State v. Miguel Avila

CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJune 16, 2021
Docket19-440
StatusPublished

This text of State v. Miguel Avila (State v. Miguel Avila) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Miguel Avila, (R.I. 2021).

Opinion

June 16, 2021

Supreme Court

No. 2019-440-C.A. (P1/09-1350AG)

State :

v. :

Miguel Avila. :

NOTICE: This opinion is subject to formal revision before publication in the Rhode Island Reporter. Readers are requested to notify the Opinion Analyst, Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 250 Benefit Street, Providence, Rhode Island 02903, at Telephone (401) 222-3258 or Email: opinionanalyst@courts.ri.gov, of any typographical or other formal errors in order that corrections may be made before the opinion is published. Supreme Court

Present: Suttell, C.J., Goldberg, Robinson, Lynch Prata, and Long, JJ.

OPINION

Justice Goldberg, for the Court. This case came before the Supreme

Court on May 11, 2021, on appeal by the defendant, Miguel Avila, from a

judgment of conviction of first-degree murder after a jury trial. The defendant

argues that the evidence failed to establish beyond a reasonable doubt that the

murder of Elio Olivero was premediated and, further, that the state failed to meet

its burden of disproving voluntary manslaughter. Therefore, the defendant

contends that the trial justice erred in denying his motion for a new trial. For the

reasons set forth in this opinion, we affirm the judgment of the Superior Court.

Facts and Travel

It is undisputed that on February 22, 2009, defendant intentionally shot

Olivero in the head, killing him. The facts disclose that at about seven o’clock on

-1- the morning of the murder, defendant appeared at the home of his ex-girlfriend,

Diana Lora, a basement apartment located at 530 Union Avenue in Providence,

Rhode Island.

The defendant’s discovery of a male guest at Lora’s home led to this

senseless homicide. According to Lora, she and defendant had known each other

for approximately two years, and they were in a dating relationship until one to two

months before the February 22, 2009 incident.1 The defendant lived with Lora at

Union Avenue in the beginning of their relationship; he eventually moved out, but

continued to keep a bureau with clothes and other items in the common area of the

basement, outside the door to Lora’s apartment.2 Lora testified that she and

defendant had “[m]any problems” during their relationship, and that he was “very

violent,” and told her, “If I see you doing something, * * * I’m going to kill you.”

Lora’s best friend, Mariubis Santana, testified that approximately six months

earlier, during a conversation with defendant at a family reunion “at the Loras’

house[,]” defendant told her that “if he ever br[oke] up with [Lora], he wouldn’t

give up, if she got another guy that he would kill the guy.”

1 The defendant told police that Lora had told him that “she needed a break” five days prior to the February 22, 2009 incident. However, Lora and two of her friends testified that the couple had broken up one to two months before the murder. 2 Lora testified that the door to her apartment led to another room in the basement where the electrical breakers were located. She testified that anyone in the apartment building could access this utility room. -2- The defendant carried out this threat on February 22, 2009. According to

Lora, Olivero gave her a ride home from work in the early morning hours, and she

and Olivero were in the basement apartment from approximately 4 a.m. until

7 a.m., when it was time for Olivero to leave for work. When she opened the door

to the apartment, defendant was at the doorway. The defendant admitted to police

that he had been waiting “outside the basement door” listening to the two voices in

the apartment for approximately fifteen minutes before Lora opened the door.

Lora testified that when she opened the door, Olivero asked who the man standing

there was. Lora introduced Olivero to defendant, who then suggested that they all

go inside the apartment to talk.

Once inside, defendant slapped Lora across the face. The defendant told

Olivero that he and Lora had only recently broken up, to which Olivero responded

with indifference. Lora then told Olivero to call the police. The 911 call reveals

that Olivero called the police and relayed that “we got a situation here.” After

Olivero communicated Lora’s address to the dispatcher, defendant asked Lora,

“You’re going to let him call the police on me?” Lora responded, “Yes, because

you hit me[,]” and she told him, “Miguel, leave because the police is going to

come.”

Lora testified that at that point defendant turned and walked down the

hallway as if he was going to leave the apartment. However, defendant was

-3- actually feigning his departure; he later admitted to police that he exited Lora’s

apartment to access his bureau in the common utility room, to retrieve a firearm.

When defendant returned to the living room with the gun, he approached Olivero

and positioned the weapon against Olivero’s head. Lora testified that Olivero

pleaded with defendant to talk to him, but defendant shot him once in the head.

The defendant admitted to the police that he was in the apartment for

approximately four to five minutes with the gun before he pulled the trigger.

After defendant shot Olivero, Lora ran into another room of the apartment;

defendant followed her, with the gun still in hand. Lora testified that while she

was screaming at defendant to “calm down,” the police began knocking on the

exterior door of the apartment building. The defendant told Lora “to be quiet” and

that she “had to do whatever he said.” Lora testified that the police knocked on the

door for about a minute or two, and then left.3 Lora and defendant remained in the

apartment for approximately ten minutes thereafter, until defendant announced that

they “had to leave.” Lora and defendant proceeded to his car, and defendant began

3 A patrol officer who responded to 530 Union Avenue testified that she received the dispatch call at approximately 7:13 a.m. and responded to the apartment building “within a minute.” Police officers checked both the front and back doors, which were locked, and rang the doorbell and banged on the door a few times. Upon receiving no answer, the officers returned to their vehicles. One officer waited outside the building for approximately three to four minutes and was not flagged down by anyone and did not see anyone leave the apartment building. The officer cleared the call because “no one approached [police and they] couldn’t gain access into the house[.]” -4- driving around for approximately two hours, during which time he made several

phone calls to Lora’s family and friends. Ms. Santana testified that she spoke with

defendant on the phone several times that morning and that he told her, “I shot the

guy once in the head because I knew that he was going to die quickly.”

Eventually, defendant stopped the car in a parking lot at 266 Adelaide

Avenue in Providence. The first police officer to locate the vehicle blocked the

only exit; and, after defendant attempted to back up towards the exit and came

bumper to bumper with the police vehicle, defendant retreated into the parking lot.

At some point, Lora was able to jump out of the vehicle and safely reach the

officers. After a near hour-long standoff, defendant was taken into custody. As he

was transported to the police station, defendant spontaneously stated to an officer,

“F* * *, I can’t believe I killed him and I did this.”

At police headquarters, defendant was advised of his rights and initialed and

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State v. Miguel Avila, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-miguel-avila-ri-2021.