Olson v. State

364 P.3d 454, 2015 Alas. App. LEXIS 176, 2015 WL 7185544
CourtCourt of Appeals of Alaska
DecidedNovember 13, 2015
Docket2479 A-11627
StatusPublished

This text of 364 P.3d 454 (Olson 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
Olson v. State, 364 P.3d 454, 2015 Alas. App. LEXIS 176, 2015 WL 7185544 (Ala. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

OPINION

ALLARD, Judge.

A jury convicted Rose M. Olson of importation of alcoholic beverages into a local option community, a class A misdemeanor. 1

*455 Olson now appeals, raising three claims of error. She argues first that the trial court improperly limited her eross-examination of the State's main witness by preventing her from eross-examining the witness about an alleged probation violation and a false statement to the court. She argues next that the prosecutor committed prosecutorial misconduct by referring to the jurors by name during his closing argument. »Last, she argues that the judge relied on Amproper considerations at her sentencing.

For the reasons explained here, we reject Olson's claims and affirm her conviction and sentence.

(Olson also separately argues that her judgment of conviction has a clerical error. The State agrees. Olson's judgment of conviction incorrectly states she was convicted under AS 04.16.200(e)(1). But Olson was actually - convicted of violating - AS 04.11,499(a). Accordingly, we direct the district court to amend the judgment to reflect the correct statute under which Olson was convicted.)

Background facts

In October 2012, Alaska State Trooper Angela Womack received a tip that a woman named Pauline Roland was planning to import aleohol and marijuana into Goodnews Bay, a local option community. A few weeks after receiving the tip, Trooper Womack learned that Roland, and her friend, Rose Olson, had checked in for an afternoon flight from Bethel to Goodnews Bay.

Trooper Womack intercepted the two women at the Bethel airport. A subsequent search of their bags uncovered thirteen 750 milliliter bottles of aleohol and 26.5 grams of marijuana. Roland's name tags were on the bags in which the aleohol was found. But the clothes in one of the bags belonged to Olson. Olson's name tag was on the bag without any alcohol but Roland's prescription medication was found in this bag. , .,.

Roland admitted that the marijuana was hers but she told the trooper that the alcohol belonged to Olson and that Olson had switched the name tags.. Olson told the trooper that the aleohol was Roland's, although she admitted that she (Olson) had helped pack the aleohol in the bags and also admitted that one of the bags with alcohol contained her clothes.

The State charged both women with importation of alcoholic into a local option community, a class A misdemeanor. 2 Roland was . also charged with sixth-degree misconduct involving a controlled substance based on the marijuana. 3

Roland subsequently entered into a plea agreement with the State whereby she agreed to plead guilty to the misdemeanor drug charge and 'agreed to testify against Olson at trial in exchange for the State dismissing the importation charge.

Olson's trial

At Olson's trial, Roland testified against Olson in accordance with her plea agreement. Roland testified that the alcohol belonged to Olson and that Olson alone had packed the aleohol into the bags.

Roland was cross—exanmned about the details of her plea agreement, and. she admitted that she was testifying against Olson in exchange for the State's dismissal of the importation charge against her. Roland was further impeached by various inconsistent statements that she had made to Trooper Womack about. the marijuana and the aleo-hol.

During her testimony, Trooper Womack acknowledged that Roland had initially lied to her about the martjuana and "changed her story" at least seven times. Trooper Wom-ack also testified that Olson admitted to helping Roland pack the aleohol and also claimed ownership of some of the clothes packed with the. aleohol.

The prosecutor's closing argument focused on the fact that Olson was charged as both an accomplice and a principal, and the proge-cutor argued to the jury that it should con-viet Olson as an accomplice even if it did not entirely believe Roland's version of events.

*456 The jury convicted Olson of importation. At sentencing, the judge sentenced Olson to 89 days with 80 suspended (9 days to serve), a $1,500 fine, and 18 months of probation.

Olson appeals.

Olson's argument that the court improperty Emited her cross-exaomination of Roland

During the defense case, Olson recalled Roland to the witness stand and attempted to ask her whether she had consumed aleohol "within the month or two prior" to her change of plea hearing. The prosecutor objected on relevancy grounds. The defense attorney argued that the question was relevant as impeachment because Roland falsely claimed at her plea colloquy that she had been sober for 20 years. The trial court sustained the prosecutor's objection, ruling that Evidence Rule 608 precluded Olson from questioning Roland about a specific instance of dishonesty.

Olson challenges this ruling on appeal, asserting that she should have been permitted to impeach Roland with Roland's "prior inconsistent statement" to the court about her sobriety. But the trial court was within its discretion to restrict Olson from questioning Roland about a specific instance of dishonesty that had no clear relevancy to the issues in this cage. (We also note that Roland's statement at her change of plea colloquy that she had been sober -for 20 years does not qualify as a "prior inconsistent statement." At trial, Roland testified that she had been sober for a long time and claimed that her contrary statement to the trooper was not true.)

Olson also argues that the trial: court's ruling unfairly prevented her from questioning Roland about her alleged drug use and an apparent probation violation that was never pursued by the State. Olson asserts that this evidence was relevant as impeachment evidence because it demonstrated Roland's continued need to curry favor with the State.

But, as the State points out and the record demonstrates, Olson explicitly abandoned this line of questioning in the proceedings below, and she never actually sought to introduce this evidence or obtain a ruling on its admissibility. (Nor did she make any offer of proof with regard to this evidence.) Because Olson abandoned this issue in the trial court, her arguments about the alleged probation violation are not properly before this Court on appeal. 4

Olson's argument that the prosecutor committed misconduct by referring to the individual jurors by name during the prosecutor's closing argument

During his closing argument, the prosecutor referred to the jurors by name on two separate occasions. The first time this occurred was when the prosecutor was explaining accomplice/principal liability to the jury.. The prosecutor told the jury that Olson had been charged both as a principal and as an accomplice, and he further explained that the jurors did not need to be unanimous as to Olson's role to convict her. To illustrate this point, the prosecutor referred to the jurors by name:

For example, Mr. M[ ], Mr. N[] and Ms. WI ], you could say she was the main player, Ms.

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Bluebook (online)
364 P.3d 454, 2015 Alas. App. LEXIS 176, 2015 WL 7185544, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/olson-v-state-alaskactapp-2015.