Supreme Court
No. 2015-42-M.P.
(P2/12-617A)
State :
v. :
José Angeles. :
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. 2015-42-M.P.
(P2/12-617A)
State :
v. :
José Angeles. :
Present: Suttell, C.J., Goldberg, Flaherty, Robinson, and Indeglia, JJ.
OPINION
Justice Flaherty, for the Court. When giving his instructions to the jury at the
conclusion of the parties’ final arguments, the trial justice referred to a suppression hearing that
had occurred before trial, and he instructed the jury that the question of whether the police
lawfully seized cocaine from José Angeles, the defendant, was a legal issue that he would decide.
After a jury convicted the defendant of two counts of felony assault and one count each of
possession of a controlled substance, resisting arrest, and reckless driving, the defendant
petitioned this Court for a writ of certiorari, arguing that the trial justice’s jury instructions
constituted reversible error because the instructions amounted to commenting on the evidence
and were “confusing, misleading, unnecessary and bolstering.” 1
The matter came before this Court for oral argument on February 23, 2017, pursuant to
an order directing the parties to appear and show cause why this appeal should not summarily be
1
The defendant, having failed to file an appeal within the period allowed, petitioned this Court
for a writ of certiorari, and we granted the petition.
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decided. After considering the parties’ oral and written arguments, and after thoroughly
reviewing the record, it is our opinion that cause has not been shown and that this case should be
decided at this time without further briefing or argument. For the reasons set forth in this
opinion, we affirm the judgment of conviction.
Facts and Travel
On the evening of July 6, 2011, Sgt. Gregory Sion, a supervisor in the Providence Police
Department’s narcotics unit, was operating an unmarked car on patrol in the north end of the
city. As Sgt. Sion was traveling east on Ledge Street, he “observed two vehicles approaching
[him] at a high rate of speed.” One of those vehicles was a silver SUV bearing Massachusetts
license plates, and the other vehicle had New York license plates. It appeared to Sgt. Sion that
the silver SUV was chasing the vehicle with New York plates and, as the two vehicles
approached him, the silver SUV veered across the center of the road and into Sgt. Sion’s lane of
travel. Sergeant Sion said that, to avoid a collision, he “had to swerve to the right to get out of
[the silver SUV’s] way,” causing the right-front wheel of the police vehicle to go up onto the
sidewalk. In response, Sgt. Sion quickly executed a U-turn in an attempt to follow the two
vehicles. He said that he initially lost sight of both vehicles but, with the aid of a passerby who
was walking his dog, he quickly located the vehicles near 33 Marietta Street. By the time Sgt.
Sion came upon the vehicles, both were unoccupied.
Using his police radio, Sgt. Sion alerted the six other members of his narcotics squad
about the incident that had occurred on Ledge Street, which he described as “a road rage type of
incident.” While Sgt. Sion had been driving around the block to see if he could locate the drivers
of the two vehicles, Det. John Bento and his partner Det. Leo Pichs, both of the Providence
Police Department’s narcotics unit, drove to Marietta Street and parked their unmarked police
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vehicle approximately halfway down the street, facing towards Charles Street. Shortly after
arriving at Marietta Street, Det. Bento saw the silver SUV “pull out of the parking lot of 33
Marietta” and come towards him. Detective Bento alerted Sgt. Sion that the silver SUV had
pulled out onto Marietta Street.
Soon, Sgt. Sion positioned his car behind the silver SUV, and Detectives Bento and Pichs
were in front of the car. Sergeant Sion observed a lone male driver in the silver SUV, who
appeared to be the same person who was driving the car when it ran Sgt. Sion off the road. He
then ordered Detectives Bento and Pichs “to move in.” Detectives Bento and Pichs got out of
their vehicle and approached the driver of the silver SUV, which was being driven by defendant,
José Angeles.
There is conflicting testimony about what happened after the police “boxed in” the silver
SUV. According to the testimony of Sgt. Sion and Det. Bento, the emergency lights on Det.
