State of Minnesota v. Timothy Denzel Cross ( 2014 )


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  •                         This opinion will be unpublished and
    may not be cited except as provided by
    Minn. Stat. § 480A.08, subd. 3 (2012).
    STATE OF MINNESOTA
    IN COURT OF APPEALS
    A13-2329
    State of Minnesota,
    Respondent,
    vs.
    Timothy Denzel Cross,
    Appellant.
    Filed December 22, 2014
    Affirmed; motion denied
    Rodenberg, Judge
    Ramsey County District Court
    File No. 62-CR-12-9924
    Lori Swanson, Attorney General, St. Paul, Minnesota; and
    John J. Choi, Ramsey County Attorney, Thomas R. Ragatz, Assistant County Attorney,
    St. Paul, Minnesota (for respondent)
    Cathryn Middlebrook, Chief Appellate Public Defender, Bethany L. O’Neill, Special
    Assistant Public Defender, St. Paul, Minnesota (for appellant)
    Considered and decided by Rodenberg, Presiding Judge; Johnson, Judge; and
    Hooten, Judge.
    UNPUBLISHED OPINION
    RODENBERG, Judge
    Appellant challenges his convictions of two counts of aiding and abetting sex
    trafficking (one count being for trafficking of an individual under 18), unauthorized
    possession of a firearm and second-degree assault, arguing that the district court erred in
    not granting his motions for mistrial. He also argues that the district court plainly erred
    in not sua sponte declaring inadmissible other-acts evidence and in not finding
    prosecutorial misconduct.    Additionally, appellant argues that the cumulative errors
    deprived him of a fair trial. Respondent moves to strike portions of appellant’s reply
    brief. We affirm the district court and deny respondent’s motion.
    FACTS
    On June 15, 2012, L.B., an 18-year-old resident of Duluth, asked her friend J.S., a
    16-year-old from Superior, Wisconsin, to accompany her on a bus ride from the Duluth
    area to the Twin Cities. L.B. told J.S. that L.B. was travelling to the Twin Cities to meet
    up with her boyfriend, Fonati Diggs, appellant’s co-defendant at trial. J.S. agreed, and
    L.B. purchased both of their bus tickets.
    Diggs and appellant Timothy Denzel Cross met J.S. and L.B. at the bus station.
    Appellant drove Diggs, J.S. and L.B. to a motel in St. Paul. At the motel, appellant and
    Diggs asked their friend, C.P., to rent two motel rooms because neither appellant nor
    Diggs had IDs. C.P. booked the rooms using cash from appellant and Diggs.
    J.S. and L.B. both testified that they were separated on their arrival at the hotel,
    one of them in each motel room. J.S. testified that appellant forced her to have sex with
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    him. J.S. also testified that she was forced to have sex with two other men and was
    forced to do other sex acts with Diggs.
    L.B. testified that she was forced to have sex with both appellant and Diggs. The
    next day, appellant and Diggs required J.S. and L.B. to “walk the street” while appellant
    and Diggs followed close behind. J.S. and L.B. understood they were expected to entice
    men to have sex with them for money. But L.B. became sick and vomited on the
    sidewalk. Appellant and Diggs picked up L.B. but required J.S. to continue to walk the
    street by herself.
    When appellant and Diggs drove away with L.B., J.S. used a cell phone still in her
    possession to call family members. J.S.’s mother answered her call and advised her to
    call the police. Because J.S. was attempting to hide from appellant’s and Digg’s sight,
    and because she was unfamiliar with St. Paul, it took the police some time to find her.
    Eventually, however, the police found J.S., and her mother picked her up later that night.
    Meanwhile, and unable to find J.S., appellant, Diggs, and L.B. slept in a car. The
    next day, L.B. was again required to “go on the street.” L.B. testified that Diggs told her
    “to charge $40 for a half-hour.” L.B. testified that when she made money by having sex
    with men, she was supposed to give it to Diggs. L.B. testified that during the week she
    was with appellant and Diggs, she had sex with at least six men for money.
    One day during that week, Diggs was out of town and L.B. testified that appellant
    “pretty much acted like my pimp” for that day. Some time that day, appellant assaulted
    L.B. by punching her in the face, giving L.B. a black eye.         C.P. testified that she
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    witnessed appellant brandishing a gun in a threatening manner in front of L.B. C.P. and
    S.G. also testified that they knew appellant and Diggs were prostituting L.B.
