State v. Escobido-Ortiz

126 P.3d 402, 109 Haw. 359
CourtHawaii Intermediate Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 30, 2005
Docket25901
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 126 P.3d 402 (State v. Escobido-Ortiz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hawaii Intermediate Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Escobido-Ortiz, 126 P.3d 402, 109 Haw. 359 (hawapp 2005).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

NAKAMURA, J.

Defendant-Appellant Aaron C. Escobido-Ortiz, also known as Aaron C. Escobido-Ortiz, Jr. (Escobido-Ortiz) 1 appeals from the Judgment entered on June 12, 2003, by the Circuit Court of the First Circuit (circuit court). 2 Escobido-Ortiz and co-defendant Ernest David Chavez, Jr. (Chavez) were jointly charged in Count 1 of the indictment with Robbery in the First Degree (Robbery I), in violation of Hawaii Revised Statutes (HRS) § 708—840(l)(b)(ii) (1993), 3 for robbing *361 a Taco Bell restaurant while armed with a knife. Chavez was charged with an additional count of Robbery I arising out of the same incident. Chavez pleaded no contest to the charges against him and Escobido-Ortiz proceeded to trial. The jury found Escobido-Ortiz guilty as charged. On June 10, 2003, he was sentenced to twenty years’ imprisonment. 4

On appeal, Escobido-Ortiz argues that the circuit court erred in 1) refusing at his first trial to exclude evidence of the positive identification of Escobido-Ortiz’s latent fingerprint found inside the Taco Bell safe, an identification made after the jury was selected, and instead declaring a mistrial; 2) denying the request of new defense counsel to continue the rescheduled trial so that counsel could obtain an expert to challenge the scientific validity of fingerprint identification; 3) allowing an expert to testify at the second trial that Escobido-Ortiz’s latent fingerprint was found inside the safe; 4) rejecting Esco-bido-Ortiz’s challenge to a juror for cause; and 5) denying Escobido-Ortiz’s motion for judgment of acquittal. We affirm.

BACKGROUND

The following relevant evidence was adduced at Escobido-Ortiz’s second trial. For one day, Escobido-Ortiz worked at the Taco Bell located on Kamehameha Highway in Kaneohe (Kaneohe Taco Bell). On June 8, 2000, at 7:30 a.m., he started work at the Kaneohe Taco Bell as a food preparation trainee but left work at about 11:45 a.m. without explanation. He did not return to work.

On June 16, 2000, shortly after 7:00 a.m., two men robbed the Kaneohe Taco Bell. Both men wore sunglasses and one of them also covered his head with a hood and his nose and mouth with a handkerchief. Two female employees were present. Threatening the use of a knife, the robbers ordered one employee to open the safe and then made both women lie face down on the floor. The robbers left with $3,327.80.

Jeannie Bucio (Bucio), 5 Chavez’s girlfriend when the robbery occurred, testified at trial. According to Bucio, on the night before the robbery, she and Chavez met Escobido-Ortiz and went “cruising” in Escobido-Ortiz’s car. At that time, Bucio was sixteen years old and had recently escaped from the Hawai'i Youth Correctional Facility (HYCF). Eseobido-Or-tiz talked to Chavez about robbing a Taco Bell, telling Chavez that Escobido-Ortiz could score “big money” or “thousands.” After “cruising” most of the night and stopping at Escobido-Ortiz’s house, the three drove in the early morning to a Jack-in-the-Box restaurant next to the Kaneohe Taco Bell. Eseo-bido-Ortiz and Chavez went to “check out” the Kaneohe Taco Bell. When they returned, Escobido-Ortiz asked Bucio to use the Ka-neohe Taco Bell bathroom.

Bucio knocked on the employees’ entrance to the Kaneohe Taco Bell and asked the female employee who answered for permission to use the bathroom. The employee accompanied Bucio and Chavez to the bathroom behind the restaurant and opened the door. When Bucio left the bathroom, she saw Chavez asking for a job application. Bu-cio walked back to the car where she was joined by Escobido-Ortiz and Chavez a short time later. They drove to Escobido-Ortiz’s house. While there, Escobido-Ortiz took money out of a bag, counted it, and gave some to Chavez and Bucio. The three, accompanied by Eseobido-Ortiz’s sister, then drove to Waikiki and rented a car.

The owner of Paradise Rent-a-Car, located in Waikiki, testified that on June 16, 2000, *362 at about 9:45 a.m., she rented a Camaro convertible to Escobido-Ortiz for two days. The rental charge, which included a $500 deposit, was $823.22. Escobido-Ortiz paid in cash, mostly in one, five, and ten dollar bills. On June 17, 2000, Chavez and Bucio “totaled” the Camaro and were arrested after a failed attempt to assist Bucio’s friend to escape from the HYCF. The police traced the Camaro back to Paradise Rent-a-Car and learned that it had been rented to Escobido-Ortiz.

Chavez testified that on June 16, 2000, he was involved in the robbery of the Kaneohe Taco Bell and that he had pleaded guilty to charges relating to that robbery. Chavez acknowledged that another person, whom he refused to name, was involved in the robbery. He specifically denied that Escobido-Ortiz was that other person. Honolulu Police Department (HPD) Detective Madeline Morika-wa (Detective Morikawa), however, testified that during an interview on July 12, 2000, Chavez stated that Escobido-Ortiz was the other person involved in the Kaneohe Taco Bell robbery.

The two Kaneohe Taco Bell employees present during the robbery, Assistant Manager Heather Hironaka (Hironaka) and Shift Manager Mailikapu Liptak (Liptak), testified at trial. On the day of the robbery, Liptak and Hironaka each arrived at work at around 7:00 a.m., before the restaurant was open. Liptak answered a knock on the door and a girl asked to use the bathroom. Liptak accompanied the girl to the bathroom and noticed a man standing nearby. A short time later, a man knocked on the door and asked Hironaka for a job application, which she gave him. When the same man returned, Hironaka opened the door and the man handed her the application. Before the door could swing closed, the man kicked it open and entered the Kaneohe Taco Bell along with another man. The other man wore a hood over his head and a handkerchief over his nose and mouth.

One of the men demanded that Hironaka open the safe, which had a combination lock on its door. Liptak was summoned and ordered to “get on the ground.” After Hirona-ka opened the safe, she joined Liptak face down on the floor. The man closest to Lip-tak took out a knife, which had a six-inch blade. The other man told the knife-holder that if Liptak moved, to “slit her throat.” The knife-holder tapped the knife on the floor in front of Liptak’s face. The men took money from the safe and stuffed it in bags. The men then ushered the women into a walk-in refrigerator and told the women to wait two or three minutes before coming out. After waiting as instructed, the women left the refrigerator and Hironaka called the police. 6

Shortly after the robbery was reported, an HPD evidence specialist recovered three latent fingerprints from the Kaneohe Taco Bell, including a partial latent fingerprint from the interior of the safe. HPD fingerprint technician Stephanie Kamakana (Kama-kana), who was qualified as an expert in fingerprint identification, testified that she positively identified the partial latent fingerprint found inside the safe as coming from Eseobido-Ortiz’s right ring finger.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
126 P.3d 402, 109 Haw. 359, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-escobido-ortiz-hawapp-2005.