NOTICE: NOT FOR OFFICIAL PUBLICATION.
UNDER ARIZONA RULE OF THE SUPREME COURT 111(c), THIS DECISION IS NOT PRECEDENTIAL
AND MAY BE CITED ONLY AS AUTHORIZED BY RULE.
IN THE
ARIZONA COURT OF APPEALS
DIVISION ONE
STATE OF ARIZONA, Appellee,
v.
JENNIFER ANN GRIFFITH, Appellant.
No. 1 CA-CR 14-0297
FILED 8-20-2015
Appeal from the Superior Court in Maricopa County
No. CR2013-00377-001
The Honorable Rosa Mroz, Judge
AFFIRMED
COUNSEL
Arizona Attorney General’s Office, Phoenix
By Joseph T. Maziarz
Counsel for Appellee
Ballecer & Segal, LLP, Phoenix
By Natalee Segal
Counsel for Appellant
STATE v. GRIFFITH
Decision of the Court
MEMORANDUM DECISION
Judge Peter B. Swann delivered the decision of the court, in which Presiding
Judge Kent E. Cattani and Judge Lawrence F. Winthrop joined.
S W A N N, Judge:
¶1 Jennifer Griffith appeals her convictions and sentences for second-
degree murder and abandonment or concealment of a dead body.
¶2 This case comes to us as an appeal under Anders v. California, 386
U.S. 738 (1967), and State v. Leon, 104 Ariz. 297 (1969). Griffith’s appellate counsel
searched the record on appeal, found no arguable nonfrivolous question of law,
and asks us to review the record for fundamental error. See Anders, 386 U.S. 738;
Smith v. Robbins, 528 U.S. 259 (2000); State v. Clark, 196 Ariz. 530 (App. 1999).
Griffith was given an opportunity to file a supplemental brief in propria persona
but did not do so.
¶3 We find no fundamental error, and therefore affirm.
FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
¶4 Griffith was indicted for second-degree murder of E.A., and for
abandonment or concealment of his dead body. The indictment included
citations to the statutes governing accomplice liability. Griffith was found
competent to stand trial in proceedings under Ariz. R. Crim. P. 11, and the matter
proceeded to a jury trial.
¶5 At trial, the state presented evidence of the following facts. From
approximately 2001 to 2003, E.A. and his wife lived in the same neighborhood as
Griffith and her husband, Daniel Griffith (“Daniel”). During that time, E.A. was
a frequent visitor at the Griffiths’ residence, which they shared with Griffith’s
parents. E.A. continued to maintain contact with Daniel after moving away from
the neighborhood.
¶6 From the evening of February 6 through the morning of February 7,
2012, multiple calls were exchanged between the Griffiths’ home phone and
E.A.’s cell phone. E.A. failed to return home after work on February 7, and did
not answer his family members’ repeated calls. That afternoon, E.A.’s wife, N.Y.,
inspected his cell phone records and discovered the calls to and from the
Griffiths’ number. N.Y. called the Griffiths and spoke to Griffith. When N.Y.
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STATE v. GRIFFITH
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inquired about E.A.’s whereabouts, Griffith stated that E.A. had called in search
of an acquaintance’s phone number and that she did not know his location.
Daniel then spoke to N.Y. and gave a similar response. Both Griffith and Daniel
gave N.Y. a phone number that they claimed to have passed on to E.A. N.Y.
called that number and found it was not in service.
¶7 That evening, N.Y. confronted the Griffiths at the front door of their
residence. Griffith, who appeared nervous, repeated the phone number that she
had previously given to N.Y. Daniel then told N.Y. that E.A. had last visited in
November 2011. He also stated that he would kill E.A. if he saw him, because he
had learned of a previous sexual relationship between E.A. and his wife. Griffith
was present when Daniel made these remarks, and she said nothing.
¶8 N.Y. declined Daniel’s repeated invitations to enter the residence,
and she returned to her home. She and other family members continued to try to
contact E.A. by phone, but they received no answer. By the next morning,
February 8, N.Y.’s calls to E.A.’s cell phone were going straight to voicemail. She
again drove to the Griffiths’ residence. On the way, she contacted E.A.’s
financial institutions and learned that someone had attempted to use E.A.’s bank
card to withdraw funds from automatic teller machines at convenience stores
near the Griffiths’ residence.
¶9 When N.Y. arrived at the Griffiths’ residence, she saw Griffith drive
up in a pickup truck. N.Y. approached Griffith in the driveway, accused her of
knowing E.A.’s location and of attempting to use his bank card, and informed
her that she was going to contact law enforcement. Griffith, visibly shaking, told
N.Y. that she did not want to be blamed for something that she did not do. N.Y.
left and filed a missing persons report with the police.
