Sakeagak v. State

952 P.2d 278, 1998 WL 4438
CourtCourt of Appeals of Alaska
DecidedJanuary 14, 1998
DocketA-6293
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 952 P.2d 278 (Sakeagak 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
Sakeagak v. State, 952 P.2d 278, 1998 WL 4438 (Ala. Ct. App. 1998).

Opinion

MANNHEIMER, Judge.

William Arthur Sakeagak was convicted of first-degree murder, AS 11.41.100(a)(1)(A), and sentenced to 99 years’ imprisonment. He appeals his conviction, arguing that three of the trial judge’s evidentiary rulings were mistaken. Sakeagak also appeals his sentence; he argues that the judge was mistaken in finding that the victim was particularly vulnerable, and he further asserts that his 99-year sentence is excessive. We affirm.

At approximately 9:20 p.m. on Sunday, October 22, 1995, North Slope Borough police officers arrived at Quonset Hut 267A at the Naval Arctic Research Laboratory (NARL) outside of Barrow. They came to investigate the report of a possible death. The officers arrived to find Sakeagak kneeling over the body of his wife, Judy.

It was evident to the officers that Judy Sakeagak was dead. Rigor mortis had begun to set in, and the extremities of Ms. Sakeagak’s body were already cool to the touch (although the body core was still warm).

William Sakeagak’s breath smelled of alcoholic beverages, but he was responsive to questions and seemed to be in control of his faculties. Sakeagak told the officers that he had left home around 7:15 that evening (that is, approximately two hours before), and that Judy had been alive, sitting in the living room, when he left. According to Sakeagak, he returned home at 9:15 (just a few minutes before the officers arrived) and discovered his wife collapsed in the bedroom.

Sakeagak told the officers that, a week before, his wife had begun to suffer a heart condition. The officers noticed that there were several bloodstains in the bedroom, in the bathroom, and on Sakeagak’s clothes. When asked about these bloodstains, Sakea-gak first said that he didn’t know where the blood had come from; later, he said that his wife had been suffering spontaneous nosebleeds.

As just explained, when Sakeagak was asked to describe his movements that Sunday evening, Sakeagak said that he had left his house around 7:15 and had returned around 9:15. Sakeagak told the officers that, during these two horn’s, he first visited the Recreational Center at NARL and then he took a bus into Barrow, where he went to a store and purchased soda and cigarettes. He then returned home.

*281 The police later discovered that Sakeagak’s account of his whereabouts did not match the bus schedule. On Sunday evenings, only two buses departed Barrow for NARL; one left at 5:40 p.m. and the other left at 9:40 p.m. The bus trip takes 15 minutes: that is, the earlier bus arrived at NARL at 5:55, while the later bus arrived at 9:55. If the buses were on time that evening, Sakeagak could not have taken the bus from Barrow and returned to NARL shortly after 9:00 as he claimed. Moreover, the police also found out that the NARL Recreational Center was closed on Sundays.

The medical examiner conducted an autopsy and concluded that Judy Sakeagak had died as a result of manual strangulation. Given the condition of the body when it was discovered, the medical examiner concluded that Judy Sakeagak had probably been dead for several hours when the officers arrived (at 9:20 p.m.). This information cast doubt on Sakeagak’s claim that his wife had been alive when he left the house at around 7:15 that evening.

Upon receipt of the autopsy report, Sergeant Venable (one of the investigating officers) re-interviewed Sakeagak. During this second interview, Venable told Sakeagak that it appeared Judy did not die of natural causes, and that Sakeagak was responsible for her death. However, Venable did not tell Sakeagak that the medical examiner had concluded that Judy was strangled. Sakeagak eventually told Venable that he and Judy had fought on the evening of her death. Sakea-gak said that, while he was pushing his wife down onto the bed, he had pulled on her arm while the arm was wrapped around her neck — suggesting that Judy had strangled by accident. At the ensuing trial, the medical examiner testified that he thought this explanation of the death was highly dubious — that it was essentially impossible for “a healthy person to put their own arm around their neck in a way that could cause them to become injured.”

A Barrow jury convicted Sakeagak of first-degree murder. Superior Court Judge Michael I. Jeffery sentenced Sakeagak to 99 years’ imprisonment.

The Evidentiary Rulings

At trial, during the government’s direct examination of Sgt. Venable, the prosecutor played a tape recording of Venable’s interview with Sakeagak (the one that took place after Venable received the medical examiner’s report). Before the prosecutor played the tape for the jury, the following exchange occurred:

PROSECUTOR: Investigator Venable, I’m going to play this whole tape for the jury, but before we listen to it, I want to give the jury a “heads up” on how the interview was conducted. Could you explain how the interview was conducted?
VENABLE: Yes, sir. I brought Mr. Sakeagak ... to the office. The first thing that I did was tell him that Judy was killed and it wasn’t — it wasn’t natural causes. The second thing I informed him of is the fact that — that he was responsible for the death.
PROSECUTOR: Okay. And basically, throughout that interview, you confronted him with those kinds of statements.
VENABLE: Yes, sir.
PROSECUTOR: Okay. And why did you [conduct] this interview as such a confrontational interview?
VENABLE: Because I felt that he was responsible for her death.

Defense counsel objected to Venable’s last answer, as well as to the playing of the parts of the taped interview where Venable told Sakeagak (falsely) that the medical examiner had concluded that Sakeagak was responsible for his wife’s death.

Judge Jeffery concluded that Venable’s in-court answer was admissible to show why the officer had “adopted that particular investigative style” during the interview. As for Venable’s false assertions to Sakeagak during the taped interview that the medical examiner had concluded that Sakeagak was responsible for his wife’s death, Judge Jeffery allowed Sakeagak’s attorney to conduct a voir dire examination of Venable (in the presence of the jury) before the tape was played. During this voir dire, Venable conceded that these statements to Sakeagak were simply part of his interview strategy, *282 and that the medical examiner had not identified Sakeagak (or any other individual) as being responsible for Judy Sakeagak’s death.

On appeal, Sakeagak contends that Judge Jeffery’s ruling essentially allowed Venable to inform the jury of his personal opinion that Sakeagak was guilty. Relying on Flynn v. State, 847 P.2d 1073 (Alaska App.1993), Sakeagak argues that this testimony deprived him of a fair trial. We disagree.

There was no chance that the jury would misapprehend the import of the statements Venable made during the taped interview concerning the autopsy results (his assertions to Sakeagak that the medical examiner had identified Sakeagak as the person responsible for his wife’s death).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
952 P.2d 278, 1998 WL 4438, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sakeagak-v-state-alaskactapp-1998.