Cortez v. State , 220 Md. App. 688 ( 2014 )


Menu:
  •              REPORTED
    IN THE COURT OF SPECIAL APPEALS
    OF MARYLAND
    No. 1952
    September Term, 2013
    ANDRES CORTEZ
    v.
    STATE OF MARYLAND
    Meredith,
    Woodward,
    Alpert, Paul E.
    (Retired, Specially Assigned),
    JJ.
    Opinion by Alpert, J.
    Filed: December 18, 2014
    Andres Cortez, appellant, was convicted by a jury sitting in the Circuit Court for
    Montgomery County of two counts of third-degree sexual offense and one count each of
    conspiracy to commit a sexual offense in the third-degree, second-degree assault, and
    participation in a criminal gang.1 Appellant raises one question on appeal: Did the trial court
    err in denying appellant’s motion to sever his participation in a criminal gang charge from
    his four other charges? For the reasons that follow, we shall affirm the judgments.
    FACTS
    The State’s theory of prosecution was that at a party on October 4, 2012, appellant
    videotaped a sexual assault of the victim by members of the “Little R” gang. The victim, one
    of the men at the party, and several police officers testified for the State. The theory of
    defense was lack of criminal agency. Appellant’s mother testified for the defense. Viewing
    the evidence elicited in the light most favorable to the State, the prevailing party, the
    following was established at trial.
    Over the summer and fall of 2012, Christopher Stultz worked with appellant in the
    kitchen of a restaurant in Montgomery County. In early November, appellant told Stultz that
    he wanted to show him something “funny” and then showed him a video on his cell phone.
    1
    See Md. Code Ann., Crim. Law, § 3-307 (third-degree sexual offense); § 3-203
    (second-degree assault); and § 9-804 (criminalizing participation in a gang).
    The court sentenced appellant to consecutive sentences of ten years of imprisonment,
    all but five suspended, for each third-degree sexual offense; a concurrent ten-year sentence,
    all but five years suspended, for conspiracy; and a consecutive ten-year sentence, all but five
    suspended, for participation in a criminal gang.
    According to Stultz, the video showed three men having sexual intercourse with a woman
    who was “out of it.” Appellant told Stultz that he had videotaped it at a party, and Stultz
    recognized appellant’s voice on the video. Stultz told the owner of the restaurant about the
    video, who in turn called the police.
    A few days later, on November 9, the police executed a search warrant for appellant’s
    home where he lived with his mother. The police recovered a cell phone on the floor of
    appellant’s bedroom. From the cell phone, the police located a video showing a sexual
    assault on a woman by several men. The videographer, who is making comments about the
    assault, is seen touching the buttocks and breasts of the victim while the other men are
    displaying hand signs, tattoos, and shouting “La Erre.” The videographer can be heard
    saying:
    That is Moreno trying to get some pussy, but is not. Laeda, you know
    what I’m saying, you know what I’m saying. That’s [unintelligible] but –
    Mohammed, calm the fuck down. You know what I’m saying. Smile for the
    camera, baby. Let me see some nipples. Sure, let me see some nipple. Let me
    see some boobs. Let me see some boobs. Let me see some [unintelligible].
    That’s the ass cheeks right there. We got it like that. That’s how Morrow’ll
    [sic] be doing it, yeah.
    The police showed Stultz the video, who said it was not the same video that appellant had
    shown him at the restaurant, but it was the same woman and she looked “out of it.” Stultz
    identified appellant’s voice as that on the videotape, as did the owner of the restaurant.2
    2
    Stultz testified that when he spoke to the police he was on probation for public
    intoxication. Three months later he had violated his probation and, he requested, and the
    (continued...)
    2
    Appellant was subsequently arrested and spoke with the police. The lead investigator
    testified that based on his conversations with appellant, he believed that the voice on the
    video was appellant’s voice.
    The police identified and located the victim on the videotape. When she saw the tape,
    she was shocked and upset. She testified that on the afternoon of October 4, 2012, she was
    walking in her neighborhood when a friend invited her to his apartment a couple of buildings
    away where he was having a party. When she arrived, there were about ten or so people
    present. She drank two or three beers, and then the party broke up when a fight erupted
    outside the building involving people at the party. A man from the party invited her and
    some other men to continue the party at another apartment.
    The victim and the other men arrived at the apartment and hung out in the upstairs
    bedroom. While there she drank three beers, leaving the bedroom two or three times to use
    the bathroom, each time leaving her beer behind. At one point she felt “very tired” and
    sleepy, and she asked one of the men to give her a ride home. She was told to lie down, that
    they would drive her home later. The next thing she remembered was waking up the next
    morning. Her cell phone was missing as well as credit cards and cash from her wallet. She
    went downstairs and asked the two men present to drive her home. They refused but gave
    2
    (...continued)
    investigating officer wrote, a letter of recommendation stating that he was helpful in the
    investigation of this case.
    3
    her money to take the bus home. She did not know she had been sexually assaulted and did
    not know who had filmed the video.
    Cecil Burrows testified that he was at a friend’s apartment with appellant and several
