State v. Cheek

2015 UT App 243, 361 P.3d 679, 2015 Utah App. LEXIS 276, 2015 WL 6523169
CourtCourt of Appeals of Utah
DecidedOctober 29, 2015
Docket20120900-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 2015 UT App 243 (State v. Cheek) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Utah primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Cheek, 2015 UT App 243, 361 P.3d 679, 2015 Utah App. LEXIS 276, 2015 WL 6523169 (Utah Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

Opinion

ORME, Judge:

§1 Appellant Haylee Cheek (Defendant) made a series of incredibly bad decisions, as a result of which she was convicted of aggravated kidnapping and aggravated robbery, both first degree felonies; theft of a firearm, a second degree felony; possession of methamphetamine and unlawful acquisition of a financial transaction card, both third degree felonies; and sexual battery, a class A misdemeanor. She appeals those convictions. We affirm.

BACKGROUND 1

T2 Shortly before Christmas in 2007, Defendant and her friend, Ron Parker, drove to Brian Head Ski Resort to break into cars. While Parker acted as a lookout, Defendant broke into a truck and stole a wallet containing a credit card and a gas card. On their way home from the ski resort, they gassed up their car using one of the stolen cards. A few days later, Defendant and another friend, Tiffani Davis, drove back to Brian Head Ski Resort. Defendant again broke into several cars while Davis acted as a lookout. Defendant stole a handgun from one of the cars.

13 On December 28, 2007, Defendant was in a hotel room in Mesquite, Nevada, with two friends, Ambree Blackner and Uriah Suhr. While the group smoked methamphetamine, Defendant told them about the gun she had stolen a week earlier, and Subr agreed to buy it from her later that day in Cedar City, Utah.

[ 4 That afternoon, Suhr and his girlfriend drove to Cedar City. Before meeting up with Defendant, Suhr decided to burglarize Black-ner's home, but he was interrupted by Black-ner's father. When confronted by Blackner's father, Subr claimed that he was looking for Blackner and left. Blackner's father was on his way out of town when he encountered Suhr, and because he was suspicious of Suhr, he called the police and asked them to watch his home while he was gone. The police agreed to do so.

T5 Later that day, Suhr and his girlfriend picked up Defendant, Defendant's son, and Blackner. The group drove to Defendant's home to retrieve the stolen handgun and then drove to Blackner's house. At Black-ner's house, the group began using methamphetamine supplied by Suhr's girlfriend.

T6 Shortly before midnight, an officer stopped by to check on the house and spoke with Blackner on the porch. The officer's knock on the door awoke Subr's girlfriend. Worried that officers might come back and search the house, she called a friend to take her home, and they agreed to meet at a nearby truck stop. The girlfriend was also worried that officers would find contraband on Suhr (who had had a seizure and passed out) if they came back to search the house, so she took a small vial -of drugs from Subr's pocket, along with some money.

T7 As the girlfriend was getting ready to leave for the truck stop, Davis arrived at the home with Ashleigh Walker. Defendant told Davis that she had seen the girlfriend taking things from Subz's pockets. Defendant and Davis then decided to rob the girlfriend. When Suhr woke up, Defendant told him what had happened and he agreed to loan Davis the handgun, which he had purchased from Defendant earlier that day.

1 8 Davis offered to drive Subr's girlfriend to the truck stop where she was supposed to meet her friend. The girlfriend, Davis, and Walker got in Davis's car, and as the group pulled out of the driveway, a police officer began following them. This concerned the girlfriend, so she took the small vial of drugs she had taken from Subr and hid it inside her vagina. When the officer stopped following them, Davis drove back to Blackner's *684 house instead of taking the girlfriend to the truck stop.

T9 Onee they were back at Blackner's house, Davis got out of the car and started talking to Suhr. Sensing trouble, Subhr's girlfriend hid the money that she had taken from Subr between the seats of the car. When Davis got back into the car, she pulled out the handgun, pointed it at Suhr's girlfriend, told her she was robbing her, and demanded the drugs and the money. When the girlfriend said that she did not have them, Davis hit her in the face with the gun. Davis then unsuccessfully searched the girlfriend's purse and went inside the house while Walker stayed outside the car to make sure the girlfriend "couldn't get out" of the car.

10 While she was waiting in the car, the girlfriend saw a cell phone on the seat and used it to call 911. She told the 911 dispatcher where she was, that "there was a gun," and that she "needed help." The girlfriend hung up when Davis came back outside with Defendant.

[11 Davis made the girlfriend get out of the car, whereupon she and Defendant pushed the girlfriend into the garage. Inside the garage, Defendant and Davis knocked the girlfriend to the ground and, again, unsuccessfully searched her for the drugs and money. The two women then took the girlfriend into an adjoining workroom. When the girlfriend tried to escape, Defendant grabbed her by the hair, pulled her to the ground, hit her, and tied her up with rope. At that point, Walker came into the workroom, placed duct tape over the girlfriend's mouth, and went back inside.

{12 Defendant told Davis to search the girlfriend's vagina for the drugs, but Davis refused to touch the girlfriend (hereafter, "the Victim") and started searching for pliers or gloves to use in extracting the drugs. Although she could not see what was happening, the Victim testified that the women used one "cold object" and one "rough object" to search her vaginal cavity for the vial of drugs. Using the "rough object," Davis extracted the vial of drugs from the Victim's vagina and handed it to Defendant. Around that time, Walker returned to the workroom and reported that she had found the money in the car. Defendant and Davis then released the Victim and told her to put her clothes back on. Shortly thereafter, the police arrived at the home.

T13 One officer looked inside the workroom and saw Davis and the Victim. He later testified that the Victim appeared "very nervous" and "visibly upset"; that her "face was red, bruised," and swollen; and that blood was coming out of one of her nostrils. He also noticed a rope, a glove, and a "pair of panties" on the floor in the workroom. Davis claimed that the Victim's boyfriend had beaten her up and that Davis had brought her to the workroom to see if she could help her. The Victim, however, told the officer that she had "been beaten up" by "three to four girls" and that "all the girls were involved." She also identified Defendant and Davis as being "responsible for the assault."

{14 A short time later, another officer arrived at the house and found Defendant huddled in a "well darkened" corner of the garage with her head down and her hands covering her face. When the officer asked Defendant why she was hiding in the garage, Defendant told him she was "doing nothing" and that she was "not involved in what's going on here." Thereafter, officers located a duffel bag near where Defendant had been hiding and found the gas card that was stolen from the truck parked at Brian Head Ski Resort inside. After obtaining a search warrant for Defendant's car, the officers also found a checkbook belonging to a California resident who had been vacationing at the ski resort during the week of Christmas.

{15 During her several interviews with police, Defendant offered conflicting stories.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

State v. Beltran-Perez
2026 UT App 36 (Court of Appeals of Utah, 2026)
State v. Popp
2019 UT App 173 (Court of Appeals of Utah, 2019)
Cheek v. Iron County
2018 UT App 116 (Court of Appeals of Utah, 2018)
State v. Gonzales-Bejarano
2018 UT App 60 (Court of Appeals of Utah, 2018)
State v. King
2017 UT App 43 (Court of Appeals of Utah, 2017)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2015 UT App 243, 361 P.3d 679, 2015 Utah App. LEXIS 276, 2015 WL 6523169, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-cheek-utahctapp-2015.