State v. Reed ( 2021 )


Menu:
  •                      NOTICE: NOT FOR OFFICIAL PUBLICATION.
    UNDER ARIZONA RULE OF THE SUPREME COURT 111(c), THIS DECISION IS NOT PRECEDENTIAL
    AND MAY BE CITED ONLY AS AUTHORIZED BY RULE.
    IN THE
    ARIZONA COURT OF APPEALS
    DIVISION ONE
    STATE OF ARIZONA, Appellee,
    v.
    GEORGE M. REED, Appellant.
    No. 1 CA-CR 19-0701
    FILED 03-30-2021
    Appeal from the Superior Court in Maricopa County
    No. CR2016-005718-001
    The Honorable Sally Schneider Duncan, Judge
    AFFIRMED
    COUNSEL
    Arizona Attorney General’s Office, Phoenix
    By Michael Valenzuela
    Counsel for Appellee
    The Law Office of Kyle T. Green, Tempe
    By Kyle T. Green
    Counsel for Appellant
    STATE v. REED
    Decision of the Court
    MEMORANDUM DECISION
    Judge Kent E. Cattani delivered the decision of the Court, in which
    Presiding Judge Randall M. Howe and Judge Cynthia J. Bailey joined.
    C A T T A N I, Judge:
    ¶1            George M. Reed appeals his conviction and sentence for sale
    or transportation of narcotic drugs (heroin), a class 2 felony. For reasons
    that follow, we affirm.
    FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    ¶2            In 2016, detectives from the Arizona Department of Public
    Safety and Phoenix Police Department conducted a year-long investigation
    of illegal drug activity at an apartment complex. Undercover detectives
    identified and began using Eddie Flores, who lived at the complex, as a
    “middleman” to procure drugs from others in the complex.
    ¶3           In July 2016, detectives met Flores outside of the apartment he
    shared with Reed and asked to buy a quarter ounce of heroin. Flores
    telephoned someone to obtain the drugs, and a short time later, Reed
    arrived and walked into the apartment. Flores followed Reed into the
    apartment. A few minutes later, Flores returned and delivered a bag of
    heroin to the detectives. The detectives gave Flores an extra $10 for
    arranging the deal.
    ¶4            In August 2016, a detective sent a text message to Flores
    saying he had a friend who wanted to purchase “a ball from OG Reed.”
    The detective later testified that “ball” meant 3.5 grams of heroin and that
    “OG Reed” was Reed’s nickname. Later that day, detectives met Flores at
    the apartment complex, and Flores told them they could meet Reed at
    another location to get the heroin. Flores then made a phone call to Reed,
    and the detectives heard Flores tell him “they just picked me up,” then ask
    Reed if he wanted to meet at a gas station. The detectives recorded the call.
    ¶5            The detectives drove Flores to the gas station and waited in
    the parking lot. While they were waiting for Reed, the detectives gave
    Flores $175 for the heroin. Reed eventually pulled up in a van, and Flores
    walked over to the van and got in the front passenger seat. Flores then
    returned to the detectives’ car with a small plastic bag containing heroin.
    2
    STATE v. REED
    Decision of the Court
    ¶6             The State charged Reed, as a principal or an accomplice, with
    two counts of sale or transportation of narcotic drugs—the first count for
    the July 2016 sale and the second count for the August 2016 sale. The jury
    acquitted Reed of the first count but convicted him of the second count. The
    superior court sentenced Reed as a repetitive offender on felony release at
    the time of the offense to 14 years’ imprisonment.                See A.R.S.
    §§ 13-703(J), -708(D).
    ¶7            Reed appealed, and we have jurisdiction under A.R.S. § 13-
    4033(A)(1).
    DISCUSSION
    I.     Sufficiency of the Evidence.
    ¶8            Reed argues that the evidence did not support his conviction,
    asserting that the State did not establish that he intended to sell drugs to the
    detectives. We determine de novo whether the evidence supports a
    conviction, viewing the facts in the light most favorable to sustaining the
    verdict. State v. Burns, 
    237 Ariz. 1
    , 20, ¶ 72 (2015).
    ¶9            We review this type of claim by assessing whether substantial
    evidence supports the jury’s findings. State v. Tison, 
    129 Ariz. 546
    , 552
    (1981). Evidence is substantial if reasonable jurors could conclude that it
    supports a finding of guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. State v. West, 
    226 Ariz. 559
    , 562, ¶ 16 (2011).
    ¶10           To convict Reed, the State had to prove that he knowingly
    transported for sale, offered to transport for sale, sold, transferred, or
    offered to sell or transfer a narcotic drug or was an accomplice in such a
    transaction. A.R.S. §§ 13-3408(A)(7), -303(A)(3). An accomplice is someone
    who intendeds to aid or counsel another person in planning or committing
    an offense or “[p]rovides means or opportunity to another person to
    commit the offense.” A.R.S. § 13-301(2), (3). Generally, criminal intent is
    shown by circumstantial evidence because it reflects a defendant’s “state of
    mind,” State v. Bearup, 
    221 Ariz. 163
    , 167, ¶ 16 (2009) (quoting State v.
    Routhier, 
    137 Ariz. 90
    , 99 (1983)), and we do not distinguish “between the
    probative value of direct and circumstantial evidence” in assessing the
    defendant’s state of mind. See State v. Bible, 
    175 Ariz. 549
    , 560 n.1 (1993).
    ¶11           Reed does not challenge the State’s evidence showing that
    Flores sold heroin to the detectives or that he provided heroin to Flores. He
    instead argues that (1) the State did not present evidence that he knew
    Flores would sell the heroin to the detectives or that he intended to aide
