State v. Mohamud

2017 UT 23, 395 P.3d 133, 837 Utah Adv. Rep. 19, 2017 WL 1436447, 2017 Utah LEXIS 60
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedApril 21, 2017
DocketCase No. 20140844
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 2017 UT 23 (State v. Mohamud) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Mohamud, 2017 UT 23, 395 P.3d 133, 837 Utah Adv. Rep. 19, 2017 WL 1436447, 2017 Utah LEXIS 60 (Utah 2017).

Opinions

Chief Justice Durrant,

opinion of the Court:

Introduction

¶ 1 This case, along with State v. DeJesus,1 requires us to apply the due process analysis [136]*136we set forth in State v. Tiedemann,2 which addresses the due process rights of criminal defendants when evidence has been lost or destroyed. Defendant Khalid Mohamud was sentenced to an indeterminate term of one to fifteen years in prison for possessing a shank in prison. He argues on appeal that a video recording of the discovery of the shank was lost or destroyed by the State and that this loss of evidence violated his due process rights and required the dismissal of the ease. He also raises an ineffective assistance claim, arguing that his counsel was ineffective in stipulating to the due process analysis applicable to claims regarding evidence lost ox-destroyed by the State. The stipulation conceded that thei-e is a threshold l-equii-ement that the defendant show a reasonable probability that the lost evidence would have been exculpatory. Under the due process analysis set forth in Tiedemann, we hold that Mr. Mohamud’s due pi-ocess rights were not violated and that his counsel did not l-ender ineffective assistance. We thus affirm the trial court’s decision.

Background

¶ 2 On August 29, 2013, Mr. Mohamud, who was incarcerated in the Utah State Pi-is-on, was scheduled to transfer to another cell to allow another inmate to move into his former cell. There wei-e three officers involved in the transfer: Officer Miller, who was stationed in the control room that ovei*-looked the prison section in which Mr. Moha-mud was held, and Officers Auelua and Weaver, who were standing outside of'the section containing Mr. Mohamud. Mr. Moha-mud was instructed to leave his cell, place his possessions in front of his new cell, enter the section showei-, and lock the shower door so that the new inmate could be moved into Mi*. Mohamud’s former cell. Mr. Mohamud placed his possessions in front of the new cell and entered the shower, but did not close or lock the door. Officer Millei-, via intercom from the control room, accordingly instructed Mr. Mohamud to approach the section door.

¶3 After Mr. Mohamud approached the door, Officer Auelua handcuffed him and led him through the door into a “horseshoe” area. As Officer Auelua escorted Mr. Moha-mud, Officer Weaver noticed “a pretty good-sized bulge” in Mr. Mohamud’s left sock. Officer Weaver asked Mr. Mohamud about the bulge. When Mr. Mohamud did not respond, Officer Weaver asked him to step up against the wall. Mr. Mohamud complied, and Officer Weaver i*eached down into his sock and pulled out a metal shank that could have “kfll[ed] somebody.” Officer Auelua testified that he saw Officer Weaver remove the shank, and Officer Miller testified that although he saw Officer Weaver reach down to Mr. Mohamud’s ankle, he did not personally see the shank. Officer Miller also testified that Officer Weaver told him that Officer Weaver had found a shank in Mr. Mohamud’s sock.

¶ 4 After the shank was discovered, Officers Weaver and Auelua escorted Mr. Moha-mud to a holding cell. While being escorted, Mr. Mohamud asked questions like “[W]hy are you bringing me down here? What did I do?” Officer Weaver took a picture of the shank and prepared a report. Subsequently, Bryan Heybome, an investigator for the Utah Department of Corrections, was assigned to the ease. As part of his investigation, Mr. Heyborne spoke with Mr. Moha-mud and, among other questions, asked him whether the shank belonged to a cellmate. Mr. Mohamud said it did not. Mr. Heyboi-ne also reviewed Officer Weaver’s repox-t, though he did not review or othex-wise seek to obtain or preserve any available surveillance footage.

¶ 5 On October 11, 2013, Mr. Mohamud was charged with one count of possessing a prohibited item in a correctional facility. On November 6, 2013, counsel for Mr. Mohamud submitted a discovery x-equest seeking all video recordings of the event. Counsel renewed this request on January 9, 2014. Soon after, the State told defense counsel that any footage that might have captured the incident would have already been recorded over. According to Mr. Heyborne’s later testimony, recordings from surveillance cameras “are saved for about approximately 30 days, and then they are recorded over.” Thus, by the [137]*137time charges were filed—forty-three days after the incident—any . footage that might have captured the incident had already been lost. In response to this information, Mr. Mohamud moved to dismiss the charges against him, arguing that there was surveillance footage that captured the incident, that it had been lost or destroyed by the State, that there was a reasonable probability the evidence would have been exculpatory because it could have impeached the State’s witnesses’ credibility, and that he was prejudiced by the loss of the evidence.

¶ 6 During the hearing on Mr. Mohamud’s motion to dismiss, the court asked defense counsel, “Don’t you have to show on behalf of Mr. Mohamud that there is a reasonable probability that the destroyed videotape would be exculpatory?” Counsel agreed that this was the standard “as laid out in Tiede-mann,” Counsel argued that a video recording of the incident would have been exculpatory because it could have impeached the testimony of the officers, though he provided no further details as to what specific testimony would have been impeached. When questioned by the court about the lack of details and supporting evidence, counsel for Mr. Mo-hamud stated that “there is no way for us to actually proffer” evidence that the lost video would have been exculpatory “aside from Mr. Mohamud’s own testimony,” which would require him to “waiv[e] his right against self[-]mcrimination or his right to remain silent.”

¶7 Because Mr. Mohamud chose not to testify, the only evidence put on during this hearing was testimony from Mr. Heyborne, the investigator. He testified that “most” prison facilities have surveillance cameras, that there were some cameras in the unit where Mr. Mohamud was being held, and that these cameras generally “record[] and ... are on.” Mr. Heyborne also testified that while he knows where some of the cameras are located, and that they possibly could have recorded the incident, he did not “know if those cameras were actually recording that day,” he never “view[ed] any recordings for August 29th of 2013,” and he “ha[d] no knowledge whether or not there was an actual recording made.” Ultimately there was no testimony as to whether the cameras were on and recording, what the recording would have shown, or whether the recording would have contradicted the facts as alleged by the State.

¶ 8 At the end of the hearing, the court concluded that the lack of evidence showing a reasonable probability that the lost evidence would be exculpatory was the dispositive issue. The court held that defense counsel’s statement that “he believes it is potentially exculpatory ... doesn’t meet the standard of the case law.” The court also found that “there is not even evidence that there was a videotape. There may have been a videotape. There is no evidence the cameras were on or they were off at the time[,] ... nothing to indicate what the camera ... would have seen, if it would have even seen this incident.” Accordingly, the trial court denied Mr. Mohamud’s motion to dismiss.

¶ 9 A one-day jury trial was held on August 13, 2014. The jury found Mr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2017 UT 23, 395 P.3d 133, 837 Utah Adv. Rep. 19, 2017 WL 1436447, 2017 Utah LEXIS 60, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-mohamud-utah-2017.