Category: Violence – Homicide Battery

  • Monster Slayer

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    The Story of Serial Killer Robert Fry

    By Robert Scott (www.kensingtonbooks.com)

    Pages 240-241

    The first problems came for Fry’s defense team, Ed Bustamante and Eric Hannum, who were suddenly removed from the case. The state’s defenders’ office stepped in and began to negotiate a contract with Santa Fe lawyer Stephen Aarons.  Steve Aarons had a long and colorful career as an attorney.  He had attended George Washington University, Saint Louis University and Oxford University.  He was a lieutenant colonel in the Judge Advocate General’s (JAG) Corps of the Army. He had prosecuted fifty court martial cases between 1980 and 1983 and was special defense counsel in a Nürnberg, Germany, murder trial.  He spoke Spanish and German.

    Aarons opened his own law office in Santa Fe in 1992, and he had been practicing as a defense lawyer since then, handling over thirty murder cases.  One very interesting case that he was involved in just before the Fry/Tsosie trial was that of Judge Charles Maestas, of Espanola, New Mexico.  Four women accused Maestas of propositioning them.  They said that Maestas had promised to reduce their citations if they had sex with him.  Suzette Salazar actually went ahead and had sex with Maestas – but she audio taped their sexual encounter.

    At Maestas trial, Aarons acknowledged that the man did have sex with Salazar, but he said the sex was consensual. Aarons told Court TV,  “It’s not illegal to have sex.  Evidence will be presented that at least three of the four women did not tell the truth about their allegations.”

    Things took an even more bizarre turn when the lead investigator for the state, Karen Yontz, was shot dead while allegedly trying to rob a bank. Aarons contended that Yontz set up the whole scheme to try and discredit Judge Maestas in the first place. Just before the Robert Fry trial began, Judge Maestas was found guilty and sentenced to three years in prison. It was a victory of sorts for Aarons because the jury had acquitted on over forty counts as to three of the four women and the sentence was light compared to the hundred years Maestas might have received.

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  • Serial Murderer Get Two Life Sentences

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    [c

    • State of New Mexico v. Robert Fry, D-1116-CR-200000542

      Practice Area:
      Violent crime
      Date:
      Dec 01, 2000
      Outcome:
      Life sentence
      Description:
      Fry II. Serial murderer’s life spared in second death penalty trial
    • State of New Mexico v. Robert Fry D-1116-CR-200001055

      Practice Area:
      Violent crime
      Date:
      Jan 01, 2000
      Outcome:
      Life sentence
      Description:
      Third jury trial of serial killer
    • Man Convicted of 2 Murders; Farmington Store Site of Killings

      The Associated Press
          Robert Fry was found guilty Thursday of first-degree murder in the 1996 slaying of two men inside a counterculture store in downtown Farmington.
      Jurors deliberated for 11 hours before reaching a verdict. Fry, who had been smiling earlier, put his hands on the table before him and hung his head after hearing the verdict.
      Fry, 31, was charged in the Nov. 29, 1996 slayings of Matthew Trecker, 18, and Joseph Fleming, 25. They were stabbed and their throats slashed in the now-defunct Eclectic store.
      Fry was also found guilty of larceny, tampering with evidence and intimidation of a witness.
      He was immediately sentenced to two consecutive life sentences, 41/2 years for tampering with evidence and 6 years for intimidation.
      “Matt and Joe are smiling today and I’m glad I was a part of it,” Assistant District Attorney Mitch Burns said.
      Defense Attorney Steve Aarons said he will appeal the convictions.
      Fry already is facing the death penalty for the 2000 murder of a Shiprock woman and is serving a life sentence for the 1998 murder of an Arizona man.
      In closing arguments Wednesday, prosecutors had asked the jury to piece together a puzzle of evidence linking Fry to the killings.
      The puzzle pieces consisted of testimony from witnesses and statements made by Fry during an inconclusive polygraph test. During the interview, Fry gave his “theory” of how the killings occurred, and prosecutors said the details were too close to reality to be overlooked.
      Fry had said that if he were the killer he would cut Fleming’s throat and lay him down. This happened, according to testimony from a crime scene investigator.
      “We have a braggart giving details,” Assistant District Attorney Brent Capshaw said Wednesday. “In the process of bragging, he can’t help disclosing facts only the killer would know.”
      But the defense argued that Fry was attempting to help solve the mystery of who killed the young men.

     

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  • Jury Says Killing in Self Defense

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    Killing Was Self-Defense.(Journal North)

    Byline: Jeremy Pawloski, Albuquerque Journal Staff Writer

    Slain youth’s family denies allegations he was involved with gangs

    A 17-year-old boy who admitted to fatally stabbing a Santa Fe police officer’s brother last year walked out of court a free man late Thursday night after a jury found that he acted in self-defense.

    Fred Mestas of Santa Fe was at an undisclosed location Friday afternoon out of fear for his safety, his attorney, Stephen Aarons said.

    Meanwhile, the family of Jason Vasquez, 19, who was stabbed by Mestas in the heart and the abdomen the night of June 13, 2001, was trying to come to grips with the verdict.

    Mestas was acquitted of second-degree murder.

    “For me, working in Santa Fe and having to work in the area where my brother was killed … it’s hard,” said Jason’s older brother, Santa Fe Police Officer Robert Vasquez, 24. “Obviously, no justice was served. …


    Murder Defendant Describes Fatal Fight.(Journal North)

    Demonstration Given in Court

    Bent down on one knee, 17-year-old Fred Mestas showed a jury Wednesday how he pulled a knife from a strap in his pants and used it to strike out during a fight at the Cottonwood Village mobile home park on June 13, 2001.

    “I reached for the knife, I put my head down and I just started punching,” Mestas said earlier during his testimony.

    Two of Mestas’ blows with the knife mortally wounded Jason Vasquez, 19, the younger brother of Santa Fe Police Officer Robert Vasquez.

    Mestas is charged with a count of second-degree murder in Vasquez’s death and tampering with evidence for throwing away the knife. …

    Jury Says Killing Was Self-Defense.(Journal North)

    A
    Teen Facing Murder Charges in Trailer Park Stabbing.(Journal North)

    Article from: Albuquerque Journal (Albuquerque, NM) | March 13, 2002 | Copyright
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    Byline: Jeremy Pawloski Journal Staff Writer

    A 16-year-old Santa Fe boy despondent over losing his ex-girlfriend brought a kitchen knife with him when he went looking for her at a mobile home park the night of June 13, 2001, according to http://www.go-binder.com/ and  court records.

    “He was in a sad mood,” Eric Rael has said in court of his friend Fred Mestas, on the night Mestas left to find his ex-girlfriend, Felicia Valdez.

    Prosecutors allege Mestas used the knife that night to kill Jason Vasquez, a Santa Fe police officer’s brother.

    Mestas, now 17, is charged with second-degree murder in connection with Vasquez’s death. His trial starts Thursday before 1st District Judge Stephen Pfeffer.

    According to court records, Mestas and Vasquez had a fistfight when a group of teens confronted each other on Sycamore Loop in the Cottonwood Village mobile home park the night of Vasquez’s death. …

    Fatal Stabbing Suspect Out of Jail.

    Article from: Albuquerque Journal (Albuquerque, NM) | August 9, 2001 | Copyright
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    Byline: Wren Propp Journal Staff Writer

    Teen Now Under House Arrest

    A 16-year-old accused of stabbing a man to death in a Santa Fe mobile home park was released from jail Wednesday but placed under house arrest while waiting for trial.

    Two state district court judges had to sign off on the release of Fred Mestas, who faces a second-degree murder charge in the death of Jason Vasquez, 20, of Penasco.

    Vasquez was stabbed once in the chest and once in the abdomen during an altercation between two groups of teen-agers who had a history of violent confrontation.

    The murder charge against Mestas is being heard by State District Judge Stephen Pfeffer. …

    Friends Say Fatal-Stabbing Suspect Was Attacked.

    Article from: Albuquerque Journal (Albuquerque, NM) | July 12, 2001 | Copyright
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    Byline: Jeremy Pawloski Journal Staff Writer

    Teen Is Facing Murder Charge

    Friends of Fred Mestas, a 16-year-old charged in the stabbing death of Jason Vasquez, 20, testified Wednesday that they saw Mestas being attacked by a group of 15 or more the night of Vasquez’s death.

