October 30, 2017
Supreme Court
No. 2016-115-C.A.
(P1/14-2045AG)
State :
v. :
Chaquiro Blandino. :
NOTICE: This opinion is subject to formal revision before publication in
the Rhode Island Reporter. Readers are requested to notify the Opinion
Analyst, Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 250 Benefit Street, Providence,
Rhode Island 02903, at Tel. 222-3258 of any typographical or other
formal errors in order that corrections may be made before the opinion is
published.
Supreme Court
No. 2016-115-C.A.
(P1/14-2045AG)
State :
v. :
Chaquiro Blandino. :
Present: Suttell, C.J., Goldberg, Flaherty, Robinson, and Indeglia, JJ.
OPINION
Justice Flaherty, for the Court. The defendant, Chaquiro Blandino, appeals from a
judgment of conviction after a jury found him guilty of (1) first-degree murder of Francis
Rodriguez; (2) discharging a firearm during a crime of violence (murder), resulting in the death
of Rodriguez; (3) assault with a dangerous weapon (a firearm) upon Marvin Vasquez; (4)
discharging a firearm during a crime of violence (assault with a dangerous weapon), without
causing injury to Vasquez; (5) discharging a firearm from a motor vehicle, creating a substantial
risk of injury to Rodriguez and Vasquez; and (6) unlawfully carrying a pistol without a license.
The defendant filed a motion for a new trial, which the trial justice denied. The trial justice
imposed consecutive life sentences on counts 1 and 2; a consecutive ten-year sentence on count
3; a consecutive ten-year sentence, non-parolable, on count 4; and concurrent ten-year sentences,
suspended with probation, on counts 5 and 6, to run consecutive to count 4. Before this Court,
the defendant asserts that the trial justice erred when he denied the defendant’s request to order
the state to produce the investigative notes of Det. Angelo A’Vant of the Providence Police
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Department. The defendant further contends that the trial justice erred when he denied the
defendant’s motion for a new trial. After careful consideration of the defendant’s arguments and
a thorough review of the record, we affirm the judgment of conviction.
I
Facts and Trial Testimony
There is little factual dispute in this case. It is uncontroverted that defendant shot and
killed Francis Rodriguez on May 2, 2014. It is also undisputed that defendant had previously
been robbed, shot, and frequently harassed by members of the “C-Block” gang.1 The only
question at trial was whether the killing of Rodriguez was a cold-blooded, premeditated murder
or an act of self-defense. The jury found it to be the former.
The central issue on appeal is whether defendant was entitled to certain notes taken by
Det. A’Vant during the course of his investigation. Those notes, defendant argues, may have
contained information about the potential C-Block membership or association2 of Rodriguez, the
murder victim, and Vasquez, the main witness for the state. The defendant also posits that Det.
A’Vant’s notes could have included information about defendant’s reputation to C-Block as a
snitch and the gang’s ensuing harassment of him. According to defendant, access to the notes
would have helped him more effectively pursue and present his theory of self-defense. The
defendant claims that that access would clearly have depicted the life-threatening violence he
experienced at the hands of C-Block members and his resulting need to respond with deadly
1
The C-Block gang derives its name from its base of operations around Congress Avenue on the
south side of Providence, between Broad Street and Elmwood Avenue.
2
Detective A’Vant explained the distinction between a member and an associate of a gang. He
said that a gang member is someone who is involved in all the gang’s criminal activities,
including drive-bys and robberies—a member “rides and dies” with the gang. A gang associate,
on the other hand, may be from the gang’s area or be a friend of gang members, but an associate
does not necessarily participate in the gang’s crimes. Despite this loose affiliation, an associate
of a gang risks being “labeled” as a member by rival gang members.
-2-
force when Vasquez and Rodriguez—purported members (or at least associates) of the gang—
pulled a gun on him.
