Court Opinion

ID: 2774495
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2015-01-29 17:02:50.970422+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T11:12:54.425604
License: Public Domain

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     UNDER ARIZONA RULE OF THE SUPREME COURT 111(c), THIS DECISION IS NOT PRECEDENTIAL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.

                         DIMITRI ROZENMAN, Appellant.

             Nos. 1 CA-CR 13-0458, 1 CA-CR 13-0898 (Consolidated)
                              FILED 1-29-2015

               Appeal from the Superior Court in Maricopa County
                            No. CR2009-007039-001
                     The Honorable Bruce R. Cohen, Judge

                            AFFIRMED AS MODIFIED

                                       COUNSEL

Arizona Attorney General’s Office, Phoenix
By Joseph T. Maziarz
Counsel for Appellee

Michael J. Dew, Attorney at Law, Phoenix
By Michael J. Dew
Counsel for Appellant

Dimitri Rozenman, Buckeye
Appellant
                          STATE v. ROZENMAN
                           Decision of the Court

                      MEMORANDUM DECISION

Presiding Judge Jon W. Thompson delivered the decision of the Court, in
which Judge Donn Kessler and Judge Kent E. Cattani joined.

T H O M P S O N:

¶1            Defendant Dimitri Rozenman appeals his convictions and
sentences for conspiracy to commit first-degree murder and for criminal
damage, a domestic violence offense. This case comes to us as an appeal
under Anders v. California, 386 U.S. 738 (1967) and State v. Leon, 104 Ariz.
297, 451 P.2d 878 (1969). Defendant’s appellate counsel has searched the
record on appeal and found no arguable nonfrivolous question of law, and
asks us to review the record for fundamental error. Defendant has filed a
supplemental brief in propria persona in which he raises several issues for
appeal.

¶2            We have searched the record for fundamental error and
considered the issues identified by Defendant, and have found no
reversible error. All of the proceedings were conducted in compliance with
the Arizona Rules of Criminal Procedure and substantial evidence
supported the convictions. Defendant was present and represented himself
at trial and at sentencing, and was given the opportunity to speak at
sentencing, at which time the court imposed a legal sentence except insofar
as noted below.

¶3             We have noted an error in the sentencing minute entry. The
sentencing minute entry ordered Defendant to “submit to DNA testing for
law enforcement identification purposes and pay the applicable fee for the
cost of that testing in accordance with [Arizona Revised Statutes (“A.R.S.”)
section] 13–610 [(Supp. 2013)].” However, A.R.S. § 13–610 does not
authorize the superior court to order a convicted person to pay for the cost
of DNA testing. State v. Reyes, 232 Ariz. 468, 472, ¶ 14, 307 P.3d 35, 39 (App.
2013). Therefore, we vacate that portion of the sentencing minute entry
which requires Defendant to do so.

¶4           Accordingly,     we    affirm   Defendant's    convictions   and
sentences as modified.

                                      2
                          STATE v. ROZENMAN
                           Decision of the Court

I.     Procedural Background

¶5            A grand jury indicted Defendant in June 2009 on one count of
conspiracy to commit first-degree murder, and one count of criminal
damage of between $2,000 and $10,000, a domestic violence offense, charges
stemming from damage to the vehicles of his ex-wife and her family and a
plot to murder them. Following a trial in 2010, a jury convicted Defendant
of the charged offenses. The trial court granted a new trial on the ground
that the state had failed, albeit inadvertently, to properly disclose to
Defendant one of the surveillance recordings of a February 13, 2009 meeting
to discuss the murder conspiracy, the so-called Hawk recording.

¶6            Defendant represented himself at the second trial, and a jury
again convicted him of the charged offenses. The trial court sentenced
Defendant to life with possibility of parole after 25 years for the conviction
on conspiracy to commit first-degree murder, and a concurrent sentence of
2 years on the criminal damage conviction.1 The trial court gave Defendant
1,565 days of presentence incarceration credit.