    “As I ran up I saw just a bunch of guys around Fred, beating him as if he were a dog,” said Michael Gonzales during Mestas’ preliminary hearing before Santa Fe Magistrate George Anaya.

    Gonzales had previously written in a statement to police that he saw “Fred stab someone” that night, Deputy District Attorney Tony Julian said.

    But Gonzales said Wednesday he does not recall Mestas stabbing anyone on the night Vasquez died. …

    Self-Defense Claimed as Murder Trial Opens.(Journal North)

    Article from: Albuquerque Journal (Albuquerque, NM) | March 15, 2002 | Copyright
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    Byline: Jeremy Pawloski Journal Staff Writer

    Trailer Park Site of Stabbing

    A prosecutor said Thursday that 17-year-old Fred Mestas “was a festering boil of love, jealousy, anger, revenge and finally murder,” on the night of Jason Vasquez’s fatal stabbing at the Cottonwood Village mobile home park on June 13, 2001.

    But Mestas’ attorney said Mestas acted out of self-defense during a fight that night and “was getting hit multiple times by multiple people,” including by one young man wielding a broomstick, when Mestas stabbed the 19-year-old Vasquez twice.

    “Thank God, he had a knife,” Mestas’ attorney, Stephen Aarons, said during opening statements in Mestas’ second-degree murder trial before 1st Judicial District Judge Stephen Pfeffer. …

    Suspect Says He Was Jumped.

    Article from: Albuquerque Journal (Albuquerque, NM) | June 22, 2001 | Copyright
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    Byline: Jeremy Pawloski Journal Staff Writer

    Teen Held on Open Count of Murder

    A 16-year-old boy charged with murder in a fatal stabbing at the Cottonwood Village mobile home park last week told police he was “jumped” while taking a walk on Sycamore Loop, according to the probable cause statement for his arrest.

    Fred Mestas, 16, of Santa Fe, is charged with an open count of murder in the fatal stabbing of Jason Vasquez, 20, of Penasco on the night of June 14.

    Vasquez was stabbed twice once in the chest and once in the abdomen in front of 2612 Sycamore Loop and died at the scene, according to the statement.

    Mestas had “visible injuries to his face, arms and neck area” when he turned himself in to sheriff’s deputies Thursday near the Old Las Vegas Highway with his mother, the probable cause statement says.

    Gun Report Puts Teen Slaying Suspect Back in Jail.

    Article from: Albuquerque Journal (Albuquerque, NM) | November 15, 2001 | Copyright
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    Byline: Jeremy Pawloski Journal Staff Writer

    House Arrest Order Violation Alleged

    A Children’s Court judge on Wednesday ordered that a Santa Fe boy charged with murder must go back to jail after he was accused of violating his house arrest by shooting a neighbor in the leg with a pellet gun, a police report said.

    Children’s Court Judge Barbara Vigil said in court Wednesday that she does not know if the charge that Fred Mestas, 16, shot a neighbor in the leg with a pellet gun is true. Mestas’ attorney on Wednesday entered a denial to the charge.

    Vigil nonetheless placed Mestas back in detention and said that, even if Mestas was only shooting a pellet gun at tin cans, that in itself is a probation violation. …

    Boy Charged in Killing Released From Detention.

    Article from: Albuquerque Journal (Albuquerque, NM) | November 20, 2001 | Copyright
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    Byline: Jeremy Pawloski Journal Staff Writer

    Police Allege Youth Used Pellet Gun

    A Children’s Court judge on Monday ordered that a Santa Fe boy charged in a killing be released from detention, after his attorney argued that an alleged violation of his conditions of release was unfounded.

    Last week, Children’s Court Judge Barbara Vigil ordered that Fred Mestas, 16, must return to juvenile detention because of the alleged violation in a juvenile case separate from his charges in connection with a killing.

    Mestas spent four days in jail after prosecutors on Nov. 14 brought before Vigil an allegation that he violated his interim order by shooting a man in the leg with a pellet gun.

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  • Gregg Francis Braun Executed in Oklahoma

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    Gregg Braun was sentenced to die for the 1989 murder of Gwendolyn Sue Miller, 31, in an $80 flower shop robbery in Ardmore, Oklahoma. A customer was shot in the head and robbed of $600 and the bookkeeper was also shot. He also murdered four other people in a multi-state crime spree. Each of the five murder victims was found shot in the back of the head with a .25-caliber handgun. After pleading guilty and receiving life sentences in both New Mexico and Kansas, Braun pled guilty without an agreement in Oklahoma and was sentenced to death for the murder of Miller. Braun was the son of a prominent lawyer and had a college degree in criminal justice.

    Gregg Braun – Executed July 20, 2000. (Compiled and Edited by Robert Peebles)

    Gregg Francis Braun, 39, was put to death by lethal injection at Oklahoma State Penitentiary in McAlester. He was pronounced dead at 12:17am. His execution was witnessed by 39 members of the five persons he had killed in 1989. Twelve of the witnesses watched the execution from a viewing room in the death chamber, while 27 watched through close-circuit television. Braun had requested only one witness, Rev Chi Peter Phung, a Catholic priest. Braun had asked his family members not to witness his execution.

    Braun was the 10th man put to death by the state this year and the 29th since the state resumed capital punishment in 1977. He was also the 55th person executed in the United States this year and the 653rd since the reinstatement of capital punishment.

    Background

    On July 19, 1989, Barbara Kochendorfer, 27, and Mary Rains, 28, both of Garden City, Kansas, were murdered. Each of the women worked in convenience stores in Garden City. They were abducted from their respective places of work in two separate incidents. Both women were shot in the head and their bodies were dumped in ditches three miles apart outside of town. The next day EP “Pete” Spurrier was murdered in his Pampa, Texas, photo processing shop. He had been shot in the head. One day after Spurrier’s murder, Gwendolyn Sue Miller, 31, was shot to death. Miller was working at Dodson’s Flower Shop in Ardmore, Oklahoma. She and two other women, JoAnn Beane (who also worked there) and Mary Mannings (apparently a customer), were forced to lie face down on the floor and then all three were shot in the back of the head. Beane and Mannings both survived. Two days later Geraldine Valdez, 48, a convenience store clerk in Springer, New Mexico, was shot and killed. All five murder victims were shot with a .25-caliber pistol.

    On Sunday, July 23, 1989, Michael Frank Greene, 37, of Inola, Oklahoma, was arrested in a Lawton, Oklahoma, hospital for the murder of Gwen Miller. He was also suspected of killing Kochendorfer and Rains in Kansas and Spurrier in Texas. Greene had been identified from a photo lineup by one of the survivors of the Ardmore shooting. Within hours of Greene’s arrest, Gregg Francis Braun, 28, was arrested in New Mexico for the murder of Valdez. At the time of his arrest, Braun, of Garden City, Kansas, allegedly implicated himself in the murder of Miller. On Wednesday, July 26, the murder charge against Greene for the slaying of Miller was dropped.

    By August 3rd Braun was the primary suspect in the murders of Kochendorfer and Rains in Kansas, Spurrier in Texas, and Miller in Oklahoma. On August 18 Braun was charged with first-degree murder for the shooting death of Miller. In April, 1990, Braun pled guilty but mentally ill to the New Mexico charge of the capital murder of Valdez. In September, 1991, Braun was sentenced to life in prison for the murder after jurors could not reach a consensus on the sentencing. Braun would have to serve a minimum of 36.5 years behind bars for the murder and robbery before being eligible for parole. Braun was sentenced to four life sentences and two sentences of 15 years to life for the murders/robberies in Kansas. The court ruled that these sentences must be served consecutively, meaning Braun would have to live past 100 to be eligible for parole.

    In August, 1993, Braun pled no contest to the robbery and murder charges against him in Ardmore. It was a “blind” plea (i.e. there was no deal with the prosecutor for a particular sentence in exchange for the plea.) On August 23, Judge Thomas Walker sentenced Braun to death for the 1989 murder of Miller. On August 27, Braun’s attorneys filed a motion to withdraw the plea, but this motion was refused by Walker.

