A.P.S. v. State of Alabama

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Alabama
DecidedDecember 16, 2022
DocketCR-21-0024
StatusPublished

This text of A.P.S. v. State of Alabama (A.P.S. v. State of Alabama) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal Appeals of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
A.P.S. v. State of Alabama, (Ala. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

Rel: December 16, 2022

Notice: This opinion is subject to formal revision before publication in the advance sheets of Southern Reporter. Readers are requested to notify the Reporter of Decisions, Alabama Appellate Courts, 300 Dexter Avenue, Montgomery, Alabama 36104-3741 ((334) 229-0649), of any typographical or other errors, in order that corrections may be made before the opinion is published in Southern Reporter.

Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals OCTOBER TERM, 2022-2023 _________________________

CR-21-0024 _________________________

A.P.S.

v.

State of Alabama

Appeal from Blount Juvenile Court (JU-18-7.01)

On Application for Rehearing

McCOOL, Judge.

This Court's opinion issued on August 5, 2022, is withdrawn, and

the following opinion is substituted therefor.

A.P.S. appeals an order of the Blount Juvenile Court transferring

him to the Blount Circuit Court for prosecution as an adult on a charge CR-21-0024

of capital murder. For the reasons set forth herein, we reverse the

transfer order and remand the case for further proceedings.

Facts and Procedural History

Around midnight on December 15, 2017, Ricardo Santiago Gonzalez

and Adalberta Chavez Ruiz were murdered in their residence; the

murder weapon was a handgun. In January 2018, Gonzalez and Ruiz's

17-year-old son Leo Chavez was charged with capital murder in

connection with his parents' deaths. 1 In a delinquency petition filed that

same month, A.P.S., who was 14 years old when the murders occurred,

was also charged with capital murder. The State subsequently filed a

motion to transfer A.P.S. to the circuit court for prosecution as an adult.

See § 12-15-203(a), Ala. Code 1975. Before the transfer hearing occurred,

Chavez was convicted of capital murder and was sentenced to life

imprisonment without the possibility of parole.

As with all transfer hearings, the transfer hearing in this case

consisted of two phases: (1) a probable-cause phase, during which the

1"This Court may take judicial notice of its own records." Doster v. State, [Ms. CR-20-0300, December 17, 2021] ___ So. 3d ___, ___ n.1 (Ala. Crim. App. 2021).

2 CR-21-0024

juvenile court was required to determine "whether there is probable

cause to believe that [A.P.S.] committed the alleged crime," and (2) a

dispositional phase, during which the juvenile court was required to

determine "whether it is in the best interest of [A.P.S.] or the public to

transfer [A.P.S.] to the circuit court to stand trial as an adult." J.S.A. v.

State, 615 So. 2d 1288, 1290 (Ala. Crim. App. 1993). The State's only

witness at the probable-cause phase of the transfer hearing was

Investigator Leonard Chambless of the Blount County Sheriff's

Department, whose testimony provided the following facts.

On December 17, 2017, Inv. Chambless responded to Gonzalez and

Ruiz's residence because members of Ruiz's family had found blood in the

residence and had filed a missing-persons report. Upon entering the

residence, Inv. Chambless found "a blood-soaked couch," "a chunk of hair

and scalp on the top of the stove," and "bags of bloody rags and a bloody

mop." (R. 27-28.) Neither Gonzalez nor Ruiz was in the residence, and

two vehicles – a Chevrolet S-10 truck and a Cadillac Escalade sport-

utility vehicle – were missing from the property.

Two days later, law enforcement officers in Chattanooga,

Tennessee, stopped Chavez while he was driving the Escalade and took

3 CR-21-0024

him into custody, and the officers subsequently found the S-10 truck,

which was also in Tennessee. After obtaining a search warrant, Inv.

Chambless searched both vehicles and found blood in the bed of the S-10

truck and various receipts in both the truck and the Escalade;

Chattanooga law enforcement officers also found two handguns in the

Escalade when they arrested Chavez. However, according to Inv.

Chambless, at the time of the transfer hearing it was "undetermined"

whether either of those handguns had been used to murder Gonzalez and

Ruiz. (R. 94.)

Based on the receipts he found in the vehicles, Inv. Chambless

obtained surveillance videos from a Mapco gasoline service station in

Collinsville and a Cricket brand cellular-telephone store in Oneonta. The

surveillance video from the Mapco service station reflects that, at some

unspecified time on the morning of December 16, 2017 – after Gonzalez

and Ruiz had been murdered – both the S-10 truck and the Escalade were

at the service station, and A.P.S. can be seen on that video. (R. 37.) The

surveillance video from the Cricket store reflects that Chavez, A.P.S., and

Jose Villanueva were in the store on the morning of December 17, 2017,

and that Chavez made a purchase with his father's credit card. (R. 38-

4 CR-21-0024

40.) However, the receipt for that purchase indicated that the purchase

occurred on December 16, 2017, at 7:24 p.m. (R. 43-44.) No explanation

was provided for the discrepancy between the time stamp on the

surveillance video and the time stamp on the receipt.

As part of his investigation, Inv. Chambless spoke with Jose

Valadez, and the State asked Inv. Chambless to testify to the substance

of Valadez's out-of-court statement. A.P.S. objected to the admission of

Valadez's statement on the grounds that the statement was hearsay and

that the admission of the statement would violate his right to confront

the witnesses against him. The juvenile court overruled that objection,

and Inv. Chambless testified as follows regarding Valadez's statement:

"[Valadez] said he went to Villanueva's house and picked up Villanueva and [A.P.S.] on or about the 15th of December. They went to [Chavez's] house sometime around midnight-ish. When they got to [Chavez's] house, [Valadez] stayed in the car. [A.P.S.] and Villanueva exited the vehicle and went in the house. [Valadez] heard gunshots. Then they came and got him and brought him into the house at which point he saw [Chavez's] mom and dad dead in the house. Dad was on the couch and mom on the floor. They cleaned up as best they could. They put the two bodies in a white S-10 pickup, took them out and buried them."2

2InFebruary 2022, Valadez pleaded guilty to abuse of a corpse and was sentenced to 10 years' imprisonment. (Supp. C. 6.)

5 CR-21-0024

(R. 85.) On cross-examination, Inv. Chambless testified that A.P.S.'s

DNA was not on either of the handguns found in the Escalade and that

there was no physical evidence that connected A.P.S. to the murders of

Gonzalez and Ruiz. (R. 91, 95.)

Following Inv. Chambless's testimony, the juvenile court conducted

the dispositional phase of the transfer hearing and, following that phase,

took the matter under advisement. In an order issued on October 1, 2021,

the juvenile court found that there was probable cause to believe A.P.S.

had committed capital murder and transferred him to the circuit court

for prosecution as an adult. A.P.S. filed a timely notice of appeal.

Discussion

On appeal, A.P.S. claims that the juvenile court's transfer order

must be reversed because, he says, the court erred by allowing Inv.

Chambless to testify to the substance of Valadez's out-of-court statement.

In support of that claim, A.P.S.

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