Court Opinion

ID: 892252
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2013-06-05 18:37:17.757173+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T12:39:33.463485
License: Public Domain

1      IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO

 2 STATE OF NEW MEXICO,

 3       Plaintiff-Appellee,

 4 v.                                                          NO. 27,693

 5 JESUS CARMONA,

 6       Defendant-Appellant.

 7 APPEAL FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF DOÑA ANA COUNTY
 8 Stephen Bridgforth, District Judge

 9 Gary K. King, Attorney General
10 Katherine Zinn, Assistant Attorney General
11 Santa Fe, NM

12 for Appellee

13 Inocenté, P.C.
14 Brian A. Pori
15 Albuquerque, NM

16 for Appellant

17                             MEMORANDUM OPINION

18 BUSTAMANTE, Judge.

19       This is the second time this case has come before us. In his first trial,

20 Defendant was convicted of first degree kidnapping and aggravated battery on a

21 household member. These convictions were based on evidence that Defendant
 1 kidnapped and brutally attacked his girlfriend after she had ended their relationship

 2 and moved out. Defendant appealed, and we affirmed his convictions. Defendant

 3 then successfully pursued habeas corpus relief and was granted a new trial based on

 4 ineffective assistance of counsel. At the beginning of his second trial, he pled guilty

 5 to battery on a household member and went to trial solely on the kidnapping charge.

 6 He was once again convicted of first degree kidnapping.

 7        In this appeal, Defendant contends that the evidence is insufficient to establish

 8 great bodily harm and that the kidnapping statute is unconstitutionally vague as

 9 applied. He also contends that the court erred in excluding evidence of a prior false

10 claim by Victim, in admitting the prior testimony of Victim’s twin sister, and in

11 failing to impose an adequate sanction for the State’s destruction of evidence. Finally,

12 he contends that his convictions for aggravated battery on a household member and

13 for kidnapping violate double jeopardy. We reject Defendant’s contentions and

14 affirm.

15 BACKGROUND

16        Victim testified that she and Defendant had lived together and had planned to

17 get married. A couple of days before August 23, 2002, Victim had decided to leave

18 Defendant and had moved out. On August 23, Victim was at the Tortilla Flats bar

                                              2
 1 when Defendant came in, followed shortly by her twin sister, Belinda, who was

 2 holding Victim’s daughter. Defendant and Belinda got into a fight, with Defendant

 3 slapping Belinda, and the two of them pushing each other. At Victim’s insistence,

 4 Victim, Belinda, and Victim’s daughter left the bar. Belinda told Victim to get into

 5 Belinda’s car, but Victim wanted to take her own car.

 6        In the parking lot, Defendant was yelling at Victim and got into his truck.

 7 Defendant threatened her with his truck, moved his truck as she attempted to move her

 8 car, and as she tried to get away, he ran into her car with his truck. Before she knew

 9 it, Defendant was in her car, in the same seat with her. Defendant grabbed Victim by

10 the hair and pulled it back so that she was looking straight up at the sky. He told her,

11 “[d]rive, you fucking bitch. Drive.”

12        Victim did not want to drive, but did what she was told to do. She felt that she

13 was “overpowered at that point.” She was in the driver’s seat but Defendant was

14 driving, because “[m]y head was pointing completely toward[] the sky.” Defendant

15 pulled the steering wheel to turn onto Moongate Road. He was madder than Victim

16 had ever seen him, and he was still holding onto her hair and her head. Defendant was

17 punching her in the face, pulling her hair back as hard as he could, and hitting her in

18 the body and ribs.

                                              3
 1         Victim was desperate to get out of the car, so she opened the door and tried to

 2 jump out, even though the car was traveling 30-40 m.p.h. She was part way out of the

 3 car, with Defendant still holding onto her hair. Defendant stopped the car, got out, put

 4 his boot on her neck, and pulled up on her head. An elderly gentleman stopped to

 5 help, but Defendant scared the man away.

 6         Defendant dragged Victim back into the car, drove away, and continued to

 7 attack her. He did not turn into their house, but instead turned into a desolate area.

 8 Victim said it “was just a constant beating the whole ride.” Finally, she grabbed the

 9 steering wheel and turned it because “[t]he further we went down that road, the further

10 away from life I was getting because I knew that I was going to die out there, and I

11 didn’t want to die out in the desert.” As a result, the car got stuck on the side of the

12 road.

