Adonay Polanco Cabrera v. Commonwealth of Virginia

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedJuly 11, 2023
Docket1038224
StatusUnpublished

This text of Adonay Polanco Cabrera v. Commonwealth of Virginia (Adonay Polanco Cabrera v. Commonwealth of Virginia) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Adonay Polanco Cabrera v. Commonwealth of Virginia, (Va. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA UNPUBLISHED

Present: Judges Beales, O’Brien and Athey Argued at Fredericksburg, Virginia

ADONAY POLANCO CABRERA MEMORANDUM OPINION* BY v. Record No. 1038-22-4 JUDGE RANDOLPH A. BEALES JULY 11, 2023 COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF FAIRFAX COUNTY Penney S. Azcarate, Judge

(John W. Pickett; Pickett Law Group, PLLC, on brief), for appellant. Appellant submitting on brief.

Aaron J. Campbell, Assistant Attorney General (Jason S. Miyares, Attorney General, on brief), for appellee.

Following a jury trial, Adonay Polanco Cabrera was convicted of first-degree murder,

statutory burglary, and grand larceny.1 On appeal, Polanco Cabrera contends that the trial court

erred in admitting evidence that he fled to El Salvador following the murder and in admitting into

evidence autopsy and crime scene photos of the victim. He also contends that the trial court erred in

denying his motion to strike for failing to prove the offense date alleged in the indictment and in

denying his motion to strike based on the insufficiency of the evidence to convict him of murder.

I. BACKGROUND

“In accordance with familiar principles of appellate review, the facts will be stated in the

light most favorable to the Commonwealth, [as] the prevailing party at trial.” Scott v.

* This opinion is not designated for publication. See Code § 17.1-413(A). 1 On appeal, Polanco Cabrera does not challenge his convictions for statutory burglary or for grand larceny. Commonwealth, 292 Va. 380, 381 (2016). As the Supreme Court has stated, “This principle

requires us to ‘discard the evidence of the accused in conflict with that of the Commonwealth,

and regard as true all the credible evidence favorable to the Commonwealth and all fair

inferences to be drawn therefrom.’” Kelley v. Commonwealth, 289 Va. 463, 467-68 (2015)

(quoting Parks v. Commonwealth, 221 Va. 492, 498 (1980)).

In November 2016, Leif Erick Ohlsson and Polanco Cabrera were engaged in a romantic

relationship. In the afternoon of November 22, 2016, Ohlsson picked up Polanco Cabrera and

Polanco Cabrera’s roommate, Fredy Cisneros Agustin, from their apartment. They first drove to

a park and then went out to dinner. After dinner, they purchased beer and cocaine before

arriving at Ohlsson’s apartment around 11:00 p.m. that evening.

At Ohlsson’s apartment, Polanco Cabrera and Cisneros Agustin used cocaine, and all

three of them (including Ohlsson) listened to music and drank beer. Cisneros Agustin testified

that, when Polanco Cabrera finished the cocaine, Polanco Cabrera asked Ohlsson “for more

money to buy more cocaine” and for Ohlsson’s car. Ohlsson gave Polanco Cabrera money for

the cocaine but refused to let him use the car. According to Cisneros Agustin, Ohlsson’s refusal

to let Polanco Cabrera use the car made Polanco Cabrera angry, and Polanco Cabrera told

Cisneros Agustin, “I think I’m going to kill this old man.”

Soon thereafter, Cisneros Agustin went to use the bathroom. He testified that, while he

was in the bathroom, he heard Ohlsson yell, “No, Adonay, no, Adonay, please, no, please, no.”

When Cisneros Agustin exited the bathroom, he saw Ohlsson on the floor and Polanco Cabrera

using a shoelace to strangle Ohlsson. Polanco Cabrera had braced his foot against the back of

Ohlsson’s neck and was pulling the shoelace tight around his neck. Ohlsson’s face was purple,

and blood hemorrhaged from his mouth. When Cisneros Agustin asked Polanco Cabrera what

he had done, Polanco Cabrera responded, “I killed him.” Cisneros Agustin testified that

-2- Polanco Cabrera instructed him to drop a nearby marble bust onto Ohlsson’s body.

Cisneros Agustin complied, dropping the marble bust on Ohlsson’s head.

Cisneros Agustin testified that he and Polanco Cabrera then left Ohlsson’s apartment

around 12:00 a.m. or 12:30 a.m. on November 23, 2016. Before they left, they took a safe,

several paintings, and Ohlsson’s car keys.2 They then called Jose Perez Amaya and Gabriel

Coca, and the four of them went to a park and opened the stolen safe. The four men returned to

Polanco Cabrera’s apartment and divided the stolen items. Polanco Cabrera gave

Cisneros Agustin two watches that were taken from the safe. Then, around 5:00 a.m.,

Polanco Cabrera and his friends returned to Ohlsson’s apartment to steal a carpet and some more

paintings. Apartment security cameras recorded them entering the building and departing with

Ohlsson’s property.

The next day, November 24, 2016, Cisneros Agustin called the police to report Ohlsson’s

murder. Fairfax County police officers Brian McCarthy and Mario Colorado responded to the

call and spoke with Cisneros Agustin. Both officers testified that, during their initial interactions

with him, Cisneros Agustin “appeared intoxicated.” Cisneros Agustin handed over the watches

stolen from Ohlsson’s safe and told the officers that he had been drinking with friends two days

prior during which “a shoelace was used to kill the American.” Cisneros Agustin initially

claimed that they had “accidentally” killed the man after the man had made a derogatory

comment about Hispanics and that they left his body on a table. During a police interview with

Detective John Long, Cisneros Agustin explained that Polanco Cabrera had strangled Ohlsson

with a shoelace.

2 Security cameras recorded Polanco Cabrera and Cisneros Agustin leaving the apartment complex with the items they stole from Ohlsson’s apartment. -3- Based on the information provided by Cisneros Agustin, police searched both Ohlsson’s

apartment and the apartment that Cisneros Agustin shared with Polanco Cabrera. In Ohlsson’s

apartment, police found Ohlsson’s body covered by a bolt of fabric and lying face-down on the

floor in the hallway between the bathroom and the study. A marble bust lay beside Ohlsson’s

head. They also noticed that there were “some empty spots” on the wall “where perhaps picture

frames were missing.” When police searched Polanco Cabrera’s apartment, they found some of

the stolen picture frames and paintings in Polanco Cabrera’s sleeping area.

Police arrested Cisneros Agustin late on November 24, 2016. Perez Amaya and Coca

were also arrested around this time. Fairfax County police were unable to arrest Polanco Cabrera

because he fled to El Salvador shortly after the murder. On December 14, 2017, a grand jury

indicted Polanco Cabrera for the murder of Leif Erick Ohlsson “[o]n or about the 23rd day of

November, 2016,” for statutory burglary, and for grand larceny. In 2020, El Salvador extradited

Polanco Cabrera to the United States.

During an August 18, 2020 police interview, Polanco Cabrera admitted that he,

Cisneros Agustin, and Ohlsson were in Ohlsson’s apartment on the night of Ohlsson’s murder.

He also admitted that he participated in taking the safe and paintings from Ohlsson’s apartment,

that they took Ohlsson’s car, that they went to a park to try to open the safe, and that he got

scared so he fled to El Salvador. He denied killing Ohlsson, instead claiming that, on the night

of the incident, he received a phone call from Sandra Chavez and went out on the balcony to talk

to her. When he returned inside the apartment, he found Ohlsson dead on the floor. However, at

trial, Chavez testified that she did not remember speaking with Polanco Cabrera at all during the

month of November 2016.

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