    Appellant was charged with two counts of engaging in sex trafficking of an
    individual in violation of 
    Minn. Stat. § 609.322
    , subd. 1(a)(4), (b)(2) (2012), possession
    of a firearm by an ineligible person in violation of 
    Minn. Stat. § 624.713
    , subd. 1(2)
    (2012), and two counts of second-degree assault with a dangerous weapon in violation of
    
    Minn. Stat. § 609.222
    , subd. 1 (2012). Appellant’s case was joined with Diggs’s case for
    trial to a jury.
    At trial, L.B. testified, without solicitation, that she believed appellant and Diggs
    were in a gang.1 Diggs’s attorney objected, and the district court overruled the objection.
    Diggs’s attorney moved for a mistrial and the district court denied the motion. During
    the trial testimony of Sergeant Bandemer, one of the investigators, the sergeant testified
    in response to an open-ended question that S.G. believed appellant and Diggs to be
    members of a gang. Defense counsel objected, and the objection was sustained.
    At trial, all of the attorneys questioned multiple witnesses concerning the
    uncharged sex offenses alleged by L.B. and J.S. Counsel for appellant and Diggs each
    argued that even the state did not believe L.B. and J.S., because the state did not charge
    these other sex crimes. The state also provided testimony by Sergeant Brandemer that
    1
    L.B. testified that at the motel on the first night in the Twin Cities, appellant and Diggs
    allowed their friends to enter L.B.’s motel room and force sex on her. When asked,
    “What did you think about the fact of him letting other men come into your room?”, L.B.
    responded, “When we [her and Diggs] were up in Duluth, he was always, like, saying
    stuff about he was in a gang and everything.” The prosecutor interrupted L.B.’s answer
    and attempted to clarify the question, but, again, L.B. testified, “I just pretty much was,
    like, I’m not going to fight, because they’re probably all in the gang, too.”
    4
    sex is often used in sex-trafficking cases as a “breakdown of the young girl [and] is one
    of the first things that a trafficker will do.”      Sergeant Bandemer testified that this
    “breakdown” allows the traffickers to “say that she’s their property now and that she’s
    the one that’s going to be prostituting for them.” He testified without objection that
    traffickers “break down young girls’ . . . will to fight.”
    The jury found appellant guilty of aiding and abetting sex trafficking of an
    individual under 18, aiding and abetting sex trafficking, possession of a firearm by an
    ineligible person, and second-degree assault of L.B. The jury acquitted appellant of
    second-degree assault of J.S. The jury also found the following aggravating factors to
    have been proven: both J.S. and L.B. suffered bodily harm during the commission of the
    sex-trafficking offense and both sex-trafficking offenses involved “more than one sex-
    trafficking victim.”
    At the sentencing hearing, the district court sentenced appellant to prison for 158
    months on count I; for 96 months on count III; for 60 months for the possession of a
    firearm by an ineligible person; and for 60 months for second-degree assault. The
    sentences for counts I and III were upward departures based on the jury’s finding of
    aggravating factors and were sentenced consecutively. Counts V and VI were sentenced
    concurrently. The district court reasoned:
    I’m aware of the fact—I’m aware of [appellant’s] age;
    however, the testimony in the trial was shocking, to say the
    least. [Appellant] and Mr. Diggs took advantage of two very
    vulnerable, young girls . . . who were looking for friendship
    and looking for somebody to trust. They thought those
    persons were [appellant] and Mr. Diggs. They, unfortunately,
    lured them in and used them to their own advantage and
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    really treated these young women in just a shocking way and,
    in the view of the Court, worse than they would treat any of
    their property.
    This appeal followed.
    DECISION
    I.
    On appeal, appellant argues that the evidence of J.S. and L.B. being raped at the
    motel rooms was impermissible other-acts evidence under Minnesota Rules of Evidence
    404(b), that admission of that evidence was plainly erroneous, and that the testimony
    regarding appellant and Diggs belonging to a gang was similarly impermissible other-acts
    evidence. Additionally, appellant claims that the prosecutor committed misconduct in his
    closing statement by using the word “rape,” shifting the burden of proof by asking the
    jury in one instance to determine “guilt or innocence,” commenting on appellant’s choice
    not to testify, misstating facts, and improperly vouching for a witness. Appellant also
    argues that the imposition of consecutive sentences was erroneous because it
    “exaggerates the criminality of appellant’s conduct.”