13         Defendant pulled Victim out onto the ground, repeatedly kicked her in the face

14 and ribs, and repeatedly strangled her with his hands until she lost consciousness. He

15 kicked her near her eyes and in the jaw. Victim testified to not being able to breathe

16 because she was hit so hard. He lifted the hood of the car and told her, “come here,”

17 because he wanted to put her head in the engine so he could close the hood on her

18 head. She refused. He pulled the metal rod, used to prop the hood open, off her car.

                                              4
 1 She told the emergency room physician, Dr. Patterson, that Defendant had beaten her

 2 with the prop rod. However, at trial she could not remember if he hit her with it or

 3 not; “I was hit so many times that night, I don’t know.”

 4        To get Defendant to stop, she told him she still loved him. He stopped hitting

 5 her, but said he would have to kill her because of what he had done to her face, and

 6 he worried that he would be imprisoned forever for what he had done. She told him

 7 she would lie and say that some girls had beaten her up outside of a bar. Defendant

 8 said, “I have to kill you. Look at your face.”

 9        By this time it was dark. They began walking and made it to a house, and the

10 owner gave them a ride home. She said nothing to the man because she was afraid for

11 her life. Once home, she could not see and did not try to get to the phone because she

12 was afraid of Defendant. She could not stand or take a shower by herself. She was

13 urinating blood, her ears were ringing so badly she could barely hear, and she could

14 not see. Her jaw was almost locked shut, she could not turn or move her head, and she

15 had great difficulty breathing. She wanted Defendant to take her to the hospital, but

16 he would not, instead stated his concern that he was going to go to prison.

17        She plotted how she would get out of the house. She said she did not leave the

18 bedroom because “I wanted to live, and I was willing at that point to do anything he

                                             5
 1 told me to.” At some point, Felix Romo, a friend of Defendant’s, came to the house.

 2 She told Defendant that if she were taken to the hospital she would use a false name

 3 and say she had been beaten by some girls outside a bar. She ultimately made a deal

 4 with Defendant and Mr. Romo that she would buy them cocaine if they would take her

 5 to the hospital. On the way to the hospital, she made good on her promise to buy

 6 drugs. Mr. Romo then took her to the hospital and carried her in.

 7 DISCUSSION

 8 A.     Great Bodily Harm

 9        Defendant argues that the evidence is insufficient to establish great bodily harm.

10 In reviewing this claim, we use a two-step process. Initially, the evidence is viewed

11 in the light most favorable to the verdict. Then we determine “whether the evidence

12 viewed in this manner could justify a finding by any rational trier of fact that each

13 element of the crime charged has been established beyond a reasonable doubt.” State

14 v. Apodaca, 118 N.M. 762, 766, 887 P.2d 756, 760 (1994) (internal quotation marks

15 and citation omitted). “In reviewing the sufficiency of the evidence, we must view the

16 evidence in the light most favorable to the guilty verdict, indulging all reasonable

17 inferences and resolving all conflicts in the evidence in favor of the verdict.” State v.

18 Cunningham, 2000-NMSC-009, ¶ 26, 128 N.M. 711, 998 P.2d 176.

                                               6
 1        The parties do not dispute that the kidnapping statute in effect at the time

 2 Defendant committed his offense in 2002 required great bodily harm to support a first

 3 degree kidnapping conviction. Subsequent changes to the statute in 2003 do not affect

 4 this appeal. See NMSA 1978, § 30-4-1(A) (2003) (replacing the requirement of great

 5 bodily harm with “physical injury”). “Great bodily harm” means an injury to a person

 6 which creates a high probability of death or results in serious disfigurement or results

 7 in loss of any member or organ of the body or results in permanent or prolonged

 8 impairment of the use of any member or organ of the body. UJI 14-131 NMRA.

