State v. Hust

CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedJune 24, 2024
StatusUnpublished

This text of State v. Hust (State v. Hust) 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. Hust, (N.M. 2024).

Opinion

This decision of the Supreme Court of New Mexico was not selected for publication in the New Mexico Appellate Reports. Refer to Rule 12-405 NMRA for restrictions on the citation of unpublished decisions. Electronic decisions may contain computer- generated errors or other deviations from the official version filed by the Supreme Court.

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO

Filing Date: June 24, 2024

No. S-1-SC-39555

STATE OF NEW MEXICO,

Plaintiff-Appellee,

v.

LELAND HUST,

Defendant-Appellant.

CAPITAL APPEAL George P. Eichwald, District Judge

Bennett J. Baur, Chief Public Defender Allison H. Jaramillo, Assistant Appellate Defender Santa Fe, NM

for Appellant

Raúl Torrez, Attorney General Van Snow, Assistant Attorney General Albuquerque, NM

for Appellee

DECISION

ZAMORA, Justice.

{1} Defendant Leland Hust appeals his convictions for criminal sexual penetration of a minor and child abuse resulting in death. Defendant argues the district court abused its discretion by: (1) admitting Y-STR DNA evidence; (2) overruling defense counsel’s objection to a comment made by the prosecutor during rebuttal argument; (3) preventing defense counsel from elaborating in closing argument on molestation allegations against Defendant’s step-grandfather; (4) admitting portions of a police interview when Defendant was alone and talking to himself; and (5) qualifying the lead detective as an expert in bloodstain pattern analysis.1 We affirm.2

I. BACKGROUND

A. The Crime

{2} Defendant lived in a home with eight other people, including his mother and stepfather; his step-grandparents; A.R., the victim; and A.R.’s mother. Winston Scates, Sr. (Scates, Sr.) is Defendant’s step-grandfather. A.R. and her mother, who is an acquaintance of Defendant’s step-grandparents, had moved into the home a few weeks before A.R.’s death.

{3} In August 2018, six-year-old A.R. was sexually assaulted and killed. A.R. was last seen alive and unharmed around midnight. The next morning, A.R.’s mother discovered A.R. was dead. A.R. was found on a mattress in the room where she slept, her skin gray and purple. She wore only a t-shirt and had blood running down her thigh.

{4} There was no sign of forced entry into the home where A.R. was found dead. However, household members had contact with A.R. prior to her death. Defendant’s step-grandmother testified that during the afternoon prior to her death, Defendant and A.R. watched a movie and played in A.R.’s room. That evening, Defendant’s step- grandparents hugged A.R. goodnight before she went to bed. Defendant claimed he did not lie on A.R.’s bed, had put a movie on for A.R. in her room before he went to bed, and was asleep when A.R. was sexually assaulted and murdered.

{5} The police collected samples of various bloodstains and fabrics from the scene for DNA testing. The forensic pathologist from the Office of the Medical Investigator performed A.R.’s autopsy. The pathologist swabbed A.R.’s vagina and cervix for DNA evidence. The autopsy revealed A.R. had significant vaginal and anal injuries, including a tear that extended up to her cervix. According to the pathologist, A.R. could have been strangled to death or been suffocated or some combination of the two.

{6} The police interviewed Defendant and all other household members the day A.R. was found raped and killed. Defendant was interviewed again by police several days later. Defendant said he did not know who hurt or killed A.R. and that he would never have hurt his “niece” in that way. Police interviewed Defendant again in early October 2018. During this interview, Defendant was confronted with the result of the DNA testing, which implicated him. After police informed Defendant of the DNA results, Defendant admitted he made A.R. “that way” and said “clearly I killed my niece.”

1Defendant raised three additional issues in his statement of issues. However, we decline to review these issues because Defendant failed to address them in his brief in chief. State v. Perea, 2001-NMSC-026, ¶ 1, 130 N.M. 732, 31 P.3d 1006. See also State v. McDowell, 2018-NMSC-008, ¶ 34, 411 P.3d 337 (declining to review issues not argued in brief in chief in direct appeal). 2We resolve this case by non-precedential decision because settled law provides a clear basis for affirmance. See Rule 12-405(B)(1) NMRA. Defendant went on to state, “I don’t remember doing this to her. I want to die right now just knowing I’m the one that did it.”

{7} At some point during the October interview, Defendant was left alone in the interview room and started talking to himself about “Whisper.” The “Whisper references” include Defendant saying:

When did I do it? When did I wake up in the middle of that dream? I had to have done it after falling asleep. I had to have woken up and go do something, go pee or something. I hope it didn’t come out. I hope that thing did not come out again. I can’t handle that thing. If that came out again . . . it’s in the box. He’s in the box. He didn’t come out. There’s no way. There’s no way that one came out. There’s no way that one came out, because when I woke up, that one was still in the box, it was still in the box.

{8} After he was arrested, Defendant offered A.R.’s mother another account of what happened in recorded telephone calls he made to her from jail. He explained Scates, Sr. was in A.R.’s room, dressed in a robe and armed with a revolver, and that when Defendant came into the room, A.R. was covered with blood and not breathing. Defendant told A.R.’s mother that Scates, Sr. made him “touch [A.R.] and clean up the mess” and made him “wipe up her area.” When A.R.’s mother asked him if Scates, Sr. made him penetrate A.R., Defendant answered “yah” and said “I didn’t get a hard on or anything.” A.R.’s mother encouraged Defendant to write a letter explaining what happened. A handwritten note addressed to the investigating detectives was found in Defendant’s cell. In the note, Defendant wrote: “What I was forced to see and do at gunpoint is enough to make me want to die . . . I wish to die for my part in that night . . . Even if proven innocent, I still would have offed myself.”

B. The Trial

{9} As a result of the investigation in this case and based on events that had occurred years prior to A.R.’s death, Scates, Sr. was charged with criminal sexual contact of a minor. The minor in that case was his granddaughter, who is not related to A.R. He pled guilty to that charge and is a registered sex offender. He testified about this offense at trial and was given immunity for his testimony. The defense cross- examined Scates, Sr., directly accusing him of having raped and killed A.R., which he denied.

{10} The State’s forensic DNA expert was Eve Tokumaru. She examined the evidentiary samples taken from the crime scene. Ms. Tokumaru determined how much DNA was present in the samples and whether there was enough DNA to test. No semen was found. The testing Ms. Tokumaru did on the blood samples confirmed it was A.R.’s blood.

{11} Ms. Tokumaru also performed Y-STR amplification testing. Y-STR amplification is a form of DNA testing which differentiates a male lineage and is one way to determine whether there is male DNA in fluid samples collected from a female body. Because men inherit their Y chromosomes from their fathers and fathers and sons have the same Y chromosome, Y-STR testing can only determine whether a man in a particular patrilineal line was the source of the DNA.

{12} The male Y-STR DNA profile from the vaginal swabs indicated a mixture of at least two male individuals. The major profile contained enough DNA for Y-STR testing.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
State v. Hust, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-hust-nm-2024.