IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA
No. 22-1391
Filed December 20, 2023
STATE OF IOWA,
Plaintiff-Appellee,
vs.
ALFRED NICHOLAS DUPREE WILES,
Defendant-Appellant.
________________________________________________________________
Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Polk County, Tabitha Turner, District
Associate Judge.
A defendant appeals the consecutive sentences imposed following
revocation of a deferred judgment and conviction for a domestic abuse assault
offense. SENTENCES VACATED AND REMANDED FOR RESENTENCING.
Martha J. Lucey, State Appellate Defender, for appellant.
Brenna Bird, Attorney General, and Martha E. Trout, Assistant Attorney
General, for appellee.
Considered by Tabor, P.J., and Badding and Chicchelly, JJ.
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BADDING, Judge.
Alfred Wiles appeals the sentences imposed following revocation of his
deferred judgment for possession of marijuana, first offense, and conviction for
domestic abuse assault impeding air or blood flow. He claims the district court
imposed illegal sentences by sending him to prison for one year on the marijuana
charge and requiring him to complete the Iowa Domestic Abuse Program “while
incarcerated.”
The State concedes those two errors but contests the other sentencing
challenges raised by Wiles—that (1) the district court abused its discretion by
failing to (a) consider evidence that Wiles was in therapy, (b) provide Wiles with
his right of allocution, and (c) state reasons for imposing consecutive sentences;
and (2) he was denied due process by the prosecutor’s presentation of evidence
without advance notice. We vacate the illegal sentences and remand for
resentencing.
I. Background Facts and Proceedings
In February 2022, while Wiles was on probation for assault while displaying
a dangerous weapon, he pled guilty to possession of marijuana, first offense. The
district court granted Wiles a deferred judgment and placed him on probation for
one year. The next month, Wiles was charged with domestic abuse assault
impeding air or blood flow causing bodily injury, a class “D” felony. See Iowa Code
§ 708.2A(5) (2022). A probation violation report and two addendums were filed in
both cases in March. Wiles stipulated to these violations in June. That same
month, he pled guilty to a reduced charge of domestic abuse assault impeding air
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or blood flow, an aggravated misdemeanor. See id. § 708.2A(2)(d). The parties
agreed they would be “free to argue for any legal sentence.”
In the weeks after Wiles’s stipulation and guilty plea, two more addendums
to the probation violation report were filed. The report and each addendum stated
Wiles was on probation for possession of marijuana, second offense.1 A combined
hearing on the new violations, the disposition for the prior violations, and
sentencing on the domestic abuse assault charge was held in August. In the
evidentiary phase of the hearing, the district court heard testimony from Wiles’s
probation officer before finding Wiles had violated his probation as alleged in the
two new addendums.
Moving on to the disposition phase, defense counsel argued that Wiles
should continue on probation. The court then heard a lengthy statement of
allocution from Wiles, during which he talked about his weekly therapy and a head
injury he had suffered. When Wiles was finished, the State called the probation
officer back to the stand for her recommendation on disposition. She testified that
Wiles had not given her any documentation about his head injury or ongoing
therapy, though he did give her one progress report “of a month or 30 days of his
therapy.” Because “[t]here’s no accountability with this client,” the probation officer
asked the court to revoke his deferred judgment and send him to prison. The State
echoed that recommendation, arguing Wiles was not “a candidate to have
community supervision at this point.”
The court sided with the State, telling Wiles:
1 That was Wiles’s original charge, but he pled guilty to and was sentenced on the
reduced charge of possession of marijuana, first offense.
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Okay. Mr. Wiles, I’ll move on to your new charge momentarily.
I’ve listened to what you’ve said. I’ve read all of the reports of
violation. I read all the addendums. I’ve listened to the probation
officer. And I’ve listened to arguments of your counsel and the State.
You were placed on probation January 19, 2022, for assault
with a dangerous weapon. And I reviewed that case as well, and
what you pled guilty to was assaulting a person and then threatening
them with a butcher knife. That’s what was written down in your
petition to plead guilty. We find ourselves back here, and you’ve pled
guilty to yet another violent crime.
