State v. Gordon

2004 UT 2, 84 P.3d 1167, 491 Utah Adv. Rep. 11, 2004 Utah LEXIS 2, 2004 WL 68727
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 16, 2004
Docket20020332
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 2004 UT 2 (State v. Gordon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Gordon, 2004 UT 2, 84 P.3d 1167, 491 Utah Adv. Rep. 11, 2004 Utah LEXIS 2, 2004 WL 68727 (Utah 2004).

Opinion

WILKINS, Justice:

¶ 1 Defendant Adrian Gordon appeals his conviction for murder. Gordon argues the evidence presented at his bench trial was insufficient to support the verdict. We affirm.

BACKGROUND 1

¶ 2 Gordon was convicted of murdering Lee Lundskog. Lundskog died in the early morning of September 29, 2001 outside a 7-Eleven store in Salt Lake County as a result of numerous blows to the head. Gustavo Diaz-Hernandez, a witness to the incident, saw Lundskog’s attacker repeatedly kicking Lundskog. The evidence of homicide was substantial enough that the only issue at trial was the identity of the attacker.

¶ 3 According to the unchallenged facts, Gordon was at the 7-Eleven near the time of the murder wearing a light-colored shirt. Robert Mellen, a regular customer at the 7-Eleven, saw Gordon wave at Lundskog as if to beckon him. Diaz-Hernandez, whose eyesight was quite good, witnessed the attack on Lundskog while waiting for a ride to work and immediately reported it to the person driving him to work. Police later seized a light-colored T-shirt from a place where Gordon was living.

¶ 4 In the announcement of its verdict, the trial court discussed numerous other facts. Gordon challenges many of the trial court’s statements regarding the evidence by placing the trial court’s statements into three categories: those unsupported by the evidence, improper and irrelevant inferences, and statements that are inconsistent with the evidence. Gordon asserts that the trial court’s unsupported, improper, and inconsistent statements, all of which he refers to ge-nerieally as “findings,” must be stricken, leaving a conviction unsupported by sufficient evidence.

*1168 ANALYSIS

I. STANDARD OF REVIEW

[1] ¶ 5 “When reviewing a bench trial for sufficiency of the evidence, we must sustain the trial court’s judgment unless it is ‘against the clear weight of the evidence, or if [we] otherwise reach[ ] a definite and firm conviction that a mistake has been made.’ ” State v. Goodman, 763 P.2d 786, 786-87 (Utah 1988) (quoting State v. Walker, 743 P.2d 191, 193 (Utah 1987)).

II. SUFFICIENCY OF THE EVIDENCE

¶ 6 As noted above, in evaluating Gordon’s insufficiency of the evidence claim we must determine whether the verdict is against the clear weight of the evidence presented at trial. Although we do not discuss each and every fact presented at trial, the trial record provides ample evidence to support the facts discussed below.

¶ 7 Robert Mellen, a frequent customer of the 7-Eleven store where Lundskog was killed, testified at trial concerning his observations at the 7-Eleven on the morning of Lundskog’s murder. Mellen arrived at the 7-Eleven shortly after 5:20 a.m. Mellen identified Gordon as being at the store that morning. Upon leaving the 7-Eleven, Mel-len returned to his truck in front of the store. According to a surveillance video from inside the 7-Eleven, Gordon exited the store on foot at 5:25:56 a.m. and headed north. While Mellen was backing his truck away from the store about ten seconds later he saw Gordon, whom he identified in a photo line-up, “waving [Lundskog] ... to come over and talk to him.” At 5:27:21, barely a minute after Gordon’s gesture to Lundskog, the store’s surveillance camera shows Lundskog walking north in front of the 7-Eleven — the direction of Gordon’s travel. This is the last time Lundskog appears on the surveillance tape. Lundskog’s body was later found just behind the 7-Eleven, near the northwest corner of the building.

¶ 8 Another witness at trial, Gustavo Diaz-Hernandez, witnessed at least a portion of the attack on Lundskog. He testified that he was walking by the 7-Eleven when he heard noises that he eventually determined came from one person kicking another. Diaz-Hernandez observed the attack from various vantage points and distances. He watched the attacker repeatedly kick Lundskog before ceasing the attack and entering the 7-Eleven store from the front. The front of the store was well-lit. According to Diaz-Hernandez, the attacker was a muscular African-American man with short hair wearing a loose T-shirt, baggy shorts, and white tennis shoes. Diaz-Hernandez’s description of the attacker’s clothing matched Mellen’s description of Gordon.

¶ 9 Diaz-Hernandez continued observing the attacker, who left the 7-Eleven store when another ear pulled up. The attacker went to that car, put some bags inside, returned to Lundskog and kicked him again, and then walked away from the area alongside the ear. Diaz-Hernandez’s observations of the attacker match quite well with Gordon’s actions as recorded on videotape by the store’s surveillance camera.

¶ 10 Gordon first appeared on the store’s video at 5:20:50 a.m. when he entered the store from the north. While in the store, Gordon used the telephone before briefly departing to the north, passing Lundskog in the doorway. Gordon then reentered the store at 5:25:45 a.m. before again departing and heading north barely fifteen seconds later. According to Mellen’s testimony, he saw Gordon beckon toward Lundskog at 5:26:08-:09 a.m. Lundskog is seen crossing in front of the store in Gordon’s direction just over one minute later. Gordon reentered the 7-Eleven from the north at 5:31:17 a.m. and returned to the telephone. One car pulled into the parking lot and its occupant entered the store. Then, another car pulled into the parking lot at 5:32:01 a.m., whereupon Gordon left the store heading north. Neither Gordon nor Lundskog is seen again on the store’s surveillance tape.

¶ 11 Given the accounts presented at trial by both Diaz-Hernandez and Mellen, and the videotape evidence from the store, the trial court’s verdict is not against the clear weight of the evidence; rather, it is amply supported by that evidence. Gordon *1169 encountered Lundskog at the store that morning. This fact is clearly evidenced both by them passing one another in the doorway and Mellen’s observation of Gordon’s beckoning motion toward Lundskog. Further, the videotape evidence showing Lundskog heading toward the north shortly after Gordon’s actions reasonably supports the conclusion that Lundskog responded to Gordon’s summoning. Nearly four full minutes after Lundskog disappeared from the view of the surveillance camera, Gordon reentered the store from the north before again leaving as a car pulled into the parking lot, as described by Diazr-Hernandez. Any discrepancies in Diaz-Hernandez’s testimony are minor compared to the accuracy of his observations.

¶ 12 Gordon argues that Diaz-Hernandez’s identification of Gordon as the attacker is suspect because of the poor lighting conditions in the area where Lundskog was attacked and Diaz-Hernandez’s inconsistent preliminary hearing testimony regarding the identity of the attacker. Although Diaz-Hernandez failed to positively identify Gordon as the attacker in a photo line-up and at the preliminary hearing, he did positively identify Gordon at trial.

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Bluebook (online)
2004 UT 2, 84 P.3d 1167, 491 Utah Adv. Rep. 11, 2004 Utah LEXIS 2, 2004 WL 68727, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-gordon-utah-2004.