 9        When Victim arrived at the hospital, Dr. Welsh, a plastic surgeon, determined

10 that the facial bones around her eyes were broken. She had blood behind each

11 eardrum, indicating a fracture at the base of her skull. Her eyes were swollen

12 completely shut. She had so much swelling that Dr. Patterson, the emergency room

13 physician, could not examine her eyes, and had to rely on an ophthalmologist for that

14 exam. She had to be given medication and a sedative before the ophthalmologist

15 could even open her eyes to check her eyeballs. She had blunt injuries, including

16 bruises, swelling, and fractures. Her face and neck were swollen and slightly

17 discolored, and her neck injuries were consistent with manual strangulation. Victim

                                              7
 1 testified that her breathing was labored because of pain in her ribs, her ears were

 2 ringing so badly she could hardly hear, and she was urinating blood.

 3        Victim was in the hospital for five days. She developed periorbital cellulitis,

 4 a serious infection of the tissue around the eyes. To treat it, Dr. Welsh cut the tissue

 5 around her eyes to drain the accumulated pus and placed her on antibiotics. Her jaw

 6 was also drained due to the infection. Dr. Welsh treated her for about a month after

 7 her release from the hospital. Victim testified that one eye was pinched shut for one

 8 month, and when the eye finally opened, the eyeball was pointing backward. Victim

 9 has scarring from the incisions around her eyes, and one of her eyes is sensitive to

10 light and allergens and is sometimes swollen. She was unable to go back to work for

11 about six months.

12        In support of his argument that the evidence is insufficient to establish great

13 bodily harm, Defendant seizes on an isolated portion of Dr. Welsh’s testimony that

14 they were fortunate because the only serious thing was the infection, and it was

15 resolved. Defendant describes the episode as involving “no serious injury . . . except

16 a treatable infection which was resolved.” He argues that Victim had only “two black

17 eyes, swollen cheeks, and marks on her neck, none of which were life-threatening.”

18 He asserts that she was not completely deprived of the use of any member or organ

                                              8
 1 of her body “for an extended length of time.” Finally, he concludes that a sensitivity

 2 to light does not establish great bodily harm.

 3        Defendant’s attempt to isolate particular testimony and to downplay the severity

 4 of the injuries is unpersuasive. His arguments were for the jury to consider, and it

 5 rejected them. Victim’s injuries, including fractured facial bones near the eyes, were

 6 severe and serious. Some of the physical effects are lasting. In our view, any rational

 7 jury could find that Victim suffered great bodily harm.

 8 B.     Void for Vagueness

 9        Defendant next argues that the kidnapping statute is unconstitutionally vague.

10 We review this issue de novo. See State ex rel. Children, Youth & Families Dep’t v.

11 Shawna C., 2005-NMCA-066, ¶ 24, 137 N.M. 687, 114 P.3d 367. Statutes are

12 strongly presumed to be constitutional, and “the defendant has the burden to prove

13 unconstitutionality beyond all reasonable doubt.” Id. ¶ 32. A statute may be vague

14 on its face or as applied. See State v. Laguna, 1999-NMCA-152, ¶¶ 25-26, 128 N.M.

15 345, 992 P.2d 896. A statute is vague on its face if it does not give fair warning to a

16 person of ordinary intelligence what the law requires. Id. ¶ 25. A statute is

17 unconstitutional as applied if the statute has no standards or guidelines and thus allows

18 arbitrary and ad hoc enforcement by police, prosecutors, judges, and juries. Id. ¶ 26.

                                               9
 1 If a statute clearly applies to a defendant’s conduct, it is not unconstitutional as

 2 applied. Id. ¶ 24.

 3        We have already held that the kidnapping statute is not unconstitutionally vague

 4 on its face because it gives fair warning to people of ordinary intelligence what the

 5 law requires.     See id. ¶¶ 29-30.       Defendant, however, contends that it is

 6 unconstitutional as applied to his case. His argument that the statute is vague as

 7 applied focuses on the requirement that the act of kidnapping must be accompanied

 8 by the intent to inflict great bodily harm. He argues that because the jury could not

 9 pinpoint with precision when his intent developed, then the statute is vague as applied.

10 He also argues that “a person who voluntarily permitted [Victim] to go to the hospital

11 cannot understand when his alleged acts violated the law.”

12        We reject Defendant’s arguments. In criminal cases, intent is often not

13 susceptible of proof by direct evidence, and our cases frequently observe that intent

14 may be proven by circumstantial evidence. See State v. Hoeffel, 112 N.M. 358, 361,

15 815 P.2d 654, 657 (Ct. App. 1991). During kidnapping, a defendant’s intent may arise

16 in many ways and it would be impossible to state them all with exactitude. The fact

17 that intent is not always capable of precise determination does not mean that the

                                              10
 1 statute is vague as applied. Cf. Shawna C., 2005-NMCA-066, ¶ 37(stating that a law’s

 2 generality is not the equivalent of vagueness).

