Powerful Iowa judge charged with OWI after witnesses say she drove wrong
way on highway
[November 06, 2025]
By RYAN J. FOLEY
IOWA CITY, Iowa (AP) — A powerful Iowa judge has been charged with
operating a vehicle while intoxicated after witnesses say she drove the
wrong way on a highway Tuesday night while passed out behind the wheel.
Adria Kester, chief judge of the state’s Second Judicial District, was
released from the Boone County Jail on Wednesday morning, court records
show.
A criminal complaint said motorists called 911 after 8 p.m. on Tuesday
night to report a truck slowly driving eastbound in the westbound lanes
on U.S. Highway 30 near Boone. One of the witnesses reported the driver
looked unconscious and slumped over the steering wheel, and drove into
the highway median.
The complaint said a witness got out of their vehicle to check on the
driver but could not open the door, and the vehicle was still slowly
moving in the median. The witness told police she had to climb in the
back window to put the 2026 GMC Canyon Denali truck in park and shut it
off.
A deputy with the Boone County sheriff’s office said he found Kester in
the driver’s seat appearing to be heavily intoxicated and unsteady. He
wrote that Kester, 55, of nearby Ogden, could not walk on her own and
was assisted to an ambulance for treatment.
After she was cleared by medical services, Kester still could not walk
and refused to answer whether she would be willing to undergo field
sobriety testing, according to the complaint. The deputy wrote in the
complaint that he also determined it would not be safe to conduct those
tests given her condition.

A warrant was issued to obtain a sample of Kester’s blood at the Boone
County Hospital. She was arrested for first offense operating while
intoxicated and booked into jail around 4 a.m.
County Sheriff Andy Godzicki said the blood specimen would be shipped to
a state crime laboratory for testing. He said he was glad that no one
was injured in the incident.
“This is a tough situation for both the Kester family and the sheriff's
office,” he said, adding that he had instructed his staff to treat the
judge the same as any other suspect.
Kester pleaded not guilty in a court filing submitted Wednesday
afternoon by her attorney, Matt Lindholm, who is considered one of the
state's top lawyers for defending against drunk driving charges.
“Judge Kester recognizes the seriousness of the situation and is fully
cooperating with law enforcement and the judicial process,” Lindholm
said in a statement. “She is committed to addressing this matter
responsibly and in accordance with the law.”
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This booking photo provided by the Boone County Sheriff's Office
shows Adria Kester, chief judge of the state’s Second Judicial
District, on Wednesday, Nov. 5, 2025, at the Boone County Jail in
Boone, Iowa, after her arrest on a charge of operating while
intoxicated. (Boone County Sheriff's Office via AP)

Steve Davis, a spokesperson for the Iowa Judicial Branch, said the
court system was aware of Kester's arrest but could not comment
since it was “a pending case and a personnel matter.” He said the
seven-member Judicial Qualifications Commission investigates
allegations of misconduct by Iowa judges, and can recommend the
retirement, discipline or removal of a judicial officer to the Iowa
Supreme Court.
A judge ordered Kester released without bond after an initial court
appearance Wednesday morning. The judge also ordered her to submit
to a substance abuse evaluation and follow any recommendations for
treatment in the next 30 days.
Iowa Chief Justice Susan Christensen appointed Kester chief judge in
the district, which includes 22 counties in northern and central
Iowa and is the largest geographically in the state, in December
2022. In that role, Kester supervises hundreds of judges and court
employees in the district and presides over cases.
Kester had been appointed as a district judge by Gov. Kim Reynolds
in 2017 after serving as a prosecutor and criminal defense lawyer.
Kester’s judicial position quickly complicated the criminal
proceedings against her.
One district associate judge recused herself from the case Wednesday
due to her “professional relationship” with Kester. Christensen
later signed an order requiring that a judge from another district
be appointed to handle the case. Judge Gregory Brandt was later
designated.
The Boone County Attorney’s Office also cited a conflict in asking
the court to appoint the Polk County Attorney’s Office as a special
prosecutor.
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