United States v. James

139 F.3d 748, 49 Fed. R. Serv. 21, 98 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 2104, 98 Daily Journal DAR 2936, 1998 U.S. App. LEXIS 5729, 1998 WL 128489
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedMarch 24, 1998
DocketNo. 96-30081
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 139 F.3d 748 (United States v. James) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth 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. James, 139 F.3d 748, 49 Fed. R. Serv. 21, 98 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 2104, 98 Daily Journal DAR 2936, 1998 U.S. App. LEXIS 5729, 1998 WL 128489 (9th Cir. 1998).

Opinions

Opinion by Judge KLEINFELD; Dissent by Judge NOONAN.

KLEINFELD, Circuit Judge:

The only issue raised in this case is whether the district court erred by excluding some evidence regarding the victim’s violent past.

FACTS

Appellant’s daughter shot and killed appellant’s boyfriend. For furnishing her daughter with the gun, the mother, appellant, was indicted for aiding and abetting manslaughter within Indian country, under 18 U.S.C. §§ 2, 1112, 1153. She was convicted in a jury trial, and sentenced to probation for five years. The daughter was prosecuted in a juvenile proceeding. The daughter’s ease is not at issue here.

The mother, Ernestine James, met her boyfriend, David Ogden (the victim), at a pow-wow in Seattle. He was nice sober, nasty drunk. Ogden had boasted to her about once killing a man and getting away with it. He told her he had sold another man a fake watch, and when the man complained, had stabbed him in the neck with a ball point pen. Ogden told appellant that “it was pretty funny watching a guy with a pen dangling out of his neck.” He also bragged that he had once “ripped a side view mirror off the car and beat a man unconscious with [749]*749it,” and that, in yet another incident, he had robbed an old man by holding him down with a knife in his face and threatening to cut his eyes out.

James had seen Ogden’s violence with her own eyes and suffered it. The worst was when Ogden was intoxicated and James refused to have sexual intercourse, so he threw her on the bed and raped her. On another occasion when Ogden wanted to have sexual intercourse with James and she had refused, he came into the room where she and her daughter Jaylene Jeffries were and started yelling at James and calling her names. The daughter got up and held Ogden at knife point with a carving knife until James ordered them both to desist. Ogden once struck the mother with a backhanded slap, giving her a swollen lip. Another time, he was drunk and wanted to have sexual intercourse with James, and would not take no for an answer until she broke a glass on the dresser and threatened him with it.

Once in their apartment, Ogden accused a Mend of “looking at” James, and when the Mend denied it, beat him up. When James and her daughter told Ogden to stop, he kept kicking and hitting the man, so James tried to dial 911. Ogden ripped the phone out of the wall. There was another phone in the bedroom, so James went to that phone and told her daughter to follow her. James had started dialing when Ogden broke the door down, on top of her daughter. James put the phone down, and the daughter, Jeffries, started hitting and kicking Ogden. James told them both to stop and told Ogden to leave. They both complied. Jeffries broke some of Ogden’s ribs when she beat and kicked him.

When James and Ogden would go out for dinner, a few drinks, and window shopping, he would start yelling at strangers and challenging them to fights. Sometimes he and the strangers would fight. James also testified Ogden used to take his knife out of his sock, open and close it, and switch it back and forth between hands as if he were in a fight.

Jeffries, the daughter, had beaten Ogden on three occasions. She testified that “I was the one doing something, but he wasn’t.” Ogden would never fight back against her. He acted scared of her, even though she was only 14. As described above, she had broken his ribs on one occasion.

Ogden hated Jeffries’ boyMend, Michas Tiatano. Ogden, James, and Jeffries were Indian, but Tiatano was part Black and Asian. Ogden hated Black people. On the day Ogden was killed, the four of them had been together at a party. At one point during the party Ogden had lifted a hammer from the carpentry tools he used at his job and said to Tiatano “I ought to hit you with this,” but stopped when James told him to “knock it off.” Later Ogden started pulling Tiatano around by his shirt and telling him he hated him. Jeffries told Ogden to stop, and he did.

When James decided to leave the party, her van got stuck on a fish net laying on the ground. She and Jeffries were sitting in the van, when Jeffries heard Tiatano say “oh man” and fall down. Ogden had just punched Tiatano in the face, possibly with some object in his hand, so hard that he broke his nose and knocked him unconscious. Some other men who were there brought Tiatano into the house and gave him first aid. That incident led to Jeffries killing Ogden. Her testimony is worth reading:

Q. Now, when you heard that statement from your mother that Michas [Tiatano] had just gotten hit by David [Ogden], how did you feel?
A. Angry.
Q. What did you do?
A. I got out of the van and started chasing him.
Q. Why were you chasing David Ogden? A. Because he hurt my boyMend.
Q. What were you going to do if you got ahold of David Ogden?
A Beat him up.
Q. Where did you chase him?
A. Around — I chased him to my Aunt Teresa’s. And he went around on the road and I chased him down the road a little bit and then I came back.
Q. Were you able to catch him?
A. I got ahold of him once.
[750]*750Q. What happened?
A. He swung back, tried to hit me.
Q. Did he hit you?
A. No. He came close to, though.
Q. What happened next?
A. I let him go and he ran some more. Q. Then what?
A. I ran after him.
Q. This was 29-year old man, is that correct?
A. Yeah.
Q. You were 14 at the time?
A. Yeah.
Q. Why were you trying to reach him?
A. I just answered your question.
Q. Weren’t you afraid that he would harm you?
A. No.
A. No, I wasn’t afraid of him.
Q. You were not afraid of him?
A. No.
Q. And at the end of the chase, what did you do?
A. I went over to my mom’s side of the van.
Q. Was this on the driver’s side?
A. Yeah.
Q. What happened next?
A. My mom had a gun out. She was loading it.
Q. When you got up to the van, what happened next?
A. She gave me the gun.
Q. Did you ask her for the gun?
A. No.
Q. Did she say anything to you when she handed you the gun?
A. Yes. She said it was on safety.
Q.

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139 F.3d 748, 49 Fed. R. Serv. 21, 98 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 2104, 98 Daily Journal DAR 2936, 1998 U.S. App. LEXIS 5729, 1998 WL 128489, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-james-ca9-1998.