    Clemency Denied

    The Oklahoma Pardon and Parole Board held a clemency hearing for Gregg Braun on Tuesday, June 27, in Oklahoma City. Braun was represented by Benjamin McCullar and Jim Rowan. Rowan was Braun’s trial attorney. Braun’s mental illness, Borderline Personality Disorder, was raised by his attorneys as an issue worthy of clemency. Braun did not attend the hearing. The Board voted 4-0 to deny a recommendation of clemency to Governor Keating. Since capital punishment was reinstated in Oklahoma, this was the 22nd clemency hearing held for a death row inmate. There has never been a vote in favor of clemency.

    ProDeathPenalty.Com

    Gregg Braun was sentenced to die for the 7/21/89 murder of Gwendolyn Sue Miller in an $80 flower shop robbery in Ardmore, Oklahoma. A customer was shot in the head and robbed of $600 and the bookkeeper was also shot. He also murdered four other people in a multi-state crime spree. Each of the five murder victims was found shot in the back of the head with a .25-caliber handgun. Miller’s husband, Dusty, and their 3 children planned to watch Braun die on the eve of the anniversary of her July 21, 1989, death. “After all the pain and being helpless to protect my kids and family, this is the only thing I can do,” Miller said.

    On July 19, 1989, Braun, a 28-year-old college graduate with a degree in criminal justice, kidnapped Barbara Kochendorfer, 27 and Mary Raines, 28, during a robbery of two different convenience stores, on opposite sides of town in Garden City, Kansas. Both women were shot and dumped on the side of the same rural road. Between them they left eight young children. Braun later told police that just after the first murder he felt he had to kill again. The next day, July 20, 1989, he also murdered 54-year-old Pete Spurrier, the owner of the One Hour Photo store in Pampa, Texas.

    On July 23, 1989, Braun killed Geraldine Valdez, 48, by shooting her twice in the head during a gas station robbery in Springer, New Mexico. He was caught 40 minutes after her murder with the gun still in his car. “You guys must be proud,” he told police. “You don’t know what kind of famous criminal you caught.” Braun told a deputy of his murderous spree, “it wasn’t as good as shooting craps in Vegas, but it was all right.” Lelyn Braun says he didn’t know this Gregg Braun. Yes, the son he raised had his troubles with drugs. Yes, the youngest Braun ran with the wrong crowd. But he had seemed ready to get his life on track when he came to live with his parents. Lelyn Braun blames the murder spree on a combination of drugs and alcohol. He said he wrote the victims’ families to tell them that he wished Gregg had never been born. Lelyn Braun doesn’t defend his son’s actions. But says “They’re going to kill a good man. And they’re going to do it illegally.” Braun’s father was a prominent Garden City lawyer at the time of the crimes. Mr. Braun wanted to have his son returned to New Mexico to serve a life sentence there.

    Dusty Miller understands why a father would fight for his child. He raised 3 children to adulthood alone. But Mr. Miller can’t comprehend how a 28-year-old Mr. Braun could walk into an Ardmore, Okla., floral shop and shoot his sweet-natured wife, Gwendolyn Sue Miller. And Mr. Miller doesn’t believe that a man like that can change as Lelyn Braun claims. “I don’t understand how he could meet somebody like Gwen and still make a decision that the world didn’t need her anymore,” Mr. Miller said Monday. Dolores Spurrier doesn’t want to see the execution of Braun, who pleaded guilty to the shooting death of her husband, Pete. “Any delay would be too much,” Dolores said Tuesday before the execution. “I’ll handle it better here (in Pampa). I just want it over with,” she said of the execution. The victim’s son, Bill Spurrier of San Antonio, said he will attend the execution, but the coming event invoked painful memories. “The execution brought everything back like it was yesterday, and it’s not only for me, but for my wife and my mother,” Spurrier said Tuesday. Bill Spurrier said the execution will bring him a sense of closure. “I know he’ll never be able to commit another murder,” he said.

    Dolores Spurrier said she went to every one of Braun’s trials and got to know relatives of the other victims. “I think everybody is just glad that it’s going to happen,” she said. “It will be some closure. But I don’t think you would ever really get over it.” Other representatives of the victims’ families are planning to be at the execution. The families have stayed in touch and said they always planned to attend the execution, no matter how long it took. 39 family members of Braun’s 5 murder victims came to witness the execution, but only 12 of them were able to witness it from inside the death chamber. The remaining 27 watched from a nearby room on closed-circuit television. “I’m glad to get this over with,” said Dusty Miller, Gwendolyn Miller’s husband. “I feel sorry for him (Braun) that he’s chosen to take his life and do something like this, . . . but I’m still very angry that he’s taken my wife and my children’s mother away. I can’t forgive him tonight. Maybe I can sometime down the line.”

    Thursday’s execution of Gregg Francis Braun brought a sense of justice to Bill Spurrier but will not completely mend the emotional rips and tears from his father’s murder. “I’ve been asked several times whether I feel that watching the execution would be revenge for me,” Spurrier said Thursday. “My answer is after 11 years, there is no revenge; that is justice.” Braun was pronounced dead at 12:17 a.m. Thursday, 6 minutes after receiving a lethal injection at the Oklahoma State Penitentiary in McAlester, Okla. “I think that the execution was very humane,” said Bill Spurrier, a San Antonio resident. “It looked like he just went to sleep.” Spurrier thanked the Oklahoma Department of Corrections personnel and everybody who was there for the victims. “They handled a very tough situation in a professional manner,” he said. “I feel very sorry for Braun’s family, but they did get the opportunity to say goodbye, which I never got that opportunity. I had to say goodbye to my dad at the grave.” Spurrier said there is never complete closure to the loss of his father. “When my son was born in Sicily when I was stationed there, my dad traveled all the way to Sicily to hold his grandson,” Spurrier said. “He’ll never have the chance to hold my grandson.”

    The Southwest Kansas Register

    “The Art and Soul of Forgiveness,” by David Myers.

    In 1983, Pope John Paul II stepped into a cell in an Italian prison and embraced Mehmet Ali Agca, the man who had attempted to assassinate him two years earlier. When asked in 1999 by a group of children gathered at a Rome church why he forgave him, the pope replied, “I forgave him because that’s what Jesus teaches. Jesus teaches us to forgive.”

    In December 1999, a Tennessee family of four fought to keep the escaped mental patient who kidnapped and killed their mother from facing the death penalty — because that’s they way they felt their mother would have wanted it. During his mother’s funeral, Father Charles Strobel told the mourners, “Why speak of anger and revenge? Those words were not compatible with the very thought of our mother. So, I say to everyone, we are not angry or vengeful, just deeply hurt. “We know the answers are not easy and clear, but we still believe in the miracle of forgiveness. And we extend our arms in that embrace.”

    Closer to home, Ruth and Bob Hessman of Dodge City work every day to forgive the man who, on July 19, 1989, killed their daughter, Mary Rains, a few miles from a Garden City convenience store where she had been working early that morning. Devout Catholics, the couple had long been opposed to the death penalty, a stance that didn’t change after their daughter was murdered.

    Approximately four years before Gregg Braun was executed July 20, the couple began writing to their daughter’s killer. At first he expressed a bitterness that reflected a belligerence he displayed in court. After a time, though, he seemed to release his bitterness and replace it with humility; several letters expressing regret and apologizing for killing the Hessmans’ daughter. In a Dodge City Daily Globe article by Eric Swanson published soon after Braun was executed, Ruth Hessman commented, “Knowing that he had reconciled himself with his Maker and worked on that – that was our main intent.” Sister Jolene Geier, O.P., a Dominican Sister of Great Bend, helped organize a prayer vigil for Braun the night before his execution in Oklahoma. The vigil was attended by the Hessmans.

    At the vigil an introductory prayer read, in part, “We are gathered here in the presence of God who is full of compassion and mercy to pray for Gregg Braun who is scheduled to be executed before the night is over. We are here, also, to pray for his family and his victims and their families. We especially need to pray for those who cannot forgive Gregg, who has asked for forgiveness for his crimes.” Sister Geier told the Register that she admired the Hessmans because they were able to “overcome their own hatred and lack of forgiveness. They began to pray for him – for his soul – that he would be saved. …We think that these people who do so much bad can turn around and be saved. You just think about the scripture passage, about the good shepherd going after the one lost sheep. That depicts what happened to Gregg. He was so lost and he responded to all the love and tenderness that his family, and especially Ruth and Bob, gave him, and it was through this love that God forgave him. “[The Hessmans] are a model to us on the struggle to forgive,” she added. ” We Sisters not only walked with the Hessmans but we walked with Gregg’s family. We want the greater diocese to know that we Sisters encourage people to take a stand against the death penalty, and really let it be known that it is not a way to respond to evil.”