I don’t have any evidence presented by any party that you are,
in fact, actively engaged in therapy. I believe that at some point you
were engaged in therapy, but nobody has given me a progress report
so I don’t have any evidence that you are, in fact, actively engaged
in therapy addressing what is clearly some issues since you now
have two violent crimes that I’m looking at today.
You have been noncompliant with probation in several
different ways. You’ve missed probation officer meetings, you
missed [Iowa Domestic Abuse Program] classes, and you were
removed from those. . . .
So when I’m determining what an appropriate sentence is, I
have to look at two things: One is rehabilitation, and the other is
protecting the public from further offenses by you. You’ve also
stipulated to using THC through your probation on at least one
occasion. I don’t know what else this system can do for you to
rehabilitate you. . . . And you keep committing these crimes.
If you didn’t have a new violent conviction—I guess that
you’ve pled to because we’ve not convicted you yet—I wouldn’t be
doing what I’m about to do. But you do. So you’re committing violent
crimes and not seeing that you’re trying to address whatever issue is
causing you there. So as such, sir, I do not believe that continued
probation is appropriate in this matter.
The court revoked Wiles’s deferred judgment on the possession-of-marijuana
charge and sentenced him to one year in prison, as the State had requested. The
court also revoked his probation for assault with a dangerous weapon and imposed
“the original sentence of two years in prison.” Those sentences were run
consecutively to one another.
With the probation matters finished, the court turned to sentencing on
Wiles’s domestic abuse assault charge. Defense counsel noted his
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arguments previously were kind of conjoined in both cases seeing
probation on the . . . violation matters as well as a probation sentence
on this charge. Obviously that doesn’t make much sense at this point
since the Court has now sentenced him to prison on the probation
violation charge[s], so we would ask in light of everything that’s
already been discussed here today and based on the arguments that
have previously been made on the record, that Mr. Wiles be given
the current sentence concurrent to the probation violation to
minimize the period of incarceration that he’s to receive.
The court then stated: “Okay. Just to make sure the record is complete,
since this is a new sentencing, if your client would like to make a statement of
allocution, he can do so at this time.” Wiles began, “Yes. I didn’t have a say in the
last—” but the court cut him off, saying:
You certainly did, Mr. Wiles. I listened to everything you said
so now we’re on to a new sentencing. All I want to know is if there’s
something you would like to say as it relates to what you want me to
do. You want me to run this concurrent or consecutive?
Wiles answered, “Concurrent.” After the State made its argument for consecutive
sentences, the court gave Wiles another opportunity to speak. He reiterated, “I’ve
been going to my therapy that I’m supposed to be doing. . . . I’ve been doing
everything [the probation officer’s] asked.” When Wiles continued talking about
his therapy, the court cut him off again and said, “I understand. You previously
told me all about your therapy so you don’t need to discuss that anymore.” Wiles
finished by “asking for . . . concurrent sentence if you could.”
The court rejected that request and sentenced Wiles to a term of
incarceration not to exceed two years, consecutive to the other two charges, for a
total of five years in prison. The court explained:
I don’t do this lightly, Mr. Wiles, but I am going to run the sentence
consecutive. And the only reason I’m doing that is because of the
violent nature of these offenses and the fact that you were on
probation and committed another violent offense. I deem it
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appropriate when I’m considering protecting the public from further
offenses by you. Probation is denied.
In the sentencing order that followed, the court also ordered Wiles to complete the
Iowa Domestic Abuse Program “while incarcerated.”
Wiles appeals, challenging only the sentences imposed on his convictions
for possession of marijuana, first offense, and domestic abuse assault impeding
air or blood flow.2 See State v. Thompson, 951 N.W.2d 1, 5 (Iowa 2020) (finding
good cause to appeal following guilty plea where defendant was challenging “the
order revoking deferred judgment and entering a judgment of conviction and
sentence”); see also State v. Damme, 944 N.W.2d 98, 105 (Iowa 2020).
II. Standard of Review
We review sentencing decisions for correction of errors at law and “will not
reverse the decision of the district court absent an abuse of discretion or some
defect in the sentencing procedure.” See State v. Formaro, 638 N.W.2d 720, 724
(Iowa 2002).
