State of Minnesota v. Adolph Donte Valentine ( 2014 )


Menu:
  •                           This opinion will be unpublished and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
    A13-1930
    State of Minnesota,
    Respondent,
    vs.
    Adolph Donte Valentine,
    Appellant.
    Filed December 1, 2014
    Affirmed
    Smith, Judge
    Olmsted County District Court
    File No. 55-CR-12-2784
    Lori Swanson, Attorney General, St. Paul, Minnesota; and
    Mark A. Ostrem, Olmsted County Attorney, James P. Spencer, Assistant County
    Attorney, Rochester, Minnesota (for respondent)
    Cathryn Middlebrook, Chief Appellate Public Defender, Rachel F. Bond, Assistant
    Public Defender, St. Paul, Minnesota (for appellant)
    Considered and decided by Smith, Presiding Judge; Larkin, Judge; and Bjorkman,
    Judge.
    UNPUBLISHED OPINION
    SMITH, Judge
    We affirm appellant’s conviction of fourth-degree sale of a controlled substance
    because the evidence is sufficient to support the verdict. As to appellant’s alternative
    argument, he is not entitled to a new trial because the district court did not plainly err in
    its evidentiary rulings.
    FACTS
    In January 2012, a confidential informant working with the Rochester Police
    Department called Adolph Donte Valentine to negotiate a purchase of illegal drugs. The
    plan was for the buy to occur in a Rochester hotel room, wherein police had set up
    concealed audio and video equipment, and to let Valentine leave without confrontation so
    that police could continue to build a case against him.          The informant, J.B., was
    cooperating in exchange for the dismissal of a pending prostitution charge against her.
    The operation involved three different hotel rooms: the “target” room, wherein the
    transaction was to occur, a “clean” room wherein J.B. was kept before and after the buy,
    and a surveillance room wherein officers watched and recorded the hidden-camera video.
    Before the buy, officers searched the target room to ensure that no drugs or money were
    present, and an officer searched J.B. in the clean room to verify that she was not carrying
    any drugs or money. Officers installed their surveillance equipment in the target room
    and gave J.B. $60 after recording the serial numbers of the bills.
    When officers were ready, J.B. called Valentine on the phone several times, and
    police recorded the calls. J.B. and Valentine agreed that J.B. would buy a certain amount
    of drugs for a certain amount of money, and Valentine would bring the drugs to the hotel
    room. When Valentine arrived, J.B. let him into the room.1 Officers in the surveillance
    1
    The surveillance devices did not capture the entire transaction because of the camera’s
    limited field of view.
    2
    room observed that Valentine seemed agitated. To hurry things along and avoid risks to
    J.B.’s safety, one of the officers called J.B.’s cell phone posing as a john on his way to
    the room to do business with J.B. Valentine then frisked J.B. and asked for more money.
    J.B. refused and said, “I gave you everything I got.” Valentine left the room without
    incident, and officers did not confront him.
    After Valentine left, officers entered the target room and found a plastic baggie
    containing five pills in plain view on a table. One officer took charge of J.B. and moved
    her back to the clean room. Another officer seized the pills. Officers searched J.B. and
    the target room and found no buy money and no other contraband. Later analysis
    revealed that the pills were benzylpiperazine, a schedule I controlled substance.
    In April 2012, respondent State of Minnesota charged Valentine with one count of
    fourth-degree sale of a controlled substance. He waived his right to a jury trial and
    proceeded to a bench trial.       The state relied heavily on circumstantial evidence
    established by testimony from the officers because J.B. did not appear to testify. The
    state’s theory was that the presence of buy money and absence of drugs before Valentine
    arrived, together with the presence of drugs and the absence of money after he left, leads
    to the conclusion that a drug sale occurred.
    Although the state did not have transcripts prepared, the audio recordings of J.B.’s
    phone conversations with Valentine were admitted in evidence without objection and
    played in open court. The district court permitted the state to stop the audio recordings
    for a police witness to interpret the jargon J.B. and Valentine used. The state focused the
    district court’s attention on an exchange wherein J.B. proposed “five for thirty,” which
    3
    the witness interpreted as an offer to buy five pills for $30, and then she agreed to “five
    for fifty,” which the witness interpreted as an agreement to buy five pills for $50. The
    video surveillance recording also was played with similar commentary, but again the
    audio portion was not transcribed.
    The defense theory was that the circumstantial evidence did not eliminate the
    possibility that J.B. might have framed Valentine by sneaking the drugs into the target
