Terence James v. State , 2015 Wyo. LEXIS 106 ( 2015 )


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  •                IN THE SUPREME COURT, STATE OF WYOMING
    
    2015 WY 83A
    APRIL TERM, A.D. 2015
    July 16, 2015
    TERENCE JAMES,
    Appellant
    (Defendant),
    v.                                                   S-14-0234
    THE STATE OF WYOMING,
    Appellee
    (Plaintiff).
    Appeal from the District Court of Albany County
    The Honorable Jeffrey A. Donnell, Judge
    Representing Appellant:
    Office of the Public Defender: Diane M. Lozano, State Public Defender; Tina N.
    Olson, Chief Appellate Counsel; Eric M. Alden, Senior Assistant Appellate Counsel.
    Argument by Mr. Alden.
    Representing Appellee:
    Peter K. Michael, Wyoming Attorney General; David L. Delicath, Deputy Attorney
    General; Jenny L. Craig, Senior Assistant Attorney General; Blake A. Klinkner,
    Assistant Attorney General. Argument by Mr. Klinkner.
    Before BURKE, C.J., and HILL, KITE, DAVIS, and FOX, JJ.
    NOTICE: This opinion is subject to formal revision before publication in Pacific Reporter Third.
    Readers are requested to notify the Clerk of the Supreme Court, Supreme Court Building,
    Cheyenne, Wyoming 82002, of typographical or other formal errors so correction may be made
    before final publication in the permanent volume.
    KITE, Justice*.
    [¶1] Terence James appeals his conviction for aiding and abetting aggravated robbery,
    claiming the district court denied him the right to due process when it refused to instruct
    the jury on his defense of duress. We conclude Mr. James was denied his right to a fair
    trial when the district court ruled the duress defense instruction would not be given to the
    jury after Mr. James testified and admitted the elements of the crime, leaving him with no
    defense whatsoever. We reverse and remand for a new trial.
    ISSUE
    [¶2] Mr. James asserts he was denied his right to due process when the district court
    refused to instruct the jury on his defense of duress. The State contends the district court
    properly ruled Mr. James was not entitled to the instruction because he did not present
    competent evidence establishing a prima facie case of duress.
    FACTS
    [¶3] On January 1, 2013, Mr. James and Kevin Lewis entered the Fairfield Inn in
    Laramie, Wyoming wearing bandanas over their faces. Mr. Lewis told the front desk
    clerk this was a robbery and brandished a gun. The desk clerk opened the side door to
    allow Mr. Lewis behind the desk and Mr. Lewis asked him to open the drawer and show
    him the money. Mr. Lewis removed the money and asked whether there was a safe. The
    desk clerk said there was but he did not have the combination. Mr. Lewis asked the clerk
    for his wallet. Mr. Lewis and Mr. James then left the hotel.
    [¶4] On January 11, 2013, a business was robbed in Cheyenne. Police stopped a vehicle
    matching the description of the car used in the robbery. Mr. Lewis and Mr. James were
    in the vehicle. During questioning, Mr. James told police he was not with Mr. Lewis
    when he committed the Cheyenne robbery earlier that evening. He said Mr. Lewis had
    attempted to contact him that day but he had refused to talk to him. Mr. James admitted
    his involvement in the Laramie robbery. He also told police he had been with Mr. Lewis
    when he committed a robbery in Colorado and attempted a robbery in Casper, Wyoming
    the week before. Mr. James was arrested and charged with accessory before the fact to
    aggravated robbery, in violation of Wyo. Stat. Ann. § 6-1-201(a) and § 6-2-401(a)(c)(ii)
    (LexisNexis 2011) for his involvement in the Laramie robbery.
    [¶5] Prior to trial, Mr. James submitted the following jury instruction:
    *The opinion published in James v. State, 
    2015 WY 83
    , published on June 11, 2015, WL
    3623601 (Wyo.), is amended by this opinion. The earlier opinion has no further force or
    effect.
    1
    DEFENDANT’S PROPOSED JURY INSTRUCTION
    NO. J
    Duress Defense Instruction
    [C]onduct which would otherwise constitute an offense is
    justified if a reasonable person would believe that he was
    compelled to engage in the proscribed conduct by the threat
    or [use] of immediate physical force against his person or the
    person of another which resulted or could result in serious
    physical injury which a reasonable person in the situation
    would not have resisted.