¶7            The trial court later denied Defendant’s motion for new trial,
which raised numerous issues relating to the four-month delay by police in
impounding the recordings of surveillance and a confrontation call, and the
admission of those and other recordings at trial. The trial court found it
had no jurisdiction to decide Defendant’s late-filed motion to vacate
judgment, in which Defendant argued that the testimony before and at trial
of the investigating officers showed that they conspired to obstruct justice
by deliberately concealing the existence of the Hawk recording. The court
concluded, however, that if it had jurisdiction over the motion to vacate
judgment, it would deny it. Defendant filed timely notices of appeal of the
convictions and the order denying his post-verdict motions and we have

1      The presumptive sentence for this class 5 felony is 1.5 years. See
A.R.S. § 13-1602(B)(3) (Supp. 2014); A.R.S. § 13-702(D) (2010). The jury did
not find any aggravating circumstances, and the superior court did not
mention any in sentencing Defendant to an aggravated sentence on this
conviction. Defendant, however, did not object. It is possible the court
meant to aggravate the sentence by a circumstance implicit in the verdicts.
Moreover, the superior court gave Defendant 1,565 days, or nearly four
years, of presentence incarceration credit on this sentence, and thus, any
error under Blakely v. Washington, 542 U.S. 296 (2004), did not prejudice
Defendant, as necessary for reversal on fundamental error review.

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                           STATE v. ROZENMAN
                            Decision of the Court

jurisdiction pursuant to A.R.S. §§ 12-120.21(A)(1) (Supp. 2014), 13-4031
(2010), and 13-4033(A) (2010).2

II.    Discussion

       A.     Sufficiency of Evidence

¶8             Defendant argues on appeal that his conviction was contrary
to the weight of the evidence because the evidence demonstrated he did not
consciously agree to any plot to murder his ex-wife and her family. We
review de novo the sufficiency of the evidence to support a conviction. State
v. West, 226 Ariz. 559, 562, ¶ 15, 250 P.3d 1188, 1191 (2011). We review for
abuse of discretion the superior court’s denial of a motion for new trial
based on the weight of the evidence. State v. Neal, 143 Ariz. 93, 97, 692 P.2d
272, 276 (1984); see Ariz. R. Crim. P. 24.1(c)(1). The superior court abuses its
discretion in denying a motion for new trial if the evidence is not sufficient
to support the verdict. Neal, 143 Ariz. at 97, 692 P.2d at 276. In reviewing
the evidence, we view the facts in the light most favorable to upholding the
jury's verdict, resolving all conflicts in the evidence against the defendant.
State v. Girdler, 138 Ariz. 482, 488, 675 P.2d 1301, 1307 (1983); State v. Henry,
176 Ariz. 569, 577, 863 P.2d 861, 869 (1993). Credibility of the witnesses is
an issue for the jury, not this court. State v. Dickens, 187 Ariz. 1, 21, 926 P.2d
468, 488 (1996). 3

¶9             The evidence at trial was more than sufficient to support the
convictions. The offense of conspiracy to commit first-degree murder
required proof in pertinent part that 1) “with the intent to promote or aid
the commission of an offense”; 2) the defendant “agree[d] with one or more
persons that at least one of them or another person [would] engage in
conduct constituting the offense”; and 3) the intended conduct would
constitute first-degree murder. A.R.S. § 13-1003(A) (2010); see A.R.S. § 13-
1105(A)(1) (2010). Criminal damage requires proof that a defendant
recklessly damaged property of another person. A.R.S. § 13-1602(A) (Supp.
2014).

¶10           The evidence demonstrated that in 2008 Defendant hired L.N.
at his cigar business. L.N. testified that Defendant regularly complained

2      We cite the current versions of the applicable statutes when no
revisions material to this decision have since occurred.

3      Abrogated on other grounds by State v. Ferrero, 229 Ariz. 239, 242-43, ¶¶
15-20, 274 P.3d 509, 512-13 (2012).

                                        4
                          STATE v. ROZENMAN
                           Decision of the Court

about his wife and was angry she refused to sign a postnuptial agreement
to accept $50,000 in the event of a divorce. L.N. also stated that Defendant
told him that if he and his wife “were still back in Russia, that she would be
dead or they would kill her.”

¶11          Defendant served his wife with divorce papers in March 2008,
and directed L.N. to move her belongings to her parents’ house. One night
in October 2008, L.N. saw Defendant puncture the tires of three vehicles
belonging to his wife’s family, and pour sugar into the gas tank of one of
them. The repairs cost in excess of $2,000.

