State v. Jackson

596 N.W.2d 262, 1999 Minn. App. LEXIS 660, 1999 WL 387244
CourtCourt of Appeals of Minnesota
DecidedJune 15, 1999
DocketC5-98-1339
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 596 N.W.2d 262 (State v. Jackson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Jackson, 596 N.W.2d 262, 1999 Minn. App. LEXIS 660, 1999 WL 387244 (Mich. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

OPINION

SHUMAKER, Judge.

On May 4, 1997, a man raped E.R. in her parents’ home. On May 22, 1997, a man raped A.S. in-her home. The state charged Tony Dejuan Jackson with both incidents.

Jackson consented to the joinder of the cases for trial. The jury found him guilty of burglary, criminal sexual conduct, assault, and false imprisonment from the May 4 incident. The jury was unable to reach a unanimous verdict as to any charge from May 22, and the trial court declared a mistrial on those counts.

The court sentenced Jackson to a term of 182 months for criminal sexual conduct in the first degree — a double durational departure — and to a consecutive sentence of 48 months for the burglary.

Appealing from the judgment of conviction, Jackson contends that the court abused its discretion by denying his motion for a Schwartz hearing and by improperly departing from the sentencing guidelines. We affirm.

FACTS

On May 4, 1997, E.R. was alone in the home she shared with her parents when a man knocked on the door and asked if he could use the telephone. E.R. let him come in. He was a tall, African American with short hair. He wore a polo shirt and a blue fanny pack with the words “St. Paul” on it.

Once in the house, the man put a gun to E.R.’s head and told her not to scream or he would kill her. When she said her parents would return soon, the man responded that he would kill them too. The man took E.R. to a bedroom where he put a sheet in her mouth and handcuffed her hands behind her back. He rolled her onto her back, put a blanket over her head and had vaginal intercourse with her two or three times. During his assault, the man repeatedly told E.R. to shut up or he would kill her. Before he left, the man removed the handcuffs and tied E.R.’s hands with yarn.

Jackson was driving at 3:30 a.m. on May 19, 1997, with his headlights off when the police stopped him. They searched his car and found, among other things, a blue fanny pack with the words “St. Paul” on it. In the pack was a set of handcuff keys. The police arrested but then released Jackson.

*265 A tall, fit African-American male entered AS.’s home on May 22, 1997, and raped her vaginally, orally, and anally. Although the man blindfolded A.S. before he assaulted her, she briefly saw him. She thought he was a man named Tony who worked at a newly opened restaurant in the area. Later that day, the police arrested Jackson, a tall, fit African-American male with short hair.

At Jackson’s trial, the state presented evidence that two thumbprints from E.R.’s telephone matched Jackson’s left thumb print and that one fingerprint from AS.’s door matched a print of Jackson’s left middle finger. A forensic scientist testified that sperm from the sheet on which the man raped E.R. and sperm from two items from A.S.’s house matched Jackson’s DNA profile. The scientist also testified that the random match probability was less than one in a billion. Jackson denied both incidents and offered an alibi defense for the May 4 crimes.

At the beginning of its deliberations, the jury asked to review testimony about the qualifications of the state’s fingerprint expert. The court denied the request and instructed the jurors to rely on their recollections of the evidence. On the second day of deliberations, the jury asked whether the defense agreed that a particular fingerprint belonged to Jackson. The court instructed that the jury had received all the evidence, in the case. Ultimately, the jury returned guilty verdicts as to all four charges from May 4 and was unable to reach a unanimous verdict as to any of the May 22 charges.

After the jury delivered its verdicts, the St. Paul Pioneer Press newspaper reported that, on the third day of deliberations, some of the jurors tried to convince holdout juror Samuel Momah of the accuracy of the fingerprint evidence:

Finally, on Friday morning, Dow had Momah look at the fingerprint taken from the Cottage Grove woman’s telephone and compare it with the one of Jackson’s introduced as evidence.
“I showed him the fingerprint and I had him look at it with a magnifying glass,” Dow said.
Momah agreed they were the same. Dow and the other jurors even dabbed their own fingers with ink and showed how they were different from the two in evidence. “He did not believe the testimony of experts,” Dow said. “He had to see it for himself.”

Because of the newspaper article, Jackson’s attorney requested a Schwartz hearing to explore possible juror misconduct. The court denied the request, ruling that, even if the jurors did what the story reported, they did not act improperly. Rather, their inquiry and conduct were merely steps in their deliberations.

Finding that Jackson’s cruelty, E.R.’s age, and the effects of Jackson’s conduct on E.R. aggravated the severity of his rape, the court doubled the presumptive sentence for the criminal sexual conduct offense. The court imposed the presumptive sentence for burglary but made it consecutive to the other sentence.

ISSUES

1. Did the trial court abuse its discretion by denying appellant’s request for a Schwartz hearing?

2. Were the trial court’s double-dura-tional departure and consecutive sentences an abuse of discretion?

ANALYSIS

1. Schwartz Hearing Motion

A trial court has discretion to grant a new trial for juror misconduct. State v. Kelley, 517 N.W.2d 905, 910 (Minn.1994). The standard of review for denial of a Schwartz hearing is abuse of discretion. State v. Larson, 281 N.W.2d 481, 483-84 (Minn.1979). Although Schwartz hearings are to be liberally granted, a defendant must establish a prima facie case of “sufficient evidence which, standing *266 alone and unchallenged, would warrant the conclusion of jury misconduct.” Id. at 484.

Here, Jackson argues the trial court abused its discretion by refusing to conduct a Schwartz hearing. Jackson’s evidence of alleged misconduct consists of a newspaper article reporting that during deliberations some jurors inked their own fingers to persuade a holdout juror that their prints were different from those in evidence. Jackson contends that this was an impermissible jury experiment. He argues that the jurors’ act of inking their fingerprints represented more than jury thought process and was instead the acquisition of evidence outside the judicial process.

Jackson cites Jensen v. Dikel, 244 Minn. 71, 69 N.W.2d 108 (1955), as analogous to this case. In Jensen, the jury used tools not admitted into evidence “to perform an independent experiment” with defendant’s steering mechanism by replacing missing parts with those from one of the sample mechanisms. Id.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
596 N.W.2d 262, 1999 Minn. App. LEXIS 660, 1999 WL 387244, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-jackson-minnctapp-1999.