    The State has the burden of proving beyond a reasonable
    doubt that the defendant did not act with such justification. If
    the State fails to carry this burden, then you must find the
    defendant not guilty of the charge.
    [¶6] In her opening statement, defense counsel told the jury that Mr. James’ presence
    during the motel robbery was compelled by Mr. Lewis’ intimidating behavior and threats
    to harm Mr. James or his family. She told the jury that Mr. Lewis had easy access to Mr.
    James, his mother and his family because he lived with them. She told the jury that Mr.
    James did not want to participate in Mr. Lewis’ criminal acts but feared that if he refused,
    Mr. Lewis would harm his family.
    [¶7] During cross-examination of the State’s witnesses, defense counsel made it clear
    that although Mr. James was present during the robbery, Mr. Lewis had the gun, did all
    the talking and took the money. Defense counsel also made it clear that Mr. James told
    police Mr. Lewis had threatened him and his mother and he was scared of Mr. Lewis.
    [¶8] On the morning of the second day of trial, the district court held a jury instruction
    conference outside the presence of the jury. After hearing argument from counsel, the
    court decided any duress defense instruction given to the jury would state:
    Duress may be a defense to criminal charges. Thus conduct
    that would otherwise constitute a criminal offense may be
    justified if a reasonable person would believe that he was
    compelled to engage in that conduct by the threat or use of
    immediate physical force against his person or the person of
    another which results or could result in serious physical injury
    which a reasonable person in the situation would not have
    resisted.
    2
    If there was a reasonable legal alternative to violating
    the law, a chance both to refuse to do the criminal act and
    also to avoid the threatened harm, the defense must fail.
    The duress must be present, imminent or impending,
    and it must be of such a nature so as to induce a reasonable
    fear of death or serious bodily harm if the otherwise criminal
    act is not done.
    The defendant carries the burden of proving the
    defense of duress.
    The district court advised counsel:
    Now, I will say this as well: I don’t know what the
    evidence is going to be today, obviously. We’re having this
    whole discussion based on the supposition that the evidence
    presented will support this instruction. That may or may not
    be the case.
    And under Campbell, the Supreme Court requires a
    very narrow set of facts before this instruction becomes
    appropriate. A history of being a bad guy doesn’t do it.
    So we’ll see whether or not we’ll actually give this
    instruction at all. That will be based on what the evidence is
    this morning, okay?
    [¶9] After the instruction conference, the defense presented its case. Mr. James was the
    only witness. He testified that he met Mr. Lewis in November of 2012 when Mr. Lewis,
    who was dating Mr. James’ mother, began living with him and his mother in their home
    in Cheyenne, Wyoming. One day in December, Mr. James accompanied Mr. Lewis to
    take his mother to work. Mr. James had left his son with his sister and told her that he
    would be right back. After they dropped Mr. James’ mother off at work, however, rather
    than returning home, Mr. Lewis drove to a club. Mr. James objected but Mr. Lewis
    ignored him. Inside the club, Mr. Lewis began arguing with other customers. They left
    the club, and outside in the parking lot Mr. Lewis pulled a gun and threatened to shoot
    people. Mr. James testified that Mr. Lewis then drove to a gas station. In the parking lot
    outside the gas station, Mr. Lewis made derogatory remarks to a female customer. Mr.
    James testified that the woman’s boyfriend told Mr. Lewis to stop disrespecting his
    girlfriend and Mr. Lewis “got in his face.” The woman came over to stop him and Mr.
    Lewis knocked a coffee cup out of her hand and punched her. Mr. James also testified
    that his mother and Mr. Lewis had an altercation in December of 2012 in which Mr.
    Lewis threatened to kill her if she ever left him and said that if Mr. James and his brother
    3
    found out he had killed her, he would “deal with” them. Mr. James understood this to
    mean that Mr. Lewis would hurt them in some way. Mr. James testified that because of
    Mr. Lewis’s aggressive and violent behavior, he was afraid of him.