III. Analysis
A. Notice of State’s Sentencing Evidence
Working in reverse order on Wiles’s claims, we start with his challenge to
the State’s evidence at the disposition phase of the probation revocation hearing.
Citing State v. Ashley, 462 N.W.2d 279, 282 (Iowa 1990), Wiles contends the
2 The appeal does not include the probation revocation or sentence in the assault-
with-a-dangerous-weapon case. See Euans v. State, No. 20-0212, 2022
WL 951094, at *3 (Iowa Ct. App. Mar. 30, 2022) (“[T]here is not a right to file a
direct appeal from a probation revocation proceeding where . . . the applicant was
not granted a deferred judgment.”); see also State v. Rheuport, 225
N.W.2d 122, 123 (Iowa 1975); State v. Farmer, 234 N.W.2d 89, 90–91
(Iowa 1975).
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prosecutor was required to provide him with notice that his probation officer would
question whether he “had a traumatic brain injury and if he was participating in
therapy” during her testimony. He argues this error “materially impacted” his
sentence for domestic abuse assault impeding air or blood flow, necessitating
resentencing in both cases. We reject this claim for several reasons.
First, we find that Wiles failed to preserve error on this issue. See Top of
Iowa Coop. v. Sime Farms, Inc., 608 N.W.2d 454, 470 (Iowa 2000) (“In view of the
range of interests protected by our error preservation rules, this court will consider
on appeal whether error was preserved despite the opposing party’s omission in
not raising this issue at trial or on appeal.”). Wiles did not object to the probation
officer’s testimony that she did not have documentation about his head injury or
ongoing therapy, though he did cross-examine her on those issues. “[W]hile many
sentencing issues defy the normal rules of error preservation, this one doesn’t.”
State v. Carter, No. 22-1016, 2023 WL 2673226, at *3 (Iowa Ct. App.
Mar. 29, 2023) (citing State v. Gordon, 921 N.W.2d 19, 23 (Iowa 2018), which held
that error-preservation rules applied to due-process challenge to risk assessment
tools used at sentencing); see also State v. Graham, 897 N.W.2d 476, 491
(Iowa 2017) (declining to address a sentencing due process issue that was not
raised in district court).
Second, even if Wiles could raise this issue for the first time on appeal, the
court’s holding in Ashley regarding notice of the State’s sentencing evidence
appears limited to cases in which a presentence investigation report has been
ordered. See 462 N.W.2d at 282 (“The basic requirements of due process and fair
notice have been codified in Iowa Code sections 901.3 and 901.4, and we believe
8
that failure to provide the statutory notice renders such evidence inadmissible on
the issue of sentencing.” (emphasis added)); see also Iowa Code §§ 901.3, .4
(setting out requirements for presentence investigation reports). No presentence
investigation report was ordered here. Wiles does not provide any authority for his
argument that the “lack of a presentence investigation report does not remove the
prosecutor’s duty to provide advance notice of the sentencing evidence.”
Third, unlike Ashley, the matters that Wiles complains about were not
uncharged offenses. Cf. 462 N.W.2d at 282 (finding that information about a
defendant’s “alleged misrepresentations” that was available to the State before
sentencing “must be a part of the presentence investigation report”). They were
instead a response to issues that Wiles himself brought up during his statement of
allocution to the court. Wiles has not explained how his probation officer’s
testimony about a topic he introduced into the proceeding violated his right to due
process. See State v. Drake, 259 N.W.2d 862, 867 (Iowa 1977) (“A judgment in a
criminal case will not be disturbed because of sentencing procedures unless there
is a showing of abuse of discretion, procedural conduct prejudicial to defendant,
circumstances which manifest inherent unfairness and injustice, or conduct which
offends the public sense of fair play.” (citation omitted)).
B. Sentencing Considerations
Evidence of therapy. In a related claim, Wiles asserts the district court
abused its discretion by “erroneously conclud[ing] that it lacked ‘any evidence
presented by any party that you are, in fact, actively engaged in therapy.’” Wiles
contends this was erroneous because he told the court that he was in therapy.