    In an article in “Grains of Wheat,” a publication of the Dominican Sisters of Great Bend, Ruth Hessman wrote of the killing, “This news devastated our family – the shock, the disbelief, the pain, and yes, the anger. The thing that stands out in my mind from that awful time was what our pastor, Father (John) Maes told me after the funeral: ‘Ruth, before this is over you may even be angry at God, and I just want you to know that he will understand.’ “…We didn’t find forgiveness just by saying, ‘We forgive’ and moving on. We found we needed to start each day with a prayer of forgiveness for [Gregg]. Even after the 10 years that have passed there can still be the temptation to be unforgiving, but with prayer we are trying to eliminate that feeling and to realize that her death was the beginning of her journey to her heavenly father! “Peace comes to us now from watching our children and grandchildren as they learn to follow us on the journey of forgiveness. For if we are to believe we can be forgiven, we must first be able to forgive.”

    As the first 50 years in the life of the Diocese of Dodge City comes to a close, Bishop Ronald M. Gilmore is inviting all people of the diocese to feel an integral part of the anniversary celebration. For some, especially those who have faced the closure of their church or parish over the years, this may first require forgiveness and reconciliation within the diocese. Whether an individual, a community or a country, reconciliation does not come easy. As Bob Hessman told the Register, it takes effort, and the process leading to forgiveness can be a painful one.

    At the prayer vigil for Gregg Braun, the following was also read: “We are here tonight to remember the stories that have been told over and over during these 10 years since those horrible events took place. It is through telling our stories that reconciliation can happen within ourselves first of all and then with others who are involved. Reconciliation is the work of God, who initiates and completes in us reconciliation through Jesus. Reconciliation is not a human achievement, but the work of God within us.”

    Conception Abbey

    Gregg Braun was a murderer. During a five-day spree in July 1989, he killed four women and one man in Kansas, Texas, Oklahoma and New Mexico. When captured by New Mexico law officers, he belligerently told them: “You guys must be proud. You don’t know what kind of famous criminal you caught.”

    But 11 years later, Brother Jeremiah contends, the state of Oklahoma killed a man of prayer, a man who extensively studied Western monasticism and often said that if his life could’ve been different, he thought he may have become a monk. A man filled with self-loathing and remorse, who struggled with the belief that his sins were too great for even God’s forgiveness. A man who corresponded regularly with Bob and Ruth Hessman, the parents of Mary Rains, one of Braun’s victims. The Hessmans believed so sincerely in his transformation that they pleaded for his life. They attended a prayer vigil the night of his execution where Ruth read aloud their last letter from Braun. “What a remarkable testimony to forgiveness,” Brother Jeremiah says.

    Brother Jeremiah’s correspondence began through a friend, Dominican Sister Renee Dreiling. She was the condemned man’s fifth- and sixth-grade teacher and had corresponded with him since his arrest. Brother Jeremiah was intrigued when Sister Renee told him of Braun’s fascination with monastic life. Braun even viewed his life on death row in a monastic way, committing himself to prayer and spiritual reading.

    Braun’s letters were full of questions. He fleshed out his scholarly knowledge of monasticism with questions about every day life at Conception Abbey. What was it like to pray in community? What was the silence like? He inquired about Brother Jeremiah’s journey from simple vows toward solemn vows (see Solemn profession…), which he professed in August, six weeks after Braun’s death. As they grew closer, Brother Jeremiah read of Braun’s fears and remorse. “His letters were filled with so much pain,” Brother Jeremiah recalls. “He would vacillate. One letter would be full of self-hatred. He didn’t think God’s mercy could surpass the wrong that he’d done.” The next letter would radiate with hope. “He had a great devotion to Mary,” Brother Jeremiah reveals. “He knew that Jesus listened to his mother and that was a source of hope for him. In that way, God was approachable.”

    In late June Braun’s execution date was set for July 20. It was then that he asked if Brother Jeremiah would come to Oklahoma for a visit. After much wrangling with red tape and prison rules, the monk found himself at the doors of H-Unit two weeks to the day before the execution date. As he entered the visiting chamber, he saw Braun for the first time, through reinforced glass and heavy metal bars. They talked by telephone for two hours.

    “He talked briefly about his upcoming execution,” Brother Jeremiah recounts. “He was torn between whether he should hold out hope for his appeals or begin preparing for his death.” Braun tentatively discussed his crimes, referring to the times of the murders as “when the madness started.” Then he caught himself and was silent for a moment. “I can’t describe the look that came over his face,” Brother Jeremiah says. “It was a look of sadness the likes of which I’d never seen before.” The two hours went quickly. When Brother Jeremiah stood to leave, Braun pressed his palm to the glass and the monk did the same.

    “There was a moment when the bars and the glass seemed to disappear and we touched,” Brother Jeremiah says, his voice cracking. “Gregg said he loved me and thanked me for coming. I told him I was proud and honored to call him my brother and friend.” Shortly after that, Brother Jeremiah said goodbye. Braun corrected him. “I’ll see you later,” he said.

    The Daily Ardmoreite.Com.

    “Victim’s Former Husband Speaks Out ,” by Marsha Miller. (July 19, 2000)

    Dusty Miller says when he watches the execution of his wife’s killer, he will be honoring the wedding vows he made to her for the final time. “I took an oath to love, honor and protect my wife. I wasn’t allowed to do it. Gregg Braun took that away from me. Making sure he pays for what he did — it’s the last thing I can do to honor those vows,” Miller said.

    Barring an unforeseen stay of execution, Braun is scheduled to die by lethal injection at 12:01 a.m. Thursday for the 1989 slaying of Gwendolyn Sue Miller. The local florist was one of five victims who died during the Garden City, Kan., man’s five-day killing rampage that raged through four states. Two other women, JoAnn Beane, formerly of Ardmore, and Mary Manning, Marietta, were wounded but survived Braun’s murderous stop in Ardmore. Miller, who previously hesitated to discuss Braun’s pending execution, changed his mind Tuesday. “We were afraid we would jinx it. But the attorney general’s office has encouraged me to talk about it. Those who are trying to prevent it are talking,” Miller said.

    Miller, his family and Manning will travel to Oklahoma State Penitentiary at McAlester this afternoon. They will be joined by survivors of Braun’s other victims: Mary Rains and Barbara Kochendorfer, both Garden City; P.E. “Pete” Spurrier, Pampa, Texas; and Geraldine Valdez, Springer, N.M. The group will meet with members of the attorney general’s staff, who will brief them on the execution process. They will also tour the prison and some will give interviews. Braun asked to be served a last meal of a chef salad with Italian dressing, barbecue beef or pork and a hot fudge brownie sundae. He didn’t want his family to witness the execution. They planned to be in McAlester, however, for a memorial service at a local Catholic church, his father, Lelyn Braun said. About 11:30 p.m., Braun will be escorted into the execution chamber. Approximately 31 minutes later, the victims’ survivors and other witnesses will listen to any final words Braun might offer and watch as the State of Oklahoma takes his life in exchange for ending life of the 31-year-old Ardmore woman.

    Miller doesn’t expect to hear apologies or words of remorse from Braun. “I haven’t heard from him in 11 years. He could sit and write letters to others, but not to us. Some say he has expressed remorse, but every time he has had an opportunity to say something publicly he has used it to wisecrack. At one point he told a reporter, ‘Tell your editor thanks for the publicity,’ That’s just like a slap in the face,” Miller said. “At this point I don’t care. I don’t need him to tell me he’s sorry now.”

    While Braun has never attempted to contact any of the victims’ survivors, Miller said his family did receive a letter of regret and sympathy from the killer’s parents. Shortly after Braun was arrested, Miller started carrying a photograph of his wife’s murderer in his wallet. “I didn’t want to forget him. After the shock, the grief, anger and depression I finally got tired of being reminded. It got to the point where it wasn’t healthy anymore and I stopped,” he said. Now Miller says all he wants is justice. “I feel it (execution) needs to be done. It closes a chapter in our lives. It won’t be a complete closure, naturally we don’t have Gwen any more,” Miller said. “This person did not care for Gwen, her life or her future. He deserves to pay for what he did.”

