Ventura v. People

64 V.I. 589, 2016 V.I. Supreme LEXIS 15
CourtSupreme Court of The Virgin Islands
DecidedMay 4, 2016
DocketS. Ct. Criminal No. 2014-0021
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 64 V.I. 589 (Ventura v. People) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of The Virgin Islands primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ventura v. People, 64 V.I. 589, 2016 V.I. Supreme LEXIS 15 (virginislands 2016).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

(May 4, 2016)

HODGE, Chief Justice.

Appellant Jose Ventura appeals from the Superior Court’s July 25, 2014 judgment and commitment, which sentenced him to life imprisonment without the possibility of parole as punishment for his conviction of first-degree murder. For the reasons that follow, we affirm Ventura’s conviction but remand the case to Superior Court so that it may consider Ventura’s motion for a new trial in the first instance.

I. STATEMENT OF RELEVANT FACTS AND PROCEDURAL POSTURE

Sometime around June 14, 2001, Virgin Islands Police Corporal Wendell Williams disappeared from the island of St. Croix. His sister reported him missing a week later, and the Virgin Islands Police Department (“VIPD”) opened an investigation into his disappearance. They discovered that, although his time card at work was initially being punched on his behalf, he had stopped reporting to work and had not been in contact with either friends or family. His car was also discovered, abandoned and burned.

After allegations that the VIPD was handling the case improperly, the Federal Bureau of Investigation (“FBI”) became involved in the investigation and learned that right before his disappearance, Williams had confronted two VIPD officers about not properly turning in a seized weapon. Not much else was learned until May 2002, when Theresa Coogle contacted the FBI and reported that she had witnessed Williams’s murder in an abandoned building near the Grapetree Hotel area of St. Croix. The VIPD investigated the area, including an abandoned building [597]*597found on the property, but no forensic evidence connected to this case was discovered. Hardly any further investigation took place until some ten years later, when the VIPD created a Cold Case Unit, which began reinvestigating Williams’s disappearance.

VIPD Detective Frankie Ortiz re-interviewed Coogle on June 15,2011, and based on this subsequent interview, he returned to the Grapetree Hotel area for further investigation. He found a second abandoned building — near the abandoned building processed in 2002 — that matched Coogle’s description.2 This time, the VIPD, in conjunction with the FBI and an Evidence Recovery Team from Puerto Rico, carefully processed the second building and found items they considered evidence — including a broken blade, blood, and bullet indentations — of a potential murder scene as described by Coogle. The VIPD was unable to recover DNA evidence or fingerprints from the scene but based on this alleged newly recovered evidence, Detective Ortiz obtained a warrant for Ventura’s arrest, along with four other people Coogle alleged were involved in the murder.

Ventura was arrested on February 13, 2012, and charged in a February 13, 2012 information — along with Jose Rivera, Maximiliano Velasquez III, Sharima Clercent, and Juan Velasquez — with having aided and abetted the murder in the first degree of Williams by shooting him with a firearm, in violation of 14 V.I.C. §§ 922(a)(1) and 11(a), and for having aided and abetted in the killing of Williams during the course of a kidnapping, or felony murder, in violation of 14 V.I.C. §§ 922(a)(2) and 11(a). Jury selection commenced on January 21, 2014, and ended two days later on January 23,2014. The trial commenced on January 28,2014.

Jaslene Williams, Williams’s sister, testified at trial that she normally saw Williams two or three times a week, and that she reported him missing after he failed to visit her house or return her phone calls, and stopped retrieving her mail from their joint mailbox, as he usually did. She could not testify to the exact date of his disappearance but stated that she believed someone from the VIPD was responsible for Williams’s disappearance, noting that another VIPD officer had been signing [598]*598Williams in for his shifts even though Williams had not been reporting for duty.

Coogle, who has two children with Ventura’s co-defendant Maximiliano Velasquez, testified that one night in June 2001, she and Maximiliano3 went out to dinner to celebrate their engagement. At the time, Coogle was seventeen years old and eight months pregnant with their second child. After dinner, Maximiliano dropped her off at her home and left. Later that night, he called her and asked her to pick him up on the north shore of St. Croix. Coogle drove out to the Grapetree Hotel area and parked the car once she saw Maximiliano standing on the side of the road. She then followed him on foot to a building. Inside the building, Coogle stated she saw a man stripped down to his underwear, on his knees, and with his hands bound behind his back and around a pole located in the middle of the room. She stated that the man had wire wrapped around his body and he was being electrocuted, using power from a generator since the building appeared to be abandoned and without electricity. She later recognized the man she saw bound in the abandoned building as Williams from news reports of his disappearance. Coogle then testified that Williams was shot in the hand and in the head:

A. I saw the officer get shot in his hand.
Q. Who shot him in the hand?
A. Jose Ventura.
Q. And did anything else happen to the officer?
A. Yes.
Q. What else happened to him?
A. I saw — I saw him get shot in his mouth.
Q. Do you recall who did that?
A. Yes.
Q. Who shot the officer in his mouth?
A. Your Honor, the person that shot him in his hand was ... was Jose Rivera, the person that shot him in his mouth was Jose Ventura.

(J.A. 98.) Coogle stated she went outside the building and threw up, then went back into the building, where she saw Rivera cut William’s ankle off [599]*599with a John Deere saw. After the body was dismembered, it was put into garbage bags and Ventura and Rivera carried the bags towards the shoreline for disposal. Coogle admitted that she and Clercent cleaned up Williams’s blood, under orders from Maximiliano. Coogle and Maximiliano then left the area.

Coogle, in her testimony, informed the jury that at a pretrial hearing held on January 27, 2014, she had confused the identities of Jose Ventura and Jose Rivera, and identified Ventura when asked to identify Rivera. She explained that she had confused Rivera with Ventura because they were both named Jose and she and the attorney had just been discussing Ventura. Coogle also acknowledged that she had given multiple statements to both federal and local law enforcement agencies, and that those statements were partly inconsistent with her court testimony.4 She explained that it was likely that the agents confused the facts of Williams’s murder with another homicide she had witnessed and had also discussed with the agents.

At the close of the People’s evidence, Ventura moved for a judgment of acquittal, which the Superior Court granted only as to the felony murder charge.5 Ventura did not call any witnesses in his defense, but his co-defendant, Rivera, did.

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Related

Williams v. People of the Virgin Islands
2024 V.I. 27 (Supreme Court of The Virgin Islands, 2024)
People of the Virgin Islands v. Jose Ventura
Superior Court of The Virgin Islands, 2020
Smith v. Government of the Virgin Islands
67 V.I. 797 (Supreme Court of The Virgin Islands, 2017)
Jean-Baptiste v. Virgin Islands Taxicab Commission & Government
64 V.I. 235 (Superior Court of The Virgin Islands, 2016)
Rivera v. People
64 V.I. 540 (Supreme Court of The Virgin Islands, 2016)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
64 V.I. 589, 2016 V.I. Supreme LEXIS 15, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ventura-v-people-virginislands-2016.