¶10 The police contacted E.A.’s cell phone service provider and learned
that his phone’s last known location was in the area of the Griffiths’ residence.
They also learned, from surveillance video and an eyewitness, that Daniel was
the person who had attempted to use E.A.’s bank card. Based on this
information, the police obtained a warrant to search the Griffiths’ residence.
¶11 Before executing the warrant, the police found E.A.’s car parked
behind apartments near the Griffiths’ residence. A resident informed police that
the car had been parked there for several days. Police opened the car using a key
fob provided by E.A.’s family. They found finger-shaped bloodstains on the
trunk latch, and found a dry red clot inside of the empty trunk. Testing later
revealed that the blood was E.A.’s.
¶12 The police executed the search warrant on the evening of
February 9. Wearing marked police vests, they approached the front door of the
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STATE v. GRIFFITH
Decision of the Court
Griffiths’ residence and found that the front door was open but the security door
was closed. The police announced their presence and ordered that the door be
opened, but the inhabitants did not comply. The police therefore breached the
door and detained various individuals, including Griffith, who was standing just
inside the entryway. Griffith was forced to the floor and handcuffed.
¶13 A detective escorted Griffith to a marked patrol vehicle and
questioned her about E.A.’s whereabouts. At that point, the detective knew that
E.A.’s car had been found, and he believed that E.A. was alive and possibly in
danger. Griffith initially denied any knowledge of E.A.’s location, but then
disclosed that she and Daniel had burned his body in the desert. The detective
stopped the conversation and moved Griffith to a different vehicle, where she
was advised of her Miranda1 rights and interviewed by him and two other
detectives. Though the audio-recording of the interview reveals that Griffith did
not verbally indicate that she understood her rights and wished to waive them,
one of the interviewing detectives testified at trial that she “kind of nodded her
head as she understood.”
¶14 Griffith told the detectives several different versions of events.
First, she claimed that E.A. had been stalking and harassing her, that her only
recent contact with E.A. had been by phone, that the contact had angered Daniel,
and that he had told her she would not have a stalker anymore. She stated that
Daniel later asked her to help him pack the bed of a pickup truck with various
trash items, including a large and oddly shaped item wrapped in a blanket, and
that he had driven them to the desert.
¶15 Griffith then modified her story, claiming that E.A. had bullied her
into inviting him to the house and that he had attempted to rape her in the
garage. Griffith stated that Daniel responded to her screams, shot E.A. with his
rifle, directed her to leave, and later requested that she help him move a large
blanket-wrapped item from the garage into the bed of the pickup truck. Griffith
stated that the middle of the object was shaped like a bent elbow or knee, and
that she rode with Daniel to the desert, where she helped him unload the item
and he set fire to it.
¶16 Griffith then modified her story once more, varying her description
of E.A.’s conduct and comments in the garage. Among other things, she stated
that E.A. had threatened her with a box cutter. She also disclosed that Daniel
had been hiding in the garage with the gun because he wanted to talk to E.A.
1 Miranda v. Arizona, 384 U.S. 436 (1966).
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STATE v. GRIFFITH
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¶17 Griffith agreed to guide the police to the burn site. Aided by
Griffith, the police found a badly burned body deep in the desert. The medical
examiner who autopsied the body concluded that the cause of death was
multiple gunshot wounds. He concluded that the body had sustained at least
three gunshot wounds -- to the head, to the neck, and to the pleural cavity. He
also found that parts of the facial bones were missing or damaged. Dental
records showed that the body was E.A.’s.
¶18 A search of the Griffiths’ residence revealed several items of
evidence in their shared bedroom, including a piece of paper with E.A.’s name
and an address, a printout of MapQuest directions to the address, a handwritten
letter from Griffith to Daniel in which she professed her love for him and
apologized for having been unfaithful, and a pair of men’s pants stained with
blood. The police also found an operable .22 caliber rifle with a loaded
magazine, an operable .22 caliber pistol with a round of ammunition in the
chamber, and multiple loose rounds of .22 caliber ammunition. Testing later
revealed blood on the muzzle of the rifle. Experts could not exclude E.A. as the
source of the blood or the firearms as the source of the bullets recovered from his
body.
¶19 The police also found evidence in the Griffiths’ garage, a cluttered
space with a walkway leading to a door into the house. They found a key fob for
E.A.’s vehicle and a small address book containing E.A.’s personal items. They
also found blood on multiple surfaces in the garage -- there were transfer stains
on several of the items in the garage, and there were high- and medium-velocity
spatter stains on the inside of the garage door and the garage floor. In at least
one detective’s opinion, it appeared that someone had tried to clean up the
blood: he found an almost-empty bottle of bleach by the interior door. Tests
showed that some of the blood was E.A.’s.
