State v. Harris , 2015 Utah App. LEXIS 304 ( 2015 )


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    2015 UT App 282
    THE UTAH COURT OF APPEALS
    STATE OF UTAH,
    Appellee,
    v.
    DERONE QUINTON HARRIS,
    Appellant.
    Memorandum Decision
    No. 20140358-CA
    Filed November 27, 2015
    Second District Court, Ogden Department
    The Honorable Michael D. DiReda
    No. 131901796
    Samuel P. Newton, Attorney for Appellant
    Sean D. Reyes and Deborah L. Bulkeley, Attorneys
    for Appellee
    JUDGE STEPHEN L. ROTH authored this Memorandum Decision, in
    which JUDGES JAMES Z. DAVIS and J. FREDERIC VOROS JR.
    concurred. 1
    ROTH, Judge:
    ¶1      Derone Quinton Harris appeals his convictions for
    burglary, theft, and criminal mischief, each third degree felonies,
    and possession of burglary tools, a class B misdemeanor. 2 We
    affirm.
    1. Judge James Z. Davis participated in this case as a member of
    the Utah Court of Appeals. He retired from the court on
    November 16, 2015, before this decision issued.
    2. Harris was also convicted of failure to stop at the command of
    a law enforcement officer, a class A misdemeanor, and
    (continued…)
    State v. Harris
    ¶2     “We view the facts in the light most favorable to the jury
    verdict and recite them accordingly.” State v. Montoya, 
    2004 UT 5
    , ¶ 2, 
    84 P.3d 1183
     (citation and internal quotation marks
    omitted). At 4:15am on September 8, 2013, a door sensor alarm
    and two interior motion detector alarms were triggered at a ski
    specialty store (the Store) located in Ogden, Utah. The Store is a
    U-shaped building set back from the public road by a parking
    lot. The three sides of the building form a courtyard that
    contains three large planter boxes, each one set further from the
    public entrances than the last. The Store has two public
    entrances located at the base of the U; both are glass doors with
    floor-to-ceiling metal gates that are pulled across them at night.
    There are also four non-public entrances: three at the back of the
    building from the basement, and one at the front of the building.
    All the Store’s entrances are locked at night.
    ¶3     When the alarms triggered, two Ogden City police
    officers, Officer Nielsen and Officer Grogan, were dispatched to
    investigate. The officers arrived at the Store in separate patrol
    vehicles within seven minutes of the initial alarm. Once at the
    scene, they began to investigate on foot, with Officer Nielsen
    moving to check the courtyard while Officer Grogan went to the
    rear of the building.
    ¶4     At first, neither officer saw anyone at the scene. When
    Officer Nielsen approached the courtyard, he could see that one
    of the glass doors had been broken, with most of the shards
    having fallen out into the courtyard. He also noticed a large tree
    branch lying on the ground next to the door. But as Officer
    Nielsen approached the broken door, a man later identified as
    Harris “jump[ed] out from behind” the planter box closest to the
    Store’s entrances and ran away from the Store. Officer Nielsen
    (…continued)
    interference with an arresting officer, a class B misdemeanor. He
    does not challenge either conviction on appeal.
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    State v. Harris
    and Officer Grogan soon cornered Harris near a fourplex not far
    from the Store. Harris resisted arrest, and the officers physically
    subdued him. When Officer Nielsen searched Harris, he
    discovered a shard of glass in Harris’s pants pocket that matched
    the thickness and hue of the glass from the Store’s broken door.
    ¶5      The officers then returned to the Store with Harris.
