Jordan v. State

481 P.2d 383, 1971 Alas. LEXIS 283
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 25, 1971
Docket1166
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 481 P.2d 383 (Jordan v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jordan v. State, 481 P.2d 383, 1971 Alas. LEXIS 283 (Ala. 1971).

Opinion

OPINION

CONNOR, Justice.

After trial by jury, appellant was convicted of assault with intent to kill one Mac Saling, in violation of AS 11.15.160. 1 Saling was an assistant harbormaster at Ketchikan, Alaska. Appellant was the owner of a trolling boat moored at Ketchi-kan, Alaska, at the time of the incident which resulted in appellant’s conviction.

*384 On the morning of June 13, 1968, at about 8:00 a. m., Saling ascended from Thomas Basin, a small boat harbor in Ketchikan, to the ramp where his Volkswagen bus was parked. He found the door to the bus partly open and on the seat was a flashlight which had not been there when he had parked the vehicle about fifteen minutes earlier. The flashlight was old and worn, the lens had been painted white, and the butt was fastened with tape. Saling shook the flashlight, heard something sliding in it, and noticed that the switch was broken. He thought that the flashlight had been placed there as a joke, but he left it in the vehicle at that time.

About 10:00 a. m. that day Mr. Saling again parked his vehicle near Thomas Basin and grasped the flashlight, intending to dispose of it. At that point he saw an ambulance with its light flashing, he ran to give assistance, and as he was running the flashlight exploded. Smoke and debris rose high into the air. Pieces of Mr. Sal-ing’s body were found on the roof of a two-story building which stood nearby. Mr. Saling lost all of his left hand, part of his left arm, part of his right hand, and was disemboweled by the explosion. Nevertheless, after long hospitalization he recovered and testified at appellant’s trial.

At trial a pattern of circumstantial evidence was adduced. Witnesses placed appellant near Thomas Basin on the morning in question. He was described as looking about in all directions. By his own statements both out of court and while on the witness stand, appellant admitted being in the vicinity of Mr. Saling’s vehicle at about the time it was parked there, though he denied actually seeing the vehicle, which he knew by sight.

Appellant stated that when he was in the Thomas Basin area he was carrying a brown paper shopping bag containing an unboxed roll of aluminum foil. He explained his having the aluminum foil by stating that he left his boat in another harbor earlier, thinking he was taking with him his garbage sack, that he discovered his error, but decided nevertheless to continue to walk to Thomas Basin in order to go shopping. However, appellant was only about 100 feet from his boat when he discovered his error. He easily could have returned for his garbage rather than carry the aluminum foil a considerable distance round the town.

The evidence showed that defendant purchased a five-cell “KWIK-LITE” flashlight from the Service Auto Parts retail store in Ketchikan, on April 17, 1968. This flashlight is manufactured by Fulton Manufacturing Co. of Wauseon, Ohio, packaged by Ballkamp, and distributed by “NAPA” or National Auto Parts Association. Appellant signed a receipt on the day that he purchased this particular flashlight.

At trial a special agent of the Federal Bureau of Investigation testified as an expert witness. His testimony was that the end cap and extra bulb holder found in the debris from the explosion had the same observable physical characteristics as the Fulton five-cell “KWIK-LITE” flashlights, manufactured by Fulton and available in the FBI laboratory, and that they had the same physical characteristics as one of the State’s exhibits, which was a flashlight purchased by the Ketchikan Police Department from Service Auto Parts store in Ketchikan, using the same part number as the part number on the invoice signed by the appellant. The FBI agent also testified that the debris in evidence was more consistent with a smooth flashlight than a twelve-sided flashlight. Additionally, testimony elicited at trial indicated that the end cap of the Fulton five-cell “KWIK-LITE” was unique. None of the evidence about the characteristics of these various flashlights was disputed at trial.

Appellant testified at his trial (his first trial resulting in a mistrial), that he had realized between his first and second trial that the flashlight he purchased was twelve-sided. Through testimony of Fulton and NAPA officials, it was established that such twelve-sided flashlights could not *385 have been available in Ketchikan, Alaska, at the time of appellant’s purchase. This testimony was buttressed by business records. It was proved that twelve-sided flashlight tubes were not used by Fulton to fill NAPA orders until February 2, 1968, when the first shipment of twelve-sided flashlights was made. Additionally it was proved that the kind of flashlight sold to Service Auto Parts in Ketchikan, later sold to the appellant, was shipped from Seattle on February 7, 1968, but that these flashlights were obtained from 1966 NAPA stock. The manager of the Service Auto Parts store in Ketchikan testified that the five-cell “KWIK-LITE” sold to the appellant was the only one of that type his store ever sold previous to the bombing. It was also established that the Ketchikan store was the exclusive Alaska jobber for NAPA products.

By the same receipt which established appellant’s purchase of the flashlight, it was also shown that he purchased “Top Line” acid core solder. This solder was also purchased by the Ketchikan Police Department, so that it could be compared in the FBI laboratory with solder found in the debris from the explosion. Through testimony of three FBI expert witnesses, who performed spectrographic and neutron activation analysis of the two solders, it was shown that the solder in the debris came from the same original source as the solder purchased by the Ketchikan Police Department. The particular batch of solder which was the common source of the two samples was unique in the experience of one of the testifying agents.

In the opinion of another FBI expert witness, the adhesive tape found in the debris came from a roll of tape of the same manufacturer and of the same width as certain tape found on the appellant’s trolling boat. The yarn counts and other characteristics of the tape did not vary between the samples in question.

It was shown that appellant had experience as a powderman in his past, and that only a basic knowledge of explosives would have been necessary to construct a device such as the flashlight bomb in question. Through FBI expert witnesses it was shown that the force of the explosion was consistent with a high order explosive such as dynamite, that sodium nitrate was obtained from the debris and that sodium nitrate is an essential element of dynamite. Another witness testified that he saw dynamite aboard appellant’s boat in approximately March or April of 1968.

One Arthur W. Almquist testified that he had agreed to give the appellant several electric blasting caps, that he put them in a paper sack and left them at a liquor store owned by Almquist for the defendant to pick up there. A clerk at the liquor store testified to receiving the caps in a package from Mrs. Almquist and giving them later to the appellant. Almquist testified that he gave another set of an electric blasting cap with leg wires, from the same box from which he obtained the caps he gave to the appellant, to a Ketchikan Police Department officer, and that the caps were identical to the ones he gave to the appellant.

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Bluebook (online)
481 P.2d 383, 1971 Alas. LEXIS 283, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jordan-v-state-alaska-1971.