Santiago Valdez v. State of Indiana

56 N.E.3d 1244, 2016 Ind. App. LEXIS 249, 2016 WL 3959336
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 22, 2016
Docket18A02-1509-CR-1514
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 56 N.E.3d 1244 (Santiago Valdez v. State of Indiana) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Santiago Valdez v. State of Indiana, 56 N.E.3d 1244, 2016 Ind. App. LEXIS 249, 2016 WL 3959336 (Ind. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

BAKER, Judge.

[1] Santiago Valdez appeals his convictions for Class B Felony Attempted Rape 1 and Class C Felony Criminal Confinement. 2 He argues that the trial court made evidentiary errors and-that the State engaged in prosecutorial misconduct. During closing, arguments, the prosecutor hinted to the jury that the defense counsel improperly. influenced an expert witness outside of the trial. We find that these statements constituted prosecutorial, misconduct, but that a prompt admonishment from the trial' court prevented Valdéz from being placed into grave peril. We; also find that the trial court did not m'ake evidentiary errors. Consequently, we affirm.

Facts 3

[2] On: April 7, 2012, Valdez was at the Muncie home of his sister, C.V. He had been drinking alcohol and smoking crack, C.V. was on the phone with her uncle when she heard Valdez utter an obscenity. She ended the phone call with her únele and walked toward Valdez.

[3] At this point, C.V. realized that Valdez had taken off his pants and underwear. She immediately phoned the police be *1247 cause, as she testified later, “I knew he was going to try something with me.”- Tr. p. 695. Before she was able to speak to the police dispatchers, Valdez walked over to her, pushed her on the couch, and got on top of her. C.V. left the phone on and was able to kick it under the couch where Valdez could not see it.

[4] The police dispatcher could, hear the ensuing struggle and recorded it. On the recording, Valdez says things like “wé gonna f* * “come on with it,” “shut your mouth,” and “take your top off.” ' Id. at 723. C.V. can be heard crying and saying “Oh my God,” and “please heíp me.” Id. at 723-24. During the struggle, Valdez took off C.V.’s shirt, pants, and underwear.

[5] A police officer came to the house. When C.V. opened the -door, the officer noticed that C.V. was wearing only one sock and Valdez was naked from the waist down. C.V: told the officer, “He’s trying to rape me.” Id. at 734 Valdez calmly told the officer- “that everything was fine.” Id. The officer arrested Valdez.

[6] On April 12, 2012, the State charged Valdez with attempted rape,' a Class B felony; criminal confinement, a Class C felony; attempted incest, a Class C felony;- -intimidation, a‘ Class D felony; and battery, a Class A misdemeanor. The State eventually dropped the attempted incest and battery charges.

[7] On July 13, 2012, Valdez filed a suggestion of insanity, alleging that he was a former boxer who had suffered repeated blows to the head. Valdez began writing dozens of pro se “motions” to the trial court, 4 including a motion to represent himself. The trial court denied his motion to represent himself, finding that he..was not mentally competent, and Valdez filed an interlocutory appeal on that issue. We affirmed the. trial court’s decision to deny his motion to represent himself in a memorandum decision. Valdez, v. State, No. 18A06-1407-CR-304, 2015 WL 302272 (Ind.Ct.App. Jan. 22, 2015). ,

[8] The case was remanded to the trial court, and on June 3, 2015, the State notified the trial court that it intended to present evidence of previous criminal activity covered by Indiana Evidence Rule 404(b). In 1993, Valdez -was convicted in Monroe County ,of rape and confinement, and was sentenced to twenty-three years. After a hearing, Valdez agreed that his prior convictipns should be presented because he believed they were relevant to his insanity defense. The. parties agreed, on the following limiting instruction: “This evidence has been received solely on the issue of Defendant’s sanity. This evidence should be considered, by you only for that limited purpose.”. Appellant’s App. p. 244. However, the jury never received this instruction.

[9] On July 20-23, 2015, Valdez was tried before a jury. At trial, Valdez repeatedly attempted to put into evidence a Pre-Sentence Investigation Report from the 1993 Monroe County trial, which included reports of psychological evaluations done in 1986 and 1987 in connection with a criminal case from Arizona (“Defense Exhibit M”). .He also attempted to put into evidence a police report from the 1993 case in which the victim told police that Valdez would not sleep for fear that people were hiding in his closet or attic or were watching him, through his windows (“Defense Exhibit N”). The trial court agreed with the State that these documents constituted hearsay and lacked a. proper foundation, *1248 and so denied Valdez’s attempt to admit them into evidence.

[10] During closing arguments, the State tried to convince the jury that a defense witness, Dr. Javan Horwitz, was not credible when he testified that Valdez could not understand the wrongfulness of his actions. The State argued the following:

This was supposed to be an independent evaluation on the up and up. I’ll just tell you I’ll call it as I see it. But, what’s going on here? The Defense is controlling the information that this alleged expert is looking at. I wonder why the Defense didn’t want Doctor Horwitz to hear that record. I wonder why. Then remember that as of Friday he wasn’t sure if he denied having an opinion, like we talked about. Interestingly, he comes into open Court ... and now he surprisingly has an opinion on insanity. Who’s the only person Hor-witz talked to after he hung up the phone with me and said, “I didn’t have an opinion”? Mr. Wieneke, the Defense attorney. So he went from I don’t have an opinion to he’s legally insane. And what’s the common — what changed from Friday to Wednesday? He talked to the Defense.

Tr. p. 1423. Valdez immediately objected and moved for a mistrial. The trial court told the State, “I understand his complaint about it because you are impugning his character.” Id. at 1424. The trial court did not grant the mistrial, but did sustain the objection. It admonished the jury not to take the State’s statements on this issue as evidence, and informed them that earlier testimony, outside the presence of the jury, had established that the defense had not told Dr. Horwitz what to say.

[11] The jury found Valdez guilty as charged. On August 20, 2015, the trial court held a sentencing hearing and sentenced Valdez to twenty years for attempted rape and eight years for criminal confinement, with those sentences to be served consecutively. The trial court vacated the intimidation count based on double-jeopardy concerns. Valdez now appeals.

Discussion and Decision

[12] Valdez has four arguments on appeal: 1) the trial court should have admitted the documents from his 1993 case; 2) since the jury did not find that Valdez was insane or mentally ill, he should have been allowed to represent himself from the beginning of the case; 3) the trial court should have given a limiting instruction regarding Valdez’s 1993 conviction; and 4) the State committed reversible error when it suggested that the defense told a witness what to say.

I. Admission of Evidence

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Related

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
56 N.E.3d 1244, 2016 Ind. App. LEXIS 249, 2016 WL 3959336, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/santiago-valdez-v-state-of-indiana-indctapp-2016.