    Further investigation revealed that all three of the front entrance
    door locks had been tampered with and damaged. Pry marks
    were also discovered on the exterior of two of the basement
    doors.3 In the courtyard, a black backpack, a white shopping
    bag, and a black duffle bag were discovered on the ground
    “[j]ust around the corner” from the planter box located closest to
    the broken door where Officer Nielsen had first seen Harris. The
    white shopping bag had the Store’s labels on it and contained
    two sets of headphones and two Bluetooth headsets, all new and
    of the kind sold at the Store.4 The black backpack was also Store
    merchandise, and was filled with women’s socks and a number
    of pairs of sunglasses from the Store.5 There was a claw hammer
    on top of the black duffle bag, and inside the duffle bag were a
    “long straight screwdriver, three small screwdrivers and three
    pairs of pliers.” A crime scene investigator processed the bags
    and their contents but was only successful in recovering
    fingerprints from two pairs of sunglasses; those prints did not
    match Harris’s. Inside the store, a closed cash box had been
    pried at and “mangled.” A suitcase from the Store’s inventory
    3. The monetary damage to the doors and locks amounted to
    nearly $2,000.
    4. The crime scene investigator testified that the headsets
    together retailed for $350 and the headphones were $30 each.
    5. The Store’s owner testified that it appeared as though an
    entire sunglasses rack had been dumped into the backpack. The
    items were valued at around $2,000.
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    State v. Harris
    was found lying open on the floor. An entire rack of jackets had
    been cleared; a few of them were found at the bottom of the
    basement stairwell, and the rest were in a pile in the Store’s
    storage room.
    ¶6     Harris was charged with burglary, theft, criminal
    mischief, interference with an arresting officer, failing to stop at
    the command of a law enforcement officer, and possession of
    burglary tools. At trial, defense counsel moved for a directed
    verdict at the conclusion of the State’s case. The trial court
    denied the motion, stating that “reasonable minds could
    disagree” regarding the sufficiency of the State’s evidence. The
    jury convicted Harris on all charges.
    ¶7      On appeal, Harris argues that the State presented
    insufficient evidence to convict him of burglary, theft, criminal
    mischief, and possession of burglary tools. Specifically, Harris
    argues there was insufficient evidence to establish that he
    entered the Store; that he possessed any of the items found
    outside the Store, whether burglary tools or Store inventory; or
    that he damaged the Store or its contents. He dismisses the
    significance of the glass shard found in his pocket and contends
    that the only evidence of any substance that ties him to the
    crimes was his presence at the scene and his flight—but then
    argues that neither presence at the scene of a crime nor flight are
    sufficient under Utah law to support the convictions. Harris
    asserts that the trial court therefore should have “forthwith
    order[ed] him discharged.” See Utah Code Ann. § 77-17-3
    (LexisNexis 2012). The State argues that the evidence was
    sufficient for the case to go to the jury.6 We conclude that the
    6. The State also argues that Harris has not preserved the
    insufficiency arguments he makes on appeal. Considering the
    proceedings related to Harris’s directed verdict motion as a
    whole, including the prosecutor’s response to the motion, we
    conclude the issues were sufficiently preserved.
    20140358-CA                     4                
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    State v. Harris
    State presented sufficient evidence to defeat Harris’s directed
    verdict motion, and affirm.
    ANALYSIS
    ¶8      A party seeking reversal of a directed verdict denial has a
    difficult burden of persuasion on appeal because we “review the
    evidence and all reasonable inferences that may fairly be drawn
    therefrom in the light most favorable to the jury verdict,” State v.
    Colwell, 
    2000 UT 8
    , ¶ 11, 
    994 P.2d 177
    , and we will reverse the
    denial only if we determine that the evidence “is so inconclusive
    or so inherently improbable as to an element of the crime that
    reasonable minds must have entertained a reasonable doubt as
    to that element,” State v. Workman, 
    852 P.2d 981
    , 984 (Utah 1993)
    (citations omitted). Put another way, the trial court’s decision
    will be affirmed “if, upon reviewing the evidence and all
    inferences that can be reasonably drawn from it, we conclude
    that some evidence exists from which a reasonable jury could
    find that the elements of the crime had been proven beyond a
    reasonable doubt.” State v. Montoya, 
    2004 UT 5
    , ¶ 29, 
    84 P.3d 1183
     (citation and internal quotation marks omitted).
