State v. Gonzales

121 P.3d 822, 2005 Alas. App. LEXIS 114, 2005 WL 2471004
CourtCourt of Appeals of Alaska
DecidedOctober 7, 2005
DocketA-8653
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 121 P.3d 822 (State v. Gonzales) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Alaska primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Gonzales, 121 P.3d 822, 2005 Alas. App. LEXIS 114, 2005 WL 2471004 (Ala. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

OPINION

STEWART, Judge.

In January 1992, the Anchorage police uncovered evidence that Andrew D. Gonzales had sexually abused his girlfriend’s daughter, A.D. During the investigation, the police contacted Gonzales for an interview. He left the state within days of the contact. By July 1992, the investigation was dormant.

Ten years later, the police discovered that Gonzales had returned to Alaska. The 1992 case was reopened and the grand jury indicted Gonzales in September 2002 for several counts of sexual abuse of a minor based on the 1992 allegations. The grand jury also indicted Gonzales for several counts of distribution and possession of child pornography based on conduct in 2002.

*824 Gonzales moved to dismiss the counts that were based on the 1992 allegations. Gonzales argued that the ten-year delay between the 1992 discovery and investigation of the allegations and the 2002 indictment was unreasonable and prejudiced him. Gonzales argued that he was prejudiced because several items of evidence collected by the police in 1992 had been lost.

Superior Court Judge Michael L. Wolver-ton granted Gonzales’s motion to dismiss. Because we conclude that Judge Wolverton’s ruling was not an abuse of discretion, we affirm.

Background and proceedings

During a traffic stop on January 5, 1992, an Alaska State Trooper noticed sexually explicit drawings of a juvenile female on the floor of Gonzales’s ear. Later that day the state troopers interviewed A.D., the juvenile daughter of Gonzales’s girlfriend (D.D.), to investigate whether Gonzales had depicted her in the drawing, and whether he had sexually abused her. In the interview, A.D., who was ten years old at the time, denied that Gonzales had ever drawn her naked and denied that he had sexually abused her.

The troopers referred the investigation to the Anchorage Police Department. Anchorage Police Detective Linda Branchflower re-interviewed A.D. on January 15, 1992. During this interview, A.D. stated that Gonzales had sexually abused her by taking her clothes off and fondling her genital area and by touching her with his penis. Detective Branchflower videotaped an interview with A.D., her younger brother, M.D., and her mother, D.D.

The next day, Detective Branchflower executed a search warrant on Gonzales’s residence. The day after executing the warrant, Branchflower learned from D.D. that Gonzales said that the police missed a videotape hidden in his kitchen. Branchflower contacted Gonzales at his work and asked him to come to the police station for an interview. Branchflower assured Gonzales that no matter what he told her in the interview, she would allow him to leave without being placed under arrest. Gonzales agreed to an interview at the police station.

During the interview, Gonzales admitted that the illustrations found by state troopers in his ear were of A.D., but said that she had not posed for them. When the detective confronted Gonzales about A.D.’s allegations of sexual abuse, he requested an attorney. Branchflower ended the interview, but told Gonzales that if he changed his mind about talking to her further, she was still interested in getting his side of the story.

Gonzales left the state soon after this interview. Detective Branchflower attempted to locate Gonzales by searching databases that would show whether Gonzales had applied for a driver’s license or had committed a crime in Florida, Nevada, or Washington— states where she had heard Gonzales might be residing. But Branchflower did not locate Gonzales. Branchflower suspended the Gonzales investigation in July of 1992.

Gonzales returned to Alaska in December of 2001. When Anchorage Police Detective Kristie Neddeau learned that Gonzales was residing in Alaska, she resumed the investigation. In September 2002, the grand jury indicted Gonzales for four counts of first-degree sexual abuse of a minor, two counts of second-degree sexual abuse of a minor, and one count of attempted first-degree sexual abuse of a minor, 1 based on Gonzales’s alleged abuse of A.D. during 1991 and 1992. In addition, the grand jury indicted Gonzales on three counts of distribution of child pornography and seven counts of possession of child pornography, based on conduct in 2002. 2

Gonzales moved to dismiss the sexual abuse of a minor charges on the ground of prejudicial pre-accusation delay. While the case was dormant, the police lost most of the recordings of the interviews that Branchflower conducted, including the videotape of her interview with A.D. on January 15, 1992, and the tape recording of Branchflower’s interview with Gonzales. At the evidentiary hearing on the motion, Judge Wolverton heard *825 testimony from Gonzales, his son, Andrew Gonzales Jr., and from Branchflower, who had retired before the case was revived.

After the parties submitted additional briefing and presented argument, Judge Wolverton granted Gonzales’s motion to dismiss the first seven counts of the indictment involving sexual abuse of a minor. Judge Wolverton explained:

[T]here was no good reason set forth for the delay. I’m going to find also that because the tapes were missing, among[] other items of evidence ... that I would have granted the motion under Fletcher[ 3 ] to give an instruction to the jury that they would have presumed that the evidence would have been favorable to the defendant. In my view that sort of finding ... is equivalent to actual prejudice.

Judge Wolverton issued a summary written order granting Gonzales’s motion. He severed the first seven counts involving sexual abuse of a minor from the remaining counts based on his conduct in 2002. The State now appeals.

Judge Wolverton did not abuse his discretion by dismissing the charges

The State argues that Judge Wolverton erred by dismissing the sexual abuse charges in the indictment. The State claims that the delay was reasonable and did not prejudice Gonzales.

We noted in State v. Mouser 4 that the due process clauses of the United States and Alaska Constitutions protect defendants against unreasonable pre-accusation delay. 5 The primary concern of the rule against unreasonable pre-accusation delay is not the length of the delay, but the harm to the defendant’s ability to present a defense. 6 In order to prove unreasonable pre-accusation delay, a defendant must show (1) that the State lacked a valid reason for the delay, and (2) that the delay prejudiced the defendant. 7

To assess a claim of pre-indictment delay, courts must balance the State’s interest in postponing accusation against the defendant’s interest in early notice of the charges against him. 8

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Related

State v. Wright
Alaska Supreme Court, 2017
State v. Gonzales
156 P.3d 407 (Alaska Supreme Court, 2007)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
121 P.3d 822, 2005 Alas. App. LEXIS 114, 2005 WL 2471004, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-gonzales-alaskactapp-2005.