State v. Gallegos

2016 UT App 172, 380 P.3d 44, 819 Utah Adv. Rep. 13, 2016 Utah App. LEXIS 177, 2016 WL 4256940
CourtCourt of Appeals of Utah
DecidedAugust 11, 2016
Docket20140571-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 2016 UT App 172 (State v. Gallegos) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Utah primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Gallegos, 2016 UT App 172, 380 P.3d 44, 819 Utah Adv. Rep. 13, 2016 Utah App. LEXIS 177, 2016 WL 4256940 (Utah Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

Opinion

VOROS, Judge:

¶1 Isaac Anthony Gallegos appeals his convictions for. murder, aggravated assault, and obstruction of justice stemming from two stabbings—one fatal—outside a Salt Lake City club in 2012. Gallegos contends that the trial court erred in two ways: first, by admitting unreliable eyewitness identification testimony from one witness; and second, by refusing to declare a mistrial after a prosecution witness alluded to Gallegos’s alleged gang ties. We affirm.

BACKGROUND

¶2 On a snowy November night in 2012, two people—a club patron and a club bouncer—were stabbed outside a Salt Lake City club during a parking lot brawl. The patron died at the scene. The bouncer (Bouncer) survived.

¶3 Earlier that evening, a group of four patrons—the murder victim (Victim) and three others—went to the club. A few hours later, as the four prepared to leave, Gallegos, his girlfriend, and another couple arrived, and their ID’s were scanned at the door. Inside the club, Gallegos was introduced to one of the four patrons (Patron) as “Smokey, from 18th Street.” The two “exchanged words” and Gallegos hit Patron. A scuffle ensued just inside the club’s front doors. A club manager (Manager) alerted security. Club security apparently quelled the fight, but it soon moved outside.

¶4 In the parking lot, the fight escalated into a brawl with a crowd of people fighting on the ground. Bouncer began pulling people off the pile surrounding Victim. A man then approached Bouncer from behind and stabbed him at least twice. The man also stabbed Victim. Bouncer survived, but Victim died at the scene.

¶5 After the brawl, police arrived and investigated. Four witnesses described the stabber as a bald Hispanic man with short facial hair. A fifth witness described the stabber as a bald man with a goatee. One of those witnesses, Patron, told police that the stabber was introduced as “Smokey, from 18th Street” earlier that night. A police database check for the moniker “Smokey” returned Gallegos’s name and address.

*47 ¶6 Later that night, police began surveil-ling Gallegos’s apartment. Outside his apartment, tire tracks in the snow led to a parked brown or copper Chevy truck with its engine still warm. Footprints from the truck led to Gallegos’s door. At about 1 a.m., two children left Gallegos’s apartment and carried two garbage bags to a nearby dumpster. The bags contained a torn long-sleeve dress shirt with a small blood stain, a white undershirt, and a small knife blade without its handle. The blood on the shirt was Gallegos’s own. The knife tested negative for blood.,Gallegos was charged with murder, aggravated assault, and obstruction of justice.

Manager’s Eyewitness Testimony

¶7 Gallegos challenges Manager’s identification of Gallegos as the stabber. Manager testified that while attempting to break up the melee he saw one of the men “trying to work toward” Bouncer. The man “reached into his pocket and he pull[ed] out a knife.” The knife appeared to be a double-sided “black knife” with a two-and-a-half to three-inch blade. Watching “the guy with the knife,” Manager saw the man “start[ ] stabbing [Bouncer],” “three, maybe four times.” Manager did not “know if he connected on every single swing” but testified that the stabber “definitely hit [Bouncer].” In .response, Bouncer initially “just shoved [the stabber] off like it was nothing” before realizing he had been stabbed.

¶8 At this point Victim lay beneath a “dog pile” on the ground. Manager testified that after the stabber struck Bouncer, the stabber got on top of Victim and repeatedly stabbed him, ‘Tetween eight and ten times.” The stabber swung so many times, Manager testified, that “all I saw was a blur.” Another bouncer (Employee) pulled the stabber off of Victim, but could not hold him. Manager testified that the stabber ended up “looking straight at [him]” from only “a few feet away.” Still looking at the stabber, Manager told the stabber to “just leave.” The stabber and two other men ran to a truck and drove away. Manager initially described the truck to police as a “big Ford four-door truck” but later described the vehicle as a “reddish brown” Chevy truck.

¶9 Manager testified that he had a clear view of the stabber’s face because the fight occurred near the club’s illuminated awning. Manager described the stabber as an average-size, bald, Hispanic man about 30 years old with short, light facial hair. And he described the stabber as “wearing a white T-shirt” covered by a light “brownish” long-sleeve dress shirt.

¶10 As a former bouncer, Manager was trained to “memorize what [a perpetrator] look[s] like” and “memorize if there is anything that stands out, clothing, facial hair, tattoos,” when something serious happens. Manager explained that bouncers do this “so if police or any kind of liability-type issues were to come up, bouncers would know the details.” Although Manager admitted that he had watched the news the day after the incident and heard that the poliee had arrested a suspect, he did not “remember a picture.”

¶11 Approximately 30 days after the stabbings, Manager was shown a photo array by the lead detective on the case. Another officer had assembled the physical photographs, but the detective knew which photo showed the suspect. The photo array itself consisted of an instruction sheet and a stack of six black-and-white photos: one photo of Gallegos, and five “filler photos” of other men who shared Gallegos’s birth' year and physical characteristics—bald or with very short hair and facial hair. Although the detective later testified that the photos were limited to “the exact same age, within the same ethnicity of the [suspect],” two of the men did not have Hispanic surnames and the parties disagree about the exact ethnicity of each person. The suspects appear to have similar skin tones. The selection criteria for the photo array stated “white male.” 2

*48 ¶12 The detective conducted the photo array at the police station. He began the procedure by handing Manager the instruction sheet and asking him to read it; the sheet contained four instructions:

You are about to be shown a group of photographs. Before you view these photo- • graphs, please read the following carefully.

1) Because a police officer is showing you a group of photographs, this should not influence your judgment in any way.
2) The person who committed the crime may or may not be in’ the group of photographs.
3) You are in no way obligated to identify anyone.
4) Study each photograph carefully before making any comments. Consider that the photographs could be old or new, that hair styles change, and that persons can alter their identity by growing or shaving facial hair.

¶13 The detective testified that he made no comments or gestures while Manager read the instructions. After Manager finished reading the instruction sheet, he signed his name to it. Next, the detective handed Manager a stack of six black-and-white photographs; Gallegos’s photo was third in the stack.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2016 UT App 172, 380 P.3d 44, 819 Utah Adv. Rep. 13, 2016 Utah App. LEXIS 177, 2016 WL 4256940, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-gallegos-utahctapp-2016.