    The Salina Journal Online

    “No Justice,” by George P. Pyle, Journal Columnist. (July 21, 2000)

    THE ISSUE : The execution of Gregg Braun

    THE ARGUMENT

    Now he has dragged others into hell. It is early yet. Gregg Francis Braun only died at 17 minutes past midnight Thursday morning at the hands of the state of Oklahoma. But, so far, there have been no reports that any of the people he killed 11 years ago, in a crime spree that spanned four states and took five lives, have returned to the land of the living. There is evidence, however, that the survivors of some of Braun’s victims, cruelly misled by cravenly opportunistic politicians, did get to taste of the hell known only to those who wish the death of others.

    Braun, son of a prominent Garden City, Kan., lawyer, who began life with every advantage and earned a college degree in criminal justice, fell into hell in July of 1989 when he kidnapped a clerk from a convenience store he had just robbed, took her to a country road and killed her. Then he felt compelled to do it again, and again, in other towns. The killing that led to his own death was that of a florist from Ardmore, Okla. Braun also had been sentenced to life in prison in Kansas, New Mexico and Texas, and his family had tried to get one of those states to take him back and exact justice in their less violent way. But the states declined, and the Supreme Court would not intervene.

    So now Braun has been killed. And some of the loved ones of those he killed got to watch, to taste a bit of the hell that Braun has lived all those years and — perhaps — still will. The desire to see another person die is cruelty beyond description, no matter how cruel that person may have been. That desire is also quite natural, quite human, in circumstances such as these, as widowed wives and motherless children grasp for any peace, any balance, any (to use the currently en vogue term) closure they can find.

    The point of the law, though, is to help us rise above our natural human urges and decide that we will not emulate the behavior of those we so rightly despise. That is why the state, not the widow or the orphan, is the officially aggrieved party in a murder case. That is why the cold, soulless state, not the emotionally wounded loved ones left behind, determine the facts, apply the law and search for something resembling justice.

    But, somewhere along the way, those loved ones, and all who are hurt by vicious and senseless crime, were sold a bill of goods. We were told that killing the killer would bring us peace. We were told it would balance the unbalanceable, right the unrightable, soothe the unsoothable.

    It does not. It will not. And to tell the most innocent victims of the most heinous crimes that it will do those things is a crime in itself. A crime committed by those who should know better.

    Shawnee Online

    “State Executes Five-Time Killer.” (May 2, 2000)

    McALESTER, Okla. (AP) — Gregg Francis Braun named his five victims one by one in the order he killed them in 1989 and said, “I’m sorry,” just before being put to death early Thursday. Braun, 39, strained against the straps that held him to a gurney in Oklahoma’s death chamber as his apologies rolled forth like a chant. “I’m sorry I murdered you. I’m sorry I took your lives. I pray for our Lord Jesus Christ to bless your lives and to save you. I’m so sorry I killed you,” the Kansas man said. He was pronounced dead at 12:17 a.m., six minutes after receiving a lethal mix of drugs. Braun received the death sentence for killing an Ardmore, Okla., florist. His execution came on the eve of the 11th anniversary of her murder. His last statement rambled over 3 minutes and was sometimes slurred. He apologized to his victims’ families, also naming them one by one. He also apologized to the people he injured in his four-state murder spree. “What I did was unforgivable, but I ask you to forgive me,” he said, as three dozen family members of his victims watched inside a witness room or via closed circuit television.

    Braun shot and killed Gwendolyn Sue Miller, 31, while robbing her parents’ Ardmore flower shop. Two other women shot at the same time survived. Miller’s husband, Dusty, and their three children traveled to the Oklahoma State Penitentiary to witness the execution. “It’s never going to go away,” Miller said, “but at least we’re not going to have to deal with him on an ongoing basis.” When New Mexico law officers caught up with Braun on July 23, 1989, he told them, “You guys must be proud. You don’t know what kind of famous criminal you caught.”

    His killing spree had begun five days earlier after he robbed a convenience store in his hometown of Garden City, Kan. Braun took the clerk to a rural road and shot her. He would later tell police he felt he had to kill again and chose another store clerk. Their bodies were found on the same road. Mary Rains left behind three young children. Barbara Kochendorfer left behind five. “The youngest was 2,” said Angie Bentley, Kochendorfer’s sister, who also came to witness the execution. “He’s affected a lot of families, not just hers. Babies. They’re not going to grow up with their mothers.” On July 20, Braun killed E.P. “Pete” Spurrier while robbing his one-hour photo store in Pampa, Texas. Two days after the Oklahoma slaying, he killed Geraldine Valdez at the Springer, N.M., convenience store where she worked. Braun was captured a short time later. He received life sentences for the murders in Kansas, New Mexico and Texas.

    Braun graduated college with a degree in criminal justice. His father, Lelyn, a lawyer in Garden City at the time of the murders, blamed drugs for turning his youngest son into a murderer.

    “He’s found peace with God,” Lelyn Braun said in the days before the execution. Braun apologized to his own family in his last statement. Then, he let out a long deep sigh before saying, “Save me Mother Mary from the eternal damnation I deserve.” “I’m not an animal. I’m so sorry,” he said. “I’m so sorry,” Braun’s defense had sought to have him returned to New Mexico to serve the life sentence there. But New Mexico courts rejected extradition efforts Wednesday, and the U.S. Supreme Court denied his final appeal just hours before the execution. Spurrier’s son, Bill, lamented that his father would never meet his great-grandson. He said he felt sorry for Braun’s family, too. “But they do get the opportunity to say goodbye,” he said. “I had to go to my father’s grave and say goodbye to the headstone.”

    {Note: In one of the last cases handled by Stephen Aarons as a public defender, he worked out a tentative agreement with the district attorney and the family of the victim to have Mr. Braun plead guilty but mentally ill in exchange for the removal of the death penalty for the murder in Springer, New Mexico. This agreement was discussed in 1989. Ultmately with contract defender Gary Mitchell as defense counsel, that was the final judgment and sentence. While Kansas, Texas agreed with New Mexico in finding Braun mentally ill from cocaine psychosis and lack of sleep over eight days, each handing down a life sentence instead, Oklahoma executed him instead. ]

     

    [/column]

  • State v. Wilson (1990)

    787 P.2d 821, 109 N.M. 541, No. 18204.

    STATE of New Mexico, Plaintiff-Appellee,
    v.
    Samuel Edward WILSON, Defendant-Appellant.

    Supreme Court of New Mexico.

    [109 N.M. 542] Jacqueline Robins, Chief Public Defender, Stephen D. Aarons and P. Jeffrey Jones, Asst. Appellant Defenders, Santa Fe, for defendant-appellant. Hal Stratton, Atty. Gen., Katherine Zinn, Asst. Atty. Gen., Santa Fe, for plaintiff-appellee.

    OPINION
    SOSA, Chief Justice.

    Defendant-appellant, Samuel Edward Wilson (Wilson), was convicted pursuant to a jury verdict of first degree murder contrary to NMSA 1978, Section 30-2-1(A) (Repl.Pamp.1984) and conspiracy to commit murder contrary to NMSA 1978, Section 30-28-2(A) (Repl.Pamp.1984). The jury also found the aggravating circumstance of murder for hire. Wilson was sentenced to life imprisonment for first degree murder, and nine years with two years mandatory parole for conspiracy to commit murder, with the sentences set to run concurrently.

    The State presented evidence that Wilson hired James Smith and Maurice Lee Smith, brothers, to kill the victim, the husband of a woman whom Wilson wanted to marry. Testimony at trial showed that Wilson provided a weapon, told the Smith brothers on which night to kill the victim and the method and manner of killing him, and to take money from the scene of the crime. Wilson points to various inconsistencies in this testimony and to the prosecutor’s admission that the State’s case contained such inconsistencies. After he was arrested, James Smith told police that Wilson had not been involved in the killing. The guns used in the murder were found on property owned by the Smith family. Later, however, James Smith told investigators that Wilson promised to pay him and his brother to kill the victim.

