Nick Rhoades v. State of Iowa , 848 N.W.2d 22 ( 2014 )


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  •                IN THE SUPREME COURT OF IOWA
    No. 12–0180
    Filed June 13, 2014
    NICK RHOADES,
    Appellant,
    vs.
    STATE OF IOWA,
    Appellee.
    On review from the Iowa Court of Appeals.
    Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Black Hawk County,
    David F. Staudt, Judge.
    The defendant filed a postconviction relief action claiming his
    guilty plea was invalid. DECISION OF COURT OF APPEALS VACATED;
    JUDGMENT OF DISTRICT COURT REVERSED AND CASE REMANDED
    WITH DIRECTIONS.
    Christopher R. Clark and Scott A. Schoettes of Lambda Legal
    Defense & Education Fund, Inc., Chicago, Illinois, and Joseph C.
    Glazebrook and Dan L. Johnston of Glazebrook & Moe, L.L.P., Des
    Moines, for appellant.
    Thomas J. Miller, Attorney General, Kevin R. Cmelik, Assistant
    Attorney   General,   Thomas    J.   Ferguson,    County   Attorney,   and
    Kimberly A. Griffith, Assistant County Attorney, for appellee.
    2
    Earl B. Kavanaugh of Harrison & Dietz-Kilen, P.L.C., Des Moines,
    and Tracy L. Welsh, New York, New York, for amicus curiae National
    Alliance of State and Territorial AIDS Directors, the Center for HIV Law
    and Policy, and HIV Law Project.
    3
    WIGGINS, Justice.
    A defendant brings a claim alleging his trial counsel provided
    ineffective assistance of counsel related to the defendant’s guilty plea to
    the crime of criminal transmission of the human immunodeficiency virus
    (HIV) in violation of Iowa Code section 709C.1 (2007). 1 The district court
    disagreed and dismissed the defendant’s postconviction relief action.
    The defendant appealed and we transferred the case to our court of
    appeals. The court of appeals affirmed. On further review, we find the
    guilty plea record did not contain a factual basis to support the plea. We
    also find the court in this case cannot use the rule of judicial notice to
    establish the factual basis in the guilty plea record. Based on the state
    of medicine both now and at the time of the plea in 2009, we are unable
    to take judicial notice that an infected individual can transmit HIV,
    regardless of an infected individual’s viral load, when that individual
    engages in protected anal or unprotected oral sex with an uninfected
    person. Accordingly, we vacate the decision of the court of appeals and
    reverse the judgment of the district court. We also remand the case with
    directions.
    I. Background Facts and Proceedings.
    The petitioner in this case, Nick Rhoades, was diagnosed with HIV
    in 1998. From 1999 to 2005, Rhoades did not receive treatment for his
    HIV diagnosis. In 2005, Rhoades began consistently receiving medical
    care for his HIV diagnosis from the University of Iowa Hospitals and
    Clinics. Every three to six months during this time, Rhoades received
    1The   general assembly repealed Iowa Code chapter 709C, and replaced it with
    new legislation. See 2014 Iowa Legis. Serv. S.F. 2297 (West). The governor signed the
    bill, and it was effective May 30, 2014. 
    Id. § 11.
                                            4
    treatment. In the spring of 2008, Rhoades’s doctor informed him his HIV
    viral load was nondetectable.
    The events of this case turn on an encounter between Rhoades and
    A.P. on June 26, 2008. On that evening, Rhoades met A.P. on a social
    networking site. Rhoades and A.P. began conversing, and subsequently
    A.P. invited Rhoades to his home in Cedar Falls. Rhoades accepted. A.P.
    understood Rhoades to be HIV negative, in part because Rhoades’s
    online profile listed him as HIV negative.
    In    Cedar    Falls, Rhoades     and   A.P.   engaged   in   consensual
    unprotected oral and protected anal sex. Several days later, A.P. learned
    Rhoades was potentially HIV positive.         A.P. contacted the police, and
    subsequently the State charged Rhoades with criminal transmission of
    HIV in violation of Iowa Code section 709C.1.
    Rhoades engaged the services of an attorney to defend him in this
    criminal matter. This was the attorney’s first case involving Iowa Code
    section 709C.1. On May 1, 2009, Rhoades pled guilty to one count of
    criminal transmission of HIV. The district court accepted the plea. At
    the sentencing hearing, the district court sentenced Rhoades to a term of
    imprisonment not to exceed twenty-five years with life parole and
    required Rhoades be placed on the sex offender registry.            The district
    court retained jurisdiction.    Rhoades filed a motion to reconsider the
    sentence.    On September 11, the district court suspended Rhoades’s
    twenty-five year sentence and placed Rhoades on probation for five years.
    Rhoades did not file a direct appeal.
    On     March     15,   2010,    Rhoades    filed   an    application   for
    postconviction relief pursuant to Iowa Code chapter 822.               Rhoades
    alleged his trial counsel was ineffective for allowing Rhoades to plead
    guilty by failing to challenge the factual basis of the plea and failing to
    5
    complete a proper investigation before the plea hearing.        The district
    court denied Rhoades’s application for postconviction relief.       Rhoades
    appealed and we transferred the case to our court of appeals. The court
    of appeals affirmed.     Rhoades requested further review, which we
    granted.
    II. Issue.
    We must determine if Rhoades received ineffective assistance of
    counsel when he pled guilty to criminal transmission of HIV in violation
    of Iowa Code section 709C.1.
    III. Standard of Review.
    Ineffective-assistance-of-counsel claims are grounded in the Sixth
    Amendment. State v. Clay, 
    824 N.W.2d 488
    , 494 (Iowa 2012). We review
    ineffective-assistance-of-counsel claims de novo. 
    Id. We review
    issues of
    statutory interpretation for correction of errors at law. State v. Wills, 
    696 N.W.2d 20
    , 22 (Iowa 2005).
    IV. Elements of the Crime of Criminal Transmission of HIV.
    The legislature codified the crime of criminal transmission of HIV
    in Iowa Code section 709C.1. The Code provides in relevant part:
    1. A person commits criminal transmission of the
    human immunodeficiency virus if the person, knowing that
    the person’s human immunodeficiency virus status is
    positive, does any of the following:
    a. Engages in intimate contact with another person.
    ....
    2. For the purposes of this section:
    a. “Human immunodeficiency virus” means the human
    immunodeficiency virus identified as the causative agent of
    acquired immune deficiency syndrome.
    b. “Intimate contact” means the intentional exposure of
    the body of one person to a bodily fluid of another person in
    6
    a manner that could result in the transmission of the human
    immunodeficiency virus.