To effectively analyze defendant’s claim, it is first necessary to parse through defendant’s
description of his tangled history with C-Block. In January of 2011, when he was sixteen years
old, defendant went to see a girl. As he made his way into her home, a young male, who was
later identified as a member of C-Block, pointed a gun at defendant and forced him to remove
and hand over his pants, shirt, shoes, and watch. While defendant was in this state of undress,
the C-Block member pistol-whipped defendant and demanded he leave the building. Needing no
further invitation, defendant fled down the street. As he did, he was stopped by a Providence
police officer. The defendant relayed to the officer that he had been robbed and beaten, and he
later testified before a grand jury to that effect.
C-Block consequently labeled defendant as a snitch. Members of the gang began
following defendant; first at his high school, then at the Community College of Rhode Island.
The defendant claims he was assaulted with a baseball bat on one occasion. Out of fear,
however, defendant simply endured the harassment. He never again reported a C-Block member
to the police.
In November of 2013, defendant was working at his mother’s restaurant, which is located
on Elmwood Avenue just blocks away from C-Block’s main territory on Congress Avenue.
Behind the restaurant, defendant said, he saw C-Block members approaching and that one of
them was flashing a silver gun.3 The defendant jumped a fence and ran away as fast as he could.
Despite his best efforts to escape, defendant was shot once in the back and once in the leg. He
3
The defendant said that the individuals were readily identifiable as members of the gang
because of their black hooded sweatshirts, which bore the words “I think I’m Geek.” The
defendant knew this to be a reference to a fallen C-Block member.
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was forced to undergo surgery and remain in the hospital for over a week. When he recovered,
defendant refused to cooperate with authorities during the prosecution of the C-Block member
who was ultimately convicted and incarcerated for the shooting. The defendant maintained that
he had learned his lesson after the 2011 robbery; he would not snitch on the gang again.
Despite his silence, defendant said that his troubles with C-Block continued. According
to him, gang members knew that he worked nearby, and they continued to follow and harass
him. On May 2, 2014, the day of Rodriguez’s death, defendant testified that he was sitting in his
mother’s minivan outside the restaurant, waiting to make a delivery, when a green Subaru
containing Rodriguez and Vasquez pulled up alongside his vehicle. The defendant testified that
he knew both men from the local barbershop; he also declared that he knew them both to be C-
Block members. According to defendant, Rodriguez drew his finger across his throat—a sign
that defendant said he interpreted as a death threat. At that point, defendant drove off and picked
up his friend, Nelson Pineda. The two drove around Providence, smoking marijuana and making
deliveries for defendant’s mother.
The defendant said that, later that afternoon, as defendant and Pineda were in the area of
the restaurant, they saw the same green Subaru approaching them. Rodriguez and Vasquez were
still in the car. The driver of the Subaru tried to block defendant’s minivan at a stop sign, such
that he could not turn left or right. Rodriguez emerged from the Subaru and yelled insults at
defendant. Pineda later testified that defendant responded in a similar vein. The defendant was
able to maneuver the minivan around the Subaru, but he said that, as he was pulling away, he
heard a loud bang from the rear of the car and concluded that Rodriguez had hit the rear window.
-4-
Indeed, according to Pineda’s testimony, Rodriguez struck the minivan with what looked to him
like the barrel of a gun.4 The defendant and Pineda got away, for the time being.
The defendant further testified that, at that point, having been confronted and threatened
by Rodriguez twice in one day, he drove home and retrieved a gun. 5 Once back in the car,
defendant said, he placed the gun to the right of the driver’s seat, hidden from Pineda’s view in
the passenger seat. Pineda testified that he was too high from smoking marijuana to realize that
they had stopped at defendant’s house or that defendant returned in possession of a gun. The two
then went back to the restaurant.
Around 8 p.m., defendant and Pineda were driving around again. This time, they stopped
on Warrington Street to roll blunts.6 The minivan was parked on top of a speed hump7 on the
right side of the road, facing in the direction of Broad Street, with the engine and lights off and
the keys still in the ignition. As defendant was finishing cracking open a cigar, he opened his
window to discard the tobacco. It was then that he noticed headlights approaching. When he
looked more closely, defendant said, he realized it was Rodriguez’s green Subaru yet again.