    [¶10] Mr. James testified that he and Mr. Lewis went to Chicago just before Christmas,
    2012. Mr. Lewis told him he had friends there who were robbers and killers who would
    come to Mr. Lewis’ assistance whenever he needed them. On their way back from
    Chicago on December 23, 2012, Mr. Lewis stopped at a motel in York, Nebraska. He
    told Mr. James they were getting a room for the night. They went inside and Mr. Lewis
    asked the front desk clerk whether the manager was there. She said, no, and, according to
    Mr. James, Mr. Lewis pulled out a gun and said “this [is] a robbery.” Mr. James testified
    he was terrified. He said Mr. Lewis made the desk clerk lie down on the floor, took her
    purse, took money from behind the desk, and walked out of the motel. Mr. James
    testified that back in the car, he told Mr. Lewis he did not want to have anything to do
    with him and wanted to go home to his son. He testified that Mr. Lewis held the gun to
    his head and told him he would do whatever Mr. Lewis wanted him to do, or Mr. Lewis
    would do something to his family.
    [¶11] Mr. James testified he was at a party at his mother’s house eight days later when
    Mr. Lewis said he was going out to get more alcohol. Mr. James’ mother told him to go
    with Mr. Lewis. Rather than going to a liquor store, however, Mr. Lewis drove onto the
    highway and headed in the direction of Laramie, Wyoming. Mr. James asked where they
    were going and Mr. Lewis said he would let Mr. James know when they got there. They
    drove to Laramie and stopped at the Fairfield Inn. Mr. Lewis parked the car, pulled
    bandanas out of the backseat, retrieved a gun from the glove compartment and told Mr.
    James to follow his lead. Mr. Lewis entered the motel and asked if the manager was
    there. The desk clerk said, no, and Mr. Lewis pulled out the gun and robbed him and the
    motel. Mr. James testified that he went into the motel with Mr. Lewis because of Mr.
    Lewis’ threat to hurt his family if he did not do what Mr. Lewis told him to do. Mr.
    James testified he did not go to the police about Mr. Lewis’ behavior because of Mr.
    Lewis’ statement that his friends, whom Mr. Lewis described as “killers,” would protect
    him and Mr. James did not know if they were watching him. He also said he had gone to
    the police before and they had not helped him.
    [¶12] Mr. James testified that after his arrest he remained fearful of Mr. Lewis even
    though Mr. Lewis was also in custody. He related that during one interview with police,
    he could hear Mr. Lewis in the next room and was afraid Mr. Lewis was listening to him.
    He told the officer he did not want to go into detail about what had happened because he
    thought Mr. Lewis was listening. He testified that he was still afraid of Mr. Lewis at the
    time of trial even though Mr. Lewis was in jail because he had said that if Mr. James ever
    told on him, his friends would do something to Mr. James’ family.
    4
    [¶13] Mr. James did not deny that he was with Mr. Lewis during the robbery. His entire
    defense was that he was there because, based on Mr. Lewis’ violent and intimidating
    behavior and threats, he feared Mr. Lewis would harm him or his family if he did not
    cooperate. On cross-examination of Mr. James, the prosecutor established that in order to
    claim duress as a defense, Mr. James had admitted all of the elements of the crime
    charged.
    [¶14] After Mr. James’ testimony, the district court held a final jury instruction
    conference outside the presence of the jury. The court informed counsel that it had not
    heard testimony supporting the duress defense instruction. Defense counsel argued that
    Mr. James’ testimony that he was compelled to engage in criminal conduct by the threat
    of immediate physical force against his person or his family supported the instruction.
    The district court responded that there was no immediate or imminent threat; rather, there
    was one threat a week before the robbery. Defense counsel argued that Mr. James had a
    reasonable and genuine belief that Mr. Lewis had friends who would kill or harm him or
    his family. The district court responded:
    And what steps did he take, which he had the
    opportunity to take, in order to avoid committing the crime
    and in order to avoid the risk of harm? Does he tell anybody
    about any of this? No. Did he go to the police? No. When
    they got to Laramie, did he get out of the car and try to walk
    away? No. Did he do anything at all to try to avoid this so-
    called threat?
    Defense counsel stated that Mr. James believed there was no alternative and did not
    believe the police would be able to protect his family. He believed if he did not
    participate either he or his family would be killed or harmed. Defense counsel argued
    that although in reality there may have been alternatives to cooperating with Mr. Lewis,
    Mr. James’ fear of him and his easy access to Mr. James, his mother and his family, and
    his fear of Mr. Lewis’ friends, reasonably led him to believe he had no alternative.
    Ruling the evidence did not support a finding that there was a present, imminent or
    impending threat and Mr. James had reasonable alternatives to violating the law, the
    district court declined to give the duress defense instruction. Additionally, the court ruled
    that counsel would not be allowed to argue duress in closing argument.
