State v. Gillette

699 P.2d 626, 102 N.M. 695
CourtNew Mexico Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 11, 1985
Docket7667
StatusPublished
Cited by59 cases

This text of 699 P.2d 626 (State v. Gillette) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico 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. Gillette, 699 P.2d 626, 102 N.M. 695 (N.M. Ct. App. 1985).

Opinions

OPINION

DONNELLY, Chief Judge.

Defendant appeals his convictions of sixteen counts of criminal sexual penetration in the second degree, five counts of attempted first degree murder, one count of arson, one count of residential burglary, and one count of contributing to the delinquency of a minor. Defendant raises eight issues on appeal. We discuss defendant’s claim of (1) error in admission of evidence of poison; (2) refusal to permit evidence of prior sexual conduct of victim (points II and III from the brief-in-chief); (3) insufficient evidence of defendant’s position of authority; (4) erroneous admission of photographic evidence; (5) insufficient evidence of burglary; (6) insufficient evidence of attempted murder; and (7) erroneous instructions to the jury. We affirm.

The charges against defendant arise out of a bizarre and tangled scenario. In August 1980, defendant met the victim’s family in California and shortly thereafter became a boarder in their home. At the time, Kathleen was living with her three children, including D.M., age 12.1 D.M. testified that defendant shared a room with him and made sexual advances to him shortly after moving into their home. The child testified that he resisted these advances for about a month, but later submitted. In August 1981, Kathleen decided to move her family to Albuquerque. Defendant came along and continued to live in the household. D.M. testified that defendant engaged in sexual activity with him in New Mexico on the average of twice a week. These incidents occurred between August 1981 and April 1982.

Kathleen asked defendant to move out of her house when she decided that defendant was interfering with the family relationships and after her other son, Tim, told her defendant had approached him sexually. Defendant left in April 1982, and for a time thereafter was allowed to visit D.M. Kathleen did not yet know about D.M. and defendant’s sexual relationship. According to Kathleen, defendant and her son were spending too much time together, and she decided that defendant should not see her son at all. Kathleen testified that she became engaged to be married in October 1982, and planned to move the family to Australia.

D.M. testified that after Kathleen had forbidden defendant from having any contact with him, defendant would secretly come to the family residence without his mother’s knowledge. According to D.M., about once a week at approximately 9:00 p.m., defendant would enter the family residence through an unlocked window and spend the night with him. Sexual activity would occur during these visits.

According to D.M., the usual pattern of defendant’s secret visits also occurred on the evening that a fire was set in their home. Tim, a brother of D.M., testified that in the latter part of November 1982, a fire occurred in the attic of their house. After extinguishing the fire, Timothy discovered that a paint can, usually kept in the garage, had been placed inside the home heating furnace and fuel had been spilled in the hallway near the furnace. Tim testified that the furnace was usually turned off at night, but he noticed that the thermostat had been turned all the way up on the night of the fire. The fire department was called after the fire was discovered.

The evening of the fire defendant and D.M. discussed the possible move of the family to Australia. Defendant was quiet in response to the news and, before D.M. fell asleep, defendant stated that maybe in the future the two would get together. Later that night D.M. was awakened and his mother told him that someone had started a fire in the house. Defendant had secretly left sometime earlier. Before going back to sleep, D.M. hid the jacket and shirt defendant had left behind. D.M. testified that his reason for hiding defendant’s clothing was that he did not want anyone to know that defendant had been in the house that night.

Arson investigators found evidence of arson in the garage including a Coleman fuel can and a towel used by Tim to wipe up fuel in the hallway of the house. Chemical tests performed by arson investigators established that the liquid found in the hallway near the furnace in the family home was a combustible fuel. An employee of a convenience store near the family residence identified defendant as the person who, on November 21, 1982, had purchased a container of the same brand of fuel as was found in Kathleen’s home. Defendant was charged with burglary arising from his unlawful entry of Kathleen’s home on November 30, 1982, and arson resulting from the fuel scattered in the hallway and the fire started in the attic.

Kathleen testified that several months later, on February 29, 1983, when she arrived at work at Presbyterian Hospital, a package containing a Dr. Pepper had been left for her by an anonymous person. When she took a drink of the Dr. Pepper she thought it tasted terrible. Two friends, Sharon Erdmann and David West-brook, also drank from the container and thought there had been something added to the Dr. Pepper. Erdmann and Westbrook noticed that the bottom of the container had been tampered with and resealed. The police were immediately notified. Kathleen was informed, for the first time by detectives investigating the attempted Dr. Pepper poisoning, that D.M. and the defendant had an ongoing sexual relationship.

Chemical tests performed on the contents of the container of Dr. Pepper established that pentobarbital had been mixed with the beverage.2 Dr. Coleman, the chemist who performed the tests on the contents of the can, testified that pentobarbital is known as a “sleeper or a downer” and is commonly used for death by injection. At the time the pentobarbital was discovered in the can given to Kathleen, defendant was employed at the Good Shepherd Animal Clinic. Defendant admitted that he had access to sodium pentobarbital (which turns into pentobarbital if mixed with Dr. Pepper), the same drug that was used in animal euthanasia at the animal clinic. There was also evidence that defendant had worked as a paramedic and was experienced in administering injections.

I. CHEMICAL ANALYSIS OF THE DR. PEPPER

Defendant claims he was denied due process for the attempted murder charges because none of the soft drink was left, after testing, for an independent analysis by defendant’s chemist. Defendant argues that this denied him the opportunity of exposing exculpatory evidence of the presence of substances in the can.

Both the police and the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) had been initially involved in the investigation to determine whether the soft drink had been mixed with a toxic substance. The container was taken by the EPA to Dr. Coleman, who analyzed the contents solely to determine the quantity of pentobarbital it contained. Dr. Coleman kept all of his papers and the spectograph analysis of the solution which could be reviewed and used by any other chemist. Dr. Coleman testified that he used all but an insignificant amount of the contents of the liquid in making his analysis, and the small remainder had been discarded. Dr. Dugan, a chemist, said the contents of the Dr. Pepper can could have been analyzed for the presence of other substances if a small amount of the contents of the can had been preserved for analysis.

Defendant relies on State v. Lovato, 94 N.M.

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Bluebook (online)
699 P.2d 626, 102 N.M. 695, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-gillette-nmctapp-1985.