Dyer v. State

666 P.2d 438, 1983 Alas. App. LEXIS 329
CourtCourt of Appeals of Alaska
DecidedJuly 1, 1983
Docket6133
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 666 P.2d 438 (Dyer 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
Dyer v. State, 666 P.2d 438, 1983 Alas. App. LEXIS 329 (Ala. Ct. App. 1983).

Opinion

OPINION

COATS, Judge.

Donald Dyer was convicted of assault with a dangerous weapon, former AS 11.-15.220. 1 Judge Duane Craske sentenced Dyer to eight years’ imprisonment. Dyer appeals his conviction and sentence to this court. We affirm.

Wrangell resident Robert Seimears was a twenty-five-year old deckhand living on the tugboat May in July of 1979. About 10:00 or 11:00 p.m. on the night of July 29, Seim-ears was speeding through the harbor with his girlfriend in his thirteen-foot skiff, making swells. He had been “drinking quite a bit at the time.” His actions disturbed' Steven Hodges, who while standing on a dock, shot at Seimears’ boat with a .22 caliber rifle. Seimears then confronted Hodges, took the rifle away from him, *441 ejected the shells, and threw the rifle down on the dock. Hodges ran away.

On the night of July 30, after playing pool and drinking at Wrangell’s “Brig” bar, Seimears took his skiff to the May to pick up more cash. On his way back across the harbor, he decided to go talk to Hodges. He erroneously thought that Hodges was staying aboard Donald Dyer’s boat, the forty-two foot troller “Green Hornet.” Dyer was a fifty-year old fisherman and heavy equipment operator who was living aboard his boat. Seimears did not know him by name.

According to Seimears, at about 10:30 or 11:00 p.m. he pulled up alongside of the Green Hornet. Leaving his motor running, he stepped from his skiff onto Dyer’s unlighted boat. Seimears was bent over, tying a mooring line when he saw a flash from the Green Hornet’s cabin and felt a sharp blow to his abdomen. Dyer had shot him with a .357 caliber revolver. Seimears fell into his skiff, and attempted to disconnect the mooring line to leave. However, Dyer allegedly attempted to pull Seimears out of the boat and force him under water. At this point, Seimears got a good look at Dyer’s face. Seimears escaped and steered his boat back to the May. He fell into the water but was rescued by the May’s captain. The next thing Seimears remembered was waking up in a Seattle hospital.

Seimears lost parts of his intestines, pancreas and liver, and remained in the hospital for over two months. His right kidney and his stomach were also damaged. He underwent four operations, and his recovery was difficult.

At the preliminary hearing, Seimears admittedly lied to the court. He stated that he had only tied his boat to the Green Hornet so that he could walk across it to the dock, and he denied that he went to the Green Hornet to find Hodges. He later said that he lied because he was afraid that if he told the truth Dyer might not be convicted.

Dyer’s trial testimony presented a substantially different version of the shooting. According to Dyer, at about 11:00 p.m., he was seated alone in the Green Hornet’s cabin, having a few drinks before going to bed. Something bumped against his boat, and he saw a man looking through his window. Seimears, a total stranger to Dyer, came into the cabin and accused Dyer of being a friend of Hodges. Dyer told him to leave. Seimears put his hand into his coat pocket; Dyer thought he saw the outline of a gun barrel in the pocket and was afraid that Seimears was going to shoot him. Dyer shot Seimears. Seimears fell onto the floor, but he got up and left in his boat.

After the shooting, Dyer quickly started up the Green Hornet and left Wrangell, traveling north. Dyer claimed that on August 10 the Green Hornet sank in Chatham Strait after hitting a rock. He rowed a skiff ashore, and flew from Tenakee to Juneau, and then to Oregon, under an assumed name. Even though there was a warrant out for his arrest, he later returned to Alaska. He was arrested in Fairbanks on November 18, 1980. The police were unable to locate Hodges, who left Wrangell shortly after the shooting.

The prosecution first charged Dyer with assault with a dangerous weapon, but then indicted him for shooting with intent to kill, wound or maim. Dyer was convicted of the originally charged offense.

THE INDICTMENT

Dyer first argues that trial judge Duane Craske erred in not dismissing the indictment. Dyer argues that Judge Craske erred on two grounds: first, that he should have dismissed the indictment because of vindictive prosecution; and second, that he should have dismissed the indictment because of the prosecution’s failure to present exculpatory evidence to the grand jury.

Vindictive Prosecution

The prosecution originally charged Dyer in a felony complaint filed on July 31, 1979, with committing an assault with a dangerous weapon on July 30. Dyer fled Wrangell and the charge remained unchanged during the nearly sixteen months he remained a fugitive,- during the preliminary hearing on *442 November 20,1980, and for about six weeks after the preliminary hearing until Dyer was indicted on January 8,1981. After the preliminary hearing, Dyer refused the prosecution’s request to waive grand jury indictment, but there was no discussion between Dyer and the prosecution as to what might be the consequences of refusal. Both parties agree that at no time did the prosecution inform or threaten Dyer that it was considering asking the grand jury to indict him on the greater charge of shooting with intent to kill, wound or maim. Former AS 11.15.150. After the grand jury indicted Dyer on the greater charge, his attorney claimed that the indictment was vindictive, in retaliation for the refusal to waive Dyer’s constitutional right to grand jury indictment. Alaska Const, art. I, § 8. The prosecution denied this charge.

Vindictive prosecution violates a defendant’s constitutional rights to due process. U.S. Const, amend. XIV, § 1; Alaska Const, art. I, § 7. The trial court recognized that the prosecutorial “function cannot be exercised in a manner that would chill or discourage the [exercise of the] right[s] of a defendant.” The court found that in this case, however, the increased charge of shooting with intent to kill, wound or maim was based upon District Attorney Victor Krumm’s good faith reassessment of an assistant district attorney’s lesser charge, after hearing the victim’s preliminary hearing testimony. The trial judge found that at the time the assistant district attorney filed the assault with a deadly weapon charge, he had not yet learned that Seimears claimed that after Dyer had shot him, Dyer had attempted to pull Seimears out of his skiff and push him under water. The prosecution learned this information a few days later. The complaint lay dormant while Dyer remained a fugitive. The court found there were two reasons why reassessment after the preliminary hearing was not unreasonable. First, the court termed the preliminary hearing testimony of Seimears “new evidence.” The court reasoned that even though the prosecutor knew the probable content of Seimears’ testimony before he testified, it was only after he testified that the prosecutor actually had the victim’s in-court testimony and was able to judge his demeanor while testifying before the court. Second, as the court noted “because of the practical fact that all of us have so many criminal matters that we are concerned with ... it is a normal and non-prejudicial thing for an assessment to take place at certain critical junctures of the criminal justice system” such as after a preliminary hearing.

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Bluebook (online)
666 P.2d 438, 1983 Alas. App. LEXIS 329, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dyer-v-state-alaskactapp-1983.