Salazar v. State

559 P.2d 66, 1976 Alas. LEXIS 363
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 17, 1976
Docket2548
StatusPublished
Cited by53 cases

This text of 559 P.2d 66 (Salazar v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Salazar v. State, 559 P.2d 66, 1976 Alas. LEXIS 363 (Ala. 1976).

Opinion

OPINION

ERWIN, Justice.

This appeal presents seven major specifications of error arising from the first degree murder conviction of Francisco Salazar. The issues necessarily decided on appeal of this case will be addressed seriatim after a statement of the facts.

In the early morning hours of July 12, 1974, while traveling south on the Tudor-Muldoon Roadway, a passer-by observed a vehicle burning in the vicinity of the Chu-gach Hills subdivision. After watching the fire for a short period of time, the passer-by called the Fire Department.

On the following afternoon a cyclist observed a body lying in a field near the Chugach Hills subdivision. Police officers found the body to be that of a dead male which apparently had been repeatedly run over by an automobile. A search of the deceased’s wallet, which contained about $200, identified the man as Lorenzo Wilson. When the shift supervisor for the Alaska State Troopers arrived at the scene, he informed the investigating officer of the report of the burning vehicle observed the previous night. After a brief search the vehicle was located approximately ¼-mile from the body.

As a result of the ensuing investigation, it was determined that the deceased was in fact Lorenzo Wilson, that it was his vehicle which had been burned on July 12, and further, that he had been killed by having been run over repeatedly by this vehicle. Other information gathered by the police disclosed that Wilson and another man had purchased gasoline in Wilson’s vehicle only minutes before it had been seen burning by the passer-by. A gas station attendant informed police that Wilson was the passenger and the man driving the car had “Negroid features.”

Police investigations first focused on the son of a married woman with whom Wilson *70 was having an affair. However, after conducting a photo line-up with the service station attendant and administering a lie-detector test to the son, further investigation was dropped.

Police investigations shifted focus the week following the homicide after a conversation with Gary Tolen which implicated Francisco (Pancho) Salazar in Wilson’s death. Tolen told the troopers he had driven Salazar to work in the Chugach Hills area on July 12, the morning of the murder. As they were driving down the Tudor-Mul-doon Roadway, Salazar said that he had spotted a burned-out car to their right. He asked Tolen to drive to it. Although Tolen could not see the vehicle, he followed Salazar’s directions. Once the vehicle was located, both Tolen and Salazar rummaged through it, and Tolen removed, among other items, a tape deck. As his motive for going to the police with this story, Tolen explained that on the evening of July 14th he stopped by his parents’ house and showed the tape deck to them and to his job foreman, Ken Kropidlowski, who happened to be visiting the house. After Kropidlow-ski departed, Tolen’s mother told him that based on her conversation with Kropidlow-ski, she believed the tape deck had been taken from a car which had been used in a murder and that Kropidlowski felt Salazar was involved. Fearful that he might be implicated in the crime by virtue of the fact that he had put his fingerprints all over Wilson’s car, Tolen decided to go to the police and clear himself of any involvement in the murder.

Police interviews with Kropidlowski further implicated Salazar. He said that he had talked with Salazar on July 12, 1974, the day of the murder, and on the following day. Kropidlowski stated that Salazar had acted “pretty nervous” and had said that someone else had committed the crime in Mountain View and had planned to transport the body to the Muldoon area, place the car over the body and burn the car.

On Wednesday, July 17, the troopers telephoned Fred Gregory, the owner of the company for which Salazar, Kropidlowski and Tolen worked, and agreed to meet with him at a local Anchorage restaurant when told that Gregory would not give any information over the telephone. It is disputed whether the troopers informed Gregory that Salazar was a suspect in the murder investigation or whether they merely informed him that Salazar was in trouble. In any event, later that day Salazar was fired by Gregory, after having been informed that he was in “serious trouble.”

On that same day Salazar and his girlfriend, Janice Maillelle, moved out of the house they had been sharing with another man, Henry Nelson. In the week that followed the couple stayed with friends in three different locations. They were eventually found in the basement of a friend’s house, and Salazar was arrested.

In a police interview conducted shortly after Salazar’s arrest, 19-year-old Ms. Mail-lelle made a number of statements, which she later recanted, indicating that Salazar had participated in the murder. She stated that Salazar and Nelson had left the house sometime during the early morning of July 12th and that Salazar had told her he had driven over a black man but could not remember exactly how he had killed him.

At the subsequent jury trial the State was unable to show any connection between Salazar and the deceased, nor were they able to show a motive for the killing. It was the State’s theory, however, that Henry Nelson, Salazar’s roommate, had been driving Wilson’s car shortly before Wilson was killed and that Nelson had assisted Salazar in the homicide. The State’s case was founded on Salazar’s alleged admissions to Janice Maillelle and Ken Kropid-lowski and on the fact that he went into hiding when he discovered the police were looking for him. In addition, the State maintained that Salazar could not have seen Wilson’s vehicle from the Tudor-Mul-doon Roadway when he was riding in To-len’s car, and thus he must have had prior knowledge of the vehicle’s location.

The defense asserted was alibi. Salazar testified that he and Janice Maillelle had *71 spent the evening of the killing, July 11th, on Fourth Avenue in Anchorage traversing from saloon to saloon, beginning at the Elbow Room and climaxing with a visit to the Montana Club. When they arrived home around 11:30 p. m., their roommate, Henry Nelson, was in bed. Janice and the defendant also retired but were awakened when Evelyn Pederson and Eddie Mitchell, two friends, arrived to spend the night. Salazar returned to bed around 1:00 a. m. and awoke at 5:00-5:30 a. m.

At the trial Evelyn Pederson testified that she had spent the night in the living room and would have seen Salazar depart the house if he had done so during the night. She maintained that no one left until 6:00 a. m. when Salazar and Nelson departed.

In addition, Janice Maillelle denied the truth of the statements she had given to the police shortly after Salazar’s arrest. She testified that she told the police what they wanted to hear so that they would leave her alone. She further testified that as far as she knew, Salazar and Nelson did not leave the house until around 6:00 a. m.

Salazar explained that he had gone into hiding because he had been involved in an automobile accident earlier in the year and had failed to make the restitutionary payments required in order to maintain his probationary status.

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Bluebook (online)
559 P.2d 66, 1976 Alas. LEXIS 363, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/salazar-v-state-alaska-1976.