    ¶9     In addition, while the evidence against Harris is largely
    circumstantial, it “is a well-settled rule that circumstantial
    evidence alone may be sufficient to establish the guilt of the
    accused,” Salt Lake City v. Carrera, 
    2015 UT 73
    , ¶ 11 (citation and
    internal quotation marks omitted), and “[d]irect evidence is not
    required” to establish guilt, State v. Nielsen, 
    2014 UT 10
    , ¶ 47, 
    326 P.3d 645
    . Convictions based solely on circumstantial evidence
    are reviewed to determine “‘(1) whether there is any evidence
    that supports each and every element of the crime charged, and
    (2) whether the inferences that can be drawn from that evidence
    have a basis in logic and reasonable human experience sufficient
    to prove each legal element of the offense beyond a reasonable
    doubt.’” State v. Lyman, 
    966 P.2d 278
    , 281 (Utah Ct. App. 1998)
    (quoting State v. Brown, 
    948 P.2d 337
    , 344 (Utah 1997)). “A
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    State v. Harris
    reasonable inference is a conclusion that can be drawn from the
    evidence and is based on logic and reasonable human
    experience.” State v. Cristobal, 
    2014 UT App 55
    , ¶ 4, 
    322 P.3d 1170
    . “Additionally, a reasonable inference arises when the facts
    can reasonably be interpreted to support a conclusion that one
    possibility is more probable than another.” 
    Id.
     (citation and
    internal quotation marks omitted). On the other hand,
    circumstantial evidence is insufficient if the inferences derived
    from it give rise to only “remote or speculative possibilities of
    guilt.” See Carrera, 
    2015 UT 73
    , ¶ 11 (citation and internal
    quotation marks omitted). But where the fabric of circumstantial
    evidence “reasonably sustain[s]” inferences of guilt, Nielsen, 
    2014 UT 10
    , ¶ 47, and “‘cover[s] the gap between the presumption of
    innocence and the proof of guilt,’” Lyman, 
    966 P.2d at 281
    (quoting State v. Petree, 
    659 P.2d 443
    , 444–45 (Utah 1983)), the
    evidence will be sufficient. We first consider the sufficiency of
    the evidence in the case and then turn to the cases Harris uses to
    support his arguments.
    A.     The Evidence
    ¶10 Harris contends that the case against him is “not
    particularly strong” because there are only three pieces of
    evidence relevant to his charges of burglary, 7 theft, 8 possession
    7. “An actor is guilty of burglary who enters or remains
    unlawfully in a building or any portion of a building with intent
    to commit: (a) a felony [or] (b) theft . . . .” Utah Code Ann. § 76-6-
    202 (LexisNexis 2012).
    8. “A person commits theft if he obtains or exercises
    unauthorized control over the property of another with a
    purpose to deprive him thereof.” Id. § 76-6-404; see also id. § 76-6-
    412(1)(b)(i) (stating that theft is a third degree felony if, “the
    value of the property or services is or exceeds $1,500 but is less
    than $5,000”).
    20140358-CA                      6                
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    State v. Harris
    of criminal tools, 9 and criminal mischief: 10 (1) his proximity to
    the “stolen property on the outside of the store;” (2) his flight
    from the police; and (3) the “small piece of glass” found in his
    pocket. In particular, he contests the sufficiency of evidence as to
    the specific elements of entry, constructive possession 11 of the
    tools, constructive possession of the stolen items, and
    destruction of the Store’s property, pointing out that the State
    9. “Any person who manufactures or possesses any instrument,
    tool, device, article, or other thing adapted, designed, or
    commonly used in advancing or facilitating the commission of
    any offense under circumstances manifesting an intent to use or
    knowledge that some person intends to use the same in the
    commission of a burglary or theft is guilty of a class B
    misdemeanor.” 
    Id.
     § 76-6-205.