Bento’s vehicle were activated, and Detectives Bento and Pichs, who were in plainclothes,
verbally identified themselves as police officers, and Det. Pichs’ badge was clearly visible.
Several eyewitnesses, however, testified that the police did not turn on their emergency lights nor
did they identify themselves as they approached the silver SUV. And two of the eyewitnesses
testified that they believed that defendant was getting “jumped” by random people.
Detective Bento testified that, as he walked toward the silver SUV, he observed
defendant “manipulate something in his hand and put it under his leg.” Then, defendant put the
silver SUV into reverse, striking Sgt. Sion’s vehicle, and proceeded to drive back and forth,
ramming into both Det. Bento’s vehicle and Sgt. Sion’s vehicle repeatedly until he had enough
room to escape. The defendant drove the silver SUV onto the sidewalk towards Det. Bento, at
which point Sgt. Sion drew his service pistol and at “point blank range shot the left rear tire of
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the vehicle in hopes that it would somehow disable the vehicle from running down [Det.]
Bento.” However, Det. Bento was struck 2 and defendant fled the scene. A high speed chase
ensued.
The chase soon ended after defendant crashed into a parked car and lost control of the
SUV, which went down a driveway, and ultimately through a yard and into a fence. The
defendant fled on foot, but the police quickly apprehended him. Officer Andres Perez, who at
the time of this incident was a detective in the Providence Police Department’s narcotics unit,
participated in the pursuit and capture of defendant. After defendant was taken into custody,
Officer Perez returned to the abandoned SUV to see “if there was any evidence left there.” As it
turned out, Officer Perez “seized [from the driver’s side floor] a clear plastic bag, and that clear
plastic bag contained nine individually wrapped bags of suspected crack cocaine.”
The state filed a criminal information, charging defendant with the offenses enumerated
earlier in this opinion. Before trial, defendant filed a motion to suppress the seized bag of
cocaine, alleging that the police lacked probable cause to stop his vehicle or to arrest him, and
that the cocaine had been seized illegally. After a hearing on the issue, the trial justice denied
defendant’s motion. 3
During defendant’s jury trial, several references were made, especially during
defendant’s cross-examination of the police witnesses, about whether the cocaine that Officer
Perez seized from the silver SUV had been in plain view, and whether the police had probable
cause or a warrant allowing them to search the vehicle. There was also testimony that a
2
Detective Bento suffered minor injuries, including abrasions and “some bumps and bruises.”
3
At trial, defendant stipulated to admission of the cocaine and the accompanying toxicology
report.
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suppression hearing had occurred several weeks before trial. When the trial justice imparted his
instructions to the jury, he included the following:
“Now, let me say at the outset, ladies and gentlemen, there
was testimony about the legality if you would of the seizure of the
cocaine from the silver SUV by the Patrolman Perez. Now, that is
not an issue before you. You do not have to determine and cannot
determine the legality of the seizure of this particular evidence.
That is, as I just said, that is a legal issue and something that I
decide. Not you. So I don’t want you to be confused by the use of
some terms here such as probable cause, plain view, and
abandoned. That’s not something that you have to sort out or
decide, and frankly, when reference was made to a hearing that
occurred about six weeks or almost two months ago, that was a
hearing held before me to decide those particular issues,
specifically the legality of the search and the seizure of that
particular evidence, so that is not something for you to consider or
for you to decide. You can consider the testimony on the issues of
the witnesses’ credibility, but not – there’s no legal determination
that you have to make as to the legality of that so-called search and
seizure.”