    [¶15] The district court re-convened the jury and read them the instructions. Almost
    immediately in his closing argument, the prosecutor stated:
    I would like you to notice what’s missing from this
    instruction packet. There is nothing about a duress defense.
    There is no duress defense in this case. You are not
    5
    instructed on it. It doesn’t apply to this case. Your duty is to
    apply the law as you’re instructed.
    So there’s no duress defense. What does that leave
    you with? Forget all the evidence I put in before in my case
    in chief. You’ve got Terence James’ admission on the stand
    that he participated in the robbery on January 1, 2013, here in
    Laramie. You’ve got his admission that he was present
    during the robbery; that a gun was used, and they robbed that
    clerk at gunpoint.
    The prosecutor concluded his remarks by saying:
    [Mr. James] participated in that robbery. That’s what he told
    you. That’s why he should be convicted. Duress is not a
    defense in this case. . . .
    [¶16] After deliberating for almost an hour, the jury submitted the following question to
    the court: “Does the law allow us to consider duress?” Over defense counsel’s
    continuing objection, the district court answered the question, “No.” Eighteen minutes
    later, the jury returned a verdict finding Mr. James guilty of the crime of accessory before
    the fact to the crime of aggravated robbery. The district court sentenced Mr. James to
    serve five to ten years in prison with credit for 362 days served in pre-adjudication
    confinement. Mr. James timely appealed from the judgment and sentence.
    STANDARD OF REVIEW
    [¶17] The failure to give an instruction on the law related to a theory of defense is a due
    process issue, which this Court reviews de novo. Nelson v. State, 
    2010 WY 159
    , ¶ 13,
    
    245 P.3d 282
    , 285 (Wyo. 2010).
    DISCUSSION
    [¶18] This Court has said:
    Due process requires the trial court to give a correct
    instruction to the jury that details the defendant’s theory of
    the case. Blakely v. State, 
    474 P.2d 127
    , 129 (Wyo.1970).
    The instruction must sufficiently inform the court of the
    defendant’s theory and must be supported by competent
    evidence.       Bouwkamp v. State, 
    833 P.2d 486
    , 490
    (Wyo.1992). A theory of the case is more than a comment on
    the evidence that tells the jury how to consider the evidence.
    Ellifritz v. State, 
    704 P.2d 1300
    (Wyo.1985). Fundamentally,
    6
    the instruction must in the first instance be a proper theory of
    the case, or theory of defense, instruction. That is, the offered
    instruction must present a defense recognized by statute or
    case law in this jurisdiction. 
    Bouwkamp, 833 P.2d at 490
    .
    ....
    Any competent evidence is sufficient to establish a defense
    theory even if it consists only of testimony of the defendant.
    Best v. State, 
    736 P.2d 739
    , 745 (Wyo.1987). We view the
    evidence in a light favorable to the accused and the accused’s
    testimony must be taken as entirely true to determine if the
    evidence is competent. Duckett v. State, 
    966 P.2d 941
    , 944
    (Wyo.1998). Even if the court deems the evidence to be
    weak, or unworthy of belief, the instruction must be given if a
    jury could reasonably conclude the evidence supports the
    defendant's position. 
    Id. Nelson, ¶
    14, 245 P.3d at 285-286
    , citing Iseli v. State, 
    2007 WY 102
    , ¶ 10, 
    160 P.3d 1133
    , 1136 (Wyo. 2007). Instructions not based on the evidence, however, can be
    properly refused. 
    Id. [¶19] In
    Wyoming, duress has been recognized as a defense to criminal charges, other
    than a charge of taking the life of an innocent person. Campbell v. State, 
    999 P.2d 649
    ,
    659 (Wyo. 2000), citing Amin v. State, 
    811 P.2d 255
    , 260 (Wyo. 1991). Duress must be
    present, imminent or impending, and of such a nature so as to induce a well-grounded
    fear of death or serious bodily harm if the otherwise criminal act is not done. 
    Id. The defendant
    has the burden of demonstrating the elements of the defense. 
    Id. [¶20] In
    Amin, 811 P.2d at 256
    , two prison inmates were convicted of aggravated assault
    and kidnapping after they forcibly seized two prison employees and held them captive.
