State v. Feliciano

901 A.2d 631, 2006 R.I. LEXIS 140, 2006 WL 1932661
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJuly 14, 2006
Docket2002-624-C.A.
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 901 A.2d 631 (State v. Feliciano) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Feliciano, 901 A.2d 631, 2006 R.I. LEXIS 140, 2006 WL 1932661 (R.I. 2006).

Opinion

OPINION

Justice SUTTELL, for the Court.

A jury convicted the defendant, Anthony Feliciano, of several offenses in connection with the shooting death of Walter Sol and the wounding of Juan Palomo. The defendant now appeals from the five-count conviction in Superior Court, which counts were as follows: count 1, conspiracy to commit murder; count 2, first-degree murder; count 3, assault with intent to commit murder; count 4, discharging a firearm while committing a crime of violence, resulting in death; and count 5, discharging a firearm while committing a crime of violence, causing injury. 1 On counts 2 and 4, the defendant was sentenced to two mandatory consecutive life sentences. In addition, he was sentenced to ten years to serve for conspiracy (count 1), to run concurrently with count 2, and to twenty years suspended with probation for the crimes against Palomo (counts 3 and 5) to run concurrently with count 4.

On appeal, defendant advances four arguments that, individually, he posits should result in the reversal of his conviction. The first three allegations of error are evidentiary. The defendant’s foremost contention is that an opinion of the United States Supreme Court in Crawford v. Washington, 541 U.S. 36, 124 S.Ct. 1354, 158 L.Ed.2d 177 (2004), compels this Court to reevaluate past precedents maintaining the admissibility of hearsay evidence, under certain circumstances, against criminal defendants pursuant to Rule 804(c) of the Rhode Island Rules of Evidence. Speeifi- *634 eally, he asserts that the trial justice erred by admitting a statement Sol made to an acquaintance days before his death. Next, defendant argues that the trial justice abused his discretion by allowing the state’s assistant medical examiner to answer a series of hypothetical questions, when the record lacked adequate foundation to support them, and when the witness’s answers served only to mislead the jury. In the last of his evidentiary challenges, defendant asserts that the trial justice further abused his discretion by permitting a detective to testify about a conversation between a Spanish-speaking police officer serving as a translator and the surviving victim, Palomo, concerning the latter’s photo identification of cocon-spirator Jesse Simas. 2 As his final claim, defendant urges this Court to overturn our holding in State v. Rodriguez, 822 A.2d 894, 906-08 (R.I.2003), and hold that his simultaneous convictions for murder and discharging a firearm in connection with that murder violate the protection against double jeopardy contained in article 1, section 7, of the Rhode Island Constitution.

By nature of his timely appeal, we address defendant’s arguments seriatim in Part II of this opinion, and, based on the reasons therein, affirm the judgment of conviction.

I

Facts and Procedural History

For Walter Sol, the evening of June 16, 2001, began with revelry and libations at a park on Valley Street in Providence. Marvin Torres, who was under a sentence of home confinement on the evening in question, testified that he arrived at the park in his Honda Civic, shedding his ankle bracelet for the occasion. Already present were friends Jorge Benitez, Palomo, and Sol. Drinking until the point of dizziness, the group decided to depart the park around 11:30 p.m. and proceed to “Jennifer’s house,” which was apparently located on Bergen Street, the site of the approaching incident.

Although the timing and logistics of the jaunt to Bergen Street are somewhat in dispute, it is clear that the group departed the park in two vehicles: Torres’s Honda and a stolen Toyota Camry. When they arrived at Bergen Street around midnight, Torres was driving the Toyota with Palo-mo in the passenger seat, followed by Ben-itez and Sol in the Honda. As Torres slowly began to drive the Toyota down Bergen Street in the direction of Regent Avenue, “[sjome dude,” whom Torres described as a “[wjhite” person, walked into the middle of Bergen Street brandishing a firearm. Upon seeing the exposed weapon, Torres accelerated, narrowly missing the gun-wielding assailant, but not before a bullet penetrated the windshield and struck passenger Palomo in the left arm, directly above the elbow. Palomo later described the individual as an “American,” and when pressed further, indicated that he was a “[wjhite * * * American.” Torres continued speedily down Bergen Street, made a right turn onto Regent Avenue, and, with an injured Palomo in tow, fled the scene. Although Torres was unable to identify the shooter during the ensuing investigation, Det. Philip Hartnett testified that Palomo picked the “person who shot at the car” out of a police photo array, which individual the police identified as Jesse Simas, a reputed drug dealer in the neighborhood.

Benitez, from his perspective behind the Toyota, testified that the shooter redirected his ire toward him and Sol, driver and *635 front-seat passenger in the Honda, respectively. As the gunman fired, Benitez ran him over with the vehicle, crashed into another car, hit his head on the windshield, and briefly passed out. When Benitez recovered consciousness, he got out of the vehicle from the driver’s side door and ran in the direction of Regent Avenue. Alfred Rotondo and his cousin Alfred Conte, Jr., both living at 60 Bergen Street at the time, largely confirmed Benitez’s account of that evening’s events. Rotondo testified that, as he was watching television in his bedroom, he was startled by a loud “smash,” which the witness likened to the sound of an automobile collision. Running to the front parlor, the four bay windows of which boasted a wide vista of brightly lit Bergen Street, Rotondo observed an individual whose buttocks were lodged in the passenger side of the Honda’s windshield. Conte, who was standing beside his cousin in the parlor as the events unfolded before them, added that an individual, whom Conte described as “[k]ind of big, kind of heavy, [and] white,” was shouting for someone to extricate him from the windshield. The Honda’s occupants complied and defenestrated the individual, who then ran bleeding toward 59 Bergen Street.

Immediately after that, Rotondo recalled seeing three men walk over to the Honda from between 61 and 59 Bergen Street — across the street from the witnesses’ even-numbered street address. Rotondo then observed one person, whom he described as a skinny young black man with dreadlocks, approach the passenger-side window, and, with a gun in his left hand, fire five shots at close range into the vehicle. The gunman then walked away from the Honda and disappeared between 61 and 59 Bergen Street, while the Honda’s passenger, apparently wounded during the melee, managed to get out of the vehicle. Upon leaving the Honda, Roton-do saw the man fall to the ground initially, but then scamper away northward on Bergen Street. Conte provided a similar description of the gunman, but testified to hearing only four shots and seeing only one person approach the Honda. During the subsequent investigation, both witnesses identified defendant, Anthony Feli-ciano, as the man who riddled the Honda with bullets.

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Bluebook (online)
901 A.2d 631, 2006 R.I. LEXIS 140, 2006 WL 1932661, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-feliciano-ri-2006.