Court Opinion

ID: 4504734
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2020-02-05 17:04:23.97345+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:24:55.390290
License: Public Domain

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

                                    No. 18-1723
                               Filed February 5, 2020

NICOLAS COLE JACOBS,
     Applicant-Appellant,

vs.

STATE OF IOWA,
     Respondent-Appellee.
________________________________________________________________

       Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Des Moines County, Michael J.

Schilling, Judge.

       An applicant appeals the district court’s denial of his postconviction-relief

application. AFFIRMED.

       Nate Nieman, Rock Island, Illinois, for appellant.

       Thomas J. Miller, Attorney General, and Israel Kodiaga, Assistant Attorney

General, for appellee State.

       Considered by Bower, C.J., and May and Greer, JJ.
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MAY, Judge.

        When he was sixteen, Nicolas Jacobs told police he had inappropriately

touched a seven-year-old child. The trial court denied a motion to suppress

Jacobs’s admission. Jacobs then pled guilty to lascivious acts with a child, a

forcible felony, and was sentenced accordingly.            Later, Jacobs filed this

postconviction-relief (PCR) action. The PCR court denied relief. This appeal

followed.

        Jacobs contends trial counsel was ineffective for failing to challenge Iowa

Code section 232.11 (2015) on equal protection grounds. Section 232.11 provides

children with a “right to be represented by counsel” that can only be waived under

limited circumstances. For example, waiver by a child who is sixteen “is valid only

if a good faith effort has been made to notify the child’s parent, guardian, or

custodian” of specific information, including their right to “visit and confer with the

child.” Iowa Code § 232.11(2). But these protections only apply during certain

“proceedings within the jurisdiction of the juvenile court.” Id. § 232.11(1). And

pursuant to section 232.8(1)(c), violations by children sixteen or older “which

constitute [] forcible felon[ies] are excluded from the jurisdiction of the juvenile

court.” So the protections of section 232.11 do not apply to children sixteen or

older who are suspected of a forcible felony.

        Jacobs claims this is unconstitutional. He claims section 232.11 violates

equal protection because it treats children differently based on the charges they

face.

        We previously addressed the same issue in State v. Jennings. No. 14-

2098, 2016 WL 3269545, at *6–7 (Iowa Ct. App. June 15, 2016). There, we
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rejected an applicant’s claim that “he received ineffective assistance because

defense counsel did not challenge the exclusion for forcible felonies in the

application of section 232.11 as a violation of equal protection.” Id. at *6. We see

no reason to reach a different conclusion here. We affirm the denial of Jacobs’s

PCR application.

      AFFIRMED.