State v. Griffin

2016 UT 33
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 27, 2016
DocketCase No. 20090520
StatusPublished

This text of 2016 UT 33 (State v. Griffin) 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. Griffin, 2016 UT 33 (Utah 2016).

Opinion

This opinion is subject to revision before publication in the Pacific Reporter

2016 UT 33

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF UTAH

GLENN HOWARD GRIFFIN, Appellant, v. STATE OF UTAH, Appellee.

No. 20090520 Filed July 27, 2016

On Direct Appeal

First District, Brigham City The Honorable Ben H. Hadfield No. 051100219

Attorneys: Jennifer Gowans Vandenberg, Park City, for appellant Sean D. Reyes, Att’y Gen., John J. Nielsen, Asst. Att’y Gen., Salt Lake City, for appellee

JUSTICE HIMONAS authored the opinion of the Court, in which CHIEF JUSTICE DURRANT, ASSOCIATE CHIEF JUSTICE LEE, JUSTICE DURHAM, and JUSTICE PEARCE joined.

JUSTICE HIMONAS, opinion of the Court:

INTRODUCTION ¶ 1 This thirty-two-year-old murder case is back before us on appeal for the second time. In 2005, Glenn Howard Griffin was charged with the 1984 murder of Bradley Perry, who was working at a Texaco gas station in Perry, Utah. The State sought the death penalty. The jury convicted Mr. Griffin of murder but imposed a sentence of life without parole instead of death. When the case was first before us on appeal, we remanded it to the trial court for a rule 23B hearing addressing three issues regarding Mr. Griffin’s claims of ineffective assistance of GRIFFIN v. STATE Opinion of the Court

counsel.1 We stayed the rest of Mr. Griffin’s appeal pending the outcome of those proceedings. We now address the trial court’s findings from the rule 23B hearing and several of Mr. Griffin’s original claims, based on which Mr. Griffin seeks to set aside his conviction. We affirm Mr. Griffin’s conviction.

BACKGROUND

¶ 2 Early in the morning of May 26, 1984, Utah State University students Ali Sabbah and Bassem Barish stopped at a Texaco gas station in Perry, Utah, having left Logan around midnight to drive to Ogden.2 They were about to put gas in their car when a man came out of the gas station and offered to help them pump the gas, even though the pump was a self-service gas pump. The man was around six feet tall and lean with black eyes and dark hair, as well as a black or dark beard, and was wearing sneakers. As the man was pumping their gas, Mr. Sabbah saw cuts and bruises on the man’s hand, and both students noticed that his arms were covered with scratches. Mr. Sabbah also noticed what appeared to be “kind of dried up blood” smeared on the man’s shirt or jeans and shiny, fresh blood on the man’s sneakers. After the man finished pumping the gas, Mr. Sabbah paid him for the gas with five one-dollar bills.

¶ 3 Mr. Barish then decided that he wanted to buy cigarettes and started to make his way toward the building. The man intercepted him and asked what Mr. Barish was doing. When Mr. Barish answered that he was going to get cigarettes, the man offered to retrieve them from the gas station for him. Mr. Barish asked how much the cigarettes cost, and the man responded that they cost one dollar. The man retrieved the

1 The three issues remanded for the rule 23B hearing were Mr. Griffin’s “claims of counsel’s conflict of interest, the failure to investigate statements by [Steven] Wells, and the failure to introduce evidence of [Craig] Martinez’s burglary of the victim’s home.” State v. Griffin, 2015 UT 18, ¶ 57, ___ P.3d ____. 2 “When reviewing a jury verdict, we examine the evidence and all reasonable inferences in a light most favorable to the verdict, reciting the facts accordingly. We present conflicting evidence only when necessary to understand issues raised on appeal.” State v. Heaps, 2000 UT 5, ¶ 2, 999 P.2d 565 (citation omitted).

2 Cite as: 2016 UT 33 Opinion of the Court

cigarettes and gave them to Mr. Barish, who gave the man a five-dollar bill. The man gave him four one-dollar bills as change, which Mr. Sabbah believed were from the five dollars that he had given the man for the gas. When the man handed Mr. Barish the cigarettes and his change, Mr. Barish noticed that there appeared to be fresh blood on one of the dollar bills. After this exchange, the students got back in their car and drove away.

¶ 4 This encounter raised the suspicions of both Mr. Sabbah and Mr. Barish. Mr. Barish showed the dollar bill with blood on it to Mr. Sabbah, who also thought it looked like fresh blood. He then placed the bloody dollar bill on the dashboard of the car. The students subsequently sped down the road in an attempt to get pulled over and make contact with the police. After their attempt to get pulled over failed, the students stopped at a pay phone, and Mr. Sabbah called 911. The 911 operator told the students not to leave their location and to wait for an officer to arrive. Approximately ten to thirty minutes later, an officer, who Mr. Sabbah recalled identified himself as Alan, arrived at the students’ location. Either Alan or another officer took the four one-dollar bills, including the one with blood on it, from the students and placed them in plastic bags. The students followed the officers to the police station, where the officers took their statements. The students were also interviewed at the police station. During the interview, Mr. Sabbah drew two sketches of the man who pumped the gas, one depicting the man’s profile and the other his face.

¶ 5 Police officers arrived at the gas station around 4:30 a.m. When the responding officers entered the building, they saw a blood trail on the floor leading to a storage room. The storage room door was locked, so one of the officers, Officer Joseph Lynn Yeates, climbed up on a structure outside the building to peer into the storage room through a window. Through the window, Officer Yeates saw a man lying on the ground with multiple injuries. After calling for an ambulance, Officer Yeates reentered the store and together with another officer kicked in the storage room door. He then checked the victim’s body and determined that the victim was dead. At that point, Officer Yeates canceled the ambulance and called for detectives to respond to the scene. The police vacuumed the “fight area of the crime scene” to collect evidence. During the investigation at the gas station, Officer Dennis Able also recorded and narrated a video of the crime scene.

3 GRIFFIN v. STATE Opinion of the Court

¶ 6 The victim was identified as Bradley Perry, who worked as a clerk at the gas station. The condition of his body testified to the violent nature of the crime. His hands were tied behind his back with an electrical cord, and he was covered with injuries, including bruises on his shoulders, torso, head, and face. Mr. Perry had what police believed to be a defensive wound on his hand from warding off an attack with a knife, as well as stab wounds on the front of his torso and on his back. Police believed that some of the wounds on Mr. Perry’s chest and back were caused by a screwdriver. Mr. Perry also had a head wound that police believed had been inflicted by striking him in the head with a sixty-pound Dr. Pepper syrup container found near his body. Mr. Perry had a fractured jaw and skull. The medical examiner also found injuries consistent with strangulation. Ultimately, the medical examiner determined that Mr. Perry’s death was caused by the combination of blunt force injuries to the head and neck and multiple stab wounds.

¶ 7 The state of the storage room and other areas of the gas station showed that there had been a violent struggle. In the arcade area, there were scuff marks on the floor, a large potted plant that had been moved and broken, and there was a smear of blood in the middle of the floor. And in the storage room, there were “spatters and splashes and transfers of blood,” “items that had been stepped on and wadded up,” and a dental bridge or partial dental bridge that was lying “some distance from the body.” Police also found bloody shoeprints from two different kinds of shoes, neither of which matched Mr.

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2016 UT 33, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-griffin-utah-2016.