    ....
    4. This section shall not be construed to require that
    an infection with the human immunodeficiency virus has
    occurred for a person to have committed criminal
    transmission of the human immunodeficiency virus.
    5. It is an affirmative defense that the person exposed
    to the human immunodeficiency virus knew that the infected
    person had a positive human immunodeficiency virus status
    at the time of the action of exposure, knew that the action of
    exposure could result in transmission of the human
    immunodeficiency virus, and consented to the action of
    exposure with that knowledge.
    Iowa Code § 709C.1.       Therefore, to establish the crime of criminal
    transmission of HIV the State must prove the following elements: (1) “the
    defendant engaged in intimate contact with [the victim]”, (2) at the time
    of intimate contact the defendant’s HIV status was positive, (3) the
    defendant knew his HIV status was positive, and (4) “[a]t the time of the
    intimate contact, [the victim] did not know that the defendant had a
    positive HIV status.” State v. Stevens, 
    719 N.W.2d 547
    , 549 (Iowa 2006).
    It is also incumbent on the district court to instruct the jury on the
    definition of “intimate contact” because the legislature has specially
    defined this phrase in the Iowa Code.        See 
    id. (recognizing the
    jury
    instruction also defined intimate contact to mirror the statutory
    definition).   For purposes of section 709C.1, intimate contact requires
    “(1) there was an intentional exposure of the body of one person to a
    bodily fluid of another person, and (2) this occurred in a manner that
    could result in the transmission of . . . HIV.” 
    Id. at 550.
    In considering the definition of “intimate contact,” we have
    previously defined “could” in the criminal transmission statute as
    requiring “that transmission of . . . HIV from the infected person to the
    7
    exposed person was possible considering the circumstances.”        State v.
    Keene, 
    629 N.W.2d 360
    , 365 (Iowa 2001). Although there are multiple
    definitions of “possible,” we have not previously elaborated on what
    “possible” means here. First, “possible” may mean something “that may
    or may not occur.”   Webster’s Third New International Dictionary 1771
    (unabr. ed. 2002).    This definition is broad, and some courts have
    recognized the word “possible” in certain contexts may mean allowing
    any likelihood of occurrence, no matter how remote.       See Pittsburgh,
    Cincinnati, Chi. & St. Louis Ry. v. Indianapolis, Columbus, & S. Traction
    Co., 
    81 N.E. 487
    , 488 (Ind. 1907) (recognizing a distinction between the
    word “practicable,” which requires reasonableness, and the word
    “possible”); Gustafson v. Benda, 
    661 S.W.2d 29
    , 31 (Mo. Ct. App. 1982)
    (“ ‘Possible’ encompasses the entire range of probability from highly
    improbable to almost sure . . . .”), rev’d on other grounds, 
    661 S.W.2d 11
    (Mo. 1983).
    Second, “possible” may mean “having an indicated potential by
    nature or circumstances.” Webster’s Third New International Dictionary
    1771. This definition considers the reality of a thing occurring, rather
    than a theoretical chance.     In Keene, we linked possibility to the
    circumstances present. See 
    Keene, 629 N.W.2d at 365
    . We find useful
    this commentary by the Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals:
    The potential for legal liability must be reasonable, not
    merely theoretical. In considering possible state law claims,
    possible must mean more than such a possibility that a
    designated residence can be hit by a meteor tonight. That is
    possible. Surely, as in other instances, reason and common
    sense have some role.
    Legg v. Wyett, 
    428 F.3d 1317
    , 1325 n.5 (11th Cir. 2005) (emphasis
    omitted) (citations omitted) (internal quotation marks omitted).      Some
    8
    courts have recognized an inherent reasonableness consideration in
    construing the meaning of “possible” in the context of certain statutes.
    See Topeka City Ry. v. Higgs, 
    16 P. 667
    , 674 (Kan. 1888) (recognizing the
    word “possible” meant capable of being done, among other definitions,
    yet determining in the context of the statute the phrase required
    reasonable precautions); Sullivan v. Mountain States Power Co., 
    9 P.2d 1038
    , 1047 (Or. 1932) (determining the statutory language “every
    possible effort” did not require actions that were neither reasonable nor
    practicable); Commonwealth v. Allied Bldg. Credits, Inc., 
    123 A.2d 686
    ,
    691 (Pa. 1956) (recognizing the definition of “possible” meant capable of
    happening as contrasted with impossibility, however finding within the
    context of the statute the word carried a notion of reasonableness).
    We find the second definition is more appropriate in the context of
    this criminal statute for at least two reasons.         First, we recognize this
    statute   requires   expert   medical       testimony   on    the   likelihood   of
    transmission of HIV.     Experts are not required to testify in absolutes
    when it comes to causation. See Bradshaw v. Iowa Methodist Hosp., 
    251 Iowa 375
    , 383, 
    101 N.W.2d 167
    , 172 (1960) (recognizing expert opinions
    were admissible when the expert was giving testimony that a causal
    relation was possible, likely, or probable).
    Second, and more importantly, we would not want to deprive a
    person of his or her liberty on the basis the defendant’s actions caused
    something that can only theoretically occur.                 Causation must be
    reasonably possible under the facts and circumstances of the case to
    convict a person of criminal transmission of HIV in violation of Iowa Code
    section 709C.1.
    9
    Thus, to establish a factual basis for Rhoades’s guilty plea, the
    record must establish the four elements of the crime together with the
    two requirements of the statutory definition of intimate contact.
    V. Attacking a Guilty Plea.
    We have recognized at least two ways a defendant may attack his
    or her guilty plea. First, a defendant may attack his or her guilty plea on
    the ground the defendant did not receive effective assistance of counsel
    as   required    under   the   Sixth   Amendment   to   the   United   States
    Constitution because there was no factual basis to support the
    defendant’s guilty plea. See State v. Finney, 
    834 N.W.2d 46
    , 54 (Iowa
    2013). Second, a defendant may show he or she did not make a knowing
    and intelligent waiver of a constitutional right when pleading, even if
    overwhelming evidence shows a factual basis exists. 
    Id. at 55.
    Failure to
    make a knowing and intelligent waiver of a constitutional right violates
    the Due Process Clauses of the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments to the
    United States Constitution. 
    Id. at 55.
    In this proceeding, Rhoades bases his attack on his guilty plea
    under the Sixth Amendment by claiming ineffective assistance of
    counsel. We can parse his argument into two claims. The first claim of
    ineffective assistance of counsel alleged is that his trial counsel allowed
    Rhoades to plead guilty when no factual basis existed for the plea and
    then counsel failed to subsequently file a motion in arrest of judgment.
