State v. Howley

920 P.2d 391, 128 Idaho 874, 1996 Ida. LEXIS 85
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedJune 21, 1996
Docket20985
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 920 P.2d 391 (State v. Howley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho 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. Howley, 920 P.2d 391, 128 Idaho 874, 1996 Ida. LEXIS 85 (Idaho 1996).

Opinion

McDEVITT, Chief Justice.

This is a criminal case on interlocutory appeal regarding the State’s motion in limine to disallow the defense of necessity. The State filed this interlocutory appeal, arguing that the district court erred in denying its motion in limine on the grounds that the elements for the defense of necessity were not supported by the record and transcript which have been presented, pursuant to stipulation, on appeal. We reverse the district court’s denial of the State’s motion in limine and remand.

I.

BACKGROUND AND FACTS

On November 20, 1991, at approximately 8:30 p.m., Láveme Collins-Macchio was forcibly abducted from her Boise home. Collins-Macchio was 39 years old and was the primary caretaker of four children. Collins-Macchio had just put her four boys to bed and changed into her nightgown, when at approximately 8:30 p.m. the door bell rang. Collins-Macchio and three of her boys responded to the door bell. Collins-Macchio peered out the peephole of her door and saw a man standing with a pizza box. Collins-Macchio then opened the door because she thought that the pizza man had made a mistake and brought her another pizza; Collins-Macchio had ordered a pizza for dinner earlier that night. The pizza man told Collins-Macchio that he had her pizza, to which Collins-Macchio responded that she did not order another pizza and that there must have been a mistake. The pizza man kept pushing the pizza, which had a receipt with her name on it, towards Collins-Macchio and Collins-Macchio kept denying it was her pizza. When Collins-Macchio decided she would accept the pizza and reached out to take the pizza, the pizza man grabbed her by the arm and pulled her out of the doorway. Collins-Macchio and her children began screaming in fright and Collins-Macchio yelled to her children to call the police. Collins-Macchio’s son Eoy tried to call the police but was unable to because the respondents had disconnected Collins-Macehio’s phone service. 1

Another man grabbed Collins-Macchio and the two men forced Collins-Macchio into a van that had pulled into Collins-Macchio’s driveway. Collins-Macchio did not know either of the two men who forced her into the van. Collins-Macchio was terrified.

As the two men forced Collins-Macchio into the awaiting van, Collins-Macchio’s sister Patricia Cox ran from a neighbor’s home, located across the street from Collins-Mac-chio’s home, into Collins-Macehio’s home to take care of the children. Collins-Macchio did not see Cox as Collins-Macchio was forced away from her home and into the van. 2

Once Collins-Macchio was in the van, she was forced to lie face down, with the two men on top of her, and their hands over her mouth. The men eventually let Collins-Mac-chio sit up on the floor of the van and gave her a coat and socks. The van was driven by a third man to a cabin in the McCall area that Collins-Macchio had never been to before. The three men who abducted and drove Collins-Macchio to the cabin in the McCall area were the respondents Michael *876 D. Howley, Charles Allen Kelly, and Carmine J. DeSanetis.

Upon arriving in the McCall area, Collins-Macchio was taken by the arms and escorted into a cabin by two of the male respondents. Upon entering the cabin, Collins-Macchio met a woman named Joy DeSanetis, who is also a respondent in this ease. Collins-Mac-chio was informed later that night (November 20, 1991), that Collins-Macchio’s mother was the person who set up Collins-Macchio’s abduction. 3 Collins-Macchio had bruises on her chin (where the men had grabbed her mouth as they were taking her out of her home), arm, and leg, that were in the shape of fingers. 4

The following morning, November 21, 1991, Collins-Macchio overheard Joy talking with Coelho on the phone, and went downstairs to try to talk to Coelho. Joy ordered the men to take Collins-Macchio back upstairs as Joy and Collins-Macchio were wrestling over the phone and Collins-Macchio was screaming to Coelho for help. Collins-Macchio was transported later in the morning of November 21, 1991, to McCall and then to the Nampa/Caldwell area. While in McCall, Collins-Macchio waved her arms pleading for help from another person, which angered the respondents sitting beside her, who then pulled her down into the seat and held her down. The respondents forced Collins-Macehio to lie flat on her stomach on the floor of the van for the trip down to the Nampa/Caldwell area (except for a lunch break), due to CoUins-Macehio’s efforts to get help. A foam pad was added to the wood floor of the van for the trip from McCall to the Nampa/Caldwell area.

When the van arrived in the Nampa/Cald-well area, two of the male respondents took Collms-Macehio’s arms and walked her into a motel room. One of the men told Collins-Macchio to walk straight into the room and not to give them anymore problems. Collins-Macchio showered and received a change of clothes while in the Nampa/Cald-well motel room.

Coelho and Cox arrived at the Nam-pa/Caldwell motel the night of November 21, 1991. Coelho told Collins-Macchio not to try to escape. Another woman arrived at the Nampa/Caldwell motel that night and told Collins-Macchio the purpose of Collins-Mac-chio’s abduction was to talk about Collins-Macchio’s church, the Church Universal and Triumphant (church).

Collins-Macchio did not spend the night of November 21, 1991, at the Nampa/Caldwell motel. Collins-Macchio was transported from the Nampa/Caldwell motel to the Boise area in a van with the three male respondents, while lying face down on the floor of the van. Collins-Macchio did not know where in Boise she had been taken. The respondents, Coelho, Cox, and the woman who wanted to talk about Collins-Macchio’s church, all joined Collins-Macchio in a Boise hotel room the night of November 21, 1991. Cox slept with Collins-Macchio in the bed, Coelho slept on the floor by the window, and one of the male respondents slept by the door. The following nights the other two male respondents slept on the floor by the *877 window and Coelho slept in the living room area.

Collins-Macchio never left the Boise hotel room between November 21,1991 (Thursday night) and November 26, 1991 (Tuesday). From November 22,1991 through November 26, 1991, Collins-Macchio was served her meals inside the Boise hotel room and listened to (or tried not to listen to) lectures given by a number of individuals Collins-Macchio did not know. These individuals will be collectively referred to as “depro-grammers.” Collins-Macchio described these lectures as “interrogations” which lasted all morning, afternoon, and night, with breaks for breakfast, lunch, and dinner. The interrogations “mocked” Collins-Macchio’s religion and the people involved in her religion. Collins-Macchio responded to these interrogations, stating that it was the teachings that she followed, and not a person or place that she followed.

Collins-Macchio asked whether the deprogramming exercises could be completed before Thanksgiving, which was on the following Thursday. Collins-Macchio was told that if she entered a dialogue with the depro-grammers, it would make the exercises go faster.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
920 P.2d 391, 128 Idaho 874, 1996 Ida. LEXIS 85, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-howley-idaho-1996.