Suddenly their open drivers’ windows were mere feet apart.
The testimony of the witnesses diverged as to what happened next. The defendant
testified that he saw Rodriguez leaning forward while Vasquez pointed a gun at him from the
passenger seat. Thinking he was about to die, defendant testified, he ducked down and grabbed
the gun from the floor with his right hand. The defendant said that, while still crouching, he
4
It should be noted, however, that Pineda testified twice before the grand jury without
mentioning either being present for the confrontation or witnessing Rodriguez with a gun.
5
The defendant testified that he had obtained the gun from a friend, Shaquele Padilla, in
exchange for marijuana, which defendant admitted selling.
6
If one empties the contents of a cigar, it can be filled with marijuana and resealed. The finished
product is a blunt.
7
As opposed to a regular speed bump, a speed hump is approximately as wide as a car is long.
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pointed the gun over his head and fired out the window; he could not recall how many times.
The defendant then started the car and drove away, not knowing whether he had shot either
Rodriguez or Vasquez. He said that he dropped Pineda off at his house. Pineda was called as a
witness for the state; his testimony regarding the shooting substantially mirrored that of
defendant.8
Vasquez, who was also called by the state, offered a markedly different version of events.
He said that he and Rodriguez had spent the day simply driving around Providence smoking
marijuana. Vasquez denied that any sort of verbal or physical altercation between defendant and
Rodriguez had occurred earlier that day. According to Vasquez, neither he nor Rodriguez had a
gun in the car when Rodriguez was killed. Vasquez claimed that, at the time of the shooting, he
was high, reclined in the passenger seat, drinking a beer, staring into space, and dozing off.
While Rodriguez was slowing down to cross the speed hump on Warrington Street, Vasquez
said, he heard a sudden rapid succession of gunshots. As both men ducked, Vasquez testified, he
looked to his left and saw Rodriguez, motionless and bleeding. Rodriguez was also unresponsive
to Vasquez’s questions. Thinking that Rodriguez was dead, Vasquez—a fugitive from justice
who had previously been convicted of carrying a pistol without a license—fled the vehicle and
walked to a friend’s house. Vasquez said that he looked back only to find that Rodriguez still
had not emerged from the stopped car. Vasquez claimed that he never saw who had fired at
them and killed Rodriguez.
8
Pineda admitted that the first time he testified before the grand jury, he had denied being in
defendant’s car during the shooting. His second version presented to the grand jury involved his
telling defendant that he should have just fought Rodriguez rather than shooting him. Pineda’s
testimony at trial that Vasquez pointed a gun at defendant, necessitating self-defense, was first
shared with a defense investigator the night before the trial began. After Pineda failed to appear
in court in response to a subpoena, the trial justice then issued a body attachment to ensure his
presence.
-6-
Ballistic evidence was introduced, and it lent further credence to Vasquez’s recounting of
the shooting. Detective Douglas Allin of the Providence Police Department’s Bureau of
Criminal Identification testified that he recovered six cartridge casings clustered closely together
around the speed hump on Warrington Street. Farther down the street, toward Elmwood
Avenue, Det. Allin discovered an expended projectile. Also, the processing of Rodriguez’s
Subaru, which had come to rest against a building, yielded three more projectiles: one that was
imbedded in the left rear bumper, which had entered the vehicle just underneath the taillight
assembly; a second partial fragment that was lodged in the driver’s side rear door frame, which
had entered directly above the molding; and a third in the glove compartment. That round had
fragmented as it entered immediately above the glove compartment; copper jacketing from the
projectile was found on the floor of the front passenger seat area. Detective Allin then proceeded
to place a ballistic rod in the hole where the projectile entered above the glove compartment to
test the trajectory from which it had been fired. He determined that the bullet had traveled
through the open driver’s window at an acute angle and passed through the passenger cabin
before penetrating the dashboard and coming to rest in the glove compartment. Notably,
Assistant Medical Examiner Priya Banerjee, M.D., testified that the bullet that killed Rodriguez
entered the back of his neck and exited through his left eye orbit.9
Detective A’Vant testified that he was tasked with investigating who was responsible for
the shooting of Rodriguez. After being informed of the suspect vehicle’s registration, as relayed
by a witness who saw the minivan fleeing from the scene, Det. A’Vant learned that the vehicle
was registered to defendant’s mother. Police officers responded to her address—where
defendant also resided—to set up surveillance. There, they arrested defendant’s brother, Johan
9
Before trial, the state and defendant stipulated that a DNA profile obtained from the projectile
in the glove compartment matched that of Rodriguez.
