Young v. State

374 P.3d 395, 2016 Alas. LEXIS 81, 2016 WL 3369222
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedJune 17, 2016
Docket7110 S-15665
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 374 P.3d 395 (Young v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Young v. State, 374 P.3d 395, 2016 Alas. LEXIS 81, 2016 WL 3369222 (Ala. 2016).

Opinion

OPINION

MAASSEN, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

A defendant accused of 1nvolvement in a shooting was convicted at trial, in part on the strength of three eyewitness identifications. He challenged the admissibility of two of the identifications on due process grounds, but the superior court ruled them admissible. *399 The defendant also requested an eyewitness-specific jury instruction, which the superior court refused. Finally, the defendant argued that he was entitled to a mistrial because of an alleged discovery violation by the State that he learned of mid-trial. The superior court denied his motion, finding that the State had not violated the disclosure rules and alternatively that the defendant had not suffered any prejudice. The defendant was convicted, and the court of appeals affirmed his conviction.

'On petition to this court, the defendant argues not only that we should reverse his conviction based on the current law on the admissibility of eyewitness identifications but also that Alaska's due process clause requires the adoption of a new test. He also argues that the superior court erred in failing to give his requested jury instruction and in failing to grant him a mistrial,

We hold that the superior court erred under the law as it currently exists when it held one of the eyewitness identifications sufficiently reliable to be admitted at trial, but that it did not err in admitting the other, We also hold that the superior court erred in refusing to give an eyewitness-specific jury instruction but did not err in denying a mistrial. Because the errors are harmless, we affirm the defendant's conviction.

We also conclude, however, that the current test for the admissibility of eyewitness identification evidence does not adequately protect the right to due process under the Alaska Constitution We therefore identify factors that courts should consider in future cases when deciding whether to admit eye— witness identification evidence.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

A. The Crime And The Investigation

During the summer of 2008 a series of violent incidents took place in the Fairbanks area between members of two gangs, the Bloods and the Crips. In late July there was a fight inside the Fairbanks Walmart; in early August there was another at the Tana-na Valley Fair, Persons known or alleged to be current or former members of the Bloods were later. shot at outside the Eagles Hall by persons shouting Crips slogans.

The incident at issue here occurred on August 15 at approximately 4:00 p.m. A green Buick sedan carrying alleged members of the Bloods was traveling down College Road in Fairbanks, followed by friends in another car, Another vehicle variously de-seribed as a gray, silver, or white SUV passed them going the other way, made a U-turn, and pulled up alongside the Buick. Someone in the SUV started shootmg at the Buick and continued to do so while the vehicles raced along for what was later estimated to be two miles.

'No one was mgured in the shooting, but the Buick was significantly damaged. Bullets also passed through two uninvolved. vehicles, narrowly missing their passengers, A bystander walking her bike reported hearing a bullet pass by her head; she jumped mto a ditch to take cover.

Later that evening the police arrested Arron Young. He had a gun in the waistband of his pants and the key to a sflver SUV in his pocket

The police interviewed witnesses from the scene and put out a request for those, with information to come forward. Jason Gaze-wood, a criminal defense attorney and former prosecutor, contacted the police department. to report that he had witnessed part of the gunplay. A police detective visited Gaze— wood's office and showed him a six-person photographic array; Gazewood picked Young as looking most like the man he had seen behind the wheel of the SUV.

A grand jury convened in September 2008. There Gazewood testified about what he had seen. Another witness, Arles Arauz, also identified Young as the driver of the SUV. Although Arauz had told the police immediately after the incident that he was unable to identify the assailants, at the grand jury hearing he picked Young's picture out of a photographic array. But a third grand jury witness, John Anzalone, failed to identify Young and picked another man instead,

The grand jury indicted Young for attempted murder in the first degree and mis *400 conduct involving weapons in the first degree. 600

B. Young's Motion To Suppress Gaze-\_ wood's Identification

Trial was eventually set for January 4, 2010. In late December 2009 Young moved to suppress Gazewood's pretrial and in-court identifications, claiming that the pretrial identification procedure had been unnecessarily suggestive. 5,

The superior court held an evidentiary hearing. Gazewood testified that the police «detective had come to his office about three days after the incident and showed him a six-person photographic array, He testified that he remembered "saying something about ... having a recollection of it being someone of Samoan descent ... before the lineup was brought out,". though he could. not recall whether he said this on the telephone .or after the detective arrived at his office. The detective testified that he did not remember whether Gazewood had identified the driver's race in the phone call.

The photographic array contained photographs of six black men but no Samoans. The detective testified that, because Gazewood was an attorney experienced in criminal law, he did not give Gazewood any fhstructions before showing him the array; he assumed Gazewood would understand the process and its purpose. Gazewood testified that although he was given no instructions, he assumed that the array contained the suspect because he had been involved in many such procedures in the past. He also testified; however, that he did not feel he was required to select someone from among the photos he was shown.

Gazewood testified that he quickly narrowed his choice to two photos, one of which was Young's. Though conflicted, he was most focused on Young; he testified that the way Young's hair was pulled back in the photograph made him "more like the person I'd seen in the vehicle certainly." He testified that he put his finger tentatively on Young's photograph, at which point the detective told him to "trust your instinets." Gazewood testified that the detective's remark terminated his deliberations, and he selected Young as the man who looked most like the one he had seen in the SUV. When asked at the hearing whether he believed the detective was suggesting the desired result, he answered:

Yeah, I ... think he saw me laboring over it and spending a little more time pointing to Mr. Young than the other two, or the other one by the time I had eliminated one of them, And I took it as, you know, you're pointing to this guy more than the others, you know, that's the guy you should identify. ... I took it as that's the guy we waat you to pick,

Gazewood testified that he was leaning toward Young anyway but that the detective's remark "ended this elimination process that I was kind of ... undergoing. ...

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
374 P.3d 395, 2016 Alas. LEXIS 81, 2016 WL 3369222, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/young-v-state-alaska-2016.