¶20 E.A.’s blood was also found in Griffith’s parents’ pickup truck,
which the police found parked at the Griffiths’ residence. In the bed of the truck,
police found a fabric tie-down strap stained with E.A.’s blood. They also found a
gas can and a bloodstained rag. In the cab of the truck, they found a pair of
white sunglasses that matched the sunglasses worn by Daniel in surveillance
video from one of the convenience stores. The video showed, however, that
Daniel had used a vehicle other than the pickup truck to visit at least one of the
stores. The police searched this vehicle, which was also found parked at the
Griffiths’ residence, but they did not find anything of evidentiary value. Nor did
they find anything in a third vehicle found at the residence.
¶21 A detective interrogated Griffith at the police station. She was
again advised of her Miranda rights, and again nodded her head to indicate that
she understood her rights. She eventually admitted that she had lured E.A. to
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STATE v. GRIFFITH
Decision of the Court
the house by suggesting that she would have sex with him. She also admitted
that she knew Daniel was planning to confront E.A. and point a gun at him.
¶22 Griffith testified to yet another version of events. She testified that
Daniel was very controlling and paranoid, and had long suspected her of past
unfaithfulness. Around November 2011, he learned that she had cheated on him
with E.A. during the time they were neighbors. He became very angry, and
orchestrated a meeting between himself, Griffith, and E.A. But even after the
meeting, Daniel continued to question Griffith about the affair, and he returned
home one day with injuries caused by E.A. Later, on February 7, Daniel forced
Griffith to invite E.A. to their residence, telling her that he wanted to talk to E.A.
He instructed her to lead E.A. into the garage when he arrived, and she did so,
not knowing that Daniel was there. When her back was turned, Daniel shot E.A.
multiple times with his pistol; he then hit E.A. with the gun. Griffith left the
garage. When she left the house with her mother a short time later, she did not
see E.A.’s car parked outside. That afternoon, Daniel called her and instructed
her to pick him up from a friend’s apartment. She did so, and he directed her to
drive him to a convenience store. Late that night, Daniel woke her. At his
direction, she helped him load a heavy blanket-wrapped object into the bed of
the pickup truck. She then rode with him as he drove deep into the desert,
where she stayed in the truck as he unloaded the bed and set the contents on fire.
She learned on the drive back that the burned items included E.A.’s body.
¶23 The state impeached Griffith with her recorded interviews. Griffith
testified that she had lied to the police because she had been frightened, because
she had been under the influence of medication, and because she had been
subconsciously defending her husband.
¶24 After considering the evidence and closing arguments, the jury
found Griffith guilty of second-degree murder, and of abandonment or
concealment of a dead body. The jury found that the murder was a dangerous
offense, and found several aggravating factors with respect to each of the
offenses. The jury found that both offenses involved the presence of an
accomplice and caused harm to the victim’s immediate family, and found that
the murder also involved the use of a deadly weapon. The court entered
judgment on the jury’s verdicts and sentenced Griffith to a flat eighteen-year
prison term for the murder and a concurrent two-year term for the abandonment
or concealment of a dead body, with credit for 805 days of presentence
incarceration. Griffith appeals.
DISCUSSION
¶25 We find no fundamental error. Griffith was present and
represented by counsel at all critical stages. The jury was properly composed of
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STATE v. GRIFFITH
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eight jurors in accordance with A.R.S. § 21-102(B) and Ariz. R. Crim. P. 18.1(a),
and there is no evidence of jury misconduct or bias. Though the record reveals
that two of the jurors experienced an interpersonal conflict, both they and a third
juror who was aware of the issue informed the court that the conflict had not
affected the jury’s deliberations.
¶26 The evidence presented at trial was properly admissible. We note
that Griffith did not move to suppress any of her statements to law enforcement,
but objected at trial to the state’s introduction of the pre-Miranda statements. The
court overruled the objection based on the “rescue doctrine” (also known as the
“private safety exception”) adopted in State v. Londo, 215 Ariz. 72 (App. 2006).
Relying on the three-part test announced in People v. Riddle, 83 Cal. App. 3d 563
(Cal. App. 1978), Londo held that the rescue doctrine excepts statements from
Miranda when there is “1) an urgent need, and no other course of action promises
relief; 2) the possibility of saving a human life by rescuing a person in danger;
and 3) rescue is the primary purpose and motive of the interrogator.” Londo, 215
Ariz. at 76, ¶ 10. The California Supreme Court later eliminated the third prong
of the Riddle test, relying on United States Supreme Court cases to hold that
“applicability of the rescue doctrine must be grounded on objective facts known
to law enforcement.” People v. Davis, 208 P.3d 78, 122 (Cal. 2009).
