Esquivel-Castillo v. People

2016 CO 7, 364 P.3d 885
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedJanuary 25, 2016
DocketSupreme Court Case 13SC904
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 2016 CO 7 (Esquivel-Castillo v. People) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Esquivel-Castillo v. People, 2016 CO 7, 364 P.3d 885 (Colo. 2016).

Opinion

JUSTICE COATS

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

11 Esquivel-Castillo petitioned for review of the judgment of the court of appeals affirming his conviction of felony murder. People v. Esquivel-Castillo, No. 09CA1505, 2013 WL 4674794 (Colo.App. Aug. 29, 2018) (not published pursuant to C.A.R. 85(F)). A jury acquitted him of a separate count of kidnapping, charged according to the "seized and carried" alternative way of committing that erime, but convicted him of felony murder for a death caused during his commission *886 or attempted commission of kidnapping the same victim, during the same charged time-frame, by a different statutorily qualifying act of kidnapping. | As pertinent to the issue on review in this court, the court of appeals rejected Esquivel-Castillo's assertion that the more specific kidnapping charge necessarily limited the seope of the more generally-charged felony murder count to a charge of death caused in the course of or in furtherance of the commission of kidnapping by seizing and carrying the victim from one place to another, resulting in his having been convicted of a erime with which he had never been charged.

12 Because one count of an information is not cirenmseribed by another count of that information unless the latter is incorporated in the former by clear and specific reference, the crime of kidnapping alleged more generally as an element of felony murder was not limited to the specific alternative act of kidnapping alleged in the separate kidnapping count, and therefore jury instructions as to all statutory forms of kidnapping supported by the evidence did not constructively amend the felony murder charge, The judgment of the court of appeals is therefore affirmed.

L.

183 - Salvador - Esquivel-Castillo - was charged by information with separate counts of first degree (felony) murder, second degree murder, and first degree kidnapping, A jury acquitted him of first degree kidnapping and the lesser offense of second degree kidnapping, but convicted him of felony murder and second degree murder. He was sentenced to life imprisonment without parole, to be served concurrently with a 48-year sentence for second degree murder. 1

¶4 The charges arose from the disappearance and death of the defendant's former girlfriend and mother of one of his children, whose body was found buried near the home of one of the defendant's friends. The felony murder count of the information alleged that the defendant committed or attempted to commit "kidnapping" and that the victim's death was caused in the course of or in furtherance of that crime, or in immediate flight therefrom. By.contrast, although the separate kidnapping count involved the same victim and the same timeframe, it more specifically charged "first degree kidnapping," committed by forcibly seizing and carrying the victim from one place to another, with the intent thereby to force the victim or another person to make a concession or give up something of value in order to secure the victim's release. (Emphasis added).

¶5 Evidence was admitted at trial from which the jury could find that after the vie-tim sought to end her relationship with the defendant, the defendant abducted her and either forced or enticed her into his car, for the purpose of coercing her into marrying him, and ultimately killed her and buried her body. One witness recalled seeing the defendant push the victim into his car and drive off the evening before she was reported missing, while other testimony suggested that the victim may have briefly stepped out of the car at some point that evening and reentered under her own volition, but as the result of threats and intimidation by the defendant. Other evidence indicated that the victim's blood was found in the lining of the defendant's trunk and that traces of vegetation matching the vegetation growing at the burial site were found on the defendant's clothing and the undercarriage of his car. . The defendant testified on his own behalf that he neither forced, threatened, nor intimidated the victim to enter his car on the night in question, but rather that she entered of her own accord; and that he did not kill her, but rather she died of a drug overdose while sitting in the passenger seat of his car, after which he buried her body out of fear that he would be suspected of her murder. _

T6 With regard to the separate charge of "first degree kidnapping," the jury was instructed that it would be permitted to return a verdiet of "guilty" only if it found, along with the other elements of first degree kidnapping, that the defendant seized and carried the victim from one place to another, *887 However, with regard to the charge of felony murder and, specifically, its allegation , that the victim's death was caused in the course of or in furtherance of the defendant's commission or attempted commission of "kidnapping," or in immediate flight therefrom, the jury was instructed as to all portions of the statutory definitions of both first and second degree kidnapping supported by the evidence. See §§ 18-38-3801, -802, C.R.S. (2015). The jury was therefore instructed to find the defendant guilty of felony murder if it determined that the victim's death was caused in. the course of or in furtherance of or in immediate flight from the defendant's commission or attempted commission of the first degree kidnapping of the victim, committed either (1) by forcibly seizing and carrying her from one place to another, (2) by enticing or persuading her to go from one place to another, or (8) by imprisoning or forcibly secreting her; or in the course of or in furtherance of or in immediate flight from the commission or attempted commission of the second degree kidnapping of the victim, committed by knowingly seizing and carrying her from one place to another, without her consent and without lawful justification.

T7 The jury received separate verdict forms for the charges of first degree kidnapping and felony murder, 2 With regard to the former, the jury was also permitted to return a verdict of "guilty" as to the lesser offense of second degree kidnapping, should it find the defendant "not guilty" of first degree kidnapping. With regard to the felony murder charge, the jury was instructed that if it were to return a verdiet of "guilty," it should, also answer an interrogatory, indicating the alternative statutory act or acts of kidnapping upon which its verdict was based,. The jury returned verdicts of "not guilty" as to first and second degree kidnapping, but a. verdict of "guilty" as to felony murder. The jury further answered the included interrogatory by indicating that it found the defendant committed kidnapping by enticing or persuading the victim to go from one place to another.

' 8 Sometime after the verdicts, the defendant moved for judgment of acquittal on the grounds that the information had not sufficiently charged the crime of which he was ultimately convicted. The district court denied the motion, ruling in the alternative that because felony murder was charged in terms of the "generic" erime of kidnapping, without incorporation of the specific count charging first degree kidnapping, no essential element.

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2016 CO 7, 364 P.3d 885, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/esquivel-castillo-v-people-colo-2016.