State v. Castro

CourtCourt of Appeals of Kansas
DecidedJanuary 8, 2015
Docket111981
StatusUnpublished

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

Bluebook
State v. Castro, (kanctapp 2015).

Opinion

NOT DESIGNATED FOR PUBLICATION

Nos. 111,981 111,982

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF KANSAS

STATE OF KANSAS, Appellee,

v.

PHILLIP CASTRO, Appellant.

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Appeal from Wyandotte District Court; ROBERT P. BURNS, judge. Opinion filed January 8, 2016. Affirmed.

Randall L. Hodgkinson, of Kansas Appellate Defender Office, for appellant.

Shawn M. Boyd, assistant district attorney, Jerome A. Gorman, district attorney, and Derek Schmidt, attorney general, for appellee.

Before SCHROEDER, P.J., PIERRON, J. and HEBERT, S.J.

Per Curiam: Phillip Castro appeals his convictions by a jury of criminal discharge of a firearm at an occupied building, aggravated battery, and criminal possession of a firearm by a convicted felon. He requests a new trial, alleging that the district court erred in instructing the jury and that the evidence was insufficient to support the convictions. He also requests reconsideration of the district court's revocation of his probation in a prior case due to his current convictions.

1 We find Castro has not established that he is entitled to a new trial, and, accordingly, we affirm the convictions. In light of that disposition, we do not address the issue of probation revocation.

Factual and Procedural Background

In the early evening hours of October 7, 2012, brothers Emmanuel and Daniel Valadez heard an unfriendly pounding at the front door of their duplex in Kansas City. The brothers, at least one of whom (Daniel) had just taken some drags from a marijuana cigarette, went to the door to find out who it was but got no response. As the pounding continued, Daniel went and glanced through his bedroom window onto his front porch where he saw two men he knew. One man, Roberto Garcia, was holding a handgun as he pounded and kicked the door. The other man, Phillip Castro, stood behind Garcia with one foot on the front step, holding a bigger gun down to his side, which Daniel described as similar to a shotgun or assault rifle that was 3-to-4 feet long. Daniel assumed the men were there to collect a $600 debt that Daniel owed to Castro, who Daniel had met in person once a few months prior.

Daniel's attempts to calm the situation upon his return to the front door failed, and the pounding was replaced by bullets coming through the door and walls of the duplex. One of those bullets went through Daniel's left thigh as he stood just feet from the door. After Daniel's failed attempts to help his girlfriend, who had been napping in his bedroom, he and Emmanuel ran through the kitchen and out the back door, separating once outside.

Daniel fled up the alley, stopping at the first occupied residence he found and sitting down on the driveway, still within sight distance of the duplex. From there, Daniel saw Castro run down the back stairway carrying the rifle just before he heard several more gunshots. Daniel then got up and started to travel toward his mother's home. After

2 hearing sirens approaching, Daniel switched direction and ran back to the front of his duplex. There, on the steps, he found Emmanuel sitting in the middle of the steps, severely wounded and gasping for air.

Emmanuel had been shot multiple times after fleeing the duplex. Some of his wounds came after he tried to hide in the bottom of a staircase under their back porch after running out of the back of the house. By that time, the men had broken through the front door and ran through the house after the brothers. The man with the handgun soon found Emmanuel hiding in the staircase. The man repeatedly fired at Emmanuel from the top of the stairs, hitting him in the legs seven or eight times and his left testicle once. Emmanuel did not realize he had been shot as he scrambled to escape the barrage of bullets. He managed to run up his neighbor's staircase to the other side of the duplex, where he hid by a central air conditioning unit. Believing the shooters had left, Emmanuel tried to return to the front porch. But the shooters were not gone. Emmanuel soon encountered the man with the bigger gun, who fired seven or eight shots at Emmanuel from 8-to-10 feet away, striking him once in his chest and once in his stomach. The man then fled.

Daniel was able to identify Garcia and Castro as the men at their duplex with guns that day. He consistently did so immediately after the shooting, later that night at the hospital, and again during a later-recorded statement. Daniel was not, however, able to identify who shot him or his brother, nor could Emmanuel, who saw only the guns amid the chaos. A neighbor in the adjoining duplex, Humberto Adame-Majera, saw no one as he managed to avoid the bullets coming through his walls.

No weapons were ever found, but the police did find physical evidence linking Castro and Garcia to the shooting. That evidence tied back to the 16 shell casings found at the front, back, and side of the brothers' duplex. Those shell casings, described as "7.62 by 39" rounds manufactured by Winchester, are typically known to be fired from an AK-

3 47 assault rifle. The police found two partial and two empty boxes of the same kind of ammunition during a search of Garcia's home, where Garcia said Castro had also been staying. In the home's furnace closet, the police also found a shoe box containing Castro's identification card, his social security card, a utility bill with Castro's name on it, and various other miscellaneous photos and papers.

The State charged Castro with three felonies as a result of these events: criminal discharge of a weapon at an occupied building causing great bodily harm to Daniel, a severity level 3 felony in violation of K.S.A. 2012 Supp. 21-6308; aggravated battery causing great bodily harm to Emmanuel, a severity level 4 felony in violation of K.S.A. 2012 Supp. 21-5413(b); and criminal possession of a firearm by a convicted felon. Sixteen months later, a jury convicted Castro as charged. Castro challenged the reliability of Daniel's identification of him in his motion for new trial and during his allocution, during which he professed his innocence. The trial court, noting that it was the jury's job to decide credibility, denied the motion for a new trial.

The district court subsequently imposed a presumptive controlling sentence of 206 months' imprisonment. During the same hearing, the district court cited this conviction in support of revocation of Castro's probation in case 10CR680. The court then imposed a controlling 44-month prison sentence, which he ordered to run consecutive to Castro's 206-month prison sentence in 12CR1390.

Castro filed timely appeals in both cases, which this court consolidated for purposes of argument and decision. Castro has not, however, briefed the underlying facts or circumstances of 10CR680. He simply requests that if this court reverses or modifies his convictions in 12CR1390, it "should also vacate the probation revocation in case number 10CR680 and remand for reconsideration in light of that disposition."

4 Lesser Included Offense of Criminal Discharge of a Weapon

Castro was charged with and convicted of a severity level 3 person felony of criminal discharge of a weapon at an occupied building causing great bodily harm. He now argues that he should get a new trial because the district court should have sua sponte instructed the jury on the lesser offense of criminal discharge of a weapon resulting in bodily harm, a severity level 5 person felony.

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State v. Castro, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-castro-kanctapp-2015.