    3
    STATE v. REED
    Decision of the Court
    Flores in the sale of the heroin, and (2) his sale or transfer of drugs to Flores
    was a discrete transaction different from Flores’s sale to the detectives.
    ¶12           Both of Reed’s arguments fail because the State proffered
    evidence that Reed and Flores were accomplices selling heroin to the
    detectives. First, the quantity of drugs involved in the transaction
    permitted the jury to infer Reed’s knowledge of Flores’s sale to the
    detectives. And Flores contacted Reed after a detective texted Flores and
    asked to buy drugs from “OG Reed.” The detective testified that he told
    Flores he wanted to buy heroin from Reed because Reed was someone he
    could trust, further explaining at trial that he “always ask[ed] for a large
    quantity of heroin in order to find out who the main dealer was in the
    complex.” The detective’s requested quantity of heroin matched the
    amount Reed gave Flores, and the jury could reasonably infer that Reed
    knew that Flores was not intending to keep the heroin for his personal use
    based on the quantity involved. See, e.g., State v. Cheramie, 
    218 Ariz. 447
    ,
    450, ¶ 18 (2008); State v. Arce, 
    107 Ariz. 156
    , 161–62 (1971).
    ¶13            Additionally, Flores’s transactions were directly traceable to
    Reed. Although each transfer was arguably a discrete event, Reed was
    involved in the overall transaction with the detectives. See, e.g., State v
    Brown, 
    217 Ariz. 617
    , 620–21, ¶ 10 (App. 2008). After Flores told the
    detectives they could meet Reed somewhere else to get the heroin, Flores
    called Reed, telling him that “they just picked me up,” and that they would
    meet him at a convenience store. Once Reed arrived, Flores approached
    Reed’s van, and Reed gave him the heroin. Flores later told the detectives
    that if Reed “didn’t like something, he would have driven off,” but he did
    not do so, and one of the detectives testified that he looked at Reed, the
    driver and only occupant of the van, for a few seconds before Reed left the
    parking lot. And finally, although the jurors acquitted Reed of the charge
    relating to the July sale, they heard evidence of his involvement in that sale.
    The acquittal did not prevent the jury from considering this other-act
    evidence because it was properly admitted under a lesser standard of proof
    than that required for conviction of the offense. Cf. State v. Yonkman, 
    233 Ariz. 369
    , 374, ¶ 15 (App. 2013).
    ¶14           Based on this evidence, a reasonable juror could infer that
    Reed promoted or facilitated the August 2016 transaction or provided the
    means for its occurrence. See, e.g., Cheramie, 218 Ariz. at 450, ¶ 18; see also
    State v. McNair, 
    141 Ariz. 475
    , 480–81 (1984) (noting that a jury can infer
    criminal intent from the relationship of the parties and their conduct before
    the crime occurred). Accordingly, Reed’s conviction is supported by
    substantial evidence.
    4
    STATE v. REED
    Decision of the Court
    II.    Alleged Due-Process Violations Under A.R.S. § 13-303(A)(3).
    ¶15             For the first time on appeal, Reed argues that he was
    convicted “under a natural and probable or reasonably foreseeable
    consequence theory” and that his conviction on that basis violates due
    process. Reed asserts that (1) a jury instruction on the natural and probable
    or reasonably foreseeable consequences doctrine allowed the jurors to
    apply a lesser mens rea in convicting him as an accomplice than the mens
    rea required for a principal, and (2) the language describing the reasonably
    foreseeable consequences doctrine in A.R.S. § 13-303(A)(3), which the jury
    instruction tracked, is unconstitutionally vague. Because Reed did not
    object at trial, we review this issue only for fundamental, prejudicial error.
    See State v. Escalante, 
    245 Ariz. 135
    , 140, 142, ¶¶ 12, 21 (2018).
    ¶16            Section 13-303(A)(3) imposes criminal liability for the actions
    of another person if the defendant is an accomplice to the other’s offense,
    and it extends accomplice liability to “include[] any offense that is a natural
    and probable or reasonably foreseeable consequence of the offense for
    which the person was an accomplice.” But here, Reed was not convicted
    under the reasonably foreseeable consequences theory of liability. As
    discussed above, substantial evidence that established Reed was Flores’s
    accomplice in the sale or transportation of a narcotic drug. The prosecutor
    never argued to the jurors that Reed was guilty under the reasonably
    foreseeable consequences doctrine, and there was no other offense of which
    the sale to the detectives was a reasonably foreseeable consequence.
    Instead, Reed’s conduct in selling heroin to the detectives constituted “the
    offense for which [Reed] was an accomplice.” See State v. Lee, 
    236 Ariz. 377
    ,
    382, ¶ 16 (App. 2014). Because Reed was convicted as an accomplice of
    Flores in the commission of the drug offense itself (not of some other offense
    resulting in the drug offense, or vice versa), the challenged aspect of the
    statute was not at issue, and we need not address his remaining arguments
    challenging its constitutionality.
    CONCLUSION
    ¶17           For the foregoing reasons, we affirm Reed’s conviction and
    sentence.
    AMY M. WOOD • Clerk of the Court
    FILED:    HB
    5
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 1 CA-CR 19-0701

Filed Date: 3/30/2021

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 3/30/2021