State of Minnesota v. Romere Jerome Powell ( 2016 )


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  •                         This opinion will be unpublished and
    may not be cited except as provided by
    Minn. Stat. § 480A.08, subd. 3 (2014).
    STATE OF MINNESOTA
    IN COURT OF APPEALS
    A15-1462
    State of Minnesota,
    Respondent,
    vs.
    Romere Jerome Powell,
    Appellant.
    Filed September 6, 2016
    Affirmed
    Halbrooks, Judge
    Hennepin County District Court
    File No. 27-CR-14-37591
    Lori Swanson, Attorney General, St. Paul, Minnesota; and
    Michael O. Freeman, Hennepin County Attorney, Linda K. Jenny, Assistant County
    Attorney, Minneapolis, Minnesota (for respondent)
    Cathryn Middlebrook, Chief Appellate Public Defender, Jenna Yauch-Erickson,
    Assistant Public Defender, St. Paul, Minnesota (for appellant)
    Considered and decided by Jesson, Presiding Judge; Halbrooks, Judge; and
    Hooten, Judge.
    UNPUBLISHED OPINION
    HALBROOKS, Judge
    Appellant challenges his conviction of simple robbery under Minn. Stat. § 609.24
    (2012), arguing that the state failed to prove that he used or threatened to use force in the
    taking or carrying away of property. We affirm.
    FACTS
    On June 20, 2014, P.L. traveled from South Dakota to downtown Minneapolis for
    a bachelor party.        P.L. and his friends began drinking in their hotel room before
    continuing the celebration at a few downtown bars. When they left the last bar at
    approximately 2:00 a.m., P.L. separated from the group to escort a female he met to her
    vehicle. After she departed, P.L. began to walk back to his hotel alone.
    P.L. never made it back to the hotel because he was stopped outside of a parking
    ramp by appellant Romere Jerome Powell and another man, M.W. Powell and M.W.
    walked on either side of P.L., placed their arms around him, and directed him into the
    parking garage. They guided P.L. through the parking garage, through a skyway, and
    into a second parking garage. Powell and M.W. then put P.L. into the passenger seat of a
    vehicle.
    Once the men were all inside the car, they handed P.L. a small bag containing
    what they claimed was cocaine1 and requested $300 for it.2 P.L. did not have $300 in
    cash, so the men advised him that they were going to drive to an ATM so that P.L. could
    1
    The substance tested negative for cocaine.
    2
    P.L. testified that he did not solicit the sale of drugs.
    2
    withdraw money from his account. P.L. had no idea where he was being taken, as he was
    completely unaware of the city’s geography and was fairly intoxicated.
    The men drove approximately 10 to 15 minutes before stopping at a Wells Fargo
    ATM on Olson Memorial Highway. Powell asked for P.L.’s cards, requested P.L.’s PIN,
    and left P.L. in the car with M.W. while he accessed the machine.3 Powell successfully
    withdrew $300 from P.L.’s bank account. He then drove back to downtown Minneapolis,
    parked the car, and left with M.W. by foot. P.L. immediately called 911 but disconnected
    the call when he observed Powell and M.W. walking back toward the vehicle. When the
    men left a second time, P.L. too left the car and walked into a hotel lobby to call 911
    again.
    Minneapolis police arrived, and while the officers were standing near the
    unoccupied car, M.W. came back to the car and attempted to get into the passenger side.
    Officers engaged M.W. in conversation, and he indicated that the car belonged to Powell,
    who was at the time walking down the street toward them. Officers stopped Powell to
    investigate and subsequently conducted a show-up procedure. P.L. positively identified
    Powell as the driver.
    The state charged Powell with two counts of kidnapping and one count of simple
    robbery. During the jury trial, the district court instructed the jury on two additional
    lesser-included offenses: misdemeanor theft and felony theft from person. The jury
    3
    While Powell was out of the car accessing the ATM, P.L. sent a text message to his
    friends advising them that he had been kidnapped and robbed, relaying whatever
    knowledge he had of his location to his friends. P.L. testified that he was able to do this
    because M.W. was in the back seat and could not observe him using the phone.
    3
    found Powell not guilty of both kidnapping counts but guilty of simple robbery,
    misdemeanor theft, and felony theft from person. Powell was sentenced to 60 months in
    prison for the simple-robbery conviction. This appeal follows.
    DECISION
    Powell challenges the sufficiency of the evidence supporting his simple-robbery
    conviction, arguing that the state failed to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that he “used
    force or threatened force in the taking or carrying away of property” as required for a
    conviction under Minn. Stat. § 609.24.
    Our review of a sufficiency-of-the-evidence challenge is “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 jurors to reach the verdict which
    they did.” State v. DeRosier, 
    695 N.W.2d 97
    , 108 (Minn. 2005) (quotation omitted). We
    assume that the jury “believed the state’s witnesses and disbelieved any evidence to the
    contrary.” State v. Moore, 
    438 N.W.2d 101
    , 108 (Minn. 1989). “The jury is the ultimate
    judge of credibility . . . .” State v. Townsend, 
    872 N.W.2d 758
    , 763 (Minn. App. 2015);
    see also State v. Reese, 
    692 N.W.2d 736
    , 741 (Minn. 2005) (“[A]ssessment of witness
    credibility is a jury function.”). A guilty verdict will not be reversed “if, giving due
    regard to the presumption of innocence and to the prosecution’s burden of proving guilt
    beyond a reasonable doubt, the jury could reasonably have found the defendant guilty of