¶12            When the divorce decree ordering Defendant to pay his wife
approximately $500,000 was issued in late January 2009, Defendant was
“incoherent and really upset,” and told L.N. he wished his ex-wife were
dead. Sometime after that, L.N. testified, Defendant approached him and
proposed a plan whereby L.N. would hire people to force his ex-wife to sign
a paper agreeing to relinquish all money awarded in the divorce decree,
and then kill her and her family. Defendant offered to pay L.N. $70,000 in
installments, and later gave L.N. $5,000 in cash.

¶13            L.N. ultimately told Defendant’s ex-wife of the plot, and
agreed to allow police to hide video and audio recorders on him for a
meeting L.N. arranged with Defendant for the night of February 13, 2009.
During the meeting, L.N. told Defendant that his ex-wife had signed the
documents, and she and her family had been bound up “execution style”
and had been beaten. L.N. told Defendant he was not going to give
Defendant “details of how they’re gonna murder them,“ and talked about
“hit guys,” and when they would “go and shoot them people.“ Defendant
gave L.N. $500 in cash to get the hit men out of town. Defendant indicated
by nodding that all he wanted L.N.’s men to do was kill the ex-wife and her
family, and he would handle disposing of the hit men. During that
meeting, Defendant never told L.N., “you’re scaring me,” threatened to call
police, or called him crazy.

¶14            In a recorded confrontation call six days later, L.N. told
Defendant that his ex-wife and her parents were dead, to which Defendant
immediately asked L.N. when he was going to return to work. Defendant
did not call 9-1-1 that night to report that he had just been told his ex-wife
and her family had been murdered.

¶15           When police called on Defendant at his girlfriend’s apartment
early the next morning and told him about the “murders,” and repeatedly
asked him if he knew who might have done this, Defendant never

                                      5
                          STATE v. ROZENMAN
                           Decision of the Court

mentioned L.N. Police arrested Defendant and served him later that day
with a protection order from his ex-wife, and told him that his ex-wife and
her family were safe. At that time, Defendant told police that he was
concerned that hit men hired to commit the murders might come looking
for him.

¶16           This evidence was more than sufficient to prove beyond a
reasonable doubt that Defendant caused more than $2,000 in damages to
the vehicles of his ex-wife and her family, and later conspired with L.N. to
murder them.

      B.     Other Issues Raised in Supplemental Brief

¶17           Defendant raises numerous additional issues in his
supplemental brief, most relating to admission at trial of the recordings of
surveillance (exhibits 96 and 97), the later confrontation call (exhibit 90),
and questioning by police at his girlfriend’s apartment (exhibit 100), and
testimony relating to their impoundment and disclosure.

             1.      Delay in Impounding Recordings

¶18          Defendant raises a number of legal grounds for reversal
related to the alleged failure of the investigating officers to properly
impound three of the recordings for four months after they were created,
and the fourth for one month after it was created.

¶19            The background on these issues is as follows. The lead
detective testified at trial that he did not impound the recordings of the
February 13, 2009 surveillance or the later confrontation call for four
months because he continued his investigation until a grand jury met to
consider the charges -- more than four months after the date of the
surveillance. He stated that during the four months prior to impound,
when the recordings were not being used, he kept them secured in a locked
drawer in his desk. The detective also asserted that this method of handling
such evidence was not uncommon, and distinguished it from the practice
of immediately impounding evidence such as drugs, guns, or money.
Another detective who had recorded Defendant’s responses to police while
being told that his ex-wife had been murdered testified that he did not
impound the recording for about a month because it made no sense to travel
the forty mile round-trip to the impound warehouse each time he needed
to listen to the recording while he continued to work with other detectives
on this complex investigation.

                                     6
                          STATE v. ROZENMAN
                           Decision of the Court

¶20             After trial, an associate of Defendant searched the internet
and discovered Operations Order 8.1 within a 1,200 page manual on
Phoenix Police rules, guidelines and procedures. Defendant’s discovery of
Operations Order 8.1 formed the basis, in large part, for Defendant’s motion
for new trial, in which he argued that pursuant to Operations Order 8.1,
“[a]ll property will be impounded prior to the end of the shift” except when
authorized by a supervisor. Defendant contended that he was thus denied
a fair trial, having unsuccessfully sought police impound policies in pretrial
discovery and having elicited testimony at trial from the investigating
officers that they retained the recordings for investigative purposes as
common practice. Insofar as the record reflects, however, Defendant did
not supply any expert or other witness who testified that such policy was
violated by the conduct of the detectives in this case. Although both
Defendant’s and the State’s expert testified that they found no evidence that
anyone had altered or tampered with the recordings, Defendant
nevertheless argued in his posttrial motion that the only reasonable
explanation for the four-month delay in impounding the recordings was to
allow the lead detective sufficient time to tamper with them.

