State v. Valdivia

CourtCourt of Appeals of Arizona
DecidedApril 22, 2021
Docket1 CA-CR 16-0867
StatusUnpublished

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

Bluebook
State v. Valdivia, (Ark. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

NOTICE: NOT FOR OFFICIAL PUBLICATION. UNDER ARIZONA RULE OF THE SUPREME COURT 111(c), THIS DECISION IS NOT PRECEDENTIAL AND MAY BE CITED ONLY AS AUTHORIZED BY RULE.

IN THE ARIZONA COURT OF APPEALS DIVISION ONE

STATE OF ARIZONA, Appellee,

v.

VALERIE FRANCIS VALDIVIA, Appellant.

No. 1 CA-CR 16-0867 No. 1 CA-CR 19-0168 PRPC (Consolidated) FILED 4-22-2021

Appeal and Petition for Review from the Superior Court in Maricopa County No. CR2015-155321-001 The Honorable Colleen L. French, Judge Pro Tempore (Retired)

VACATED AND REMANDED; DENYING PCR AS MOOT

COUNSEL

Arizona Attorney General’s Office, Phoenix By Michelle L. Hogan Counsel for Appellee

Maricopa County Attorney’s Office, Phoenix By Adena J. Astrowsky Counsel for Appellee on the Petition for Review

Maricopa County Public Defender’s Office, Phoenix By Lawrence S. Matthew Counsel for Appellant Debus & Kazan LTD., Phoenix By Larry L. Debus, Gregory M. Zamora Counsel for Appellant on the Petition for Review

MEMORANDUM DECISION

Presiding Judge Michael J. Brown delivered the decision of the Court, in which Chief Judge Peter B. Swann and Judge Kent E. Cattani joined.

B R O W N, Judge:

¶1 Valerie Francis Valdivia appeals her conviction and sentence for forgery, claiming prosecutorial misconduct occurred at trial. She also challenges the denial of her petition for post-conviction relief. Because Valdivia has established fundamental, prejudicial error, we vacate her conviction and sentence.

BACKGROUND

¶2 Valdivia entered a bank located inside a grocery store, asking that her check be cashed. Because Valdivia did not have an account with the bank, the manager asked to speak with her and took her identification. Valdivia told the manager that the payor, C.S., gave her the check for work she completed. Valdivia claimed to be in a hurry and appeared nervous. The manager noticed the signature on the check did not match the signature associated with the account and contacted C.S. to verify the transaction. When C.S. denied issuing the check, the manager went to a separate part of the bank and contacted police.

¶3 When police arrived, Valdivia was walking quickly toward an exit without the check or identification. Valdivia claimed she did not know the check was forged, telling police that an acquaintance named “Booty” asked her to cash it. Officers ran the nickname “Booty” through a database, pulled up a photo of a woman named Lauren Budoff, and Valdivia identified her as “Booty.” Though Valdivia would later testify she planned to meet Budoff at a specified location and give her the cash, she failed to tell officers about the meet-up location, and instead told them she did not have Budoff’s contact information. C.S. confirmed his checkbook had been stolen, he did not know either Valdivia or Budoff, and he did not issue the check.

2 STATE v. VALDIVIA Decision of the Court

¶4 Valdivia was indicted for committing forgery, a class 4 felony. In the State’s initial notice of disclosure, Budoff was listed as a potential witness, along with her address. She was not called as a witness at trial, however, where the State presented the testimony of the bank manager, C.S., and two police officers. On cross-examination of Officer Ferrante, defense counsel asked the officer whether the name “Lauren Budoff [has any] significance to you.” The State objected based on “self-serving hearsay[.]” Defense counsel argued the question did not involve hearsay; instead, he wanted to inquire whether Officer Ferrante conducted an investigation of Budoff. The State replied: “The only reason you have that name -- that name is in the police report . . . . It is not currently evidence in this trial.” Following additional discussion, the court sustained the objection.

¶5 Valdivia testified that she ran into an acquaintance (Budoff) at an internet café. Budoff told Valdivia she started a new job but could not cash her paycheck because she lacked a valid ID. Budoff offered Valdivia $100 to cash the check. While presenting the check to the bank and being questioned by the manager, Valdivia said she did not know C.S. or how Budoff received the check, but she believed Budoff had recently started working for C.S. Valdivia further testified that when asked by police where the check came from, she explained she got it from “Lauren Budoff,” who “goes by Booty.” Valdivia testified that she confirmed the photo shown to her on the police laptop was Budoff.

¶6 During initial closing argument, the prosecutor stated that any claim Valdivia received the check from Budoff lacked credibility, but made no other references to Budoff. Defense counsel responded in part by asking the jury to consider why police did not investigate Budoff, asserting Valdivia told police officers at the outset where she obtained the check, but they did not “care to corroborate” her story. Defense counsel also emphasized that Valdivia did not write the check and it was the State’s burden to investigate whether Budoff was involved. According to defense counsel, his client did a favor and “got burned by Lauren Budoff.”

¶7 In rebuttal closing, the prosecutor repeatedly attacked Valdivia’s credibility and asserted there was no Budoff (or “Booty”):

The devil is in the details. When you delve a little deeper into [Valdivia’s] story, when I asked further questions about this Booty, it fell apart.

. . .

3 STATE v. VALDIVIA Decision of the Court

[Valdivia] has no witnesses. There’s no evidence to corroborate anything that she says.

All she knows is a nickname, Booty, so the police try to pull up who this person is. [The police] are following up on what she’s telling them, and of course the first photo that they pull up, yeah, that’s her, with nothing else to corroborate.

...

Where is this Booty? Where was she on December 4? . . . These are red flags about the credibility of this story, the red flags that this story doesn’t make sense.

There’s no Booty, and even if there’s hypothetically someone who was also involved, your jury instructions say the absent participant, if someone else was also culpable, that doesn’t necessarily take away from her guilt, her culpability, her actions and her choices that day.

If you are arrested for a crime, you don’t lead the police directly to the person who is responsible? Because there’s no Booty. This person doesn’t exist.

The defendant . . . tried to shift the burden. She tried to pass the buck. She was pointing fingers saying this is not my fault, this is somebody else’s fault, but when you ask questions, look at the details of this case, the details of her testimony yesterday, what she said, what was inconsistent, what she hadn’t told the police, the evidence shows that this story doesn’t make sense . . . . She knew the check was a forged check.

It is not reasonable to make excuses and to say that the defendant was duped. The defendant’s story makes no sense. . . . There’s no way the defendant did not know that that check was fraudulent. All the credible evidence in this case shows

4 STATE v. VALDIVIA Decision of the Court

that she had to have known. It is simply not reasonable to say that she had no idea. It is not reasonable to blame and point the finger elsewhere, to blame Booty. There’s no Booty.

(Emphasis added.) The jury found Valdivia guilty and the superior court sentenced her to a repetitive presumptive ten-year prison sentence. Valdivia appealed, and while the appeal was stayed, she sought post- conviction relief. After an evidentiary hearing on Valdivia’s ineffective assistance of counsel claim, the court denied relief. This court granted Valdivia’s request to consolidate her appeal and petition for review.

DISCUSSION

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Related

State v. Moody
94 P.3d 1119 (Arizona Supreme Court, 2004)
State v. Hughes
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State v. Dansdill
443 P.3d 990 (Court of Appeals of Arizona, 2019)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
State v. Valdivia, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-valdivia-arizctapp-2021.