¶27 At the time Griffith was taken into custody, the police knew that
E.A. had gone missing a few days before. They also knew that he had exchanged
multiple calls with someone at the Griffiths’ residence before he went missing,
and that his last known location was near the Griffiths’ residence. They had
evidence that E.A.’s cell phone was turned off or inoperable and that Griffith’s
husband had attempted to use E.A.’s bank card. They had also found E.A.’s car
parked near the Griffiths’ residence. Based on these facts, we cannot say that the
court erred by concluding that the pre-Miranda interview, a brief encounter that
was limited to questions regarding E.A.’s whereabouts, was reasonably
necessary and reasonably designed to locate a kidnapped victim who could still
be alive. Further, to the extent that the interrogating detective’s subjective state
of mind was relevant, the detective testified that he believed E.A. might have
been kidnapped and was possibly alive.
¶28 The evidence was sufficient to support the jury’s verdicts. A
person commits second-degree murder when, “without premeditation[, he or
she] . . . intentionally causes the death of another person . . . or[, k]nowing that
[his or her] conduct will cause death or serious physical injury, . . . causes the
death of another person . . . or[, u]nder circumstances manifesting extreme
indifference to human life, [he or she] recklessly engages in conduct that creates a
grave risk of death and thereby causes the death of another person.” A.R.S. § 13-
1104(A). A person commits abandonment or concealment of a dead body when
he or she “knowingly move[s] a dead human body or parts of a human body
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STATE v. GRIFFITH
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with the intent to abandon or conceal the dead human body or parts.” A.R.S.
§ 13-2926(A). A person may be liable for either of these offenses as an accomplice
if he or she aids another in planning or committing the offense or provides the
means and opportunity for the other person to commit the offense. A.R.S. §§ 13-
301(2)-(3), -302, -303.
¶29 The state presented evidence that Griffith, at a minimum, lured
E.A. to her garage knowing that her armed husband, who had a conflict with
E.A., was waiting within. The state also presented evidence that E.A. was killed
in the garage, and that Griffith thereafter helped her husband dispose of the
body by burning it deep in the desert. At the very least, the evidence was
sufficient to support Griffith’s convictions under an accomplice theory. The
evidence was also sufficient to support the jury’s finding that the murder was a
dangerous offense. An offense is dangerous if it involves “the discharge, use or
threatening exhibition of a deadly weapon or dangerous instrument or the
intentional or knowing infliction of serious physical injury on another person.”
A.R.S. § 13-105(13). A firearm is a deadly weapon. A.R.S. § 13-105(15). The state
presented evidence that E.A. died of multiple gunshot wounds.
¶30 The evidence was also sufficient to support the jury’s aggravating-
circumstances findings. The finding that the offenses involved the presence of an
accomplice was supported by copious evidence regarding Daniel’s participation.
The finding that the offenses caused harm to E.A.’s immediate family was
supported by N.Y.’s testimony that she, E.A.’s mother, and E.A.’s children were
seriously traumatized by his murder and the state in which his body was
recovered. Finally, the finding that the murder involved the use of a deadly
weapon was supported by the evidence that E.A. died of gunshot wounds.
¶31 Griffith received lawful sentences for her convictions. See A.R.S.
§§ 13-1104(C), -706(A), -710(A), (C), -701(D), -2926(C), -702. She was given an
opportunity to speak at the sentencing hearing, and the court stated on the
record the evidence it considered and the factors it found in imposing sentence.
Consistent with A.R.S. § 13-712(B), the court properly calculated and applied her
presentence incarceration to her sentences.
CONCLUSION
¶32 We have reviewed the record for fundamental error and find none.
See Leon, 104 Ariz. at 300. Accordingly, we affirm Griffith’s convictions and
sentences.
¶33 Defense counsel’s obligations pertaining to this appeal have come
to an end. See State v. Shattuck, 140 Ariz. 582, 584-85 (1984). Unless, upon review,
counsel discovers an issue appropriate for petition for review to the Arizona
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Supreme Court, counsel must only inform Griffith of the status of this appeal
and her future options. Id. Griffith has 30 days from the date of this decision to
file a petition for review in propria persona. See Ariz. R. Crim. P. 31.19(a). Upon
the court’s own motion, Griffith has 30 days from the date of this decision in
which to file a motion for reconsideration.
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