State v. Pacheco

2 P.3d 752, 134 Idaho 367, 2000 Ida. App. LEXIS 38
CourtIdaho Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 25, 2000
Docket25422
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 2 P.3d 752 (State v. Pacheco) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Pacheco, 2 P.3d 752, 134 Idaho 367, 2000 Ida. App. LEXIS 38 (Idaho Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

SCHWARTZMAN, Judge.

Samuel Pacheco was found guilty of aggravated assault, enhanced for use of a deadly weapon and being a persistent violator. He was sentenced to twenty-seven years of incarceration with seven years fixed. We affirm his judgment of conviction and sentence.

*369 i.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

Pacheco, dressed in a denim jacket, jeans and white and blue Reebok tennis shoes, walked into the men’s furnishings section of the ZCMI department store in Idaho Falls. He tried on a pair of black-framed sunglasses and looked at other merchandise. Later, he squatted down behind a display and concealed the glasses in the sleeve of his jacket. ZCMI security employees Paul Withers and Brett Robison observed Pacheco’s activities through the store’s video surveillance system. After walking about the store for a few minutes, Pacheco left without paying for the sunglasses. Robison met Pacheco outside the store, identified himself, stated why he was stopping him and escorted Pacheco back into the store where Withers caught up with them. There, Pacheco turned as if to head back out to the mall, but Withers grabbed his left arm to stop him. According to the trial testimony of Robison and Withers, Pacheco then took several steps backwards, leveled a large stainless steel or nickel plated semiautomatic handgun at Robison and told them to get back or he would shoot. When Robison attempted to follow him, Pacheco cocked the handgun and threatened to kill him. Pacheco then exited the store and ran into the parking lot. The sunglasses, with the ZCMI label still attached, were found in the bushes outside the store. Video clips from the ZCMI surveillance system showing Pacheco taking the sunglasses was awed on the television news.

Pacheco was identified and located at his home in Afton, Wyoming. Idaho Falls Police Officer Darren Cook accompanied the Afton police in serving a Wyoming arrest warrant on Pacheco and executing a Wyoming search warrant for his home. In the garage, Cook observed ammunition for both a .44 and a .45 caliber firearm and a pair of white and blue Reebok tennis shoes. Pacheco was arrested and charged with aggravated assault and with enhancements for being a persistent violator and using a deadly weapon. To support the persistent violator enhancement, the state alleged that Pacheco had two prior felony convictions from Utah, an aggravated robbery and aggravated burglary, both entered on July 17, 1980 in the same judgment of conviction.

Prior to trial, counsel for Pacheco argued that the two Utah felonies were related and could only count as one under the persistent violator statute. See State v. Brandt, 110 Idaho 341, 715 P.2d 1011 (Ct.App.1986). On the day of trial, the state filed an amended information seeking to include a 1978 California conviction for unlawful driving or taking of a motor vehicle as a second felony conviction for the purpose of applying the persistent violator statute. Pacheco objected on the ground that such a late amendment prejudiced his ability to prepare a defense to the allegation. The district court permitted the amendment to the persistent violator allegation, citing State v. Smith, 116 Idaho 553, 777 P.2d 1226 (Ct.App.1989), as authority allowing an amendment to the information until the state rested its case.

At trial, Robison and Withers testified to the facts set forth above. Counsel for Pacheco sought to offer the testimony of Kandi Turley Ames, Ph.D., a psychologist and expert witness on memoiy and perception, to challenge the testimony of Robison and Withers that Pacheco had a firearm in his hand. The court refused to allow Ames’s expert testimony on the ground that it would not assist the trier of fact given the witnesses’ detailed recollections of the firearm and their individual experiences with firearms.

As Officer Cook began testifying to the evidence found during the search of Pacheco’s home, counsel for Pacheco moved for a mistrial based upon the state’s late production of Cook’s police report, the search warrant and inventory. The state explained that it had disclosed these items on the morning of Cook’s testimony. The court found that the defense was aware of the existence of the search warrant and inventory pursuant to the state’s letter three months before trial, affording the defense the opportunity to investigate and challenge the admissibility of the evidence seized under the search warrant — the shoes and ammunition. The court then allowed the defense two hours to review the late disclosed documents to see if there *370 was additional evidence that should have been disclosed and how the late production prejudiced Pacheco. As a sanction for late production, however, the court ruled that the actual tennis shoes and .45 caliber ammunition would not be admitted into evidence. After a recess, counsel for Pacheco acknowledged that Pacheco’s case had not been prejudiced by the state’s late disclosure. The court also found that there was nothing to indicate late disclosure had actually prejudiced the defense. Therefore, Officer Cook was permitted to testify about the evidence found in Pacheco’s home.

Pacheco testified that he had stolen the sunglasses and acted with hostility and fled from the ZCMI security officers, but did not have a gun in his possession. He explained that perhaps the sunglasses had looked like a gun because of the way he might have been holding them. 1

The jury found Pacheco guilty of aggravated assault, that he had used a deadly weapon in the commission thereof and that he had two prior felony convictions making him a persistent violator. Pacheco, now represented by substitute counsel, filed a motion for a new trial raising the same claims presented in his motion for a mistrial. Following a hearing on the merits, the district court denied both motions. At sentencing, the court imposed a prison term of twenty-seven years, with seven years fixed. Pacheco appeals.

II.

DISCOVERY VIOLATION

Pacheco asserts that the state failed to disclose a police report, the search warrant and the inventory of items seized until Officer Cook of the Idaho Falls Police Department testified at trial. Pacheco argues that he was denied a fair trial as a result, but without articulating the particular prejudice resulting from the late disclosure.

A. Standard of Review for Late Disclosure

On appeal from the district court’s order denying a defendant’s motion alleging prejudice from the state’s late disclosure of evidence, we review the trial court record to see if there was substantial and competent evidence to support a finding of no unfair prejudice. State v. Byington, 132 Idaho 589, 592-93, 977 P.2d 203, 206-07 (1999). When an issue of late disclosure of prosecution evidence is presented, the inquiry on appeal is whether the lateness of the disclosure so prejudiced the defendant’s preparation or presentation of his defense that he was prevented from receiving a fair trial. State v. Tapia,

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Bluebook (online)
2 P.3d 752, 134 Idaho 367, 2000 Ida. App. LEXIS 38, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-pacheco-idahoctapp-2000.