    the charged offense.” State v. Vang, 
    847 N.W.2d 248
    , 258 (Minn. 2014) (quotation
    omitted).
    4
    The state was required to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that Powell was guilty
    of simple robbery. Simple robbery is defined as:
    Whoever, having knowledge of not being entitled
    thereto, takes personal property from the person or in the
    presence of another and uses or threatens the imminent use of
    force against any person to overcome the person's resistance
    or powers of resistance to, or to compel acquiescence in, the
    taking or carrying away of the property is guilty of robbery
    ....
    Minn. Stat. § 609.24 (emphasis added).
    It is undisputed that Powell took P.L.’s property in P.L.’s presence, knowing that
    he was not entitled to take it. Powell concedes as much: “Powell has not challenged the
    jury’s guilty verdicts for theft from person and misdemeanor theft. On this record, the
    state offered sufficient evidence that Powell committed theft.” The remaining question is
    whether the state satisfied the second element of simple robbery—that Powell used force
    or the threat of imminent force against P.L. to overcome his resistance or to compel
    acquiescence in the taking or carrying off of his property.
    Powell argues that his conviction of simple robbery should be overturned because
    (1) Powell and M.W. did not use force against P.L. but only subjected him to “gentle
    nudging” and (2) even if the nudging constituted force, there was no temporal connection
    between the touching and the carrying away of property.
    While it is true that P.L. testified that Powell and M.W. pushed him “gently” and
    that the responding officer testified that P.L. used the term “friendily” to describe how
    Powell and M.W. guided him, Powell isolates these words from the rest of the testimony
    to connote that the interaction was somehow consensual or friendly.           Powell also
    5
    narrowly focuses on the lack of a definition for “force” to suggest that the statute cannot
    support a conviction.4 These arguments are strained.
    P.L. testified about the series of events that occurred from the moment Powell and
    M.W. approached him to the time the police arrived. He never made it back to the hotel
    after he dropped the female off at her car because, as P.L. stated, he was “stopped along
    the way” by two men who “had come out of a parking ramp and . . . put their arms
    around me on either side and directed me into the parking ramp.” P.L. clarified that
    “they went around my shoulder on either side of me. So I had, you know, a hand here, a
    hand here, armpit on each side.” Powell and M.W. directed him, with their hands on his
    body, through one parking ramp, through a skyway, and into another parking lot before
    placing him in their car. P.L. testified that he “was concerned for [his] safety at the time
    . . . not doing anything stupid so as to put that in jeopardy.” When the men arrived at the
    vehicle, one opened the door and both guided P.L. into the passenger seat while at least
    one still had their hands on P.L. They then shut the car door behind him.
    When P.L. told the men that he did not have $300 and that he did not want the
    cocaine, Powell drove to a Wells Fargo ATM to withdraw money from P.L.’s accounts.
    P.L. testified that he had no idea where they were driving, “was fairly scared,” and did
    not feel as though he had any control of the situation. P.L. also testified that when they
    4
    Powell maintains that the issue before this court is not a sufficiency-of-the-evidence
    problem but a question of statutory interpretation because the statute does not define
    “force.” Thus, Powell asks this court to conduct a de novo review and “adopt a sensible,
    statute-driven definition of ‘force’ for simple robbery.” We decline to engage in this
    analysis because the facts of this case are sufficient to uphold a simple-robbery
    conviction.
    6
    arrived at the ATM, he did not ask to get out of the car because he was worried about his
    safety, noting from the moment Powell placed him in the car, that “I wasn’t going to try
    to do anything that was going to put that in immediate danger.”
    Powell also argues that his conviction should be reversed because any touching
    that happened in guiding P.L. to the car was too temporally remote from the actual taking
    of P.L.’s money, i.e., “[T]here must be some outer temporal limit on force preceding a
    taking.” This argument is without merit. The touching in this case was indisputably part
    of a chain of events designed to result in the taking of P.L.’s property.
    The jury heard testimony about the events of June 20, 2014 not only from P.L. but
    also from the responding officers, who testified consistently about their recollections of
    P.L.’s report that night. This testimony included descriptions of Powell putting his arms
    around P.L., guiding him through several unoccupied areas into an unknown car, and
    driving him to an ATM to withdraw money. Powell urges this court to adopt a bright-
    line definition for “force” that does not include his actions on the night of June 20, 2014.
    But the record clearly reflects that P.L. did not go willingly with Powell and M.W., that
    he feared for his safety, and that he did not willingly give up his property. On these facts,
    a jury could reasonably conclude that Powell’s actions were intended to threaten the
    imminent use of force against P.L. so as to overcome his resistance to the robbery.
    Affirmed.
    7
    

Document Info

Docket Number: A15-1462

Filed Date: 9/6/2016

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 4/17/2021