    JUROR RECUSAL
    During voir dire of the prospective jury, one juror stated in open court that an upcoming religious holiday, Yom Kippur, might prevent him from being able to attend to his jury duties every day of the trial. Prior to the parties’ counsel asserting challenges to the venire, and after the prospective juror had spoken with the trial judge in chambers about his possible conflict, the following exchange took place:

    [Court]: One issue that I’d like to bring up, and I failed to go over this with [the juror]. He did indicate two Jewish holidays next week: Monday would not be a problem but Wednesday would be a problem. I don’t know if we want to bring him in to see if he would refuse to serve or that if he had to sit in court on Wednesday if that would cause him any problems.

    [Prosecutor]: I asked him that and * * *.

    [Court]: Oh, did you? Oh, you asked him and he said it would not?

    [Prosecutor]: Yes.

    [Court]: O.K., I’m sorry. I did not hear then.

    [Defense Counsel]: We have no challenges for cause.

    [Court]: That’s fine, let’s bring the jurors in.

    The prospective juror at issue was chosen. On the fourteenth day of trial, he sent another note (his third note) to the trial judge restating his anxiety about serving the following day, Yom Kippur. The trial judge met with the juror in chambers, out of the presence of counsel for either party, came back into court and announced that she was excusing the juror, and appointed an alternate juror to sit in the excused juror’s place for the remainder of the trial.

    After the judge’s first in-chambers discussion with the juror, she stated to the parties and counsel what had been discussed. Prior to the second meeting in chambers, the juror had sent the judge a second note, to which the judge did not respond. Following his third note, the day before Yom Kippur, the judge met with the juror the second time and asked him if he could serve at least half a day, but he answered that it would be impossible. In his affidavit submitted after trial, the juror also testified, “During my two meetings with Judge Maes, neither the prosecution nor the defense attorneys were present.”

    Page 823

    [109 N.M. 543] He also testified, “[I]t is unthinkable for me to devote myself to any other pursuits on Yom Kippur than fasting, prayer and contemplation.”
    Prior to the judge’s second in-chambers discussion with the juror, the following exchange took place in open court:

    [Court]: [The juror] has again raised his concern about tomorrow. Where are we as far as defendant * * *.

    [Defense Counsel]: There are two short witnesses * * *.

    * * * * * *

    I think that * * * we could easily finish testimony within * * * an hour, or two hours, I guess * * *. But we could do jury instructions tomorrow, and, I don’t know, whatever the court feels is the proper thing to do.

    No objection was raised to the juror’s dismissal until Wilson’s counsel filed a motion for new trial following the verdict, nor was any objection raised to the judge’s consulting with the juror outside of the presence of the attorneys for the parties.

    WILSON’S ALIASES AND HIS PRIOR MILITARY CONVICTIONS

    Prior to trial, Wilson filed a “Motion in Limine About Aliases” in which he asked the court to “[r]efer to defendant during proceedings before the jury only as Ed Wilson[,]” and to “[r]equire that the prosecution, through its argument and witnesses, so refer to defendant.” The court granted this motion. Wilson also filed a “Motion to Exclude All References to Defendant’s Prior Convictions,” which read, in pertinent part, as follows:

    1. On two occasions more than ten years ago, defendant was convicted by military courts-martial of absenses [sic] without leave.

    2. These convictions equate to misdemeanor offenses.

    * * * * * *

    Therefore defendant requests that the court prohibit the prosecutor from making any reference to this past conviction, and to direct witnesses to follow this ruling.

    The court granted this motion also.

    On cross-examination of a State witness, the following exchange took place:

    [Defense Counsel]: Now officer, that manslaughter charge that you brought up, you had an opportunity to check that, didn’t you?

    [Witness]: Yes, sir. I did.

    * * * * * *

    [Defense Counsel]: Isn’t it a fact that you found out that indeed there was no manslaughter charge for Mr. Wilson?

    [Witness]: That is true, sir.

    [Defense Counsel]: As a matter of fact, there are no felonies for Mr. Wilson–felony convictions for Mr. Wilson?

    [Witness]: Can we have–clarification?

    [Defense Counsel]: A conviction is when you get convicted for a felony?

    [Witness]: The conflict that I have is there was a special court martial and a special court martial through the military judicial system would be the same as a felony through the civilian system.

    The subject of manslaughter had been elicited on direct examination. The Smith brothers had told the witness they felt threatened by Wilson to kill the victim because of Wilson’s reputation for having committed manslaughter in Texas. The court allowed questioning about this matter. Following the witness’ response equating a court martial conviction with a “felony through the civilian system,” Wilson’s counsel asked the court to take judicial notice that Wilson’s court martial conviction of “AWOL” was a misdemeanor. The court did so. Defense counsel did not ask the court to admonish the jury on this point. After a recess, the prosecutor asked the court for permission to inquire on re-direct examination into Wilson’s military convictions. Wilson’s counsel then moved for a mistrial, or in the alternative, an admonition to the jury not to consider the military conviction as a felony conviction. The court ruled that the prosecutor could not inquire on re-direct into Wilson’s military

    Page 824

    [109 N.M. 544] conviction. It denied the motion for mistrial, and did not admonish the jury as requested.
    Concerning the court’s order disallowing testimony on any aliases Wilson may have used, the following exchange occurred on cross-examination of Wilson by the prosecutor:

    [Prosecutor]: Now, you testified that the reason you put Ed Wilson to Samuel E. Wilson was just something you decided to do?

    [Wilson]: No, sir.

    [Prosecutor]: What was the purpose of it then?

    [Wilson]: Like I said, at one time [officials at the department of motor vehicles] may ask you for your driver’s license for I.D. and the next time they won’t. “Ed” is just natural for me. I’ve gone by Ed all my life, since I was a little feller.

    [Prosecutor]: You’ve never gone by any other name?

    [Wilson]: Yes sir.

    [Prosecutor]: What was that?

    [Wilson]: John Edward Goodloe.

    [Prosecutor]: Why did you go under that name?

    [Wilson]: Because I didn’t want to go back to Vietnam.

    [Prosecutor]: You were finally discharged as a deserter?

    At this point Wilson’s counsel objected. The objection was overruled. The court previously had allowed the prosecutor to inquire into several different names Wilson had used on his vehicle registration forms.

    JURY INSTRUCTION ON FIRST DEGREE MURDER

    The court instructed the jury on first degree murder, in pertinent part, as follows:

    For you to find the defendant guilty of first degree murder * * * the state must prove * * * each of the following elements of the crime:

    1. The defendant had [the victim] killed;

    2. The killing was with the deliberate intention to take away the life of [the victim] * * *.

    This instruction was the same as that found in the relevant uniform jury instruction, SCRA 1986, 14-201, except that in the latter, paragraph number one reads, “The defendant killed [the victim].” Wilson’s counsel had asked the court to instruct the jury verbatim from SCRA 1986, 14-201, and then add an instruction on aiding and abetting, to the effect that:

    1. The defendant intended that the crime be committed;

    2. The crime was committed;

    3. The defendant helped, encouraged or caused the crime to be committed.

    This second tendered instruction is the same as uniform instruction, SCRA 1986, 14-2822. The court refused both tendered instructions and read its own as quoted above.

    ISSUES RAISED ON APPEAL
    On appeal, Wilson asserts the following errors:

    I. The trial judge’s in-chambers communications with the eventually dismissed juror deprived Wilson of due process, equal protection and a fair trial.

    II. The prosecutor’s inquiry into Wilson’s prior military conviction and his use of different names in referring to Wilson deprived Wilson of due process, equal protection and a fair trial.

    III. The trial court’s alteration of the uniform jury instruction, SCRA 1986, 14-201, by using the words “had [the victim] killed” instead of the words “killed [the victim],” and the court’s refusal to read the uniform jury instruction, SCRA 1986, 14-2822, deprived Wilson of due process, equal protection and a fair trial.

    IV. Upon the evidence presented at trial, no rational trier of fact could have found proof of guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.

    Page 825

    [109 N.M. 545] OUR HOLDING ON APPEAL

    For the reasons stated herein, we reverse the judgment and sentence and remand the case for a new trial. Before discussing the points outlined above as Roman numerals I-IV, we first discuss an issue not raised in Wilson’s brief.