    They claimed prison conditions were such that they were under duress and coerced into
    acting as they did and had no other recourse. This Court upheld the district court’s
    refusal to give a duress defense instruction because the instruction misstated the law and
    the defendants presented no evidence they (a) were faced with a specific threat of death
    or substantial bodily injury in the immediate future; (b) did not have time to complain to
    the authorities, or any such complaint would have been futile; and (c) had no opportunity
    to resort to the courts to redress their grievances. 
    Id. [¶21] In
    Campbell, the defendant was charged with child endangerment after she failed
    to take her three year old daughter to the doctor for treatment of second and third degree
    burns the child sustained over eighteen percent of her body while left alone with the
    defendant’s boyfriend. 
    Id. at 654.
    When the defendant arrived home and observed the
    burns, she left the child with a babysitter and went out with her boyfriend to play darts at
    a bar. 
    Id. At trial,
    the boyfriend testified that he had been physically abusive to the
    7
    defendant for years, and although she wanted to take the child to the hospital, he believed
    she went to the bar to avoid angering him. 
    Id. at 655.
    The defendant testified that she
    had a long history of abuse by her brother, stepfather and her boyfriend and, at the time
    of her daughter’s injuries, she feared for herself and her daughter if she refused to go with
    her boyfriend. 
    Id. [¶22] Defense
    counsel requested a jury instruction on the defense of duress and coercion
    and the district court denied the request, finding no evidence of imminent bodily harm.
    
    Id. at 659.
    On appeal, the defendant claimed she should have been allowed to present the
    defense because the abuse she had suffered caused her to believe she was in imminent
    danger of harm if she did not leave her daughter and go with her boyfriend. 
    Id. at 660.
    She likened her situation to that of a battered woman raising self defense as an
    affirmative defense, which is specifically allowed by Wyo. Stat. Ann. § 6-1-203(b). This
    Court concluded the battered woman statute applies only when a person is charged with a
    crime involving the use of force against another and asserts she acted in self-defense, and
    the statute did not apply in the context of a child endangerment charge. 
    Id. [¶23] This
    Court then considered whether the defendant had established the elements of
    the common law defense of coercion and duress; that is, whether she presented evidence
    that she faced present, imminent or impending death or serious bodily injury if she stayed
    and cared for the child. We said:
    The evidence established that others were present in the house
    at the time Campbell made her decision and did not witness
    Campbell’s refusing to play darts or witness Boyer’s [sic]
    threatening Campbell if she cared for her child. Campbell
    made no attempt to seek medical advice, take her daughter to
    the hospital, dress her in loose clothing, or give her
    medications either for pain or to prevent infection. Campbell
    testified that she recognized that the burns were extensive and
    serious and required medical care, and she decided not to seek
    medical care because her past abuse caused her to realize that
    she would provoke Boyer. We agree with the district court
    that this record does not establish that she faced present,
    imminent or impending death or serious bodily harm, and the
    district court did not err in refusing to give her defense
    instruction.
    
    Id. [¶24] Amin
    and Campbell are distinguishable from Mr. James’ case. In neither case did
    the defendants present evidence of an actual direct threat of physical harm before they
    committed the criminal act. In contrast, Mr. James testified that a week before the
    8
    Laramie robbery, after he told Mr. Lewis he wanted nothing to do with him, Mr. Lewis
    held a gun to his head and told Mr. James that he would do what Mr. Lewis wanted him
    to do or Mr. Lewis would harm his family. Then, after driving to an unknown location in
    Laramie rather than to the liquor store as he had said, Mr. Lewis retrieved a gun from the
    glove compartment and told Mr. James to follow his lead. Viewing this evidence in the
    light most favorable to Mr. James and accepting his testimony as true as we are required
    to do, we conclude a jury could reasonably have concluded that on the night of the
    robbery Mr. James faced a present, imminent or impending threat of such a nature as to
    induce a well-grounded fear of death or serious bodily harm if he did not do what Mr.
    Lewis said.
    [¶25] In concluding otherwise, the district court found there was no threat on the night of
    the Laramie robbery; rather, the only threat occurred a week earlier. We disagree. Mr.
    James was unarmed and alone in a different town with a man whom he had seen behave
    violently, who was armed with a gun and who a week earlier had held the gun to his head
    and threatened to harm his family if he did not do what he was told. These facts were
    sufficient to establish a jury question as to Mr. James’ duress defense.