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Blandino, on a charge of driving with a suspended license. Johan, who was on bail for a pending
firearm possession charge, was brought to the police station and interviewed by Det. A’Vant.
The next day, Johan indicated that he had additional information to share with Det. A’Vant; he
later informed the detective about the location of the murder weapon. In a bush in front of the
home of defendant’s neighbor, Det. A’Vant uncovered a .40-caliber Smith & Wesson and an
accompanying magazine.10 While in the vicinity, Det. A’Vant also saw, behind defendant’s
house, the minivan used during the shooting. A warrant was issued for defendant’s arrest as a
result of the investigation. After ten months on the run, defendant turned himself in to the
Superior Court in February 2015.
II
Brady & Rule 16
During the trial, Det. A’Vant brought a notebook with him when he resumed the witness
stand for cross-examination. He testified that it simply contained the notes he had been taking
throughout the trial. Defense counsel then asked whether Det. A’Vant had taken notes during
the course of his investigation. Detective A’Vant conceded that he had. As to the whereabouts
of those notes, he testified that “I believe I have the notepad * * * in my file – folder.” Defense
counsel responded, “If you could just provide that to me at some point, I’d like to see that.” The
state immediately objected and asked for a sidebar. The trial justice sustained the objection at
that point, but he indicated that the state could not be heard on the issue until a later time.
Under cross-examination, Det. A’Vant disclosed that, because of the drive-by nature of
the shooting, he initially believed that it might be gang-related. Defense counsel inquired into
10
When Det. A’Vant searched the Providence Police database, he found a report of a stolen .40-
caliber Smith & Wesson filed by Victor Padilla, the father of defendant’s friend, Shaquele
Padilla.
-8-
whether Det. A’Vant had pursued that theory. It was then revealed that Det. A’Vant had indeed
interviewed members of C-Block. He did so because he was aware that Rodriguez had been
associated with C-Block at some point in his life and that defendant previously had been shot and
robbed by members of the gang.
However, Det. A’Vant testified that he did not take notes of all those interviews and that
he could not recall if the information gleaned from those interviews had been recorded in any
police reports. As Det. A’Vant explained, “[t]here is a lot of information that’s relevant to this
case, and all of that is recorded. Certainly, there’s conversations that I have with dozens of
people when I conduct investigations. Not all of that is recorded, no, if I don’t deem it to be
pertinent to the case.” He testified that he did not consider his C-Block interviews to be
important enough to record because “any hearsay or anyone who believed that the victim was
part of a gang, associated with a gang, or was a gang member, it wasn’t necessarily pertinent to
me * * *, whether they’re a gang member or not, that’s not important to the investigation.”
Detective A’Vant summed up his role as an investigator as follows:
“I’m not building a case for defense when I’m putting a case
together. I’m building a case that’s based on facts and
circumstances that prove or disprove the guilt or innocence of your
client. Whether or not the victim was, once again, associated or a
member of a gang, in some cases it’s not relevant. There was no
evidence to show – to support the fact that this was some type of
gang retaliation * * *.”
