State v. McCullar

2014 UT App 215, 335 P.3d 900, 769 Utah Adv. Rep. 33, 2014 Utah App. LEXIS 222, 2014 WL 4460427
CourtCourt of Appeals of Utah
DecidedSeptember 11, 2014
Docket20120648-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 2014 UT App 215 (State v. McCullar) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Utah primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. McCullar, 2014 UT App 215, 335 P.3d 900, 769 Utah Adv. Rep. 33, 2014 Utah App. LEXIS 222, 2014 WL 4460427 (Utah Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

Opinion

VOROS, Judge:

T1 Robert L. McCullar was convicted of murdering Filiberto Robles Bedolla. McCul-lar told his girlfriend (by then a police informant) that he had slashed Bedolla's throat with a piece of broken glass. At trial, McCullar sought to raise a reasonable doubt of his own guilt by pointing the finger at Dawna Finch, Bedolla's girlfriend and "main prostitute." The jury convicted MeCullar without having heard much of the evidence implicating Finch. On appeal McCullar contends that he was unduly restricted in attempting to present his defense to the jury. We agree. We therefore reverse McCullar's conviction and remand for further proceedings.

BACKGROUND 2

The Murder

2 Filiberto Robles Bedolla and his roommate shared a studio apartment in Ogden. Bedolla's roommate spent the morning of December 22, 2009, looking for work. When he returned to the apartment that afternoon to drop off groceries, he noticed Bedolla still in bed, completely under a bedsheet. The roommate said, "Hey buddy," but Bedolla did not respond. As the roommate. left the apartment, he ran into Bedolla's brother. The two returned to the apartment to wake Bedolla. The roommate shook Bedolla's foot but Bedolla did not respond. Bedolla's brother then pulled back the bedsheet. Be-dolla was dead, his bedding bloodstained, his neck covered with stab wounds. The fly on his jeans was unbuttoned and a pornographic movie was playing on a loop on the television near the foot of his bed.

*902 13 The crime seene revealed no obvious suspect. The first officer to arrive saw no evidence of a struggle, and the door showed no sign of forced entry. Bedolla's wounds indicated that the killer used a knife with a single-edged blade, but police found no weapon at the seene. Investigators found blood prints on a lightswitch, a doorknob, and a DVD case, all left by someone wearing knit gloves. They also found blood prints on an outturned pocket of Bedolla's jeans. Three thousand dollars in cash, with which Bedolla had intended to purchase a car, was missing.

The Investigation

T 4 Police focused initially on two suspects: Bedolla's roommate and Dawna Finch, a woman investigators described as Bedolla's "main prostitute." One detail in particular piqued police interest in Finch. Bedolla reportedly kept a picture of Finch on his headboard. The picture was gone when Bedolla's body was found.

15 Other suspects soon emerged. An informant told police of a woman seen sharpening a crack pipe, and police briefly entertained a theory that Bedolla's wounds could have been caused by that type of weapon. Another informant told police. that a local man named Michael had bragged about committing the murder.

T6 But the police investigation eventually narrowed to a single suspect: Robert McCul-lar. Police first sought out McCullar because they believed he might provide them with information about Finch. Soon after their search began, MeCullar approached two officers on the street. He had heard police were investigating "a murder or something" and were looking for him. McCullar seemed to be unfamiliar with the details of the investigation. He believed the murder had taken place the previous Friday, for example, when it had actually taken place the previous Tuesday. He told police, "This is bullshit. I didn't do no murder. I don't even know the guy." But McCullar then asked the police why they were investigating him "if there was no forced entry" into Bedolla's apartment. That question struck the officers as suspicious-they considered the lack of a forced -entry to be a nonpublic detail of the crime.

T7 Several weeks later police received another tip. While in custody after a drug arrest, a woman named Donna 'Major told. police that she had information about the Bedolla murder. She told police that she and McCullar were "close associates" and that MecCullar had "made some comments and statements that led her to believe that he was the murderer." Major first told police that Finch was in Bedolla's apartment when McCullar killed him. But Major changed her story, telling police that she had been with MecCullar herself and had smoked a cigarette outside Bedolla's apartment as McCullar killed Bedolla When MeCullar emerged from Bedolla's apartment building, Major said, blood marked his clothing.

McCullar's Confessions and Trial

T8 Major did, in fact, know McCullar well. They met in the summer of 2009 and, for some time, had a romantic relationship. Though that relationship ended before police began investigating McCullar, during the investigation Major still told McCullar that she loved and cared for him and that she wanted to leave Ogden and run away with him to Dallas. Major testified that neither of them ever "totally gave up" on the relationship and that she thought McCullar "still had feelings" for her. Major also testified that she believed she was able to "manipulate those feelings" to "get [MeCullar] to confess or incriminate himself" in Bedolla's murder.

T9 In spite of their affection, Major was angry at McCullar for his failure to bail her out of jail when she was held on drug charges. In a conversation from jail, Major "vented" to MecCullar about her "so-called friends" who never "step up for you when you need them." Major told McCullar, "When I get out of here, ... karma is coming to town and that bitch is named Donna."

110 Though they were skeptical of her initial story implicating MecCullar in Bedolla's murder, police remained interested in Major's willingness to implicate McCullar. Major told police she could "set up a meeting" and "get a confession" from MeCullar. Police told Major that if she did, they might be *903 able to negotiate her release from prison and drop the felony drug charge against her.

{11 Onee Major agreed to cooperate with an investigation into McCullar's involvement in the murder, police "initiated the discussion that led to her release." They then outfitted a hotel room with a modified clock radio capable of audio and video recording. McCullar met Major at the hotel room, and police monitored and recorded at least an hour and fifteen minutes of McCullar's activity in the hotel room. During his conversation with Major, McCullar confessed to killing Bedolla. He told Major that after a "run in" with Bedolla, he followed Bedolla home, seooped up a piece of broken glass outside the apartment complex, barged through the apartment door before Bedolla could close it, and cut Bedolla's throat. As McCullar de-seribed the killing to Major, he indicated the length and location of the fatal wound by tracing a path with his finger from "right under the right ear to about the center" of the throat.

{ 12 While in prison awaiting trial, McCul-lar met a pastor serving five years to life for statutory rape. On one occasion, MeCullar asked the pastor, "Does God forgive murder?" On another occasion, MeCullar seemed to acknowledge killing Bedolla, saying, "That paisa motherfucker, I had to handle my business, and so I had to do what I had to do." 3 MecCullar told the pastor he "left the body" at the scene of the crime and that "he didn't think it would be found for anywhere from 12 to 24 hours." MeCullar also suggested that he was not alone at the murder seene.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2014 UT App 215, 335 P.3d 900, 769 Utah Adv. Rep. 33, 2014 Utah App. LEXIS 222, 2014 WL 4460427, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-mccullar-utahctapp-2014.