¶21            Following two days of oral argument, the judge denied the
motion for new trial, reasoning that he had given Defendant great latitude
during trial in presenting his defense, and that through cross-examination
and argument, Defendant had raised these same issues with the jury, the
fact-finder and the sole judge of credibility, and it had found him guilty.

                     a.     Youngblood Claim

¶22           Defendant argues that his due process rights were violated
pursuant to State v. Youngblood, 173 Ariz. 502, 844 P.2d 1152 (1993), because
the investigating officers acted in bad faith in failing to impound the
recordings at the end of the shift, per the plain wording of Phoenix Police
Operations Order 8.1. Defendant argues that had the recordings been
properly impounded, the audio and video might have been more accurate
and might have exonerated him.

¶23            In Youngblood, our supreme court held that “absent bad faith
on the part of the state, the failure to preserve evidentiary material which
could have been subjected to tests, the results of which might have
exonerated the defendant, does not constitute a denial of due process of law
under the Arizona Constitution.” Id. at 508, 844 P.2d at 1158; see Ariz.
Const., art. 2, § 4; see also Arizona v. Youngblood, 488 U.S. 51, 57-58 (1988)
(holding the same under the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth
Amendment to the United States Constitution). To any extent that the

                                      7
                           STATE v. ROZENMAN
                            Decision of the Court

ostensible police failure to follow Operations Order 8.1 can be construed as
a failure to “preserve” the recordings for purposes of Youngblood,
Defendant has failed to persuade us that the investigating officers did so in
bad faith. We accordingly find no merit in this argument.

                     b.      Brady Claim

¶24           Defendant also argues that the State violated his rights under
Brady v. Maryland, 373 U.S. 83 (1963), and thereby deprived him of a fair
trial by failing to comply with his pretrial request for the police
department’s policies and procedures for impounding evidence; by
offering allegedly false testimony from officers on this issue; and by arguing
in closing that “it is common police procedure not to impound evidence
while conducting an investigation.” In Brady, the Supreme Court held that
“the suppression by the prosecution of evidence favorable to an accused
upon request violates due process where the evidence is material either to
guilt or to punishment, irrespective of the good faith or bad faith of the
prosecution.” Id. at 87.

¶25             Evidence is considered “material” for purposes of Brady only
if “there is a reasonable probability that, had the evidence been disclosed to
the defense, the result of the proceeding would have been different. A
reasonable probability is a probability sufficient to undermine confidence
in the outcome.” United States v. Bagley, 473 U.S. 667, 682 (1985). “The mere
possibility that an item of undisclosed information might have helped the
defense, or might have affected the outcome of the trial, does not establish
‘materiality’ in the constitutional sense.” United States v. Agurs, 427 U.S. 97,
109-10 (1976) (holding that evidence of prior convictions of victim for
possession of knives was not material notwithstanding defendant’s claim
of self-defense, in part because it was cumulative of other evidence that he
had knives on him at the time of his murder).

¶26             The record fails to reveal any testimony to support
Defendant’s claim that Operations Order 8.1 applies to the recordings at
issue, that the investigating officers lied in testifying that it was common
practice to retain surveillance recordings (rather than send them to the
impound warehouse) while investigating the offense, or that anyone
tampered with the recordings during the four months they were not
impounded. Under these circumstances, we are not persuaded that
Operations Order 8.1 was evidence material to his guilt, as required to
establish a Brady violation.

                     c.      Denial of Motion for New Trial

                                       8
                          STATE v. ROZENMAN
                           Decision of the Court

¶27            Defendant also argues that the trial court erred in denying his
motion for new trial based on the newly discovered evidence of Operations
Order 8.1. We review a trial court’s ruling on a motion for new trial based
on newly discovered evidence for abuse of discretion. State v. Orantez, 183
Ariz. 218, 221, 902 P.2d 824, 827 (1995). To warrant a new trial, a defendant
“must show that (1) the newly-discovered evidence is material; (2) the
evidence was discovered after trial; (3) due diligence was exercised in
discovering the material facts; (4) the evidence is not merely cumulative or
impeaching, unless the impeachment evidence substantially undermines
testimony that was of critical significance at trial; and (5) that the new
evidence, if introduced, would probably change the verdict or sentence in
a new trial.” Id. at 221, 902 P.2d at 827. Again, in the absence of any
testimony that Operations Order 8.1, in fact, applies to such recordings, or
that anyone tampered with the recordings before they were impounded,
we are not persuaded that this evidence was material, or that it “would
probably change the verdict or sentence.” Consequently, we conclude that
the trial court did not abuse its discretion in denying Defendant’s motion
for new trial.