    room. The male officer who searched J.B. in the clean room admitted not conducting so
    thorough a search that it would have been impossible for J.B. to keep the drugs hidden.
    Defense counsel suggested that this possibility might have been eliminated had a female
    officer conducted the search.
    From the bench, the district court returned a guilty verdict, concluding that “[t]he
    only reasonable inference” supported by the circumstantial evidence was “that
    [Valentine] brought and left the drugs in the room and received and departed with the
    money.” The district court observed that it was possible that J.B. sneaked the drugs into
    the target room to frame Valentine, but it discarded that hypothesis as unreasonable
    because it would involve committing felony possession of a controlled substance in the
    presence of police officers in order to get a gross-misdemeanor prostitution charge
    dismissed. The district court discussed the audio recordings of the telephone calls and
    concluded that the calls were “consistent with setting up a drug purchase.” The district
    court later issued a written verdict incorporating the reasoning and findings it stated from
    the bench.
    4
    DECISION
    I.
    “In reviewing a sufficiency of the evidence claim, [appellate courts] are limited to
    a painstaking analysis of the record to determine whether the evidence, when viewed in a
    light most favorable to the conviction, was sufficient to permit the [decision-maker] to
    reach [its] verdict.” State v. Hatfield, 
    639 N.W.2d 372
    , 375 (Minn. 2002). In this
    analysis, circumstantial evidence is given “as much weight as any other kind of evidence,
    as long as the circumstances are both consistent with the hypothesis that the defendant is
    guilty and inconsistent with any rational hypothesis except that of guilt.” 
    Id. at 376
    . To
    support a guilty verdict, circumstantial evidence must form “a complete chain which, in
    light of the evidence as a whole, leads so directly to the guilt of the accused as to exclude,
    beyond a reasonable doubt, any reasonable inference other than that of guilt.”             
    Id.
    (quotations omitted); accord State v. Al-Naseer, 
    788 N.W.2d 469
    , 473 (Minn. 2010).
    We review circumstantial evidence under a two-step process—first to identify the
    circumstances proved and second to “examine independently the reasonableness of all
    inferences that might be drawn from the circumstances proved.” Al-Naseer, 788 N.W.2d
    at 473-74 (citation and quotation omitted). In the first step, we give deference to the fact-
    finder’s acceptance of the proof offered by the state and rejection of contrary evidence.
    Id. at 473. But in the second step, “[w]e give no deference to the fact finder’s choice
    between reasonable inferences.” Id. at 474 (quotation omitted). “[I]f any one or more
    circumstances found proved are inconsistent with guilt, or consistent with innocence,
    then a reasonable doubt as to guilt arises.” Id. (quotation omitted).
    5
    Based on our examination of the district court’s written and oral verdicts, we
    conclude that these 10 circumstances were proved: (1) the telephone calls between J.B.
    and Valentine were consistent with setting up a drug purchase; (2) Valentine came to
    J.B.’s hotel room in response to those calls; (3) Valentine is the man police captured on
    video during the operation; (4) there were no drugs in the target room before Valentine
    entered; (5) there were drugs in the room after Valentine left; (6) the pills police
    recovered were a controlled substance; (7) before Valentine entered the target room there
    was $60 of buy money in the room before Valentine entered the room, (8) the buy money
    was gone when he left; (9) Valentine knew he was selling a controlled substance; and
    (10) the events occurred in Olmsted County in January 2012.
    Valentine’s circumstantial-evidence analysis relies heavily on the district court’s
    observation that J.B. could have hidden the drugs and sneaked them into the room.
    Valentine argues that we should treat that observation as an additional circumstance
    proved and that his conviction must be reversed because this circumstance is inconsistent
    with guilt and consistent with innocence. We reject this argument because Valentine’s
    characterization of the district court’s comment as a “circumstance proved” is not
    consistent with the plain meanings of the words the district court used.
    The district court stated, “[I]t is possible that [J.B.] had hidden the drugs on her
    person. The police didn’t detect it. And she produced the drugs for the police falsely
    claiming that what had just occurred was the defendant selling her drugs.” (Emphasis
    added.) “Possible” is defined as “[c]apable of happening . . . without contradicting
    proven facts.” The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language 1375 (5th ed.
    6
    2011). Thus a more accurate characterization is that the district court acknowledged a
    hypothetical possibility. The district court did not conclude that J.B. sneaked drugs into
