.1(17)) that the homeowner is associated with?
The record doesn’t provide an answer. We have no information about any
homeowner’s actual connection to a person having any of the characteristics
33
mentioned in the statute or about Geddes’s beliefs on this subject. Without being
able to identify the homeowner’s association with a person of a certain protected
characteristic, then under the plain terms of the hate crime statute, we lack
evidence to uphold Geddes’s hate crime convictions. This failure is fatal to the
State’s hate crime charge and requires reversal.
The majority attempts to bridge this chasm in the evidence by declaring
that displaying a Pride flag shows “association with” “persons of lesbian, gay,
and other sexual orientations within the LGBTQ+ community.” But how does
displaying a flag connect its displayer to an actual person? A flag is a symbol.
See Flag, Black’s Law Dictionary 782 (11th ed. 2019). See generally United States
v. Eichman, 496 U.S. 310, 315–17 (1990) (describing a law criminalizing the
burning of an American flag as an attempt “to preserve the flag’s status as a
symbol of our Nation and certain national ideals”). As a symbol, a flag doesn’t
independently create or express actual association with particular persons. One
can own and display a Pride flag without having any association with another
person.
Examples abound exposing the illogic in finding “association with” other
people based merely on the display of a symbol. Assume that I were to wear a
Los Angeles Angels baseball cap. Does donning the Angels logo now make me
“associated with” Mike Trout and Shohei Ohtani and the other players on the
Angels’ roster? Am I also now “associated with” Angels fans in California or Japan
or elsewhere—all of them complete strangers to me—because of the symbol on
my cap? Of course not, despite whatever wish I might harbor to be associated
with big-league sluggers.
Or assume I place a bumper sticker on my car depicting the blue and
yellow Ukrainian flag. Am I now “associated with” Ukraine’s forty million
citizens? Am I “associated with” President Zelenskyy? And then of course there’s
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the potential inverse: whatever creates association (under this mistaken view)
presumably works in the opposite direction and creates dissociation. So by
displaying a Ukrainian flag, am I now dissociated with Russia in light of the
ongoing war? Am I now dissociated with American politicians who disfavor
providing support to Ukraine in the war?
You get the picture. Not everyone who displays a pirate flag is associated
with actual pirates. Taking someone’s display of a flag and, from that act alone,
making assumptions about the displayer’s association with other humans can
quickly become a fool’s errand. This sort of dot-connecting is rooted in
speculation, not evidence, and as a result is limited only by one’s imagination.
It’s speculation to say that everyone who displays a Pride flag is actually
associated with millions of people around the world—or some unidentified subset
of them—who identify as LGBTQ+.
The statute requires proof of a victim’s “association with a person of a
certain” protected characteristic as the basis for a hate crime. Iowa Code
§ 729A.2. The State bears the burden to prove every element of a crime, which
in this case means that the State must offer proof of the victim’s “association
with a person.” Merely displaying a Pride flag does not allow us to draw any
conclusions about the sexual orientation or other characteristics of persons that
the homeowner associates with.
Nor do Geddes’s notes amount to admissions by him that the property
owners and lessees were “associated with” persons of lesbian and gay
orientation. Four of the five notes include only four words: “Burn that gay flag.”
They make no reference to any “person” with whom the homeowners are
associated. The other note with the additional two sentences similarly makes no
reference to any person “associated with” the homeowner. There’s no admission
to be found in the content of the notes Geddes left that satisfies the State’s
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burden of proof on this point. At best, Geddes’s notes might suggest a belief that
the flag indicated the homeowners’ support for LGBTQ+ rights. But we cannot
stretch a symbol suggesting support for a cause into evidence of a victim’s actual
association with persons. When the legislature means to refer to a general
“affiliation” in our hate crime statute, it uses the word “affiliation.” See id. (listing
within the protected characteristics “political affiliation”). No such language
appears with sexual orientation or sex. The statute requires a tie to a “person”
having a certain protected characteristic, but evidence of it in this record is
simply absent. See id.
