State v. Tunoa

153 P.3d 464, 113 Haw. 393
CourtHawaii Intermediate Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 6, 2007
DocketNo. 27756
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 153 P.3d 464 (State v. Tunoa) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hawaii Intermediate 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. Tunoa, 153 P.3d 464, 113 Haw. 393 (hawapp 2007).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

LIM, J.

In this murder case, which arose out of the shotgun slaying of Tuputala Esau (Tupu), Emanuelu Tunoa (Defendant or Elu) appeals the January 10, 2006 judgment of the Circuit Court of the First Circuit (circuit court)1 that convicted him of murder in the second degree (count I) and use of a firearm in the commission of the murder (count V). On appeal, Defendant complains of various instances of purported prosecutorial misconduct, including the use of the “red herring” analogy in argument and the presence of the Prosecuting Attorney in the gallery during part of the trial. We affirm.

I. Background.

Defendant was charged via complaint with murder in the second degree (count I), place to keep loaded firearm (count II), felon in possession of ammunition (count III), felon in possession of a firearm (count IV), and use of a firearm in the commission of the murder (count V).

[395]*395During a hearing on various pretrial motions held just before jury selection, Defendant agreed to and signed a stipulation that at the time of the homicide, he (1) had a prior felony conviction and (2) lacked a permit to own or carry a firearm. The stipulation was filed in the court record.

During its general voir dire, the circuit court instructed the jury panel that

in deciding this case, you must consider only the evidence which has been presented to you and such inferences that are justified by your reason and common sense. You must not be influenced by pity for the defendant or passion or prejudice against the defendant. In other words, you’re not here today to decide whether Mr. Tunoa is a good person or a bad person. You’re here to decide whether, based on the evidence presented, the State has proven the crimes charged beyond a reasonable doubt. You must do this objectively. You must do this dispassionately.

Then the circuit court queried,

Is there anyone here who cannot follow this rule?
(No response)

As an introduction to his general voir dire, the deputy prosecuting attorney (DPA) told the jury panel that “I am the prosecutor in this case. And you’ll notice that I don’t have anybody sitting next to me at counsel table, and that’s because as the prosecutor, I represent the people of the State of Hawaii in this case.” Defendant did not object to this particular comment.

After the jury was selected and excused for the nonce, some other matters in limine were discussed. During the discussion, the circuit court questioned whether the morgue photographs to be shown to the jury had to be in color. Picking up on that concern, defense counsel asked that all such photographs be changed to black and white. The circuit court so ordered, over objection by the DPA.

Just before opening statements, the circuit court gave the jury some general instructions. Among them were the following:

From time to time during the trial, I will be called upon to make rulings of law on motions or objections that are made. Please do not conclude from any of my rulings that I have any opinions on the merits of this case or favor one side over the other. If you hear me sustain an objection to a question being asked by [sic] a witness, that means I will not permit the question to be answered. You should not speculate on what that answer is and not consider that answer. You should also not draw any conclusion from the question that was asked itself.
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And again, evidence comes by way of testimony, by witnesses after they have taken an oath to tell the truth, and from exhibits that have been received by the court for your consideration.

The State’s first witness was the evidence specialist who took the morgue photographs. The DPA asked,

Q. And now, again, those photographs, do they represent the way that [Tupu] looked on—this was done on March 31st, 2003?
A. Yes.
Q. And the photos are in black and white but—
A. Yes.
Q. —he wasn’t black and white when you—
A. Well, the photos I took were in col- or.

Defense counsel objected, and at bench reminded the circuit court that

you specifically instructed counsel to change the photographs to black and white. There’s no reason to have told the jury, oh, the suggestion being they’re so horrendous or they’re so inflammatory that I had to have them changed to black and white, having it said specifically they were previously in color.

The circuit court sustained, but nevertheless ruled, over defense counsel’s reiterated objection, that “[t]he questions themselves are not prejudicial, but they’re not relevant. So he’ll just move on.”

Four eyewitnesses, each of whom was either related to or a friend—or at least a close [396]*396acquaintance—of both Defendant and Tupu, testified that on the evening of March 28, 2003, upwards of twenty young people gathered on the Leokáne Street bridge in Waipa-hu to drink beer. There, as the party wore on into the wee hours of the next day, Defendant shot Tupu several times at point-blank range with a twelve-gauge, pump-action, sawed-off shotgun. Defendant rode away from the scene in his car, driven by someone else. Tupu was dead on arrival at the hospital. One of the eyewitnesses close by remembered seeing Defendant pop the trunk of his car, take out a shotgun he had shown off on other occasions, point it at Tupu and say, “where my money stay?” That witness heal'd Defendant’s brother plead, “No, Elu, no, Elu, put the gun away.” But then, there was “[j]ust one big flash.” None of the eyewitnesses saw Tupu take any action, aggressive or otherwise, towards Defendant. None of them saw Tupu with a weapon that night. All Tupu had in his hand when he died was a Bud Light.

Several of the eyewitnesses and a couple of other witnesses remembered a fight between Defendant and Tupu that took place about a month before the homicide. Apparently, Tupu owed Defendant $140 but refused to pay. To settle the dispute, they agreed to fight. After some preliminary posing by both men, Defendant lunged in to attack but was met by a straight right to the face. Defendant dropped to the ground unconscious, whereupon Tupu stepped over him and punched him four more times for good measure. Defendant never did get his money back.

The chief medical examiner conducted the autopsy. She found three shotgun wounds. The first shot, fired from four to seven feet away, entered the right lower side of Tupu’s chest, causing major damage to his heart and liver. The second shot, fired from one to three feet away, went through Tupu’s left cheek, severely lacerating his brain and blowing his skull apart. The third shot, also from one to three feet away, went into Tupu’s right upper back, fractured his ribs and caused catastrophic damage to his right lung. Each wound, in and of itself, would have been fatal. The medical examiner found alcohol and crystal methamphetamine in Tupu’s blood.

After the State rested, the DPA broached the subject of a motion for judgment of acquittal:

[DPA]: J.A.

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Related

State v. Mark
210 P.3d 22 (Hawaii Intermediate Court of Appeals, 2009)
State v. Tunoa
162 P.3d 1 (Hawaii Supreme Court, 2007)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
153 P.3d 464, 113 Haw. 393, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-tunoa-hawapp-2007.