Cogdill v. State

101 P.3d 632, 2004 Alas. App. LEXIS 211, 2004 WL 2650290
CourtCourt of Appeals of Alaska
DecidedNovember 19, 2004
DocketNo. A-8541
StatusPublished

This text of 101 P.3d 632 (Cogdill 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
Cogdill v. State, 101 P.3d 632, 2004 Alas. App. LEXIS 211, 2004 WL 2650290 (Ala. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

OPINION

MANNHEIMER, Judge.

Jerry Dwight Cogdill appeals his convietion for bootlegging-selling aleoholic beverages without a license-in a "local option" [633]*633community (4.e., a community that has voted to restrict the sale and/or possession of alcoholic beverages under AS 0411491).1 Cog-dill claims that the superior court was obliged to dismiss the prosecution pursuant to Criminal Rule 48(c) because the district attorney's office refused to grant immunity to a potential witness who asserted her privilege against self-incrimination and declined to testify.

For the reasons explained here, we conclude that (1) this witness's testimony was not essential to a fair trial, and (2) the State had a good reason not to grant immunity to the witness. Accordingly, the superior court correctly refused to dismiss the case against Cogdill.

Underlying facts

Cogdill was a bootlegger who was caught in a "sting" operation. The police had information that Cogdill was selling aleoholic beverages, but the police were also told that Cogdill would not sell directly to prospective customers; instead, Cogdill insisted on selling the liquor only through a go-between, Eleanor Merly. For this reason, police informant Bertha Leavitt approached Merly. Leavitt asked Merly to obtain a bottle of liquor for her, and Merly (who was ignorant of the police investigation) agreed.

The police gave Leavitt a marked $100 bill to use as the purchase money. Then, under police surveillance, Leavitt took a cab to Cogdill's residence. When the cab arrived at Cogdill's residence, Leavitt handed the $100 bill to Merly. Merly went inside while Leav-itt waited in the cab. A little later, Merly emerged from the residence with a bottle of vodka; she gave this bottle to Leavitt.

Leavitt turned the bottle of vodka over to the police, and the police then obtained a search warrant for Cogdill's residence. During the ensuing search, the police found the marked $100 bill that Leavitt had given Merly, as well as other bottles of vodka. Under questioning by the police, Cogdill admitted that he had just sold a bottle of vodka to Merly. Based on this evidence, Cogdill was charged with felony bootlegging.

The controversy swrrounding Merly's proposed testimony

Merly was not charged with any crime, even though the evidence suggested that Merly potentially faced criminal liability for her role in this transaction.2

Prior to trial, a defense investigator interviewed Merly. During this interview, Merly denied that Cogdill had sold the bottle of vodka. Merly conceded that she had given Cogdill the $100 bill, but she asserted that she gave him this money in order to pay off a pre-existing debt. As to how Merly happened to leave Cogdill's residence carrying a bottle of vodka, Merly explained that Cogdill had agreed to loan her a bottle of vodka, with the understanding that she would replenish Cogdill's supply when she got her own next shipment of liquor.

(In other words, Merly asserted that she had embezzled Leavitt's money. Instead of using the $100 to purchase alcohol (the purpose for which Leavitt had entrusted the money to Merly), Merly used the money to pay off her own pre-existing debt to Cogdill. Then, in order to conceal this embezzlement from Leavitt, Merly borrowed a bottle of vodka from Cogdill and gave the bottle to Leavitt. Thus, according to Merly's description of these two transactions, she (Merly) was the person who ultimately was going to pay for 'the bottle of vodka that she delivered to Leavitt.)

Coigdill’s attorney wanted Merly to take the stand and give this account of events, but Merly invoked her privilege against self-incrimination.

Cogdill's attorney then suggested that, because Merly was unavailable as a witness, her statement was admissible under Evi-denee Rule 804(b)(8) as a statement against penal interest. But under Rule 804(b)8), when "a statement tending to [incriminate] the declarant [is] offered to exculpate the accused", the statement is not admissible "unless corroborating cireumstances clearly [634]*634indicate the trustworthiness of the statement". Superior Court Judge Michael I. Jeffery ruled that Merly's statement did not have sufficient guarantees of trustworthiness to satisfy Rule 804(b)(8). Cogdill does not challenge this ruling.

In a final attempt to have Merly's version of events presented to the jury, Cogdill's attorney argued that Merly's proposed testimony was essential to a fair trial, and that the State should therefore grant Merly immunity for her testimony. Relying on this Court's decision in State v. Echols3 (which we discuss at length later in this opinion), Cog-dill argued that if the State declined to immunize Merly, Judge Jeffery should exercise his authority under Alaska Criminal Rule 43(c) and dismiss the prosecution "in furtherance of justice".

Judge Jeffery concluded that Cogdill's case was materially different from the situation presented in Echols, and he therefore refused to order the State to immunize Merly or face dismissal of the indictment.

This is the ruling that Cogdill challenges on appeal. Cogdill argues that Judge Jeffery abused his discretion when he declined to dismiss the case after the State refused to grant immunity to Merly.

Why we affirm the superior court's ruling

In State v. Echols, this Court recognized that there are certain extreme cireumstances in which a trial judge can properly dismiss a criminal prosecution under Criminal Rule 43(c) if the State refuses to immunize a witness who has erucial exculpatory evidence to offer.4 However, Echols provides uncertain guidance concerning the precise circumstances that warrant this type of judicial intervention.

The lead opinion in Echols lists several factors that, in combination, were found to justify the trial judge's decision to dismiss the prosecution: (I) the State's evidence against the defendant was ambiguous and uncertain;5 (2) the witness who was claiming the Fifth Amendment privilege could be expected to provide critical testimony regarding the defendant's guilt or innocence;6 (3) the State had no significant reason for refusing to grant immunity to this witness;7 and (4) the State would still have been able to prosecute the witness, even if the witness received immunity.8

(This last factor deserves special attention. At the time Echols was decided, a witness's privilege against self-incrimination could be overridden by a grant of use immunity. See AS 12.55.101(a). Thus, even though the immunized witness would be protected from the government's later use of their testimony, and from the use of any information derived from that testimony, the government would still be able to prosecute the witness for crimes arising from the events described in the witness's testimony if the government's case was based on pre-existing or independently derived evidence.

Although AS 12.55.101(a) is still on the books, that use immunity statute has been superseded by the Alaska Supreme Court's decision in State v. Gonzales, 858 P.2d 526 (Alaska 1993).

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Related

State v. Burden
948 P.2d 991 (Court of Appeals of Alaska, 1997)
State v. Echols
793 P.2d 1066 (Court of Appeals of Alaska, 1990)
Blair v. State
42 P.3d 1152 (Court of Appeals of Alaska, 2002)

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Bluebook (online)
101 P.3d 632, 2004 Alas. App. LEXIS 211, 2004 WL 2650290, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cogdill-v-state-alaskactapp-2004.