The majority states that we should defer to the district court’s findings
because motive in a hate crime case is a factual determination and “[t]hat fact
determination went against Geddes here.” But this is not a case where a
factfinder in a lower court heard testimony from witnesses or had access to
information that we, as an appellate court, lack. This was a bench trial on the
minutes, meaning that all the evidence was presented to the judge without in-
court testimony and instead through a document that summarized each
witness’s expected testimony. See Iowa R. Crim. P. 2.17(2) (2023) (describing a
trial on the minutes). The judge simply reviewed the documents presented by the
parties and heard legal arguments from the lawyers. Since no one testified at
trial, there were no credibility determinations involving witnesses that warrant
our deference to the district court’s findings. See, e.g., State v. Torres,
989 N.W.2d 121, 126 (Iowa 2023) (noting our deference to the district court’s
factual findings based on its opportunity to assess the credibility of witnesses).
The lawyers’ oral arguments are all transcribed in the record. The district court
was in no better position to evaluate evidence of motive or any other issue in this
case, and I thus see no reason to defer to the district court’s factual findings.
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The district court, for its part, found a violation of both parts of the hate
crime statute: that displaying the flag was enough to prove both (1) that the
homeowners themselves were members of the LGBTQ+ community and (2) that
the homeowners were “associated with” another person having the protected
characteristic. The majority acknowledges that the district court erred in its
finding on the first part as no evidence in the record supports such a finding. Yet
the majority defers to the district court’s finding on the second part despite an
identical absence of evidence of association. In explaining its position, the
majority states that the judge “presumably drew on [the judge’s] personal
experience and understanding to find that the targeted persons’ display of the
LGBTQ+ flag or flag emblem was an expression of their solidarity with persons
of particular sexual orientations.” The majority never explains why the judge
could not also presumably draw on his personal experience and understanding
to make conclusions about the homeowners’ own sexual orientations. Of course,
both types of speculation are inadequate to prove beyond a reasonable doubt the
homeowners’ own characteristics or their “association with” others.
The majority’s language here is telling in another way. In an effort to give
meaning to the words “association with a person of a certain” characteristic in
the statute, Iowa Code § 729A.2, the majority rewrites the statute so that
“association with” is now replaced by “solidarity with.” If the legislature thought
that the much looser ties of “solidarity with” others was sufficient to commit a
hate crime, it could have said so. It chose instead language requiring a closer
link: proof of “association with” persons of a certain protected characteristic.
Affirming the conviction despite the lack of evidence on this point denied the
defendant his right to require the State to prove every element of the offense.
The majority criticizes this dissent’s adherence to the law’s text as taking
an “unduly narrow view of Iowa’s hate crimes law [that] would leave uncovered
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many offenses that an ordinary person would view as a hate crime.” But
convictions in our criminal justice system are not founded on what an ordinary
person would view as a crime. The legislative branch defines what is criminal in
our society. United States v. Santos, 553 U.S. 507, 523 (2008). It does so only
through the written words of statutes. See United States v. Wiltberger, 18 U.S. (5
Wheat.) 76, 95 (1820). “[B]ecause of the seriousness of criminal penalties, and
because criminal punishment usually represents the moral condemnation of the
community, legislatures and not courts should define criminal activity.” United
States v. Bass, 404 U.S. 336, 348 (1971). Crimes, including hate crimes, are not
defined by judges, and they most certainly are not defined by what judges might
speculate “an ordinary person would view as a hate crime.”
“The temptation to stretch the law to fit the evil is an ancient one, and it
must be resisted.” Moskal v. United States, 498 U.S. 103, 132 (1990) (Scalia, J.,
dissenting). The majority, in my view, succumbs to this temptation today.
Because the State failed to establish the statutory elements set forth in the text
of Iowa Code § 729A.2, I must respectfully dissent. I would reverse Geddes’s hate
crime convictions and remand to the district court for dismissal.