State v. Zlahn

2014 MT 224, 332 P.3d 247, 376 Mont. 245, 2014 WL 4086498, 2014 Mont. LEXIS 480
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 19, 2014
DocketDA 13-0184
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 2014 MT 224 (State v. Zlahn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana 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. Zlahn, 2014 MT 224, 332 P.3d 247, 376 Mont. 245, 2014 WL 4086498, 2014 Mont. LEXIS 480 (Mo. 2014).

Opinion

JUSTICE WTHEAT

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

¶1 Robert Zlahn (Zlahn) appeals from the judgment of the Montana Thirteenth Judicial District Court, Yellowstone County, sentencing him to Montana State Prison for a total of thirty years, with five suspended, after a jury convicted him of three felonies: Assault with a weapon, criminal endangerment, and tampering with or fabricating physical evidence.

ISSUES

¶2 We affirm and review the following issues:

*247 1. Should we exercise plain error review to consider Zlahn’s contention that the failure to immediately assign him counsel violated his constitutional and statutory rights?
2. Did the District Court err in refusing Zlahn’s proposed jury instructions regarding factors affecting the reliability ofeyewitness identification?
3. Did the District Court err in its evidentiary rulings related to condoms found in Zlahn’s van, gunshot residue tests, line-up statistics and vantage point evidence ?
4. Did the District Court abuse its discretion when it refused to declare a mistrial based on the court’s comments to a co-conspirator?
5. Is there sufficient cumulative error to warrant a new trial?

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

¶3 On July 1, 2011, Alanna Vincent (Vincent) was returning to her home in the Billings Heights after doing some grocery shopping at the nearby Walmart. She noticed two black men in a dented maroon van make a U-turn to follow her vehicle. She parked hér vehicle in front of her home and watched as the van drove by slowly. As she was getting out of her car, the van turned around to pull up beside her. Through the open window, the driver, a short-haired black man with a gap in his teeth, asked her whether she wanted to get in the van and have intercourse. She noticed that he had an accent. Feeling threatened, Vincent told the men to leave her alone and ran into her home. There, she told her boyfriend, a body builder and former football player, Ryan Grosulak (Grosulak), what had happened.

¶4 Grosulak began driving around the neighborhood in search of the dented maroon van with two black men in the front seats. He caught up with a vehicle that matched that description not far away. He rolled down the window of his car, yelled at the men about their behavior towards Vincent using some choice language, and made an obscene gesture. A “skinny white kid” jumped out of the back and wanted to fight. Then the driver stepped out of the car and began returning Grosulak’s obscenities. Grosulak stepped out of the car. When he did so, “just bullets just start flying, like I just got totally stunned.” He said the van’s driver, who had short or buzzed hair and was wearing a bright green shirt, was the shooter, although he did not see the gun. He later testified that the gun was a silver pistol. Terrified, Grosulak dove back into his car and began both driving away and calling 9-1-1. While he was on the phone with the 9-1-1 dispatcher, he returned to the *248 apartment.

¶5 Officer Joseph Dickerson (Officer Dickerson) was employed with the Billings Police Department at the time as a patrol officer. At about 2:57 p.m. he received a dispatch for shots fired in the Heights and arrived at a nearby residential address where another officer believed he had apprehended the suspects. The suspects were Zlahn, a black man who had short hair and was wearing a green shirt; Samuel Bettie (Bettie), a black man who had dreadlocks at the time; and Sean Bowers (Bowers), a young white man. The address belonged to Bowers’s grandmother.

¶6 Officer Dickerson spoke with Zlahn at the scene. Officer Dickerson noticed that Zlahn had an accent. Zlahn said he had dropped his girlfriend off at work, then his vehicle had broken down and he had found someone to push his vehicle from where it had broken down several miles away to its current location. He denied involvement with the shooting.

¶7 Officers also spoke with Bowers at the scene. Bowers initially denied being in the van and said he had just met Bettie and Zlahn on the street. He also said that he was going to meet his mother at Walmart. He later changed his story and admitted to being present for the altercation. He said he heard three shots fired, but did not know who had fired them. He said the shots came from the driver’s side of the vehicle. When officers asked Bowers where the weapon was, he pointed to a bush. There the officers recovered a gun. The gun was a .45 caliber that was ready to fire. Officer Dickerson bagged and inventoried the weapon.

¶8 The police transported Zlahn, Bettie and Bowers to the City Hall where a detective administered gunshot residue (GSR) tests to all three men. Zlahn became agitated when the detective said he would be doing GSR testing, while the other two men remained calmer. The GSR tests revealed that all three suspects had been in close proximity to the gun when it was fired; however, it did not show which of the suspects had fired the gun. Comparisons of DNA found on the gun with the suspects’ DNA showed that Zlahn’s DNA was a “major contributor” to the DNA profile, but that Bettie’s was not. The expert who testified said that the DNA profile from the gun was a “mixed” profile with probably three to four contributors. She explained that the fact that Bettie’s DNA did not appear on the gun did not mean that Bettie could not have handled the gun or been the shooter. It appears there was no comparison of Bowers’s DNA with the DNA found on the gun.

¶9 Later on July 1, 2011, an officer arrived at Vincent’s and *249 Grosulak’s apartment to transport them to the place where the van had been apprehended. Vincent and Grosulak both were sure the van in which the suspects were apprehended was the one they had seen. A detective arrived afterwards to show them photographic line-ups. Grosulak could not identify the shooter from any line-up because he said events had happened too quickly for him to be able to identify anyone. Vincent identified Zlahn as the person who had been driving the van when the offensive remarks were made. Following Zlahn’s arrest, the keys to the van were found among Zlahn’s belongings. The van was registered to Zlahn’s girlfriend.

¶10 Zlahn was charged with felony attempted deliberate homicide in Yellowstone County Justice Court. Zlahn appeared before a justice of the peace on July 5, 2011, and, through a public defender who had come to court to represent all defendants on the j ail-court calendar that day, requested to be represented by a public defender. The justice of the peace ordered the Office of the State Public Defender (OPD) to represent Zlahn and ordered the State to file an information in district court by July 12, 2011. Pursuant to an internal policy not to assign attorneys to felony defendants until after the defendants have been arraigned in district court, OPD did not assign a public defender to Zlahn immediately. The State did not file its information until July 21, 2011. Zlahn was arraigned in District Court on July 25, 2011.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2014 MT 224, 332 P.3d 247, 376 Mont. 245, 2014 WL 4086498, 2014 Mont. LEXIS 480, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-zlahn-mont-2014.