    10. “A person commits criminal mischief if the person . . .
    intentionally damages, defaces, or destroys the property of
    another,” id. § 76-6-106(2)(c). Additionally, to qualify as third
    degree felony criminal mischief, the “actor’s conduct [must]
    cause[] or [be] intended to cause pecuniary loss equal to or in
    excess of $1,500 but is less than $5,000 in value.” Id. § 76-6-
    106(3)(b)(ii).
    11. Constructive possession is a highly fact-intensive inquiry that
    is wholly dependent on the “facts and circumstances of each
    case” with a view toward determining whether there is a legally
    sufficient connection between the accused and the contraband.
    See State v. Burdick, 
    2014 UT App 34
    , ¶ 36, 
    320 P.3d 55
     (citations
    and internal quotation marks omitted). Factors particularly
    pertinent in this case include “incriminating behavior of the
    accused,” “presence of [items] in a specific area over which the
    accused has control,” State v. Fox, 
    709 P.2d 316
    , 319–20 (Utah
    1985) (citations omitted), the accused’s presence at the time
    contraband items are found, and the accused’s “proximity to the
    [items],” Burdick, 
    2014 UT App 34
    , ¶ 36.
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    State v. Harris
    presented no direct evidence (such as fingerprints or video
    surveillance) that affirmatively put him inside the Store or in
    contact with the Store’s merchandise found outside it.
    ¶11 But the legal standard applicable to a sufficiency
    challenge does not focus on the strength of the prosecution’s
    evidence. Rather, our review is limited to a determination of
    whether there is “some evidence” that would allow a reasonable
    jury to find that the elements of the crimes had been “proven
    beyond a reasonable doubt.” Montoya, 
    2004 UT 5
    , ¶ 29 (citation
    and internal quotation marks omitted). Here, in addition to the
    three pieces of evidence Harris identifies, the prosecution
    presented evidence that: (1) Harris was the only person observed
    in the vicinity of the Store in the early morning hours just
    minutes after three of the Store’s alarms, including two interior
    motion detectors, were triggered; 12 (2) Harris was discovered,
    not on the public street, but deep in the courtyard, mere feet
    from the broken glass and door, crouched over the stolen items
    and burglary tools, and behind a planter box that concealed him
    from view; (3) the Store bore proof of damage in the form of
    tampered entrance locks and pry marks surrounding entry
    doors, consistent with the burglary tools; (4) when the officers
    approached the Store, rather than engage with them or attempt
    to explain his presence, Harris fled the scene and subsequently
    resisted arrest; and (5) Harris’s pocket contained a piece of glass
    that matched the shattered glass from the Store’s entrance.
    ¶12    We conclude that this evidence fulfills the requirement of
    “some evidence” from which a jury might reasonably infer,
    based on “logic and reasonable human experience,” that Harris
    12. Officer Nielsen testified as to the significance of the multiple
    alarms. He stated that in “[t]his one we had two motions and a
    door so you had three alarms set off” and concluded that that
    “usually” meant the alarms were not “false.” The Store’s owner
    agreed.
    20140358-CA                     8                
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    State v. Harris
    committed the crimes with which he was charged. See Cristobal,
    
    2014 UT App 55
    , ¶¶ 3, 4, 7. “Logic” and “human experience”
    suggest that a person found alone on the Store’s private
    property, in the dark of the early morning, just minutes after
    alarms were triggered, at some remove from the common
    thoroughfare, crouched over stolen items and burglary tools,
    with a piece of glass from the Store’s shattered entryway in his
    pocket, was not at the scene of the crime through mere
    happenstance. Rather, considered together, we think this
    evidence is sufficient to support a reasonable inference that it
    was probable that Harris’s presence at the Store was due to his
    direct involvement in the criminal activity that had just
    occurred. In this case, that direct involvement necessarily
    included entry into the Store, constructive possession of the tools
    and stolen items, and criminal mischief.