 3        To support Defendant’s conviction, the jury had to find that Defendant

 4 kidnapped Victim with the intent to inflict great bodily harm. From Defendant’s

 5 statements made outside the bar that he was going to “kill [her],” or that he would

 6 “knock the crap out of [her]” if she did not do what he wanted, and from evidence that

 7 Defendant inflicted great bodily harm throughout the kidnapping, the jury could infer

 8 that he had that intent. See Cunningham, 2000-NMSC-009, ¶ 29 (stating that the

 9 defendant’s earlier statement in which he threatened the victim’s life constituted

10 circumstantial evidence of the defendant’s deliberate intention to kill); State v.

11 McGuire, 110 N.M. 304, 308-09, 795 P.2d 996, 1000-01 (1990) (noting that evidence

12 of a later sexual assault by the defendant on the victim may be used by the jury to

13 infer that the defendant had the necessary criminal intent to hold the victim for service

14 against her will at the time she was first kidnapped). Evidence that Defendant was

15 intent on violence, of his protracted restraint of Victim, and of the great bodily harm

16 he caused, establishes a classic case of first degree kidnapping. We conclude that the

17 statute clearly applies to Defendant’s conduct, and therefore the statute is not

18 unconstitutional as applied. See Laguna, 1999-NMCA-152, ¶ 24.

                                              11
 1        Defendant’s argument that he allowed Victim to go to the hospital and could

 2 not have known when his acts violated the law is equally unpersuasive.               If

 3 Defendant’s claim is that he did not understand the statute and did not know what the

 4 law required, we reject that claim. See id. ¶¶ 29-30 (holding that the kidnapping

 5 statute gives reasonable notice to people of ordinary intelligence of what the law

 6 requires). If Defendant is relying on his own purported confusion about what the law

 7 required, we reject this argument as well. The test is an objective one, dealing with

 8 what a person of ordinary intelligence would understand from reading the statute. See

 9 id. ¶ 25. It is not a subjective test, and Defendant’s own inability to understand what

10 the law requires does not render the statute unconstitutional.

11        We also reject Defendant’s argument that he allowed Victim to go to the

12 hospital because it narrowly focuses only on the evidence that is favorable to him.

13 The fact that Defendant finally allowed Victim to go to the hospital ignores the

14 quantum of evidence establishing that Defendant’s actions, beginning in the parking

15 lot, involved taking Victim by force, restraining her for a lengthy period of time, and

16 brutally beating her. Allowing her to go to the hospital occurred much later in the

17 chain of events. As we have discussed, sufficient evidence established first degree

                                             12
 1 kidnapping. Because the kidnapping statute clearly applies to Defendant’s conduct,

 2 the statute is not unconstitutional as applied. See id. ¶ 24.

 3 C.     Evidence of Prior False Claims

 4        Defendant contends that the court improperly ruled that he could not admit

 5 evidence of a prior false claim by Victim. We review this issue for an abuse of

 6 discretion. See State v. Sarracino, 1998-NMSC-022, ¶ 20, 125 N.M. 511, 964 P.2d

 7 72.

 8        According to Defendant, Victim’s ex-boyfriend, Adrian Villa, would have

 9 testified to a 1997 incident of domestic violence. Defendant told the court that Victim

10 “filed a police report against [Mr. Villa] accusing him of kidnapping, and those

11 charges were ultimately dropped.” The court would not allow that testimony. Later,

12 when the issue arose again, Defendant told the court that the issue involved a false

13 complaint for auto theft. He argued that the circumstances of the prior incident were

14 similar to those in this case.