But, as the State points out, the court was not required to believe Wiles. See State
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v. Wingfield, No. 22-1415, 2023 WL 6292302, at *2 (Iowa Ct. App. Sept. 27, 2023)
(“As to Wingfield’s contention that the court ignored his expression of remorse, the
court was not required to take his statements, either at sentencing or to the
[presentence investigation] interviewer, at face value.”). In any event, this
statement was limited to Wiles’s illegal sentence for the possession-of-marijuana
charge, which we are vacating. So we need not address it further.
Right of allocution. Wiles next asserts that he was denied allocution before
the court sentenced him on his conviction for domestic abuse assault impeding air
or blood flow. Iowa Rule of Criminal Procedure 2.23(3)(d) entitles defendants to
personally address the court to make a statement in mitigation of punishment.
When it comes to providing a defendant with this opportunity, “[n]o special
language is required to fulfill the rule’s mandate.” State v. Lumadue, 622
N.W.2d 302, 304 (Iowa 2001). Instead, the question “is whether the defendant is
given an opportunity to volunteer any information helpful to the defendant’s cause.”
Id. (citation omitted).
The record shows the court gave Wiles several opportunities to speak—first
at the revocation disposition and then twice during the sentencing for the domestic
charge. See State v. Oo, No. 22-0661, 2023 WL 4104028, at *2 (Iowa Ct. App.
June 21, 2023) (rejecting defendant’s claim that he was denied allocution where
the court “solicited statements from Oo as it pondered both revocation disposition
and the ultimate sentence”). “Asking the defendant if he wants to say something,”
like the court did here, “is generally sufficient.” Id.; accord State v. Craig, 562
N.W.2d 633, 635 (Iowa 1997) (noting substantial compliance with the rule is
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sufficient and discussing cases finding such compliance). We accordingly reject
this claim.
Reason for consecutive sentence. Finally, Wiles asserts the court
impermissibly relied on “the violent nature of these offenses” in determining
consecutive sentences were appropriate. He contends “[p]ossession of marijuana
is not a violent offense.” True. But that was not the only offense before the court.
Wiles was on probation for assault with a dangerous weapon—a butcher knife—
when he was charged with domestic abuse assault impeding air or blood flow. So
we do not find the court abused its discretion in relying on “the fact that [Wiles]
w[as] on probation and committed another violent offense” in determining
consecutive sentences were appropriate. See State v. Rawls, No. 18-0882, 2019
WL 2145722, at *2 (Iowa Ct. App. May 15, 2019) (finding imposition of consecutive
sentences was not an abuse of discretion where defendant “committed multiple
crimes over an extended period, while on probation”).
C. Illegal Sentences
The district court, likely led astray by the probation violation report and
addendums, sentenced Wiles to one year in prison after revoking his deferred
judgment for possession of marijuana, first offense. The State concedes this was
an illegal sentence because the maximum sentence for that offense is six months
in jail. See Iowa Code § 124.401(5). The State also concedes that the district
court did not have the authority to require Wiles to complete the Iowa Domestic
Abuse Program while incarcerated. See, e.g., State v. Gardner,
No. 22-0422, 2023 WL 153509, at *2 (Iowa Ct. App. Jan. 11, 2023) (agreeing with
defendant that the court “lacked authority to order him to complete sex-offender
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treatment while incarcerated”). Though that program is statutorily required upon
conviction of an offense under Iowa Code section 708.2A(2), see Iowa Code
§ 708.2A(10), Wiles is correct that decisions about programming for inmates are
left to the department of corrections. See Iowa Code § 904.202; State v. Smith,
No. 18-2248, 2021 WL 1400772, at *3 n.6 (Iowa Ct. App. Apr. 14, 2021) (“The
department of corrections may still require Smith to participate in the sex offender
treatment program, but that decision is within the authority of the department, not
the district court.”); accord Dykstra v. Iowa Dist. Ct., 783 N.W.2d 473, 478–79
(Iowa 2010).
D. Remedy
“[I]mposition of a sentence that is not permitted by statute is an illegal
sentence, and such sentence is void and must be vacated.” State v.
