Rantala v. State

216 P.3d 550, 2009 Alas. App. LEXIS 143, 2009 WL 2974220
CourtCourt of Appeals of Alaska
DecidedSeptember 18, 2009
DocketA-9769
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 216 P.3d 550 (Rantala 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
Rantala v. State, 216 P.3d 550, 2009 Alas. App. LEXIS 143, 2009 WL 2974220 (Ala. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinions

OPINION

MANNHEIMER, Judge.

John Todd Rantala appeals his conviction for witness tampering.1 This charge was based on three telephone conversations between Rantala and his domestic partner, Terri Mischler. Rantala, who was in jail on a charge of burglary, telephoned Mischler three times on the day before his burglary case was scheduled to come before the grand jury. The State alleged, and the trial jury found, that during these three telephone conversations Rantala “attempted to induce [Mischler] to testify falsely, [or] offer misleading testimony, or unlawfully withhold testimony” at the grand jury proceeding.

Rantala was originally charged with three separate counts of witness tampering, one count for each of the three telephone conversations. His trial on these charges ended without a decision, after the jury declared themselves hung on all three counts and Rantala’s attorney requested a mistrial. Eight months later, the State filed a superseding information which contained a single, consolidated charge of witness tampering based on all three telephone conversations. At Rantala’s second trial, he was convicted of this superseding count.

In the present appeal, Rantala claims that the trial judge at his first trial engaged in misconduct, and that the judge’s actions misled the defense attorney into seeking a mistrial. Based on the assertion that his attorney was misled about the need for, or the advisability of, a mistrial, Rantala argues that the double jeopardy clause barred the State from bringing him to trial a second time for witness tampering.

[552]*552Rantala also argues in this appeal that the evidence presented at his trial was legally insufficient to establish the crime of witness tampering.

As we explain more fully in this opinion, we reject Rantala’s double jeopardy claim. However, we also conclude that the evidence presented at Rantala’s trial, even when viewed in the light most favorable to the jury’s verdict, is insufficient as a matter of law to support a conviction for witness tampering. We must therefore reverse Ranta-la’s conviction.

Rantala’s double jeopardy claim

As we noted earlier, Rantala’s first trial ended in a mistrial after the jurors returned to court and announced that they were hung on all three counts. In a note that the foreman handed to the trial judge when the jurors came back to the courtroom, the jurors gave the following breakdown of their position: on Count I, they were split 6 to 6; on Count II, they were split 6 for conviction, 3 for acquittal (with 3 apparently undecided); and on Count III, they were split 9 for conviction and 3 for acquittal.

Based on this information, both the prosecutor and the defense attorney agreed that the jurors would be unable to reach any verdicts, and the defense attorney requested a mistrial. The trial judge, Superior Court Judge Harold M. Brown, granted this request.

However, a few minutes before the jury returned to court and told Judge Brown that they were unable to reach a verdict on any of the three counts, the jury took an action that was seemingly inconsistent with their later declaration that they were hung: they sent the judge a completed verdict form on one of the counts (Count I). This verdict form declared that the jurors had found Rantala “Not Guilty” on Count I.

Judge Brown notified the parties that he had received this completed verdict form, and that this form apparently contained the jury’s verdict on Count I, but Judge Brown did not tell the parties what that verdict was. Instead, the judge told the parties that he intended to send the verdict form back to the jury, with an instruction that the jurors should submit their verdicts on all three counts at the same time.

The prosecutor immediately responded, “I agree.” Rantala’s attorney’s only response was to point out that it was ten minutes before 9:00 p.m., the time at which Judge Brown intended to let the jurors go home for the night.

There was a pause in the proceedings while Judge Brown composed his note to the jurors. When the judge was finished, he read the note aloud to the two attorneys. Neither attorney objected to (or even commented on) what the judge had written. Judge Brown then sent the following note to the jury:

Jurors: I am returning the verdict form to you. I have not announced your verdict to the parties. You should return your verdict on all counts at the same time. I , will ask you as a group to come back into court at 9 p.m. to consider whether it would be fruitful to continue deliberations tonight or whether we should return at 9 a.m. tomorrow to continue deliberations.

This note bears the time “8:50 p.m.”, but the log notes of the proceeding show that the court went off-record (assumedly, so that this note could be sent to the jury) at 8:55 p.m. Just under ten minutes later, at 9:04 p.m., the court reconvened with the jurors present in the courtroom. At that time, the jury foreman handed Judge Brown the note which declared that the jurors were split along the lines described in the first paragraph of this section. We note, in particular, the fact that the jurors declared themselves split 6 to 6 on Count I — the very count on which the jurors, seemingly, had been in unanimous agreement only minutes before.

Moreover, (as Judge Brown immediately revealed to the parties), the jury foreman made a verbal comment when he handed Judge Brown the note that contained the breakdown o'f the júrors’ positions: the foreman told the judge that, in his opinion, the jury was “hopelessly hung”.

When the prosecutor and the defense attorney were apprised of the jury’s numerical breakdown, and of the foreman’s comment, [553]*553they agreed that it was pointless to ask the jurors to continue deliberating. The defense attorney then moved for a mistrial, which Judge Brown granted.

Two weeks later, Rantala (now represented by a new attorney) filed a motion in which he argued that, under the double jeopardy clause, Count I had to be dismissed. Rantala asserted that Judge Brown committed error by failing to inform the parties of the content of the jury’s premature verdict on Count I— ie., by failing to inform the parties that the jury had apparently voted to acquit Rantala on this count. Rantala argued that if his defense attorney had been aware of the apparent acquittal on Count I, the defense attorney either would not have requested a mistrial when the jury returned to court ten minutes later and declared themselves hung, or the defense attorney at least would have insisted on polling the jurors before he asked for the mistrial.

Based on the foregoing argument, Rantala asserted that his defense attorney’s request for a mistrial did not constitute a “knowing” or “intelligent” waiver of Rantala’s double jeopardy rights on Count I — and that, therefore, the State was barred from bringing Rantala to trial again on Count I.

Rantala did not offer an affidavit from his trial attorney in support of this motion, nor did he seek an evidentiary hearing. Judge Brown denied the motion without comment.

As explained above, Rantala was later tried a second time — this time, on the single consolidated count — and the jury found him guilty.

On appeal, Rantala renews his argument that Judge Brown should have apprised the parties that the jury foreman had written “Not Guilty” on the verdict form for Count I.

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Rantala v. State
216 P.3d 550 (Court of Appeals of Alaska, 2009)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
216 P.3d 550, 2009 Alas. App. LEXIS 143, 2009 WL 2974220, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rantala-v-state-alaskactapp-2009.