Soundara v. State

107 P.3d 290, 2005 Alas. App. LEXIS 19, 2005 WL 327262
CourtCourt of Appeals of Alaska
DecidedFebruary 11, 2005
DocketA-8329
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 107 P.3d 290 (Soundara 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
Soundara v. State, 107 P.3d 290, 2005 Alas. App. LEXIS 19, 2005 WL 327262 (Ala. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

*292 OPINION

MANNHEIMER, Judge.

Vannaphone Soundara assaulted his common-law wife over the course of six or seven hours. Based on this conduct, Soundara was convicted of mitigated kidnapping (ie., a kidnapping in which the defendant voluntarily releases the victim without sexually assaulting or inflicting serious physical injury on the victim) and two counts third-degree assault. 1

Soundara appeals his convictions, contending that the trial judge improperly rejected his efforts to remove a juror after the juror disclosed, in the middle of trial, that his mother had been the victim of domestic violence. In a separate argument, Soundara also contends that the evidence presented at his trial supports only one conviction for third-degree assault, not two.

In addition, Soundara appeals his kidnapping sentence. He argues that the sentencing judge applied the wrong presumptive term when calculating his sentence, and he further argues that the evidence does not support the judge’s finding of aggravating factor AS 12.55.155(e)(2) — that Soundara acted with deliberate cruelty.

For the reasons explained here, we remand Soundara’s case to the superior court for reconsideration of the juror issue. We can not say that the trial judge abused his discretion when, following full disclosure of the facts, the judge concluded that the juror could be fair. Nevertheless, Alaska law is clear that if the juror knowingly withheld relevant information during voir dire, Soun-dara would be entitled to removal of the juror regardless of whether the juror could be fair. The trial judge never made a finding as to whether the juror knowingly withheld relevant information during voir dire; accordingly, we must remand Soundara’s case to the superior court.

In addition, we conclude that Soundara’s two convictions for third-degree assault must merge into one consolidated conviction. It is true, as the State argues, that the evidence presented at Soundara’s trial is sufficient to support the conclusion that Soundara assaulted the victim twice, with the two assaults separated by a significant interval. But the jury was never asked to decide this issue — and this question of fact is for the jury, not for the trial judge or for an appellate court.

Finally, we conclude that Soundara’s sentencing judge employed the correct presumptive term, and that the evidence supports the sentencing judge’s finding of deliberate cruelty.

The facts of the kidnapping and assault

On May 4, 2000, Soundara’s common-law wife, T.K., told Soundara that she was leaving him and moving to California. During the next two days, Soundara and T.K. argued repeatedly about T.K’s decision. Then, on the night of May 6th, Soundara bound T.K.’s hands and feet with speaker wire. For the next six or seven hours, Soundara beat T.K. intermittently while the couple’s two small children cried in a nearby bedroom.

According to the State’s evidence, Soun-dara whipped T.K. with speaker wire, hitting her more than 30 times and leaving cuts and bruises over half of her body. During the course of the hours-long assault, Soundara strangled T.K. (again, with the speaker wire), he struck her with a knife handle and with the dull edge of the knife blade, and he struck her with the butt of a gun. At one point, Soundara pointed the gun between T.K.’s eyes and threatened to shoot her. He also threatened to slice T.K.’s thigh with the knife and to rub salt into the wound. And Soundara told T.K. that if she left him after this, he would shoot their children, set fire to them, and then kill himself. Finally, around five o’clock in the morning on May 7th, Soun-dara released T.K.

Based on these events, Soundara was charged with kidnapping and several counts of first-, second-, and third-degree assault.

The challenge to Juror Stahn

As jury selection was beginning, the trial judge, Superior Court Judge Larry D. Card, required all of the prospective jurors to swear to tell the truth during the jury selec *293 tion process. Judge Card then read the indictment against Soundara. This indictment informed the prospective jurors that Soundara was charged with restraining T.K. with the intent to inflict injury on her, and that he was additionally charged with causing injury to T.K. by means of wire or cord, and with threatening T.K. with both a gun and a knife. Before the attorneys commenced their voir dire questioning, Judge Card asked the members of the jury pool if there was any reason why they felt they could not be fair in a case like Soundara’s. Prospective juror Keith Stahn did not respond to Judge Card’s question.

The prosecutor then told the prospective jurors that Soundara’s case concerned “domestic violence”, that it was a case involving “[an] assault on a woman” by means of a knife and speaker wire. The prosecutor asked the prospective jurors whether “anyone would have a problem sitting here and listening to the facts of this case”. Stahn did not respond.

The prosecutor told the jurors that, if Soundara’s case was to be decided impartially, it was important that the jurors not have “anything in [their] background ... to interfere with [their] listening to the facts of this case and coming to a [fair] conclusion at the end of the trial”. The prosecutor then asked the prospective jurors, “Has anyone been charged with, [or been] the victim of, or [been] a witness in [an] assault or [an act of] domestic violence?” Several potential jurors responded to the prosecutor’s question, but Stahn did not.

While Stahn was present in court, several prospective jurors revealed that family members, or other people whom they were close to, had been victims of domestic violence. All of these prospective jurors were released from jury service. In addition, several other jurors responded to questions concerning the difficulty of remaining impartial in cases like Soundara’s, if a friend or family member of theirs had been subjected to domestic violence.

When it was Stahn’s turn for individual voir dire, the prosecutor asked him, “So you’re comfortable with everything that you’ve heard, and [you have] no questions about ... the issues that have been raised?” Stahn replied, “No problems.” The prosecutor then asked Stahn if there was “any reason” why Stahn could not sit as a juror in Soundara’s case. Stahn responded, “No, I don’t think that there’s any reason” — but then he added that he probably should talk about “one thing ... that came up yesterday”. Stahn thereupon revealed that he was a member of the Ruffed Grouse Society, an organization that supports the preservation of woodlands for grouse and other game birds.

When it was Soundara’s attorney’s turn to question Stahn, the defense attorney asked if Stahn had “ever had [an] experience with ... a family member or ... friend where domestic violence [was] an issue”. Stahn replied, “No.”

Based upon Stahn’s answers to these voir dire questions, Soundara’s attorney passed Stahn for cause.

But later in the selection process, after two other prospective jurors had been questioned about their experience with domestic violence, Stahn asked Judge Card for a “sidebar” (i.e., a private conference with the judge and the attorneys).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
107 P.3d 290, 2005 Alas. App. LEXIS 19, 2005 WL 327262, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/soundara-v-state-alaskactapp-2005.