    ¶13 In particular, this evidence reasonably and logically
    suggests that Harris was in close proximity at the very moment
    the glass door was broken. There was testimony at trial that the
    majority of the shattered glass had fallen outward toward the
    courtyard. Harris was apprehended with a piece of glass that
    matched the broken door in his pocket. A jury could reasonably
    conclude that the presence of the glass shard on Harris’s person
    was consistent with both the violent manner in which the glass
    was broken and the way the glass fell outward into the
    courtyard. It would thus be reasonable to infer that the piece of
    glass was in Harris’s pocket because he was standing next to the
    glass door when it was broken, and, in conjunction with other
    evidence, that he broke the glass himself.
    ¶14 Harris’s attempts to dismiss the glass shard’s significance
    by claiming it is just as likely that the “glass touched his hands”
    while he knelt to look at the items behind the planter and “later
    was transferred to his pocket” are unpersuasive. It seems
    unlikely that in the course of kneeling down at the scene of the
    break-in, a piece of glass would have found its way from the
    ground into his pocket. Certainly, the jury could have reasonably
    20140358-CA                     9               
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    State v. Harris
    concluded that the more plausible explanation was that Harris
    was in close proximity to the door when the glass was broken,
    not that he “inadvertently transferred” a piece of the glass to his
    pocket while innocently kneeling down to look at items behind
    the planter. See Cristobal, 
    2014 UT App 55
    , ¶ 7 (“Because these
    inferences support a conclusion that one possibility is more
    probable than another . . . the inferences are reasonable and not
    speculative.” (citation and internal quotation marks omitted)).
    ¶15 Consequently, because the evidence supports reasonable
    inferences that place Harris in close proximity the moment the
    glass door was shattered, the contested elements of the charges
    fall into place. In order to enter the well-secured building, entry
    had to be forced, and Harris was discovered crouched alone over
    a bag of tools that would have afforded him the means to create
    a point of entry. Other than the tree branch, no other evidence
    was recovered from the scene to suggest another means to force
    an entry. And the exterior damage—the broken door, the
    damaged exterior door locks, and the damage to the paint and
    wall surfaces next to the exterior basement doors—was
    consistent with the kinds of tools in the bag. 13 It would be
    reasonable to infer from this damage that, because he was
    present when the glass door shattered, Harris exercised “power”
    and “control” over the tools to engage in criminal mischief by
    creating the entry point.
    ¶16 It would also be reasonable to infer that Harris used the
    tools to enter the Store and thereafter exercise control over the
    merchandise by removing it from the premises. Harris was
    discovered hiding behind a planter box with the stolen
    merchandise within minutes after interior motion detectors had
    13. These inferences were strengthened by Officer Nielsen’s
    testimony that the pry marks “in relation to the tools” were
    “[v]ery similar to possibly the hammer or the screwdriver” and
    that the pry marks were “fresh.”
    20140358-CA                    10               
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    State v. Harris
    been triggered. Because the stolen merchandise had been inside
    the Store before the burglary, the only way the bags of stolen
    merchandise could have made it out to the courtyard was
    through an unauthorized entry, and the very presence of the
    bags outside of the Store supports this inference. 14 In addition,
    the presence of the merchandise outside the Store right next to
    the bag of tools reasonably supports inferences that the
    procurement of stolen merchandise was the endgame and that,
    had the police arrived later, Harris would have absconded with
    both the tools and the merchandise.
    ¶17 Thus, all of the evidence taken together would permit a
    jury to infer that Harris committed the crimes with which he was
    charged. Accordingly, the evidence of burglary, theft, criminal
    mischief, and possession of burglary tools was sufficient to
    survive Harris’s motion to dismiss at the close of the State’s
    evidence.
    B.     Cases Cited by Harris
    ¶18 The cases Harris relies on do not persuade us to reach a
    different result. Harris cites a number of cases standing for the
    general proposition that “mere presence” 15 at a crime scene is
    14. The Store’s owner testified that, when she locked up the Store
    on the night of the burglary, both the backpack and the shopping
    bag used to carry the stolen merchandise had also been inside
    the Store.
