State v. James Leroy Skunkcap

CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedJune 17, 2014
StatusPublished

This text of State v. James Leroy Skunkcap (State v. James Leroy Skunkcap) 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. James Leroy Skunkcap, (Idaho 2014).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF IDAHO

Docket No. 41394-2013

STATE OF IDAHO, ) ) Boise, May 2014 Term Plaintiff-Respondent, ) ) 2014 Opinion No. 48 v. ) ) Filed: June 17, 2014 JAMES LEROY SKUNKCAP, ) ) Stephen W. Kenyon, Clerk Defendant-Appellant. ) )

Appeal from the District Court of the Sixth Judicial District of the State of Idaho, in and for Bannock County. The Hon. Peter D. McDermott and the Hon. Robert C. Naftz, District Judges.

The judgments of the district court are affirmed.

Sarah E. Tompkins, Deputy State Appellate Public Defender, Boise, argued for appellant.

Kenneth K. Jorgensen, Deputy Attorney General, Boise, argued for respondent.

EISMANN, Justice. These are two cases out of Bannock County that were consolidated on appeal. In the first case, the Defendant was convicted of attempting to elude a peace officer, a felony, and of malicious injury to property and assault, both misdemeanors. In the second case, the Defendant was convicted of grand theft, a felony. For each felony, he was sentenced to eighteen years in prison, with eight years fixed and ten years indeterminate, and the sentences were ordered to be served consecutively. We affirm the convictions and sentences.

I. Factual Background.

November 13, 2006, crime. On November 13, 2006, James Leroy Skunkcap (Defendant) stole two saddles from a horse trailer that the owner of a store had parked next to a warehouse that was located near the store. As one is facing the front of the store, the warehouse would be to the left of and behind the store, and the horse trailer was parked near the left side of the warehouse. At about 1:15 p.m., a store employee, who was feeling ill, left the store to drive home. She left by the front door and was walking to her pickup, which was parked to the left of the store. While doing so, she saw a light blue car parked beside the left side of the horse trailer. The front of the car and the front of the trailer were facing her. She could see that the trunk of the car was open and there was a man standing behind the car. After she got into her pickup, which she estimated to be sixty to seventy feet from the blue car, she could see that the man was struggling to put a saddle into the trunk of the car, and she saw that the back door of the trailer was open. She thought that if the man had purchased or pawned the saddle, it would be strange to park so far from the store’s front door. She watched the man for about five minutes and wrote down the license number of the car. After he drove away, she headed home, but as she was doing so she telephoned the store and spoke to two employees to see if anyone had done any transaction with a saddle. She also suggested that the owner check his horse trailer. It normally took the employee about thirty minutes to drive from the store to her home. Before she arrived at home, she received a telephone call from a police officer, and she told him the license number of the blue car. He ran a records check and drove to the residence of the owner of the license plates. The owner told him that a man she only knew as “Don” had taken the plates from her car some time earlier. Her car, a 1989 dark blue Toyota Camry, was in her garage and did not appear to the officer to be operable. The officer then returned to the police station and entered the stolen license plates in the National Crime Information Center data base. The following day, Defendant was arrested driving a light blue 1990 Toyota Camry bearing the stolen license plates. November 14, 2006, crimes. On November 14, 2006, a Pocatello police detective drove to a trailer park because he had been informed that Defendant was there. The detective was driving a Ford Escape, which was rented by the police department and did not have any markings indicating it was a police vehicle. As the detective drove past the identified residence, he saw a blue car parked in front of it. He recorded the license number of the car and then parked within sight of it. He radioed dispatch and was advised that both the license plates on the car and the car may have been stolen. After watching the car for over an hour, he saw a male and female get into it and drive away. The detective followed the blue car as it left the trailer park.

2 Two sheriff’s deputies had also responded to the area to assist the detective. Each of the deputies was driving a four-door pickup equipped with overhead lights and the words “Bannock County Sheriff” written on the front doors. They were parked along a paved road that ran east- west and were informed when the blue car was leaving the trailer park. The deputies saw the blue car pull onto the paved road and turn west towards them, but it was traveling in the eastbound lane. One of the deputies activated the overhead lights on his pickup and began driving toward the blue car. The car immediately made a u-turn and began heading east in the westbound lane. The other deputy did not activate his overhead lights, but also began driving toward the blue car. Upon seeing the approaching sheriff’s vehicles, the detective positioned his vehicle so that it was facing north blocking the westbound lane of traffic. He did so in order to stop any westbound traffic while leaving the eastbound lane open. The blue car continued driving east in the westbound lane and struck the left front quarter panel of the detective’s vehicle. The pickup with its overhead lights on pulled up next to the blue car and stopped, and the other pickup pulled in behind the car and stopped. The driver of the car turned around and looked at the deputy in the pickup behind him. The driver then put the car in reverse and slammed into the pickup, and then he put the car in drive and again slammed into the detective’s vehicle. Defendant was the driver of the blue car. He and his female passenger were arrested. A subsequent search of the car revealed methamphetamine, a controlled substance. Eluding case. On November 15, 2006, the State commenced criminal proceedings against Defendant based upon the events of November 14, 2006. In these proceedings, herein called the “Eluding Case,” Defendant was charged with five felonies: (1) attempting to elude a peace officer while causing damage to the property of another; (2) malicious injury to property consisting of the deputy’s pickup and the detective’s vehicle; (3) possession of a controlled substance, methamphetamine; (4) grand theft by possession of the blue car; and (5) aggravated assault upon a law enforcement officer, the detective. Defendant waived a preliminary hearing on those charges, and he was bound over to answer in the district court before Judge Peter D. McDermott. On November 30, 2006, the State filed an information charging those offenses, and Defendant entered a plea of not guilty. The State later amended the information to add an allegation that Defendant was a persistent violator, having previously been convicted of at least two felonies.

3 Defendant was tried before a jury, and it returned a verdict finding him guilty of felony attempting to elude a peace officer; guilty of felony malicious injury to property for the second collision with the detective’s vehicle; not guilty of possession of methamphetamine; not guilty of theft of the blue car; and not guilty of aggravated assault upon a police officer, but guilty of misdemeanor assault. After the jury returned its verdict, Defendant admitted to the allegations that he had previously been convicted of at least two prior felonies. He admitted that on October 2, 1995, he was convicted in Idaho of the felony of being an accessory to grand theft and that on February 27, 1989, he was convicted of three counts of felony theft in federal court in Montana.

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State v. James Leroy Skunkcap, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-james-leroy-skunkcap-idaho-2014.