State v. E. Rodriguez

2024 MT 132, 551 P.3d 292, 417 Mont. 52
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedJune 25, 2024
DocketDA 21-0499
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 2024 MT 132 (State v. E. Rodriguez) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. E. Rodriguez, 2024 MT 132, 551 P.3d 292, 417 Mont. 52 (Mo. 2024).

Opinion

06/25/2024

DA 21-0499 Case Number: DA 21-0499

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF MONTANA 2024 MT 132

STATE OF MONTANA,

Plaintiff and Appellee,

v.

ESANDRO ROMAN RODRIGUEZ,

Defendant and Appellant.

APPEAL FROM: District Court of the Eighth Judicial District, In and For the County of Cascade, Cause No. CDC-19-793 Honorable John A. Kutzman, Presiding Judge

COUNSEL OF RECORD:

For Appellant:

Chad Wright, Appellate Defender, Michael Marchesini, Assistant Appellate Defender, Helena, Montana

For Appellee:

Austin Knudsen, Montana Attorney General, Katie F. Schulz, Assistant Attorney General, Helena, Montana

Joshua A. Racki, Cascade County Attorney, Matthew Robertson, Deputy County Attorney, Great Falls, Montana

Submitted on Briefs: October 25, 2023

Decided: June 25, 2024

Filed:

s p--6.•--if __________________________________________ Clerk Justice Jim Rice delivered the Opinion of the Court.

¶1 Esandro Rodriguez (Rodriguez) was convicted by a jury of aggravated kidnapping,

accountability for aggravated burglary, and two separate counts of accountability for

assault with a weapon. Rodriguez appeals, contending there was insufficient evidence to

support his conviction of aggravated burglary by accountability. Alternatively, Rodriguez

argues his convictions for aggravated burglary by accountability and assault with a weapon

by accountability against Leah Gray violate § 46-11-410, MCA, the multiple conviction

statute, which warrants plain error reversal or reversal for ineffective assistance of counsel

in failing to object to the duplicative convictions.

¶2 We restate the issues as follows:

1. Whether there was sufficient evidence to convict Rodriguez of accountability for aggravated burglary.

2. Whether Rodriguez’s convictions for assault with a weapon by accountability and aggravated burglary by accountability violate § 46-11-410, MCA?

We affirm on Issue 1 and reverse on Issue 2.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

¶3 On September 27, 2019, around 10:00 p.m., Jesse Daniels (Daniels) and his

girlfriend, Lauren Aviles (Aviles), met up with Rodriguez for the purposes of finding

Michael Crawford (Michael) and collecting money Michael owed them for a past drug

transaction, and ultimately purchasing methamphetamine for themselves. Aviles drove

Daniels and Rodriguez in her vehicle, an older model white Mercury Grand Marquis,

toward Countryside Village in Great Falls, where Michael’s mobile home was located. As

2 they neared the Village, they saw Michael, Michael’s girlfriend, Amanda, and Michael’s

mother’s partner, “Junior,” walking along the street toward Walmart.

¶4 Daniels confronted Michael about the money he owed them. Michael ran away, and

Daniels and Rodriguez held Amanda and Junior at gunpoint and forced them into the car.

While the two men kept their guns trained on Amanda and Junior, Aviles drove to

Michael’s mobile home. Daniels demanded that Junior call Michael. Rodriguez threatened

Amanda and held a gun to her lower back for the duration of the drive.

¶5 When the group arrived at the home, Michael’s mother, Leah, was smoking a

cigarette on the porch. Moments before, Michael had arrived at the home, told Leah about

Amanda and Junior being taken, and ran into the home. Daniels, Rodriguez, Junior, and

Amanda walked up to mobile home, and Daniels asked Leah where Michael was. Behind

Daniels, Rodriguez, still holding his gun, stood with Amanda and Junior. Leah told Daniels

that Michael was not there, and when Daniels moved toward the door, Leah grabbed his

arm and told him not to go inside. Daniels said he “wasn’t playing,” and pressed a gun to

Leah’s stomach. Leah initially froze, but then pushed Daniels, and she and Junior ran

inside, and shut and locked the door. Daniels went to the annex door on the mobile home

and began knocking and pounding on that door, yelling for Michael to come out.

¶6 Leah’s daughter-in-law, Celeste, opened that door, unaware that Daniels and

Rodriguez were armed. She was startled by the commotion and had intended on telling

them that her two-year-old daughter was trying to sleep. However, Daniels returned to the

main door. He barged into the living room and knocked over Celeste’s 2-year-old

3 daughter. Leah and Junior ran into the kitchen. Chasing after them, Daniels, gun in hand,

ran past the dining area and into the kitchen. Leah yelled for her mother, stating that

Daniels had a gun and telling her to call 911. Leah heard her two-year-old granddaughter

crying and spun around as Junior rushed by her in the kitchen, where Daniels entered and

came face to face with Junior. When Daniels realized that police were being contacted, he

turned and fled. Junior testified that Daniels held a gun to him in the car and outside the

home, but not inside the home. While Daniels was inside, Rodriguez, Aviles, and Amanda

remained outside.

¶7 After Daniels fled, Daniels and Rodriguez forced Amanda back into Aviles’s car

and drove off. Rodriguez kept his gun trained on Amanda. Later that night, they met

Michael at a McDonalds’s parking lot, and he paid them the money they demanded.

Daniels then told Rodriguez to release Amanda. Thereafter, Daniels, Aviles, and

Rodriguez drove to Oregon.

¶8 On October 9, 2019, a Great Falls Police Department (GFPD) officer conducted a

traffic stop of Aviles’s white Mercury Grand Marquis, which matched the description of a

vehicle police were attempting to locate, and alerted Officer Hronek, who had been looking

for Daniels, Rodriguez, and Aviles. Daniels was then driving the vehicle, and Aviles was

a passenger. GFPD detectives obtained a search warrant for Aviles’s vehicle, finding

weapons and a notebook and pictures belonging to Rodriguez in the car. Rodriguez was

located and questioned, and ultimately charged with several offenses arising out of the

incident: Count I, aggravated kidnapping of Junior; Count II, aggravated kidnapping of

4 Amanda; Count III, accountability to assault with a deadly weapon against Junior; Count

IV, accountability to aggravated burglary; Count V, accountability to assault with a weapon

against Leah; and Count VI, accountability to assault against Celeste. Rodriguez was tried

and convicted on Counts II through V; he was acquitted on Count I. Count VI was

dismissed at trial upon the State’s motion.

¶9 Rodriguez appeals, raising issues that challenge his convictions of Count IV and V.

Additional facts will be discussed herein.

STANDARD OF REVIEW

¶10 A claim of insufficiency of evidence is reviewed de novo regardless of whether it

was raised below. State v. Robertson, 2014 MT 279, ¶ 16, 376 Mont. 471, 336 P.3d 367.

“When reviewing a challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence, this Court determines

whether, after reviewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the prosecution, any

rational trier of fact could have found the essential elements of the crime beyond a

reasonable doubt.” State v. Christensen, 2020 MT 237, ¶ 11, 401 Mont. 247, 472 P.3d 622.

Thus, “[i]t is within the province of the jury to determine the weight and credibility afforded

to the evidence, and it is not this Court’s function to agree or disagree with the jury’s

verdict.” Byers v. Cummings, 2004 MT 69, ¶ 16, 320 Mont. 339, 87 P.3d 465. The State

must prove every fact necessary to constitute the crime beyond a reasonable doubt. State

v.

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Bluebook (online)
2024 MT 132, 551 P.3d 292, 417 Mont. 52, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-e-rodriguez-mont-2024.