Lawson (Timothy) v. State ( 2014 )


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  •                              The district court conducted a Petrocellii hearing in July 2013.
    At the hearing, only the three witnesses to the 2007 uncharged
    misconduct testified. The court agreed with the State that their testimony
    about the uncharged misconduct was relevant to prove identity and
    absence of mistake. It specifically concluded that the testimony was
    relevant to prove identity for two reasons. First, the three witnesses
    testified that the man they saw in 2007 "was a black male who was of the
    same general build" and had the "same general hairstyle," and was the
    "same general age as the defendant." This, of course, was not unexpected
    considering that each of those witnesses made an in-court identification of
    Lawson during the Petrocelli hearing. Second, the district court concluded
    that the 2007 incident was relevant because it occurred in the "northwest
    area" of Las Vegas, in "public," during "daylight hours," and the man did
    not stop masturbating when he was seen by other people during both
    incidents.
    On appeal, the State withdraws its absence-of-mistake
    justification by admitting that the uncharged misconduct evidence "was
    only actually used at trial to show identity," because Lawson "never put
    forward a mistake defense." 2 It suggests that the 2007 uncharged
    1Petrocelli   v. State, 
    101 Nev. 46
    , 
    692 P.2d 503
    (1985).
    2 Even if the State had not withdrawn its absence-of-mistake
    justification and Lawson had argued that the victim was mistaken about
    what he was doing in the alley, the fact that Lawson had masturbated in
    public in a different location under different circumstances four years
    earlier would not have tended to show the victim's absence of mistake. See
    also David P. Leonard, The New Wigmore: A Treatise on Evidence:
    Evidence of Other Misconduct and Similar Events § 7.2.2 (2009 & Supp.
    2014) ("Absence of mistake or accident' is generally synonymous with
    intent.").
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    misconduct evidence was relevant to prove identity through modus
    operandi reasoning or some other unspecified theory of identification. We
    conclude that the district court clearly abused its discretion because the
    witnesses' testimony was not relevant for a nonpropensity purpose and the
    probative value of the evidence was substantially outweighed by the
    danger of unfair prejudice.
    We recently "reemphasize [d] that `[a] presumption of
    inadmissibility attaches to all prior bad act evidence." Bigpond v. State,
    128 Nev. , , 
    270 P.3d 1244
    , 1249 (2012) (second alteration in
    original) (quoting Rosky v. State,   
    121 Nev. 184
    , 195, 
    111 P.3d 690
    , 697
    (2005)). "In order to overcome the presumption of inadmissibility, the
    prosecutor must request a hearing and establish that: (1) the prior bad act
    is relevant to the crime charged and for a purpose other than proving the
    defendant's propensity, (2) the act is proven by clear and convincing
    evidence, and (3) the probative value of the evidence is not substantially
    outweighed by the danger of unfair prejudice."     
    Id. at ,
    270 P.3d at
    1250. Evidence is relevant if it has "any tendency to make the existence of
    any fact that is of consequence to the determination of the action more or
    less probable than it would be without the evidence." NRS 48.015. Within
    the context of a Petrocelli determination, this fact of consequence must be
    related to a nonpropensity purpose. 
    Bigpond, 128 Nev. at 270
    P.3d at
    1249-50.
    The State claims that the testimony of the three witnesses
    was relevant to prove Lawson's identity as the person masturbating in an
    alley near Cheyenne Avenue and Rainbow Road in June 2011 and not
    simply to prove that Lawson acted in conformity with his character as a
    person who has previously masturbated in public. As is the case here, the
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    admission of uncharged misconduct evidence to prove identity without
    first proving such a fact. as motive, opportunity, preparation, or plan, "has
    a particularly great tendency to implicate the person's character and
    conduct." Leonard, supra § 12.1. The three witnesses' descriptions of
    Lawson's physical characteristics in 2007 during the Petrocelli hearing,
    which included his race, gender, and height, did not have any tendency to
    make it more likely that he was the person identified by the victim in
    2011. For instance, there was no allegation that Lawson's physical
    characteristics had changed between the time of the alleged act in 2011
    and Lawson's trial in 2013, when he was physically present in court, or
