State v. Urena

899 A.2d 1281, 2006 R.I. LEXIS 110, 2006 WL 1652238
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJune 16, 2006
Docket2004-199-C.A.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 899 A.2d 1281 (State v. Urena) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Urena, 899 A.2d 1281, 2006 R.I. LEXIS 110, 2006 WL 1652238 (R.I. 2006).

Opinion

*1284 OPINION

Justice SUTTELL,

for the Court.

The defendant, Amarilis Urena, appeals from a conviction of manslaughter in the stabbing death of her boyfriend after a trial in which she presented evidence concerning battered woman’s syndrome. The defendant contends that the trial justice erred in (1) denying her motion for a new trial because the state did not prove beyond a reasonable doubt that she did not act in self-defense, and (2) denying her motion to suppress statements she made to the police. Finding no error in the trial justice’s rulings, we affirm the judgment of conviction.

Facts and Procedural History

On August 26, 2001, defendant fatally stabbed Hector Tavares after a confrontation with him at her friend Javiela Felix’s apartment in Providence. At the time, Ms. Urena and Mr. Tavares had been involved in a romantic relationship for nearly a year and lived together in defendant’s apartment in Providence. It is uncontro-verted that throughout much of their relationship Mr. Tavares was abusive toward defendant. On August 26, 2001, Ms. Ure-na’s fourteen-year-old daughter was visiting her from New York. During the course of the day, Mr. Tavares began drinking beer and proceeded to get drunk. Recognizing that his consumption of alcohol was often a precursor to Tavares’s violent behavior, Ms. Urena became fearful that he might abuse her in front of her daughter. She decided, therefore, to take her daughter and spend the night at Ms. Felix’s apartment.

During the course of the evening, Mr. Tavares called Ms. Felix’s apartment multiple times looking for defendant. The defendant’s daughter answered the first several calls and simply hung up on him. Eventually, however, defendant spoke with Mr. Tavares, and it was agreed that he would bring defendant’s apartment keys to Ms. Felix’s apartment.

When Mr. Tavares arrived at Ms. Felix’s apartment, he walked in and threw the set of keys on the coffee table before sitting on the sofa. The defendant’s daughter was in Ms. Felix’s bedroom talking on the telephone at the time. The defendant sat on a different sofa in the living room, across from Mr. Tavares. Ms. Felix spoke to Mr. Tavares shortly before leaving the living room and going into the bathroom. The defendant testified that she and Mr. Tavares then got into an altercation because she refused to return to her apartment with him.

The defendant testified that the confrontation escalated until she “started to really be very afraid.” She said that she was fearful because Mr. Tavares was drinking, and when he drank, “everything changes.” She said that she believed “[t]hat as always he was going to beat me up again, and this time in front of my daughter.” The defendant said she asked Mr. Tavares “more than five times to please leave,” but he would not go. The defendant then went to the kitchen and grabbed a knife, which she said she intended to use “[j]ust to scare him so he [would] just leave.” The defendant testified that when she returned from the kitchen to confront Mr. Tavares with the knife, “[a]ll of a sudden,” Mr. Tavares “came on top of [her],” and “the knife just went in him.”

Ms. Felix testified that when she came out of the bathroom, she saw defendant and Mr. Tavares standing in what appeared to be an embrace. The defendant’s daughter was also out of the bedroom, hugging defendant and calling “Mom, Mom, Mom.” Ms. Felix said that she then saw defendant pull the knife out of Mr. Tavares’s chest. Ms. Felix did not see the knife go into Mr. Tavares. Then, Ms. Felix saw Mr. Tavares silently fall to the *1285 floor and, with her ear to his chest, determined that his heart was not beating as usual. She testified that defendant told her to rinse the knife and throw it away, but that she placed it in the kitchen sink instead. The defendant then called the police.

When the police arrived, defendant, her daughter, and Ms. Felix still were in the apartment. The defendant and Ms. Felix told the police that they did not know the victim’s name and that he had stumbled into the apartment bleeding after knocking on the apartment door. 1 The police asked the three females to accompany them to the police station to help further with the investigation, and they agreed. Later, at the police station, defendant changed her story and admitted that she knew Mr. Tavares when the police showed her a document, found on Mr. Tavares, displaying defendant’s signature and indicating that a no-contact order between defendant and Mr. Tavares had been terminated.

After admitting that she knew Mr. Ta-vares, defendant gave a statement to the police in response to their questioning, which was interpreted by a Spanish-speaking officer. She said that Mr. Tavares “was always abusive to her” during their one-year relationship and had been attending domestic violence classes to curb his fits of abuse. Although Mr. Tavares was not physically abusive on the night of the stabbing, defendant asserted that he was intoxicated and “was talking to her aggressively.” The defendant said that this was what prompted her to get the knife from the kitchen drawer. She admitted to the police that she “hit him with the knife in the chest area” because his aggressive behavior made her “nervous.” Subsequently, on December 7, 2001, a grand jury charged defendant with the murder of Mr. Tavares.

On January 10, 2003, defendant filed a motion to suppress the statements she made to the Providence police at the station. A trial justice of the Superior Court heard the matter on January 13, 2004. The defendant asserted that the police improperly failed to advise her of her Miranda 2 rights when she was being driven from the apartment to the station because the police knew or should have known that she was a suspect. She also argued that she did not make a knowing and voluntary waiver of her rights after she was advised of them later in the evening at the police station. The state presented the testimony of three police officers at the suppression hearing who testified that defendant was not in custody when she was taken to the station. The officers further testified that, before she made her formal statement, defendant was advised of her rights multiple times, indicated that she understood them, and said that she wished to speak to the police anyway.

The trial justice denied defendant’s motion to suppress the statements. In so ruling, the trial justice found that defendant was not in custody when the police asked her to accompany them to the station and that she had gone voluntarily. At that time, defendant was not a suspect, but was believed to be one of three witnesses to this incident. In addition, the trial justice found that defendant was also not in custody when she arrived at the police station. He concluded that “anything she said up until the time when the termination of the no contact order was produced was not in any way a product of a custodial setting.”

*1286 Once that document was shown to defendant, however, “things changed,” and defendant became a suspect in the homicide.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
899 A.2d 1281, 2006 R.I. LEXIS 110, 2006 WL 1652238, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-urena-ri-2006.