People of Michigan v. Nicole Lynn Pacheco

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 27, 2019
Docket342887
StatusUnpublished

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

Bluebook
People of Michigan v. Nicole Lynn Pacheco, (Mich. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

If this opinion indicates that it is “FOR PUBLICATION,” it is subject to revision until final publication in the Michigan Appeals Reports.

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF MICHIGAN, UNPUBLISHED June 27, 2019 Plaintiff-Appellee,

v No. 342887 Monroe Circuit Court NICOLE LYNN PACHECO, LC No. 17-243999-FH

Defendant-Appellant.

Before: BECKERING, P.J., and CAVANAGH and RONAYNE KRAUSE, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

Defendant, Nicole Lynn Pacheco, appeals by right her jury trial convictions of operating a motor vehicle while intoxicated (third offense; hereafter “OWI 3d”), MCL 257.625(1), and assaulting, battering, wounding, resisting, obstructing, opposing, or endangering a person performing his duties (resisting arrest), MCL 750.81d(1).1 The trial court sentenced defendant as a fourth habitual offender, MCL 769.12, to prison terms of 58 months to 30 years for OWI 3d and 3 to 15 years for resisting arrest. We affirm defendant’s convictions, but vacate her sentence and remand for resentencing.

I. BASIC FACTS

This case arises from a one-car motor vehicle accident. At defendant’s trial, Trooper Daniel Drewyor testified that he was dispatched to the location of a crashed and abandoned vehicle just in front of a truck stop on Dixie Highway, and across the street from an IHOP where defendant used to work. The driver side door was open and no one was in the car. As Trooper Drewyor was retrieving a purse from the driver’s seat, defendant approached him and identified the purse as hers. Trooper Drewyor explained that defendant smelled like alcohol, had red and glossy eyes, and was unsteady on her feet. He asked defendant whether she had been in the accident, but defendant attempted to leave the scene rather than answer the question. Trooper

1 Defendant was acquitted of one count of resisting arrest.

-1- Drewyor said he told defendant that she could not leave because he was investigating her involvement in the accident, but defendant again attempted to leave. Trooper Drewyor testified that he decided to arrest defendant and, while he was attempting to handcuff her, “[she] pulled her hands away several times and again attempted to leave against [his] orders.” Eventually, he and a second trooper managed to handcuff defendant. Trooper Drewyor said he asked defendant to get into the patrol vehicle several times before she complied, and once inside the patrol vehicle, defendant “refused to stay seated, was unbuckling her seatbelt and trying to leave [the] patrol vehicle to the point to where [Trooper Drewyor and Sergeant Herman] had to request a sheriff’s deputy to transport her within a caged vehicle.”

Defendant maintained at trial that she did not know how her purse ended up in the car, that she repeatedly told Trooper Drewyor that she had not been driving the car, and that she had been at the IHOP when the accident occurred. Charles Knuckles, who testified that he witnessed the accident from a McDonald’s Restaurant near the truck stop, claimed that he saw five or six people spill out after the accident and that defendant was not the person who exited the driver’s side door. Defendant also averred that she did not attempt to leave the scene, but admitted that she might have “got a little indignant” when Trooper Drewyor was questioning her because she had not done anything wrong. She also denied struggling when Trooper Drewyor handcuffed her. Kimberly Stone, one of defendant’s former colleagues at the IHOP, saw the officers handcuffing defendant and testified that it did not appear to her that they had any difficulty in arresting defendant.

After arresting defendant, Trooper Drewyor obtained a search warrant that would allow a hospital to perform a blood-alcohol test on defendant. The results of the test indicated that defendant had a blood-alcohol content of 0.204, approximately two-and-a-half times Michigan’s legal limit. Trooper Drewyor took defendant from the hospital to the Monroe County jail. While in jail, defendant made phone calls to her estranged husband and her sister, during which she made admissions indicating that she had crashed the car. She made a similar admission in a phone call with Knuckles. These calls were recorded and played for the jury. As already indicated, the jury convicted defendant of OWI 3d and one count of resisting and obstructing a police officer, and acquitted her of one count of resisting and obstructing a police officer.

II. DISCUSSION

A. INSUFFICIENT EVIDENCE

Defendant argues that the prosecution’s evidence was insufficient for a jury to conclude beyond a reasonable doubt that she was driving the motor vehicle, that she used force to resist arrest, and that her arrest was lawful. We disagree. This Court reviews sufficiency of the evidence claims de novo, considering “the trial evidence in a light most favorable to the prosecution [to] determine whether a rational trier of fact could have found that all the elements of the offense were proved beyond a reasonable doubt.” People v Schumacher, 276 Mich App 165, 167; 740 NW2d 534 (2007). Furthermore, this Court “must defer to the fact-finder by drawing all reasonable inferences and resolving credibility conflicts in support of the jury verdict.” Id.

-2- 1. OPERATING A MOTOR VEHICLE WHILE INTOXICATED

To convict a defendant of operating a motor vehicle while intoxicated requires proof beyond a reasonable doubt that

(1) the defendant operated a motor vehicle (2) on a highway or other place open to the general public or generally accessible to motor vehicles (3) while under the influence of liquor or a controlled substance, or a combination of the two, or with a blood alcohol content of 0.08 grams or more per 100 milliliters of blood. [People v Hyde, 285 Mich App 428, 448; 775 NW2d 833 (2009).]

Defendant does not dispute that she was “under the influence of liquor” on the night in question. Rather, she argues there was insufficient evidence to establish the first element because nobody witnessed her driving the car. Defendant’s argument fails to appreciate that “[c]ircumstantial evidence and reasonable inferences arising from that evidence can constitute satisfactory proof of the elements of a crime.” People v Oros, 502 Mich 229, 240; 917 NW2d 559 (2018) (quotation marks and citation omitted).

At trial, the prosecution played several telephone calls between defendant and other individuals made and recorded while defendant was in jail and during which defendant admitted to driving the car. These statement were admissible under MRE 801(d)(2) as party admissions. In one telephone call, defendant told her sister, Jacqueline Pacheco, “Like I swear I’m never going to drink and drive again because I f*****g had a couple shots.” Defendant also said, “I think I just got drunk and drove down the side— like the wrong road.” Defendant told Pacheco that she was alone when the accident occurred. During a telephone call with her husband, Kade Johnson, defendant said, “I left [my daughter] with [Pacheco] because I ran to the bank to cash [Pacheco’s] paycheck and then f*****g on my way back, I fell asleep so I ran off the side of the road.” And during a telephone call with Knuckles defendant stated, “I’ve never met you, but you just so happen[ed] to be at the [truck stop] when I crashed that car; well, when that car got crashed.”

In addition, Stone testified that when she and defendant spoke at IHOP on the night of the accident, defendant told her she had driven into a fence and needed help getting the vehicle unstuck. Specifically, defendant told Stone she “was turning and [she] didn’t make the turn.” Trooper Drewyor also found defendant’s purse on the driver seat of the crashed vehicle.

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Bluebook (online)
People of Michigan v. Nicole Lynn Pacheco, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-of-michigan-v-nicole-lynn-pacheco-michctapp-2019.