State v. J Carmona

CourtNew Mexico Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 22, 2009
Docket27,693
StatusUnpublished

This text of State v. J Carmona (State v. J Carmona) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. J Carmona, (N.M. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

1 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO

2 STATE OF NEW MEXICO,

3 Plaintiff-Appellee,

4 v. NO. 27,693

5 JESUS CARMONA,

6 Defendant-Appellant.

7 APPEAL FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF DOÑA ANA COUNTY 8 Stephen Bridgforth, District Judge

9 Gary K. King, Attorney General 10 Katherine Zinn, Assistant Attorney General 11 Santa Fe, NM

12 for Appellee

13 Inocenté, P.C. 14 Brian A. Pori 15 Albuquerque, NM

16 for Appellant

17 MEMORANDUM OPINION

18 BUSTAMANTE, Judge.

19 This is the second time this case has come before us. In his first trial,

20 Defendant was convicted of first degree kidnapping and aggravated battery on a

21 household member. These convictions were based on evidence that Defendant 1 kidnapped and brutally attacked his girlfriend after she had ended their relationship

2 and moved out. Defendant appealed, and we affirmed his convictions. Defendant

3 then successfully pursued habeas corpus relief and was granted a new trial based on

4 ineffective assistance of counsel. At the beginning of his second trial, he pled guilty

5 to battery on a household member and went to trial solely on the kidnapping charge.

6 He was once again convicted of first degree kidnapping.

7 In this appeal, Defendant contends that the evidence is insufficient to establish

8 great bodily harm and that the kidnapping statute is unconstitutionally vague as

9 applied. He also contends that the court erred in excluding evidence of a prior false

10 claim by Victim, in admitting the prior testimony of Victim’s twin sister, and in

11 failing to impose an adequate sanction for the State’s destruction of evidence. Finally,

12 he contends that his convictions for aggravated battery on a household member and

13 for kidnapping violate double jeopardy. We reject Defendant’s contentions and

14 affirm.

15 BACKGROUND

16 Victim testified that she and Defendant had lived together and had planned to

17 get married. A couple of days before August 23, 2002, Victim had decided to leave

18 Defendant and had moved out. On August 23, Victim was at the Tortilla Flats bar

2 1 when Defendant came in, followed shortly by her twin sister, Belinda, who was

2 holding Victim’s daughter. Defendant and Belinda got into a fight, with Defendant

3 slapping Belinda, and the two of them pushing each other. At Victim’s insistence,

4 Victim, Belinda, and Victim’s daughter left the bar. Belinda told Victim to get into

5 Belinda’s car, but Victim wanted to take her own car.

6 In the parking lot, Defendant was yelling at Victim and got into his truck.

7 Defendant threatened her with his truck, moved his truck as she attempted to move her

8 car, and as she tried to get away, he ran into her car with his truck. Before she knew

9 it, Defendant was in her car, in the same seat with her. Defendant grabbed Victim by

10 the hair and pulled it back so that she was looking straight up at the sky. He told her,

11 “[d]rive, you fucking bitch. Drive.”

12 Victim did not want to drive, but did what she was told to do. She felt that she

13 was “overpowered at that point.” She was in the driver’s seat but Defendant was

14 driving, because “[m]y head was pointing completely toward[] the sky.” Defendant

15 pulled the steering wheel to turn onto Moongate Road. He was madder than Victim

16 had ever seen him, and he was still holding onto her hair and her head. Defendant was

17 punching her in the face, pulling her hair back as hard as he could, and hitting her in

18 the body and ribs.

3 1 Victim was desperate to get out of the car, so she opened the door and tried to

2 jump out, even though the car was traveling 30-40 m.p.h. She was part way out of the

3 car, with Defendant still holding onto her hair. Defendant stopped the car, got out, put

4 his boot on her neck, and pulled up on her head. An elderly gentleman stopped to

5 help, but Defendant scared the man away.

6 Defendant dragged Victim back into the car, drove away, and continued to

7 attack her. He did not turn into their house, but instead turned into a desolate area.

8 Victim said it “was just a constant beating the whole ride.” Finally, she grabbed the

9 steering wheel and turned it because “[t]he further we went down that road, the further

10 away from life I was getting because I knew that I was going to die out there, and I

11 didn’t want to die out in the desert.” As a result, the car got stuck on the side of the

12 road.

13 Defendant pulled Victim out onto the ground, repeatedly kicked her in the face

14 and ribs, and repeatedly strangled her with his hands until she lost consciousness. He

15 kicked her near her eyes and in the jaw. Victim testified to not being able to breathe

16 because she was hit so hard. He lifted the hood of the car and told her, “come here,”

17 because he wanted to put her head in the engine so he could close the hood on her

18 head. She refused. He pulled the metal rod, used to prop the hood open, off her car.

4 1 She told the emergency room physician, Dr. Patterson, that Defendant had beaten her

2 with the prop rod. However, at trial she could not remember if he hit her with it or

3 not; “I was hit so many times that night, I don’t know.”

4 To get Defendant to stop, she told him she still loved him. He stopped hitting

5 her, but said he would have to kill her because of what he had done to her face, and

6 he worried that he would be imprisoned forever for what he had done. She told him

7 she would lie and say that some girls had beaten her up outside of a bar. Defendant

8 said, “I have to kill you. Look at your face.”

9 By this time it was dark. They began walking and made it to a house, and the

10 owner gave them a ride home. She said nothing to the man because she was afraid for

11 her life. Once home, she could not see and did not try to get to the phone because she

12 was afraid of Defendant. She could not stand or take a shower by herself. She was

13 urinating blood, her ears were ringing so badly she could barely hear, and she could

14 not see. Her jaw was almost locked shut, she could not turn or move her head, and she

15 had great difficulty breathing. She wanted Defendant to take her to the hospital, but

16 he would not, instead stated his concern that he was going to go to prison.

17 She plotted how she would get out of the house. She said she did not leave the

18 bedroom because “I wanted to live, and I was willing at that point to do anything he

5 1 told me to.” At some point, Felix Romo, a friend of Defendant’s, came to the house.

2 She told Defendant that if she were taken to the hospital she would use a false name

3 and say she had been beaten by some girls outside a bar. She ultimately made a deal

4 with Defendant and Mr. Romo that she would buy them cocaine if they would take her

5 to the hospital. On the way to the hospital, she made good on her promise to buy

6 drugs. Mr. Romo then took her to the hospital and carried her in.

7 DISCUSSION

8 A. Great Bodily Harm

9 Defendant argues that the evidence is insufficient to establish great bodily harm.

10 In reviewing this claim, we use a two-step process. Initially, the evidence is viewed

11 in the light most favorable to the verdict. Then we determine “whether the evidence

12 viewed in this manner could justify a finding by any rational trier of fact that each

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