Steve v. State

875 P.2d 110, 1994 Alas. App. LEXIS 26, 1994 WL 249518
CourtCourt of Appeals of Alaska
DecidedJune 10, 1994
DocketA-4800, A-4810
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 875 P.2d 110 (Steve v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Alaska primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Steve v. State, 875 P.2d 110, 1994 Alas. App. LEXIS 26, 1994 WL 249518 (Ala. Ct. App. 1994).

Opinion

OPINION

MANNHEIMER, Judge.

A Nome grand jury indicted Victor Steve, Sr., on two counts of second-degree sexual abuse of a minor, AS 11.41.~436(a)(l). A superior court jury found Steve guilty of one count and acquitted him of the other. Superior Court Judge Michael I. Jeffery sen-fenced Steve to 10 years’ imprisonment with 3 years suspended (7 years to serve). This sentence was imposed consecutively to a 5-year sentence Judge Jeffery imposed when, as a consequence of Steve’s new conviction, he revoked Steve’s probation from a previous sexual abuse of a minor conviction. Thus, Steve received a composite sentence of 12 years’ imprisonment with 3 years suspended (9 years to serve).

Steve appeals both his new conviction and his sentence. We affirm.

1. Indictment Issues

Steve first argues that his indictment should have been dismissed before trial because of improprieties in the prosecutor’s presentation of the case to the grand jury. Steve was indicted for sexually abusing two fifteen-year-old girls, E.W. and C.S.. E.W. was the State’s first witness at grand jury. Early in her testimony, the following exchange occurred:

PROSECUTOR: Do you know somebody named Victor Steve?
E.W.: Yes.
PROSECUTOR: How do you know Victor Steve?
E.W.: Hmm.
PROSECUTOR: Does he live in Steb-bins? Is that a person who has lived in Stebbins basically all his life?
E.W.: No, he was in prison for, how many years? He came back maybe four or five years ago.
PROSECUTOR: OK, and then you’ve known him ever since then?
E.W.: Yeah.

Based on this testimony, Steve argued that the prosecutor had intentionally elicited testimony about Steve’s prior imprisonment, thus prejudicing the grand jury’s consideration of his case.

Judge Jeffery rejected this attack on the indictment. He found that the prosecutor had not intentionally elicited testimony about Steve’s prior imprisonment; rather, Judge *113 Jeffery found that E.W.’s statement had been an unanticipated response to a neutral question concerning how long she had known Steve. In addition, Judge Jeffery noted that the prosecutor later instructed the grand jury to disregard E.W.’s statement. The prosecutor cautioned the grand jury about this evidence when one of the grand jurors asked why Steve had been in jail. The prosecutor replied that he could not answer that question,

[a]nd I’d ask the grand jury not even to consider that.... I wasn’t anticipating that answer from her. And that’s not usually admissible, and I try to keep that stuff out, because that’s not something that you should consider. It popped out, it’s in front of you, but please don’t consider that.

Judge Jeffery found this curative instruction to be a sufficient remedy. He also found that, given the strength of the State’s case at grand jury, the erroneous mention of Steve’s prior prison sentence was harmless:

Review of the testimony ... shows that the state’s case is quite strong.... The court finds that the inadmissible evidence concerning defendant’s jail time did not “appreciably affect the outcome of the grand jury’s deliberations”, given the strength of the state’s admissible evidence. The grand jury heard ample evidence “to persuade reasonably minded persons that if unexplained or uncontradicted it would warrant a conviction” on each count.

A trial court’s decision to dismiss or uphold an indictment is reviewed for abuse of discretion. Sheldon v. State, 796 P.2d 831, 834 (Alaska App.1990). We do not find an abuse of discretion here. In addition to the factors mentioned by Judge Jeffery, we also note that the grand jurors were not apprised of the reason Steve had been imprisoned earlier (a prior sexual abuse conviction). We therefore uphold Judge Jeffery’s rejection of this attack on the indictment.

The State’s second grand jury witness was C.S.. During her testimony, she told the grand jurors that, because of unspecified “problems”, she had been hospitalized twice at North Star Hospital. Later, one of the grand jurors asked about C.S.’s stays at North Star Hospital. The prosecutor replied, “You can ask her. You can’t ask me.” The grand juror then said, “Oh. Sorry.”

In his motion to dismiss the indictment, Steve characterized the prosecutor’s action as tantamount to foreclosing grand jury inquiry into C.S.’s mental health. Judge Jeffery did not view the exchange this way. He declared:

The grand jury tape discloses that the grand juror who asked the question was satisfied with the prosecutor’s answer that the grand jury would need to recall the witness to obtain more information about the North Star Hospital admission. After having been informed of the possibility of doing so, the grand jury did not take the opportunity. There is no error as to this issue.

We find no abuse of discretion in Judge Jeffery’s ruling.

Steve’s final attack on the indictment involves another portion of C.S.’s testimony. A grand juror asked C.S. why she and her friends kept going back to visit Steve. C.S. replied that Steve gave them marijuana. She elaborated that Steve had gotten her “stoned” a few times, and that, on these occasions, he had told her that he wanted something in return — which C.S. understood to mean sex. C.S. told the grand jury that she knew “his ways — getting other girls, I know how he does it. I know what he tries to do. Seen it all.”

A grand juror later asked a state trooper witness if the authorities had considered charging Steve with furnishing marijuana to the girls. The trooper replied that, even though C.S. had made such statements, the troopers had no independent proof that this had occurred.

In his motion to dismiss the indictment, Steve argued that C.S.’s statements about Steve’s furnishing marijuana to the girls unfairly prejudiced the grand jury proceeding. Judge Jeffery, however, found that this evidence was admissible because it tended to show Steve’s scheme or plan to obtain sex from the girls in exchange for alcohol and/or drugs. Judge Jeffery stated:

*114 [These] statements are admissible because they relate to the common scheme or plan of the defendant to offer the victims and their friends alcohol and drugs in return for sex. Such information is not “marginal” to the issues in the ease. The statements clearly fit the criteria for admission of such testimony established in Evidence Rule 404(b)(2).

In his brief to this court, Steve again argues that the grand jury should not have heard evidence that Steve furnished alcohol or drugs to C.S. and her friends. However, he ignores Judge Jeffery’s ruling that the contested evidence was admissible under Alaska Evidence Rule 404(b). Because Judge Jeffery’s ruling goes unchallenged and because it is not plainly mistaken, we find no abuse of discretion.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
875 P.2d 110, 1994 Alas. App. LEXIS 26, 1994 WL 249518, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/steve-v-state-alaskactapp-1994.