State v. Maestas

316 P.3d 724, 298 Kan. 765, 2014 WL 265558, 2014 Kan. LEXIS 13
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJanuary 24, 2014
DocketNo. 106,214
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 316 P.3d 724 (State v. Maestas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Maestas, 316 P.3d 724, 298 Kan. 765, 2014 WL 265558, 2014 Kan. LEXIS 13 (kan 2014).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Biles, J.:

Michael Maestas, Jr., appeals from a first-degree premeditated murder conviction rendered after he admitted stabbing his mother to death. He advances five issues: (1) prosecutorial misconduct; (2) the failure to instruct on a lesser included offense of recldess second-degree murder; (3) alleged infringement on his [768]*768right to present his defense; (4) the district court’s determination for sentencing purposes that he was not “mentally retarded” under K.S.A. 21-4634; and (5) the district court’s refusal to commit Maes-tas to the state security hospital rather than prison under K.S.A. 22-3430. We affirm.

Factual and Procedural Background

On August 1, 2009, Maestas placed a 911 call requesting an ambulance at the Hugoton, Kansas, residence he shared with his mother, Lorenza. Maestas told the operator he got carried away, went into Lorenza’s bedroom with a knife, and stabbed her. He said she was still breathing. While the call remained connected, Officer Marvin Johnson arrived. Maestas said, “Can you come in please?” Maestas tiren said, “[Unintelligible] stabbed my mom,” and, “[S]he’s over here.”

Maestas was interviewed by a Stevens County Sheriffs detective. Maestas explained that he called 911 “because I stabbed my mom.” He said he used a silver pocket knife. He told the detective Lorenza was asleep in her bedroom with the lights out when he began stabbing her. He said he was lying in his bed and heard voices and these voices were getting to him and it sounded like people were “in there.” He then said, “When I walked in[to] her room I just started stabbing and then, like, I just got out of control, I—I didn’t stop.”

Maestas said he was not sure how many times he stabbed his mother. He told the detective she started screaming during the attack, saying his name and telling him to stop, but he “just lost control and kept stabbing her.” He said she fell off the bed and he continued stabbing her. Maestas said he then looked to see if she was still breathing; stood next to her saying he was sorry; washed his hands; returned to talk to her; washed his hands again; and then called 911. He estimated the incident took 10 to 20 minutes.

Pretrial Proceedings

At a preliminary hearing, the district court found reason to believe Maestas was incompetent to stand trial and ordered him to be evaluated at the state security hospital in Larned, Kansas (Lar-[769]*769ned). Based on a report prepared from that evaluation, the district court later concluded Maestas was competent to stand trial.

Maestas engaged his own expert, Dr. Mark Goodman, a licensed psychologist, to perform a competency and psychological evaluation. In his report, Goodman concluded Maestas was oriented to time, place, and person, but had poor intellectual judgment. He concluded: “[Maestas] is well aware, intellectually, of right from wrong.” Goodman observed that it was possible Maestas’ statements about hearing voices were true and that it was difficult to determine if he intentionally killed his mother because it was possible he acted out against her due to his psychosis. Goodman diagnosed Maestas with “Psychotic Disorder: N[ot] Oftherwise] Specified],” noting possible borderline intellectual functioning. He also reported that Maestas denied killing his mother. Goodman further concluded that Maestas’ psychological disorder played a role in the killing, but due to Maestas’ denial the extent it played was unclear.

The State moved for an order in limine prohibiting die parties from discussing at trial Maestas’ mental health, well-being, capacity, intent, intelligence, or any disorders he might be alleged to have. In support, the State argued there was no issue about competence following the competency hearing, no evidence regarding insanity or other defenses concerning mental health, and no designated expert regarding Maestas’ mental health. It also noted Maestas had failed to file a notice of intent to offer evidence of mental disease or defect excluding criminal responsibility as required by K.S.A. 22-3219. The State specifically argued any lay witness testimony about Maestas’ auditory hallucinations would be an attempt to “back-door” evidence barred by statute.

In response, Maestas acknowledged he was not pursuing a diminished capacity defense, but he opposed the motion, arguing he should be able to testify about his own mental state and “offer that land of evidence.” He contended that intent and premeditation were elements to be proved at trial, which made relevant his state of mind at the time of the killing. And he asserted past reports of his auditory hallucinations to lay witnesses were probative of that state of mind. He also argued K.S.A. 22-3219 did not prevent him [770]*770or lay witnesses familiar with him from testifying. He claimed that denying him the ability to present this defense would produce “prejudice beyond belief.”

The district court granted the State’s motion, relying on Maestas’ failure to give the notice required under K.S.A. 22-3219. It also granted the motion based on two prior decisions from this court in which we held expert testimony is irrelevant when it does -not establish the mental disease or defect impacted the defendant’s ability to form intent. See State v. Pennington, 281 Kan. 426, 438, 132 P.3d 902 (2006) (expert testimony irrelevant when it does not tend to demonstrate defendant is unable to form requisite intent or does not support mental disease or defect defense as a matter of law); State v. White, 279 Kan. 326, 341, 109 P.3d 1199 (2005) (proffered expert testimony sufficient when it showed defendant had a mental disease or defect, people with this disease or defect can lack ability to premeditate and form intent, and defendant’s conduct on the date in issue was consistent with someone acting under that disease or defect). The district court said it would strictly construe K.S.A. 22-3219 during trial.

Trial

In its case-in-chief, tire State put into evidence the audio recording of Maestas’ 911 call and a video recording of his interview with the Stevens County detective. Johnson, the police officer who arrived first at the scene, testified Maestas told him Lorenza was in the bedroom and still breathing. Johnson said Maestas removed a knife from his pocket, gave it to the officer, and said, “This is what I did it with.” Asked to.descri.be Maestas’ demeanor, Johnson said, “I didn’t find him to be totally emotional, you know, he wasn’t in tears. I just feel like he’d land of resigned himself to the fact that this, happened.”

The Stevens County sheriff, who also was at the scene, testified Maestas said he was hearing voices, went into his mother’s room, and stabbed her.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
316 P.3d 724, 298 Kan. 765, 2014 WL 265558, 2014 Kan. LEXIS 13, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-maestas-kan-2014.