    15. Harris cites a number of Fourth Amendment cases to support
    his argument that mere proximity should not be enough to
    support his burglary conviction. See, e.g., State v. Swanigan, 
    699 P.2d 718
    , 719 (Utah 1985) (per curiam) (holding that proximity to
    an area where recent burglaries had been reported was
    insufficient to establish “reasonable suspicion” to justify an
    investigatory stop); State v. Trujillo, 
    739 P.2d 85
    , 86, 89 (Utah Ct.
    (continued…)
    20140358-CA                     11               
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    State v. Harris
    insufficient to support a criminal conviction. 16 Harris also cites a
    number of cases that have held that a defendant’s presence near
    (…continued)
    App. 1987) (concluding that walking along the street at a late
    hour in a “high crime area” was insufficient to establish probable
    cause that would have justified a stop and frisk of the
    defendant). We do not disagree with the holdings of these cases,
    but rather conclude, as we have explained, that this is not a
    “mere presence” case.
    16. For example, Harris cites Rawls v. State, 
    513 So. 2d 942
     (Miss.
    1987). In Rawls, the only evidence supporting conviction was
    that, around midnight, “[Rawls] walked around the side of [a
    house], shortly after two other men, who had carried several
    unidentified objects.” 
    Id. at 944
    . While all three men were on the
    sidewalk after coming around the house, only the two men
    holding items ran and hid behind another car after being
    suddenly illuminated by the eyewitness’s headlights. Rawls did
    not run and hide, and thereafter, the two men drove away in a
    car together, leaving Rawls alone. 
    Id. at 943
    . It was later
    discovered that “two television sets and a stereo were missing”
    from the house. 
    Id.
     The court reversed Rawls’s burglary
    conviction. 
    Id. at 944
    . See also Edwards v. State, 
    867 S.W.2d 90
    , 94
    (Tex. Ct. App. 1993) (evidence insufficient to support a burglary
    conviction for one of the burglarized houses at issue where the
    witness testified that she saw the defendant approach the front
    door of the house in the company of another person but could
    not verify that he entered the house because her view was
    blocked, the defendant disappeared from view “for less than a
    minute,” and he did not carry anything back to the waiting car
    with him); cf. Azcuy v. State, 
    705 So. 2d 129
    , 129 (Fla. Dist. Ct.
    App. 1998) (a defendant’s “mere proximity to an instrument,” in
    this instance a stick, that “may have been used[] by anyone” to
    burglarize a flower cart was insufficient to support his burglary
    conviction).
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    the crime scene, even in conjunction with flight or possession of
    stolen items or tools, is not sufficient to support an inference of
    entry with intent required for a burglary conviction. 17 In contrast
    17. Harris cites Commonwealth v. Hargrave, 
    2000 PA Super 5
    , 
    745 A.2d 20
    , as being particularly persuasive here. But in Hargrave,
    the only evidence the prosecution presented was proximity to
    both the crime scene and the stolen items along with the
    defendant’s subsequent flight, and the surrounding
    circumstances were decidedly less substantial than in Harris’s
    case. In Hargrave, the defendant was standing late at night with
    another man outside a Woolworth store next to boxes of stolen
    merchandise and a broken display window at the time police
    were notified that the store had been burglarized. 
    Id. ¶¶ 2
    –4. In
    addition, following a preliminary hearing on the charges, the
    defendant fled the state for a year, and the case was not tried for
    another nine years. 
    Id. ¶ 1
    . Even though the officer could not
    recall whether he had seen the defendant carrying a box from
    Woolworth’s, the trial court found that the officer’s testimony in
    conjunction with the defendant’s flight provided sufficient
    evidence to convict the defendant of burglary. 
    Id. ¶ 6
    . The
    reviewing court determined that while the Commonwealth had
    “proved beyond a reasonable doubt [that the defendant was
    present] at the scene of the crime” and was proximate “both to a
    box containing merchandise from the Woolworth’s store and to
    [the other implicated] individual,” it had not connected the
    defendant “beyond a reasonable doubt to the box, the
    merchandise, the other individual, the broken store window or
    any other entry of the store.” 
