State v. Anderson

16 P.3d 214, 199 Ariz. 187, 337 Ariz. Adv. Rep. 12, 2000 Ariz. App. LEXIS 190
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arizona
DecidedDecember 21, 2000
Docket1 CA-CR 99-0840
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 16 P.3d 214 (State v. Anderson) 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 v. Anderson, 16 P.3d 214, 199 Ariz. 187, 337 Ariz. Adv. Rep. 12, 2000 Ariz. App. LEXIS 190 (Ark. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

OPINION

WEISBERG, Judge.

¶ 1 Anthony Steven Anderson (“defendant”) appeals his convictions and sentences for stalking, a class 3 felony; threats and intimidation, a class 1 misdemeanor; criminal damage, a class 2 misdemeanor; attempted aggravated assault, a class 4 felony; and aggravated assault, a class 4 felony. For the *189 following reasons, we affirm defendant’s convictions but remand for resentencing.

FACTS

¶ 2 Defendant was charged with multiple counts arising out of various incidents involving his wife, Soyini Anderson, over the course of several months. The jury heard evidence that on December 31, 1998, the couple got into a fight because Soyini wanted defendant to leave the house. The altercation that followed resulted in Soyini’s suffering a dislocated toe. At the time, she told police that defendant had picked her up by the throat and thrown her down causing the injury. She later told others that she had provoked the argument and that, while defendant was restraining her, she had tried to kick him but had hit the wall instead, hurting her toe. At trial, Soyini denied the original version of events that she had told the police. Soyini also testified that she did not fear defendant after the incident.

¶ 3 Defendant left that night for California where he remained until mid-February. Records showed that Soyini called defendant in California approximately thirty-one times during early February.

¶ 4 Defendant returned on or about February 20, 1999, whereupon the two got into another argument. Defendant punched Soyini in the head and then got on top of her and choked her. Although, at trial, Soyini denied losing consciousness during the assault, she did recall defendant performing mouth-to-mouth resuscitation on her. She also stated that she feared for her life during this attack, but when asked if her fear was the reason she did not promptly report the incident, she responded, “I don’t think so.” When asked if she told the police that she had feared for her life, she responded “I don’t know.”

¶5 Soyini subsequently left their home. She testified that she left because of “problems” but acknowledged that she might have told police that she was hiding. Although others testified that Soyini was afraid, she stated she did not know whether she left because she was afraid or because her relationship with her husband had ended.

¶ 6 On March 6, 1999, Vivian Harris, Soyini’s mother, went to Soyini’s house to collect some clothes for Soyini and her children. The home had been broken into and clothes strewn both inside and outside the house. Someone had urinated on some of the clothes in the living room. Soyini’s wedding dress was staked to the garage wall with a knife, a photograph of Harris had a knife stuck between the eyes, and framed photographs of Soyini’s son by a previous relationship were broken. Pictures of Soyini’s other son, defendant’s child, were not damaged. The telephone and caller I.D. box were broken, and “punk bitch” was carved into one of the doors.

¶ 7 In addition, defendant had left messages on Soyini’s answering service telling her that he knew where she and her mother worked, that he could be hiding in a closet or on the roof and would jump her, cut off her hair, beat her, and kill her. He stated in one message that he had been in the house and had torn it up. Soyini’s mother testified that Soyini was afraid because of the messages. Soyini testified that she did not listen to all of the messages but that they sounded threatening. When asked if she was afraid that defendant would carry out the threats, she responded that she was not sure at the time, but thought there was a possibility. Soyini erased the messages at the suggestion of defendant’s mother, so they were not available at trial.

¶8 Evidence was presented that at approximately the same time as the damage occurred to her house, Soyini called Glendale Police. Officer Livingston testified that he was asked to contact Soyini by telephone because she was afraid that if he contacted her in person defendant would retaliate. Soyini told the officer that on March 4 defendant had threatened to beat her up badly or kill her and that defendant had said that if he were arrested he would simply be released and then come after her. Soyini also told Officer Livingston that on March 6 defendant called Soyini and told her that if she were not back home by 9:30 that morning he would beat her like he had never beaten her before and that he would burn the house and throw her clothes outside.

*190 ¶ 9 At trial, Soyini said she could not remember what she had talked about with Officer Livingston, but thought she probably did tell him about the threat of the beating. She also testified that at that time she did not feel she could safely return home.

¶ 10 On March 8,1999, at about 10:30 p.m., Soyini went to the apartment of Mark Jamerson, a friend of both defendant and hers. She brought two handguns, one she had been given by her mother and one she had just purchased. She testified that she had the guns because she “just never knew what was going to happen.” When asked if she meant this in connection to anything or any person, she responded “General.” About 11:30 p.m., when Jamerson opened the door to leave the apartment, defendant was standing outside and appeared angry. Defendant entered the apartment, went directly to Soyini, and began hitting her. After the first blow, Jamerson picked up one of Soyini’s guns. Although Jamerson’s view was obstructed, he heard Soyini screaming. Because he feared that defendant would kill Soyini, he yelled to defendant to stop and then shot him. Jamerson then left the apartment with the gun and told neighbors to call the police.

¶ 11 Soyini testified that the beating “really started” after defendant was shot and that he “threw” her around the kitchen, bit her face, and injured her nose. When defendant finally left the apartment, Soyini followed him with the second gun, firing several shots. When police arrived, they found Soyini covered in blood and the kitchen smeared throughout with blood. She told them that defendant had punched her in the face, smashed her face into the kitchen cabinets, sink and wall, tried to dig his fingernails into her jugular vein, bit the left side of her cheek, and tried to choke her. Soyini suffered a broken nose, a laceration on the nose that required seven stitches, and an abrasion on her cheek consistent with a bite mark. Concerning this assault, Soyini testified that she did not think defendant would have killed her, but that he just had assaulted her “badly.”

¶ 12 Defendant was acquitted of two counts of aggravated assault arising out of the incidents that occurred on December 31, 1998 and February 20, 1999. With respect to the March 8, 1999 incident, he was acquitted of attempted murder but convicted in the alternative of attempted aggravated assault for trying to cause a serious physical injury. He also was convicted of aggravated assault based on the broken nose Soyini suffered in the March 8, 1999 incident. Defendant was also found guilty of stalking and of misdemeanor counts of criminal damage and threats and intimidation.

¶ 13 Defendant admitted to having two prior felony convictions and to being on parole at the time of the offenses.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
16 P.3d 214, 199 Ariz. 187, 337 Ariz. Adv. Rep. 12, 2000 Ariz. App. LEXIS 190, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-anderson-arizctapp-2000.