State v. Quintana

2019 UT App 139, 448 P.3d 742
CourtCourt of Appeals of Utah
DecidedAugust 15, 2019
Docket20180107-CA
StatusPublished

This text of 2019 UT App 139 (State v. Quintana) 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. Quintana, 2019 UT App 139, 448 P.3d 742 (Utah Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

2019 UT App 139

THE UTAH COURT OF APPEALS

STATE OF UTAH, Appellee, v. MARIO BRIAN QUINTANA, Appellant.

Opinion No. 20180107-CA Filed August 15, 2019

Third District Court, West Jordan Department The Honorable L. Douglas Hogan No. 171400213

Teresa L. Welch and Owen N. Stewart, Attorneys for Appellant Sean D. Reyes and Jeffrey S. Gray, Attorneys for Appellee

JUDGE DIANA HAGEN authored this Opinion, in which JUDGES DAVID N. MORTENSEN and RYAN M. HARRIS concurred.

HAGEN, Judge:

¶1 Mario Brian Quintana appeals his convictions for one count of aggravated robbery and one count of robbery. Specifically, he argues that the State presented insufficient evidence to prove (1) his identity as the person who robbed a hotel at gunpoint (aggravated robbery count), or (2) his use of force or fear to take a woman’s car keys to aid his escape (robbery count). Because a jury could reasonably find that the evidence supported his convictions for both aggravated robbery and robbery, we affirm. State v. Quintana

BACKGROUND 1

¶2 An individual brandishing a handgun-style BB gun entered the lobby of a hotel in Taylorsville, Utah, pointed the gun at the front desk receptionist, and yelled at her, “Give me your fucking money.” The robber was wearing a black mask up to his nose, black and white gloves, white and red shoes, and a zippered hoodie with a Batman costume design and fabric ears on the hood. The receptionist immediately ran out of the building through an employee lunchroom behind the lobby.

¶3 The robber jumped over the front desk, entered a back room, and took the receptionist’s handbag. Returning to the front desk with the handbag, the robber set the BB gun on the counter and emptied the contents of the cash register drawer onto the floor and into the handbag. He then exited through the front door of the lobby, leaving the gun behind.

¶4 From the side of the building, the receptionist observed the robber run out of the hotel in the direction of a nearby coffee shop. Moments later, the receptionist returned to the front desk called 911.

¶5 After receiving a dispatch call that someone in a black jacket and black pants had robbed the hotel, law enforcement officers arrived on scene and began to search the area for the robber. As one officer searched the area surrounding the hotel, he was directed to a blond woman walking nearby whom bystanders had observed running across the street with the

1. “On appeal, we review the record facts in a light most favorable to the jury’s verdict and recite the facts accordingly. We present conflicting evidence only as necessary to understand issues raised on appeal.” State v. Prater, 2017 UT 13, ¶ 3 n.1, 392 P.3d 398 (quotation simplified).

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robber. When asked about the robber’s whereabouts, the woman directed law enforcement toward a nearby coffee shop.

¶6 When the uniformed officer arrived at the coffee shop, an employee directed him to an alleyway next to the coffee shop. According to the coffee shop employee, near the time of the robbery, customers in the drive-thru line were honking their horns and motioning toward someone running past them toward the alleyway.

¶7 In the alleyway, the officer found a man—later identified as Quintana—lying on the ground behind a barricade near a dumpster. The man jumped up as the officer approached. The officer ordered him to stop and get back on the ground, but Quintana refused and ran. The officer pursued him over a retaining wall, past a bank, and into a grocery store parking lot.

¶8 In the grocery store parking lot, multiple law enforcement officers observed Quintana run toward two women and a child. As Quintana approached the women and child, multiple uniformed and plainclothes officers continued to pursue Quintana with weapons drawn, ordering him to stop. One of the officers then observed Quintana shouting at the women, grabbing at something in one woman’s hands or catching something the woman had tossed to him, and then apparently hiding behind the woman from whom he had taken the item. Concerned that the woman who tossed the item looked “very scared” and that Quintana was trying to take control of the woman’s vehicle and escape, the officer attempted to block Quintana with his patrol vehicle. Quintana then ran into the grocery store where he was apprehended with the assistance of a taser.

¶9 Quintana was placed under arrest and provided a name to law enforcement that did not match his date of birth. At the time of his arrest, Quintana was wearing a dark hooded pullover, some jeans that “were kind of a little bit lighter in the

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front but dark in the back,” and shoes that were white and black with a distinct red tread. He was not wearing gloves.

¶10 After he was advised of his rights, Quintana admitted that he was a guest of the hotel before the robbery, that he went downstairs from his room and told the receptionist, “Give me your fucking money,” and that the blond woman with whom the police had spoken outside of the hotel after the robbery was supposed to be his getaway driver. Quintana also confessed that when he saw a patrol vehicle, he ran toward the grocery store and demanded that a woman in the parking lot give him her keys, which she threw to him, and that he wanted to use her vehicle to outrun the police.

¶11 After the interview, a detective observed that Quintana left a glove behind in the interrogation room that appeared to match the gloves observed on the security footage of the robbery. An officer also discovered what was identified by the receptionist as her handbag hidden behind the dumpster in the alleyway where Quintana was hiding. The handbag contained a similar amount of cash as had been taken from the hotel.

¶12 The State charged Quintana with aggravated robbery, robbery, failure to stop at the command of a law enforcement officer, and providing false information to a peace officer. The case proceeded to trial at which the two women from the grocery store parking lot testified. They both identified Quintana as the man they observed running “straight toward” them in the parking lot as the police followed and shouted at him to stop. One of the women testified that when they saw Quintana running toward them, they started to walk away from their vehicle because “he was coming toward [them] and [they] were getting really scared that he would come right to [them], so [they] needed to get to safety.” Quintana continued to run straight to them. He yelled at one of the women to give him her keys, which she then threw to him from five to ten feet away.

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She testified that she felt like she had to give him her keys because she was scared for her life.

¶13 The other woman similarly testified that Quintana ran up to them and shouted. He yelled at her first to give him her keys, and when she told him she did not have any, he turned to her sister who tossed him the keys. She also testified that once he had the keys, Quintana stood right behind her sister. At that point, because she had seen Quintana running from the direction of a bank with police in pursuit with firearms drawn, she believed that Quintana had “a weapon on him” and was going to use her sister as a human shield or take her sister as a hostage.

¶14 None of the State’s witnesses, apart from the receptionist, testified at trial to observing Quintana wearing a black Batman hoodie with black fabric ears on the hood during the course of his pursuit by law enforcement. The BB gun recovered at the scene was admitted at trial, but was not tested for DNA or fingerprints because the robber had worn gloves.

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Related

State v. Heaps
2000 UT 5 (Utah Supreme Court, 2000)
State v. Ireland
2005 UT App 209 (Court of Appeals of Utah, 2005)
State v. Shumway
2002 UT 124 (Utah Supreme Court, 2002)
Bagley v. Bagley
2016 UT 48 (Utah Supreme Court, 2016)
State v. Prater
2017 UT 13 (Utah Supreme Court, 2017)
State v. Cowlishaw
2017 UT App 181 (Court of Appeals of Utah, 2017)
People v. Morehead
191 Cal. App. 4th 765 (California Court of Appeal, 2011)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2019 UT App 139, 448 P.3d 742, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-quintana-utahctapp-2019.