State v. Pona.

926 A.2d 592, 2007 R.I. LEXIS 93, 2007 WL 1712542
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJune 15, 2007
Docket2005-95-C.A.
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 926 A.2d 592 (State v. Pona.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Pona., 926 A.2d 592, 2007 R.I. LEXIS 93, 2007 WL 1712542 (R.I. 2007).

Opinion

OPINION

Chief Justice WILLIAMS,

for the Court.

The defendant, Charles Pona (defendant), appeals his Superior Court conviction for first-degree murder, carrying a pistol without a license, and attempted arson. All charges stemmed from the senseless, random killing of Hector Feliciano in August 1999. For the reasons set forth herein, we affirm the judgment of the Superior Court.

I

Facts and Travel

Just before 5 p.m. on Saturday, August 28, 1999, seventeen-year-old Hector Felici-ano was working on a recently purchased used car in a vacant lot behind the tenement house he shared with his mother and older brother, Carlos Echevarria, on Congress Avenue in Providence. The events that followed were hotly contested at defendant’s criminal trial.

Hilda Carrasco lived in the first-floor apartment of 96 Hamilton Street, a tenement that was separated from the vacant lot by a chain-link fence. Carrasco testified that between 4 and 5 p.m., she was watching television in her living room. She glanced out her window and saw a dark blue and black vehicle that resembled a Blazer approach her apartment building from Congress Avenue and drive in reverse halfway into her driveway. Reluctantly, Carrasco admitted that she saw two males, one with dark skin, seated in both the vehicle’s driver and passenger seats, but she vehemently denied being able to identify either man. Believing the vehicle was associated with someone from an upstairs apartment, Carrasco returned to watching television. She testified that a few minutes later, she heard three gunshots. She gathered the courage to look out the window again and saw the vehicle drive away, taking a right out of her driveway. Carrasco managed to see the vehicle’s license plate number, which she recalled at trial as PS-977.

Eddy Remy was working in his driveway across the street from the vacant lot. Remy testified that at about 5 p.m., he heard two gunshots. When he turned to look, he saw a man in the vacant lot jump over the chain-link fence into Carrasco’s driveway. According to Remy, the man was young, eighteen to twenty years old, had dark skin, was wearing blue jeans and a dark shirt, and had short hair.

Echevarria, Feliciano’s older brother, was in his bedroom in the second-floor apartment at 87 Congress Avenue at approximately 5 p.m. on the day of Felici- *597 ano’s murder. When he heard gunshots, he ran to the kitchen and looked out a window, where he saw a blue, new-model Blazer with tinted windows pulling out of a driveway. Unaware that the gunshots and presence of the Blazer were connected, he sat back down on his bed. It was only when a friend yelled that his brother had been shot that he ran downstairs to the adjacent vacant lot, where he found his brother lying in a pool of blood. The police already had arrived.

Jennifer Rivera lived at 95 Congress Avenue; she was the only witness able to identify defendant as the man running from the murder scene. Her prior testimony at defendant’s November 15, 1999 bail hearing was played for the jury at trial. 1 At about 4:80 p.m., she was cooking in her kitchen when she heard gunshots. She looked out the window toward the vacant lot and saw a man hop a fence, get in the driver’s seat of a gray Jeep, and drive away. She described this man as black, young — approximately twenty-one years old — about five feet, nine inches tall, with a short, “fade” haircut. Three days later at the Providence police station, Rivera positively identified defendant from a photo lineup as the man running from the vacant lot; she confirmed her identification in court during defendant’s bail hearing.

The state’s firearm expert and the medical examiner described the probable last moments of Feliciano’s life. The firearm expert testified that he examined four nine-millimeter shell casings, which Detective Patricia Cornell (Det.Cornell) of the Providence Police Department testified were found between four and eight feet from where Feliciano’s body was found. He determined that all four shells were fired from the same gun. The firearm expert added that the recovered shells encased hollow-point bullets, which, he explained, open like a flower upon impact to cause maximum damage. The medical examiner testified that two projectiles actually hit Feliciano — one grazing the right side of his head and the other causing a “devastating, catastrophic fatal injury.” The medical examiner determined from the trajectory of these bullets that they were fired in rapid succession, making it highly probable that one person fired the shots.

In addition to the four shell casings, the police recovered a black pager approximately eight feet from where Feliciano’s body was found. Detective James Mars-land (Det.Marsland) testified that he seized defendant’s turquoise pager upon his arrest on October 28, 1999, and took it, along with the black pager recovered at the scene of Feliciano’s murder, to Rhode Island Beeper Center (Beeper Center) and discovered that both pagers bore the same account number and were registered to a Manuel Pona. In fact, it was established that someone went to Beeper Center the same day as Feliciano’s murder and had the company disconnect the pager found at the crime scene and issue a new pager with the same telephone number. 2

*598 Only hours after Feliciano’s murder, a Blazer was discovered on fire on Elmwood Avenue in Providence. Fourteen-year-old Jason Burtrado testified that he arrived at the scene of the blaze before the Providence Fire Department. Burtrado testified that he saw a person running from the burning truck. Two days later, at a photo lineup, Burtrado identified the fleeing man as defendant. At the time of his trial testimony, however, Burtrado admitted that he no longer could positively identify defendant as the man he saw run from the burning Blazer. Joseph Dorsey of the Providence Fire Department’s arson division determined that three separate fires had been set: one on each of the front fenders and one inside the Blazer on the passenger seat. Furthermore, Liberal Oli-veira from North Eastern Technical Services, Inc., a private company that conducted the forensic testing of the Blazer at Det. Marsland’s request, testified that the Blazer showed no signs of forced entry and that the ignition had not been tampered with, despite signs of a superficial attempt to make it look as though the ignition had been compromised.

Once word of the burning Blazer reached the Feliciano murder scene, the police escorted Echevarria, Feliciano’s older brother, to Elmwood Avenue, where he confirmed that the charred Blazer was, in fact, the same vehicle he had seen leaving Carrasco’s driveway shortly after hearing the gunshots. According to Det. Cornell of the state crime lab, defendant’s fingerprints were lifted from the Blazer’s rear passenger doorjamb and from the Blazer’s passenger door.

The police recorded the burned Blazer’s license plate number as PS-997, just one digit removed from the number that Car-rasco reported. 3 A search for this record revealed that the 1999 Chevy Blazer was registered to Enterprise Rent-A-Car (Enterprise).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
926 A.2d 592, 2007 R.I. LEXIS 93, 2007 WL 1712542, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-pona-ri-2007.