State v. Clay

329 P.3d 484, 300 Kan. 401, 2014 WL 3680487, 2014 Kan. LEXIS 430
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJuly 25, 2014
DocketNo. 107,038
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 329 P.3d 484 (State v. Clay) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court 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. Clay, 329 P.3d 484, 300 Kan. 401, 2014 WL 3680487, 2014 Kan. LEXIS 430 (kan 2014).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Moritz, J.:

Aaron K. Clay appeals his jury convictions of felony murder, attempted aggravated robbery, and criminal possession of a firearm. Clay contends the trial court twice erred in instructing the jury, twice erred by responding in writing to jury questions, and erred by permitting the jury to learn he was in custody and had been in prison. Clay also raises three sentencing errors.

We find no trial errors justifying reversal of Clay's convictions. But because the district court improperly sentenced Clay to 25 years to life instead of 20 years to life, we vacate Clay s sentence and remand for resentencing.

Factual and Procedural Background

The events leading to Clays convictions began on January 2, 2010, as a group of people socialized in the apartment of Jose Guadelupe Mayorga-Diaz (Mayorga). The group included Javier Reynoza, Mayorga’s friend; Juan Carlos Rios-Patron, who was staying with Mayorga’s neighbor; Deliska Tate and Annicka Martinez, Mayorga’s acquaintances; Reuban Richardson, who occasionally stayed with Mayorga; Kristy Robinson, Richardson’s girlfriend; and Jason Hochard, Richardson’s close friend. Tate and Martinez left Mayorga’s apartment in the early evening. Hochard, Richardson, and Robinson left sometime later.

Around 10 p.m., someone knocked on the apartment’s door. Mayorga asked who it was, and a male voice replied, “Jason.” Rey-noza opened the door, peeked out, and took two steps backward. The man at the door fired a gun, hitting Reynoza in the forehead. Reynoza later died from the gunshot wound.

Rios-Patron identifies the shooter.

Testifying through an interpreter, Rios-Patron said that on the night of the shooting he was at Mayorga’s apartment eating, drink[403]*403ing, and socializing. As Rios-Patron sat about 7 to 8 feet from the apartment’s door, he heard “Jason” knocking. After Reynoza opened the door, Rios-Patron saw a man fire a gun, hitting Rey-noza. Rios-Patron saw the shooter’s face and looked into his eyes. Afraid he too would be shot, Rios-Patron laid down on the floor.

Rios-Patron testified that on the night of the shooting he told officers he did not know the shooter. Soon thereafter, law enforcement officers showed Rios-Patron a six-person photographic lineup and asked him if any of the photographs depicted the shooter.

According to Rios-Patron, as officers showed him the photo lineup, they “kind of threaten[ed]” him, saying he needed to cooperate or else he could go to jail. So Rios-Patron selected Richardson from the lineup and told police the photograph “look[ed] like [the shooter] a lot” and that he thought “it maybe” the shooter. At trial, Rios-Patron said he picked Richardson because he had seen him around the apartment complex. But according to Rios-Patron, he “had no certainty” Richardson was the shooter and only identified him so police would “leave [Rios-Patron] alone.”

A few weeks later police again showed Rios-Patron photographs, this time in an effort to identify another of Mayorga’s guests the night of the shooting. Instead, as Rios-Patron testified, “When I saw a photograph, there was a photograph of a face right there. And when I saw it, I just—I just had to look again and went back and said, [o]h. I got surprised. It’s like, [t]his is [the shooter].” The prosecutor asked Rios-Patron how “sure” he was that the photograph depicted the shooter, and Rios-Patron responded, “Well, it’s the same. It’s him.” The prosecutor then asked Rios-Patron if the man in tire photograph was in the courtroom, and Rios-Patron identified Clay.

On cross-examination, defense counsel asked Rios-Patron if he was afraid of Richardson. After Rios-Patron said he was not, defense counsel impeached him with his preliminary hearing testimony in which Rios-Patron testified he was afraid of Richardson “and his people.”

The accounts of the law enforcement officers who were present during Rios-Patron’s identifications of Richardson and Clay differed from his. Detective James Gunzenhauser testified Rios-Pa[404]*404tron identified Richardson as the shooter before being shown a lineup. And when Rios-Patron was shown a six-person lineup shortly thereafter, he immediately identified Richardson as the shooter and expressed no uncertainty in his identification. Gun-zenhauser denied he or any other officer threatened Rios-Patron.

Detective Angela Garrison testified she showed a second set of photographs to Rios-Patron in an attempt to identify a man named Marcos who reportedly also was at Mayorga’s apartment tire night of the shooting. As Rios-Patron reviewed the photographs, he “blurted out” that the photograph depicting Clay was the shooter. Rios-Patron appeared confused, however, so Garrison placed Richardson’s photo next to Clay’s photo and again asked Rios-Patron to identify the shooter. According to Garrison, Rios-Patron initially believed the two pictures showed the same person but then became “adamant” that Clay’s photograph depicted the shooter. He then declared he knew “for sure” Clay was the shooter because of his eyes and his mouth.

The Activities of Tate, Martinez, West, and Clay

Tate and Earl “Will” West testified that they, along with Martinez and Clay, devised a plan to rob some of the people in May-orga’s apartment on January 2,2010. Although their testimony contained discrepancies, they generally corroborated each other on the following facts.

Tate testified she and Martinez left Mayorga’s apartment around 5 p.m. Clay and West picked up the two women in a dark-colored Jeep. They then stopped at a gas station, and West went inside to pay for gas and buy cigarettes.

While West was inside, Martinez and Clay talked about robbing “the Mexicans” at Mayorga’s apartment, one of whom was “flashing around a lot of money.” Tate said because she and Martinez knew Hochard and Richardson, they decided that if the two men were at the apartment, “[die robbeiy] couldn’t go down.” Tate called Hochard and determined he and Richardson had left Mayorga’s apartment.

When West returned, the others told him about their plan to commit tire robbery. At Tate and Martinez’ direction, West drove [405]*405to Mayorga’s apartment building and circled the block several times to ensure Richardson’s car was not there. Tate testified that before they arrived at the apartment building, Clay pulled out a gun. When Tate expressed concern about the gun, Martinez told her nothing would happen and that, “[i]f anything, they would just shoot off one shot to scare—-you know what I’m saying to get everybody in their place.” Tate testified it appeared Clay agreed with Martinez’ plan. Tate told Clay to use Hochard’s first name— Jason—to gain entry into the apartment.

West parked the car, and he and Clay went inside while Martinez and Tate waited in the Jeep. Clay entered the building while West stayed at the bottom of the stairs to watch the front door. West heard Clay knock on a door and then heard a single shot, causing West to run out the door.

According to Tate, after about 5 or 6 minutes, Clay and West emerged from the building and got back in the car. No one spoke as they drove away. At some point, Clay directed tire driver, Martinez, to drive to the apartment of Clay’s friend, William Sikorski.

At Sikorski’s apartment, Clay changed his clothes while Tate, Martinez, and West smoked methamphetamine.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
329 P.3d 484, 300 Kan. 401, 2014 WL 3680487, 2014 Kan. LEXIS 430, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-clay-kan-2014.