Baltimore Sun Sunday

Iowa hate crimes suspect got breaks after earlier arrests

- By Ryan J. Foley

IOWA CITY, Iowa — She was charged with stabbing one boyfriend in the chest in 2017 and, months later, with threatenin­g another with a butcher’s knife. She allegedly told her ex-husband that she was going to kill him during a child custody dispute.

Despite her violence and threats, chronic drug use and mental health problems over the last three years,

Nicole Poole caught several breaks from Iowa’s criminal justice system, court records show. The 42-yearold unemployed white woman was allowed to stay out of prison and treatment before she allegedly committed a shocking string of racially-motivated attacks this month.

Police allege that on Dec. 9, Poole intentiona­lly drove her SUV onto a sidewalk to hit a 14-year-old girl outside a suburban Des Moines junior high school. She told police that she targeted the girl, who was hospitaliz­ed for two days with injuries, because she was Hispanic.

That same day, Poole is charged with driving over a curb to strike a 12-year-old black boy who was walking home from school in Des Moines. She allegedly fled after both crashes. But she was arrested later that day after going to a gas station where she called an employee and customers racial epithets, threw items at a clerk and left without paying. Police said that she admitted to using meth hours earlier and that she was “extremely fidgety” and had dilated pupils.

Poole is charged with two counts of attempted murder, assault in violation of individual rights and second-offense operating while intoxicate­d, among other offenses.

Poole has been jailed since her arrest and is being held on a $1 million cashonly bond. An assistant state public defender representi­ng Poole declined to discuss the case.

While she faces up to 25 years behind bars for each attempted murder charge, Poole has avoided prison time for recent transgress­ions.

In July 2017, West Des Moines police officers responding to a domestic disturbanc­e found Curtis Jones, a 60-year-old black man, bleeding from a severe laceration on his shoulder outside an apartment building, records show. He was taken to a hospital for treatment.

Poole admitted that she used a knife to stab Jones, her then-boyfriend, and she was arrested on charges of willful injury and domestic abuse assault with a dangerous weapon, according to a criminal complaint. Police called the attack unprovoked.

The charges — which carried more than a decade in prison — came at a terrible time for Poole. A month earlier, her probation officer recommende­d that she face jail time for repeatedly testing positive for drugs and alcohol and skipping mandatory treatment sessions over the last seven months.

Poole was put on probation in 2016 after fleeing from police and driving with a blood alcohol content of more than twice the legal limit. After the stabbing arrest, a probation agent cited Poole’s “continued substance abuse and escalated threat to the public” in asking a judge to impose the one-year jail sentence that had been suspended.

But the prosecutio­n collapsed after Jones denied that he was stabbed and told doctors his wounds were cuts from glass, assistant Polk County attorney Thomas Miller said Friday. Miller said the office does prosecute domestic violence cases over the objections of victims in extraordin­ary cases, but that “it’s not possible to do that in every case.”

Under a plea deal, the stabbing charges were dismissed and Poole pleaded guilty to misdemeano­r disorderly conduct for “loud and raucous noise.” A judge in November 2017 gave Poole credit for jail time served after her arrest, 79 days, resolving the probation violations as well.

In January 2018, a judge noted that Poole appeared unstable and gave rambling answers during a hearing on whether her ex-husband should get custody of their daughter. Poole was not employed, would not cooperate with child welfare investigat­ors and refused a drug test, the judge noted in awarding the exhusband custody.

The next month, Poole allegedly bit her new boyfriend in the arm, picked up a butcher’s knife “and repeatedly said she would kill him,” a criminal complaint shows. The man fled the home and called police. Poole was charged with domestic abuse assault and harassment.

In a court filing, her attorney in that case said he was concerned that her “preexistin­g psychiatri­c diagnosis and the status of her mental health treatment” made her unable to stand trial. A judge ordered an expert to evaluate her and concluded in November 2018 that Poole was competent to stand trial.

But like the stabbing case, that prosecutio­n ended after the victim refused to cooperate and the county attorney’s office dismissed the charges in January 2019, court records show.

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