State v. Torres

CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 4, 2016
Docket34,984
StatusUnpublished

This text of State v. Torres (State v. Torres) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico 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. Torres, (N.M. 2016).

Opinion

This decision was not selected for publication in the New Mexico Appellate Reports. Please see Rule 12-405 NMRA for restrictions on the citation of non-precedential dispositions. Please also note that this electronic decision may contain computer-generated errors or other deviations from the official paper version filed by the Supreme Court.

1 IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO

2 Filing Date: August 4, 2016

3 STATE OF NEW MEXICO,

4 Plaintiff-Appellee,

5 v. NO. S-1-SC-34984

6 ALEXIAS TORRES,

7 Defendant-Appellant.

8 ORIGINAL PROCEEDING ON CERTIORARI 9 James Waylon Counts, District Judge

10 Marco & Shattuck 11 Joseph E. Shattuck 12 Albuquerque, NM

13 for Appellant

14 Hector H. Balderas, Attorney General 15 Charles J. Gutierrez, Assistant Attorney General 16 Santa Fe, NM

17 for Appellee

18 DECISION 1 VIGIL, Justice.

2 {1} Alexias Torres (Defendant) appeals her convictions of first-degree murder,

3 contrary to NMSA 1978, Section 30-2-1(A) (1994), conspiracy to commit first-degree

4 murder, contrary to NMSA 1978, Section 30-28-2(A) (1979), and tampering with

5 evidence, contrary to NMSA 1978, Section 30-22-5(A) (2003). Defendant challenges

6 her convictions on four grounds, arguing that: 1) there was insufficient evidence to

7 support any of the three convictions; 2) the trial court abused its discretion under Rule

8 11-403 NMRA by admitting graphic video evidence of Victim dying, as caught by a

9 police officer’s lapel camera; 3) the trial court abused its discretion under Rule 11-

10 404(B)(1) NMRA by admitting evidence that Defendant was carrying a handgun prior

11 to the murder; and 4) there was ineffective assistance of counsel.

12 {2} We reject each of Defendant’s claims of error and affirm her convictions. We

13 render this non-precedential decision because settled New Mexico law controls each

14 of the issues Defendant raises. See Rule 12-405(B)(1) NMRA.

15 I. BACKGROUND

16 {3} On June 6, 2011, Melissa Mathis (Mathis) and Victim—who were romantic

17 partners for six years cohabiting with one another in Alamogordo—ended their

18 relationship. On June 7, 2011, after the breakup, Mathis asked Victim to move out of

2 1 her trailer and Victim went to stay at the nearby trailer of her Burger King coworker

2 George Rader (Rader). That evening there was an angry exchange of text messages

3 between Victim and Mathis involving cross-accusations of infidelity, cross-

4 accusations of credit card theft, an accusation that Victim was cooperating with police

5 regarding the aforementioned, and Victim’s request to recover her possessions from

6 Mathis’s trailer. Ultimately, eight police officers would be dispatched to Mathis’s

7 trailer to end a dispute between Mathis and her landlord premised on Victim’s

8 retrieval of her possessions. After the police left, around 9:00 p.m., Mathis sent a text

9 message to “Annette” that “Shit went down,” and a text message to “Tania” “Hey girl

10 shit went down wit [sic] me nshorty [sic] [Victim] again.”

11 {4} In addition to these text messages, at some point during or after these disputes,

12 Mathis called Defendant. Defendant had stayed with Mathis and Victim for a week

13 the month prior. Mathis testified that she wanted Defendant’s help in selling a

14 television, but she ultimately sold that television on her own. Nonetheless,

15 Mathis—who had been drinking—paid her friend “Amy” to drive her to Defendant’s

16 home in Ruidoso. Mathis wanted Defendant’s help so she could “get back on her feet”

17 after her break-up with Victim. She also suggested Defendant find a job in

18 Alamogordo.

3 1 {5} Upon arriving at Defendant’s home in Ruidoso, Mathis cried about the breakup

2 and asked Defendant to talk with Victim on her behalf. Amy, Mathis, and Defendant

3 then went to the home of Defendant’s friend, Dave Franco, where they met Franco’s

4 nephew Jonathan Montoya. Montoya ultimately agreed to accompany the women on

5 their trip back to Alamogordo. Franco gave Montoya a handgun, and Mathis

6 “probably” saw Defendant in possession of a gun herself. After about an hour in

7 Ruidoso, Defendant drove Amy, Montoya, and Mathis to a liquor store, and then Amy

8 drove the rest of the way to Alamogordo. In Alamogordo Amy separated from the

9 group while Defendant, Montoya, and Mathis drank a bottle of alcohol in Mathis’s

10 trailer. Amy did not testify at trial.

11 {6} Defendant then drove Mathis and Montoya, in Mathis’s car, to Rader’s trailer

12 to find Victim. Neither Victim nor Rader were home, so the trio instead visited

13 Mathis’s brother-in-law. Mathis and Defendant left Montoya in the car as they

14 purchased drugs from the brother-in-law, at which point Mathis saw Defendant place

15 either a handgun or remote control in her waistband. Defendant next drove the trio to

16 the Burger King where both Rader and Victim worked.

17 {7} Though Victim was not scheduled to work the graveyard shift between June 7

18 and 8, 2011, she had decided to accompany Rader to his shift because she was nervous

4 1 about being alone in his trailer. Plus, she was scheduled to work the morning of June

2 8, 2011. Also working were the manager Kiyuni Sweet (Sweet) and Rommie Rogers.

3 {8} Defendant, with Montoya in the passenger seat and Mathis in the back, pulled

4 into the Burger King parking lot around 4:00 a.m. Defendant made a U-turn in the

5 parking lot, causing the vehicle to be parked facing White Sands Boulevard, the main

6 road. At this point, having seen the vehicle arrive, Victim called out to Sweet for help

7 as it approached her. Sweet observed Victim arguing with the vehicle’s occupants, and

8 heard Defendant yell something similar to “Why did you hurt my girl, [Mathis]?”

9 Sweet heard Victim say “I love her,” and then at that point he walked away toward the

10 back of the store to retrieve a box. After leaving, Sweet heard “a pop,” followed by

11 three more in quick succession.

12 {9} The “pops” were gunshots; Montoya had fired a handgun once into the car’s

13 dashboard, and three times into the pavement at Victim’s feet. One of those three

14 bullets caromed off the pavement and struck Victim harmlessly in the left thigh, and

15 one struck Victim in the right thigh. The bullet striking Victim’s right thigh severed

16 her femoral artery.

17 {10} After the shots were fired Defendant drove away quickly—but did not

18 necessarily “tear[] out of the parking lot”—northbound on White Sands Boulevard.

5 1 Defendant then headed west for a half-mile before heading north onto a by-pass. At

2 this point a police officer observed Defendant as she drove toward a rural, desolate

3 area that is not on the way to Ruidoso or Mathis’s trailer park. Defendant was then

4 stopped and each occupant arrested. Defendant was not visibly impaired.

5 {11} When police executed a search warrant on Mathis’s vehicle they found the

6 handgun hidden behind the front-center console. Four fired cartridges were found

7 inside the casings of the handgun, and testing confirmed that the bullet found in

8 Victim’s leg was fired by the recovered handgun. While no fingerprints were lifted

9 from the handgun, investigators did procure DNA samples. Analysis of DNA samples

10 taken from the handgun eliminated Defendant and Mathis as contributors. Police also

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State v. Torres, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-torres-nm-2016.