State v. Mireles

301 P.3d 677, 297 Kan. 339, 2013 WL 1924109, 2013 Kan. LEXIS 455
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedMay 10, 2013
DocketNo. 104,474
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 301 P.3d 677 (State v. Mireles) 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. Mireles, 301 P.3d 677, 297 Kan. 339, 2013 WL 1924109, 2013 Kan. LEXIS 455 (kan 2013).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Rosen, J.;

Israel G. Mireles was convicted of capital murder and rape. The district court sentenced him to a life sentence without the possibility of parole for the murder conviction and imposed a, consecutive 203-month prison sentence for the rape conviction. Mireles now brings this appeal in order to challenge the district court’s decision to allow numerous photographs into evidence and its failure to instruct the jury on felony murder as a lesser included [342]*342offense of capital murder. Míreles also argues that due to prose-cutorial misconduct, he was denied a fair trial.

Facts

In the fall of 2007, Joe Terzui opened the Bella Casa Italian Restaurant in El Dorado, Kansas. The restaurant was located next to and shared a parking lot with the El Dorado Motel. Terzui leased the restaurant’s building from the owner and operator of the motel, I.C. Patel.

Míreles had worked off and on for Terzui the previous 3 years at restaurants Terzui had opened in Vernon, Texas, and Hays, Kansas. In early October 2007, Míreles, along with his girlfriend, Victoria Martens, moved from Hays to El Dorado to help Terzui at the new restaurant. While in El Dorado, Míreles and Martens lived in a room at the motel (Room 21) that Terzui had rented for them.

A week before Thanksgiving 2007, Míreles and Martens decided to move to Texas to find new jobs. The couple’s plan was for Martens to spend Thanksgiving Day in Baxter Springs, Kansas, with her family while Míreles stayed behind in El Dorado. On the Friday after Thanksgiving, Míreles planned to quit his job, collect his wages, rent a car, pack up the couple’s possessions, and travel to Baxter Springs to pick up Martens. The couple would then travel to Texas to visit Míreles’ grandmother and then stay with Míreles’ family until they could find a place of their own.

On Thanksgiving Day, Martens’ mother picked her up at the motel and took her to her grandmother’s house in Baxter Springs. As planned, Míreles stayed in El Dorado for Thanksgiving Day; he did not work that day. On the afternoon of Friday, November 23, Míreles received $600 from Terzui. After receiving this money, Míreles rented a 2007 Ford Taurus from a car rental business in El Dorado and proceeded to run some errands around town. After doing so, he went to the Beijing Restaurant in El Dorado for drinks. He arrived there sometime between 7 and 8 p.m. and sat in the bar area of the restaurant.

At about this same time, E.S., an 18-year-old student at Butler County Community College, arrived at the Beijing Restaurant with Keeley McFann. Other acquaintances of E.S. and McFann arrived [343]*343at the restaurant and soon joined them in the bar area: Brad Scott, Greg Bostwick, Misty Walton, and three of Walton’s friends. They eventually all sat at a table and began socializing over drinks.

Mireles, a person no one in the group had met before, then walked over to the table from his seat at the bar and joined the group. Mireles proceeded to buy drinks for everyone at the table. Mireles paid particular attention to the females in the group, talking to them and continually buying them drinks.

While sitting at the table, Mireles told Scott about working at the Italian restaurant and about how he was going to visit his grandmother who was ill. Mireles also told Scott that he borrowed some money so he could pay for the visit and proceeded to show Scott the money he possessed. Mireles held the money so everyone at the table could see it. Later on, Mireles asked people at the table if they knew where to get drugs. He suggested to the group that they travel to Wichita to buy cocaine and then come back to his motel room to party. Scott told Mireles that he was not interested. Scott could not remember if anyone else explicitly objected to Mír-eles’ plan.

As closing time for the restaurant drew near, the group decided to continue tire night at the Retreat, a bar in El Dorado. They left the restaurant and traveled to the club in several cars. McFann rode with E.S. in her car, Bostwick rode with Scott in his car, Walton’s friends rode in another car, and Walton rode with Mireles in his rented Taurus. On the way to the bar, Mireles drove by the motel and restaurant and mentioned to Walton that he worked at the restaurant and stayed at the motel.

The group arrived at the bar sometime between 10 and 11 p.m. Though there was a $5 cover charge to get into the bar, Mireles took it upon himself to pay for everyone’s cover charge. When the group got inside the club, they sat down at a booth. McFann estimated that there were 80 to 90 people inside the bar. Walton said there was a “[m]oderate amount of people” inside the bar. Members of the group proceeded to drink, socialize, dance, and play pool. Mireles bought drinks for everyone in the group.

When they first arrived at the bar, Walton sat next to Mireles in the booth and the two of them talked exclusively to one another. [344]*344Walton and Mireles eventually kissed. But as the night progressed, Walton’s interest in Mireles declined due to him constantly asking her to accompany him to his motel room and after seeing him kiss E.S. McFann, who also saw E.S. and Mireles kiss, said that E.S. became interested in Mireles while at the club. After seeing Mir-eles kiss E.S., Walton left the bar with her friends at approximately midnight. Before leaving, Walton noted that E.S. appeared to be happy but intoxicated.

E.S.’s older brother, Jacob, arrived at the bar at 11:45 p.m. and met E.S. inside the bar. Jacob said that E.S. was intoxicated when he saw her. E.S. introduced Jacob to Mireles. Jacob said that it appeared that E.S. was “with” Mireles. While at the bar, Jacob said that E.S. danced, drank, and talked to her friends and to people that Jacob did not know. Jacob stayed at the bar for 30 to 45 minutes and eventually left the bar at 12:45 a.m. He said that E.S. was still at the bar when he left.

According to McFann, E.S. and Mireles became intoxicated while at the bar. They appeared to be happy and having a good time. McFann also said that as the evening progressed, Mireles became more persistent in asking the girls in the group to come to his motel room to party and even asked McFann about acquiring some cocaine.

While McFann was on the dance floor, E.S. approached her and told her that she was leaving the bar with Mireles. McFann tried to convince E.S. not to leave, but E.S. would not listen to her. A bouncer working at the bar that night saw E.S. leave the bar with Mireles. According to the bouncer, E.S. told him that she would be back. The bouncer said that E.S. appeared to be happy and not distressed.

Aurelia Resa, a high school classmate of E.S., came to the bar that evening and briefly spoke with E.S. at about the time she was getting ready to leave the bar. E.S. told Resa that she would return to the bar. Resa saw E.S. leave the bar with a man that Resa had never seen before. Resa asked the bartender about the man, and the bartender told her the man worked at the Italian restaurant.

McFann eventually left the bar with a friend who drove her to E.S.’s apartment. McFann knocked on the apartment door but no [345]*345one answered. Resa called E.S. on her cellphone before leaving the bar, but E.S. did not answer her phone. Later, Resa tried calling E.S. a second time with still no answer.

At 4 a.m.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
301 P.3d 677, 297 Kan. 339, 2013 WL 1924109, 2013 Kan. LEXIS 455, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-mireles-kan-2013.