Suchanek, 326 N.W.2d 263, 265 (Iowa 1982); accord State v. Draper, 457
N.W.2d 600, 605 (Iowa 1990) (“[W]hen a sentencing court departs—upward or
downward—from the legislatively authorized sentence for a given offense, the
pronounced sentence is a nullity subject to correction . . . .”). “When a defendant
is sentenced for multiple offenses and a portion of the sentence is vacated, ‘we
may vacate the invalid part without disturbing the rest of the sentence.’” State v.
Vandermark, 965 N.W.2d 888, 895 (Iowa 2021) (citation omitted). But we are not
required to do so, even if the sentences are severable. Id. “Remand for
resentencing is appropriate when the district court considered the sentences to be
interconnected in imposing them.” Id.; accord State v. Keutla, 798
N.W.2d 731, 735 (Iowa 2011). We determine that was the case here.
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As a result, we vacate Wiles’s sentence for domestic abuse assault
impeding air or blood flow and remand for resentencing on that conviction. We
also reverse the revocation of his deferred judgment, adjudication of guilt, and
sentence imposed for the possession-of-marijuana charge and remand to the
district court “to fashion an appropriate consequence within the authorized range
of choices provided in Iowa Code section 908.11(4).” State v. Bowen, No. 22-
0278, 2022 WL 16985663, at *3 (Iowa Ct. App. Nov. 17, 2022) (“Because the
sentencing decision here was made as part of the disposition decision of a
probation-revocation proceeding, we put Bowen back in the same position he was
in before disposition was determined.”); accord Keutla, 798 N.W.2d at 735
(reversing revocation of deferred judgment and remanding to the district court for
resentencing “within the authorized range of choices provided in section 908.11(4)”
where the court viewed the sentencing arrangement “as an interconnected
package”). Because we are vacating the sentences in their entirety, the district
court has full discretion on remand to determine what sentences should be
imposed within statutory limits, including whether the sentences should be
consecutive or concurrent to one another.3 See Bowen, 2022 WL 16985663, at *3
3 The State cites State v. Austin and argues “it is not necessary for a new
sentencing hearing to occur” because “this involves only a reduction” and
correction of Wiles’s sentences. 585 N.W.2d 241, 244 (Iowa 1998) (holding the
State need not produce defendant at proceeding to correct sentence); see also
Iowa R. Crim. P. 2.27(3)(b). In Austin, however, “the resentencing court was given
specific instructions concerning the entry of the amended sentence.” State v.
Candelaria, No. 04-1103, 2005 WL 1397767, at *4 n.2 (Iowa Ct. App.
June 15, 2005); accord Austin, 585 N.W.2d at 245 (vacating the sentence and
remanding “for imposition of a new sentence to omit the reference to the
restrictions regarding Austin’s eligibility for parole or work release”). Here, we are
not dictating what sentences should be imposed on remand. As a result, the
remand proceeding may be viewed “as the functional analog of the initial
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(“By requiring a do-over of the probation-revocation disposition, we do not suggest
what disposition should be imposed or that it must be more lenient than imposed
here . . . .”); accord State v. Remmers, 259 N.W.2d 779, 786 (Iowa 1977) (“We do
not intimate that the new sentence must be less than the present sentence . . . .”).
Lastly, we decline Wiles’s request to mandate resentencing in front of a
different judge because this is not a case where the court considered an improper
sentencing factor. Compare State v. Davison, 973 N.W.2d 276, 289 (Iowa 2022)
(remand for resentencing without specifying that it be done by a different judge
where the district court may have mistakenly believed defendant was ineligible for
parole), with State v. Lovell, 857 N.W.2d 241, 243 (Iowa 2014) (remanding for
resentencing before a different judge where the district court considered an
impermissible sentencing factor); see also State v. Davis, 971 N.W.2d 546, 558
(Iowa 2022) (remanding for resentencing by a different judge where the State
breached a plea agreement).
SENTENCES VACATED AND REMANDED FOR RESENTENCING.
sentencing proceeding at which [Wiles] would otherwise have a right to be present
and we thus decline to order that the State need not produce him for resentencing.”
Candelaria, 2005 WL 1397767, at *4 n.2; see also Iowa R. Crim. P. 2.27(1)
(requiring defendant’s presence at the imposition of sentence).