State of Arizona v. Shawn De Nean Edmisten

CourtCourt of Appeals of Arizona
DecidedMarch 23, 2009
Docket2 CA-CR 2007-0074
StatusPublished

This text of State of Arizona v. Shawn De Nean Edmisten (State of Arizona v. Shawn De Nean Edmisten) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arizona primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State of Arizona v. Shawn De Nean Edmisten, (Ark. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

FILED BY CLERK MAR 23 2009 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS STATE OF ARIZONA COURT OF APPEALS DIVISION TWO DIVISION TWO

THE STATE OF ARIZONA, ) ) 2 CA-CR 2007-0074 Appellee, ) DEPARTMENT A ) v. ) OPINION ) SHAWN DE NEAN EDMISTEN, ) ) Appellant. ) )

APPEAL FROM THE SUPERIOR COURT OF PIMA COUNTY

Cause No. CR-20060019

Honorable Frank Dawley, Judge Pro Tempore

AFFIRMED

Terry Goddard, Arizona Attorney General By Kent E. Cattani and David A. Sullivan Tucson Attorneys for Appellee

Robert J. Hirsh, Pima County Public Defender By Frank P. Leto Tucson Attorneys for Appellant

H O W A R D, Presiding Judge.

¶1 After a jury trial, Shawn Edmisten was convicted of several felony offenses

including burglary, aggravated assault, kidnapping, armed robbery, and drive-by shooting.

On appeal, Edmisten contends the trial court erred by giving erroneous jury instructions and the prosecutor engaged in misconduct during closing argument. For the following reasons,

we affirm.

Facts

¶2 “We view the facts in the light most favorable to sustaining the convictions.”

State v. Robles, 213 Ariz. 268, ¶ 2, 141 P.3d 748, 750 (App. 2006). Armed with various

weapons, Edmisten and three other perpetrators invaded a home, with the intent to steal

drugs, by kicking in a door and attacking the residents inside. The perpetrators found no

drugs but stole two handguns and left in a car. When a sheriff’s deputy tried to pull their car

over, Edmisten pointed a handgun at the deputy. During an ensuing car chase, Edmisten and

one of his codefendants shot at two patrol cars and one passing motorist. The innocent

motorist was struck by a bullet and suffered severe injuries. The car containing Edmisten

and the others eventually crashed into a ditch, and the occupants fled into the desert.

¶3 Edmisten approached a house carrying an AK-47 rifle. The residents of the

house, a family with two children, were sitting on the back porch. Edmisten demanded car

keys and then ordered everyone into the house. He told the family that the police were after

him and he did not want to get caught. After learning one of the residents had called 911,

Edmisten himself called 911 and told the operator he was the owner of the house and

“everything was fine, that the person moved on.” He then ripped the telephone from the wall

and removed the battery from another, portable telephone. Edmisten also took control of a

cellular telephone, which he used to call someone to ask for a ride. He then watched the six

o’clock television news to see coverage of the events, and he asked the residents about

different transportation possibilities including whether he could ride a horse they owned and

2 whether they owned an all-terrain vehicle. After one of the residents asked him to put the

rifle down so as not to make everyone nervous, Edmisten removed the clip, hid the weapon

behind a couch, and put the clip under a cushion. He also asked for and received a change

of clothes.

¶4 Edmisten then discovered there was a portable telephone on the back porch and

ordered one of the residents to retrieve it. The resident saw sheriff’s deputies outside and

informed them that Edmisten was in the house. The deputies entered and arrested Edmisten.

After he was in custody, Edmisten told a sergeant that he had taken LSD and that the

emergency lights on the sergeant’s car were “wigging him out.” The deputy who had initially

tried to stop the perpetrators’ car drove to where Edmisten was being held and identified

Edmisten as the person who had aimed a gun at him.

¶5 At trial, Edmisten’s primary defense was that he had been involuntarily

intoxicated at the time of the crimes. Edmisten’s former girlfriend, Yolanda V., testified that,

earlier on the day of the offenses, she had secretly slipped two Ecstasy pills into his drink.

Yolanda testified that Ecstasy made Edmisten disoriented, uncomfortable because it

prevented him from urinating, and incapable of driving a car. The state challenged

Yolanda’s credibility by eliciting testimony that she had not come forward with this evidence

until approximately five months after the date of the offenses and by pointing out

inconsistencies in her story with respect to the precise date she had allegedly given Edmisten

the drug. The state also suggested Yolanda’s motive for testifying was that she wanted

Edmisten to pay child support for the child they had together.

3 Jury Instructions

¶6 Edmisten first argues the trial court’s instructions on involuntary intoxication

were “incomplete, confusing, and misled the jury as to the State’s and defendant’s respective

burdens of proof.” Division One of this court has described the involuntary intoxication

defense as permitting a defendant “to negate the requisite state of mind for a criminal act.”

State v. McKeon, 201 Ariz. 571, ¶ 20, n.2, 38 P.3d 1236, 1240 & n.2 (App. 2002); cf. A.R.S.

§ 13-503 (prohibiting voluntary intoxication as defense “for any criminal act or requisite state

of mind”). As a general matter, the burden in a criminal trial is on the state to prove the

defendant’s guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. See State v. Portillo, 182 Ariz. 592, 594, 898

P.2d 970, 972 (1995). This burden includes any required mental state. See State v.

Amaya-Ruiz, 166 Ariz. 152, 173, 800 P.2d 1260, 1281 (1990) (state has burden to prove

every element of offense including mental state). And the statutes do not expressly provide

for any burden-shifting when a defendant offers evidence of involuntary intoxication in an

attempt to negate the culpable mental state for the offenses charged. See McKeon, 201 Ariz.

571, n.2, 38 P.3d at 1240 n.2 (noting legislature “neither abolished the State’s burden of

proving that a defendant possessed the requisite state of mind at the time of the offense, nor

abolished the defendant’s opportunity to introduce evidence to counter the State’s

evidence”).

¶7 The state, however, impliedly argues involuntary intoxication is an affirmative

defense and relies on State v. Figueroa, 151 Ariz. 213, 215, 216, 726 P.2d 629, 631, 632

(App. 1986), for the proposition that the burdens of proof and persuasion are on the

defendant. But since Figueroa was decided, the legislature has abolished all common law

4 affirmative defenses and provided that any affirmative defense can only exist by statute. See

A.R.S. § 13-103(A); 1997 Ariz. Sess. Laws, ch. 136, § 3. Today, no Arizona statute

explicitly makes involuntary intoxication an affirmative defense. And, pursuant to § 13-

103(B), the term “‘affirmative defense’ . . . does not include . . . any defense that either

denies an element of the offense charged or denies responsibility.” Thus, involuntary

intoxication is not an affirmative defense, and Figueroa is no longer good authority for

determining the applicable burden of proof and persuasion.

¶8 We conclude, consistent with McKeon, that involuntary intoxication is a

defense that “denies an element of the offense charged or denies responsibility” as provided

in § 13-103(B). See McKeon, 201 Ariz. 571, ¶ 20, n.2, 38 P.3d at 1240, 1240 n.2. Therefore,

when the defendant offers evidence of involuntary intoxication, the burden remains on the

state to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant is guilty of the offenses charged,

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