When the trial justice later heard argument on whether Det. A’Vant’s notes should be
produced, the following arguments were made by counsel:
“[PROSECUTOR]: The objection was concerning [defense
counsel’s] question about notes that Detective A’Vant generated in
the course of the investigation and whether or not they were turned
over to the defense. My objection is grounded in Rule 16. Rule 16
does not require the State to provide the notes of an investigator,
specifically to the defense, and the rule simply requires that a
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summary of the witness’s expected testimony be given or
documentation concerning what the witness is expected to testify
to.
“As Detective A’Vant has already testified, anything that
he may have memorialized in notes was also memorialized in other
documentation, whether it be police reports that were provided or
recorded interviews with certain individuals, or documents that
Detective A’Vant retrieved as a result of his investigation, like the
police report concerning Victor Padilla’s stolen gun report or the
RILET report of Marvin Vasquez. So whatever it is that Detective
A’Vant is going to testify to in this case or has testified to, the
State has given the defense in discovery a synopsis of that
testimony or those documents specifically relating to what he did
in the case. And I object to the inference that [defense counsel] is
creating with the jury that something nefarious has occurred
because Mr. – Detective A’Vant has not turned over his notebook
relating to the investigation to the defense so they can create a self-
defense motive in this case.
“[DEFENSE COUNSEL]: Judge, the detective’s question –
answers, Detective A’Vant’s answers were clear that he created
these notes, that he did an investigation. I’m asking to see what
the notes were. He doesn’t get – respectfully, I’ve known
Detective A’Vant 18 years, he doesn’t get to decide what’s
relevant and what gets turned over, Judge.
“THE COURT: And you don’t get to forage through his
notes either in the hopes that maybe you’ll find something of
interest to you. That’s not part of Brody [sic]. It’s not part of Rule
16. You don’t get to do that. To the extent you wish to go through
his notes, I’m not going to permit it.”
On appeal, defendant asserts that the trial justice’s determination was erroneous and that
defendant was, indeed, entitled to the notes pursuant to both the state’s discovery obligations
pursuant to Rule 16 of the Superior Court Rules of Criminal Procedure and defendant’s due-
process rights under Brady v. Maryland, 373 U.S. 83 (1963). See DeCiantis v. State, 24 A.3d
557, 570 (R.I. 2011) (“[T]he Due Process Clause of the United States Constitution, as interpreted
by the United States Supreme Court in Brady * * *, and its progeny, ‘requires that the state
provide a criminal defendant with certain information.’” (quoting State v. McManus, 941 A.2d
222, 229 (R.I. 2008))); State v. Briggs, 886 A.2d 735, 754 (R.I. 2005) (“When a criminal
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defendant requests discovery material concerning witnesses the state may call to testify at trial,
Rule 16 obligates the state to produce ‘only prior recorded statements of a witness, a summary of
the witness’s expected trial testimony, and any records of prior convictions.’” (quoting State v.
Chalk, 816 A.2d 413, 418 (R.I. 2002))).
It is clear from the record that defense counsel did not know what he was looking for in
Det. A’Vant’s notes when he first requested to see them. Indeed, none of Det. A’Vant’s
testimony relating to C-Block and his investigation into the possibility that Rodriguez’s murder
might have been gang-related had yet been elicited. At that juncture, all defense counsel knew
was that Det. A’Vant had taken notes during his investigation; defense counsel was merely
hoping to find something useful in those notes. In fact, even at the sidebar—when defense
counsel actually had more information available to him as to the potential contents of the notes—
he argued only that Det. A’Vant was not the appropriate person to decide what material was
relevant and what should be provided to defendant. It was the state, in its objection, that raised
Rule 16, arguing that the discovery rule does not require the disclosure of investigative notes.
