State v. Nguyen

429 P.3d 410, 293 Or. App. 492
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedAugust 22, 2018
DocketA162284
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 429 P.3d 410 (State v. Nguyen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Nguyen, 429 P.3d 410, 293 Or. App. 492 (Or. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

SHORR, J.

*494Defendant appeals from a judgment of conviction for one count of third-degree robbery and two counts of second-degree theft. Defendant was charged along with a codefendant, Sang Nguyen (Sang), for allegedly stealing merchandise from Abercrombie & Fitch (AF) and Abercrombie Kids (AK) stores at the Washington Square mall in Tigard. Defendant and Sang were stopped by the police shortly after driving away from the mall following an altercation with a loss-prevention officer. At trial, the court allowed the state to introduce evidence that defendant had merchandise and a receipt from another retailer in the trunk of his car. It also admitted testimony from a police detective who explained that defendant may have been engaging in "return fraud," returning stolen items for store credit.

Defendant assigns error to those evidentiary rulings.1 The state does not defend the trial court's rulings on appeal but argues that any error was harmless. We conclude that the trial court erred by admitting the challenged evidence. Further, that error was not harmless. Accordingly, we reverse and remand.

We provide the following facts as context for our analysis of the trial court's evidentiary rulings. Defendant was charged after leaving Washington Square mall with a friend, Sang. A loss-prevention officer, Tadesse, had observed Sang stealing a brown coat from the AF store in the mall. Tadesse testified that she saw Sang enter the AF store alone. She observed Sang remove a brown coat from a rack in the store, cross to other side of the store, and surreptitiously rip the security tag off the coat. During that time, Tadesse also observed defendant enter the AF store carrying a bag from Express, another clothing store in the mall. Defendant and *413Sang did not speak to or otherwise acknowledge one another. The two men then left the store at the same time, heading in opposite directions. Sang was carrying the coat from which he had removed the security tag. *495Tadesse immediately approached Sang outside the store and attempted to retrieve the coat from him. Sang resisted her efforts and insisted that the coat was his. During their struggle, defendant approached and began to argue with Tadesse. Tadesse testified that defendant asked "are you harassing my friend?" and told her "we didn't take any of your stuff, bitch." Tadesse recalled that defendant was yelling and behaving aggressively. Defendant then left, and Tadesse and Sang struggled for a few moments more. When it was clear that Sang would not release the coat, Tadesse became concerned for her safety, released the coat, and allowed Sang to leave.

Tadesse followed Sang to the parking lot outside the mall. She observed Sang and defendant meet up at a car and saw defendant place the Express bag in the trunk. Tadesse approached but maintained her distance. Sang and defendant continued to be verbally aggressive toward Tadesse. Tadesse attempted to write down the license plate number of the car, at which point defendant approached her-Tadesse recalled at trial that he "charged" up to her-and told her that he would kill her if she wrote down the license plate number. Defendant then made a slashing motion with his thumb across his throat. Tadesse backed away and the men left in the car.

Tadesse was able to record a partial license plate number and called the police. Defendant and Sang were stopped in defendant's car a short time later by Orth and Rinell, Tigard police officers. Detective Hahn arrived at the scene shortly thereafter. Orth and Rinell first recovered from the backseat of the car a brown coat matching the description of the coat that was stolen from AF. Hahn then received permission from defendant to search the car. In the trunk, Hahn discovered two jackets from AK-one blue and red and one blue-in a bag. Neither Hahn nor Orth could recall if those jackets were in an Express bag like the one Tadesse observed defendant carrying or in a different bag. The officers did not find a receipt for those jackets in the car. In addition, Hahn and Orth observed several other jackets from other retailers, including Express, in the trunk, including multiple jackets of the same size and color. The officers also found an exchange receipt for items from Express.

*496Tadesse arrived at the scene during the police search and identified defendant, Sang, and the stolen merchandise. Tadesse confirmed that they were the same men from the mall and identified the brown coat as the same one that Sang had stolen from AF. In addition, Tadesse believed that the two AK coats from the trunk, as well as a similar AK coat worn by Sang, had all been stolen as well. Tadesse based that belief on the fact that three coats of the same size and color had recently gone missing from the inventory of the AK store at the Washington Square mall. Defendant later claimed that the AK coats from the trunk belonged to him and denied that they were stolen, but he could not provide a receipt or other proof of purchase.

Defendant and Sang were both arrested and charged in connection with the stolen merchandise. Defendant was charged with two counts of theft-one for each of the AK jackets in the trunk-and one count of robbery for threatening to kill Tadesse while working with Sang to steal the brown AF coat. Defendant was not charged in connection with the Express merchandise found in the trunk. A jury found defendant guilty on all three counts.

At trial, the state called Tadesse, Orth, and Hahn as witnesses. Defendant did not call any witnesses. Tadesse recounted her version of the events above, including her memory of defendant aggressively defending Sang and threatening to kill Tadesse in the parking lot if she attempted to write down defendant's license plate number. Tadesse also testified that defendant's possession of the potentially stolen AK jackets was typical of people involved in "return fraud." Tadesse explained that return fraud entails refunding stolen merchandise for store credit, which the thieves then sell online or use for themselves. Defendant did not object to that testimony.

*414Orth testified about his observations after he stopped defendant and Sang. Defendant objected when Orth began to testify on redirect that there was clothing from other retailers in defendant's trunk. The court ruled that defense counsel had opened the door to that line of questioning when, on cross-examination, counsel asked Orth if there were multiple bags in the trunk. Following that ruling, *497Orth testified that there was Express merchandise and an exchange receipt from Express in the trunk.

Following Orth's testimony, defendant renewed the objection outside the presence of the jury, contending that the evidence was irrelevant, speculative, and unfairly prejudicial.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
429 P.3d 410, 293 Or. App. 492, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-nguyen-orctapp-2018.