United States v. Herder

59 F. App'x 257
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 4, 2003
Docket01-2357, 01-2358
StatusUnpublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 59 F. App'x 257 (United States v. Herder) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Herder, 59 F. App'x 257 (10th Cir. 2003).

Opinion

ORDER AND JUDGMENT *

STEPHEN H. ANDERSON, Circuit Judge.

Cynthia Redhouse and Rachel Herder appeal their convictions, following a jury trial, for assaulting Sheila James with a deadly weapon (a baseball bat, a metal broom handle, or a car jack) with intent to do bodily harm, in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 1153, 113(a)(3) and 2, and assault resulting in serious bodily injury, in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 1153, 113(a)(6) and 2. Both defendants were sentenced to concurrent terms of forty-six months in prison. Because both appeals largely raise identical issues, we have combined them for purposes of disposition.

The appellants contend that the district court abused its discretion, committing reversible error, by: (a) not allowing defense counsel to question the victim, Sheila James, on her opinion about whether she had a reputation for violence; (b) striking the testimony of Laima Yazzie regarding Sheila’s reputation for violence; (c) not allowing evidence of two prior acts of violence by Sheila; and (d) not allowing Michael Prendergast to testify that three to four weeks prior to the incident he saw Sheila swinging a bat around at the trailer where the incident occurred and claiming that she would “protect herself if anybody messes with her.” Additionally, the appellants contend that the district court committed plain error by failing to instruct the jury to consider Sheila’s reputation for violence in determining whether she was the first aggressor.

Appellant Herder separately argues that plain error occurred when the government introduced evidence regarding Cynthia Redhouse’s reputation for violence. And, both appellants claim cumulative error warrants reversal. Exercising jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291, we affirm both convictions.

BACKGROUND

The charges in this case arose out of a fight in a trailer located on Navajo land at Shiprock, New Mexico, 1 where the victim, 17-year-old Sheila James, was living with Mary Jane Redhouse’s son, Wilfred. On July 28, 2000, 62-year-old Mary Jane Red-house, her daughter, 40-year-old appellant Cynthia Redhouse, and Cynthia’s two daughters, 23-year-old appellant Rachel Herder, and 14-year-old Candace Prendergast, drove to Wilfred’s trailer to retrieve from Sheila keys to a car owned by Mary Jane but being used by Wilfred. Earlier that day Mary Jane and the three other women had seen Sheila with Mary Jane’s car stopped by police for a traffic violation. Apparently Mary Jane had not *260 known Wilfred was allowing Sheila to drive Mary Jane’s car, and she disapproved.

When Mary Jane, Cynthia, Rachel and Candace arrived at the trailer, Sheila James and her friend, 20-year-old Greta Mark, along with Mark’s infant son, were just leaving. However, when Sheila saw the women, she had a “bad feeling” about encountering them, so she and Greta reentered the trailer and went to the bedroom at the south end of the single-wide trailer.

Mary Jane went to the trailer, knocked on the door, and Sheila eventually came out of the bedroom and answered. The testimony differs as to the nature of Mary Jane’s encounter with Sheila (Mary Jane did not testify), but there is general agreement that Mary Jane demanded the car keys and ordered Sheila out of the trailer. It is also uncontested that Sheila then returned to the bedroom and began to pack up her belongings, and that Rachel subsequently went to and entered the bedroom.

At this point the testimony sharply differs. Sheila testified that Rachel carried with her the aluminum baseball bat Wilfred kept in the hving room, and struck Sheila on the left side of the head with the bat. Greta, who was looking out from the bathroom, confirmed that Rachel brought the bat in and swung it at Sheila. Rachel, on the other hand, testified that she was simply going back to the bedroom to get the car keys and that when she entered, Sheila struck her in the legs with a baseball bat.

In any event, a fight erupted in which Cynthia and then Candace joined with Rachel in fighting Sheila. It is also undisputed that the bat was used as a weapon, that it changed hands several times as the parties fought for possession of it and used it, and that Sheila was knocked to the floor with Cynthia on top of her and Rachel either partly on top or at the side. The testimony most favorable to the jury’s verdict indicated that when Candace joined in, she had a broom with a metal handle which broke, leaving a jagged edge.

The three women kicked, punched, and grabbed Sheila, as well as hitting her with the bat, and Candace and Rachel took turns hitting Sheila with the metal broom handle. Sheila, at the least, hit Cynthia and Rachel in the chest with the bat and probably struck both Cynthia and Rachel in other spots with the bat, as well as striking them with her fists and feet.

As indicated above, not too far into the fight Sheila was knocked to the floor where she remained until Cynthia, Rachel and Candace broke off the altercation. They testified that they did so when Sheila, who was then on the ground crying and screaming out as if in excruciating pain (R. Vol. VII at 492), exclaimed she was pregnant. Sheila testified that she had already given that information to Mary Jane while they talked in the living room, and Greta Mark testified that she heard Mary Jane tell Rachel to “wash out the baby” before Rachel went to the bedroom.

During the fight Greta left and, toward the end, Candace, who was told by Cynthia to “call the cops,” apparently left. However, Sheila testified that Rachel and Cynthia returned to the bedroom immediately after leaving and forced open the door which Sheila, after getting to her feet, was trying to hold shut, reentered the room, grabbed the bat and part of the broom handle and took them away. Officers later checked Mary Jane’s truck and the area immediately around Cynthia’s residence, but did not see the bat or part of the metal broomstick.

After the altercation Mary Jane, Cynthia, Rachel and Candace left in their truck. Sheila, worried about a miscarriage due to the kicks she had received in her *261 abdomen, went into the bathroom to see if there was blood in her urine. It was then that she discovered severe bleeding from a wound in her back, which she then examined by looking in a mirror. At first she thought the wound was caused by one of the women hitting her with a car jack that was on the bedroom floor, and she reported that in her initial account to the police. That report led to the inclusion of the jack as a weapon in the indictment.

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Related

Herder v. United States
539 U.S. 934 (Supreme Court, 2003)
Redhouse v. United States
539 U.S. 935 (Supreme Court, 2003)

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Bluebook (online)
59 F. App'x 257, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-herder-ca10-2003.