State v. Apodaca

735 P.2d 1156, 105 N.M. 650
CourtNew Mexico Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 26, 1987
Docket9692
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 735 P.2d 1156 (State v. Apodaca) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Apodaca, 735 P.2d 1156, 105 N.M. 650 (N.M. Ct. App. 1987).

Opinion

OPINION

MINZNER, Judge.

Defendant appeals from his convictions for first degree criminal sexual penetration, assault with intent to commit a felony, and aggravated assault with a deadly weapon. He raises the following issues: (1) failure to quash the indictment for" grand jury improprieties; (2) violation of his right to a speedy trial; (3) failure to grant his motion for discovery; (4) failure to grant a mistrial because the jury was not sworn until the second day of trial; (5) prosecutorial misconduct during closing argument; and (6) violation of his right to a public trial. Our calendaring notice proposed summary affirmance, and defendant has filed a timely memorandum in opposition. We now affirm.

FACTS.

A man, armed with a knife and wearing a mask, seized a twelve-year-old girl as she walked to school and forced her to perform fellatio on him. Other children told several teachers about what had taken place. Two teachers went to the location where the victim had been seized. They eventually spotted her and the man, at which time he ran and the teachers chased him.

One teacher continued the chase to a tunnel under one road, where he lost sight of the man. The teacher ran through the tunnel and met a jogger at the other side, who had seen a man come out of the tunnel. Seeing a man climbing up an embankment, the teacher and the jogger chased and caught up with him. The suspect stopped and threatened his pursuers with a pocket knife and then a tree limb. The suspect ran again, and the teacher continued to chase him while the jogger went to a nearby fire station to get help. The suspect ran down an embankment to another road toward a step van.

The teacher’s statements to the police were that the man he had chased had run in front of the van and entered the van from the left or driver’s side. He testified at trial that the suspect had entered the van’s right side and that in his statements to the police he had meant the left side as he faced the vehicle. The van had no left or driver’s side door. Defendant worked as a route man, and the van was his assigned vehicle.

During defendant’s preliminary hearing, the state requested that defendant be removed from the courtroom during the victim’s testimony to avoid the trauma to her of looking at defendant. The magistrate, over defendant’s objection, arranged the defense table so that defendant was positioned in the corridor outside the courtroom where he could not see or hear the victim.

A bind-over order was filed in magistrate court. A criminal information charging defendant with the crimes of which he was convicted in the present case, and a separate criminal information charging defendant with crimes unrelated to the present case, were filed.

While both cases were pending against defendant, he filed a discovery motion seeking investigative reports and witness statements pertaining to a case involving a widely-publicized serial rapist. Defendant contended that he was seeking these items for the purpose of showing that the suspect in that case might have been the perpetrator of the crimes with which defendant was charged. The state informed the trial court that the suspect in the serial-rapist case had been in custody since September 9, 1985, and the trial court denied the motion.

Defendant moved to dismiss the criminal information in this case, contending that defendant’s right of confrontation had been violated since defendant was excluded from the preliminary hearing during the victim’s testimony. The trial court agreed and ordered a remand for a new preliminary hearing. The criminal information in the other case was not affected by this motion.

Electing to present the case to the grand jury, the state dismissed the criminal information in this case by filing a nolle prosequi. The charges originally set out in this case were presented to the grand jury and an indictment was returned. Seven months after defendant’s arrest, an order was obtained from the New Mexico Supreme Court granting the state an extension of time for commencement of trial, and trial was commenced within this time.

Upon obtaining the tape recording of the grand jury proceedings, defendant learned that one of the regular grand jurors had been excused by the prosecutor and that an alternate had then been seated by the prosecutor. After the grand jurors had been qualified, sworn, and seated as jurors, the prosecutor asked whether any of the jurors knew of the proposed witnesses. One grand juror responded that she worked at the Los Alamos Mid School and had been at work on the day of the assault. She did not state what she knew about the case or the investigation; she indicated that whatever information she had or thought she had about the case would not interfere with her service as a grand juror on that case. The prosecutor then excused this grand juror, required her to leave the grand jury room until after the case was presented to the grand jury, and designated one of the alternates to replace the regular grand juror he had excused.

Defendant filed pretrial motions to quash the indictment for alleged grand jury improprieties and to dismiss the indictment alleging that his right to a speedy trial had been violated. The trial court denied these motions.

The prosecutor requested that the trial court be closed to the public during the testimony of the victim, and that her family members be permitted to be present. Defendant offered to agree if his family members could remain in the courtroom. Over defendant’s objection, the trial court agreed to clear the courtroom of all spectators, including defendant’s family, but allowed the victim’s family to remain in the courtroom during her testimony.

The jury was selected. The prosecutor presented his opening statement and the state’s first witness testified. It was then discovered that the jury had not been sworn after it was selected. Defendant moved for a mistrial at this time, but the trial court denied the motion. Instead, over defendant’s objection, the trial court swore the jury between the state’s first and second witnesses and ordered the jury to consider the first witness’s testimony as if they had been sworn when they heard it.

During closing argument, defense counsel called attention to the discrepancy in the teacher’s statements and testimony regarding from which side the man he had chased had entered the van. During his rebuttal summation, the prosecutor stated that the teacher had no reason to lie. Defendant objected on the grounds that this statement constituted improper argument because the prosecutor was vouching for the witness’s credibility. The trial court ruled that the prosecutor’s argument was proper. Thereafter the jury found defendant guilty on all counts.

GRAND JURY IMPROPRIETIES.

There is no statutory provision for prosecutors to discharge grand jurors or to select alternates. NMSA 1978, Section 31-6-1 (Repl.Pamp.1984) provides, in pertinent part:

The district judge shall summon and qualify as a panel for grand jury service such number of jurors as he deems necessary.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
735 P.2d 1156, 105 N.M. 650, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-apodaca-nmctapp-1987.