    Appellant argues that the district court plainly erred in permitting testimony and
    argument relating to the rape of J.S. and L.B. and that it erred in admitting evidence that
    appellant and Diggs were in a gang. Evidence of prior bad acts of a defendant is
    generally inadmissible, with very narrow exceptions. Minn. R. Evid. 404(b); see also
    State v. Ness, 
    707 N.W.2d 676
    , 685 (Minn. 2006). Such prior-bad-acts evidence is often
    referred to as Spreigl evidence, after State v. Spreigl, 
    272 Minn. 488
    , 
    139 N.W.2d 167
    (1965). Failure to object to Spreigl evidence generally constitutes a waiver of the right to
    6
    appeal unless the defendant can show plain error. State v. Washington, 
    693 N.W.2d 195
    ,
    204 (Minn. 2005). Plain error requires the complaining party to show that the district
    court (1) committed error, (2) the error committed was plain, and (3) the error affects the
    defendant’s substantial rights. 
    Id.
     Even then, an appellate court will correct the error
    only when “it seriously affects the fairness, integrity[,] or public reputation of judicial
    proceedings.” 
    Id.
     (quotation omitted).
    In State v. Vick, the Minnesota Supreme Court held that the district court’s
    decision not to sua sponte strike “unnoticed Spreigl evidence” did not constitute plain
    error. 
    632 N.W.2d 676
    , 685 (Minn. 2001). The supreme court held that, even if the
    district court’s decision not to sua sponte strike the evidence was in error, there were
    many factors tending to show that the admitted evidence did not “unfairly infect[] the
    trial.” 
    Id. at 686
    . The supreme court noted the following: that the testimony was
    introduced without objection; that the district court cautioned the jury that the defendant
    was not being charged for the acts which defendant challenged as improper Spreigl
    evidence; and that the defendant could have anticipated the other-bad-acts evidence
    which had not surprised the defendant. 
    Id.
     Finally, the supreme court observed that the
    acts testified to were “not more inflammatory than the charged incident.” 
    Id.
    As in Vick, the question presented here is not whether the evidence of appellant
    forcing sex on J.S. and L.B would have been admissible had there been an objection to it.
    Rather, the question is whether the district court’s “failure to sua sponte strike the
    testimony or provide a cautionary instruction constituted plain error.” Vick, 632 N.W.2d
    at 685. In order to find that the district court committed plain error, “the trial error must
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    have been so clear under applicable law . . . and so prejudicial to the defendant’s right to
    a fair trial, that the defendant’s failure to object—and thereby present the trial court with
    an opportunity to avoid prejudice—should not forfeit his right to a remedy.” State v.
    Manthey, 
    711 N.W.2d 498
    , 504 (Minn. 2006) (quotation omitted).
    The claimed error in admitting evidence and argument concerning the uncharged
    sex crimes is not at all clear under applicable law. As in Vick, none of the attorneys
    objected to any of the evidence offered to prove what happened on the night of June 15.
    While the district court was not asked to give a cautionary jury instruction, respondent’s
    counsel, Diggs’s counsel, and appellant’s counsel all admonished the jury that appellant
    and Diggs were not being charged with rape. Here, not only was appellant on notice of
    respondent’s intention to use evidence relating to the uncharged sex offenses, but counsel
    for appellant and Diggs also emphasized that evidence in arguing to the jury that J.S. and
    L.B. were not credible. Although allegations of rape are certainly inflammatory, they are
    seemingly no more inflammatory than are allegations that appellant forced L.B. and J.S.,
    who was a minor, to prostitute themselves.
    Further, it was not only respondent who elicited testimony about what happened in
    the motel and referred to those actions as “rape.” On cross-examination of J.S. and L.B.,
    counsel elicited extensive testimony from J.S. and L.B. about what happened in the motel
    on the night of June 15. Appellant relied on this testimony to argue to the jury in closing
    that J.S. and L.B. were lying, that being raped is not something J.S. or L.B. could forget,
    and that if the state actually believed J.S. and L.B. to be truthful, this would have been “a
    rape case.” Therefore, appellant cannot show that the district court committed plain error
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    by choosing not to intervene. Given that the evidence and argument concerning the
    uncharged sex crimes were part of appellant’s defense strategy, and in the absence of any
    objection, the district court properly refrained from injecting itself into the trial and
    interfering with the evident defense strategy.
