Cortez v. State

105 A.3d 589, 220 Md. App. 688, 2014 Md. App. LEXIS 156
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedDecember 18, 2014
Docket1952/13
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 105 A.3d 589 (Cortez v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Special Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cortez v. State, 105 A.3d 589, 220 Md. App. 688, 2014 Md. App. LEXIS 156 (Md. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

PAUL E. ALPERT (Retired, Specially Assigned), J.

Andres Cortez, appellant, was convicted by a jury sitting in the Circuit Court for Montgomery County of two counts of third-degree sexual offense and one count each of conspiracy *690 to commit a sexual offense in the third-degree, second-degree assault, and participation in a criminal gang. 1 Appellant raises one question on appeal: Did the trial court err in denying appellant’s motion to sever his participation in a criminal gang charge from his four other charges? For the reasons that follow, we shall affirm the judgments.

FACTS

The State’s theory of prosecution was that at a party on October 4, 2012, appellant videotaped a sexual assault of the victim by members of the “Little R” gang. The victim, one of the men at the party, and several police officers testified for the State. The theory of defense was lack of criminal agency. Appellant’s mother testified for the defense. Viewing the evidence elicited in the light most favorable to the State, the prevailing party, the following was established at trial.

Over the summer and fall of 2012, Christopher Stultz worked with appellant in the kitchen of a restaurant in Montgomery County. In early November, appellant told Stultz that he wanted to show him something “funny” and then showed him a video on his cell phone. According to Stultz, the video showed three men having sexual intercourse with a woman who was “out of it.” Appellant told Stultz that he had videotaped it at a party, and Stultz recognized appellant’s voice on the video. Stultz told the owner of the restaurant about the video, who in turn called the police.

A few days later, on November 9, the police executed a search warrant for appellant’s home where he lived with his mother. The police recovered a cell phone on the floor of *691 appellant’s bedroom. From the cell phone, the police located a video showing a sexual assault on a woman by several men. The videographer, who is making comments about the assault, is seen touching the buttocks and breasts of the victim while the other men are displaying hand signs, tattoos, and shouting “La Erre.” The videographer can be heard saying:

That is Moreno trying to get some pussy, but is not. Laeda, you know what I’m saying, you know what I’m saying. That’s [unintelligible] but — Mohammed, calm the fuck down. You know what I’m saying. Smile for the camera, baby. Let me see some nipples. Sure, let me see some nipple. Let me see some boobs. Let me see some boobs. Let me see some [unintelligible]. That’s the ass cheeks right there. We got it like that. That’s how Morrow’ll [sic] be doing it, yeah.

The police showed Stultz the video, who said it was not the same video that appellant had shown him at the restaurant, but it was the same woman and she looked “out of it.” Stultz identified appellant’s voice as that on the videotape, as did the owner of the restaurant. 2 Appellant was subsequently arrested and spoke with the police. The lead investigator testified that based on his conversations with appellant, he believed that the voice on the video was appellant’s voice.

The police identified and located the victim on the videotape. When she saw the tape, she was shocked and upset. She testified that on the afternoon of October 4, 2012, she was walking in her neighborhood when a friend invited her to his apartment a couple of buildings away where he was having a party. When she arrived, there were about ten or so people present. She drank two or three beers, and then the party broke up when a fight erupted outside the building involving *692 people at the party. A man from the party invited her and some other men to continue the party at another apartment.

The victim and the other men arrived at the apartment and hung out in the upstairs bedroom. While there she drank three beers, leaving the bedroom two or three times to use the bathroom, each time leaving her beer behind. At one point she felt “very tired” and sleepy, and she asked one of the men to give her a ride home. She was told to lie down, that they would drive her home later. The next thing she remembered was waking up the next morning. Her cell phone was missing as well as credit cards and cash from her wallet. She went downstairs and asked the two men present to drive her home. They refused but gave her money to take the bus home. She did not know she had been sexually assaulted and did not know who had filmed the video.

Cecil Burrows testified that he was at a friend’s apartment with appellant and several others when the victim entered the party. A few hours later, he left with the victim, appellant, and three other men, and they went to his home in Olney. When they ran out of beer, he left to get more. He did not remember much about the evening but said he was not present when the video of the sexual assault was taken. When the police showed Burrows the video, which he said he had never seen, he identified the voice in the video as belonging to appellant.

Detective Troy Tippett of the Montgomery County Police Department was qualified as an expert in the field of criminal street gangs and gang activity. He testified that a criminal street gang is an association of individuals that band together to engage in criminal activity. “Little R” or in Spanish “La Erre” was a gang that appeared in Montgomery County in 2006 and was an offshoot of a Chicago gang. He testified that gang members formed an “R” with their hand and fingers to represent the gang. When the detective interviewed appellant in connection with the assault on the victim, appellant admitted that he brought “Little R” to Montgomery County, that he was a member of Little R, and that his nickname was *693 “Moro.” 3 The detective identified a 2006 photograph of a “tagged” Montgomery County middle school with graffiti and the name “Morro” written on a side wall. The detective also identified a photograph in which appellant and several others are standing over a tombstone of one of the original gang members making the “R” hand signal. Detective Tippett, also testified to two crimes Little R had committed in the past. In 2009, two members of Little R were involved in the stabbing and death of a rival gang member, and in 2012, two members of Little R committed an assault on a rival gang member. According to Detective Tippett, appellant was not involved in either of those crimes.

The detective reviewed the videotape and opined that the sexual assault on the victim was gang-related. He explained that during the video the men are displaying the “R” hand signal and shouting out the name of the gang, “La Erre.” He opined that the victim would be viewed as a trophy and recording the incident was memorabilia of the gang’s activities. The purpose of the crime was to bolster their gang’s name and to gain respect for their members.

Appellant’s mother testified that the voice on the videotape was not her son’s voice.

DISCUSSION

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
105 A.3d 589, 220 Md. App. 688, 2014 Md. App. LEXIS 156, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cortez-v-state-mdctspecapp-2014.