    The second claim of ineffective assistance of counsel alleged is that his
    trial counsel failed to complete a competent investigation before Rhoades
    pled guilty.    We can dispose of this appeal on Rhoades’s factual basis
    claim.
    A defendant must prove by a preponderance of evidence “(1) his
    trial counsel failed to perform an essential duty, and (2) this failure
    10
    resulted in prejudice” in order to establish an ineffective-assistance-of-
    counsel claim. State v. Straw, 
    709 N.W.2d 128
    , 133 (Iowa 2006) (citing
    Strickland v. Washington, 
    466 U.S. 668
    , 687, 
    104 S. Ct. 2052
    , 2064, 
    80 L. Ed. 2d 674
    , 693 (1984)). 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. State v. Philo, 
    697 N.W.2d 481
    , 485 (Iowa 2005).         It is well-settled law that under these
    circumstances, we presume prejudice. State v. Schminkey, 
    597 N.W.2d 785
    , 788 (Iowa 1999). At the time of the guilty plea, the record must
    disclose facts to satisfy all elements of the offense. 
    Keene, 629 N.W.2d at 366
    .     We review (1) the prosecutor’s statements, (2) the defendant’s
    statements, (3) the minutes of testimony, and (4) the presentence report,
    if available at the time of the plea, to determine if the record supports a
    factual basis for the plea.   State v. Ortiz, 
    789 N.W.2d 761
    , 768 (Iowa
    2010).    We have also allowed the court to take judicial notice of well-
    known facts to establish a factual basis. See 
    Keene, 629 N.W.2d at 366
    .
    When analyzing the record, we do not require the record “to show the
    totality of evidence necessary to support a guilty conviction,” but only
    that the record demonstrates the facts to support the elements of the
    offense. 
    Ortiz, 789 N.W.2d at 768
    .
    VI. Analysis.
    In deciding this case, we first look to the prosecutor’s statements
    at the plea hearing.    The prosecutor made no statements at the plea
    hearing that contributed to establishing the factual basis.     When the
    district court asked if the prosecutor requested any further factual basis,
    the prosecutor responded, “No, Your Honor.”
    11
    Next, we consider the defendant’s statements. The colloquy that
    took place between the district court and Rhoades was as follows:
    THE COURT: What the state would have to prove is
    that on or about June 26th of 2008, here in Black Hawk
    County, Iowa, you did knowing that you had human — and I
    — I apologize.    Have a hard time saying the word —
    immunodeficiency virus, that you knew that you had that,
    that you were positive for that and that you engaged in
    intimate contact with another person and you didn’t
    acknowledge or that person didn’t know that you had the
    virus.
    Do you understand what it is you would — the state
    would have to prove?
    THE DEFENDANT: I do.
    THE COURT: Were you here in Black Hawk County on
    June 26th?
    THE DEFENDANT: I was.
    THE COURT: And at that time were you positive for
    the human immunodeficiency virus?
    THE DEFENDANT: Yes, sir.
    THE COURT: You were aware of that?
    THE DEFENDANT: Yes, sir.
    THE COURT: And did you engage in intimate contact
    with another person?
    THE DEFENDANT: Yes, sir.
    THE COURT: And did that person not know that you
    had this virus?
    THE DEFENDANT: No, sir.
    THE COURT: Can the court rely upon the minutes for
    a factual basis, state?
    MS. FANGMAN: Yes, Your Honor.
    ....
    12
    THE COURT: Can the court rely upon the minutes,
    [defense counsel’s name]?
    [DEFENSE COUNSEL]: Yes, sir.
    This colloquy establishes the factual basis for the elements that
    Rhoades was aware his HIV status was positive and at the time of his
    sexual encounter with A.P., A.P. was not aware of his HIV status. We
    find the colloquy does not establish the facts necessary for the intimate-
    contact element. It is true the district court informed Rhoades the crime
    required intimate contact and when the district court asked if he had
    intimate contact, Rhoades answered in the affirmative.             However,
    intimate contact under the statute has a specific meaning.        “ ‘Intimate
    contact’ means the intentional exposure of the body of one person to a
    bodily fluid of another person in a manner that could result in the
    transmission of the human immunodeficiency virus.”               Iowa Code
    § 709C.1(2)(b).
    In a previous case, we considered whether a plea colloquy between
    the district court and the defendant established a factual basis.           See
    Ryan v. Iowa State Penitentiary, 
    218 N.W.2d 616
    , 618 (Iowa 1974). The
    colloquy was as follows:
    THE COURT: You have told me that you are entering a
    plea of guilty because you, in fact, did what it charged you
    here in the county attorney’s information?
    DEFENDANT: Yes, Your Honor.
    
    Id. In finding
    this inquiry did not establish a factual basis, we stated:
    [The county attorney information] was necessarily couched
    in the technical language of the criminal statute. Formal
    criminal accusations almost of necessity include verbiage
    which might be expected to confound and confuse one
    unaccustomed to legal parlance. There was no sufficient
    showing of a factual basis.
    13
    
    Id. at 619.
    Here, as in Ryan, the district court used technical language from
    the statute that was insufficient to establish a factual basis. The district
    court asked Rhoades if he had intimate contact with the victim. At most,
    we can surmise from Rhoades’s affirmative response that he had some
    sort of sexual relations with the victim.       See Webster’s Third New
    International Dictionary 1184 (defining “intimate” as “engaged in or
    marked by sexual relations”).     Although we do not require a detailed
    factual basis, we do require the defendant to acknowledge facts that are
    consistent with the elements of the crime.       See State v. Taylor, 
    211 N.W.2d 264
    , 265 (Iowa 1973) (showing the district court asked the
    defendant to explain his actions supporting the crime of larceny in the
    night time and the defendant responded he “took money from the Skelly
    Station.”); State v. Quinn, 
    197 N.W.2d 624
    , 625 (Iowa 1972) (showing a
    factual basis for the crime of larceny when, among other evidence, the
    defendant stated, “I just broke into the place I guess.”). On the other
    hand, the district court’s reading of the technical terms in the
    information and having the defendant agree to those terms is not enough
    to establish a factual basis for those terms. See 
    Ryan, 218 N.W.2d at 619
    ; see also United States v. Cody, 
    438 F.2d 287
    , 289 (8th Cir. 1971)
    (“The government’s argument that [a factual basis] was fulfilled by the
    prosecutor reading from the indictment in the presence of the defendant
    falls far short of demonstrating any factual basis for the defendant’s
    plea.”).
