Peo v. Martin

CourtColorado Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 29, 2025
Docket22CA1356
StatusUnpublished

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

Bluebook
Peo v. Martin, (Colo. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

22CA1356 Peo v Martin 05-29-2025

COLORADO COURT OF APPEALS

Court of Appeals No. 22CA1356 City and County of Denver District Court No. 20CR5453 Honorable Ericka F. H. Englert, Judge

The People of the State of Colorado,

Plaintiff-Appellee,

v.

Master Titus Martin,

Defendant-Appellant.

JUDGMENT AFFIRMED

Division A Opinion by CHIEF JUDGE ROMÁN Martinez* and Taubman*, JJ., concur

NOT PUBLISHED PURSUANT TO C.A.R. 35(e) Announced May 29, 2025

Philip J. Weiser, Attorney General, Majid Yazdi, Senior Assistant Attorney General, Denver, Colorado, for Plaintiff-Appellee

Mallika L. Magner, Office of Alternate Defense Counsel, Crested Butte, Colorado, for Defendant-Appellant

*Sitting by assignment of the Chief Justice under provisions of Colo. Const. art. VI, § 5(3), and § 24-51-1105, C.R.S. 2024. ¶1 Defendant, Master Titus Martin, appeals the judgment of

conviction entered on jury verdicts finding him guilty of one count

of first degree assault causing serious bodily injury with a deadly

weapon and three counts of attempted first degree extreme

indifference murder. We affirm.

I. Background

¶2 The following evidence was presented at trial.

¶3 On July 5, 2020, Teaja Thompson drove her black car to a gas

station. In the car with Thompson were her child, Greg Williams,

and cousins Jaquane and Donzell Cooper. Jaquane was affiliated

with a gang.

¶4 Also stopped at the gas station were Kendeja Hughes, her

boyfriend, Jerelle Smith, in the front seat of her silver car, and

Martin in the rear passenger side seat. Smith and Martin were both

associated with gangs that rivaled Jaquane’s. Smith had no shirt

on, and Martin was wearing a red sweatshirt.

¶5 As Jaquane and Donzell Cooper were walking by Hughes’ car

to go inside the store, they had a verbal exchange with Smith.

According to Thompson, Jaquane made a derogatory remark to

Smith, insulted his gang colors, and flashed his gun at Martin.

1 ¶6 Thompson’s vehicle left the gas station and was driven to a

nearby food stand. At Martin’s instruction, Hughes followed

Thompson’s car.

¶7 As Thompson and the Coopers walked to the food stand, they

saw Hughes’ car pass them. Martin yelled out the window from the

rear passenger side seat, “When I double back, you better duck” or

“you better move.” Martin then instructed Hughes “to go in a circle

and . . . come back around.”

¶8 When Hughes drove past Thompson and the Coopers at the

food stand a second time, Hughes heard gunshots. She testified

that she turned around and saw Martin, wearing a red hoodie “with

his arm out of the . . . back window . . . holding his gun,” pointing it

“[t]owards the food stand.”

¶9 Thompson, too, testified that, as she was waiting at the food

stand, she saw Martin, who was in the back seat with the window

rolled down, fire “eight or nine or less” shots.

¶ 10 Jaquane was hit by a bullet and suffered a broken arm.

Thompson drove him to a hospital for treatment.

¶ 11 During a recorded hospital interview, Jaquane and Thompson

claimed they did not recognize the shooter and did not mention the

2 earlier encounter at the gas station. But outside the hospital,

Thompson told the police that Martin was the shooter. In an

interview conducted at the crime scene two days later, Thompson

elaborated, detailing what had happened, including the gas station

encounter, and she again identified Martin as the shooter. That

same day, in three photo line-ups, Thompson identified the three

occupants of Hughes’ car, with Martin as the shooter. However,

three to four months before trial Thompson told the district

attorney’s office that she did not see the gun and could not identify

the shooter. At trial, she testified that she had said this out of fear

of gang retaliation.

¶ 12 Hughes was arrested and charged with multiple counts. She

identified Martin as the shooter in a police interview and pled guilty

to accessory to murder in exchange for the dismissal of her

remaining counts and for the prosecution’s agreement to ask for

leniency in her sentencing, on the condition that she testify

truthfully at Martin’s trial.

¶ 13 At trial, Thompson and Hughes both testified that Martin was

the shooter.

3 ¶ 14 Several other eyewitnesses testified at trial as to their

recollections of what occurred. One witness testified that she saw

an “African American male” with “an Afro-style haircut” wearing a

black sweatshirt shoot a gun from the back passenger window.

¶ 15 Another witness testified that the shooter was sitting in the

rear passenger side seat, had “dreadlocks,” and was wearing “a red

hoodie.”

¶ 16 A defense witness testified that the shooter was seated in the

front passenger seat and was a “dark-skinned” man “wearing a red

¶ 17 Another defense witness was not sure if the shooter was in the

front or back seat of the passenger side. He acknowledged,

however, that he had previously told a defense investigator that he

saw the shooter in the front seat of the car.

¶ 18 Martin was convicted of one count of first degree assault

causing serious bodily injury with a deadly weapon and three

counts of attempted first degree extreme indifference murder. The

trial court imposed a sixty-year controlling sentence in the custody

of the Department of Corrections.

4 ¶ 19 On appeal, Martin argues that the trial court abused its

discretion by precluding certain photographic evidence and by

admitting evidence of a Facebook Messenger exchange.

II. Exclusion of Photographic Evidence

¶ 20 Martin contends that the trial court abused its discretion by

precluding photographic evidence that Smith owned a gun with

distinctive characteristics similar to those of the gun Martin carried

because trial witnesses presented conflicting evidence as to which

of the two men was the shooter. Because any probative value of the

photos was substantially outweighed by the danger of unfair

prejudice under CRE 403, we disagree.

A. Additional Background

¶ 21 On direct examination, Hughes testified that after hearing

shots fired, she looked behind her and saw Martin “with his arm

out of the . . . back window . . . holding his gun,” which was “black

and silver.”

¶ 22 On cross-examination, Hughes agreed that the gun was a

“Glock handgun with a silver slide, black receiver, and an attached

flashlight.” Defense counsel then asked Hughes, “Smith was also

known to carry a gun, correct?”

5 ¶ 23 The prosecutor objected, expressing concern that defense

counsel intended to show a photograph of Smith holding a firearm.

The prosecutor “assume[d] the Defense will say it’s similar to the

description of the firearm in this case.” Defense counsel confirmed

he intended to introduce photos of Smith holding a gun for that

purpose. The photos show Smith menacingly pointing a gun at the

camera.

¶ 24 The prosecutor asserted that the photographic evidence had

very limited probative value under CRE 403 because there was no

evidence when they were taken in relation to the offense. The

prosecutor also argued that admission of the photographs violated

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