    On oral argument, we learned that the trial court had made no record, before the jury began its deliberations, of any objection to the court’s rejection of Wilson’s tendered instruction on aiding and abetting. Instead, the court reconstructed the record on this issue after the jury had retired. Although Wilson did not raise this point as error in either the docketing statement or in his brief, nonetheless we review the trial court’s actions in order to determine if they constitute fundamental error. As we have held previously,

    Errors not specifically objected to at trial may be reviewed by this Court if they concern:

    jurisdictional questions or questions involving:

    (a) general public interest;

    (b) fundamental rights of a party; or

    (c) facts or circumstances occurring or arising, or first becoming known after the trial court lost jurisdiction.

    State v. Martin, 101 N.M. 595, 601, 686 P.2d 937, 943 (1984); DesGeorges v. Grainger, 76 N.M. 52, 59, 412 P.2d 6, 10-11 (1966). In the present case, the trial court’s failure to offer defense counsel an opportunity to object on the record to the court’s rejection of the tendered instruction on aiding and abetting, before the jury began its deliberations, when weighed together with the errors discussed below, deprived Wilson of a fair trial. SCRA 1986, 5-608(D) provides:

    [F]or the preservation of error in the charge, objection to any instruction given must be sufficient to alert the mind of the court to the claimed vice therein, or, in case of failure to instruct on any issue, a correct written instruction must be tendered before the jury is instructed. Before the jury is instructed, reasonable opportunity shall be afforded counsel so as to object or tender instructions, on the record and in the presence of the court.

    (Emphasis added.)

    As we have stated elsewhere, “The purpose of [such a] rule is to give the trial court an opportunity to correct any error before the jury retires to deliberate.” Nichols Corp. v. Bill Stuckman Const. Inc., 105 N.M. 37, 40, 728 P.2d 447, 450 (1986) (citing City of Albuquerque v. Ackerman, 82 N.M. 360, 482 P.2d 63 (1971)); see Baros v. Kazmierczwk, 68 N.M. 421, 427, 362 P.2d 798, 802 (1961); Hamel v. Winkworth, 102 N.M. 133, 134, 692 P.2d 58, 59 (Ct.App.1984). Although the cited cases pertain to the rules of civil procedure, we find no reason for limiting the stated policy to civil cases.

    Indeed, we conclude that the policy applies with even more force to criminal cases, and thus we now hold that on remand the court shall give due consideration to SCRA 1986, 5-608, as written.

    I. TRIAL JUDGE’S COMMUNICATIONS WITH JUROR

    While the judge’s pretrial conversations with the juror may not have been error, see State v. Ramming, 106 N.M. 42, 48-50, 738 P.2d 914, 920-22 (Ct.App.), cert. denied, 106 N.M. 7, 738 P.2d 125, cert. denied, 484 U.S. 986, 108 S.Ct. 503, 98 L.Ed.2d 501 (1987), when the juror persisted in making his objection to further service known to the judge, even well into the course of the trial, a greater degree of scrutiny of the judge’s conversation with the juror should have been afforded Wilson than otherwise might have been the case. In Ramming, the juror in question wanted to convey to the judge her fear that her peers on the jury were not intelligent enough to understand the issues. After the judge conversed with the juror, in the presence of counsel for both parties, it was established that the juror’s fear would not disqualify her from effective service.

    Here, the juror had a far more disabling fear, namely, that his religious convictions would mandate his complete incapacity to serve on the jury during a portion of the

    Page 826

    [109 N.M. 546] trial. Unlike the situation in Ramming, at no time did the court converse with the juror in the presence of counsel. In Hovey v. State, 104 N.M. 667, 726 P.2d 344 (1986), we held that it was improper for a trial judge to communicate with the jury during it’s deliberations about an issue of the case without the defendant’s personal participation. We have the same reservations about the trial judge’s communications here as we had in Hovey. Justice Walters concurred in Hovey in order to emphasize that the defendant’s right to participate in every phase of the trial was of constitutional dimension. She stated:
    [U]nless the defendant voluntarily elects to absent himself, or is excluded from the courtroom by reason of “disruptive, contumacious, or stubbornly defiant” conduct [State v. Corriz, 86 N.M. 246 at 247, 522 P.2d 793, 794 (1974) ], his right to be present is a constitutional right that may not be waived by the attorney who acts without defendant’s express consent.

    Id. at 671-72, 726 P.2d at 348-49.

    We do not extend our ruling in Hovey to cover every situation in which a trial judge communicates with jurors about a matter that is not at issue in the trial. Surely, as a hypothetical example, if a juror wrote the judge a note asking if the judge had received a promised telephone call from the juror’s spouse about the success of the spouse’s surgery that day, it would not prejudice the defendant for the judge simply to answer yes or no to the note out of the defendant’s presence. Even in this hypothetical, however, the judge would be well advised to inform defense counsel and the defendant, individually and directly, of the substance of the communication, and to make a record of the communication as soon as practicable.

    In a case such as the present one, where there had been three determined efforts by the juror to communicate with the judge, and where the substance of the communication involved the juror’s further service, the defendant, individually and directly, should have been given the option of being present during the communication. While the trial judge fully and fairly notified counsel for both parties of the substance of her conversation with the juror, she should have offered Wilson himself the opportunity to be present during her conversation with the juror. In addition, the judge should have placed her conversations with the juror on the record. We note that the committee commentary to SCRA 1986, 5-610, states, “All communications between the judge and jury should be made a part of the record, whether made in the presence of defense counsel and defendant or not.”

    Here we hold that the trial court erred both in failing to offer Wilson a chance to be present during the judge’s conversation with the juror and in failing to make a record of that conversation.

    II. THE PROSECUTOR’S ELICITATION OF TESTIMONY CONCERNING WILSON’S ALIAS, AND HIS REFERENCE TO WILSON AS A “DESERTER”

    It is possible, although we think not likely, that the prosecutor innocently blundered his way into an elicitation of Wilson’s alias. It is also possible, and perhaps more credible, that the prosecutor on closing argument inadvertently referred to Wilson as a “deserter,” thereby inaccurately making Wilson a convicted felon, rather than accurately saying that Wilson had been convicted of the misdemeanor charge of “AWOL.” The context of the circumstances surrounding the testimony leads us to conclude that Wilson’s military convictions (which were twenty-two years old) erroneously were emphasized by the prosecutor, as were Wilson’s alias, to Wilson’s prejudice.

    Wilson correctly has relied on State v. Bobbin, 103 N.M. 375, 707 P.2d 1185 (Ct.App.), cert. denied, 103 N.M. 287, 705 P.2d 1138 (1985), for the proposition that a witness’ conviction for a crime involving punishment of less than one year may not be used to attack the witness’ credibility. See SCRA 1986, 11-609. Yet, neither that case nor the underlying rule of evidence are apposite, as the testimony concerning the conviction was not used to attack anyone’s

    Page 827

    [109 N.M. 547] credibility. Rather, it was elicited unfortuitiously by Wilson’s own counsel during the cross-examination of a State witness.
    Yet, it was the use that was made of the elicited testimony that gives rise to prosecutorial misconduct. Once the court had denied the prosecutor’s request to inquire further of the witness concerning Wilson’s military convictions, the prosecutor should have ceased from any further reference to Wilson’s convictions, notwithstanding the fact that Wilson’s counsel in closing argument himself referred to the testimony about those convictions. The subject was risky, and the prosecutor, having been forewarned, should have scrupulously avoided it, seeking zealously not to prejudice Wilson’s right to a fair trial. Instead, the prosecutor intruded imprudently into the danger zone and then compounded his error by calling Wilson a “deserter.”

    The same lack of caution characterizes the prosecutor’s elicitation of testimony about Wilson’s use of other names. The prosecutor had adequate warning from the court’s orders on the pretrial motions not to intrude into this sensitive area. When Wilson volunteered the alias “John Edward Goodloe,” the prosecutor should have avoided his next question, “Why did you go under that name?”, as he undoubtedly knew that the response would involve Wilson’s prior military convictions.

    If prosecutorial misconduct were the only issue before us, we would perhaps find, as to this issue, that the scales did not tip in Wilson’s favor on appeal, relying, for example, on State v. Taylor, 104 N.M. 88, 95-96, 717 P.2d 64, 71-72 (Ct.App.), cert. denied, 103 N.M. 798, 715 P.2d 71 (1986), to the effect that Wilson’s counsel had opened the door to the prosecutor’s words on cross-examination and on closing argument. Here, however, we conclude that the doctrine of cumulative error is applicable. Other errors were committed during the course of the trial; defendant in other respects did not receive a fair trial. As we have stated elsewhere, “We must reverse any conviction obtained in a proceeding in which the cumulative impact of irregularities is so prejudicial to a defendant that he is deprived of his fundamental right to a fair trial. U.S. Const.Amend. VI, XIV; N.M. Const. art. II, Sec. 14”. Martin, 101 N.M. at 601, 686 P.2d at 943.