15        In the course of the investigation of the 1997 domestic violence incident,

16 Victim accused Mr. Villa of stealing her car. Mr. Villa ultimately pled guilty to a drug

17 charge in exchange for having the domestic violence charges dropped. The police

18 determined, however, that there was insufficient evidence to support the stolen car

                                              13
 1 allegation. After reviewing the police report from the incident, the court ruled that

 2 Mr. Villa’s testimony was not relevant. It expressed its view that the prior incident

 3 was remote, having occurred five years earlier. “In reading the [police] report, it’s

 4 certainly clear that [Victim] felt like it should be treated as a stolen car because of the

 5 nature of how [Mr. Villa] took it, but it’s also true the detective determined right away

 6 that it was inappropriate to file that charge based on what they had.” The court

 7 concluded that bringing in Mr. Villa to venture an opinion that Victim had filed a false

 8 charge was “too remote, not relevant and fraught with risk.”

 9        At a minimum, Defendant bore the burden of demonstrating that the prior claim

10 was false. See State v. Johnson, 1997-NMSC-036, ¶ 27, 123 N.M. 640, 944 P.2d 869

11 (noting that one factor in determining whether to admit evidence of a prior act of a

12 victim is whether it was committed); State v. Jordan, 116 N.M. 76, 79, 860 P.2d 206,

13 209 (Ct. App. 1993) (same). The flaw in Defendant’s argument is that Victim’s

14 allegation was not demonstrably false. The fact that the police chose to pursue the

15 domestic violence, drug, and weapons charges against Mr. Villa, and were

16 uninterested in pursuing the stolen car charge, does not establish falsity. At most, it

17 reflects an assessment that there was insufficient evidence to support it. Alternatively,

18 it is consistent with a mistaken belief by Victim that Mr. Villa had stolen her car. The

                                               14
 1 failure of the police to pursue the charge might also indicate a practical approach to

 2 the incident of domestic violence and reflect a decision to pursue the many charges

 3 that were the most strongly supported. Without a showing of falsity, Mr. Villa’s

 4 opinion is simply not relevant. See Rules 11-401, -402 NMRA (stating that irrelevant

 5 evidence is inadmissible).

 6        There is another reason why the evidence was inadmissible.            Granting

 7 Defendant’s request would have involved introducing evidence detailing the prior

 8 incident of domestic abuse between Victim and Mr. Villa, as well as testimony and

 9 cross-examination about the facts surrounding the taking of Victim’s car. No police

10 officer was to be called to establish falsity. Defendant was relying solely on a police

11 report and on Mr. Villa’s own opinion that Victim’s stolen car allegation was false.

12 This kind of testimony is inadmissible extrinsic evidence under Rule 11-608(B)

13 NMRA. See Jordan, 116 N.M. at 80, 860 P.2d at 210. On the information presented

14 by Defendant, the court properly exercised its discretion in rejecting this tangent. We

15 hold there was no abuse of discretion.

16        In his reply brief, Defendant claims that Mr. Villa should have been allowed to

17 express his opinion on Victim’s reputation for truthfulness. This specific argument

18 was not preserved. State v. Varela, 1999-NMSC-045, ¶ 25, 128 N.M. 454, 993 P.2d

                                             15
 1 1280 (stating that to preserve an error for review, the defendant must make a timely

 2 objection that specifically apprises the trial court of the nature of the claimed error).

 3 It also comes too late. See Jordan, 116 N.M. at 82, 860 P.2d at 212 (stating that a

 4 claim raised for the first time in a reply brief is ordinarily too late).

 5 D.     Admission of Prior Testimony of Belinda Dillon

 6        At the first trial, Belinda Dillon, Victim’s twin sister, testified about what

 7 happened inside and outside the bar. She died before the second trial, and the State

 8 asked the court to admit her prior testimony. Defense counsel said, “I don’t have a

 9 huge objection. I think, for the record, we should note the prior conviction was

10 reversed based on a finding of ineffective assistance of counsel.” The court observed

11 that Ms. Dillon was cross-examined and ruled that the testimony would be admitted.

12 Defendant argues that this violated his right to confront witnesses against him. We

13 review this claim de novo. See State v. Henderson, 2006-NMCA-059, ¶ 6, 139 N.M.

14 595, 136 P.3d 1005 (stating that whether prior testimony was admitted in violation of

15 a defendant’s right of confrontation is reviewed de novo).

16        When a defendant has been given the opportunity to cross-examine a witness,

17 the prior testimony is admissible. See id. ¶ 16 (holding that the defendant’s right of

18 confrontation, as provided by Crawford v. Washington, 541 U.S. 36 (2004), was not

                                               16
 1 violated by the admission of a witness’s prior testimony where the defendant had the

 2 opportunity for cross-examination). Defendant had that opportunity at his first trial.