Standard of Review
“When we are called upon to review ‘issues pertaining to jury instructions, we do so de
novo.’” State v. Pona, 66 A.3d 454, 470 (R.I. 2013) (quoting State v. Vargas, 991 A.2d 1056,
1060 (R.I. 2010)). “In conducting this task, we remain mindful that the trial justice’s jury
‘instructions need only adequately cover [ ] the law.’” Id. (quoting State v. Sivo, 809 A.2d 481,
488 (R.I. 2002)). Moreover, “[w]hen this Court reviews jury instructions, it seeks to determine
how a ‘jury of ordinary intelligent lay people would have understood them.’” State v. Imbruglia,
913 A.2d 1022, 1031 (R.I. 2007) (quoting State v. John, 881 A.2d 920, 929 (R.I. 2005)). “In
doing so, we do not isolate a challenged portion from the instructions as a whole, but rather we
scrutinize the challenged portion in the context of the entire charge.” Id. “An erroneous charge
warrants reversal only if it can be shown that the jury ‘could have been misled’ to the resultant
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prejudice of the complaining party.” Saber v. Dan Angelone Chevrolet, Inc., 811 A.2d 644, 653
(R.I. 2002) (quoting Patino v. Suchnik, 770 A.2d 861, 866 (R.I. 2001)).
Analysis
Before this Court, defendant accepts that the trial justice was correct to “remind[] the
jurors that they were the factfinders and * * * that they may not determine the legality of the
drug’s seizure.” The defendant argues, however, that the trial justice went “beyond those simple
admonishments and * * * commented on the testimony adduced regarding the seizure of the
evidence.” Without identifying any specific language that the trial justice employed, he insists
that the trial justice communicated to the jurors that “he had already made a decision about the
drugs, which was obviously in the state’s favor.” Moreover, defendant contends that this led the
jury to “conclude that the trial justice believed the state’s witnesses’ testimony about the drugs.”
The state, for its part, maintains that the challenged jury instruction was proper and
“merely and correctly admonished, in language not in any way confusing or misleading, that it
was not the jury’s responsibility to determine the legality of the seizure of the cocaine from
[defendant’s] vehicle[.]” The state, at oral argument, asserted that the trial justice referred to the
suppression hearing in his jury instructions only to give context to his instructions as a whole.
Despite defendant’s contention that the trial justice “told the jurors that he had already
decided the legality of the search and seizure[,]” we perceive no language in the challenged
instruction that supports that conclusion. The trial justice did not err when he told the jury that
“when reference was made to a hearing that occurred about six weeks or almost two months ago,
that was a hearing held before me to decide those particular issues * * *.” Even if his choice of
words was somewhat inartful, the trial justice did not disclose how, or even if, he had decided the
issue. The defendant, however, would have us believe that this comment would lead a juror to
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conclude that the trial justice had ruled in favor of the state because evidence of the seizure was
admitted, and then that juror would make the additional leap to believe that, because the trial
justice sided with the state on that evidentiary issue, the trial justice must also be siding with the
state on other issues. We do not accept that argument. Trial justices make evidentiary decisions
many times throughout the course of a trial, and the mere fact that a trial justice admits or
excludes a piece of evidence is simply not a ground to believe that the trial justice is then biased
towards one party over another.
We hold that the trial justice’s jury instructions were acceptable. Indeed, the challenged
portion of the jury instructions is but one paragraph amid twenty-three pages of transcript that
make up the jury instructions in this case. When we consider the challenged paragraph within
the context of the entire instruction, as we must, we see nothing that would be difficult for a
person of ordinary intelligence to understand. Moreover, there is an absence of anything that
would indicate that the trial justice commented on the evidence or in any other way confused or
misled the jury.
Conclusion
For the reasons set forth herein, we quash the writ previously issued and affirm the
judgment of the Superior Court. We remand this case to that tribunal with our decision endorsed
thereon.
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STATE OF RHODE ISLAND AND PROVIDENCE PLANTATIONS
SUPREME COURT – CLERK’S OFFICE
OPINION COVER SHEET
Title of Case State v. José Angeles.
No. 2015-42-M.P.
Case Number
(P2/12-617A)
Date Opinion Filed April 3, 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 Stephen P. Nugent
For State:
Aaron L. Weisman
Department of the Attorney General
Attorney(s) on Appeal
For Defendant:
Catherine Gibran
Office of the Public Defender
SU-CMS-02A (revised June 2016)