State v. Groves

2018 NMSC 6
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 11, 2018
DocketS-1-SC-36363
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 2018 NMSC 6 (State v. Groves) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico 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. Groves, 2018 NMSC 6 (N.M. 2018).

Opinion

I attest to the accuracy and integrity of this document New Mexico Compilation Commission, Santa Fe, NM '00'05- 13:45:26 2018.02.09 IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO

Opinion Number: 2018-NMSC-006

Filing Date: January 11, 2018

Docket No. S-1-SC-36363

STATE OF NEW MEXICO,

Plaintiff-Appellee,

v.

ELEXUS GROVES,

Defendant-Appellant.

APPEAL FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF BERNALILLO COUNTY Brett R. Loveless, District Judge

Bennett J. Baur, Chief Public Defender Scott Wisniewski, Assistant Public Defender Albuquerque, NM

for Appellant

Hector H. Balderas, Attorney General Martha Anne Kelly, Assistant Attorney General Santa Fe, NM

for Appellee

OPINION

DANIELS, Justice.

{1} Defendant Elexus Groves has been indicted on two counts of first-degree murder and other serious felony offenses. In this interlocutory appeal she challenges a district court order of pretrial detention that was based on two independent and alternative detention grounds contained in Article II, Section 13 of the New Mexico Constitution.

{2} The first ground was that Defendant was detainable under the provision that has been part of our Constitution since we became a state, providing an exception to the general right

1 to pretrial release for defendants charged with capital offenses.

{3} The second ground was based on the new detention authority added by New Mexico voters in the November 2016 general election, allowing denial of pretrial release of a felony defendant if the prosecuting authority requests a hearing and proves by clear and convincing evidence that no release conditions will reasonably protect the safety of any other person or the community.

{4} We hold that the district court’s detention order was lawfully based on the new constitutional authority for pretrial detention of dangerous defendants, and we affirm it on that ground. As a result, there is no need to address in this opinion the issues Defendant raises relating to the alternative ground for the district court’s action based on the old capital- offense exception, a matter that we have addressed separately in State v. Ameer, S-1-SC- 36395. See N.M. Sup. Ct. order (May 8, 2017).

I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

{5} Shortly after 6 a.m. on Friday, January 18, 2017, a man and a woman stole a van in Albuquerque. The two attempted to flee pursuing police officers, driving recklessly at extremely high speeds through residential city streets. Defendant, shown to be the apparent driver of the stolen van by physical evidence and her postarrest statements to police, crashed it into another car at an intersection, killing a teenage girl, fatally injuring the girl’s mother, and breaking the leg of the girl’s three-year-old brother. As logged by the van’s GPS data, a moment before the crash the van was traveling at seventy-eight miles per hour in a thirty- five-mile-per-hour residential zone, and on impact it was traveling at sixty-eight miles per hour.

{6} After the fatal crash, the offenders jumped out of the stolen van and continued their flight from the police. They ran through adjacent neighborhoods, climbing backyard fences and attempting to distract residents so they could steal another vehicle. After they succeeded in stealing another car, they escaped the pursuing officers but left behind a number of clues that resulted in Defendant’s identification and her arrest two days later.

{7} Among the clues, officers found a cell phone in the back yard of one witness who had called police to report that two unknown people had jumped over his fence. Investigation of that cell phone revealed a Facebook account belonging to coparticipant Paul Garcia and a call record showing contact between Garcia and Defendant.

{8} Near the place where the second vehicle had been stolen, officers discovered a jacket containing a letter addressed to Defendant from an attorney offering to represent her in connection with her pending criminal charges.

{9} Officers obtained security video footage from a business along the offenders’ escape route that recorded two persons appearing to be Defendant and Garcia crossing a parking lot.

2 In the video, the person identified as Garcia was walking with only one shoe, which appeared to match a shoe found at the wrecked van.

{10} Following her arrest, Defendant initially appeared in metropolitan court, which set release conditions including the requirement that she post a $100,000 secured bond. The State filed a motion in district court to deny Defendant’s release pending trial under the new provisions of Article II, Section 13 of the New Mexico Constitution, arguing that no conditions of release a court could impose would protect the safety of others. The case was promptly transferred to the district court, which has exclusive pretrial detention authority as a statutory court of record. See Torrez v. Whitaker, 2018-NMSC-___, ¶¶ 71, 75, ___ P.3d, ___ (S-1-SC-36379, Jan. 11, 2018).

{11} After a hearing at which no witnesses personally testified for either side, the district court denied the State’s detention motion, continued the $100,000 secured bond, and imposed additional conditions of release. Because that order has not been appealed, we need not address it further.

{12} A grand jury then indicted Defendant on multiple charges related to the deadly January 18 chase, including two counts of first-degree felony murder, carrying potential sentences of life imprisonment. NMSA 1978, § 30-2-1(A)(2) (1994) (statutorily classifying felony murder as a “capital felony”); see also NMSA 1978, § 31-18-14 (2009) (providing that a person convicted of a “capital felony” shall be sentenced to life imprisonment).

{13} The day after indictment, the State filed a second detention motion, based exclusively on the new authority in Article II, Section 13 allowing denial of pretrial release when no release conditions will reasonably protect the safety of others. To support its request, the new motion proffered details of the newly-indicted offenses and a pattern of past criminal conduct, including significantly a pending prosecution in Sandoval County. That case, based on occurrences just a few weeks earlier, also involved a stolen vehicle and a high-speed attempted escape from police by Defendant and coparticipant Paul Garcia that ended with their crashing the stolen vehicle. The motion recited that in the Sandoval County case Defendant was on pretrial release conditions that she already had violated by a failure to appear by the time she committed the offenses in this case.

{14} That postindictment detention motion first came before a temporary arraignment judge, who heard presentations of counsel and a pretrial services officer’s risk-assessment- instrument-based determination that she could not “make a [release] recommendation that would reasonably ensure public safety.” The arraignment judge entered an order for detention relying on the “nature and circumstances of the offense charged,” Defendant’s “past conduct, history relating to drug or alcohol abuse, criminal history and record concerning appearance at court proceedings,” and “the nature and seriousness of the danger to any person or the community.”

{15} Defense counsel filed a motion to review that detention order, arguing that collateral

3 estoppel principles precluded the arraignment judge from ordering detention after a previous judge had denied detention and that “no evidence was presented to [the arraignment judge] upon which she could base her ruling that pretrial detention [w]as appropriate.”

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Bluebook (online)
2018 NMSC 6, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-groves-nm-2018.