              2.     Denial of Motion to Exclude Recordings

¶28           Defendant next argues that the trial court abused its
discretion in failing to exclude the recordings at trial based on the four-
month delay in their impoundment, the delay in disclosing the existence of
the Hawk recording, alleged perjury and witness tampering related to
testimony on the Hawk recording, and anomalies in the recordings
themselves. He contends that because both experts testified that the
recordings could be subject to tampering, the “anomalies on the
recordings,”4 as well as unidentified evidence indicating that they were not

4      Defendant’s expert alluded to unidentified “anomalies” in the
recordings but testified that he could not say that there were alterations in
the recordings. The evidence does not support Defendant’s claim on appeal
that the header in the Hawk recording showed a date of 12/30/1899.
Although during his cross-examination of the state’s sound expert,
Defendant announced that he was showing the jury a document with a
12/30/1899 date in the Hawk header, Defendant agreed with the sound
expert that the document did not come from the expert’s report. Moreover,
Defendant failed to identify the source of the document from any exhibit
number, nor did he seek an explanation from the sound expert as to what
that date might mean in the context that it appeared. Our review of the
header on the Hawk recording does not show such erroneous date.

                                      9
                           STATE v. ROZENMAN
                            Decision of the Court

the original recordings, suggest tampering and rob the recordings of
trustworthiness.

¶29            Defendant filed several motions in limine to exclude the
surveillance recordings at trial on the grounds that they lacked
trustworthiness. The trial court denied Defendant’s motions, reasoning
that the issues that he raised went to the weight of the evidence and not its
admissibility. The trial court, however, stated it would give Defendant
significant leeway in asking the witnesses questions that he believed would
shed light on the unreliability of the recordings.

¶30           “Whether a party has laid sufficient foundation for admission
of evidence is within the sound discretion of the trial court.” State v. George,
206 Ariz. 436, 446, ¶ 28, 79 P.3d 1050, 1060 (App. 2003). We find no abuse
of discretion here. The requirement of authentication or identification as a
condition precedent to admissibility is satisfied by evidence sufficient to
support a finding that the matter in question is what its proponent claims.
Ariz. R. Evid. 901(a). Circumstantial evidence may be used to prove the
authenticity of a sound recording. State v. Lavers, 168 Ariz. 376, 388 n.8, 814
P.2d 333, 345 n.8 (1991). The question for the trial judge is not whether the
evidence is authentic, but only whether evidence exists from which the jury
could reasonably conclude that it is authentic. Id. at 386, 814 P.2d at 343.

¶31           In this case, a detective testified that he created the original
disks, the Hawk and audio/video recordings, shortly after the surveillance
was concluded. Additionally, L.N. testified that he had reviewed both
recordings, as well as the recording of the confrontation call, and believed
they were fair and accurate depictions of what had occurred. Another
detective likewise testified that he personally recorded the visit with
Defendant to notify him of his ex-wife’s death, and retained custody of the
original recording for about a month before formally impounding it. The
recording was admitted as an exhibit without objection.

¶32            We find no merit in Defendant’s claim that the lead detective
lied under oath and told other witnesses to lie under oath, in testifying how
many recordings were obtained from the surveillance. Moreover, in light
of the absence of testimony and evidence demonstrating that the recordings
where tampered with or should have been impounded sooner, we are not
persuaded that the delay in impoundment made the recordings unreliable.
Therefore, we conclude that Defendant has failed to raise any genuine issue
as to the trustworthiness of the recordings, and the trial court did not abuse
its discretion, much less fundamentally err, in admitting the recordings at
trial.