    We find the district court’s reference to intimate contact and
    Rhoades’s acknowledgement he had intimate contact does not establish
    the necessary factual basis an exchange of bodily fluid took place or that
    14
    Rhoades intentionally exposed A.P. to his bodily fluid in a manner that
    could result in the transmission of HIV.
    We next look to the minutes of testimony to see if a factual basis
    exists to establish Rhoades intentionally exposed A.P. to his bodily fluid
    in a manner that could result in the transmission of HIV. The minutes of
    testimony incorporate the police reports prepared by the sheriff’s
    department, which included A.P.’s statements. The minutes of testimony
    establish A.P. received oral and anal intercourse from Rhoades. 2 It also
    establishes Rhoades used a condom when performing anal sex.                      The
    minutes of testimony do not establish any exposure of bodily fluids
    between Rhoades and A.P.            Thus, the minutes of testimony do not
    establish a factual basis that an exchange of bodily fluid took place or
    that Rhoades intentionally exposed A.P. to his bodily fluid. Nor do the
    minutes of testimony show the likelihood the sexual activity in this case
    could result in the transmission of HIV.
    Next, we consider the presentence investigation report. The report
    states Rhoades admitted he engaged in consensual intercourse with A.P.,
    and A.P. reported receiving unprotected oral sex and protected anal sex.
    The presentence investigation report contains the same information
    contained in the police reports, and similarly does not establish a factual
    basis.
    The last place we look to see if a factual basis exists is by judicial
    notice of adjudicative facts.       An adjudicative fact is “[a] controlling or
    operative fact, rather than a background fact; a fact that concerns the
    parties to a judicial or administrative proceeding and that helps the court
    2In
    the postconviction relief hearing, A.P. testified he performed oral sex on
    Rhoades. However, this statement is outside the record of the guilty plea. Thus, we do
    not consider this fact in evaluating the factual basis for the guilty plea.
    15
    or agency determine how the law applies to those parties.” Black’s Law
    Dictionary 669 (9th ed. 2009).     Under Iowa Rule of Evidence 5.201, a
    court may take judicial notice of two kinds of adjudicative facts. First,
    the court may take judicial notice of a fact “generally known within the
    territorial jurisdiction of the trial court.” Iowa R. Evid. 5.201(b). Second,
    the court may take judicial notice of a fact that is “capable of accurate
    and ready determination by resort to sources whose accuracy cannot
    reasonably be questioned.” 
    Id. Iowa Rule
    of Evidence 5.201 is nearly identical to the Federal Rule
    of Evidence 201. See Fed. R. Evid. 201. The advisory committee notes to
    the Federal Rule state “[a]djudicative facts are simply the facts of the
    particular case” and “[a] high degree of indisputability is the essential
    prerequisite.” Fed. R. Evid. 201 advisory committee’s note to subdivision
    (a). Adjudicative facts concern the immediate parties, including “who did
    what, where, when, how, and with what motive or intent . . . .” Kenneth
    Culp Davis, Judicial Notice, 55 Colum. L. Rev. 945, 952 (1955). Evidence
    must support adjudicative facts.      
    Id. We have
    previously recognized
    adjudicative facts are limited to a particular proceeding. See Greenwood
    Manor v. Iowa Dep’t of Pub. Health, 
    641 N.W.2d 823
    , 836 (Iowa 2002)
    (“Adjudicative facts relate to the specific parties and their particular
    circumstances.”).
    We recognize judicial notice of an adjudicative fact in a prior
    proceeding does not automatically apply to a future proceeding. Rather,
    a court must take judicial notice of the adjudicative fact and recognize
    the same principles that supported the judicial notice in the prior case
    support judicial notice in the present case.     See State v. Musser, 
    721 N.W.2d 734
    , 747 (Iowa 2006) (recognizing we were again taking judicial
    notice of a fact we had taken notice of in Keene).
    16
    In Keene, the district court recognized a factual basis existed to
    support a defendant’s conviction of criminal transmission of HIV based
    on the minutes of testimony and the defendant’s statements made during
    the plea 
    colloquy. 629 N.W.2d at 362
    .     The minutes of testimony
    indicated the victim and the defendant engaged in consensual,
    unprotected sexual intercourse and the victim was unaware of the
    defendant’s HIV status.    
    Id. Both the
    victim and the defendant were
    uncertain if the defendant ejaculated during sexual intercourse, however
    the defendant admitted that if he did ejaculate he did so only on either
    his or the victim’s stomach. 
    Id. at 362–63.
    The minutes of testimony
    also indicated a public health nurse would testify to the risk of exposure
    of HIV during sexual contact. 
    Id. at 363.
    At the plea colloquy, the defendant stated all witnesses would be
    truthful if they testified according to the minutes of testimony. 
    Id. He further
    admitted he knew he was HIV positive when he engaged in sexual
    intercourse with the victim. 
    Id. The district
    court found a factual basis
    for the crime. 
    Id. On appeal,
    the defendant argued there was not a factual basis to
    show how sexual intercourse between he and the victim could result in
    the transmission of HIV. 
    Id. at 366.
    We disagreed. See 
    id. at 367.
    We
    determined the minutes of testimony, the defendant’s admissions during
    the plea colloquy, and our recognition of the “fact that . . . HIV may be
    transmitted through contact with an infected individual’s blood, semen
    or vaginal fluid, and that sexual intercourse is one of the most common
    methods of passing the virus” established the factual basis for the crime.
    
    Id. at 365–66.
          Accordingly, we found the defendant’s ineffective-
    assistance-of-counsel claim lacked merit. 
    Id. at 367.
    Our judicial notice
    of the adjudicative facts that HIV may be transmitted through contact
    17
    with an infected individual’s blood, semen or vaginal fluid, and that
    sexual intercourse is one of the most common methods of passing the
    virus filled in the gaps in the factual basis for Keene’s plea.
    Keene committed his crime in 1998. 
    Id. at 362.
    In 2003, we again
    recognized the adjudicative “ ‘fact that . . . HIV may be transmitted
    through contact with an infected individual’s blood, semen or vaginal
    fluid, and that sexual intercourse is one of the most common methods of
    passing the virus’ ” continued to be common knowledge to establish the
    evidence was sufficient to support a conviction under section 709C.1.3
    
    Stevens, 719 N.W.2d at 550
    –52 (quoting 
    Keene, 629 N.W.2d at 365
    ).