    [¶26] The district court also found that Mr. James was not entitled to the duress defense
    instruction because he failed to show that he had no reasonable legal alternative to
    committing the robbery. In Campbell, we did not consider whether the defendant had a
    reasonable legal alternative to endangering her child because we concluded there was no
    immediate, imminent or impending threat. In 
    Amin, 811 P.2d at 261
    , the Court
    concluded that in addition to failing to present evidence of a threat, the defendants failed
    to present evidence showing they had no reasonable alternative to seizing and holding the
    prison employees. To the contrary, the evidence showed they had access to the state and
    federal courts and had previously availed themselves of the prison grievance system with
    favorable results. 
    Id. [¶27] In
    the present case, the district court concluded Mr. James had several
    opportunities to avoid involvement in the Laramie robbery.
    He could have gone to the police. He could have told his
    mother about it. He could have simply refused and walked
    away.
    …
    [T]here was plenty of reasonable legal alternatives to
    violating the law. He had every opportunity to refuse to do
    so. And he had every opportunity to avoid the harm that was
    allegedly threatened a week earlier.
    [¶28] We do not agree that a reasonable alternative on the night of the Laramie robbery
    was to walk away. Again, Mr. James was not armed and Mr. Lewis was armed with a
    9
    gun and had threatened harm previously if Mr. James did not do as he said. Viewing this
    evidence in a light favorable to Mr. James and taking it as entirely true, we conclude that
    a jury reasonably could have believed that when Mr. Lewis and Mr. James arrived in
    Laramie on the night of the robbery Mr. James had no reasonable alternative but to
    accompany Mr. Lewis into the motel where he committed the robbery.
    [¶29] In the week leading up to the Laramie robbery, Mr. James was not in Mr. Lewis’
    presence for significant periods of time. He testified that he spent some nights with his
    girlfriend rather than at his own home with Mr. Lewis and his mother. The district court
    concluded that if he had gone to the police during that time, he could have avoided
    involvement in the Laramie robbery. Mr. James testified that he did not go to the police
    because he did not know if he was being watched by Mr. Lewis and his friends and
    because he had gone to police for help before to no avail.
    [¶30] An overwhelming majority of courts have held that, as a matter of law, a defendant
    who has the opportunity to avoid committing a crime, either by contacting police or
    otherwise removing himself from a threatening situation, cannot seek to excuse his
    criminal conduct by claiming to have acted under duress. 2 Robinson, Criminal Law
    Defenses § 177, 2014 Supp., 162. See also 2 Lafave, Substantive Criminal Law, 2d Ed.,
    § 9.7(b), 78 (A defendant may lose his defense of duress if he does not take advantage of
    a reasonable opportunity to escape, where that can be done without exposing himself
    unduly to death or serious bodily injury); 
    1 A.L.R. 4th 481
    Criminal Law – Defense –
    Coercion § 2(a) 465 (2013) (Duress cannot be invoked as a defense by one who has a
    reasonable opportunity to avoid doing the act without exposure to death or serious bodily
    harm). See also 
    40 A.L.R. 2d 908
    (2014) Coercion, compulsion, or duress as a defense to
    criminal prosecution and cases cited therein. Thus, in U.S. v. Alicea, 
    837 F.2d 103
    (2d
    Cir. 1988), the court held the duress defense was properly stricken where the defendants,
    who claimed they had been kidnapped at gun point, raped or threatened with rape and
    forced to act as drug couriers, did not take steps to extricate themselves from the situation
    when they were separated from their captors. Similarly, in People v. Speer, 
    255 P.3d 1115
    (Colo. 2011), the court concluded the duress defense was not available where the
    defendant was at various times completely out of the presence of the person who had
    threatened him. Finally, in U.S. v. Castro-Gomez, 
    360 F.3d 216
    (1st Cir. 2004) the court
    held the defendant did not have a duress defense where two days after being coerced to
    participate in an attempted drug importation, he met his coercers at the same place as
    before and was again coerced into participating in illegal activity. The court stated that a
    reasonable person would have foreseen the likelihood that the invitation to meet the
    coercers pertained to drug transportation, would not have gone to the meeting and would
    have summoned law enforcement.
    [¶31] Applying the rationale from these other jurisdictions, it could be concluded that a
    reasonable person in Mr. James’ position would either have gone to the police or taken
    other steps to extricate himself from Mr. Lewis after being threatened at gunpoint. Mr.