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                           STATE v. ROZENMAN
                            Decision of the Court

              3.     Limitations on Presentation of Defense Case

¶33             Defendant raises a number of issues related to the limitations
he believed were imposed by the trial court prior to trial on his presentation
of his case, in violation of his constitutional right to due process. Defendant
first argues that the trial court erred in limiting his cross-examination of the
investigating officers to questions that would reflect on their credibility and
motive, thereby preventing him from referring to the lead detective’s
alleged obstruction of justice and intentional suppression of the Hawk
recording in his opening statement. He also asserts that the trial court erred
by allowing the lead detective to testify that the court had previously held
that the Hawk recording had been disclosed, in response to Defendant’s
cross-examination question on whether the detective had suppressed the
Hawk recording. Finally, he contends that the trial court erred in
precluding him from calling his former defense attorney as a witness to
testify that he was misled by the investigating officers before the first trial
as to existence of the Hawk recording.

¶34           The constitutional rights to due process, compulsory process,
and confrontation guarantee a criminal defendant “a meaningful
opportunity to present a complete defense.” Crane v. Kentucky, 476 U.S. 683,
690 (1986). A defendant’s right to present evidence is subject to restriction,
however, by application of reasonable evidentiary rules. United States v.
Scheffer, 523 U.S. 303, 308 (1998).        Although we ordinarily review
evidentiary rulings for abuse of discretion, we review evidentiary rulings
that implicate a defendant’s constitutional rights de novo. State v. Ellison,
213 Ariz. 116, 120, ¶ 42, 140 P.3d 899, 903 (2006).

¶35            We have reviewed the entire record, and conclude that the
trial court did not err, much less fundamentally err, in imposing the limits
it did on Defendant’s presentation of his case. The trial court allowed
Defendant considerable leeway in questioning the investigating officers,
including the lead detective, on whether they had intentionally misled
Defendant as to the existence of the Hawk recording, or had suppressed it.
We find no error in the trial court’s admonishment to Defendant that he
could not make arguments in his opening statement. See State v. King, 180
Ariz. 268, 278, 883 P.2d 1024, 1034 (1994). Nor do we find no error in the
trial court’s determination that Defendant had opened the door to the
detective’s recitation of a court’s prior finding that the Hawk recording had
been disclosed, by asking the detective if he had suppressed the recording.
See State v. Lawrence, 123 Ariz. 301, 304-05, 599 P.2d 754, 757-58 (1979).
Additionally, we find no error in the trial court’s preclusion testimony from
Defendant’s former counsel to establish that the attorney believed the lead

                                      11
                          STATE v. ROZENMAN
                           Decision of the Court

detective had misled him as to the existence of the Hawk recording, on the
grounds the potential to confuse the jury would far outweigh any probative
value of this testimony. The court did not preclude Defendant from
arguing in closing any reasonable inferences from the evidence, and
specifically did not preclude him from arguing that the investigating
detectives obstructed justice or that they suppressed the evidence.

¶36           Defendant also argues that the trial court erred in precluding
him from offering the jury a transcript of the surveillance audio prepared
by his sound expert as an aid during the expert’s testimony, to show that
after the surveillance, the detectives accidentally recorded themselves
engaged in drug use. We have reviewed the record on this issue, and
conclude that the trial court appropriately precluded use of this transcript
on the grounds that the sound expert was not a party to the conversation,
had no greater expertise in listening than anyone else, and to the extent the
expert had used specialized equipment to increase audibility, had not
prepared an enhanced recording for the jury to hear. See Ariz. R. Evid. 702.
Nor are we persuaded (especially in light of our inability to hear any of the
claimed evidence of drug use in our review of the exhibit) that the trial court
erred in precluding Defendant from examining the lead detective on
whether the recording revealed evidence of the detectives’ drug use. See
Ariz. R. Evid. 403.

              4.     Issues Related to State’s Sound Expert

¶37           Defendant argues that the State violated his rights under
Brady and the discovery rules by failing to disclose the report of its sound
expert until after jury selection had begun, and not ordering the State to
produce its expert for an interview before trial. Brady, 373 U.S. at 87. We
review a trial court’s rulings on discovery issues for abuse of discretion.
State v. Connor, 215 Ariz. 553, 557, ¶ 6, 161 P.3d 596, 600 (App. 2007). “To
the extent [d]efendant sets forth a constitutional claim in which he asserts
that the information is necessary to his defense, however, we will conduct
a de novo review.” Id.

