Maestas v. State

275 P.3d 74, 128 Nev. 124, 2012 WL 1421838
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 29, 2012
Docket48295, 54080
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 275 P.3d 74 (Maestas v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Maestas v. State, 275 P.3d 74, 128 Nev. 124, 2012 WL 1421838 (Neb. 2012).

Opinion

*127 OPINION

By the Court,

Cherry, J.:

Appellant Beau Maestas pleaded guilty to several charges and a jury sentenced him to death for first-degree murder. He subsequently sought a new penalty trial based on allegations of juror misconduct and bias, but the district court denied the motion. In these consolidated appeals, Maestas challenges the judgment of conviction and the order denying the motion for a new trial. We conclude that none of Maestas’ claims warrant relief and therefore affirm the judgment and order.

In this opinion, we focus principally on two of Maestas’ claims. First, we consider whether NRS 175.556 violates the Eighth Amendment because it allows the district court unfettered discretion to choose between imposing a life-without-parole sentence and impaneling a new jury to determine the sentence when a jury is unable to reach a unanimous penalty verdict. We conclude that NRS 175.556 does not violate the Eighth Amendment because the relevant jurisprudence focuses on whether a capital sentencing scheme sufficiently channels the sentencer’s discretion to impose a death sentence and NRS 175.556 does not afford the district court the discretion to impose a death sentence (that determination is left to the new jury, guided by the requirements set forth in NRS 175.554). Second, we consider whether the jury foreperson committed misconduct by expressing her views on the meaning of a life sentence without the possibility of parole based on her special knowledge as a 9-1-1 dispatcher and by lying during voir dire to conceal a bias against Maestas. We hold that the district court did not abuse its discretion by denying the motion for a new trial because no misconduct or bias was proved.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

This case involves an attack on two children in a trailer located in the CasaBlanca RV Park in Mesquite, Nevada, resulting in the death of one victim and permanent physical injuries to the other victim. In the early morning hours of January 22, 2003, Officer Bradley Swanson responded to a gruesome scene. Outside the trailer, Officer Swanson found three-year-old Kristyanna Cowan lying in her grandmother’s arms. Kristyanna had sustained numerous stab wounds, including a wound to the left side of her head that penetrated midway through her brain, wounds to the right side of her head and left side of her neck that penetrated the jugular vein and caused significant blood loss, and a gaping wound to her back. Although still alive, Kristyanna was unconscious and nonre-sponsive. Swanson found Kristyanna’s 10-year-old sister Brittany Bergeron inside the trailer. She had suffered at least 20 stab *128 wounds but was still conscious and able to tell Swanson what had happened.

Brittany told Swanson that a male and female in their early 20s had come to the trailer. The male grabbed the girls and put his hand over their mouths. Brittany attempted to fight back by kicking and biting, but the male was too strong and everything “went black.”

The girls were transported to the hospital. Kristyanna died a short time later. Brittany survived the attack but was left a paraplegic as the result of a stab wound that cut through her vertebral column, severing her spine.

Information received at the crime scene indicated that the girls’ attackers had some connection to a known drug dealer named Desiree Towne. Towne informed the police that several hours before the attacks, Beau Maestas contacted her to arrange a purchase of methamphetamine. When Towne was unable to secure the drugs from her source, Maestas inquired about two individuals who drove a white Firebird with a yellow bumper. Towne determined that Maestas was referring to Tammy Bergeron (Brittany and Kristyanna’s mother) and her husband Robert Schmidt. Maestas and Towne found Bergeron and Schmidt at a casino in Mesquite, and Maestas purchased what he believed to be methamphetamine from Bergeron for $125. The substance turned out to be salt. Upon discovering this deception, Maestas and Towne returned to the casino, where Maestas and Schmidt got into an altercation and were escorted from the premises. Based on this and other information, the police issued an attempt-to-locate broadcast to authorities in Arizona, California, Utah, and Nevada. Maestas was apprehended in Utah, along with his sister Monique 1 and his girlfriend, Sabrina Bantam.

Bantam provided a detailed account of the events before and after the attacks that implicated Maestas and Monique. According to Bantam, Maestas and Monique arrived at her home after Maes-tas’ botched drug purchase. They were livid over the counterfeit drugs purchased from Bergeron. Maestas asked Bantam for a knife, which she gave to him. 2 Bantam then accompanied Maestas and Monique to the CasaBlanca RV Park. Maestas parked in the employee parking lot and instructed Bantam to honk the car horn if she saw a white Firebird (Bergeron’s vehicle). Maestas exited the car and walked toward the RV Park, leaving Bantam and Monique in the car.

When Maestas returned to the car approximately 10 minutes later, he was upset, complaining that the little girls would not let *129 him into the trailer. Monique became angry and accompanied Maestas back to the trailer to assist him in gaming entry. Again, Bantam was instructed to honk the car horn if a white Firebird appeared.

Maestas and Monique returned to the car approximately 10 to 15 minutes later. Maestas’ hands and clothing were covered in blood. Bantam drove Maestas and Monique to their grandmother’s house to clean up and get their grandmother’s car. During the drive, both siblings made incriminating statements. Monique stated that she tried to stab the little girl in the organs and kept stabbing. She said, “I should have sliced the girl’s neck then, because I was too. scared. I couldn’t do it.” Maestas commented that he “stabbed the little girl in the head.” Maestas, Monique, and Bantam eventually fled to Utah.

Physical evidence also connected Maestas and Monique to the attack. With information obtained from Bantam, police located Maestas’ and Monique’s bloody clothing and the knives. Blood from both victims was found on the clothing.

Maestas incriminated himself. He told police that he went to Bergeron’s trailer to get his money back and perhaps to retaliate against Schmidt by “maybe cutting] him or stabfbing] him or whatever,” but when he made his way into the trailer, Brittany and Kristyanna began screaming, so he stabbed them. He made similar admissions in a letter to someone named Amy, written while he was incarcerated awaiting extradition to Nevada.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
275 P.3d 74, 128 Nev. 124, 2012 WL 1421838, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maestas-v-state-nev-2012.