State v. Grunwald

2020 UT 9
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 21, 2020
DocketCase No. 20180459
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
State v. Grunwald, 2020 UT 9 (Utah 2020).

Opinion

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

2020 UT 9

IN THE

SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF UTAH

STATE OF UTAH, Respondent, v. MEAGAN GRUNWALD, Petitioner.

No. 20180459 Heard March 18, 2019 Filed February 21, 2020

On Certiorari to the Utah Court of Appeals

Fourth District, Provo The Honorable Darold McDade No. 141400517

Attorneys: Sean D. Reyes, Att’y Gen., Christopher D. Ballard, Asst. Sol. Gen., Salt Lake City, Timothy L. Taylor, AnnMarie T. Howard, Provo, for respondent Douglas J. Thompson, Provo, for petitioner

CHIEF JUSTICE DURRANT authored the opinion of the Court, in which JUSTICE HIMONAS, JUSTICE PEARCE, and JUDGE THOMAS* joined. ASSOCIATE CHIEF JUSTICE LEE filed a dissenting opinion. Having recused herself, JUSTICE PETERSEN does not participate herein; DISTRICT COURT JUDGE DOUGLAS THOMAS sat.

* Judge Thomas sat on this case and voted before his retirement on January 1, 2020. STATE v. GRUNWALD Opinion of the Court

CHIEF JUSTICE DURRANT, opinion of the Court: Introduction ¶1 Meagan Grunwald was convicted as an accomplice to the crime of aggravated murder. But the jury instruction that provided the basis for her conviction contained three errors: (1) it impermissibly permitted conviction based on a finding of recklessness, a less culpable mental state than is required by statute, (2) it impermissibly permitted conviction based on intentional aid that was not directly connected to the murder, and (3) it impermissibly permitted conviction based on a finding that Ms. Grunwald knew that the principal actor’s conduct was reasonably certain to result in aggravated murder, rather than on the finding that she knowingly committed the actus reus to help the principal actor in committing the murder. We must determine whether any of these errors, or a combination of them, caused a reasonable probability of an unfair conviction. In other words, we must determine whether, in the absence of these errors, there is a reasonable probability the jury would have arrived at a different result. ¶2 The court of appeals considered this question and determined there was no such probability. Accordingly, that court affirmed Ms. Grunwald’s conviction. Now Ms. Grunwald asks us to reverse the decision of the court of appeals because, in her view, the court failed to properly consider all of the evidence presented to the jury and misconstrued some of the legal requirements of accomplice liability. Because it is reasonably probable that the jury would not have convicted Ms. Grunwald of aggravated murder absent the jury instruction errors, we reverse her conviction and remand for a new trial with correct jury instructions. Background ¶3 Jose Angel Garcia Juaregi (Mr. Garcia) shot and killed a police officer through the back window of his girlfriend’s pickup truck. Some of the facts surrounding this murder are undisputed, while others are hotly contested and underlie the key issue on appeal. ¶4 It is undisputed that at the time of the murder Mr. Garcia and his girlfriend, Meagan Grunwald, were parked on the side of a road with their hazard lights flashing, and that Sergeant Cory Wride, the victim-police officer, had pulled up behind them to perform a “motorist assist.” During the motorist assist, Sergeant Wride first approached the driver-side door to speak to Ms. Grunwald, who was

2 Cite as: 2020 UT 9 Opinion of the Court

driving, and asked her if she was okay. Although she was crying and her face was red, she told Sergeant Wride that she was fine. Sergeant Wride then returned to his car to verify Ms. Grunwald’s and Mr. Garcia’s identities through a search of a police database. But Mr. Garcia had provided a false name and birthdate because a warrant had been issued for his arrest, so Sergeant Wride’s search did not yield any results. ¶5 Video footage from Sergeant Wride’s dashboard camera reveals what happened next. About ten minutes into the motorist assist, Sergeant Wride exited his car and approached the passenger-side window to speak to Mr. Garcia. At the window, Sergeant Wride asked Mr. Garcia if he had provided a false name, and Mr. Garcia admitted that he had. Mr. Garcia then provided another false name, and Sergeant Wride returned to his car to run the second false name through the police database. ¶6 Although the heavy tint on the truck’s back window prevented the dashboard camera from recording what was taking place inside the truck, footage does show that about a minute after Sergeant Wride returned to his vehicle, the truck’s brake lights flashed on and the lower-rear lights flickered, indicating a gear shift. One minute and a half later, the rear-passenger side window popped open about an inch. Just over one minute after that, the truck lurched forward slightly. And roughly one minute later, the truck’s center, rear window slid open and Mr. Garcia fired seven shots at Sergeant Wride in quick succession. After the fifth shot, Ms. Grunwald began pulling onto the road. Mr. Garcia fired the final two shots as she drove away. The entire event—from the time Sergeant Wride spotted Ms. Grunwald’s truck parked on the side of the road to the moment the truck drove away after the shooting—took roughly eighteen minutes, the last four of which involved Ms. Grunwald holding her foot on the brake and driving away after the shots had been fired. ¶7 After an extended police chase, Mr. Garcia was shot and killed, and Ms. Grunwald was arrested. Ms. Grunwald was charged as an accomplice in Sergeant Wride’s murder, as well as in a number of other crimes that are not at issue in this appeal. A trial followed. ¶8 At trial, the jury was shown the dash-cam footage multiple times. Both parties agree the dash-cam footage accurately depicts the crime in this case. But as to the details of what was taking place inside the truck immediately before Mr. Garcia began shooting, the jury heard two very different stories. ¶9 Ms. Grunwald raised “compulsion” as an affirmative defense at trial. Under the doctrine of compulsion, people are not 3 STATE v. GRUNWALD Opinion of the Court

guilty of a crime if they were coerced, through threat or force, to commit the crime. In support of her compulsion defense, Ms. Grunwald’s attorney painted Mr. Garcia as “the ultimate predator and exploiter” and a “master manipulator” and Ms. Grunwald as a scared, impressionable young girl who became increasingly intimidated by Mr. Garcia’s growing anger and agitation. According to Ms. Grunwald, while Sergeant Wride was searching Mr. Garcia’s false name, Mr. Garcia put a gun to her head and threatened her and her family. He then demanded that she put her foot on the brake, and, after she complied with this demand, he shifted the truck into drive. Finally, Ms. Grunwald testified that she began driving only after Mr. Garcia yelled “go, go, go” at her. So, based on this version of the story, Ms. Grunwald argues that anything she may have done to assist Mr. Garcia in murdering Sergeant Wride was coerced. ¶10 But even though Ms. Grunwald argued she was coerced into acting, she never admitted she intended for Mr. Garcia to kill Sergeant Wride, nor that she knew he would do so. Instead, she testified she did not know Mr. Garcia intended to kill Sergeant Wride, and that, even after Mr. Garcia had shot his gun, she assumed he had merely attempted to disable the police car. Ms. Grunwald did admit, however, that she twice heard Mr. Garcia say that he was going to “buck [Sergeant Wride] in the fucking head.” But she testified that she did not know what this statement meant and that Mr. Garcia refused to clarify his meaning when she asked him to do so.1 So even though Ms. Grunwald admits she held her foot on the brake for approximately four and a half minutes before Mr. Garcia began shooting, and that at some point during that time Mr.

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