Haynes v. State

15 P.3d 1088, 2001 Alas. App. LEXIS 21, 2001 WL 43765
CourtCourt of Appeals of Alaska
DecidedJanuary 19, 2001
DocketA-7457
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 15 P.3d 1088 (Haynes 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
Haynes v. State, 15 P.3d 1088, 2001 Alas. App. LEXIS 21, 2001 WL 43765 (Ala. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

OPINION

COATS, Chief Judge.

James Haynes was convicted of misconduct involving a controlled substance in the third degree, a class B felony, for selling cocaine to an undercover police officer. Haynes contends that Superior Court Judge Mary E. Greene erred in failing to allow him to introduce evidence that a confidential in *1089 formant, who had introduced the undercover officer to Haynes, had later been indicted for possession of cocaine. Haynes also contends that Judge Greene erred in ordering him to pay $220 in restitution to the state for the money that the state used to buy the cocaine from him. Additionally, Haynes argues Judge Greene erred when she found that he was a third felony offender for presumptive sentencing purposes instead of a second felony offender. Haynes also argues that his seven-year sentence is excessive, We affirm.

As part of an undercover drug investigation in Fairbanks, Alaska State Trooper Investigators Rodney Pucak and Gary Johnson used informant James Moran to identify individuals who were selling cocaine and to introduce Investigator Pucak to these individuals. After Moran identified an individual who was selling cocaine, he would introduce Pucak to the individual so Pucak could purchase the cocaine.

Moran arranged to introduce Pucak to James Haynes, who was allegedly going to sell him an eightball (one eighth of an ounce) of cocaine. On August 10, 1998, Johnson and Pucak picked up Moran at his apartment and drove to Haynes's apartment building. When they arrived, Moran and Pucak left the vehicle; Moran went into Haynes's apartment building while Pucak waited outside. After a few minutes Moran came out of the building and told Pucak he had obtained the cocaine from Haynes. Pucak told Moran "that we would not be doing the transaction that way." Pucak still had the buy money on him.

Pucak accompanied Moran into the apartment building and waited in the hallway outside the apartment while Moran went into Haynes's apartment. After about one minute, Haynes opened the door and invited Pucak into the apartment. Haynes immediately took Pucak into the apartment's bathroom and closed the door. Moran did not enter the bathroom with them-he waited outside the bathroom in the apartment hall.

Inside the bathroom, Haynes handed Pu-cak a small ziplock baggie containing a white substance. Pucak questioned whether the amount was an cightball and Haynes told him the quantity in the baggie was all he was going to get for $220. Pucak handed Haynes the money and they left the bathroom. Pu-cak and Moran left the apartment and joined Johnson in the parked vehicle. Subsequent tests revealed that the white substance in the baggie was .5 or .7 grams of cocaine.

A Fairbanks grand jury indicted Haynes on one count of misconduct involving a controlled substance in the third degree. A jury convicted Haynes on this charge. Superior Court Judge Mary E. Greene found that Haynes was a third felony offender and sentenced him to an aggravated presumptive term of seven years. Judge Greene also ordered Haynes to pay $220 to the statewide drug enforcement unit as restitution for the buy money that the police used to purchase the cocaine.

Haynes contends that Judge Greene erred in refusing to allow him to introduce evidence that the day following Haynes's sale of cocaine to Investigator Pucak, the informant James Moran was arrested for possession of cocaine. During Haynes's cross-examination of Investigator Johnson, Haynes asked him if he was aware that Moran had been indicted for a crime. Johnson acknowledged that he was aware of this. But when Haynes tried to establish that Moran had been indicted for possession of cocaine, the state objected. Judge Greene directed the parties to go to the anteroom to allow Haynes to make an offer of proof. After the state represented that Moran was alleged to have possessed cocaine the day after Haynes's sale to Pucak, the following exchange oueurred:

Haynes: I think [that evidence of Moran's indictment for possessing cocaine is] relevant because it goes to his connection with the police and with the state.
The Court: How?
Haynes: Well, he hasn't been sentenced yet in that case. >
The Court: Okay. So you're trying to impeach somebody else's statements....
Prosecutor: Trying to impeach ....
The Court: . about whether or not he had anything-any possible reason to curry favor, is that it?
*1090 Haynes: I think it goes to his relationship with the state, Judge.
The Court: Well, tell me how?
Haynes: Well, it-obviously he hasn't been sentenced yet in the case.
The Court: You still have to make a better argument than that.
Haynes: I think that it goes to show that he had a relationship with the authorities that....
The Court: But it happened after [this] case.
Haynes: I still think it goes to show that he's within the state's control still.
The Court: So what[?] I mean he's not a witness. It happened after this event. So what does it matter if he's still in control?
Haynes: Well, he's not available I don't think.
The Court: Why?
Haynes: I'll just withdraw it, Your Honor.
The Court: Okay.

On appeal, Haynes argues that he did not withdraw his question and that because, at the conclusion of the anteroom conference, Judge Greene told the jury that she sustained the state's objection, she ruled against him. Regardless of Judge Greene's remark to the jury, the record shows that Haynes withdrew his question, apparently conceding that he could not establish a reason why the evidence was admissible. 1

Furthermore,. the offer of proof that Haynes did make, that the evidence was relevant to show Moran's connection with the police and the state, did not appear to offer relevant evidence because Moran was not a witness in the trial and the case against Haynes turned on the testimony of Investigator Pucak rather than Moran. Therefore, Haynes failed to make an offer of proof that established that the evidence he sought to have admitted was relevant. 2 Had Haynes not withdrawn his question, Judge Greene would not have erred in excluding the evidence.

Haynes next argues that Judge Greene erred in ordering Haynes to pay restitution in the amount of $220 to the statewide drug enforcement unit in order to repay the state for the money that it spent when it bought the cocaine from Haynes. Haynes supports his argument with citations to cases from other jurisdictions holding that restitution for buy money cannot be ordered at sentencing. 3 However, the cases Haynes cites involve interpretations of law from other states.

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Related

Haynes v. McComb
147 P.3d 700 (Alaska Supreme Court, 2006)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
15 P.3d 1088, 2001 Alas. App. LEXIS 21, 2001 WL 43765, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/haynes-v-state-alaskactapp-2001.