Howard v. State

101 P.3d 1054, 2004 Alas. App. LEXIS 218, 2004 WL 2680929
CourtCourt of Appeals of Alaska
DecidedNovember 26, 2004
DocketA-8491
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 101 P.3d 1054 (Howard 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
Howard v. State, 101 P.3d 1054, 2004 Alas. App. LEXIS 218, 2004 WL 2680929 (Ala. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

OPINION

COATS, Chief Judge.

Jarsis Jamar Howard appeals his convictions for forgery in the second degree and resisting arrest. The State charged Howard with forgery for identifying himself as Omari S. Russell and signing Russell's name on a traffic ticket for speeding. Howard argues that the State did not establish the element of the offense of forgery that Howard had an intent to defraud Russell. We conclude that the State did prove this element. On the resisting arrest charge, the State presented evidence that Howard ran away from a state trooper and then hid in the woods. The State's only evidence that the trooper had physical contact with Howard was that he grabbed a little piece of Howard's clothing as Howard ran from him. Howard argues that the State never proved that Howard used force in resisting arrest and therefore the State did not present sufficient evidence of this charge. We agree with Howard that the State did not present sufficient evidence that he committed the crime of resisting arrest.

Factual background

On September 1, 2002 Alaska State Trooper Victor Aye observed a car traveling on the Sterling Highway. He estimated that the car was going over 100 miles per hour in a fifty-five mile per hour zone. Trooper Aye saw the car slow down because it was closing in on other cars. Trooper Aye activated his radar which clocked the car at 98 miles per hour. Trooper Aye pulled the car over and asked the driver for identification. The driver, later determined to be Jarsis Jamar Howard, claimed to have no identification with him. Howard claimed that his name was "Omari S. Russell." Trooper Aye checked with the dispatcher to get a physical description of Russell. The physical description for Russell did not seem to match-it indicated that Russell was 185 pounds, and Howard appeared to weigh much more than that. When Trooper Aye asked Howard about this, Howard claimed that he had recently gained weight. Trooper Aye then gave Howard a traffic citation for speeding. Howard signed the citation with Russell's name.

After Howard had left the seene, Trooper Aye became suspicious that Howard had used a false name. He again contacted the dispatcher and discovered that, while Omari Russell was a real person living in Anchorage, the date of birth that Howard gave was one year off from Russell's actual date of birth. As a result of this discovery, Trooper Aye had the dispatcher put out a request to stop Howard's car, so that he could determine Howard's true identity.

Alaska State Trooper Paul Randall stopped Howard's car. During the stop the dispatcher told Trooper Randall that the car's owner claimed to have loaned it to Jamar Howard. The dispatcher also reported that Howard had no valid driver's license and that there was an outstanding warrant for his arrest. When Trooper Randall asked Howard to identify himself, Howard again claimed to be Russell. When Trooper Randall confronted Howard with the fact that he knew his true identity, Howard continued to insist that he was Russell.

At this point Trooper Randall decided to arrest Howard. He ordered Howard to turn around and place his hands behind his back. Trooper Randall then took out his handcuffs and reached for Howard's arm, but Howard turned and ran into the woods. Trooper Randall pursued Howard but did not follow him past the edge of the brush, explaining that he was concerned about the potential for a violent encounter.

Mark Bellinger, an off-duty correctional officer who happened to live next door to where Howard was hiding, chased Howard into the woods and apprehended him. Once *1052 restrained, Howard continued to insist that his name was Omari Russell.

The State indicted Howard for second-degree forgery. 1 The State also charged Howard by information with giving false information to a police officer, 2 resisting arrest, 3 and driving without a valid license. 4

Howard's case went to trial before Superi- or Court Judge Jonathan H. Link. The jury convicted Howard of all four charges.

The State presented sufficient evidence to allow the jury to comvict Howard of forgery in the second degree

In order to convict Howard of forgery in the second degree the State had to demonstrate that: (1) Howard falsely made, completed, or altered a written instrument, (2) the instrument was, or purported to be, a public record, and (8) Howard had an intent to defraud. 5 Howard appeals only the sufficiency of the State's evidence of his intent to defraud.

"Intent to defraud" is defined by statute as "an intent to injure someone's interest which has value or an intent to use deception. 6 Judge Link only instructed the jury on the "intent to injure someone's interest which has value" so we will only use this theory in analyzing the case.

Howard first points out that Judge Link instructed the jury that to find Howard guilty they had to conclude that he "intended to defraud Omari S. Russell by depriving him of his driver's license and/or permanent fund dividend." Howard first contends that, under the jury instructions, in order to find "intent to defraud," the jury had to find that he had "an intent to injure someone's interest which has value." He contends that the forgery statute ceriminalizes situations where the defendant attempts to defraud another person of a valuable property interest. He argues there was no evidence that he obtained any valuable property from Russell.

The Alaska statutes define "intent to defraud" as "an intent to injure someone's interest which has value ..." If the State proved that Howard intended to injure Om-ari's interest in his driver's license and/or permanent fund dividend, this conduct would appear to fall within the statute. The statute does not require that Howard needed to intend to obtain anything of value from Russell. Furthermore, both Russell's interest in his driver's license and his interest in his permanent fund dividend are interests which have value.

We have found several cases where state courts have upheld forgery convictions where the defendant signed a false name to a traffic citation. 7 We have not located any cases where a court has held that the State's forgery statute was inapplicable to signing a false name to a traffic citation. Therefore, the language of the Alaska forgery statute including the definition of "intent to defraud" and case law support the conclusion that the State could properly charge and convict Howard of forgery for falsely signing his name on the traffic citation.

Howard contends that the State did not show that he had any intent to harm Russell. He argues that his only intent was to avoid getting a traffic ticket. AS 11.81.900(a)(1) provides that a person acts intentionally when his "conscious objective is to cause that result; when intentionally causing a particular result is an element of the offense, that intent need not be the person's only objec-tivel.]" Judge Link instructed the jury on the definition of intentionally.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
101 P.3d 1054, 2004 Alas. App. LEXIS 218, 2004 WL 2680929, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/howard-v-state-alaskactapp-2004.