State v. Manzano-Legarda

CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedMarch 20, 2026
Docket127179
StatusPublished

This text of State v. Manzano-Legarda (State v. Manzano-Legarda) 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. Manzano-Legarda, (kan 2026).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF KANSAS

No. 127,179

STATE OF KANSAS, Appellee,

v.

JESUS MANZANO-LEGARDA, Appellant.

SYLLABUS BY THE COURT

1. When a district court conducts an appropriate inquiry into a potential juror conflict and elects to retain the juror, a party forfeits a challenge to that decision by failing to move for dismissal or otherwise object.

2. Defendants lack standing to challenge the search of a vehicle in which they have no possessory interest and no reasonable expectation of privacy.

3. An error admitting evidence obtained in violation of the Fourth Amendment is constitutional error. Such error is harmless only if the benefiting party proves beyond a reasonable doubt that the error did not affect the outcome given the entire record.

Appeal from Sedgwick District Court; BRUCE BROWN, judge. Oral argument held December 17, 2025. Opinion filed March 20, 2026. Affirmed.

1 Ryan J. Eddinger, of Kansas Appellate Defender Office, argued the cause and was on the brief for appellant, and Jesus Manzano-Legarda, appellant, was on a supplemental brief pro se.

Lance J. Gillett, assistant district attorney, argued the cause, and Marc Bennett, district attorney, and Kris W. Kobach, attorney general, were with him on the brief for appellee.

The opinion of the court was delivered by

WALL, J.: This case comes to us after a shooting at a busy Wichita intersection. Someone in an SUV shot and killed another driver. The SUV belonged to a woman who had lent it to her son, Jesus Manzano-Legarda. A jury convicted him of felony murder. He now appeals directly to our court.

Manzano-Legarda doesn't argue that there was insufficient evidence to convict him. He argues instead that his conviction rested on evidence seized in violation of his Fourth Amendment right against unreasonable searches. This evidence includes the discovery of gunshot residue inside his mom's car and spent shell casings in his bedroom.

Manzano-Legarda also challenges the jury's composition. The district court retained several jurors even after potential conflicts arose during trial. That decision, in Manzano-Legarda's view, was unreasonable.

We disagree and affirm. Manzano-Legarda lacks standing to challenge the search of his mother's SUV. He wasn't the owner and wasn't in the vehicle when police stopped it. And even if the search of his room was unreasonable—which is far from clear— introducing that evidence was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt given the other evidence supporting the conviction. The district court also acted within its discretion by retaining the challenged jurors. A reasonable person could agree with those decisions, so we will not second-guess them.

2 FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

Manzano-Legarda borrowed his mother's white SUV on the day of the shooting to scrap a catalytic converter. Security footage at the scrapyard showed him leaving shortly before the shooting. He was alone in the car.

Minutes later, the SUV appeared near the shooting on store security cameras and a Flock camera, an automated camera that captures license plates. The SUV cut through a Family Dollar parking lot and turned toward a nearby intersection just before the shooting.

Witnesses at that intersection saw a white SUV pull into the oncoming lane. It stopped next to the front driver's door of Jacquez Carter's Monte Carlo. Several shots rang out from the SUV's passenger window, and it sped off. A witness described the driver as a Hispanic male with black hair and a beard. Carter tried to drive off but quickly crashed and died at the scene. Police recovered one bullet fragment in the street and five in Carter's car. All were .45 caliber.

Police located and stopped the SUV the next day. The driver was Manzano- Legarda's mother. An officer immediately noticed what he considered a "bullet strike" on the passenger door near the bottom of the window. That damage wasn't visible in the scrapyard footage taken shortly before the shooting.

Manzano-Legarda's mother followed the officers to the police station. She explained that she had let her son borrow the SUV the day before. She gave the officers verbal and written consent to search the vehicle. Officers photographed the bullet strike and took samples from inside the front passenger area. The samples tested positive for gunshot residue.

3 Later that day, officers visited Manzano-Legarda's parents' house. His mother agreed to let the officers look for him inside. In the basement, where Manzano-Legarda lived, an officer observed an open backpack with ammunition and shell casings. The officers left, used that information to obtain a search warrant, and returned. The items they seized included an ammunition tray of spent .45 caliber rounds with nine rounds missing. Testing showed Manzano-Legarda's fingerprint on the tray.

That night, officers arrested Manzano-Legarda at an apartment complex. The State charged him with first-degree felony murder based on an underlying criminal discharge of a firearm at an occupied vehicle. See K.S.A. 21-5402(a)(2) (defining first-degree murder as a killing committed "in the commission of, attempt to commit, or flight from any inherently dangerous felony"). The jury convicted him on both counts.

The court sentenced Manzano-Legarda to life imprisonment with no parole opportunity for 25 years plus a consecutive 13-month sentence for the criminal discharge.

Manzano-Legarda appealed directly to our court. He has a statutory right to appeal the district court judgment. See K.S.A. 22-3602(a). The appeal comes directly to us because the district court imposed a life sentence and Manzano-Legarda was convicted of an off-grid crime, meaning his sentence was not imposed under the grids that set presumptive sentences for most felonies. See K.S.A. 22-3601(b)(3)-(4); K.S.A. 21- 5402(b) (first-degree murder is an off-grid crime).

Manzano-Legarda was appointed an appellate attorney who filed a brief on his behalf. We also granted Manzano-Legarda's motion to file a supplemental brief that he prepared pro se, meaning that he drafted it without the help of an attorney. We then heard oral argument on December 17, 2025.

4 ANALYSIS

Manzano-Legarda raises three challenges on appeal. First, he argues that the district court abused its discretion by rejecting the motion for a new trial he filed after the verdict. In his view, the court had unreasonably retained several jurors when potential conflicts arose during trial, so the interests of justice demanded a new trial. Second, he argues in his pro se brief that the district court should have suppressed evidence from the search of his mother's SUV. And third, he argues that the trial court should have suppressed the ammunition and gun accessories seized from his room because there was insufficient evidence to establish the validity and scope of his mother's consent to the search. As we explained at the outset, we find each challenge unpersuasive.

I. A reasonable person could agree with the district court's decision to deny Manzano- Legarda's motion for a new trial.

The district court addressed four potential juror conflicts during the trial.

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State v. Manzano-Legarda, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-manzano-legarda-kan-2026.