    Id. ¶ 9
    . Further, the court
    concluded that while “[f]light does indicate consciousness of
    guilt,” inferences of guilt based on flight are only proper where
    “the other evidence of guilt consists of more than mere presence
    at the scene.” 
    Id. ¶ 11
    . The reviewing court thus held the
    evidence to be insufficient for the defendant’s conviction of
    burglary and other related offenses. 
    Id. ¶ 13
    .
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    to the cases he cites, however, the circumstances surrounding
    Harris’s presence at the Store suggest that he was more than
    merely proximate to the scene of the crime and that his
    constructive possession of the stolen items and tools was not
    isolated from the other circumstances connecting him to the
    burglary but tied to them. 18 The piece of glass tied Harris to the
    Store, the tools, and the stolen items in a way that the defendants
    in the cases he cites were not: It supports a reasonable inference
    18. Harris cites several other cases to support his argument that
    possession of the stolen items and tools, even in addition to
    “mere presence,” cannot prove that he entered the Store. See, e.g.,
    State v. Arrington, 
    514 So. 2d 675
     (La. Ct. App. 1987) (a
    defendant’s mere possession of three rings stolen from a house
    could not support an inference of entry where the defendant
    could not be placed any closer than a block from the house on
    the day of the burglary and where other evidence supported the
    defendant’s innocence); People v. Smith, 
    333 N.Y.S.2d 135
     (N.Y.
    App. Div. 1972) (evidence was insufficient to support an
    inference of entry where the defendant was apprehended on the
    fire escape stairway of an apartment building while purportedly
    in possession of two items from a burglarized apartment, but
    where the evidence also established that the defendant had been
    visiting a friend in an apartment two stories above the crime
    scene and no evidence placed him on the same story where the
    burglary occurred); see also Corbin v. State, 
    585 So. 2d 713
     (Miss.
    1991) (a defendant’s fingerprints on stolen merchandise that
    merely showed that “at some point in time” the defendant had
    touched some of the stolen merchandise was insufficient
    evidence to support a burglary conviction where the only person
    who was seen holding the stolen merchandise dropped it and
    fled upon being approached by a police officer a couple of blocks
    from the burglarized grocery store, and where that person was
    never identified). To the extent these cases do apply to this case,
    we are not persuaded by them.
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    State v. Harris
    that he was present at the Store at the point in time when the
    glass door was shattered and entry was accomplished. And
    although flight alone is not sufficient to support an inference of
    entry, it is not improper to infer guilt from flight in a case, like
    Harris’s, where there are other circumstances that support such
    an inference. 19 See State v. Holgate, 
    2000 UT 74
    , ¶ 23, 
    10 P.3d 346
    (“While a defendant’s flight from a crime scene, standing alone,
    does not support an inference of intentional conduct, the
    circumstances of a defendant’s flight, in addition to other
    circumstantial evidence, may be adequate to support such an
    inference.” (citation and internal quotation marks omitted)); see
    also 
    id. ¶ 23 n.6
     (“‘Flight by itself is not sufficient to establish the
    guilt of the defendant, but is merely a circumstance to be
    considered with other factors as tending to show . . . guilt itself.’”
    (emphasis added) (quoting 1 Wharton’s Criminal Evidence
    19. Harris cites Commonwealth v. Goodman, 
    350 A.2d 810
     (Pa.
    1976), for the proposition that presence at a crime scene
    combined with flight is insufficient to support a burglary
    conviction. In that case, the court held that the evidence was not
    sufficient to support an inference that the defendant was a
    participant in the burglary because the evidence showed only
    that the defendant emerged empty-handed from a doorway
    leading to the rear of a grocery store shortly after another man
    had emerged carrying a box of stolen meat, and that the
    defendant fled when the other man fled. 
