State v. Alston

865 P.2d 157, 75 Haw. 517
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 19, 1994
DocketNO. 16272; CR. NO. 90-0028
StatusPublished
Cited by62 cases

This text of 865 P.2d 157 (State v. Alston) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hawaii Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Alston, 865 P.2d 157, 75 Haw. 517 (haw 1994).

Opinion

*520 OPINION OF THE COURT BY

MOON, C. J.

Defendant-appellant Michael C. Alston appeals the judgments of conviction for one count of intimidating a witness and one count of terroristic threatening in the second degree entered against him after a jury trial in the First Circuit Court.

On appeal, Alston argues that (1) his conviction for terroristic threatening violated Hawaii Revised Statutes (HRS) § 701-109 (1985) which prohibits multiple convictions based on the same conduct; and (2) certain statements made by him could not constitute “threats” sufficient to support a charge of terroristic threatening because they were not communicated to the victim. We *521 hold that HRS § 701-109 did not apply in this case, and that a threat need not be communicated to the victim to constitute a terroristic threatening, and thus affirm Alston’s conviction.

I. BACKGROUND

In early September 1989, Alston was involved in an “incident” in front of the Sizzler Restaurant in Waikiki (the Sizzler), witnessed by waitress Darla Calvin and upon which criminal charges were filed. Calvin was subpoenaed by the State of Hawaii to appear in district court on November 20,1989 and to testify against Alston in the criminal trial based on the incident. 1

Pursuant to the subpoena, Calvin appeared at the district court on the date set for trial, at which time she was apparently informed that the defense had moved for and received a continuance. At the trial of the instant case, Calvin testified that before she left the district court courtroom, Alston, who was facing her, said, “someone didn’t have to be here today. Someone’s wasting their time.” Calvin believed Alston’s comment was directed to her. Frightened, Calvin approached the prosecutor and asked if she could provide her testimony by deposition rather than having to re-appear in court with Alston present. The prosecutor advised her that it would not be possible. When Calvin turned to leave, Alston allegedly “lurched forward as if to follow [her],” and again said, “[s]omeone is wasting their time,” and then sat down.

*522 Although only one date is specifically identified in the record, Alston allegedly confronted Calvin three separate times at the Sizzler over the next few weeks, culminating with his arrest and indictment in the present case.

According to Calvin, Alston first approached her after November 20, 1989, while she was waitressing at the Sizzler, and said in a menacing voice, “you got a problem with me being here?” She stepped back and said, “no.” Alston again questioned, “[h]ave you got a problem with me being here?” and then left when she did not respond. Calvin described Alston’s remarks as “threatening” based on his tone and because he “sort of jutted his chin out when he talked and sort of moved his chest forward.”

Calvin testified that on the next occasion, Alston again confronted her in the Sizzler and asked, “you got something to say to me? Have you got a problem?” Once more, Alston departed when she did not respond. Calvin stated that even though Alston did not physically threaten her, she perceived his statements as “threatening.”

On December 16,1989, Alston returned to the Sizzler at approximately 6:45 a.m. Seated inside at separate tables were Calvin’s parents and Honolulu Police Department officers Steven Ariola and Robert Medeiros. 2 Calvin, Ariola, and Medeiros testified to the following: Ariola and Medeiros were having coffee and filling out paper work after their midnight shift. Alston, who apparently could not see the officers from where he was standing, approached Calvin and pointed at her, demanding “you got something to say to me? If you’ve got something to *523 say to me, say it to my face. I know people you don’t want to know. I know someone who can make you disappear.” Ariola and Medeiros overheard Alston’s remarks. At that point, Calvin’s father stood up and followed Alston outside with the two officers close behind. Ariola and Medeiros then stopped Alston outside the Sizzler.

Within a short time, another officer, Danny Gooch arrived, and Ariola went back inside to talk with Calvin. Medeiros and Gooch questioned Alston about the statements he made inside the Sizzler. In response, Alston pointed at Calvin (who could be seen inside the Sizzler through a plate glass window) and complained angrily that he was “tired of that bitch,” and that if he were arrested, he would “go home and get his pistol and tie up this end once and for all.” Further, when two women approached the scene, Alston told one of them, who was apparently his girlfriend, “to go home and get his gun and he would take care of that fat bitch once and for all.” In making these statements to the officers, Alston never referenced Calvin specifically by name. Further, no testimony was presented that the officers or anyone else communicated Alston’s statements to Calvin or that she otherwise became aware of them.

Alston disputed much of the State’s case. He testified that although he saw Calvin in the district court on November 20, 1989, he did not speak to or approach her. However, Alston did admit commenting loudly to a friend, with the intention that Calvin would hear him, that “[he (Alston) didn’t] even know why she’s over here because she didn’t see nothing.” Thereafter, Alston saw Calvin twice at the Sizzler, but claimed that he did not have a conversation with her until December 16, 1989.

On December 16, Alston remembered entering the Sizzler as he often did to take a shortcut to Kalakaua *524 Avenue. On the way out, he stopped and turned around because he noticed Calvin pointing at him. Upon confronting her, Alston recalled,

I asked her did she have a problem with me coming inside the Sizzler’s because every time I come [sic] in there the past two times, she’s pointed me out to people. You know, like that’s the guy who got into the incident, you know, that she’s a witness in . . . [and] [s]he said no, she don’t have a problem with me being there[,] so I immediately started walking out, and one of the officers came and approached me and wanted to talk to me.

Alston flatly denied saying anything like “I can make you disappear.”

Alston admitted that he was agitated at being detained by the officers outside the Sizzler on December 16 for what he believed to be no good reason. He told Medeiros that “if he arrested me for this BS . . . when I get out he’s going to have a reason to arrest me[,] [but] I didn’t say I was going to shoot the girl. I was just basically just talking [sic] because I was upset, you know.” Alston admitted claiming to have had a gun and indicated that he told someone to “get my gun. I’m going to go off when I get out of jail.” However, Alston said he did not really have a gun, and although he could see Calvin through the window, he denied pointing at her or saying that he would use the gun on anyone.

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Bluebook (online)
865 P.2d 157, 75 Haw. 517, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-alston-haw-1994.