    others when the victim entered the party. A few hours later, he left with the victim,
    appellant, and three other men, and they went to his home in Olney. When they ran out of
    beer, he left to get more. He did not remember much about the evening but said he was not
    present when the video of the sexual assault was taken. When the police showed Burrows
    the video, which he said he had never seen, he identified the voice in the video as belonging
    to appellant.
    Detective Troy Tippett of the Montgomery County Police Department was qualified
    as an expert in the field of criminal street gangs and gang activity. He testified that a
    criminal street gang is an association of individuals that band together to engage in criminal
    activity. “Little R” or in Spanish “La Erre” was a gang that appeared in Montgomery County
    in 2006 and was an offshoot of a Chicago gang. He testified that gang members formed an
    “R” with their hand and fingers to represent the gang. When the detective interviewed
    appellant in connection with the assault on the victim, appellant admitted that he brought
    “Little R” to Montgomery County, that he was a member of Little R, and that his nickname
    was “Moro.”3 The detective identified a 2006 photograph of a “tagged” Montgomery County
    middle school with graffiti and the name “Morro” written on a side wall. The detective also
    3
    Appellant’s nickname was transcribed at trial as both “Moro” and “Morro.”
    4
    identified a photograph in which appellant and several others are standing over a tombstone
    of one of the original gang members making the “R” hand signal. Detective Tippett also
    testified to two crimes Little R had committed in the past. In 2009, two members of Little
    R were involved in the stabbing and death of a rival gang member, and in 2012, two
    members of Little R committed an assault on a rival gang member. According to Detective
    Tippett, appellant was not involved in either of those crimes.
    The detective reviewed the videotape and opined that the sexual assault on the victim
    was gang-related. He explained that during the video the men are displaying the “R” hand
    signal and shouting out the name of the gang, “La Erre.” He opined that the victim would
    be viewed as a trophy and recording the incident was memorabilia of the gang’s activities.
    The purpose of the crime was to bolster their gang’s name and to gain respect for their
    members.
    Appellant’s mother testified that the voice on the videotape was not her son’s voice.
    DISCUSSION
    Appellant argues on appeal that the trial court erred in not severing his participation
    in a criminal gang charge from his remaining charges, i.e., two counts of third-degree sexual
    offense, one count of conspiracy to commit third-degree sexual offense, and one count of
    second-degree assault. He argues, as he did below, that the sexual assault crimes were self-
    explanatory and not related to gang participation, and that the gang evidence was unduly
    prejudicial. The State responds that there was no error because evidence of gang activity was
    5
    admissible to prove motive and identity and the evidence was not unduly prejudicial. We
    agree with the State.
    Md. Rule 4-253(c) provides that the court “may” order a separate trial for different
    counts “[i]f it appears that any party will be prejudiced by the joinder for trial of counts[.]”
    Joinder issues are determined by use of two questions. Conyers v. State, 
    345 Md. 525
    , 553
    (1997). The first question is, whether evidence as to each of the accused’s individual
    offenses would be “mutually admissible” at separate trials concerning the offenses? 
    Id.
    Because this question requires a legal conclusion, we give no deference to a trial court’s
    ruling on appeal. 
    Id.
     To resolve this question, the trial court is to apply the “other crimes”
    analysis announced in State v. Faulkner, 
    314 Md. 630
     (1989) and its progeny. 
    Id.
     Originally
    a list of five substantially relevant “exceptions” to the general rule excluding other crimes
    evidence – motive, intent, absence of mistake or accident, identity, or common scheme or
    plan – the list is not exclusive. Oesby v. State, 
    142 Md. App. 144
    , 160 (2002)(citations
    omitted) and Solomon v. State, 
    101 Md. App. 331
    , 353-56 (1994), cert. denied, 
    337 Md. 90
    (1995). Over the years the list has grown with inevitable overlap. Oesby, 142 Md. App. at
    162.
    The second question is, whether “the interest in judicial economy outweigh[s] any
    other arguments favoring severance?” Conyers, 
    345 Md. at 553
    . This question requires a
    balancing of interests by the trial court, and we will only reverse if the trial judge’s decision
    “was a clear abuse of discretion.” 
    Id. at 556
    . To resolve this second question, the trial court
    6
    weighs the likely prejudice against the accused in trying the charges together against
    considerations of judicial economy and efficiency, including the time and resources of both
    the court and the witnesses. Frazier v. State, 
    318 Md. 597
    , 608 (1990)(citing McKnight v.
    State, 
    280 Md. 604
    , 609-10 (1977)).        We note that “once a determination of mutual
    admissibility has been made, any judicial economy that may be had will usually suffice to
    permit joinder unless other non-evidentiary factors weigh against joinder.” Conyers, 
    345 Md. at 556
    . “If the answer to both questions is yes, then joinder of offenses . . . is
    appropriate.” 
    Id. at 553
    .
    As an initial matter, two recent gang-related cases suggest that before admission of
    gang evidence, the State must meet a threshold burden of proving that a nexus between the
    crime(s) for which the defendant is on trial and gang membership exist. See Burris v. State,
    