    Additionally, it appears likely that at least some of the evidence concerning what
    happened at the motel on June 15, if objected to, would not have been considered
    inadmissible other-bad-acts evidence. When evidence is offered to show that “two or
    more offenses are linked together in point of time or circumstances so that one cannot be
    fully shown without proving the other,” that evidence is admissible under the immediate
    episode exception to Spreigl. State v. Riddley, 
    776 N.W.2d 419
    , 425 (Minn. 2009). If
    appellant had objected to the admission of testimony relating to what happened in the
    motel on June 15, respondent certainly would have argued that the June 15 offenses and
    the charged offenses were “linked together in point of time or circumstance.”           
    Id.
    Respondent doubtless would have argued that the evidence demonstrated why and how
    appellant and Diggs were able to prostitute J.S. and L.B. See 
    id.
     But because there was
    no objection, that argument was never made. Having not been called upon to decide
    what, at the very least, would have been a close question under Riddley, the district court
    did not plainly err.
    Appellant also argues that the district court abused its discretion when it allowed
    L.B. and Sergeant Bandemer to testify that appellant and Diggs were in a gang. There
    were three fleeting references to appellant and Diggs being in a gang. There were
    objections to two of those references. As to the unobjected-to reference, we see no plain
    9
    error.    Unlike State v. Carlson, 
    208 N.W.2d 553
     (Minn. 1978), the unobjected-to
    reference was fleeting and the district court properly refrained from intervening sua
    sponte. Doing so might have drawn even more attention to the otherwise fleeting gang
    reference.
    As to one of the remaining references, appellant objected and the objection was
    sustained. The district court asked appellant if he or Diggs wanted a curative instruction,
    and both declined that offer. Appellant received the relief he requested and to which he
    was entitled concerning that reference.
    The remaining reference occurred during L.B.’s testimony and the objection was
    overruled. After L.B.’s testimony, appellant moved for a mistrial and that motion was
    denied. We review the district court’s decision not to grant a mistrial for an abuse of
    discretion. State v. Spann, 
    574 N.W.2d 47
    , 52 (Minn. 1998). Further, a mistrial “should
    not be granted unless there is a reasonable probability that the outcome of the trial would
    be different.” 
    Id. at 53
    . Here, the reference by L.B. to gang membership was arguably
    permissible to allow the jury to understand why L.B. did not fight or flee from the motel
    room, and was, in any event, a fleeting reference. The district court has discretion in
    ruling on objections and we see no abuse of that discretion in allowing the testimony in
    this context. Additionally, in the face of the other overwhelming evidence of appellant’s
    guilt, any error was harmless. See State v. Shoen, 
    598 N.W.2d 370
    , 377 (Minn. 1999)
    (holding that an error is harmless when the guilty verdict rendered is “surely
    unattributable” to the error). Appellant is not entitled to relief on this ground.
    10
    II.
    Appellant argues that the prosecutor engaged in multiple instances of misconduct.
    If there is prosecutorial misconduct, we consider whether the misconduct was harmless
    beyond a reasonable doubt. State v. Roman Nose, 
    667 N.W.2d 386
    , 401 (Minn. 2003).
    The claim of misconduct with the most merit is that the prosecutor shifted the
    burden of proof in arguing that the jury should decide “guilt or innocence.”            The
    prosecutor made the statement to the jury during closing arguments. Appellant objected,
    and before the district court could make a ruling, the prosecutor stated, “I’ll reword it.”
    She proceeded to finish her closing statement without further objection. In State v.
    Henderson, the supreme court held that the district judge’s instructions to the jury that the
    defendant did not have to prove innocence likely cured a similar error in a prosecutor’s
    closing statement. 
    620 N.W.2d 688
    , 703 (Minn. 2001). While the district court did not
    give a curative instruction in this case, we observe that doing so might well have
    compounded what appears to us to have been an unintentional misstatement that was
    immediately and effectively corrected by the prosecutor herself.          The prosecutor’s
    restatement of the burden—“You’re being asked to find either guilty or not guilty”—
    raised no further objection, and the parties and the district court seem to have believed
    this restatement to be adequate. The prosecutor’s misstatement was harmless beyond a
    reasonable doubt.