And it was the trial justice, in making his ultimate ruling, who raised the ever-looming Brady
issue. The defendant never so much as mentioned either Rule 16 or Brady, let alone argued that
either required the state to produce Det. A’Vant’s notes. Accordingly, no Brady or Rule 16
argument has been preserved for appeal. See State v. Yon, 161 A.3d 1118, 1128 (R.I. 2017)
(“The raise-or-waive rule ‘imposes upon litigants a duty to raise all their claims for relief in the
trial court and properly articulate them to a judge for a ruling.’” (emphasis added) (quoting
D’Alessio v. State, 101 A.3d 1270, 1278 (R.I. 2014))); State v. Gomez, 848 A.2d 221, 237 (R.I.
2004) (“As established by this [C]ourt, an issue that has not been raised and articulated
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previously at trial is not properly preserved for appellate review.” (quoting State v. Donato, 592
A.2d 140, 141 (R.I. 1991))).11
III
Motion for New Trial
A
Standard of Review
When a defendant moves for a new trial, “the trial justice acts as a thirteenth juror and
exercises independent judgment on the credibility of witnesses and on the weight of the
11
Nevertheless, we pause to note that we can discern no merit in either defendant’s Brady or
Rule 16 argument. Brady v. Maryland, 373 U.S. 83 (1963) requires the state “to turn over
information that ‘(1) constitute[s] either exculpatory or impeachment evidence and (2) [is]
material to the outcome of the case or sentencing.’” State v. Burnham, 58 A.3d 889, 900 (R.I.
2013) (quoting State v. Wyche, 518 A.2d 907, 909 (R.I. 1986)). The defendant has failed to
satisfy even the first prong. There is nothing in the record to indicate that Det. A’Vant’s notes
contained any exculpatory or impeachment evidence whatsoever.
Nor did Rule 16 of the Superior Court Rules of Criminal Procedure entitle defendant to
comb through Det. A’Vant’s notes. Rhode Island has “one of the most liberal discovery
mechanisms in the United States.” State v. Huffman, 68 A.3d 558, 568 (R.I. 2013) (quoting State
v. Oster, 922 A.2d 151, 163 (R.I. 2007)). Notwithstanding this liberality, investigation notes of a
testifying detective are not explicitly covered by Rule 16. See Rule 16; State v. Briggs, 886 A.2d
735, 754 (R.I. 2005). “But the state’s discovery obligations extend beyond the literal language
of Rule 16 * * *.” DeCiantis v. State, 24 A.3d 557, 570 (R.I. 2011). This Court has held that
“[w]hen evidence * * * may nonetheless be helpful to [the] defendant’s effective cross-
examination of a witness, a defendant’s right to that evidence arises from the right of
confrontation, and thus becomes an issue ‘only when a defendant is improperly denied the ability
to confront and to effectively cross-examine an adverse witness at trial.’” State v. Chalk, 816
A.2d 413, 418 (R.I. 2002) (quoting State v. Kelly, 554 A.2d 632, 635 (R.I. 1989)).
Here, defendant was not denied the ability to searchingly cross-examine Det. A’Vant on
any and all issues pertaining to C-Block. Defense counsel elicited testimony that Det. A’Vant
was aware that defendant had been robbed, beaten, followed, threatened, and shot by C-Block
members over the course of the three years leading up to the murder; further, Det. A’Vant was
aware that Rodriguez had at least been associated with that very gang in the past. The types of
questions defense counsel asked during cross-examination of Det. A’Vant certainly were not
“improperly restricted” by the absence of the detective’s investigation notes. State v. Brown, 709
A.2d 465, 469 (R.I. 1998) (quoting Kelly, 554 A.2d at 635). Thus “the state’s discovery
obligations extend[ing] beyond the literal language of Rule 16” were never implicated.
DeCiantis, 24 A.3d at 570.
