State v. Libero

83 P.3d 753, 103 Haw. 490, 2003 Haw. App. LEXIS 388
CourtHawaii Intermediate Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 31, 2003
Docket23872
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 83 P.3d 753 (State v. Libero) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hawaii Intermediate 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. Libero, 83 P.3d 753, 103 Haw. 490, 2003 Haw. App. LEXIS 388 (hawapp 2003).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

FOLEY, J.

Defendant-Appellant James Libero (Libero) appeals from the October 4, 2000 Judgment 1 entered by the Circuit Court of the Second Circuit 2 (circuit court). Libero was charged with and convicted of the following:

Count One: Attempted Murder in the Second Degree in violation of Hawaii Revised Statutes (HRS) §§ 705-500 (1993) 3 and 707-701.5 (1993). 4
*494 Count Two: Assault in the First Degree in violation of HRS § 707-710(1) (1993). 5
Count Three: Attempted Sexual Assault in the First Degree in violation of HRS §§ 705-500 (1993) and 707-730(l)(a) (1993). 6

Libero was sentenced to life with the possibility of parole on Count One, ten years of imprisonment on Count Two, and twenty years of imprisonment on Count Three. Counts One and Two were to run concurrently, and Count Three was to run consecutively with Count One. Libero was ordered to pay a Crime Victim Compensation fee in the amount of $500.00.

Libero argues that his convictions must be reversed because (1) the State relied on his confession to prove the corpus delicti for the assault, attempted sexual assault, and attempted murder charges and failed to corroborate the confession with other substantial evidence; (2) the evidence failed to prove that Libero had the specific intent to kill; (3) the corpus delicti and evidence pertaining to the attemptéd sexual assault was insufficient; (4) jury instructions were incomplete, misleading, confusing, and defective; (5) Libero was denied his right to a speedy trial; (6) Libero’s self-incriminating statements to the police should have been suppressed; (7) the circuit court abused its discretion by allowing hearsay statements and testimony of other criminal acts; and (8) Libero’s trial counsel failed to provide effective assistance. 7 We affirm the October 4, 2000 Judgment as to Counts One and Two. We reverse the Judgment as to Count Three, Attempted Sexual Assault in the First Degree.

I.

This ease arose from an incident that occurred on November 23, 1998 (incident). Rex Clark (Clark) testified that prior to the night of the incident he and the victim, Nancy Sirovetz (Nancy), had been camping about fifty-to-sixty feet apart in the same area on the beach in Kihei. The evening of the incident, Clark had gone with some friends to watch the sunset about four city blocks from where Clark was camping. Returning to his friends’ car, Clark met Libero on the path; Libero was walking toward the area where Clark’s campsite was. During the night Clark heard noises, like someone groaning and vomiting, coming from the area in which Nancy was camping. Assuming Nancy was merely drunk, Clark did nothing until the following morning when, upon checking on her, he found Nancy covered by a bloody sheet.

Officer Hickle testified that the medics were removing Nancy from the scene when he'arrived on November 24, 1998. He questioned Nancy in the back of the ambulance, and she told him she had been asleep when the attack occurred and did not know who did it. Nancy was transported by ambulance to the hospital.

Dr. Thomas Rogers, Nancy’s attending physician, testified that Nancy presented at the emergency room with severe blunt trauma to her head, resulting in multiple fractures to the right temporal area and the left side of her brain and skull. Nancy’s right eye ball was ruptured, and there was bruising of her brain and a small blood clot on her brain.

Detective Jakubczak testified that while the police officers were canvassing the beach area where Nancy had been found, one person they talked to mentioned that she had seen Libero at approximately 7:00 p.m. on November 23,1998 about 250 yards down the *495 beach from the incident area. Detective Ja-kubczak, Detective Holokai, Officer Hickle, and Officer Nopel went to Libero’s house the evening of November 24, 1998 to question Libero. Libero told the officers that he had been on the beach on November 23 doing Tai Chi exercises when he heard a sound like someone gagging. He went to help and found Nancy with her bloody face covered and no clothing on from the waist down. Libero said he was afraid he would be blamed for this, so he went home and did not tell anyone. Libero told the officers that he had seen a kiawe 8 branch, approximately-three feet long, about two-to-three feet from Nancy. Libero realized at the time that someone had hit Nancy with the branch. Before leaving Libero’s home, the police took a Polaroid picture of Libero. Based on Libero’s description of Nancy’s partial nudity, the police ordered a sexual assault examination of Nancy.

Officer Hickle testified that after the questioning of Libero, he and Officer Nopel went back to the incident area to look for the kiawe branch. The incident area was totally undeveloped and was in total darkness. The officers used flashlights to find the branch. The officers found the branch laying where Libero had said it would be.

Detective Jakubczak further testified that on November 27,1998, Nancy gave Detective Jakubczak a description of a person she had spoken with at the campsite. That was the last thing Nancy remembered until the next morning when she was being taken to the ambulance. Nancy described the person as an attractive Hawaiian looking male, approximately thirty years old, with dark short hair and a dark complexion. Detective Jakubczak testified that he interpreted her description to be a description of Libero.

Detective Jakubczak subsequently went back to the hospital and showed the picture of Libero to Nancy along with five other pictures. Nancy was unable to identify Libero as her attacker because she said all the photographs basically were about the same, it was dark the night of the incident, and “[s]he couldn’t really see.”

Detective Jakubczak testified that on December 1, 1998, he called Libero and asked Libero to come to the police station to discuss Libero’s prior statement and to clarify some points. Detective Jakubczak read Libero his Miranda rights. Libero stated that when he was on the beach, he heard someone gagging and calling for help. He discovered Nancy with a T-shirt covering her bloody face and with no clothing on from the waist down. Libero became frightened, backed away, and tripped over an object. He picked up the object, noticed it was a kiawe branch, got seared, dropped the branch, ran home, and did not tell anyone.

Detective Jakubczak showed Libero a kiawe branch recovered from the incident scene and asked Libero if he could identify this as the branch he had tripped over.

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Bluebook (online)
83 P.3d 753, 103 Haw. 490, 2003 Haw. App. LEXIS 388, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-libero-hawapp-2003.