    Today we are unable to take judicial notice that an infected
    individual can transmit HIV when an infected person engages in
    protected anal sex with another person or unprotected oral sex,
    regardless of the infected person’s viral load.                 The evidence at the
    postconviction relief hearing 4 shows there have been great strides in the
    treatment and the prevention of the spread of HIV from 2003 to 2008. It
    was not apparent in 2009, at the time of the plea, that this fact was
    “capable of accurate and ready determination by resort to sources whose
    accuracy” could not reasonably be questioned.                      See Iowa R. Evid.
    5.201(b). Further, while this fact may have been a commonly held belief
    within the territorial jurisdiction of the trial court, we note the purpose of
    judicial notice is to show the fact is not subject to reasonable dispute.
    3We also used this fact as one of the reasons Iowa Code section 709C.1 was not
    void for vagueness under the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.
    
    Musser, 721 N.W.2d at 745
    –47.
    4While we are limited in our review for factual basis to the record before the
    district court, we are not so limited in our review for an inquiry into whether we will
    take judicial notice. Rather, we may look to either what was “generally known within
    the territorial jurisdiction of the trial court” or if the fact was “capable of accurate and
    ready determination by resort to sources whose accuracy” could not reasonably be
    questioned. Iowa R. Evid. 5.201(b).
    18
    See 
    id. Here, we
    find the fact was subject to reasonable dispute. At the
    time of the plea, Rhoades’s viral count was nondetectable, and there is a
    question of whether it was medically true a person with a nondetectable
    viral load could transmit HIV through contact with the person’s blood,
    semen or vaginal fluid or whether transmission was merely theoretical.
    The judicial notice we took in previous cases is subject to reasonable
    dispute here; thus, it is improper for us to similarly take judicial notice
    in this case. With the advancements in medicine regarding HIV between
    2003 and 2008, we are unable to take judicial notice of the fact that HIV
    may be transmitted through contact with an infected individual’s blood,
    semen or vaginal fluid, and that sexual intercourse is one of the most
    common methods of passing the virus to fill in the gaps to find a factual
    basis for Rhoades’s guilty plea.
    Thus, there was not a sufficient factual basis for the district court
    to accept the plea. Therefore, trial counsel was ineffective for allowing
    the district court to accept the plea without a factual basis.
    VII. Disposition.
    We vacate the decision of the court of appeals and reverse the
    judgment of the district court. We remand the case back to the district
    court to enter judgment finding trial counsel was ineffective. The district
    court shall order the sentence in Rhoades’s criminal case be set aside.
    Because it is possible the State can establish a factual basis, the district
    court should order the court in the criminal case to give the State the
    opportunity to establish a factual basis. State v. Gines, 
    844 N.W.2d 437
    ,
    441 (Iowa 2014); 
    Ryan, 218 N.W.2d at 620
    . The district court should
    further order if the State cannot establish a factual basis, the plea is
    withdrawn and the State can proceed accordingly. 
    Gines, 844 N.W.2d at 442
    .
    19
    DECISION OF COURT OF APPEALS VACATED; JUDGMENT OF
    DISTRICT     COURT     REVERSED      AND    CASE   REMANDED   WITH
    DIRECTIONS.
    All justices concur except Mansfield and Waterman, JJ., who
    concur specially, and Zager, J., who dissents.
    20
    #12–0180, Rhoades v. State
    MANSFIELD, Justice (concurring specially).
    I join the majority opinion because I do not believe the record
    provides a factual basis for the conclusion that Nick Rhoades
    intentionally exposed A.P. to Rhoades’s bodily fluids in a manner that
    could result in the transmission of the HIV virus.           However, I write
    separately because Justice Zager’s dissent makes some excellent points,
    and I want to comment briefly on them.
    Although we have not said so as a court, I think the reality is that
    our court has an expansive view of ineffective assistance of counsel. See
    State v. Clay, 
    824 N.W.2d 488
    , 504 (Iowa 2012) (Mansfield, J.,
    concurring specially).     In some respects, we are using ineffective
    assistance as a substitute for a plain error rule, which we do not have in
    Iowa. See State v. Rutledge, 
    600 N.W.2d 324
    , 325 (Iowa 1999) (“We do
    not subscribe to the plain error rule in Iowa, have been persistent and
    resolute in rejecting it, and are not at all inclined to yield on the point.”).
    One of those areas is guilty pleas, where we vacate a plea whenever the
    record does not contain a factual basis for each element of the crime,
    seemingly without regard to counsel’s actual competence. See State v.
    Gines, 
    844 N.W.2d 437
    , 441 (Iowa 2014). In Gines, we said:
    Where a factual basis for a charge does not exist, and trial
    counsel allows the defendant to plead guilty anyway, counsel
    has failed to perform an essential duty. Prejudice is inherent
    in such a case. The only inquiry is whether the record
    shows a factual basis for the guilty plea.
    
    Id. (citation omitted)
    (internal quotation marks omitted).
    Thus, even as we use the terminology “ineffective assistance” as a
    tool to review criminal convictions, I think it is especially important that
    we not appear to be criticizing counsel when we are talking about a legal
    21
    construct of this court.   See 
    Clay, 824 N.W.2d at 504
    (Mansfield, J.,
    concurring specially) (objecting to any general suggestion that a criminal
    defense attorney who commits ineffective assistance by our standards
    has also committed an ethical violation). I join the majority opinion in
    this case, but I do so without finding fault in the performance of
    Rhoades’s defense counsel.
    Waterman, J., joins this special concurrence.
    22
    #12–0180, Rhoades v. State
    ZAGER, Justice (dissenting).
    I respectfully dissent. I disagree that counsel was ineffective for
    allowing Rhoades to plead guilty to the crime of criminal transmission of
    the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), as I would find that there is a
    factual basis to support the plea.
    To establish a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel, we have
    said “a claimant must demonstrate ‘(1) his trial counsel failed to perform
    an essential duty, and (2) this failure resulted in prejudice.’ ” Lado v.
    State, 
    804 N.W.2d 248
    , 251 (Iowa 2011) (quoting State v. Straw, 
    709 N.W.2d 128
    , 133 (Iowa 2006)).        We have also explained that, when
    assessing whether counsel breached an essential duty, “counsel’s
    performance is measured against the standard of a                reasonably
    competent practitioner with the presumption that the attorney performed
    his duties in a competent manner.” State v. Begey, 
    672 N.W.2d 747
    , 749
    (Iowa 2003).   This rule is distilled from a thoughtful discussion of the
    importance of judicial restraint in ineffective-assistance-of-counsel cases.
