State v. Santana-Ruiz

2007 UT 59, 167 P.3d 1038, 584 Utah Adv. Rep. 9, 2007 Utah LEXIS 144, 2007 WL 2282894
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 10, 2007
Docket20050747
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 2007 UT 59 (State v. Santana-Ruiz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah 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. Santana-Ruiz, 2007 UT 59, 167 P.3d 1038, 584 Utah Adv. Rep. 9, 2007 Utah LEXIS 144, 2007 WL 2282894 (Utah 2007).

Opinion

NEHRING, Justice:

INTRODUCTION

I 1 Felipe Santana-Ruiz 1 was convicted of murdering Troy Flores. Mr. Santana-Ruiz and Mr. Florez were quarreling at a late-night party, and the argument devolved into an exchange of blows. Mr. Santana-Ruiz, armed with a knife, ended matters when he stabbed Mr. Florez multiple times, killing him. At trial, Geoffrey Clark, Mr. Santana-Ruiz's attorney, attempted to argue that Mr. Santana-Ruiz was legally justified in using deadly force against Mr. Florez because he was acting in self-defense. Mr. Clark's presentation of Mr. Santana-Ruiz's defense was marked by conduct that violated ethical codes and breached courtroom decorum.

T2 The jury convicted Mr. Santana-Ruiz. He now argues that Mr. Clark's courtroom antics doomed his defense and constituted *1040 ineffective assistance of counsel. We agree with Mr. Santana-Ruiz that Mr. Clark's behavior was inexcusable-Mr. Clark deservedly received a jail commitment for contempt of court-but his lack of courtroom decorum in this case did not meet the legal standard, announced in Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668, 104 S.Ct. 2052, 80 L.Ed.2d 674 (1984), required to sustain a showing of ineffective assistance of counsel. Mr. Clark's misconduct was offset by the overwhelming nature of the quality and quantity of evidence presented against Mr. Santana-Ruiz and diminished in its effect because the trial court took great care not to censure Mr. Clark before the jury.

BACKGROUND

T 3 On January 27, 2002, Mr. Santana-Ruiz and Mr. Florez were both in Ogden, Utah, at a house party that had carried into the early morning hours. The two men began bickering, and Teresa Gallegos, the homeowner, asked Mr. Santana-Ruiz to leave the house. The two men continued to quarrel, however, and their argument escalated into a physical confrontation. - They exchanged approximately three blows each in a ten-second interval. Mr. Santana-Ruiz's blows proved lethal because the hand that delivered them held a knife.

T4 Mr. Geoffrey Clark represented Mr. Santana-Ruiz at his four-day trial and made self-defense the focus of his defense strategy. Mr. Clark injected into this strategy numerous serious ethical violations that eventually led the trial judge to cite him for criminal contempt of court and to order Mr. Clark to serve thirty days in jail. This court affirmed the trial court's order of contempt and resulting sanction against Mr. Clark in State v. Clark, 2005 UT 75, 74 ¶¶ 23, 39, 124 P.3d 235.

T5 We recounted fully the sordid saga of Mr. Clark's misdeeds in his appeal of the contempt order. Id. TT2-18. We repeat many of those events here as they serve as the factual backdrop to Mr. Santana-Ruiz's claim that Mr. Clark's antics deprived him of a fair trial.

® Cocaine and the Toxicology Report

T 6 The state medical examiner prepared a toxicology report based on his examination of Mr. Florez's body. The report revealed that Mr. Florez had trace amounts of cocaine metabolite in his blood. The medical examiner testified at a preliminary hearing, however, that it was unlikely that Mr. Florez was under the influence of cocaine at the time of the stabbing because the testing revealed only trace amounts of metabolite and no active compound in Mr. Florez's system.

1 7 The State filed a motion in limine seeking to preclude the defense from making any reference to the toxicology report, and the court granted the motion. Mr. Clark, however, was determined to use the evidence and threatened, "[MJark my words, at the end of this trial the jury's gonna know about his LV. drug use and he's a violent criminal. Mark my words."

18 Proving himself to be a man of his word, Mr. Clark attempted to cirenmyvent the order in limine. In his cross-examination of the medical examiner at trial, Mr. Clark asked where the paramedics inserted the intravenous catheters into Mr. Florez's veins. The State objected, recognizing Mr. Clark's less than subtle attempt to show that the paramedics inserted the catheter into Mr. Florez's neck because prior intravenous drug use had ruined the veins in his arms. After a short sidebar conference, the court sustained the State's objection. Undeterred by this ruling, Mr. Clark proceeded to ask the examiner about the toxicology report and about what substances the medical examiner found in Mr. Florez's blood. The prosecution again objected, and the court sustained the objection.

T 9 Then, when a juror submitted a written question asking about the toxicology report, Mr. Clark stated, "Great question. I think it should be asked," making it appear as though the prosecution was hiding evidence. After the court reformulated the juror's question to the examiner to conform to the motion in limine by asking what drugs the victim may have been given in the hospital, Mr. Clark said, within the jury's hearing, "Your Honor, I don't think that was specifically the question. I think the question specifically was *1041 illegal drugs." The trial judge exeused the jury and reprimanded Mr. Clark.

e Teresa Gallegos

110 Teresa Gallegos, the owner of the home where the stabbing occurred, was a trial witness for the State. In an effort to impeach her testimony on cross-examination, Mr. Clark asked Ms. Gallegos if she had a problem with drinking and asked her to explain a document that he handed to her. The prosecution asked to see the document, which, upon inspection, appeared to suggest that Ms. Gallegos had been convicted of a crime. The State objected on the grounds that the document was not certified. The trial judge told Mr. Clark that he could ask Ms. Gallegos only whether she had been convicted. Mr. Clark then asked Ms. Gallegos if she had ever been "involved in a D.U.I. or alcohol-related offense." The court again corrected him, and he moved on. In the contempt hearing that followed the jury trial, the trial court found that "Mr. Clark wanted the jury to believe the paper was an official document" and that "[tlhis was an act of deceit and dishonesty by Mr. Clark."

e Reference to Threats of Violence

T11 During the trial, the prosecution called Mr. Santana-Ruiz's half-brother Marcos Ruiz to the stand and asked for his name and address. Mr. Clark objected, "I'm gonna object at this time, your Honor. The court is well aware of the threats of violence in this case...." However, no evidence had been introduced to suggest that any witness had been threatened.

e Conferences at the Bench

{12 Throughout the trial, the trial judge repeatedly called the parties to conferences at the bench. On two separate occasions, Mr. Clark walked away from the bench in the middle of the conference. The trial judge called him back and reprimanded him.

e Closing Argument

113 During his closing argument, Mr. Clark again raised the specter of Mr. Flo-rez's cocaine use. Summarizing the night's events, he said, referring to Mr. Florez, "Boy, he's got that cocaine in his system, he's got that aleohol in his system, and he wants to fight." Then, after elaborating further, he explained, "And at the time [Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
2007 UT 59, 167 P.3d 1038, 584 Utah Adv. Rep. 9, 2007 Utah LEXIS 144, 2007 WL 2282894, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-santana-ruiz-utah-2007.