    Id. at 812
    . The court
    considered it significant that the doorway the defendant and the
    other man had emerged from also led to an apartment stairway,
    and that because of this fact, the evidence was “as consistent
    with the inference that [the defendant] innocently happened
    upon the scene and fled out of fear as it [was] with the inference
    that [the defendant] was a participant in the burglary.” 
    Id.
     Thus,
    the defendant’s guilt could not be proven beyond a reasonable
    doubt. 
    Id.
     As discussed above, the circumstances supporting an
    inference of entry in Harris’s case are more substantial.
    20140358-CA                       15                
    2015 UT App 282
    State v. Harris
    § 214, at 450 (Charles E. Torcia ed., 13th ed. 1972))). Indeed, even
    if the combination of flight, proximity, and possession of stolen
    items and tools, was not sufficient to justify a burglary
    conviction, these pieces of evidence are not entirely irrelevant.
    Rather, they can properly be weighed together with other
    circumstances indicative of guilt to provide sufficient weight in
    the aggregate to support a guilty verdict. And that is the case
    here.
    ¶19    Harris’s case can also be distinguished from cases he uses
    to support his constructive possession arguments. 20 Harris’s
    “intent to exercise control” over the tools flowed directly from
    their presence at a scene where, among other damage, a glass
    door was forcibly shattered and the circumstances supported a
    reasonable inference that Harris was implicated. Harris had a
    glass shard resembling the door glass in his pocket and the
    stolen items and the tools were in his plain sight. In particular,
    the hammer was lying “on top” of the bags Harris was kneeling
    over. And Harris was found alone and adjacent to the items at a
    time of day when people were unlikely to have been outside, let
    20. See, e.g., In re M.B., 
    2008 UT App 433
    , ¶¶ 20, 26, 
    198 P.3d 1007
    (concluding that the juvenile court improperly inferred that the
    defendant “constructively possessed the burglary tools” found
    between a seat and the console where the only evidence was that
    the defendant “was in a car that contained the gloves and
    screwdrivers, and that a screwdriver and some gloves were in
    his vicinity but not in plain sight”); State v. Salas, 
    820 P.2d 1386
    ,
    1389 (Utah Ct. App. 1991) (holding that the evidence was
    insufficient to connect the defendant to the cocaine found in his
    car where there were two other passengers in the car, where the
    cocaine was “found in an area that was not easily accessible to
    the defendant,” and where the other passenger closest to where
    the cocaine had been found was “seen moving around in a
    furtive manner just before the traffic stop”).
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    2015 UT App 282
    State v. Harris
    alone crouched behind a planter box near the Store’s entrance.
    The evidence that Harris possessed the tools is therefore
    significantly more substantial than the evidence in the cases he
    cites.
    CONCLUSION
    ¶20 Reviewing the evidence presented and the inferences
    reasonably drawn therefrom, we conclude that the State
    presented sufficient evidence to survive Harris’s motion to
    dismiss. Harris has not met his difficult burden of showing that
    there was no evidence sufficient to submit the case to the jury,
    nor has he persuaded us that the circumstantial nature of the
    evidence renders inferences regarding entry and constructive
    possession merely speculative. We reiterate that our role on
    appeal is not to re-weigh the evidence but is instead limited to
    determining whether the State presented “some evidence” to
    support the elements of the contested convictions from which a
    jury could have arrived at guilty verdicts on the contested
    charges. See Mahmood v. Ross, 
    1999 UT 104
    , ¶ 18, 
    990 P.2d 933
    (“[T]he court is not free to weigh the evidence and thus invade
    the province of the jury whose prerogative it is to judge the
    facts.” (citation and internal quotation marks omitted)). While
    Harris contends that “[h]e was literally in the wrong place at the
    wrong time,” we cannot say that there is no evidence to support
    reasonable inferences regarding the elements of the charges that
    Harris challenges. Thus, the trial court did not err by denying
    Harris’s directed verdict motion at the close of the State’s
    evidence. We affirm.
    20140358-CA                    17              
    2015 UT App 282