State v. Blair

474 N.W.2d 630, 1991 Minn. App. LEXIS 882, 1991 WL 163090
CourtCourt of Appeals of Minnesota
DecidedAugust 27, 1991
DocketC6-90-2529
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 474 N.W.2d 630 (State v. Blair) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Blair, 474 N.W.2d 630, 1991 Minn. App. LEXIS 882, 1991 WL 163090 (Mich. Ct. App. 1991).

Opinion

OPINION

FOLEY, Judge.

Appellant Robert Raymond Blair appeals two convictions for criminal liability for others’ theft in connection with shoplifting by two teenage girls under his direction in two trips to one store in one day. Blair contends both convictions cannot stand because the lesser offense is based on the same criminal act on which the greater offense is based in part. He also challenges the trial court’s admission of other crimes evidence and refusal to submit a lesser included offense, an order that he reimburse extradition costs, and a double durational departure in sentencing. We affirm as modified and remand.

FACTS

On December 15, 1989, Blair was charged by complaint with one count of criminal liability for others’ theft over $2,500 in violation of Minn.Stat. § 609.05, subd. 1 (1988) and Minn.Stat. § 609.52, subd. 2(1) (Supp.1989). Blair entered a negotiated plea of guilty to a reduced charge, but did not appear for sentencing. A bench warrant was issued and Blair was later extradited from Kentucky. He subsequently withdrew his guilty plea.

*633 By amended complaint, a count was added charging Blair with criminal liability for others’ theft over $500 in violation of Minn. Stat. § 609.05, subd. 1 and Minn.Stat. § 609.52, subd. 2(1). Blair was convicted of both offenses by virtue of a jury verdict. The trial court sentenced Blair to concurrent executed terms of 52 and 46 months, a double durational departure from the sentencing guidelines’ presumptive sentences. The trial court also ordered Blair to reimburse $2,472.24 extradition costs. Blair makes a direct appeal.

The charges against Blair arose out of two separate shoplifting forays at a Target store in St. Cloud on November 11, 1989. A plainclothes Target security officer, Holly Kujas, testified she worked at Target on November 11 from 2:30 to 10:30 p.m. Ku-jas testified that, early in her shift, she noticed a locked display case containing expensive electronic equipment such as YCRs and CD players had been opened. Kujas said the lock on the case had not been broken, but the glass door was off its track and the lock was completely off. Store employees had not opened the display case. The case was re-locked.

Kujas testified she frequently checked the area during the day, and, later in the evening, saw what she considered to be suspicious behavior. She noticed a male and a female with a shopping cart. In the cart were a YCR and a small CD player.

Kujas described the female as small with blond hair and about age 16 or 17. She described the male as “ordinary.” At trial, she could not identify Blair as the man.

After being told store employees had not opened the display case, Kujas concluded it had been broken into again. She followed the man and the teenage girl. They put more items into the cart. Kujas testified it appeared the man was telling the girl what to put into the cart.

Kujas said the couple separated as they headed toward the front of the store. Ku-jas followed the girl. The girl continued through the store, acting as if she was shopping. Kujas observed the girl open a box of garbage bags on display, take one out and go to the back of the store. The girl put CD players in the bag, put the bag on the bottom of the cart, and put a VCR and “big stuff” such as a dinnerware set and a cookware set on top.

Kujas saw the girl go to the front of the store. The girl left the cart in front of the service desk and stood looking around for a few minutes. Kujas said the girl met another girl, who was also age 16 or 17. Kujas said they talked and then went to the back of the store. Kujas stayed with the cart. After a few minutes, the two girls came back to the front of the store, stood a few seconds, looked around and left together. The girl Kujas had originally been following pushed the cart out the door. Neither girl paid for the merchandise.

Kujas waited until they were outside the store, approached them, identified herself as a security officer, showed her badge and asked them to come back into the store. The girls ran in separate directions. Kujas ran after the girl she had originally been following. When the girl stopped running, Kujas asked her to go back to the store. Kujas followed her back to the store. Ku-jas testified the girl looked scared and said there was “a man with a gun. Don’t let him see me.” She also told Kujas she had not stolen for herself.

When they got back to the store, Kujas took the girl to the security office and called the police. The girl initially gave a false first name but eventually was identified as D.L.

The cart was brought into the store and Kujas did an inventory of the merchandise in the cart. The merchandise included a VCR, two CD players, a dinnerware set, a cookware set and clothing. The total value was about $900.

D.L. implicated another girl and a man she called Robert. She told the police she thought the other girl and Robert were in room No. 213 of a nearby motel. The police went to the motel room and found K.E. K.E. admitted involvement in the shoplifting and was arrested.

Both girls told the police they had stolen from the Target store twice that day and *634 both identified Blair as being involved. They both told the police Blair had guns.

Both girls testified at trial. D.L. was 15 and K.E. was 16 on November 11, 1989. Both of them had been runaways when they met Blair. They both said Blair regularly took them on shoplifting trips. The pattern was for Blair to tell them what to take and how to take it. He would watch for security guards while they pushed the carts with stolen merchandise out the door. Both K.E. and D.L. testified they had shoplifted at the St. Cloud Target with Blair before the November 11, 1989 incidents.

K.E. testified she first stole for Blair because he gave her food and a place to stay. She testified she became emotionally and sexually involved with Blair and fell in love with him. K.E. believed Blair when he told her they would get married.

D.L. testified she stole for Blair because she wanted to stay on the run and because he told her she would make a lot of money. She said she never got more than $5 or $10 from time to time, however. Once she was involved in stealing for Blair, D.L. did not think she could get out of it because she was scared by Blair pointing guns at K.E. and threatening K.E. to keep K.E. from leaving.

As to the events of November 11, 1989, the girls both testified Blair picked them up in Minneapolis that morning and told them they were going to the St. Cloud Target to steal. He said they would get a motel room.

On their first trip to Target, each girl was successful in taking a full cart of stolen merchandise out of the store. D.L. testified she remembered taking a TV off a display shelf. She said they did not take anything out of the locked display case on the first trip. That testimony was contradicted by K.E., however. K.E. testified Blair pushed in the glass back of the case in a fashion in conformity with the testimony of security officer Kujas. K.E. said Blair put two VCRs in her cart and one in the cart of D.L. K.E. also remembered taking some CD players, telephones, clothing and cigarettes on the first trip.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
474 N.W.2d 630, 1991 Minn. App. LEXIS 882, 1991 WL 163090, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-blair-minnctapp-1991.