Hinson v. State

199 P.3d 1166, 2008 Alas. App. LEXIS 100, 2008 WL 5025598
CourtCourt of Appeals of Alaska
DecidedNovember 28, 2008
DocketA-9725
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 199 P.3d 1166 (Hinson 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
Hinson v. State, 199 P.3d 1166, 2008 Alas. App. LEXIS 100, 2008 WL 5025598 (Ala. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

OPINION

STEWART, Judge.

A jury convicted Lance D. Hinson of extreme-indifference second-degree murder 1 for strangling Tina Shangin. The superior court imposed a net 70-year term to serve and restricted Hinson's eligibility for discere-tionary parole until he served 40 years' imprisonment.

Hinson appeals, arguing that the superior court wrongly denied his motion for judgment of acquittal. We reject this argument because reasonable jurors could find that the State proved the charge beyond a reasonable doubt.

Hinson also contends that his sentence is excessive. We affirm Hinson's 70-year term because the sentence is not clearly mistaken. However, we vacate the 40-year parole restriction imposed by the superior court because the court's sentencing findings do not justify the restriction. We also vacate a challenged probation condition because the record and the court's sentencing comments do not show that the condition is reasonably related to Hinson's rehabilitation or the protection of the public.

Facts and proceedings

On August 6, 2000, three men found a decomposing body in a wooded area near the intersection of Bragaw Street and the Henn Highway. When the police responded, they found Shangin's body, naked and face up, with her legs spread. Shangin was fifty-nine years old and frequented the area where her body was found. Hinson was one of the last people seen with Shangin before she disappeared.

Chief Medical Examiner Frank G. Fallico testified that Shangin died of asphyxiation due to neck compression. Dr. Fallico testified that the condition of Shangin's body was consistent with a body that had been deceased and lying in the same place for up to ten days.

Dr. Fallico also found defensive wounds on Shangin's body, specifically noting that Shan-gin's broken fingernails showed signs of a struggle. He testified that a hair caught in one of the broken fingernails could be evidence of another person who was present at Shangin's death. Dr. Fallico explained that when a person is strangled, there is a strong *1169 instinct to grasp at the person doing the strangling.

The police collected evidence from the crime seene and from Shangin's body. Various hairs found on Shangin's body were tested. Testing by the state crime lab found the hair from her broken fingernail was microscopically consistent with Shangin's, as were hairs from Shangin's shoulder. Another hair found on Shangin's shoulder was tested for DNA, and Hinson could not be excluded as the source of that hair.

Vaginal swabs of Shangin's body contained sperm components with DNA from two men. Hinson could not be excluded as the source of the major component of the sperm. The source of the minor component was not identified.

The police interviewed Hinson several times over the course of the next two years. Hinson changed his story repeatedly over the course of the interviews, and he identified other people who may have been responsible for Shangin's death.

During his first interview with police, Hin-son said that he had been drinking with Shangin and a group of friends about ten days before her body was discovered. During a subsequent interview, he stated that he last saw Shangin about a month before her body was found.

Hinson also admitted that he had a sexual relationship with Shangin. At first, he claimed that he had sex with her about a month before she disappeared, across the highway from where she was found. Later, he stated that he had sex with her the last time he saw her, about ten days to two weeks before her body was found. Eventually, he stated that he had sex with Shangin about a week before her body was found.

During the interviews, the detectives asked Hinson whether he knew about Shan-gin's dead body. At first, Hinson claimed that he had heard rumors that there was a dead body, but did not know whose it was. Later, Hinson told the police that he told Shangin's son that Shangin's body had been found. Eventually, Hinson admitted that he discovered Shangin's body three or four days after he had sex with Shangin. Hinson stated that Shangin's body was stiff and he did not call the police because he was afraid he would become a suspect.

During the interviews, Hinson speculated as to who killed Shangin. He identified a person he described as Shangin's boyfriend. He later claimed that a man by the name of Darryl or "D.J." may have murdered Shan-gin. Hinson said that when he was drinking with his friends, he heard Shangin's scream in the distance. Hinson claimed that D.J. then came out of the woods with a solemn look on his face and that D.J.'s hands "looked weird."

Hinson eventually stated that on the night that Shangin went missing, he had sex with her near the area where her body was found. Hinson said that he left Shangin a few minutes after they had sex. He said that when he left, Shangin was lying naked on the ground, silent, and not moving except for heavy breathing. Hinson told detectives he felt something was wrong when he left Shan-gin. He returned days later to check on her, only to find her dead.

The grand jury indicted Hinson on charges of first- and second-degree murder and manslaughter. 2

After the State presented its case, Hinson moved for a judgment of acquittal. Hinson argued that when a case is based on cireum-stantial evidence, the evidence must be of sufficient weight to exclude every reasonable hypothesis that the defendant is innocent. Hinson maintained that there was no direct evidence linking him to the homicide, no evidence that he had a motive to kill Shangin, and that the State had failed to exclude every other reasonable hypothesis. Superior Court Judge Stephanie E. Joannides took the motion under advisement and allowed the trial to proceed.

The jury acquitted Hinson of first-degree murder but convicted him of second-degree murder. Hinson renewed his motion for judgment of acquittal after the jury verdicts, and Judge Joannides later issued a written decision denying his motion.

*1170 Judge Joannides found three statutory aggravating factors from AS 12.55.155:(c)(2) (Hinson's conduct during the commission of the offense manifested deliberate eruelty to another person); (c)(8) (Hinson's eriminal history includes conduct involving aggravated or repeated instances of assaultive behavior); and (c)(10) (Hinson's conduct was among the most serious within the definition of the offense). Judge Joannides also found that Hinson was a worst offender. The judge sentenced Hinson to 99 years' imprisonment with 29 years suspended and imposed a 40-year parole restriction.

Sufficient evidence supported Hinson's conviction

When we review the denial of a motion for judgment of acquittal, we view the evidence presented at trial and the reasonable inferences from that evidence in the light most favorable to the jury's verdict. 3 The evidence is sufficient if a "fair-minded juror exercising reasonable judgment could conclude that the State had met its burden of proving [the defendant's] guilt beyond a reasonable doubt."

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282 P.3d 1262 (Alaska Supreme Court, 2012)
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Bluebook (online)
199 P.3d 1166, 2008 Alas. App. LEXIS 100, 2008 WL 5025598, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hinson-v-state-alaskactapp-2008.