    See Strickland v. Washington, 
    466 U.S. 668
    , 689–90, 
    104 S. Ct. 2052
    ,
    2065–66, 
    80 L. Ed. 2d 674
    , 694–95 (1984). By looking to the rule and
    overlooking the broader discussion, I believe we miss valuable insights
    that inform this case.
    Against the backdrop of ensuring criminal defendants receive fair
    trials, the Supreme Court cautioned that
    [j]udicial scrutiny of counsel’s performance must be highly
    deferential [because] [i]t is all too tempting for a defendant to
    second-guess counsel’s assistance after conviction or
    adverse sentence, and it is all too easy for a court, examining
    counsel’s defense after it has proved unsuccessful, to
    conclude that a particular act or omission of counsel was
    unreasonable.
    23
    
    Id. at 689,
    104 S. Ct. at 
    2065, 80 L. Ed. 2d at 694
    . Because Rhoades
    pled guilty, we are not here examining the defense attorney’s trial
    strategy, but the need for deference remains all the same.       See Hill v.
    Lockhart, 
    474 U.S. 52
    , 58, 
    106 S. Ct. 366
    , 370, 
    88 L. Ed. 2d
    . 203, 210
    (1985) (holding “that the two-part Strickland v. Washington test applies to
    challenges to guilty pleas based on ineffective assistance of counsel”).
    Whether a criminal case is resolved by a plea or by a trial, counsel’s
    decision to pursue one strategy at the expense of another does not mean
    counsel has done something unreasonable. “There are countless ways to
    provide effective assistance in any given case.” Strickland, 466 U.S. at
    
    689, 104 S. Ct. at 2065
    , 80 L. Ed. 2d at 695.
    This court benefits from the aggregated intellects of its members, a
    record developed in a postconviction relief proceeding, and time. Above
    all, we can authoritatively interpret the law. It is easy to see that with
    greater time and resources, this court could devise a different, perhaps
    better, defense strategy in nearly every criminal case. Likewise, in the
    context of a guilty plea, we have the benefit of being able to hypothesize a
    different fact investigation, test different potential outcomes, and debate
    different legal analyses under alternative constructions of the relevant
    legal standards. We can then look back and try to reconstruct what was
    going on in the mind of the attorney when he was advising his client to
    consider entering into a guilty plea and what the defendant was
    considering when making the ultimate decision to enter a plea of guilty to
    the criminal charge.
    But, comparing actual counsel’s performance, given the realities of
    criminal defense practice, to imagined counsel’s performance under
    abstract, sterile conditions is not our task.      “A fair assessment of
    attorney performance requires that every effort be made to eliminate the
    24
    distorting effects of hindsight, to reconstruct the circumstances of
    counsel’s challenged conduct, and to evaluate the conduct from
    counsel’s perspective at the time.”   
    Id. at 689,
    104 S. Ct. at 
    2065, 80 L. Ed. 2d at 694
    . Therefore, “a court must indulge a strong presumption
    that counsel’s conduct falls within the wide range of reasonable
    professional assistance.” 
    Id. I believe
    the majority in this case forgets
    that admonition.
    In a manner not inconsistent with our caselaw, the majority bases
    its conclusion the guilty plea was not factually supported on the cold
    record developed at the guilty plea hearing, without regard to other
    considerations an attorney might have when evaluating a criminal case.
    See State v. Finney, 
    834 N.W.2d 46
    , 62 (Iowa 2013) (“Recourse to the
    entire record is appropriate because . . . the relevant inquiry for purposes
    of determining the Sixth Amendment claim presented by Finney does not
    involve an examination of his subjective state of mind at the time the
    trial court accepted the plea, but instead involves an examination of
    whether counsel performed poorly by allowing Finney to plead guilty to a
    crime for which there was no objective factual basis in the record.”); State
    v. Schminkey, 
    597 N.W.2d 785
    , 788 (Iowa 1999) (“In deciding whether a
    factual basis exists, we consider the entire record before the district
    court at the guilty plea hearing, including any statements made by the
    defendant, facts related by the prosecutor, the minutes of testimony, and
    the presentence report.”). In doing so, the majority implicitly perpetuates
    the view that considering an attorney’s “strategic reasons for permitting
    his [or her] client to plead guilty” would undermine “the public’s
    confidence in our criminal justice system.” State v. Hack, 
    545 N.W.2d 262
    , 263 (Iowa 1996). I disagree with that assertion in this case because
    it undervalues attorneys’ knowledge, skill, and experience.         It also
    25
    undervalues the client’s knowledge and judgment in evaluating the case
    and making an informed decision about whether to plead guilty.
    I do agree a guilty plea must be supported by a factual basis. No
    attorney should, for instance, allow his or her client to plead guilty to
    violating a statute that requires the victim to be “ ‘under the age of
    fourteen years,’ ” when the record clearly shows the victim was “fourteen
    years of age at the time of the incidents in question.” See 
    id. (quoting Iowa
    Code § 702.5 (1993) (emphasis added)).          No reason, strategic or
    otherwise, could account for allowing a plea under circumstances in
    which the record clearly discloses the deficiency.
    The majority finds counsel ineffective because there was not a
    sufficient factual basis to support Rhoades’s guilty plea.     According to
    the majority, the record contains insufficient facts to establish the
    element of intimate contact under Iowa Code section 709C.1 (2007).
    Proving this element requires that “(1) there was an intentional exposure
    of the body of one person to a bodily fluid of another person, and (2) this
    occurred in a manner that could result in the transmission of the HIV.”
    State v. Stevens, 
    719 N.W.2d 547
    , 550 (Iowa 2006). The majority finds
    no sufficient factual basis for satisfying either prong of this element. I
    believe this is wrong for several reasons.
    In reaching its conclusion, the majority devotes insufficient
    attention to the minimal evidence required to establish a sufficient
    factual basis for a guilty plea.     The majority acknowledges that in
    reviewing a plea for a factual basis the record need not “show the totality
    of evidence necessary to support a guilty conviction.” State v. Ortiz, 
    789 N.W.2d 761
    , 768 (Iowa 2010).       Rather, it is enough “ ‘that the facts
    support the crime.’ ” 
    Id. (quoting State
    v. Keene, 
    630 N.W.2d 579
    , 581
    (Iowa 2001)). What exactly this means is unclear, but we have at least
    26
    made clear the facts contained in the record do “ ‘not necessarily’ ” have
    to show “ ‘the defendant is guilty.’ ” 
    Keene, 630 N.W.2d at 581
    (quoting
    1A Charles Alan Wright, Federal Practice & Procedure § 174, at 199
    (1999)).
