IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA
No. 16-2079
Filed August 2, 2017
STATE OF IOWA,
Plaintiff-Appellee,
vs.
KEESHA LYNN TU,
Defendant-Appellant.
________________________________________________________________
Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Black Hawk County, George L.
Stigler, Judge.
Keesha Tu appeals her conviction of forgery following a guilty plea.
AFFIRMED.
Christopher J. Foster of Foster Law Office, Iowa City, for appellant.
Thomas J. Miller, Attorney General, and Martha E. Trout, Assistant
Attorney General, for appellee.
Considered by Vaitheswaran, P.J., and Doyle and Bower, JJ.
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VAITHESWARAN, Presiding Judge.
Keesha Tu pled guilty to forgery in connection with checks drawn on the
account of an acquaintance. On appeal, Tu contends her plea lacked a factual
basis and, for that reason, her attorney was ineffective in allowing her to enter
the plea.
To prevail, Tu must prove her attorney breached an essential duty and
prejudice resulted. Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668, 687 (1984); State v.
Harris, 891 N.W.2d 182, 185 (Iowa 2017). “If trial counsel permits a defendant to
plead guilty and waives the defendant’s right to file a motion in arrest of judgment
when there is no factual basis to support the defendant’s guilty plea, trial counsel
breaches an essential duty.” Rhoades v. State, 848 N.W.2d 22, 29 (Iowa 2014).
Prejudice is presumed under such circumstances. Id.
The State charged Tu with
fraudulently us[ing] a writing with the intent to defraud or injure
anyone, or with knowledge that . . . she was facilitating a fraud or
injury to be perpetrated by anyone by making, completing,
authenticating, issuing or transferring a writing purporting to be the
act of another who did not authorize the act, to-wit: money,
securities, postage, government issued instrument, stock, bond,
credit-sale contracts, check, draft, or other writing; contrary to and
in violation of [section] 715A.2(2)(A) of the Iowa Criminal Code.
See Iowa Code § 715A.2(1)(b) (2015); State v. Acevedo, 705 N.W.2d 1, 3-4
(Iowa 2005). Tu appears to take issue with the “purporting to be the act of
another” element. See State v. Phillips, 569 N.W.2d 816, 820 (Iowa 1997)
(“[T]he mere signature as a drawer of a check in his or her name upon a bank in
which the drawer has no funds does not purport to be the act of another.”). In
her view, the record needed to contain “an unequivocal statement” that the check
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was signed with the account owner’s name and neither her assertions during the
plea colloquy nor the minutes of testimony contain such a statement. We
disagree with this characterization of the record.
At the plea hearing, Tu said she helped another woman negotiate a check
drawn on the account of her acquaintance, the acquaintance did not give either
of them permission to write the check, and she believed the friend signed the
check with the account owner’s name. The minutes of testimony rounded out the
contours of these statements. According to an officer who interviewed Tu, she
“said she took checks” belonging to the acquaintance, gave them to the friend,
and “told [the friend] that anything [the friend] gets from them then [she] wanted
some money.” Tu admitted to the officer “she was pretty sure [the checks] were
stolen.” She further admitted that, although she did not sign the checks, she
“filled out” the “pay to” name and the amount on one of the cashed checks. See
id. (“A person may purport a check to be the act of another by filling in his or her
name as the payee without authorization.”).
The record discloses a factual basis for the plea to forgery. Accordingly,
Tu’s plea attorney did not breach an essential duty in failing to challenge the
plea. We affirm Tu’s conviction, judgment, and sentence for forgery.
AFFIRMED.