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evidence.” State v. Rosario, 35 A.3d 938, 947 (R.I. 2012) (quoting State v. Guerra, 12 A.3d 759,
765 (R.I. 2011)). This requires a three-step analytical process “whereby the trial justice must
‘(1) consider the evidence in light of the jury charge, (2) independently assess the credibility of
the witnesses and the weight of the evidence, and then (3) determine whether he or she would
have reached a result different from that reached by the jury.’” State v. Moore, 154 A.3d 472,
481 (R.I. 2017) (quoting State v. Fleck, 81 A.3d 1129, 1134 (R.I. 2014)). “If the trial justice
agrees with the jury’s verdict, the inquiry is complete and the motion for a new trial should be
denied.” State v. Lopez, 149 A.3d 459, 463 (R.I. 2016) (quoting State v. Staffier, 21 A.3d 287,
290 (R.I. 2011)).
As long as the trial justice follows this procedure and articulates “a sufficient rationale for
denying [the motion], the decision will be given great weight. Such a judgment will be disturbed
only if the trial justice has overlooked or misconceived material evidence relating to a critical
issue or if the justice was otherwise clearly wrong.” Moore, 154 A.3d at 481 (quoting Lopez,
149 A.3d at 463). “We apply such a ‘deferential standard of review because a trial justice, being
present during all phases of the trial, is in an especially good position to evaluate the facts and to
judge the credibility of the witnesses.’” State v. Muralles, 154 A.3d 925, 932 (R.I. 2017)
(quoting State v. Paola, 59 A.3d 99, 104 (R.I. 2013)).
B
Analysis
The defendant argues that the trial justice clearly erred by overlooking and misconceiving
material evidence in denying defendant’s motion for a new trial. First, defendant asserts that the
trial justice erred because he credited the testimony of Vasquez that he did not have a gun in his
possession on the night of the murder. In light of Vasquez’s history as a gang member and
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fugitive from justice, to say nothing of the firearm-possession conviction on his record,
defendant claims that Vasquez could not have been characterized as a more credible witness than
either defendant or Pineda. Therefore, according to defendant, the trial justice should have
accepted the testimony of Pineda and defendant that Vasquez indeed pointed a gun at defendant.
Second, defendant maintains that the trial justice erred in finding that defendant’s explanation of
the shooting did not match the ballistic evidence. To the contrary, defendant argues that his
testimony wholly accounts for and diminishes the ballistic evidence used against him. Finally,
defendant avers that the trial justice erred in discrediting the testimony of Pineda and Johan
Blandino due to their shifting stories. Their inconsistencies, defendant claims, are readily
explained away by the same fear of C-Block that led defendant to remain silent when he was
shot by a member of the gang.
The trial justice outlined his responsibilities in passing on a motion for a new trial,
beginning first with his consideration of the evidence in light of the jury instructions. In so
doing, he recognized that the case could be distilled to one issue: whether defendant fired on
Rodriguez in self-defense.
The trial justice then proceeded to independently assess the credibility of the witnesses
and the weight of the evidence. He began with Vasquez:
“I recognize that Vasquez arrived on the stand with a fair
amount of baggage, including a prior conviction for unlawfully
carrying a pistol. He also admitted that he had spent the day
smoking marijuana, but that apparently is how every witness,
including the defendant, spent their days. In my view,
notwithstanding all of his warts and blemishes, Vasquez was a
credible witness.”
The trial justice next considered Johan’s credibility. Acknowledging the witness’s awkward
position in having to testify against his brother, the trial justice nonetheless found his failures of
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memory to be “painfully and obviously perjurious.” And the trial justice found that Pineda
“wasn’t much better.” The trial justice discussed the fact that Pineda, between his two
appearances before the grand jury and one at trial, had provided three different versions of
events. The second version, in fact, was to the effect that he had said to defendant after the
shooting that defendant “didn’t have to shoot [Rodriguez], just could have fought him.” As the
trial justice remarked, “[s]o much for the claim of self-defense.” The trial justice concluded that
neither Johan nor Pineda had helped defendant; “[i]ndeed, their testimony at trial was antithetical
to the defendant’s interest.”
