State v. Coghill

169 P.3d 942, 216 Ariz. 578, 516 Ariz. Adv. Rep. 8, 2007 Ariz. App. LEXIS 207
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arizona
DecidedNovember 1, 2007
Docket2 CA-CR 2006-0215
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 169 P.3d 942 (State v. Coghill) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arizona primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Coghill, 169 P.3d 942, 216 Ariz. 578, 516 Ariz. Adv. Rep. 8, 2007 Ariz. App. LEXIS 207 (Ark. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

OPINION

ECKERSTROM, Presiding Judge.

¶ 1 Appellant James Prentiss Coghill was convicted after a jury trial of fourteen counts of first-degree sexual exploitation of a minor under the age of fifteen, all dangerous crimes against children and class two felonies, and one count of attempted sexual exploitation of a minor, a class three felony. Before sentencing, the trial court granted the state’s motion to dismiss the dangerous crimes against children allegations on counts two through fourteen. The trial court then sentenced Coghill to a partially mitigated, fifteen-year prison term on count one and placed him on lifetime probation for all the remaining counts.

¶2 On appeal, he contends, inter alia, that: (1) the trial court erred when it admitted testimony regarding Coghill’s possession of adult pornography, (2) the court violated his constitutional right to counsel when it denied his father’s application to appear pro hac vice, (3) the court abused its discretion when it allowed the jury to see a video compilation of the child pornography seized from Coghill’s motor home after Coghill had offered to stipulate that the computer files contained child pornography, (4) the jury failed to determine Coghill knew the children in the pornographic videos were under fifteen years of age, and (5) the state violated the Arizona Rules of Criminal Procedure when it provided him with copies of his computer’s internal hard drives rather than the originals. Because we agree that the evidence regarding Coghill’s possession of adult pornography was erroneously admitted and prejudicial, we reverse his convictions and remand the case for a new trial.

BACKGROUND

¶3 Following an argument on April 1, 2003, between Coghill and Jacob Franks, Franks telephoned the police to report Cog-hill possessed child pornography in Coghill’s motor home. In response to that allegation, Pima County Sheriffs Deputies Brenda Schupbach and Jace Judd met Franks at a convenience store. Franks told the deputies that he had been living with Coghill for a *581 week but had known for approximately two years that Coghill had child pornography. He said Coghill kept the files near his computer on compact disks that were labeled “KP.”

¶ 4 Deputies Schupbach and Judd drove to Coghill’s motor home where Coghill invited them inside to talk. Coghill said Franks had been living with him for a couple of months. Coghill denied possessing child pornography and consented to Judd’s request to look at the compact disks by his computer. He told Judd he did not know what “KP” meant, that some of the disks belonged to Franks, and that Franks must have used that label. The deputies asked Coghill if he would be willing to speak to detectives, and he agreed.

¶5 Shortly thereafter, Coghill spoke with Detective Jefford Englander. In a recorded conversation, part of which was later played for the jury, Coghill told Englander that Franks had also lived with him in the same motor home in Phoenix before Coghill moved to Tucson. Coghill elaborated that he had brought Franks from Phoenix to Tucson to live with him again about a week earlier but maintained in the same statement that Franks had been using his computer constantly for the past couple of weeks. Coghill admitted to Englander that he had downloaded adult pornography and movies to his computer and had copied some of those files to disks. He also told Englander that his computer did not require a password, so either he or Franks could use it without logging on individually.

¶ 6 Following the interview, Englander secured a search warrant for Coghill’s motor home. During that search, officers seized over 650 disks, most of which contained material that was not pornographic. But among them were several disks labeled “KP” and one labeled “dirty.” The officers also seized Coghill’s computer and a bill for cable internet service in Coghill’s name.

¶7 At trial, Franks testified that he had lived with Coghill sporadically during the past few years — for a few months beginning in October 2001; again from May or June 2002 to August of that year; a month or two prior to January 20, 2003; and then for about one week prior to April 1, 2003. Even though he had told the investigating officers he had seen Coghill viewing child pornography on the computer and had even copied a disk for Coghill containing child pornography, on which Franks had handwritten the word “dirty,” Franks admitted during cross-examination that he had never actually seen any images of child pornography on the computer screen and had only seen file names on the screen. He also testified that he had previously been convicted of three felonies.

¶ 8 Coghill testified that Franks had lived with him in Phoenix from September 2001 to November 2001; then from March to April 1, 2002; from the second week of April 2002 to February 2003; again from March 2 to March 9, 2003; and then finally from March 18 to April 1, 2003. Because Coghill’s job as an aircraft mechanic required him to travel, he lived in a motor home, which he parked outside his parents’ house in Phoenix when he was not living elsewhere. During the last few days of February 2003, Coghill moved his motor home to Tucson where he had taken a new job.

¶ 9 Six of the 650 disks confiscated from Coghill contained the fifteen child pornography video files identified in the indictment; each of the six disks had “KP” handwritten on them. The child pornography files on two of those disks had been copied to disk on March 6, 2003. The remaining child pornography files had been copied to disk on May 5, 2002; October 27, 2002; November 12, 2002; and January 21, 2003. Coghill said that he had never seen or touched the disks labeled “dirty” and “KP,” and no evidence was presented that Coghill’s fingerprints were found on any of the seized items. Detective Eng-lander testified that eight of the fifteen files had once appeared on the hard drive of Coghill’s computer, but they had been deleted and overwritten with other files and were only detectable with forensic software. Two of the files could be viewed with that software.

¶ 10 Alan Kreitl, a forensic document examiner with the Arizona Department of Public Safety, compared the handwriting on twenty-nine disks seized from Coghill’s motor home, including all of the “KP” disks, against a handwriting sample provided by *582 Franks. Kreitl concluded that Franks had probably written “dirty” on the disk bearing that label and probably had not labeled the “KP” disks. Kreitl did not compare a sample of Coghill’s writing to the labeled disks.

¶ 11 A Pima County grand jury indicted Coghill for fourteen counts of sexual exploitation of a minor under the age of fifteen and one count of attempted sexual exploitation of a minor. Each count identified a separate computer file and described the alleged child pornography videos in that file. After a jury found Coghill guilty on all counts, the trial court dismissed the dangerous crimes against children allegations on all but one of the counts. It then sentenced Coghill to a partially mitigated, fifteen-year prison term on that count, to be followed by lifetime probation on all the remaining counts.

ADMISSIBILITY OF ADULT PORNOGRAPHY EVIDENCE

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
169 P.3d 942, 216 Ariz. 578, 516 Ariz. Adv. Rep. 8, 2007 Ariz. App. LEXIS 207, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-coghill-arizctapp-2007.