Hess v. State

382 P.3d 1183, 2016 Alas. App. LEXIS 155, 2016 WL 4611023
CourtCourt of Appeals of Alaska
DecidedSeptember 2, 2016
Docket2513 A-11425
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 382 P.3d 1183 (Hess 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
Hess v. State, 382 P.3d 1183, 2016 Alas. App. LEXIS 155, 2016 WL 4611023 (Ala. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

OPINION

Judge SUDDOCK.

A jury convicted Christopher S. Hess of second-and third-degree assault for strangling his mother, Patricia Hess. On appeal, he challenges aspects of the prosecutor’s final argument. We agree that some of the prosecutor’s statements were inflammatory and thus improper. But because Hess did not object to these remarks, he must establish that they undermined the fundamental fairness of his trial. We conclude that they did not.

Facts and proceedings

Responding to a report of an assault in progress, Anchorage police went to the apartment where Patricia Hess lived with her son, Christopher Hess. They found Patricia outside the apartment, apparently quite shaken. She coughed repeatedly, said she had difficulty swallowing, complained of throat pain, had bruises on her neck, and had urinated on herself, Patricia reported that her adult son became angry at her, shoved her to the floor, and strangled her.

The police spoke with Hess inside the apartment. He denied strangling his mother. He said that he and his mother had been drinking, and he claimed that she was “crazy.” The police found Patricia’s dentures, eyeglasses, and a kitchen knife on the floor of the apartment.

The State charged Hess with second-degree assault for strangling his mother and with third-degree assault for recklessly placing her in fear by use of a dangerous weapon.

At trial Patricia equivocated, saying that she had trouble remembering the incident. She testified that she and Hess had been *1185 drinking that night and that they became “really, really drunk” She disavowed any memory of her prior claim that Hess had strangled her until she almost passed out. But she related that the following morning her throat hurt at a level eight on a scale of one to ten.

Several of Patricia’s relatives testified that she had a reputation for untruthfulness and that she was particularly untruthful when off of her medications and drinking.

Hess testified that his mother always had a friend or relative living with her to help her; he had been staying with' her for approximately a month before the charged incident. He said that he and his mother were drinking on the evening in question and that the last thing he remembered was watching television. He declared that he would never strangle his mother.

Hess testified that his mother is a manipulative, attention-seeking exaggerator. He claimed that while he was passed out, she concocted a plan to injure herself, and then framed him by feigning distress to a neighbor and calling 91L

The jury convicted Hess of both second-degree and third-degree assault. The superi- or court merged the two convictions and sentenced Hess to 6 years with 2 years suspended. This appeal followed.

Why the prosecutor’s argument addressing how the jury should view a recanting victim was not obvious error

Hess challenges the prosecutor’s statements urging the jury to convict Hess to “protect” the victim and to show the victim that she was “worthy of protection.” We agree with Hess that, as a general matter, such comments are improper. A prosecutor should not argue for .a conviction based on alleged future harms that might occur if the defendant is not convicted, nor should a prosecutor urge a jury to convict in order, to “send a message.”

But it is not clear that the prosecutor was making this type of improper argument here. The prosecutor made these statements in the context of discussing Ms. Hess’s obvious reluctance to incriminate her son on the witness stand:

Maybe Ms. Hess doesn’t want the State to prosecute her son. Maybe she doesn’t, but it doesn’t mean that she does not deserve protection. Even if her own family doesn’t value her, we as a community value her, and we as a community must protect her.

The prosecutor then continued:

So if you believe the State has proved its case beyond a reasonable doubt, don’t be tempted to say, “What does it matter?” ... What this is about is proof, and ladies and gentlemen I will reiterate you have the photographs. You have her statements from that night.-

Thus, contrary to Hess’s argument on appeal, it does not appear that the prosecutor was urging the jury to convict Hess because of the need to protect the victim, or to send a message that she was worthy of being protected. Rather, the prosecutor was concerned that the jury would find that the State had proved .its case beyond a reasonable doubt and would nevertheless decide not to convict because the victim herself did not seem to want her son convicted. In context, therefore, the prosecutor’s statements were not improper, or at least not so obviously improper that the trial court should have sua sponte intervened despite the absence of any defense objection.

Why we conclude that several of the prosecutor’s closing statements were improper but that Hess nonetheless received a fair trial

Hess argues that the prosecutor made several other improper statements during his closing argument. Hess concedes that he did not object to these statements. He must therefore show that the judge committed plain error by not admonishing the prosecutor, instructing the jury to disregard the prosecutor’s remarks, or declaring a mistrial, even though Hess did not request this relief. 1

*1186 When a defendant argues that a prosecutor’s closing argument amounted to pros-ecutorial misconduct, we consider- “whether the prosecutor’s statements, if in error, constituted such egregious conduct as to undermine the fundamental fairness of the trial.” 2 In this analysis, we view the challenged statements in the context of the record as a whole. 3 .

At trial, the defense had elicited testimony from the victim and others about the victim’s mental health issues and her diminished ability to accurately perceive events when she was off of her medication. The defense also introduced reputation evidence through various family members who testified that the victim had a reputation for being untruthful and manipulative.

The prosecutor responded during his closing argument, asserting that the defense attorney was “vilifying” the victim, a tactic he claimed is frequently employed by defense attorneys in domestic violence eases. Hé stated:

Now, I warned you during my opening [at the beginning of trial] that the defense was going to go out of their way to make it look like the victim was crazy, to. vilify the victim. And we talked about this in voir dire. In domestic violence crimes[,] that’s too often what happens.

We agree with Hess that the prosecutor improperly denigrated the defense lawyer’s trial .strategy by asserting that defense attorneys in general commonly engage in false “vilification” of victims of domestic violence.

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Related

Hess v. State
435 P.3d 876 (Alaska Supreme Court, 2018)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
382 P.3d 1183, 2016 Alas. App. LEXIS 155, 2016 WL 4611023, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hess-v-state-alaskactapp-2016.