Turning to defendant’s credibility as a witness, the trial justice recited the following
language from this Court:
“[W]hen a defendant elects to testify, he runs the very real risk that
if disbelieved, the trier of fact may conclude that the opposite of
his testimony is the truth. * * * As long as there exists some other
evidence of the defendant’s guilt, disbelief of a defendant’s sworn
testimony is sufficient to sustain a finding of guilt.” State v.
Mattatall, 603 A.2d 1098, 1109 (R.I. 1992).
In that regard, the trial justice found that “the defendant’s explanation at trial of how he fired the
weapon was simply, in my view, and obviously so from this verdict and the jury’s view, wholly
unacceptable. The physical evidence just does not fit the defendant’s explanation.” First of all,
the trial justice opined that, if defendant had fired the gun as he demonstrated during his
testimony, the cartridge casings would have been within his vehicle, not outside of it on the
speed hump. The trial justice further noted that the bullet holes in the rear of Rodriguez’s car
and the fatal shot that entered the back of Rodriguez’s neck did not correspond with the driver’s-
window-to-driver’s-window shooting that defendant described.
The trial justice summed up his assessment of the evidence as follows:
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“The physical evidence clearly reflects that the defendant
must have had his arm extended through the driver’s window and
aimed down the roadway as Rodriguez’s car was leaving the speed
bump.
“There is little question in my mind that the defendant had
parked his van on the speed bump expecting, or at least hoping, he
would spot Rodriguez, whom he claimed had been harassing him
most of the day. The defendant had gone home to retrieve his gun,
and he was lying in wait for Rodriguez. And when the opportunity
finally presented itself, he took advantage of it and shot into
Rodriguez’s car deliberately, purposefully, and with the specific
intent of killing him. This was in no way self-defense, and I reject
that claim, as did the jury.
“I am well satisfied that the State easily and beyond a
reasonable doubt demonstrated that the defendant did not act in
self-defense. No gun was found in Rodriguez’s car, and I
disbelieve any suggestion by the defendant and by Nelson Pineda
that there ever was a gun in the Rodriguez car.”
Agreeing with the jury’s verdict, the trial justice denied defendant’s motion for a new trial.
It is clear to us that the trial justice followed the well-settled three-step analytical process
set forth in our jurisprudence. See Moore, 154 A.3d at 481. In denying the defendant’s motion,
the trial justice “enunciated ‘a sufficient rationale’” from which this Court can discern that he
adhered to the proper analysis. Id. (quoting Lopez, 149 A.3d at 463). In fact, he provided well
more than the requisite “few sentences of * * * reasoning on each point.” Yon, 161 A.3d at 1130
(quoting Muralles, 154 A.3d at 932). His decision is thus due great weight. Moreover, our
independent review of the record satisfies us that the trial justice “has [not] overlooked or
misconceived material evidence relating to a critical issue * * * [and is not] otherwise clearly
wrong.” Moore, 154 A.3d at 481 (quoting Lopez, 149 A.3d at 463). The trial justice committed
no error; therefore, his decision will not be disturbed on appeal.
- 16 -
IV
Conclusion
For the reasons set forth in this opinion, we affirm the judgment of conviction. The
record shall be returned to the Superior Court.
- 17 -
STATE OF RHODE ISLAND AND PROVIDENCE PLANTATIONS
SUPREME COURT – CLERK’S OFFICE
OPINION COVER SHEET
Title of Case State v. Chaquiro Blandino.
No. 2016-115-C.A.
Case Number
(P1/14-2045AG)
Date Opinion Filed October 30, 2017
Suttell, C.J., Goldberg, Flaherty, Robinson, and
Justices
Indeglia, JJ.
Written By Associate Justice Francis X. Flaherty
Source of Appeal Providence County Superior Court
Judicial Officer From Lower Court Associate Justice Robert D. Krause
For State:
Jane M. McSoley
Department of Attorney General
Attorney(s) on Appeal
For Defendant:
Lara E. Montecalvo
Office of the Public Defender
SU-CMS-02A (revised June 2016)