Bates v. State

258 P.3d 851, 2011 Alas. App. LEXIS 48, 2011 WL 2177298
CourtCourt of Appeals of Alaska
DecidedJune 3, 2011
DocketA-10350
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 258 P.3d 851 (Bates v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Alaska primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bates v. State, 258 P.3d 851, 2011 Alas. App. LEXIS 48, 2011 WL 2177298 (Ala. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

OPINION

MANNHEIMER, Judge.

Earl Cornelius Bates broke into the residence where his former girlfriend, Jessie Quilette, was living. Bates attacked Ouilette, and he also attacked Frank Iyatunguk (the primary renter of the residence) and Alfred Braun (a friend of Iyatunguk's). Based on this incident, Bates was convicted of attempted murder for his attack on Oullette. Bates was also convicted of third-degree assault for his attack on Iyatunguk and fourth-degree assault for his attack on Braun.

At Bates's trial, the prosecutor was allowed to introduce evidence of a prior assault that Bates committed against Oullette, as well as evidence of prior assaults that Bates committed against a former girlfriend and her son. This evidence was admitted under the authority of Alaska Evidence Rule 404(b)(4); this rule states that when a defendant is tried for "a crime involving domestic violence", the government may offer evidence of the defendant's other crimes of domestic violence, whether against the same victim or against other persons.

Evidence Rule 404(b)(4) expressly incorporates the definition of "crime involving domestic violence" that is codified in AS 18.66.990.. Under AS 18.66.990(8), the phrase "erime involving domestic violence" includes any crime against the person codified in chapter 41 of Title 11 of the Alaska Statutes (crimes such as attempted murder and assault in any degree) if the crime was committed "by [one] household member against another household member".

In this appeal, Bates argues that the definition of "household member" is unconstitutionally vague-and that, because Evidence Rule 404(b)(4) incorporates this definition, Evidence Rule 404(b)(4) is likewise unconstitutional.

*855 As we explain in this opinion, we conclude that, under the facts of Bates's case, the definition of "household member" is not im-permissibly vague. We therefore uphold the application of Evidence Rule 404(b)(4) in Bates's case.

Bates also challenges the trial judge's decision to allow the prosecutor to introduce the audio recording of a 911 call that was made from the Iyatunguk residence while Bates was there. The prosecutor argued that Bates could be heard speaking to the 911 dispatcher, and that Bates's words were evi-denee of his state of mind and his intentions when he attacked Ouilette and Iyatunguk. Bates opposed the admission of this evidence on the ground that the prosecution failed to offer any witness who would expressly identify the voice on the 911 recording as Bates's voice.

As we explain in this opinion, the law does not require the proponent of such evidence to produce a witness who can affirmatively identify the voice(s) heard in the recording. Rather, the identification of the voice(s) can rest on cireumstantial evidence. In Bates's case, the cireumstantial evidence was sufficient to support a reasonable inference that Bates was the man speaking to the 911 dispatcher. Accordingly, the trial judge could properly allow the prosecution to play the recording for the jury.

Finally, Bates challenges the sentencing judge's decision to make Bates ineligible for discretionary parole until he has served 20 years of his 38-year composite sentence.

Bates received 80 years to serve for the attempted murder, plus consecutive sentences of 2 years and 1 year to serve for the third- and fourth-degree assaults. He normally would be eligible to apply for discretionary parole after serving 10% years of this composite sentence. See AS 88.16.090(b)(1) and (b)(7).

We agree with Bates that the superior court failed to make sufficient findings to justify this restriction on Bates's parole eligibility. We therefore direct the superior court to reconsider this aspect of Bates's sentence.

Why we conclude that the definition of "household member" is sufficiently defi-mite to be constitutionally applied to the facts of Bates's case

As we described earlier, the trial judge allowed the prosecutor to introduce evidence of a prior assault that Bates committed against Oullette, as well as evidence of prior assaults that Bates committed against a former girlfriend and her son. This evidence was admitted under Alaska Evidence Rule 404(b)(4), which applies when a defendant is on trial for a "crime involving domestic violence". Under this rule, the government may offer evidence of the defendant's other crimes of domestic violence (whether against the same victim or against other persons).

Evidence Rule 404(b)(4) incorporates the definition of "crime involving domestic violence" that is codified in AS 18.66.990. Under AS 18.66.990(8), a "crime involving domestic violence" includes any assaultive crime codified in AS 11.41-erimes such as attempted murder and assault in any degree-if the crime was committed "by [one] household member against another household member".

As this Court noted in Bingaman v. State, 76 P.3d 398, 407 (Alaska App.2008), even though the phrase "domestic violence" is normally understood to mean an assault committed by one domestic partner against another, AS 18.66.990 defines the phrase "domestic violence" in a "special and wide-ranging way, quite divorced from its everyday meaning." One of the main reasons why Alaska's definition of "domestic violence" is so wide-ranging is that the legislature has defined the term "household member" in a broad, non-standard way.

When AS 18.66.990(8) speaks of "domestic violence" as a crime committed "by [one] household member against another", one might assume that this phrase refers to crimes in which the perpetrator and the vie-tim share the same household. But AS 18.66.990(5) defines "household member" much more broadly:

(5) "household member" includes
(A) adults or minors who are current or former spouses;
*856 (B) adults or minors who live together or who have lived together;
(C) adults or minors who are dating or who have dated;
(D) adults or minors who are engaged in or who have engaged in a sexual relationship;
(E) adults or minors who are related to each other up to the fourth degree of consanguinity, whether of the whole or half blood or by adoption, computed under the rules of civil law;
(F) adults or minors who are related or formerly related by marriage;
((G) persons who have a child of the relationship; and
(H) minor children of a person in a relationship that is described in (A)-(G) of this paragraph[.]

Now that we have described the pertinent statutory law, we will describe Bates's attack on the constitutionality of this law.

(a) Bates's argument that the definitions of "dating" and "sexual relationship" are unconstitutionally vague

When the prosecutor at Bates's trial announced his intention to offer evidence of Bates's prior assaults under Evidence Rule 404(b)(4), Bates raised a constitutional challenge to Rule 404(b)(4).

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Bluebook (online)
258 P.3d 851, 2011 Alas. App. LEXIS 48, 2011 WL 2177298, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bates-v-state-alaskactapp-2011.