    Appellant argues that the prosecutor misstated facts during closing when she
    stated without objection that L.B. “had no idea what was waiting for [her], at all” when
    she arrived in the Twin Cities. Appellant argues that this is misconduct because “the
    11
    prosecutor knew that L.B. was a victim in four other sex trafficking cases.” However,
    L.B.’s involvement in other sex trafficking cases was never presented to the jury in this
    case. And L.B. testified that she travelled to the Twin Cities to see Diggs, whom she
    considered her boyfriend. Based on the record evidence in this case, the prosecutor’s
    statement was neither error nor misconduct.
    Appellant makes other claims of prosecutorial misconduct, none of which were
    brought to the district court’s attention by objection. On careful review, we see no merit
    to any of those claims of plain error.
    Appellant argues that the cumulative effect of the claimed trial errors deprived him
    of a fair trial. But, because there was no plain error in admitting the rape evidence,
    because the admission of two fleeting references to gang involvement was not erroneous,
    and, in any event, any error concerning it was harmless, and because there was no
    prosecutorial misconduct, there was no cumulative error that deprived appellant of his
    fair trial rights.
    III.
    Appellant also challenges his sentences on appeal. Although appellant does not
    challenge the upward departures, and agrees that the consecutive sentences imposed by
    the district court are permissive, he argues that the sentence “exaggerate[ed] the
    criminality of appellant’s conduct.” Our review of a district court’s decision to impose
    consecutive sentences when permissible is for an abuse of discretion.              State v.
    Richardson, 
    670 N.W.2d 267
    , 284 (Minn. 2003).              It is permissive to impose a
    consecutive sentence when there are multiple victims. 
    Id.
    12
    Appellant cites to no cases showing that this consecutive sentence for multiple
    victims exaggerated the criminality of appellant’s conduct. To be fair, there is very little
    Minnesota caselaw concerning sentencing in sex-trafficking cases. Appellant argues that
    the consecutive sentences were “disproportionate to the severity of appellant’s
    involvement in the crimes” and that Diggs was primarily responsible for these crimes.
    Further, appellant points out that J.S. never actually engaged in prostitution because she
    was able to call 911 and leave appellant and Diggs after L.B. got sick. None of these
    arguments was presented to the district court. The only argument appellant made to the
    district court was that he is young and any sentence longer than 15 years would serve no
    societal purpose.
    While Diggs arguably is more culpable than appellant, appellant played an active
    role in the crimes.    He was a significant actor in a sex-trafficking operation that
    victimized two young women, one of whom is a minor. It was within the district court’s
    discretion to sentence appellant to consecutive sentences, and we see no abuse of that
    discretion.
    IV.
    Respondent filed a “Motion To Strike New Argument From Reply Brief,” arguing
    that appellant’s principal brief failed to reference the plain-error standard in arguing that
    the district court’s decision to admit Spreigl evidence was erroneous.          Appellant’s
    principal brief argued that the abuse-of-discretion standard should be applied.
    Respondent’s brief argued that the plain-error standard applies. Appellant’s reply brief
    accepts and applies the plain-error standard advanced by respondent. Respondent argues
    13
    that allowing appellant to accept in his reply brief the standard of review advanced by
    respondent’s brief “would put the State in an impossible position: either it does not make
    a waiver argument and thereby waives such an argument, or it makes a waiver argument
    and thereby creates the opportunity for the appellant to make a plain-error argument for
    the first time in a reply brief.”
    This court and the Minnesota Supreme Court have stated that arguments raised for
    the first time in the reply brief are waived. See State v. Yang, 
    774 N.W.2d 539
    , 558
    (Minn. 2009) (citing to the rules of civil appellate procedure to support the holding that
    the reply brief is limited to any new subject matter raised in the respondent’s brief and
    because it was not raised in the respondent’s brief or the appellant’s principal brief it was
    waived), State v. Stockwell, 
    770 N.W.2d 533
    , 541 (Minn. App. 2009) (“Because appellant
    failed to raise this issue in her principal brief, we do not address this issue on appeal.”).
    In those cases, the respondent would have been entirely blind-sided by the issue argued in
    the reply brief and unable to respond. Here, however, appellant’s failure to argue the
    plain-error standard of review in his principal brief did not deprive respondent of notice
    or the opportunity to effectively brief the issue.      Respondent’s brief of the proper
    standard of review was so effective, in fact, that appellant’s reply brief concedes the issue
    of the proper standard. Respondent’s motion to strike is denied.
    Affirmed; motion denied.
    14
    

Document Info

Docket Number: A13-2329

Filed Date: 12/22/2014

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 4/17/2021