State v. Robins

CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 2, 2018
Docket44296
StatusPublished

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

Bluebook
State v. Robins, (Idaho 2018).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF IDAHO

Docket No. 44296

STATE OF IDAHO, ) ) Plaintiff-Respondent, ) Boise, April 2018 Term ) v. ) Filed: August 2, 2018 ) ANTHONY J. ROBINS, JR., ) Karel A. Lehrman, Clerk ) Defendant-Appellant. ) _______________________________________ )

Appeal from the District Court of the Fourth Judicial District of the State of Idaho, Ada County. Honorable Samuel A. Hoagland, District Judge.

The judgment of conviction is vacated and the case is remanded for an evidentiary hearing.

Nevin, Benjamin, McKay & Bartlett, LLP, Boise, for appellant. Dennis Benjamin argued.

Honorable Lawrence G. Wasden, Idaho Attorney General, Boise, for respondent. Kenneth K. Jorgensen argued. _____________________

BRODY, Justice. This appeal arises from the jury conviction of Anthony J. Robins, Jr., for aiding and abetting two first-degree murders and an attempted first-degree murder. While he was incarcerated prior to trial, Robins’s cell was searched and handwritten notes he had prepared in anticipation of a meeting with counsel were seized and delivered to the prosecuting attorney. The district court granted Robins partial relief from a violation of his attorney-client privilege but placed the burden on him to object at trial if the State offered evidence or argument arising from the privileged materials. Robins argues that the district court erred in fashioning this remedy and we agree. In light of the circumstances, we vacate his judgment of conviction and remand the case with instructions to hold an evidentiary hearing to determine whether the State can overcome the presumption of prejudice arising from its violation of Robins’s attorney-client

1 privilege. If the State can overcome the presumption, a new trial must be conducted from which the Ada County Prosecutor’s Office must be recused. I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND Robins was charged with aiding and abetting the first-degree murders of Elliot Bailey and Travone Calloway, and aiding and abetting the attempted first-degree murder of Jeanette Juraska. He was accused of aiding and abetting John Douglas for each count. The district court granted the State’s motion to consolidate Robins’s case with the criminal case against Douglas due to the cases’ common facts, evidence, and witnesses. Following his arrest in Northern California, Robins was transferred to the Ada County Jail. On May 11, 2015, Scott McKay, Robins’s local counsel, delivered discovery files to the jail so that Robins could have access to the materials while he was detained. Jail personnel informed McKay that the files could not be stored in Robins’s cell because of the large number of documents, but that they could be securely stored in the jail library and made available for Robins’s review. When the files were delivered, McKay informed Robins that his lead counsel, Brian McMonagle, would be traveling to Boise soon to meet with Robins, and that he should prepare for the meeting by taking notes and identifying matters of discussion related to his review of the files. On May 12, 2015, Robins received permission from the jail to review the files and took notes in anticipation of his meeting with McMonagle. On May 14, 2015, upon direction from Ada County Deputy Prosecutor Shelley Akamatsu, Robins’s cell was searched by jail personnel, during which these notes were seized. The search of Robins’s cell arose from information received by the Ada County Prosecutor’s Office that an inmate unaffiliated with this case possessed a letter from Douglas to Robins that outlined an attempt to coordinate stories and minimize Robins’s culpability for the murders. The Prosecutor’s Office was informed by the inmate’s counsel that his client intended to use the letter to broker a deal in his own pending case. Shortly thereafter, Akamatsu spoke with Ada County Sheriff’s Office Sergeant Justin Ivie and directed him to locate a letter fitting this description. In turn, Sergeant Ivie instructed Ada County Sheriff’s Office Deputies Cory Brooks and Timothy Roller to conduct a search of the unaffiliated inmate’s cell to find the letter. That search did not produce the letter. After sharing the news with Akamatsu, Sergeant Ivie received approval from the prosecuting attorney to search Robins’s and Douglas’s cells. Akamatsu raised the issue of

2 attorney-client privilege with respect to the search of the unaffiliated inmate’s cell but did not address the same concern with respect to the latter two searches. Thereafter, upon an order from Sergeant Ivie, Deputies Brooks and Roller conducted a search of Robins’s cell. The deputies were once more instructed to locate the letter from Douglas to Robins that the unaffiliated inmate had claimed to possess. During the search of Robins’s cell, Deputy Roller found four pieces of lined paper consisting of six pages of handwritten notes in Robins’s property bin. These notes were later shown to be those that Robins made on May 12th during his review of the discovery files. In examining the notes for the purpose of their search, the deputies recognized that their contents referred to Robins’s and Douglas’s cases and trial. The deputies testified that the notes were not in the form of a typical legal document—i.e., they were not typewritten, on letterhead, in a legal document, marked as “legal,” stamped by an attorney, or in an envelope. They were, however, found in Robins’s property bin, which was where inmates were expected to keep their privileged materials. The deputies also recognized that the notes were not in the form of a letter, as they did not include names or salutations. Nonetheless, under the belief that they were the objective of their search and not privileged legal documents, the deputies delivered the notes to Sergeant Ivie. The notes were then booked into evidence by Sergeant Ivie. At that time, he also notified Akamatsu, who in turn stated that the seized materials sounded promising and that she had an interest in seeing their contents. In response, Sergeant Ivie scanned the notes and emailed a copy to Akamatsu. Later that day, Akamatsu emailed a copy of the scanned notes to McMonagle and informed him that they had been found during a search of Robins’s cell and booked into evidence. After the search of Robins’s cell, the deputies searched Douglas’s cell, which resulted in the seizure of notes and a lined notebook that were also delivered to Sergeant Ivie and eventually Akamatsu. The next day, the unaffiliated inmate’s attorney visited the Prosecutor’s Office and turned over a letter that had been given to him by his client. This letter was revealed to be the true objective of the searches the day before. Following these events, Robins filed a motion for order to show cause and for other relief from the State’s violation of his attorney-client privilege. In the motion, Robins asserted that the notes contained privileged content and requested the dismissal of the pending charges or, in the alternative, an order recusing the Ada County Prosecutor’s Office. In addition, Robins requested

3 the return of the privileged materials without the State’s retention of copies, the prohibition of the State from making any evidentiary use of its review of the materials, the requirement of the State to demonstrate in advance of trial that any evidence it intended to offer originated independently of the privileged materials, and the prohibition of the State from seizing and reviewing other privileged materials. Before the district court considered this motion, Robins also moved for relief from prejudicial joinder and sought to have his trial severed from Douglas’s trial. The basis for this second motion was that severance was necessary to protect his Sixth Amendment rights because the letter written by Douglas (and turned over to the prosecuting attorney by the unaffiliated inmate) was inadmissible against him.

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State v. Robins, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-robins-idaho-2018.