State v. Martine

371 P.3d 510, 277 Or. App. 360, 2016 Ore. App. LEXIS 404
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedApril 6, 2016
Docket131009; A155840
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 371 P.3d 510 (State v. Martine) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Martine, 371 P.3d 510, 277 Or. App. 360, 2016 Ore. App. LEXIS 404 (Or. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

HASELTON, S. J.

Defendant, who was convicted, following a jury trial, of one count of tampering with physical evidence, ORS 162.295, and one count of hindering prosecution, ORS 162.325, appeals, assigning error to the denial of his motion for judgments of acquittal (MJOA) as to each of those charges. Specifically, he contends, inter alia, that the state failed to adduce legally sufficient proof that the object he destroyed, an electronic device, was “physical evidence” for purposes of those offenses. As explained below, we conclude that the state’s proof of “physical evidence” was legally insufficient in that the jury could not find, without impermissible speculation, that the electronic device that defendant destroyed had any colorable connection to a pending or immediately impending official proceeding; consequently, the trial court erred in denying defendant’s MJOA. However, we further conclude that, as suggested by the state, the jury necessarily found that defendant had engaged in conduct constituting attempted tampering with physical evidence and attempted hindering prosecution. Accordingly, we reverse defendant’s convictions for tampering with physical evidence and hindering prosecution but remand for the trial court to enter judgments of conviction for attempted tampering with physical evidence and attempted hindering prosecution, and for resentencing.

In reviewing the denial of an MJOA, we view the evidence and reasonably derived inferences in the light most favorable to the state. State v. Lupoli, 348 Or 346, 366, 234 P3d 117 (2010). Consistently with that standard, the record discloses the following material facts.

Defendant was acquainted, and on friendly terms, with Benjamin Clark, who was a police officer for the city of Rockaway Beach and the varsity girls’ softball coach at Neah-Kah-Nie High School. In early 2011, Clark exchanged a number of text messages with a member of the softball team, who was 14 years old; the girl also sent Clark one or more photographs of herself. The content of at least some of the text messages and of the photo (s) was apparently potentially compromising. Clark received those transmissions on his personal iPhone and also retained the photo (s) on his iPad, and the girl transmitted at least the photo(s) on her iPod.

[363]*363On May 14, 2011, Clark received a message from his wife informing him that she had “found the child porn” and that he needed to “get rid of it.” Clark then caused an assistant coach to obtain the girl’s iPod and deliver it to him. According to Clark, he proceeded, with his wife, to destroy all three devices (that is, his iPhone and iPad and the girl’s iPod) by driving his vehicle over them at a location roughly one-quarter mile from the beach north of Neskowin, near the southern border of Tillamook County. Also according to Clark, he and his wife then scattered the broken and crushed pieces of the three devices in “the brush” there, as well as at a second location near a county road.1

In August 2011, Clark was charged by indictment with using a child in a display of sexually explicit conduct, ORS 163.370, second-degree encouraging child sexual abuse, ORS 163.387, and various other crimes relating to his alleged destruction of the electronic devices. That prosecution was the object of considerable local interest and media coverage. Among the reports was an article in the September 1, 2011, Tillamook Headlight Herald, in which defendant was quoted as commenting favorably on Clark’s public service and stating that he hoped that the charges against Clark were the result of a “misunderstanding.” The same article, which defendant read, referred to Clark’s purported destruction of the girl’s iPod. Other media reports referred to suppositions that Clark had disposed of the electronic devices by throwing them into the ocean, perhaps near Wheeler, which is four to five miles north of Rockaway Beach, and there was communal “gossip” and “rumor” to that effect. Ultimately, on March 26, 2012, Clark pleaded guilty to one count of hindering prosecution and one count of tampering with physical evidence.2

[364]*364The circumstances specifically material to defendant’s prosecution and conviction occurred after Clark was indicted and before Clark entered his guilty plea. Sometime in the late summer or early fall of 2011,3 defendant, who performed maintenance duties at the Seaview Condominiums in Rockaway Beach, found an intact electronic device on the beach near the condominiums. The device was enclosed by a zippered case and was similar in appearance to both an Apple iPhone and an Apple iPod of the sort that the girl in the then-pending Clark prosecution had possessed, which the police were attempting to find.4

Defendant showed the device to three coworkers, who provided housekeeping services at the condominiums. Because they were all aware—as was defendant—that the police were attempting to locate electronic devices in the Clark prosecution, at least two of the coworkers explicitly and repeatedly told him that he should turn the device over to the police.5 Defendant did not do so.

Instead, according to defendant—when he was asked by one of the coworkers a couple of weeks later—he took the device home and dried it out and cleaned it in an effort to make it operable, and, when that proved unavailing, he threw it out with the trash. During the course of that conversation with his coworkers, defendant referred, without elaboration, to having “talked to [Clark].”

In response to a tip, a Tillamook County detective interviewed defendant’s coworkers and then contacted defendant, who acknowledged finding the device and discarding it, reiterating his purported efforts to render it operable. Defendant also acknowledged that he and Clark were friends, that he telephoned Clark “about his morale” but not about “the investigation,” and that he had generally [365]*365heard that (in the detective’s words) “one of the phones was thrown in the ocean in the Wheeler, Oregon area.” However, according to defendant, he had not turned the device over to law enforcement because it was “a little music thing” without any resemblance to a “phone.” Defendant twice explicitly denied that his coworkers had ever urged him to take the device to the police. After having been interviewed by the detective, defendant, who had previously been friendly with his coworkers, aggressively and angrily confronted one of the housekeepers about having spoken with police about the matter.

In January 2013, defendant was indicted on one count of hindering prosecution, ORS 162.325, and one count of tampering with physical evidence, ORS 162.295.6

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
371 P.3d 510, 277 Or. App. 360, 2016 Ore. App. LEXIS 404, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-martine-orctapp-2016.