Llamas v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Kansas
DecidedNovember 16, 2018
Docket118641
StatusUnpublished

This text of Llamas v. State (Llamas v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Llamas v. State, (kanctapp 2018).

Opinion

NOT DESIGNATED FOR PUBLICATION

No. 118,641

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF KANSAS

SAMUEL DOMINGO LLAMAS, Appellant,

v.

STATE OF KANSAS, Appellee.

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Appeal from Lyon District Court; JEFFRY J. LARSON, judge. Opinion filed November 16, 2018. Affirmed in part and dismissed in part.

Paul E Dean, of Patton Putnam & Dean LLC, of Emporia, for appellant.

Amy L. Aranda, first assistant county attorney, Marc Goodman, county attorney, and Derek Schmidt, attorney general, for appellee.

Before HILL, P.J., PIERRON and POWELL, JJ.

PER CURIAM: Serving a life sentence without the possibility of parole for 20 years for aiding and abetting felony murder, Samuel Domingo Lamas appeals the denial of habeas corpus relief he had sought in his K.S.A. 60-1507 motion in district court. After a preliminary hearing, the Lyon County District Court dismissed some of his issues because they had been resolved on direct appeal or waived. After an evidentiary hearing on the remaining issues, the district court denied Llamas' motion. From our review of the record, the court's findings of fact sufficiently supported its conclusion that Llamas' trial

1 attorney was effective. And we find no abuse of discretion in the court denying his motion for a new trial. We affirm.

This was a murder in the drug trade.

In Emporia, during September 2009, Michael Ismael Navarro shot and killed Omar Flores. Flores had not paid Navarro for some drugs he had sold him. Llamas was convicted of aiding and abetting the murder. The facts of the crime can be found in State v. Llamas, 298 Kan. 246, 248-52, 311 P.3d 399 (2013). We will summarize them here.

After Navarro learned of Flores' location, he got a semi-automatic .22 caliber rifle and left his house driving a silver Honda Civic. Navarro picked up Llamas and drove to Flores' location. Navarro spotted Flores and then followed Flores, who was driving a white Suburban, to a motel. Llamas told a friend that Navarro then got out of the car with the rifle, confronted Flores, and when Flores tried to grab the rifle, Navarro began shooting Flores, "unleashing" on him. Llamas told his friend he began walking to a gas station where Navarro then drove and met him. The two men then got something to drink. Llamas told his friend that he knew Navarro had a rifle in the car.

The motel owner saw two men standing outside the vehicles get into the Honda. The man closer to the driver's door of the Suburban got in the front passenger seat of the Honda, and the other man got into the driver's seat of the Honda.

A surveillance tape from inside a convenience store near the motel showed the view from several angles. The footage included a time stamp, which showed that about two minutes after the 911 call reporting shots being fired at the motel, Navarro and Llamas walked "casually" to the door of the store while Llamas used his cell phone. The cameras showed Navarro and Llamas walking into the store together and moving to the back of the store near the coolers. About a minute later, Navarro walked to the front of

2 the store, looked out the door, and then returned to the coolers. Then, both Navarro and Llamas returned to the front of the store with drinks, which Llamas purchased with cash. Navarro left the store, but Llamas remained and played a video game for several minutes.

Llamas made inconsistent statements to law enforcement officers, claiming he knew about the shooting from the news. Then, after being confronted with the surveillance evidence from the convenience store, he admitted he was with Navarro at the time of the shooting, but claimed he did not know what Navarro was going to do. Llamas said he got out of the car and ran when Navarro began shooting Flores. He claimed Navarro caught up with him in the Honda and threatened him to not tell anyone or the same thing would happen to him. Llamas said he kept walking and Navarro then met up with him at the gas station.

Emergency personnel found Flores in the driver's seat of the Suburban, slumped over the center console. Flores had been shot 11 times with a .22 caliber gun in the head, torso, and arm.

Cell phone records established that Llamas called his uncle when he and Navarro were approaching the convenience store. Llamas' uncle testified that Llamas asked him for a ride. The cell phone records also established that Llamas called Navarro's girlfriend less than 50 minutes after the 911 call was logged. Several days later, Llamas called Navarro in Mexico, where Navarro had gone just days after the shooting.

Llamas appealed. The Supreme Court affirmed his convictions. It held:  The evidence was sufficient to support the jury's verdict because there was evidence that Llamas took an active role in the commission of the crimes and intended to aid and abet Navarro;  the trial court did not err in failing to add Llamas' proposed "'mere association or presence'" language to the aiding and abetting jury 3 instruction (although the better practice would have been to add the language); and  any error in failing to instruct the jury to consider the testimony of Navarro's girlfriend with caution because she was an accomplice was harmless. 298 Kan. at 248.

While this was going on, the State tracked down Navarro in Mexico and extradited him back to Kansas in July 2012. He eventually pled guilty to a single charge of felony murder in exchange for the dismissal of other charges against him. Navarro also conditioned his plea on the State's agreement to not prosecute his girlfriend or another friend for their parts in helping him flee to Mexico and destroying evidence after the shooting in September 2009. At his plea hearing, Navarro confirmed that he told his attorney all the facts he knew about the case, withheld no information, and provided no false information. At his sentencing hearing, Navarro chose not to make a statement.

We recount the habeas corpus procedure in district court.

In Llamas' motion for relief under K.S.A. 60-1507, he complained of prosecutorial misconduct, ineffective assistance of counsel, and abuse of discretion by the trial court. He claimed that the evidence introduced at his trial did not support the crimes charged, his attorney did not represent his interests, and the evidence introduced at trial did not support his sentence. Llamas claimed that these issues could not have been raised on direct appeal. The court appointed an attorney to represent Llamas.

In a pro se memorandum, Llamas raised three additional issues. First, he alleged prosecutorial misconduct for introducing false evidence at trial and the State had received evidence that established he did "walk/run" away from the crime scene, which it withheld from the jury. Second, Llamas claimed that his attorney did not represent his interests when he failed to locate a nearby car dealership video that showed he "walked/ran" from 4 the scene. Finally, Llamas claimed that the trial court abused its discretion because the "principle [sic] defendant" stated in court that Llamas—as movant—was "not involved in the actions on the night in question."

Llamas stated that he tried to secure "copies of principle [sic] defendant's trial transcripts to establish this material fact." Llamas also argued that some portions of witnesses' trial testimony was refutable, and some witnesses should have been identified as accomplice witnesses.

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