Rogers v. State

232 P.3d 1226, 2010 Alas. App. LEXIS 51, 2010 WL 2015275
CourtCourt of Appeals of Alaska
DecidedMay 21, 2010
DocketA-9991
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 232 P.3d 1226 (Rogers 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
Rogers v. State, 232 P.3d 1226, 2010 Alas. App. LEXIS 51, 2010 WL 2015275 (Ala. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

OPINION

MANNHEIMER, Judge.

Shawn W. Rogers appeals his conviction for manslaughter. 1 He argues that there is a fatal variance between the theory of causation that the State presented to the grand jury and the theory of causation that the trial jury apparently adopted (as suggested by the jury’s questions to the court, and by the jury’s verdict on a proposed aggravating factor). The State’s theory of this case (both at grand jury and at trial) was that Rogers committed first-degree murder by pulling a handgun in a bar and shooting another man with the intent to kill him. The trial jury found Rogers guilty of manslaughter — apparently under the theory that, after Rogers pulled the handgun, several bystanders (including the victim) struggled with Rogers for control of the gun, and that during this struggle Rogers lost control of the gun, but the gun somehow went off, fatally wounding the victim.

For the reasons explained in this opinion, we conclude that even if the jury adopted the *1229 view of the case described in the preceding paragraph, this is not a fatal variance from the State’s theory of an intentional shooting, and thus the jury’s verdict is a valid resolution of the case.

Rogers also argues that the State improperly failed to apprise the grand jury of an exculpatory statement that Rogers made to a state trooper several hours after his arrest. For the reasons explained in this opinion, we conclude that Rogers’s statement is not exculpatory (for purposes of grand jury practice).

Underlying facts, Part 1: the parties’ competing versions of the shooting

Shawn Rogers was indicted, and brought to trial, on a charge of first-degree murder. The case arose from an altercation that took place at Fat Albert’s Tavern in Beluga on the evening of July 26-27, 2004. Rogers and another man, Brian Black, were among the patrons of the tavern that night.

When Rogers arrived at the tavern, he was carrying a loaded handgun that he had taken with him earlier that day on a fishing trip. He gave this weapon to the bartender, but he retrieved the weapon shortly after “last call” was announced. Exactly what happened next was the central dispute at Rogers’s trial.

The State’s theory was that Rogers intentionally shot Black. The State presented evidence that, around closing time, Rogers said something provocative to Black. None of the State’s witnesses could tell exactly what Rogers said, because the music in the tavern was turned up so loud. But whatever Rogers said, it caught Black’s attention. Black asked Rogers, “Are you talking to me?” Rogers indicated that he was talking to Black, and then he repeated his comment.

At that point (according to the State’s witnesses), Rogers stood up, drew his handgun from the holster, and pointed the gun at Black. Black said something like, “Are you pulling a gun on me, motherfucker?”, and then he stood up and headed toward Rogers — apparently intending to disarm him. Two of Black’s co-workers — Chuck Thome and Ron Thebeau — also converged on Rogers.

Rogers got off two shots in quick succession. One of these caused a near-contact wound in Black’s side, just below his left armpit. The bullet passed through Black’s lungs and aorta, then lodged near his spine. Black died soon after receiving this wound.

Rogers’s gun jammed after the second shot. With Rogers unable to get off another round, Thome managed to knock the weapon from Rogers’s hand and subdue him.

The defense offered a competing version of events. The defense asserted that Rogers did not threaten anyone with his gun, and that he was the victim of an attack by Black and his two friends. According to the defense, Rogers’s gun went off accidentally during the struggle, and Black was shot.

Rogers took the stand at his trial and testified that he was wearing a handgun when he entered the bar, so he removed the weapon from its holster and handed it to the bartender for safekeeping. Later, when the bar was closing, he retrieved his handgun from the bartender. He tried to return the weapon to its holster, but he was unable to do so because the holster was tangled with his other clothing. At that point, without warning, Black and his friends approached Rogers and attacked him. According to Rogers, the gun went off once in his hand from the physical contact. Rogers testified that the gun was pointed toward the floor when this first shot was fired. Then Rogers lost control of the weapon. A few moments later, Rogers was thrown to the floor and knocked unconscious. Rogers asserted that he was unaware of how the second shot was fired.

Underlying facts, Part 2: the issue of causation, and how this issue was litigated at Rogers’s trial

After the presentation of evidence at Rogers’s trial was concluded, the trial judge and the attorneys discussed the proposed jury instructions. The parties agreed that the jury should be instructed on first-degree murder (the crime charged in the indictment), and on the lesser offenses of second-degree murder and manslaughter. After discussing the various culpable mental states that applied to these different degrees of *1230 criminal homicide, the judge and the attorneys turned to the issue of proximate cause.

The prosecutor submitted proposed instructions on proximate cause because, as the prosecutor explained to the trial judge, the defense had introduced evidence suggesting that Black was shot accidentally during a struggle over the gun:

Prosecutor: [T]he defense is attacking the State’s case [by] indicating that the death of Mr. Black could have been caused by accident through the struggle that ensued. ... The jury could find that Mr. Rogers pulled the gun [and] pointed it at Mr. Black, but did not shoot ...; rather, during the struggle that ensued, ... [either] through the victim himself pulling the gun away from the defendant, or from a third [person] intervening in the struggle and disarming the defendant, that’s [how] the death of Mr. Black ... was caused.
[Under that scenario,] what the case law tells us ... is [that] the defendant is responsible for ... actions that ... he has set in motion, as long as his actions were a substantial factor in causing the death.

Rogers’s attorney raised two objections to the proposed instructions on proximate cause. First, the defense attorney disputed the prosecutor’s assertion that, if Black was killed accidentally during a struggle over control of the gun, Rogers would be criminally responsible for the homicide. Second, the defense attorney argued that the State was changing its basic theory of the ease. The defense attorney pointed out that, from the time of the initial felony complaint and indictment, the State had maintained that Black died as a result of Rogers purposely shooting him. The defense attorney argued that it would be improper for the State to now rely on a theory that Black died as a result of an accidental discharge of the gun during a struggle.

In reply, the prosecutor acknowledged that the State’s theory of the case was that Rogers purposely shot Black with the intent to kill him.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
232 P.3d 1226, 2010 Alas. App. LEXIS 51, 2010 WL 2015275, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rogers-v-state-alaskactapp-2010.