State v. Sanchez

127 P.3d 212, 142 Idaho 309, 2005 Ida. App. LEXIS 95
CourtIdaho Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 6, 2005
Docket30202
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 127 P.3d 212 (State v. Sanchez) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Sanchez, 127 P.3d 212, 142 Idaho 309, 2005 Ida. App. LEXIS 95 (Idaho Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

PERRY, Chief Judge.

Jeremy Flores Sanchez appeals from his judgments of conviction and sentences for conspiracy to commit robbery, robbery, conspiracy to commit first degree kidnapping, first degree kidnapping, aggravated battery, and attempted first degree murder. We affirm.

I.

FACTS AND PROCEDURE

In June 2000, the victim in this case was traveling eastbound on an interstate through Idaho. While driving in the right lane, the victim noticed a dark-colored, four-door vehicle with four people driving along side her in the left lane. When the victim increased her speed, the other vehicle also increased its speed. A man and a woman seated on the passenger side of the vehicle leaned out through their windows and begin to strike the victim’s car with sticks. The victim stopped her ear and tried to get around the vehicle. The driver of the other vehicle then parked across both eastbound lanes. Three of the vehicle’s occupants, two men and a woman, approached the victim’s car and demanded money and drugs. A tall man, later identified as John Wurdemann, placed the victim in the passenger seat of her ear and then sat in the driver’s seat. The woman, later identified as Sarah Pearce, entered the victim’s car and sat behind John. The other man, later identified as Sanchez, sat directly behind the victim.

A man, later identified as Kenneth Wurdemann, approached in the assailants’ vehicle and yelled, “Get her car off the road.” Kenneth proceeded down the interstate while John followed in the victim’s car. The vehicle and the victim’s ear exited the freeway and parked along a dark country road in a field. The victim pleaded with her assailants not to harm her. John responded by stabbing the victim five times in the chest. John continued to demand money, and the victim *313 provided her wallet, which contained $40 and credit cards. John attempted to slash the victim’s throat but instead cut her hand and took her wedding ring. The victim then turned to Pearce, who was sitting in the back seat, and pleaded for her life. Sanchez grabbed the victim’s hair, pulled it back, reached over the victim’s right side and cut her throat.

The victim told Pearce to take all of her possessions but to please not kill her. Pearce responded by telling the victim that she and her associates would take everything and then kill her. The victim exited her car and kneeled on the ground to plead for her life. Kenneth approached the victim’s car and stated, “We’re going to kill her now.” Sanchez and Pearce exited the victim’s car, and Kenneth struck the victim in the head from behind with a baseball bat. The victim fell to the ground face first and Sanchez, Pearce, and John repeatedly stabbed and beat the victim’s back. The assailants took $500 from the trunk of the victim’s ear and several collectible dolls. The assailants then left the victim lying on the ground and drove away in their vehicle.

While driving away from where they had left the victim, the assailants decided to return because things needed to be “taken care of right.” Upon their arrival, John slashed the victim’s shoulder with a knife. The victim fell to the ground face first with her feet lying partially under her car. The assailants then set the victim’s car on fire and departed. The victim was able to roll away from her burning car and was rescued after the fire drew the attention of passersby. The victim was taken to the hospital and treated in the intensive care unit. After ten days in the hospital, the victim was released to a hospital closer to her home, where she remained for another six days.

Law enforcement obtained details of the attack and descriptions of the suspects from the victim, which were broadcast on the news. In response to a news story, a witness reported that she had been driving on a highway near the location the victim was found a few hours before the incident. The witness testified that four people in a midsized four-door maroon vehicle had flagged down her vehicle under suspicious circumstances. The witness identified Sanchez and the Wurdemanns from a video lineup as the men who had stopped her vehicle. Another witness reported that, shortly before the victim was abducted, he stopped at a rest stop just west of the location of the attack. The witness indicated that he saw three men and a woman in a gold four-door vehicle. Two men and a woman entered the restrooms while the third man waited at the vehicle. In the men’s restroom and in the lobby, the witness was able to see the two men at close range, in a well-lit area. From a video lineup, the witness identified Sanchez and John as being present at the rest stop. Both witnesses identified Sanchez in court as being the person that they had seen on the night in question.

Over the course of the investigation, the victim was shown photo and video lineups. In one photo lineup, the victim was shown photographs of six men, including Sanchez. From these photographs, the victim selected a man other than Sanchez and indicated that the man in the picture jumped out at her as being the perpetrator. The victim later testified that she picked the man instead of Sanchez because Sanchez’s skin tone appeared too pale in the photograph. In another photo lineup, the victim identified a woman other than Pearce and told the officer that she was certain the woman was the perpetrator. Later, the victim was told that the person she identified was not a suspect. The victim testified that she viewed that lineup shortly after watching a re-enactment of the attack on America’s Most Wanted. The victim testified that she picked the photo of the woman who was not Pearce because that woman looked similar to the actress in the re-enactment. In two other photo lineups, the victim was shown two sets of six photographs, including one with John and another with Pearce. The victim identified neither John nor Pearce from those lineups.

The victim informed law enforcement that she was not comfortable with her attempts to identify her assailants from photographs because she was not able to observe body language or hear voices. In March 2002, law enforcement showed the victim four sets of *314 video lineups, from which she identified Sanchez, Pearce, and the Wurdemanns as being the perpetrators of the attack against her. The victim testified that she felt more confident about her ability to correctly identify her assailants in the video. In court, the victim identified Sanchez as the man who sat behind her in her car and cut her throat.

In March 2002, Sanchez was arrested and charged with conspiracy to commit robbery, I.C. §§ 18-1701, 18-6501; robbery, I.C. §§ 18-204, 18-6501, 18-6502, 18-6503; conspiracy to commit first degree kidnapping, I.C. §§ 18-1701, 18^4501; first degree kidnapping, I.C. §§ 18-204, 18-4501, 18-4502; aggravated battery, I.C. §§ 18-903(a), 18-907(b); first degree arson, I.C. §§ 18-204, 18-802; and attempted first degree murder, I.C. §§ 18-204,18-306, 18-4001,18-4002,18-4003. A trial was held in October and November 2002. The jury was unable to reach a unanimous verdict, and the district court declared a mistrial.

A second trial was held in May and June 2003. Kenneth testified for the state in exchange for the state’s agreement to dismiss several charges pending against him and to limit its sentencing recommendation to a unified term of ten years.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
127 P.3d 212, 142 Idaho 309, 2005 Ida. App. LEXIS 95, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-sanchez-idahoctapp-2005.