State v. Medina

48 P.3d 1005, 112 Wash. App. 40
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedMay 13, 2002
DocketNo. 46206-7-I
StatusPublished
Cited by41 cases

This text of 48 P.3d 1005 (State v. Medina) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Medina, 48 P.3d 1005, 112 Wash. App. 40 (Wash. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

Schindler, J.

Raul Medina was convicted of first degree robbery and first degree kidnapping. He argues that his conviction must be reversed because (1) the State failed to prove each element of first degree kidnapping as set forth in the “to convict” instruction, (2) he was deprived of his right to confrontation when the State introduced a codefendant’s statement to the police, and (3) the trial court abused its discretion by denying his motion to sever his case from that of his two codefendants. We disagree. Medina also claims [43]*43error with respect to his sentence. The State concedes this error. Accordingly, we affirm the convictions and remand for resentencing.

FACTS

During the evening of August 27,1999, Russell Elder was pumping gas into his car at an AM/PM station in Shoreline. Medina approached Elder and asked him if he wanted to buy some marijuana. Elder replied that he would purchase five dollars worth. He paid for his gas and parked his car in the AM/PM parking lot. Codefendant Keith Hunt joined them, and Elder, Hunt, and Medina joined a group of approximately six other individuals, including the third codefendant, Adam Aker. They entered a wooded area across the street from the gas station, and, according to Elder, Medina told him that they were going to meet the person who had the marijuana.

Also according to Elder, after the group entered the wooded area, Medina turned and hit Elder in the face. Elder fell to the ground, and members of the group began to punch and kick him. Medina and Hunt went through Elder’s pockets and took his car keys, wallet, and ATM card and demanded his ATM access code. Medina left and then returned with Elder’s car. The remaining members of the group forced Elder over to his car, where they continued to beat him. Elder said that Medina and another member of the group forced him into the trunk of his car.

Elder testified that he rode in the trunk for about 15 minutes before the car came to a stop. Its occupants left the car. After the car was stopped, Elder heard a two-way radio nearby. After waiting a few minutes, he knocked on the trunk lid and yelled for help. A Shoreline School District security guard on routine patrol heard Elder’s yell and called for help. Fire department employees freed Elder from the trunk.

[44]*44A few days after the incident, Elder gave a statement to a King County Sheriff’s detective. Based on Elder’s information, the detective prepared photomontages. Elder identified Medina, Hunt, and Aker from the montages.

When Hunt was arrested, he gave a statement to another detective in which he admitted his involvement in the incident, but limited his involvement to placing his knee on Elder’s neck while Medina and others robbed him. Hunt told the detective that he did not hit Elder.

The State charged Medina, Hunt, and Aker with first degree robbery and first degree kidnapping. All three defendants were tried together. Prior to and during trial, Medina moved to sever his case from that of his codefendants because of the State’s intent to introduce Hunt’s statement and because he claimed that his defense was mutually antagonistic to Hunt’s. The trial court denied the motions to sever. The court admitted a redacted version of Hunt’s statement and instructed the jury that it could consider the statement only against Hunt, not against either codefendant Medina or Aker.

The jury convicted Medina and Hunt as charged and acquitted Aker. This court affirmed Hunt’s conviction in an unpublished, per curiam opinion.1

DISCUSSION

Sufficiency of the Evidence

The “to convict” instruction on the first degree kidnapping charge stated in part:

To convict the defendant RAUL MEDINA of the crime of kidnapping in the first degree, as charged in count II, each of the following elements of the crime must be proved beyond a reasonable doubt:
[45]*45(1) That on or about August 27, 1999, the defendant or an accomplice intentionally abducted another person;
(2) That the defendant or an accomplice abducted that person with intent to facilitate the commission of Robbery in the First Degree; and
(3) That the acts occurred in the State of Washington.[2]

The “to convict” instruction differs from the language of the statute defining the offense of first degree kidnapping2 3 in that it does not include the “or flight thereafter” alternative. Specifically, under the statute, a person is guilty of first degree kidnapping if he or she intentionally abducts another person with intent “[t]o facilitate commission of any felony or flight thereafter.”4 But, under the instructions given here, the jury could convict Medina of first degree kidnapping only if it found that he or an accomplice abducted Elder with intent to facilitate the commission of first degree robbery. The State did not object to the “to convict” instruction. The instruction, therefore, became the law of the case and the State had the burden of proving the crime as set forth in the “to convict” instruction.5

Medina argues that the State failed to prove that he kidnapped Elder to facilitate the commission of first degree robbery because the robbery of Elder was complete before the kidnapping began. Evidence is sufficient to support a conviction if, assuming the truth of the State’s evidence of guilt, a rational trier of fact could find each of the essential elements of the charged crime.6

[46]*46Medina relies on State v. Allen7 in which, under the specific facts presented, the court held that the crimes of first degree robbery and first degree kidnapping did not merge and that the trial court did not err by failing to dismiss the kidnapping charge as duplicitous. In that case, the defendants pointed a rifle at a convenience store clerk and told him to get into the back seat of their car. The defendant complied and one of the defendants entered the store and took the cash register drawer. The defendants told the clerk to lie down in the car, and they drove away. They drove approximately three blocks and released the clerk.

The Supreme Court held that the crimes with which the defendants were charged, first degree robbery and first degree kidnapping, did not merge because “[o]nce the money had been obtained by force, the robbery was completed.”7 8 The court stated that neither the flight from the scene of the robbery nor the means of flight from the scene was statutorily or logically a part of the robbery. Accordingly, the court held that the trial court did not err by refusing to dismiss the kidnapping charge.9

Based on Allen, Medina argues that the robbery here was complete after Medina and the others took Elder’s wallet and keys, which occurred before they forced Elder into the trunk. So, he argues, the State could not prove that the kidnapping occurred to facilitate the commission of the robbery.

There is a significant difference between this case and Allen. In Allen, the defendants took the cash register drawer from the store and forced the victim into their own car. Here, by contrast, in addition to taking Elder’s wallet

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
48 P.3d 1005, 112 Wash. App. 40, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-medina-washctapp-2002.