    435 Md. 370
    , 390-91 (2013)(citing Guiterrez v. State, 
    423 Md. 476
    , 496 (2011)(to transform
    the gang membership “from an impermissible prior bad act to a concrete component of the
    crime charged,” the State must prove as a threshold matter that the crime is gang-related)).
    While it is unclear whether that requirement applies in severance/joinder cases, even if it is
    a requirement, it was met here. The men in the video can be seen displaying gang hand-signs
    and yelling out the name of the gang. Gang expert Detective Tippett explained that the
    sexual attack was gang-related as it “speaks directly to the gang’s desire to bolster their name
    and display that fear and intimidation factor as it relates to an individual and the victim.”
    7
    We now turn to the first question in a joinder analysis. We look to whether the crimes
    were mutually admissible – whether they had special relevance. Clearly, evidence that the
    sexual assault was gang-related was admissible to prove motive for the crime and appellant’s
    identity. Appellant does not argue to the contrary. Rather, appellant focuses his attack on
    the second question, arguing that admission of the gang-related evidence was too prejudicial.
    Appellant relies heavily on Burris, supra, and Guiterrez, supra, to support his argument, but
    his reliance is misplaced. On the contrary, after reviewing those cases and the transcript we
    are persuaded that the gang evidence was well-tailored to the facts of this case and not
    unduly prejudicial.
    In Burris, Burris was convicted of first-degree murder and use of a handgun. Prior
    to trial, the State moved to introduce the testimony of a gang expert who was to identify
    Burris as a member of a violent gang and explain Burris’s motive in the killing – that he
    killed the victim at the direction of Burris’s gang boss over an unpaid debt. The trial court
    ruled the evidence admissible to prove motive. At trial, the State’s expert: 1) testified that
    the Black Guerilla Family dealt narcotics in prison, controlled Maryland prisons, and
    concealed their illicit activities by speaking Swahili in prison, and 2) described Burris’s
    numerous gang tattoos which suggested that he had a propensity to murder. The Court of
    Appeals reversed Burris’s convictions. The Court found that the evidence was highly
    prejudicial and lacked substantial relevant value because the facts of the case did not
    8
    implicate a prison environment and the gang expert failed to link Burris’s motive, to kill in
    an effort to collect a debt, with gang membership. Burris, 435 Md. at 394-97.
    In Gutierrez, Gutierrez was convicted of first-degree murder. At his trial, the State
    introduced an expert who testified that: 1) MS-13 was the most violent gang he had seen in
    the past several years, 2) the gang is allied with the Mexican Mafia, 3) if a non-gang member
    identified himself as a member of MS-13 he could be subject to punishment up to death, 4)
    when responding to criticism of their gang, MS-13 might react with violence up to death, and
    5) to become a member of MS-13, that person must be “jumped in” or beaten by other gang
    members.    Except for the first statement, the Court of Appeals found the statements
    admissible – they were probative to explain Guiterrez’s and others actions leading up to and
    including the murder, and they were not unduly prejudicial. The Court held, however, that
    the first statement was more prejudicial than probative because it had no relevance to the
    crimes charged and was unnecessarily inflammatory. Nonetheless, the Court viewed the
    statement as harmless. Gutierrez, 
    423 Md. at 499
    .
    As the State correctly notes, neither Burris nor Gutierrez concerned joinder but rather
    were concerned with the admission of other crimes (gang-related) evidence. The procedural
    issue of joinder/severance and the evidentiary issue of the admissibility of “other crimes”
    evidence are two distinct, albeit partially overlapping legal doctrines calling for different
    analyses. Solomon, 101 Md. App. at 345 (“That particular weighing exercise [used in other
    crimes analysis] would also be inapplicable to a joinder/severance determination.”). In
    9
    contrast, while the possible prejudice to a defendant from a joint trial is one of the factors to
    be weighed, “judicial economy is a heavy counterweight on the joinder/severance scales.”
    Id. at 346. Here, there were significant benefits to the State of joinder –the conservation of
    judicial resources and public funds. A unitary trial requires a single courtroom, judge, and
    courtroom personnel. Only one group of jurors need serve. In addition, the public is served
    by the reduced delay on disposition of criminal charges both in trial and through the appellate
    process. Here, the judicial economy considerations of joining the charges outweighed the
    minimal likelihood of prejudice.
    For the reasons set out above, we find no error by the trial court in denying appellant’s
    motion to sever his participation in a criminal gang charge from his other charges.
    JUDGMENTS AFFIRMED.
    COSTS TO BE PAID BY APPELLANT.
    10
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 1952-13

Citation Numbers: 220 Md. App. 688, 105 A.3d 589, 2014 Md. App. LEXIS 156

Judges: Alpert

Filed Date: 12/18/2014

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 11/10/2024