    The record plainly discloses that A.P. performed unprotected oral
    sex on Rhoades, and the two engaged in protected anal sex where the
    condom may have failed. The plea colloquy also reveals that Rhoades
    admitted on the record that he had intimate contact with the victim.5
    The majority dismisses these facts as insufficient to satisfy the two
    subelements of intimate contact, however, because neither the court nor
    counsel expanded on the facts on the record with evidence that Rhoades
    admitted he intentionally exposed the victim to bodily fluid or that the
    exposure occurred in a manner that could result in the transmission of
    HIV. I believe the acknowledgement by Rhoades that he had unprotected
    oral sex with the victim and his admission of intimate contact with the
    victim, combined with reasonable inferences based on common sense,
    provides a sufficient factual basis to support the guilty plea.
    Had this case gone to a jury trial, jurors would have been
    instructed to “consider the evidence using [their] observations, common
    sense, and experience.”          Iowa State Bar Ass’n, Iowa Criminal Jury
    Instruction 100.7. It would be reasonable then for a defense attorney, in
    considering whether to advise his or her client to accept a guilty plea, to
    reflect on how a jury would likely use the fact A.P. performed
    unprotected oral sex on Rhoades, that there was a possibility of failed
    5THE   COURT: And did you engage in intimate contact with another person?
    THE DEFENDANT: Yes, sir.
    Query: Would the majority have found a factual basis for the plea if the court
    had said “intimate contact as defined by the Code?”
    27
    protection during anal sex, and that Rhoades later apologized to the
    victim.   Having so reflected, a seasoned lawyer might have reasonably
    concluded jurors would use their common sense and experience to infer
    a fluid exchange or intentional exposure from the unprotected oral sex;
    thus, the attorney could have reasonably concluded a jury was likely to
    convict Rhoades.
    Considering the high likelihood of a guilty verdict based on these
    facts, counsel might reasonably advise his client to plead guilty, allow his
    client to plead guilty, and not find it necessary to supplement the record
    with additional, specific facts regarding the intimate contact.     While I
    agree that the ultimate fact of fluid exchange or intentional exposure is
    disputed in the record, this is not necessarily fatal because counsel, like
    jurors, should be able to draw inferences from the evidence in the record
    before them. Cf. United States v. Heid, 
    651 F.3d 850
    , 856 (8th Cir. 2011)
    (concluding conduct of alleged coconspirators “does not permit an
    inference” the coconspirators knew the purpose for which money was to
    be used and thus holding there was an insufficient factual basis for a
    guilty plea); United States v. Cheney, 
    571 F.3d 764
    , 769 (8th Cir. 2009)
    (finding a sufficient factual basis for a guilty plea after drawing an
    inference from facts contained in the record).      In other words, if lay
    jurors can draw inferences from the facts in reaching a guilty verdict
    beyond a reasonable doubt, then a trained attorney should be permitted
    to do so in relying on a lesser burden of proof. The majority does not
    explain how the absence from the record of such readily inferable facts
    overcomes    the   “strong   presumption”    counsel    provided   effective
    assistance of counsel.   See Strickland, 466 U.S. at 
    689, 104 S. Ct. at 2065
    , 80 L. Ed. 2d at 694.
    28
    However, I am not suggesting such inferences were even necessary
    in this case. In demanding the record disclose a fluid exchange or an
    intentional exposure of Rhoades’s bodily fluid to A.P., the majority seems
    to ignore that counsel’s assessment of the factual sufficiency of the plea
    would have been made in light of Iowa Code section 709C.1 as it had
    been interpreted “as of the time of counsel’s conduct.” 
    Strickland, 466 U.S. at 690
    , 104 S. Ct. at 
    2066, 80 L. Ed. 2d at 695
    .         In Keene, a
    published opinion available at the time of Rhoades’s guilty plea, the
    defendant admitted engaging in unprotected sexual intercourse while
    knowingly infected with HIV. 
    See 629 N.W.2d at 366
    . The defendant
    pled guilty, then challenged the criminal-transmission statute as
    unconstitutionally   vague   and   challenged    his   plea   as   factually
    insufficient. See 
    id. at 363.
    The defendant argued he did not intend to
    expose his victim to HIV because during their sexual encounter he either
    did not ejaculate or did so outside of his victim’s body. See 
    id. at 366.
    We rejected this argument, calling it “irrelevant” for purposes of the
    constitutional challenge and the factual-basis challenge.     See 
    id. (“We conclude
    our above analysis concerning the vagueness argument applies
    with equal force to Keene’s factual basis claim.”); see also State v.
    Musser, 
    721 N.W.2d 758
    , 761 (Iowa 2006) (crediting witness’s testimony
    stating that “it is possible to transmit HIV during intercourse even when
    the man does not ejaculate”).       We found Keene’s lawyer was not
    ineffective. 
    Keene, 629 N.W.2d at 367
    .
    Thus, at the time when counsel was representing Rhoades, the
    factual basis for a guilty plea under Iowa Code section 709C.1 could be
    established without any showing of fluid exchange or intentional
    exposure of fluid. Even being mindful of the limitations of this record, it
    does show A.P. performed unprotected oral sex on Rhoades.            Under
    29
    Keene, that was enough. That the record developed at Rhoades’s guilty
    plea in 2008 did not contain evidence of Rhoades’s ejaculation is, using
    this court’s word, “irrelevant.” 
    Id. at 366.
    To now hold otherwise is to
    ignore not only the presumption of professional competence to which
    counsel is entitled, but also our own precedent.
    The fact of the unprotected oral sex is also sufficient to establish
    the intentional exposure “occurred in a manner that could result in the
    transmission of the HIV,” the second element of intimate contact.
    
    Stevens, 719 N.W.2d at 550
    .      The majority discusses taking judicial
    notice of the fact that HIV can be transmitted through semen. We took
    judicial notice of that fact in Keene, the majority notes, but the majority
    declines to do so in this case. See 
    Keene, 629 N.W.2d at 365
    .
    Taking judicial notice of the fact is, however, unnecessary under
    Stevens, which followed Keene and was also a published opinion at the
    time of Rhoades’s 2008 guilty plea. In Stevens, a jury convicted the HIV-
    positive, oral-sex-recipient defendant under Iowa Code section 709C.1.
    
    See 719 N.W.2d at 548
    . The defendant appealed, arguing that judicial
    notice could not be taken of the transmissibility of HIV through semen in
    his case because, unlike the defendant in Keene, he had not pled guilty.
    See 
    id. at 550.