    the room, and Valentine points to no evidence supporting that conclusion. We therefore
    limit our circumstantial-evidence analysis to the 10 proven circumstances enumerated
    above, which are explicitly supported by the district court’s factual findings.
    Based on its findings about the circumstances proved, the district court concluded:
    “The only reasonable inference is that [Valentine] brought and left the drugs in the room
    and received and departed with the money. That’s a drug sale.” The district court noted
    that the defense theory would require J.B. to commit felony-level possession of a
    controlled substance in the presence of police officers and frame Valentine for possession
    of the drugs, all in an effort to get a gross-misdemeanor charge dismissed. The district
    court opined that “the risk benefit of such a gambit is just way out of proportion and
    seems . . . entirely unreasonable” and concluded that the defense theory did not present a
    reasonable inference inconsistent with guilt. We agree.
    The supreme court has held that, “if any one or more circumstances found proved
    are inconsistent with guilt, or consistent with innocence, then a reasonable doubt as to
    guilt arises.” Al-Naseer, 788 N.W.2d at 474. Here, none of the circumstances proved are
    inconsistent with guilt or consistent with innocence. Without that support, the defense
    theory raises no more than a metaphysical doubt about Valentine’s guilt. We therefore
    reject the defense theory and conclude that the circumstantial evidence is sufficient to
    support the district court’s verdict.
    7
    II.
    In the alternative, Valentine asserts that, because J.B.’s statements during the pre-
    buy phone calls are inadmissible hearsay, he is entitled to a new trial, maintaining that the
    district court committed prejudicial error by relying on those statements as substantive
    evidence. Valentine did not object to the admission of the audio recordings at the time
    they were offered, and the district court noted that they were “received without
    objection.” Our review of their admissibility therefore is governed by the plain-error
    standard. State v. Griller, 
    583 N.W.2d 736
    , 740 (Minn. 1998).
    Under the plain-error standard, the defendant must show that three conditions
    exist: (1) there was error; (2) the error was plain; and (3) the error affected the
    defendant’s substantial rights. State v. Strommen, 
    648 N.W.2d 681
    , 686 (Minn. 2002). If
    those conditions exist, “we may correct the error only if it seriously affects the fairness,
    integrity, or public reputation of judicial proceedings.” 
    Id.
     (quotation omitted).
    Our analysis is complicated by the manner in which the recordings were presented
    here and comments the state made after their presentation. The district court heard the
    recorded conversations along with commentary from a police officer who interpreted the
    jargon and clarified portions that were not clear due to the poor quality of the recording.
    After presenting the evidence and the witness’s commentary, the state acknowledged that
    J.B. would not testify and told the district court that “[a]ny statements that have been
    offered by her are not offered for the truth of the matter asserted, but instead to explain or
    provide a context for subsequent conduct by [Valentine] and the officers in completing
    this operation.”
    8
    Valentine asserts that the state’s comment amounts to an admission that all of
    J.B.’s statements during the telephone calls were inadmissible hearsay. We disagree.
    “‘Hearsay’ is a statement, other than one made by the declarant while testifying at the
    trial or hearing, offered in evidence to prove the truth of the matter asserted.” Minn. R.
    Evid. 801(c). The effect of the state’s comment therefore was the opposite of the effect
    Valentine claims. Moreover, the truth or falsity of the statements J.B. made during the
    phone calls is not relevant to the verdict. For example, during the key phone call, J.B.
    stated that she would buy “five for fifty,” which the witness interpreted as a statement
    that she would pay Valentine $50 for five pills. Whether that statement is true—whether
    J.B. really would buy “five for fifty”—is not relevant to the verdict. What is relevant is
    that the conversation occurred and that it provided context for Valentine’s appearance at
    the hotel room, the disappearance of the buy money, and the appearance of the drugs.
    The corresponding proven circumstance given by the district court is that “[t]he telephone
    calls [were] consistent with setting up a drug purchase.”
    Returning to the conditions required by the plain-error standard, we conclude that
    on this record there is not plain error. We therefore need not consider whether any error
    that may have occurred was prejudicial or whether any correction is warranted.
    Valentine is not entitled to a new trial.
    Affirmed.
    9
    

Document Info

Docket Number: A13-1930

Filed Date: 12/1/2014

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 12/2/2014