 3 That is sufficient. See Henderson, 2006-NMCA-059, ¶ 16.

 4        Defendant, however, claims that because defense counsel was ineffective, it is

 5 as if there had been no opportunity for cross-examination and that the prior testimony

 6 is inadmissible because it is as if there had been no cross-examination at all. He has

 7 cited two cases for this proposition, Mancusi v. Stubbs, 408 U.S. 204 (1972), and

 8 United States v. Ciak, 102 F.3d 38 (2d Cir. 1996). Both cases deal with a situation in

 9 which counsel was ineffective in a prior trial, and the prosecution introduced prior

10 testimony at a second trial. Neither case found reversible error. In Mancusi, the Court

11 found that the defendant had shown no specific prejudice. See 408 U.S. at 213-16.

12 In Ciak, the court found that habeas relief had been granted, in part, based on

13 inadequate cross-examination of another witness, not of the witness whose prior

14 testimony was being admitted. Therefore, the court held that the prior testimony was

15 admissible. See 102 F.3d at 44. Accordingly, neither case supports Defendant’s

16 request for reversal.

17        Under the facts, we are not persuaded that the admission of Ms. Dillon’s prior

18 testimony constitutes reversible error. Defendant’s habeas petition did not raise

                                             17
 1 inadequate cross-examination of Ms. Dillon as a problem. His only claim regarding

 2 cross-examination was that counsel did not adequately cross-examine Victim.

 3        Moreover, Defendant has not shown specific prejudice. Defendant points out

 4 that Ms. Dillon had prior convictions and that counsel did not bring that out on cross-

 5 examination. This is an obvious shortcoming, but it was cured at the second trial

 6 when, at Defendant’s request, the court instructed the jury that Ms. Dillon had a prior

 7 conviction for forgery. Other than cross-examination of Ms. Dillon about her prior

 8 forgery conviction, which was cured on retrial, Defendant has provided no concrete

 9 ideas about what additional cross-examination would have explored, or how it would

10 have helped. Without that showing, we are unwilling to depart from the rule that prior

11 testimony is admissible if there was a prior opportunity for cross-examination.

12 Because Defendant had a prior opportunity and has not shown specific prejudice, we

13 find no error.

14        Additionally, even if we were to find error, we would conclude that it was

15 harmless. State v. Johnson, 2004-NMSC-029, ¶ 7, 136 N.M. 348, 98 P.3d 998 (stating

16 that if the defendant’s Sixth Amendment right of confrontation was violated “[w]e

17 must address, therefore, whether the violation was harmless in this case”). “[T]he

18 central focus of the Chapman inquiry has always been ‘whether there is a reasonable

                                             18
 1 possibility that the evidence complained of might have contributed to the conviction.’”

 2 Id. ¶ 9 (quoting Chapman v. California, 386 U.S. 18, 23 (1967)). “These factors

 3 include the importance of the witness’ testimony in the prosecution’s case, whether

 4 the testimony was cumulative, the presence or absence of evidence corroborating or

 5 contradicting the testimony of the witness on material points, the extent of

 6 cross-examination otherwise permitted, and, of course, the overall strength of the

 7 prosecution’s case.” Id. ¶ 11 (internal quotation marks and citation omitted).

 8        Ms. Dillon’s testimony was relatively brief. She testified how, outside of the

 9 bar, Defendant rammed Victim’s car, that he was screaming at Victim, and described

10 how he jumped into Victim’s car. She testified that Defendant stated he was going to

11 kill Victim. Ms. Dillon’s testimony is very similar to that of Mr. Stroud, the bar

12 security guard, who also testified that Defendant rammed Victim’s car, berated her,

13 and jumped into her car. Like Ms. Dillon, he testified that Defendant was intent on

14 violence, testifying that Defendant had said he would “knock the crap out of [Victim]”

15 if she did not do what he wanted. Consequently, we conclude that Ms. Dillon’s

16 testimony was not critical, was cumulative, and was corroborated by the testimony of

17 Mr. Stroud, as well as by Victim. We further conclude that the State’s case was well

18 supported.