    Because Keene did not apply, the defendant argued, the
    State was required to present evidence on the intimate-contact element.
    See 
    id. The State
    countered, arguing that Keene’s significance was not
    that the court had taken judicial notice, per se, but that taking judicial
    notice of a fact recognizes that “the jury can be assumed to have the
    knowledge, common sense, and collective intelligence to know that oral
    sex resulting in ejaculation could result in the transmission of the HIV.”
    See 
    id. 30 We
    agreed with the State’s argument. See 
    id. By taking
    judicial
    notice, we explained, Keene recognized “what is clearly common
    knowledge in today’s society.” 
    Id. at 551.
    Noting Keene was a case about
    sexual intercourse, and not specifically oral sexual intercourse, we went
    on to explain that “oral sex is a well-recognized means of transmission of
    the HIV.”   See 
    id. Stevens thus
    holds “that oral sex is a manner of
    transmission of the HIV.” 
    Id. at 552.
    One might argue that Stevens is distinguishable because in that
    case ejaculation undisputedly occurred, and here it did not. I believe the
    fact of ejaculation in Stevens must be disregarded, however, in order to
    reconcile Stevens with our earlier statement in Keene that the fact of
    ejaculation was irrelevant under the statute. Under this view, the fact of
    unprotected oral sex is sufficient to satisfy the second prong of the
    intimate-contact element. Of course in retrospect, one might disagree.
    But, this was the status of our law in 2008 when Rhodes entered his plea
    after consultation with counsel.     The susceptibility of these cases to
    different interpretations six years later demonstrates the need for the
    presumption counsel’s assistance was effective.      In no event should
    ambiguity in statutes or our caselaw serve as the foundation for now
    holding counsel’s assistance ineffective.
    Supposed ambiguity in the statute and caselaw provides the
    foundation for the most glaring flaw in the majority’s reasoning.      In
    Keene, we defined the word “could” in Iowa Code section 709C.1 to mean
    “that transmission of the HIV from the infected person to the exposed
    person was possible considering the 
    circumstances.” 629 N.W.2d at 365
    .
    According to the majority, we have never defined “possible.” The majority
    then considers potential meanings of the word, concluding possible
    31
    means “reasonably possible,” which the majority explains “considers the
    reality of a thing occurring, rather than a theoretical chance.”
    The majority concludes we have never defined “possible” under this
    statute by extracting the definition of “could” from its context in Keene.
    But, considering the definition of “could” in that context leads to a
    different conclusion about the meaning of possible. We said:
    In enacting this statute, the legislature did not intend “could
    result” to mean “did result.” See [Iowa Code] § 709C.1(4).
    Furthermore, “could” is the past tense of “can,” which is
    defined as “[u]sed to indicate possibility or probability.” The
    American Heritage Dictionary 232, 330 (2d college ed. 1985).
    Thus, for a person to be guilty of violating section 709C.1, it
    must simply be shown that transmission of the HIV from the
    infected person to the exposed person was possible
    considering the circumstances.
    
    Id. (first emphasis
    added).       We expressly considered a definition of
    “could” that incorporated a sense of probability, and we rejected it. See
    
    id. The most
    reasonable conclusion to draw from this rejection is that
    this   court   believed   the   legislature   intended   “possible”   to    mean
    “theoretically possible,” not probable or “reasonably possible.”           If that
    implication was not enough, we emphasized “possible” when defining
    could, making all the more clear it meant only possible, not probable.
    See 
    id. The majority
    simply ignores this context. Having done so, the
    majority holds an attorney must ensure a guilty plea factually supports
    not only the law as this court has interpreted it, but also the law as this
    court might one day interpret it (or reinterpret it).
    There is no way to reconcile the majority’s conclusion. The strong
    presumption in favor of an attorney’s effective assistance of counsel and
    the need to suppress hindsight’s temptation in favor of an analysis that
    takes account of the law and the facts as they were at the time of the
    conduct under review are the hallmark of ineffective-assistance-of-
    32
    counsel analysis.        In 2008, when counsel examined the record to
    determine whether the facts met the elements of the criminal-
    transmission statute, he could have reasonably concluded the guilty plea
    was factually supported according to the law as it was then.              All the
    necessary      facts   are   in   the   record,   notwithstanding   the   record’s
    limitations.
    Finally, I think we need to keep in mind the underlying purpose of
    the statute. As testified to by Dr. Meier at the postconviction trial, Iowa
    Code section 709C.1 is really a disclosure statute. That is, the crime is
    committed when a person knows he or she is infected with HIV. He or
    she needs to disclose this fact to the potential sexual partner before
    engaging in intimate contact with that person. As the statute provides, if
    he or she discloses their HIV status and the partner engages in intimate
    contact consensually, there is no crime.             See Iowa Code § 709C.1(5)
    (providing an affirmative defense).            In the months leading up to the
    criminal offense, and in the subsequent months prior to Rhoades’s
    decision to plead guilty, we cannot forget it is Rhoades who had all of the
    relevant facts. Rhoades had all of the medical information regarding his
    HIV status and his viral load. Rhoades knew whether he should engage
    in intimate contact, whether this intimate contact needed to be protected
    or unprotected, the reasons he believed the intimate contact did or did
    not need to be protected, and whether there was a possibility that the
    HIV could be transmitted. Nevertheless, Rhoades listed his HIV status
    on his online dating profile as negative and told A.P. he was “clean”
    before the two engaged in the intimate contact.              After these initial
    denials, Rhoades finally admitted to A.P. two weeks later in a recorded
    phone call that he was HIV positive.
    33
    In this case, there is no question that the record, when viewed as a
    whole and allowing all reasonable inferences, provides an ample factual
    basis for the guilty plea. Rhoades was fully advised and knowledgeable
    of the elements of the crime, including the need for intimate contact as
    defined in the statute. He admitted this on the record. Counsel was also
    fully knowledgeable of the elements of the crime as well. I would not find
    that counsel was ineffective for allowing Rhoades to plead guilty to the
    charge without a further development of the facts during the plea
    colloquy.
    We once assured attorneys that they need not “know what the law
    will become in the future to provide effective assistance of counsel.”
    Snethen v. State, 
    308 N.W.2d 11
    , 16 (Iowa 1981).           They could, we
    reassured them, provide effective assistance of counsel by standing on
    “established rules of law.”   State v. Schoelerman, 
    315 N.W.2d 67
    , 72
    (Iowa 1982).    Today’s decision must leave counsel with the distinct
    feeling of having a rug yanked out from under him.
    I would affirm the decision of the district court.