    By this criterion, the prosecutor’s elicitation of testimony concerning Wilson’s alias, and the prosecutor’s emphasis of Wilson’s military convictions do not pass constitutional muster. Taken in the aggregate, in the context of the other errors committed at trial, the prosecutor’s conduct amounts to reversible error.

    III. THE COURT’S INSTRUCTION ON FIRST DEGREE MURDER

    On oral argument, the State contended that insertion of the phrase “had the victim killed” made the instruction more compact, and thus more specifically informed the jury on the nature of the alleged crime. While this argument has merit, we also are mindful of the compelling policy reasons underlying our holding in Jackson v. State, 100 N.M. 487, 489, 672 P.2d 660, 662 (1983) (premising reversal based on improper jury instructions on the court’s discretion “to prevent injustice where a fundamental right of the accused has been violated”).

    Here, we do not find that the slight change in the uniform instruction eliminated an essential element of the crime in the instruction or that it prejudiced Wilson. The instruction did not differ materially from the uniform instruction. See id. at 489, 672 P.2d at 662. It could even be argued that rejection of the instruction on aiding and abetting, in conjunction with the court’s slight alteration of the instruction on first degree murder, was helpful to Wilson. See State v. Ochoa, 41 N.M. 589, 608-09, 72 P.2d 609, 621-22 (1937).

    IV. PROOF BEYOND A REASONABLE DOUBT

    While the evidence in this case arguably fell below the standard to which the State is held under its burden of proof beyond a reasonable doubt, we do not conclude the evidence was inadequate. The jury could have found guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.

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    [109 N.M. 548] For the foregoing reasons this case is reversed and remanded to the trial court for proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.

    IT IS SO ORDERED.

    WILSON, J., concurs.

    RANSOM and MONTGOMERY, JJ., specially concurs.

    BACA, J., dissents.

    RANSOM, Justice (specially concurring).

    To the extent that, from the opinion filed today, it may be inferred that the trial court’s violation of Rule 5-608(D) constituted fundamental error, alone or in combination with other error, I demur. I concur, nonetheless, that it is important to the administration of justice that Rule 5-608(D) be adhered to in every criminal trial. The dispositive issues in my mind, however, are the matter of the dismissal of the juror without meaningful input and participation by defendant, and prosecutorial misconduct in the extraordinary efforts used to present to the jury the matter of the military conviction that had been ruled inadmissible.

    MONTGOMERY, Justice (specially concurring).

    I CONCUR with the result reached in the plurality opinion, for most of the reasons stated in Part II of the opinion. I find that the prosecutor’s violation of the trial court’s pre-trial orders in referring to the defendant’s military conviction and eliciting testimony as to the defendant’s previous alias amounted to prosecutorial misconduct. The prosecution’s references to these subjects in violation of the court’s orders–going so far as to call the defendant a “deserter” on cross-examination and in closing argument–for me “tip the scales” in the direction of reversible error. Since I do not agree that other errors were committed in the trial, I obviously do not believe the doctrine of cumulative error is applicable to this case.

    I do not agree that the trial court’s failure to make a record of whatever transpired at the time the instructions were settled amounted to fundamental error. I also do not agree that the trial court’s communication with the juror outside the presence of the defendant, given all the circumstances in this case, constituted reversible error; and I join in Justice Baca’s dissent on this issue.

    I understand the plurality opinion to reject the defendant’s attack on the trial court’s instruction on first degree murder, and I agree with this disposition.

    Since a new trial is necessary, I make no decision on whether or not the evidence satisfied the State’s burden of proof.

    BACA, Justice (dissenting).

    Unable to agree with the majority opinion, I respectfully dissent. The majority considered four questions on appeal: the judge’s in-chambers communication and eventual dismissal of a juror; the prosecutor’s inquiry into Wilson’s prior military conviction and his use of aliases; the trial court’s alteration of the Uniform Jury Instructions; and the court’s timing of objections to jury instructions. The majority found that each question taken singly was not sufficient to reverse the conviction, but taken together constituted cumulative error and therefore mandated a reversal.

    The majority found Wilson was “deprived of a fair trial” partly because objections to jury instructions were not made of record before the jury retired to deliberate. The majority then went on to find that the altered Uniform Jury Instruction complained of and the refusal to give an aiding and abetting instruction was not error. As a matter of fact, the majority found that the instruction as altered did not differ materially from the Uniform Jury Instructions and further “it could even be argued that rejection of the instruction on aiding and abetting in conjunction with the court’s slight alteration of the instruction on first degree murder was helpful to Wilson.” It is difficult to see how the court “deprived Wilson of a fair trial” notwithstanding the fact that an opportunity to object to these instructions was not afforded until the jury had retired when this court has specifically

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    [109 N.M. 549] found that there is no harm and perhaps there is help to the defendant by the giving of these instructions.
    At the trial below, in the docketing statement, and in the briefs filed in this court there is no complaint about the fact that the judge failed to take objections to jury instructions before submitting them to the jury. Only upon oral argument did this court unearth that fact. Though the procedure was flawed, prejudice to the defendant does not exist. I agree that the better policy is for a trial judge to have a hearing on the record for objections to jury instructions before the jury retires. This is strongly suggested by SCRA 1986, 5-608(D).

    Under almost all circumstances when a jury has been impaneled, it is best that a trial judge not communicate with a juror except in the presence of counsel and the defendant. In this case, the trial judge communicated with a juror prior to impaneling and several days into the trial as well as receiving three notes from the juror concerning continued service through a religious holiday. In Hovey v. State, 104 N.M. 667, 726 P.2d 344 (1986), this court held that it was inappropriate for a trial judge to communicate with a juror concerning matters that are at issue in the trial. In this case, the trial judge did not communicate with a juror concerning matters at issue in the trial but only tried to deal with matters of scheduling around a religious holiday. The majority specifically did not extend the Hovey rule to cover every situation in which a trial judge communicates with a juror. When defense counsel and defendant were made aware of the fact that the conversations had taken place and the juror was to be excused, no objections were made either as to the conversations, the absence of a record, or the fact that the juror would not continue serving.

    It is the better practice that all communications between the judge and juror be made a part of the record whether made in the presence of defense counsel and defendant or not. SCRA 1986, 5-610 suggests this procedure. Rule 5-610 by its very language “presence of defense counsel and defendant or not” would seem to suggest that under certain circumstances defense counsel and the defendant would not be present when conversations are held with jurors. No objections being made below, no showing of prejudice by the conversation, or the excuse of the juror, there is no prejudice to Wilson.

    A more troubling facet of this case is the revelation of the prior criminal record of Wilson and aliases used by him, along with the gratuitous referral to Wilson as a deserter by the prosecution in closing argument after being warned by the court. The question of Wilson’s prior criminal record, however, was elicited by his own counsel in cross-examination. The court in response to an objection gave a curative instruction that an A.W.O.L. conviction in a military tribunal was equivalent to a misdemeanor and was not a felony conviction. The misuse of this information by the prosecutor in referring to Wilson as a deserter in closing argument was inappropriate. The inquiry by the prosecutor as to various aliases by Wilson by contrast was less objectionable. The referral to the aliases could be explained by inadvertence or innocent response to proper questions. The majority holds that “if prosecutorial misconduct were the only issue before us we would perhaps find, as to this issue, that the scales do not tip in Wilson’s favor on appeal.” I agree this standing alone is not sufficient to tip the scales in Wilson’s favor.

    Finding no error in the judge’s in-chambers communication and the dismissal of the juror; finding no error in the refusal of the Uniform Jury Instruction and the altering of another jury instruction; finding no error or prejudice to Wilson in the timing of jury instructions objections; and, further, finding prosecutorial misconduct does not tip the scales in Wilson’s favor, I find no cumulative error. I would affirm the conviction. State v. Wilson, 109 N.M. 541, 787 P.2d 821, 1990 NMSC 19 (N.M., 1990)