State v. Pola

2025 UT App 143
CourtCourt of Appeals of Utah
DecidedOctober 9, 2025
DocketCase No. 20240338-CA
StatusPublished

This text of 2025 UT App 143 (State v. Pola) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Utah primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Pola, 2025 UT App 143 (Utah Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

2025 UT App 143

THE UTAH COURT OF APPEALS

STATE OF UTAH, Appellee, v. KENNETH PAUL POLA, Appellant.

Opinion No. 20240338-CA Filed October 9, 2025

Third District Court, West Jordan Department The Honorable Matthew Bates No. 231902314

Janet Lawrence, Attorney for Appellant Simarjit S. Gill and Steven C. Gibbon, Attorneys for Appellee

JUDGE RYAN D. TENNEY authored this Opinion, in which JUDGES MICHELE M. CHRISTIANSEN FORSTER and DAVID N. MORTENSEN concurred.

TENNEY, Judge:

¶1 Kenneth Pola was sitting in the doorway of an abandoned restaurant on a winter day when an officer approached him and suggested that Pola might be trespassing. When the officer ran Pola’s name through a police database, the officer learned that Pola had several outstanding arrest warrants. Pola became agitated, and when the officer and his backup attempted to arrest Pola, Pola resisted and spat in both of their faces.

¶2 Pola was later charged with two counts of propelling an object or substance at an officer. The case went to trial, and a jury convicted Pola as charged. On appeal, Pola argues that the jury instructions should have defined the terms “lawful arrest” and State v. Pola

“probable cause,” and he further argues that the instructions incorrectly suggested that there was no mens rea for the element of whether Pola was a “prisoner.” Pola also argues that there was insufficient evidence to show that he was a prisoner at the time he spat at the officers. For the reasons set forth below, we affirm.

BACKGROUND 1

The Events

¶3 On February 23, 2023, a sergeant (Sergeant) saw Pola sitting outside the door of an abandoned restaurant. Sergeant “immediately recognized” that Pola was homeless because Pola had a sleeping bag and other possessions with him. The restaurant was marked with a “no trespassing” sign and Sergeant thought that Pola might be violating that prohibition. Sergeant approached Pola and asked “if he [was] aware that he was trespassing, and [Pola] said, ‘Yes.’” As the conversation continued, Pola became “agitated” and “kept saying that he was going to call the FBI or he wanted [Sergeant] to call the FBI and have [Sergeant] arrested for assault.” It appeared to Sergeant that Pola was on drugs.

¶4 Sergeant called for backup, and another officer (Officer) soon arrived on the scene. Sergeant asked Pola for his name, and he then went to his patrol vehicle and ran a “records check” to see if Pola had “any warrants or any other issues.” Sergeant later explained that this is “a routine part” of “investigating a possible crime or a suspicious activity.” Sergeant discovered that Pola “had several warrants for assault and trespassing and disorderly

1. “On appeal, we recite the facts from the record in the light most favorable to the jury’s verdict and present conflicting evidence only as necessary to understand issues raised on appeal.” State v. Suhail, 2023 UT App 15, n.1, 525 P.3d 550 (quotation simplified).

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conduct,” and Sergeant decided that he “was going to arrest [Pola] on those warrants.”

¶5 Sergeant returned to Pola and Officer, placed Pola in handcuffs, and “told him he was under arrest for . . . his warrants.” 2 Sergeant then took Pola back to the “marked patrol vehicle” to place him in the back seat. At this point, Pola had become “extremely agitated.”

¶6 Pola sat down in the vehicle, but “he didn’t want to get all the way into the vehicle.” When Sergeant “told him that he needed to get into the vehicle,” Pola spat in Sergeant’s face, and Pola’s saliva landed on Sergeant’s cheek and forehead. Sergeant responded by “turn[ing] [Pola’s] head away . . . and pinning him against the seat so he couldn’t move his head or spit on” Sergeant again. Officer went to the opposite side of the vehicle to assist Sergeant in putting Pola’s seat belt on. When Officer leaned into the vehicle, Pola said, “Shut the fuck up,” and then spat on Officer’s face. Pola’s saliva landed “[a]ll over [Officer’s] face, mostly the forehead, and some of it went inside [his] mouth.” At this point, the officers put a spit hood on Pola.

Charges and Trial

¶7 Pola was later charged with two counts of propelling an object or substance at an officer in violation of Utah Code section 76-5-102.6. 3

2. This quotation comes from Sergeant’s trial testimony. Our review of the body camera footage confirms that as Pola was being arrested, Sergeant told him, “You got a bunch of warrants, you’re going to go to jail for them.”

3. The State also charged Pola with one count of criminal trespass. At the preliminary hearing, however, the State conceded that it would “not be able to produce sufficient evidence for the (continued…)

20240338-CA 3 2025 UT App 143 State v. Pola

¶8 At trial, the State presented its case through testimonies from both Sergeant and Officer, as well as through footage from their body cameras. The State then rested, at which point Pola did not make a directed verdict motion.

¶9 Pola testified in his own defense. Pola explained that he was sitting under the “cover” of the restaurant, which, in his view, “was not illegal” because “it was snowing badly.” Pola said that he “was waiting for some friends that were helping [him] out” because someone “stole over $4 million from [him] and they didn’t want to pay.” When Pola was asked who stole the money, Pola responded, “Well, West Valley stole it. Salt Lake City stole it. South Salt Lake stole it. My employer stole it. Midvale City stole it. The sheriff’s office confessed on themselves.” When Pola was asked why he kept referring to the FBI during the interaction with Sergeant and Officer, Pola responded,

Well, because I worked for the FBI my entire life. And when they arrested me, I looked over the cop’s shoulder, and they said I have—do drugs, in their computer. Fifty years. Never has happened. That’s fraud and perjury. I did not commit a crime. They just didn’t want to pay for it. Their own judges said those trespasses were illegal. The cops said, “Ken did not commit a crime.”[4]

¶10 On cross-examination, the State asked Pola whether the officers told him why he was being arrested. Pola initially said that “[n]one of them did” and that he “already went to court on”

trespassing count,” and the court later dismissed that count without prejudice.

4. During the early stages of the case, Pola’s trial counsel raised a question about Pola’s competency to proceed. Pola was subsequently evaluated and, after a hearing, was found to be competent. On appeal, Pola does not raise any issues related to his competency.

20240338-CA 4 2025 UT App 143 State v. Pola

his warrants. But when Pola was asked again if the officers told him that he was “being arrested on warrants,” Pola responded, “Yeah.” Pola admitted that he spat at one of the officers, and he also said he “did that under duress and mental anguish” and that “[i]t was no crime because they arrested [him] on fraudulent charges.” When asked which officer he spat on, Pola said he had “no recollection” but that “it doesn’t matter” because he “didn’t commit a crime” and officers “can’t arrest people and create the crime.”

¶11 Before trial, the parties submitted proposed jury instructions outlining the elements of the offense of propelling an object or substance at an officer. Pola’s proposed instruction read as follows:

1. Kenneth Pola

2. Intentionally, knowingly, or recklessly;

3. Threw or propelled an object or substance;

4. At a peace officer; and

5. Was a prisoner or a detained individual.

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Related

State v. Gaines
2026 UT App 44 (Court of Appeals of Utah, 2026)
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2026 UT App 22 (Court of Appeals of Utah, 2026)

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2025 UT App 143, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-pola-utahctapp-2025.