¶38           We find no merit in Defendant’s argument that the delayed
disclosure of the expert report violated his Brady rights and the discovery
rules. To demonstrate a Brady violation, a defendant must show that the
prosecution suppressed material evidence favorable to the accused. Brady,
373 U.S. at 87. The record shows that the State’s sound expert was hired to
provide enhanced recordings, and that his report summarizing the
characteristics of the original disks and the measures he took to create the
enhanced recordings was disclosed shortly if not immediately after it was

                                      12
                           STATE v. ROZENMAN
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completed, which was four days before Defendant gave his opening
statement and two weeks before the sound expert testified. Defendant has
failed to show that the report itself contained any material evidence
favorable to him, that is, evidence that impeached the credibility of the lead
detective by casting doubt on the trustworthiness of the recordings. The
favorable evidence cited by Defendant on appeal – a supposed 1899 date in
the header of the Hawk recording, which Defendant argues was suggestive
of tampering – was not in fact found in the sound expert’s report, as
Defendant himself conceded at trial. Under these circumstances, we
conclude that the report contained no material evidence favorable to
Defendant, necessary to establish a Brady violation. Moreover, in light of
the record showing that the report was disclosed as soon as it was
completed and two weeks before the sound expert testified, we are not
persuaded either that the State violated Arizona Rule of Criminal
Procedure 15.1, or that Defendant suffered any prejudice from the failure to
disclose it earlier. See State v. Martinez-Villareal, 145 Ariz. 441, 448, 702 P.2d
670, 677 (1985); Ariz. R. Crim. P. 15.1 (b)(4), (e)(3).

¶39             Further, the trial court did not violate Defendant’s due
process right by refusing to order the State to produce its sound expert for
an interview before Defendant made his opening statement. Defendant
first expressed an urgent need to interview the State’s sound expert the day
before jury selection was set to begin on February 25, 2013. Defendant did
not, however, ask for a continuance to allow him to interview the sound
expert before he made his opening statement. The trial court ordered the
State to produce the expert for an interview as soon after February 25, 2013,
as an interview could be arranged. The record reveals an avowal by the
State that it produced its sound expert for an interview two days during the
following week, the week of March 4, 2013, but Defendant “opted not to
interview him until the week of March 11, 2013.” The record also shows
that Defendant’s advisory counsel finally interviewed the State’s sound
expert on March 12, 2013, two days before the sound expert testified. The
State’s sound expert testified that it was possible to tamper with recordings,
although such tampering would be easily detected, and he could find no
evidence of tampering.

¶40           Under these circumstances, we are not persuaded by
Defendant’s argument that his inability to interview the sound expert
before he made his opening statement somehow prejudiced him or
constituted an unreasonable limitation on his presentation of his defense.
Consequently, the court did not err, much less fundamentally err, in not
requiring the report or the expert to be produced sooner.

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                           STATE v. ROZENMAN
                            Decision of the Court

              5.     Prosecutorial Misconduct

¶41           Defendant argues that the trial court erred in overruling his
objection to the prosecutor’s argument that the surveillance tape showed
that Defendant nodded when L.N. asked Defendant if Defendant wanted
him to “just stick to the initial contract, take care of Jana and them, and I’ll
leave the hit men for you to take care of later?” We find no merit in this
argument: the prosecutor’s argument represented a reasonable
interpretation of the evidence.

¶42           Lastly, Defendant contends that the prosecutor must have
known that the lead detective was offering perjured testimony when the
detective testified that the county attorney was allowed to have evidence
during the course of an investigation. Defendant offers no support for his
claim that this testimony was perjured, and we could find none in the
record. We accordingly find no fundamental error on this basis.

III.   Conclusion

¶43          For the foregoing reasons, we affirm Defendant’s convictions
and sentences as modified by vacating the order that Defendant pay the fee
for DNA testing.

¶44           Counsel's     obligations     pertaining      to    Defendant's
representation in this appeal have ended. Counsel need do nothing more
than inform Defendant of the status of the appeal and his future options,
unless counsel's review reveals an issue appropriate for submission to the
Arizona Supreme Court by petition for review. State v. Shattuck, 140 Ariz.
582, 584–85, 684 P.2d 154, 156–57 (1984). Defendant shall have thirty days
from the date of this decision to proceed, if he so desires, with an in propria
persona motion for reconsideration or petition for review.

                                    :ama

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