Tracy Lynn Hardin v. State of Iowa
Tracy Lynn Hardin v. State of Iowa
Opinion
On July 16, 1995, Tracy Lynn Hardin broke into her husband's house through a window, shot and wounded her husband, ran upstairs, and fired four more shots, three of which struck her husband's girlfriend, killing her. Alfredo Parrish represented Hardin during her trial on charges of first-degree murder and attempted murder.
See
State v. Hardin
,
Hardin filed her first application of postconviction relief (PCR) in 1998, and Unes J. Booth was appointed to represent her. Of the several issues initially raised, PCR counsel pursued and presented evidence on three claims of ineffective assistance of prior counsel:
(1) failure to object to misconduct by the prosecutor in presenting false expert testimony regarding the sequence of the four shots fired upstairs; (2) failure to investigate and present forensic evidence regarding the order in which the shots were fired, and (3) failure to request the court stop the trial and order a hearing to determine Hardin's competency to continue with the trial.
Hardin v. State
, No. 03-1089,
Hardin appealed, and Theresa Wilson from the appellate defender's office was appointed to represent her.
See
(1) failure of PCR trial counsel to have Hardin testify at the PCR trial,
(2) failure of trial and appellate counsel to object to [an expert witness's] testimony on the ultimate issues of insanity and diminished responsibility, and (3) failure of trial and appellate counsel to object to the jury instruction on insanity.
In 2014, Hardin filed this PCR application, which raised a number of ineffective-assistance claims aimed at her trial counsel, appellate counsel, first PCR counsel, and first PCR appellate counsel. The PCR court found Hardin's claims were time-barred by Iowa Code section 822.3 (2014), and no exceptions were applicable. Hardin appeals, contending the district court erred in finding her claims time-barred.
We review a PCR dismissal applying summary judgment standards.
Schmidt v. State
,
The PCR statute provides that applications "must be filed within three years from the date the conviction or decision is final or, in the event of an appeal, from the date the writ of procedendo is issued."
However, Hardin argues,
The [Iowa] State Public Defender system has invaded Hardin's right to effective counsel, her rights to equal protection, and her rights to due process in violation of the Sixth and Fourteenth Amendments of the United States Constitution, and article I, sections 6, 9, and 10 of the Iowa Constitution, as such she has been unable to challenge her murder conviction on postconviction relief.
In support of Hardin's claim, she presented the affidavit and testimony of Gordon Allen, who noted PCR applicants do not have the absolute right to substitute counsel of their choosing and that resources for inmates to conduct their own legal research are "extremely limited."
In essence, Hardin contends the concept of equitable tolling should save her petition. "Our court has repeatedly noted the doctrine of equitable tolling does not apply to section 822.3."
2
Larimer v. State
, No. 17-0276,
AFFIRMED.
In this second PCR action, Wilson explained:
I don't have a specific recollection of this particular case, but I can tell you I would have looked at what was raised at the trial level, and as I recall, Al Parrish did the trial and he's a very thorough attorney. So I would have looked at what issues had already been fairly well-litigated, whether or not there was any avenue I thought that I could relitigate those issues. This case, as I recall, was primarily a mental defense case, not a sufficiency case, so the focus was on mental defenses.
....
Q. Would you agree with me that you didn't raise any of the issues that had been raised at the trial level post-conviction? A. I agree.
Q. Can you tell me why you handled the appeal in that way? A. I'd have to recreate my mindset back then, but what I assume it was that the issues addressed at trial-at the appeal had been fully litigated or required additional record, is usually why I wouldn't raise it, and was consistent with the law at the time. The post-conviction, the only part that troubled me was the fact that she wasn't allowed to testify, and I tried to address that, and unfortunately this was pre the case law that the applicant has a right to present evidence at the post-conviction pro se.
So my guess is that on my review of the trial record and appellate record, the initial appellate record, there was just no reasonable argument to be made.
See
James v. State
,
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.