                                             19
 1        Because Defendant had the opportunity for prior cross-examination, and has not

 2 demonstrated any prejudice from the absence of additional cross-examination, we

 3 conclude that the admission of Ms. Dillon’s prior testimony was not constitutional

 4 error. Even if we were to conclude that there was error, we see no reasonable

 5 possibility that Ms. Dillon’s testimony might have contributed to the conviction.

 6 E.     Lost Evidence

 7        Defendant contends that the State’s destruction of evidence required dismissal

 8 of the case or, alternatively, a ruling that Victim could not testify. As the court

 9 recognized, prohibiting Victim from testifying would be the equivalent of dismissing

10 the case.

11        The destroyed evidence consisted of jeans worn by Victim, Defendant’s

12 cowboy boots, and Victim’s cowboy boots. This evidence was destroyed after this

13 Court affirmed Defendant’s convictions and issued our mandate in the prior appeal,

14 but before Defendant filed the petition for habeas corpus that resulted in a new trial.

15 The court denied Defendant’s motion to dismiss, finding no bad faith by the State,

16 finding that the evidence was material, but concluding that its destruction was not

17 prejudicial. The court dealt with the issue by giving a special instruction informing

18 the jury that Defendant’s and Victim’s boots, and Victim’s jeans, had been destroyed,

                                             20
 1 that the destruction had not been in bad faith, and that “[y]ou may but are not required

 2 to draw the inference that the destroyed evidence was potentially exculpatory.”

 3        To determine whether deprivation of evidence is reversible error, we apply the

 4 test from State v. Chouinard, 96 N.M. 658, 661, 634 P.2d 680, 683 (1981). Under that

 5 test, the State must either breach some duty or intentionally deprive the defendant of

 6 evidence, the evidence must have been material, and the loss of the evidence must

 7 have prejudiced the defendant. Id. The trial court has discretion to fashion an

 8 appropriate remedy, and we review that decision for an abuse of discretion. Id. at

 9 662-63, 634 P.2d at 684-85.

10        Defendant has failed to designate the transcript of the hearing on this issue. “It

11 is [a d]efendant’s obligation to provide this Court with a sufficient record proper.”

12 State v. Druktenis, 2004-NMCA-032, ¶ 44, 135 N.M. 223, 86 P.3d 1050. “Where

13 there is a doubtful or deficient record, every presumption must be indulged by the

14 reviewing court in favor of the correctness and regularity of the [trial] court’s

15 judgment.” State v. Rojo, 1999-NMSC-001, ¶ 53, 126 N.M. 438, 971 P.2d 829

16 (internal quotation marks and citation omitted). Without the transcript, we do not

17 know what Defendant or the State argued, nor do we have the benefit of any reasoning

18 stated by the court. We could reject Defendant’s argument on this issue for this

                                              21
 1 reason alone. See State v. Gilbert, 98 N.M. 77, 81, 644 P.2d 1066, 1070 (Ct. App.

 2 1982) (stating that a defendant’s failure to include the transcript of the motion hearing

 3 would normally preclude review).

 4        Even on the merits, Defendant’s argument is unpersuasive. Defendant ascribes

 5 a sinister motive for the State’s destruction of the evidence. However, the State did

 6 not destroy the evidence until our mandate affirming had been issued. Nothing was

 7 pending at that point. Defendant argues that the State should have preserved the

 8 evidence for future litigation, including a habeas corpus proceeding. We decline to

 9 determine that the State breached some duty or intentionally deprived Defendant of

10 the evidence. The case had been affirmed, and there is no evidence the State knew a

11 habeas proceeding was in the offing.

12        We turn next to materiality and prejudice. Defendant makes the sweeping

13 statement that “the failure to preserve this evidence severely prejudiced [him] because

14 he forever lost the opportunity to impeach the state’s chief witness with physical

15 evidence which would have belied her claims.”              This is an overstatement.

16 Defendant’s assertion assumes the evidence was favorable to him and “would have”

17 impeached Victim. But it was the State that relied on the evidence, thereby suggesting

18 that the evidence was unfavorable to Defendant. Rather than harming Defendant,

                                              22
 1 destruction of the evidence may have helped him by eliminating evidence that was not

 2 considered favorable to him in the first trial.

