State v. Ramirez

812 S.E.2d 915
CourtCourt of Appeals of North Carolina
DecidedMay 1, 2018
DocketNo. COA17-603
StatusPublished

This text of 812 S.E.2d 915 (State v. Ramirez) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Ramirez, 812 S.E.2d 915 (N.C. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

McGEE, Chief Judge.

Juan Carlos Ruiz ("Ruiz") was shot in the head and killed as he was driving a white Ford Focus (the "Ford") eastbound on Holloway Street/Highway 98 ("Holloway") in Durham, at approximately 4:25 p.m. on 25 May 2014. Alexis Hernandez Ramirez ("Defendant") was charged and convicted of the first-degree murder of Ruiz and of discharging a firearm into an occupied vehicle in operation. Defendant argues on appeal that the trial court committed prejudicial error by instructing the jury on "flight." We find no error.

I. Facts

Defendant's girlfriend at the time of the murder was fifteen-year-old Yadira Mendez ("Mendez"). Defendant was twenty-one at the time of the shooting. At Defendant's trial, Mendez testified to the following: She was in the front passenger seat of Defendant's stepfather's dark green or blue car ("Defendant's car") as Defendant was driving her and his brother to pick up a friend on the afternoon of 25 May 2014. Mendez testified Defendant always wore a hat, and she identified a gray Lakers baseball cap as one of the hats Defendant owned. As Defendant was heading west on Holloway, a four-lane road, he made an unexpected U-turn and

started driving really fast and he was excited until he got close up to-he got close to another car [the Ford], he passed [the Ford] a little bit, and then he slowed down to get right beside [the Ford]. And that's when he pulled-pulled out his gun from his pants and he started shooting.

Mendez testified that the Ford was traveling in the left lane, and that Defendant's car was in the right lane as he pulled up beside the Ford. Mendez testified that Defendant had his left hand on the steering wheel as he pointed the gun at the Ford through his open window with his right hand, and that Defendant fired three shots. Mendez also testified: "I saw a guy's head just go down and [the Ford] just started driving off and crashed." "[Defendant] started driving really fast and was just saying, 'I shot an OG. I shot an OG.' "

When Durham Police Investigator Ann Cristaldi ("Investigator Cristaldi") arrived at the scene where the Ford had crashed, she recognized one of Ruiz's tattoos, which said "Scooby." She recognized that name as belonging to someone she knew from a previous investigation and that he belonged to the "Norteno" or "Northside" gang. When Investigator Cristaldi requested an identification for a gang affiliate with the nickname "Scooby," it came back as Defendant's known nickname. Ruiz's girlfriend, Katie Crowder ("Crowder"), testified that she knew Ruiz "was, you know, supposed to be an OG or something[,]" but that he "didn't want to be around it [anymore]." Crowder testified that she understood "OG" to mean "Original Gangster."

Immediately after the shooting, Defendant drove to his house, which was not far from where the shooting occurred. Mendez remained in Defendant's car while Defendant went into the house with the gun he had used to shoot Ruiz, and returned with a different handgun. She described the gun Defendant used to shoot Ruiz as looking "like a police gun," and the gun Defendant retrieved from his house as "like, one of those old ones, like a revolver-type." Mendez was interviewed at the police station on 3 June 2014 concerning the shooting, and her statement, which she read at trial, largely conformed to her trial testimony.

A video camera from a tobacco shop on Holloway captured what Mendez identified as the shooting, as well as the moments preceding and following it. Mendez identified two cars depicted on the video and in the photographs as the Ford and Defendant's car. According to Mendez's testimony as she watched the video, it accurately depicted the events as she had described them in her earlier testimony. Mendez identified the part of the video that she said depicted the moment Defendant shot Ruiz, stating she "saw [Ruiz's] head just [go] down and the [Ford] drifted away." According to Mendez, the Ford continued to drift over and off the street until it "crashed into a house." Defendant then sped away. At some point in the video, a red truck passed in front of the tobacco shop. Mendez testified that the red truck was not involved in the shooting, and that at some point, she "actually met the people that were in the red truck" and they had no involvement in Ruiz's death.

Investigator Cristaldi received a tip from a man calling himself "Little David," indicating that Defendant and "a female [who] went to Southern High School with a first name of Yadira" were involved in the shooting. Investigator Cristaldi testified that, in support of his claim, Little David "showed us some Facebook photos." Mendez was questioned at the police station on 3 June 2014. When asked why she thought the police wanted to question her, Mendez testified that the officers "said that people did see me in [Defendant's car]. And I had also told somebody and I guess that somebody told [an officer]." Mendez was asked: "Did you tell other people in other forms of media?" Mendez replied: "Yes." She said she had engaged in an exchange on Facebook with Ruiz's sister and Crowder. Mendez identified a document that was presented to her as being a copy of her Facebook exchanges. In one of Mendez's Facebook comments, she said "it was [Defendant who shot Ruiz] and that [she] didn't care what happened." On cross-examination, Mendez agreed with Defendant's counsel's statement that in her interview with police, she was "bragging about it on Facebook[.]" Following her interview at the police station, Mendez signed a written statement, which she read at trial. Mendez's statement closely conformed to her trial testimony. Part of her statement was that "[a]fter [Defendant] saw that he shot Scooby, the [Ford] drifted. [Defendant] drove [away] fast and we went to his house. When we were there, he was screaming, 'Hell, yeah, I shot an OG.' "1

Mendez testified she corresponded with Defendant for a short period subsequent to his arrest while he was in jail. Some of those letters were read in court, and mainly consisted of Defendant expressing his devotion to Mendez in what could be interpreted as a manipulative manner, and then asking her to withdraw her statement to the police identifying him as the shooter. Defendant also repeatedly asked Mendez to go live with his brother, and to stay away from her parents. Some examples of Defendant's entreaties follow: "Please, I ask you on my knees that you say that you don't know anything, that you were only lying. I beg and plead with you, please, be quiet. Only ... say that if they ask you. Okay?" "And always tell them that you don't know anything, that everything is a lie, that you were only angry at me, and you want your attorney and don't speak with anybody." Defendant instructed Mendez to "[g]o to live with my brother, but don't tell anybody where you're going to live, baby, please." Defendant told Mendez, "[w]hen you go over there [to his brother's house], erase from Facebook-close up, erase your Facebook, please, my love." "Do this great favor for me, baby. I already spoke to him [Defendant's brother]. .... I beg you, go with him and don't tell anybody anything, please. My love, do what I'm asking you to do." Defendant told Mendez that she should try to convince her parents to support him because otherwise-for reasons unclear-they would end up spending twenty years in jail "for kicking [Mendez] out of their home[.]" "So tell [your parents] that everything is a lie, what you have told them about me. Baby, please talk to them. And when all this is over, we will be together again, I promise you."

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Related

State v. Abraham
451 S.E.2d 131 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1994)
State v. Juarez
794 S.E.2d 293 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 2016)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
812 S.E.2d 915, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-ramirez-ncctapp-2018.