    10
    James’ explanation as to why he did not go to the police or take other action between the
    first and second robberies may be insufficient to show that he had no opportunity to avoid
    the Laramie robbery. On the other hand, Mr. James had no way of knowing that rather
    than going to get alcohol, Mr. Lewis would drive to Laramie and rob a motel. The issue
    of whether the evidence presented a jury question is a close call; however, we are
    persuaded it was sufficient to support giving the theory of defense instruction and
    allowing the jury to determine whether Mr. James had a reasonable opportunity to avoid
    the crime.
    [¶32] Deleted.
    [¶33] Deleted.
    [¶34] It is worth mentioning for purposes of future cases involving a duress defense that
    the federal courts have adopted a pre-trial procedure for cases involving a duress defense.
    When a defendant has indicated that he will seek to present a
    duress defense to the jury and the government seeks to
    preclude such evidence as legally insufficient, “it is
    appropriate for [the] court to hold a pretrial evidentiary
    hearing to determine whether [the] defense fails as a matter of
    law.” United States v. Paul, 
    110 F.3d 869
    , 871 (2d Cir. 1997).
    The burden at such a hearing is on the defendant to present
    some evidence on each of the elements of the defense. See,
    e.g., United States v. Jaswal, 
    47 F.3d 539
    , 544 (2d Cir. 1995)
    (per curiam). If the court finds that the defendant's evidence is
    insufficient as a matter of law to establish an element of the
    duress defense, the court may preclude the defendant from
    presenting evidence of that defense to the jury. See, e.g.,
    United States v. Bailey, 
    444 U.S. 394
    , 416, 
    62 L. Ed. 2d 575
    ,
    
    100 S. Ct. 624
    (1980); United States v. 
    Villegas, 899 F.2d at 1343
    .
    U.S. v. Lizalde, 38 Fed. Appx. 657, 659-660 (2nd Cir. 2002). See also U.S. v. Bakhtiarii,
    
    913 F.2d 1053
    , 1075 (2nd Cir. 1990). Had this or a similar procedure been utilized before
    trial in the present case, the defense would have known before trial that the district court
    would not give the duress defense instruction and would not have relied on it as its sole
    defense at trial. Mr. James and defense counsel then could have considered the other
    options available to them. Resolving the matter in this way would have avoided the jury
    confusion that obviously occurred as reflected by the jury question.
    [¶35] In light of the remand, we also take this opportunity to adopt the duress defense
    elements both the State and Mr. James have urged us to apply in resolving this appeal. In
    11
    Dixon v. United State, 
    548 U.S. 1
    , 
    126 S. Ct. 2437
    , 
    165 L. Ed. 2d 299
    (2006), the issue
    before the Court was whether the defendant had the burden to prove her duress defense
    by a preponderance of the evidence or the State had the burden to prove beyond a
    reasonable doubt that she did not act under duress. The Court held the burden was on the
    defendant to prove the defense by a preponderance of the evidence. In reaching that
    result, the Court said:
    There is no federal statute defining the elements of the
    duress defense. We have not specified the elements of the
    defense, see, e.g., United States v. Bailey, 
    444 U.S. 394
    , 409-
    410, 
    100 S. Ct. 624
    , 
    62 L. Ed. 2d 575
    (1980), and need not do
    so today. Instead, we presume the accuracy of the District
    Court’s description of these elements: (1) The defendant was
    under an unlawful and imminent threat of such a nature as to
    induce a well-grounded apprehension of death or serious
    bodily injury; (2) the defendant had not recklessly or
    negligently placed herself in a situation in which it was
    probable that she would be forced to perform the criminal
    conduct; (3) the defendant had no reasonable, legal alternative
    to violating the law, that is, a chance to refuse to perform the
    criminal act and also to avoid the threatened harm; and (4)
    that a direct causal relationship may be reasonably anticipated
    between the criminal act and the avoidance of the threatened
    harm. … [S]ee generally United States v. Harper, 
    802 F.2d 115
    , 118 (C.A.5 1986).
    
    Dixon, 548 U.S. at 5
    , 
    n.2, 126 S. Ct. at 2437
    , 165 L.Ed. 2d at 307. These elements apply
    on remand and in all future cases involving a duress defense.
    [¶36] Reversed and remanded for a new trial.
    12