    that they more closely resembled his appearance in 2007. In fact, the
    witnesses' in-court identification of Lawson during the Petrocelli hearing
    in 2013 suggests that Lawson looked exactly the same as he did in 2007.
    The jurors, therefore, could have simply compared the victim's physical
    description of the man she saw in the alley to Lawson himself without
    relying on the three witnesses' memory of a different unrelated incident
    that occurred six years earlier.
    It is not surprising that the 2007 uncharged misconduct
    testimony was not directly relevant to prove identity. Although identity
    "is indisputably one of the ultimate purposes for which evidence of other
    criminal conduct will be received . . . it is rarely a distinct ground for
    admission." Kenneth S. Broun, 1 McCormick On Evidence § 190 (7th ed.
    2013). "Almost always, identity is the inference that flows from one or
    more of the [other nonpropensity purposes]." 
    Id. Here, the
    district court
    concluded that the testimony about the 2007 uncharged misconduct was
    not relevant to show a common scheme or plan but nonetheless admitted
    the evidence to prove identity because it believed the 2007 incident was
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    "strikingly similar" to the charged offense. Thus, it appears that the
    district court concluded that Lawson's uncharged misconduct in 2007
    established a modus operandi that would allow the jury to infer that he
    was the person who was masturbating in the alley in 2011. In order to
    draw this conclusion the State was required to demonstrate that the
    methods used in both incidents were so similar or distinct that it was
    reasonable to infer that they were both committed by the same person.
    "For the common features to be distinctive, they must not be shared by
    most offenses of that type." People v. Thigpen, 
    713 N.E.2d 633
    , 639 (Ill.
    App. Ct. 1999). Where a party is pursuing a modus-operandi theory
    rather than a common scheme or plan theory, "proper application of
    modus operandi reasoning requires greater similarity between the charged
    and uncharged conduct." Leonard, supra § 13.5 (emphasis omitted). The
    common features cited by the district court in this case—daylight,
    northwest Las Vegas, and the failure of the offender to stop committing
    the offense when observed by a passerby—fell far short of the
    distinctiveness required for admissibility under a modus-operandi theory.
    Therefore, the district court abused its discretion.
    Moreover, even if the 2007 incident had been marginally
    probative for some nonpropensity purpose, the district court should have
    concluded that the probative value of testimony about another incident of
    open or gross lewdness by three different witnesses was substantially
    outweighed by the danger of unfair prejudice and involved the needless
    presentation of cumulative evidence. See NRS 48.035. In this case, that
    danger of unfair prejudice was not unfounded and did, in fact, deny
    Lawson the right to a fair trial. Any doubt about whether the State
    intended the jury to use the uncharged misconduct testimony for a
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    propensity purpose was removed when the State instructed the jury
    during opening statements that it could use the 2007 incident to "assume"
    that the victim's identification of Lawson in 2011 "as the person
    masturbating in front of her was correct." We conclude that the district
    court's error substantially affected the jury's verdict and we 3, 4
    ORDER the judgment of conviction REVERSED AND
    REMAND this matter to the district court for proceedings consistent with
    this order.
    Hardesty
    '
    Douglas
    &4    79A           ,J.
    Cherry
    cc: Hon. Stefany Miley, District Judge
    Joshua R. Lucherini
    Attorney General/Carson City
    Clark County District Attorney
    Eighth District Court Clerk
    3 Because we are reversing based on the district court's improper
    admission of Lawson's uncharged misconduct, we need not address
    Lawson's other claim of prosecutorial misconduct based on the State's
    comments during opening statements and its misstatement of the
    evidence during rebuttal closing arguments.
    4The fast track statement and reply fail to comply with NRAP
    3C(h)(1) and NRAP 32(a)(4) because they do not contain 1-inch margins on
    all four sides. Counsel is cautioned that the failure to comply with the
    briefing requirements in the future may result in the imposition of
    sanctions. See NRAP 3C(n).
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Document Info

Docket Number: 64567

Filed Date: 9/19/2014

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 10/30/2014