 3        On retrial, Defendant suggested to the trial court that the boots and jeans could

 4 have provided useful information because testing might have revealed no dragging

 5 marks on Victim’s boots or might have revealed blood spatter on the clothing. This

 6 is not compelling. Defendant’s argument about Victim’s boots focuses on Victim’s

 7 assertion that, as she tried to jump out of the car, she had been dragged by Defendant.

 8 Defendant perhaps hoped to show that, if the boots had not been damaged, the lack

 9 of damage might cast doubt on her claim. We suspect that at the first trial Victim may

10 have testified that she had been dragged. In this trial, however, her testimony does not

11 clearly describe being dragged along the ground. Instead, it very briefly describes her

12 being part way out of the car and trying not to get her legs run over by the back wheel.

13 In any event, even if we were to assume she was being dragged, at most the absence

14 of drag marks on her boots would cast doubt on only a very discrete part of her

15 testimony. There was other, ample evidence that she had been kidnapped and severely

16 beaten by Defendant. Whether she had been dragged or not was not central to the

17 case. Evidence about blood spatter was not critical either. Defendant suggested that

18 blood spatter might have been tested to determine if it was consistent with Victim’s

                                              23
 1 report. Given the facts in this case, blood spatter, or its absence, would not have

 2 explained away the significant and damaging evidence of the beating Victim suffered.

 3        We conclude that the State did not intentionally deprive Defendant of the

 4 evidence, that Defendant’s arguments about the potential value of the evidence is

 5 speculative, and that Defendant has not shown prejudice. See Chouinard, 96 N.M. at

 6 663, 634 P.2d at 685 (holding that there was no reversible error where the defendant

 7 offered only speculation that the lost evidence would have undercut the State’s case).

 8 Consequently, dismissal of the case, or the equivalent of dismissal–prohibiting Victim

 9 from testifying–would have been a windfall to Defendant, and out of proportion to the

10 event. The court’s treatment of the issue was appropriate, and we see no abuse of

11 discretion.

12 F.     Double Jeopardy

13        Finally, Defendant contends that his convictions for battery on a household

14 member and for kidnapping violate double jeopardy. He argues that the acts were not

15 distinct because there was one continuous incident and one victim. We review his

16 double jeopardy claim de novo. State v. Andazola, 2003-NMCA-146, ¶ 14, 134 N.M.

17 710, 82 P.3d 77.

                                             24
 1        Under State v. Saiz, 2008-NMSC-048, ¶ 30, 144 N.M. 663, 191 P.3d 521, we

 2 examine the trial record to determine whether Defendant’s acts are separated by

 3 sufficient indicia of distinctness to be considered non-unitary conduct. Distinctness

 4 is determined by considering whether the acts are separate in time and space, “the

 5 quality and nature of the acts, the objects and results involved, and the defendant’s

 6 mens rea and goals during each act.” Id. The proper analysis is whether the jury

 7 reasonably could have inferred independent factual bases for the charged offenses.

 8 Id.

 9        Here, there is ample evidence from which the jury could reasonably infer a

10 separate course of conduct underlying the kidnapping and separate from the battery.

11 Defendant’s acts were not coextensive. Defendant’s acts were separated in time and

12 location. The kidnapping that began in the bar parking lot and, at least initially, was

13 not accompanied by battery. Additionally, there was a period of time, after Defendant

14 finally stopped beating Victim, when the jury could find that Defendant was

15 restraining Victim by keeping her present, by keeping her in the house, and by

16 refusing to take her to the hospital. On the evidence, the jury could infer that

17 Defendant’s physical attack was not coextensive with his restraint of Victim. The

18 quality and nature of Defendant’s acts were different, his mens rea was different, and

                                             25
 1 his goals were different. We conclude that the evidence establishes that the two

 2 crimes were distinct and that the jury could reasonably infer separate factual bases for

 3 them. Consequently, we hold there was no double jeopardy violation. See id. ¶¶ 33-

 4 34 (holding that where the evidence suggested that the defendant forcibly restrained

 5 the victim as part of an attempted sexual assault, and then killed her, the jury could

 6 reasonably infer separate factual bases for kidnapping and murder).

 7        Defendant’s conviction is affirmed.

 8        IT IS SO ORDERED.

 9
10                                         MICHAEL D. BUSTAMANTE, Judge

11 WE CONCUR:

12
13 JONATHAN B. SUTIN, Judge

14
15 LINDA M. VANZI, Judge

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