Court Opinion

ID: 3219433
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-01 17:02:40.000683+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:30:52.944266
License: Public Domain

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             IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF ALASKA

PATRICK LEON HINSON,
                                                      Court of Appeals No. A-11839
                            Appellant,               Trial Court No. 3PA-12-1768 CR

                     v.
                                                               OPINION
STATE OF ALASKA,

                            Appellee.                    No. 2508 — July 1, 2016

              Appeal from the Superior Court, Third Judicial District, Palmer,
              Beverly Cutler, Judge.

              Appearances: David D. Reineke, under contract with the Public
              Defender Agency, and Quinlan Steiner, Public Defender,
              Anchorage, for the Appellant. Diane L. Wendlandt, Assistant
              Attorney General, Office of Criminal Appeals, Anchorage, and
              Craig W. Richards, Attorney General, Juneau, for the Appellee.

              Before: Mannheimer, Chief Judge, Allard, Judge, and Suddock,
              Superior Court Judge. *

              Judge ALLARD.

              A jury convicted Patrick Leon Hinson of felony failure to register as a sex
offender and sixth-degree misconduct involving a controlled substance (based on his

   *
       Sitting by assignment made pursuant to Article IV, Section 16 of the Alaska
Constitution and Administrative Rule 24(d).
possession of marijuana). In this appeal, Hinson argues that the trial court committed
plain error by: (1) allowing the jury to hear that the criminal charge was failure to
register “as a sex offender”; (2) admitting evidence of the specific sex offense that gave
rise to Hinson’s duty to register; and (3) allowing the State to make an improper closing
argument about the dangerousness of sex offenders and the need for the registration
requirement. Hinson also argues that there was insufficient evidence to convict him of
marijuana possession.1
              For the reasons explained here, we conclude that the evidence was
sufficient to convict Hinson of marijuana possession and Hinson has not shown plain
error on any of his other claims. We therefore affirm Hinson’s convictions.

       Facts and proceedings
              On July 12, 2012, Alaska State Trooper Joel Miner stopped Hinson because
he was driving without a seatbelt. Because Hinson had a bottle of alcohol in his pocket,
Miner asked to search the vehicle for open containers of alcohol. Hinson consented to
the search, and Miner found a baggie of marijuana in the center console. Miner later
testified that when he discovered the marijuana, Hinson “in a way, acknowledged that
it was his” by stating, “Hey, it’s not a gun, it’s just a little ... bit of weed.”
              Miner decided to issue a citation for the drug offense, and he asked Hinson
for his home address. Hinson provided his address and told Miner he was a registered
sex offender. When Miner ran Hinson’s information through the Alaska Public Safety

   1
        Hinson also makes the conclusory assertion that the court erred by admitting evidence
of his bail conditions in this case. But because Hinson makes no legal argument related to
this claim, we conclude that it is waived for inadequate briefing. Petersen v. Mutual Life Ins.
Co. of N.Y., 803 P.2d 406, 410 (Alaska 1990) (“Where a point is not given more than a
cursory statement in the argument portion of a brief, the point will not be considered on
appeal.”).

                                             –2–                                         2508

Information Network, he discovered that the address Hinson provided did not match the
address Hinson had reported to the sex offender registry. When Miner asked Hinson
about this discrepancy, Hinson explained that he had moved four months earlier, in
February 2012, when he was “kicked out” by his girlfriend. He said that he believed he
had until the following year to update his sex offender registration.
              Hinson was ultimately charged with felony failure to register as a sex
offender for failing to notify the registry of his change of address.2 (Hinson was charged
with a felony because this was his second offense.) Hinson was also charged with sixth-
degree misconduct involving a controlled substance for possessing marijuana.3
              The superior court bifurcated Hinson’s trial on the failure to register charge
so the jury would not hear that Hinson had a prior conviction for failure to register unless
he was convicted of the current offense. The superior court also considered whether it
should “sanitize” the charge so the jury only heard that Hinson had been charged with
“failure to register” and not that he had been charged with “failure to register as a sex
offender.” But the court decided not to do this, and both the prosecutor and the defense
attorney agreed with the court’s decision.
              The prosecutor told the jury in opening statement and later introduced
evidence to show that Hinson had been convicted of a misdemeanor sex offense and that
he was therefore required to register as a sex offender.4 The evidence included Hinson’s
sex offender registration file, which contained forms Hinson had signed acknowledging
that he was required to notify the sex offender registry within one business day of any
change in address. The State also introduced several documents (including a two-month­

   2
       AS 11.56.835(a)(1).
   3
       AS 11.71.060(a)(2)(A).
   4
       AS 11.41.438(a)(1) and AS 11.31.100(a), respectively.

                                           –3–                                        2508

old traffic citation and the bail paperwork in this case) that listed the new address Hinson
had provided to Trooper Miner.
              Hinson did not object to the admission of any of this evidence. At one
point, the defense attorney questioned the necessity of identifying Hinson’s underlying
sex offense as attempted third-degree sexual abuse of a minor. But when the State
sought to admit the copy of Hinson’s 2001 judgment — which showed that he had
entered a no contest plea to the misdemeanor offense of attempted third-degree sexual
abuse of a minor and was sentenced to 6 months to serve — the defense attorney told the
judge that he had no objection.
              Hinson called one witness in his defense: his former girlfriend Melissa
Leach, who testified that Hinson had lived with her and their two children for eight years
until their breakup in February 2012. Leach testified that Hinson had occasionally
returned for overnight visits and babysitting, that he had stated his intention to reconcile
with Leach and move back in, and that he had never been away from the home for more
than thirty consecutive days.
              Based on this testimony, Hinson’s attorney argued in closing that because
Hinson intended to return to Leach’s residence, and because he was never away from the
residence for more than thirty consecutive days, he had not changed his residence for
purposes of the sex offender registry. (Department of Public Safety regulations provide
that a sex offender “is considered to have changed residence on the date that the offender
leaves the residence without intending to return to continue living there, or the date that
the offender has been away from the residence for 30 consecutive days, whichever
occurs first.”5)

   5
       13 Alaska Administrative Code 09.040(b).

                                           –4–                                        2508

              The jury convicted Hinson of failure to register and sixth-degree
misconduct involving a controlled substance. Hinson subsequently stipulated that he had
a prior conviction for failure to register as a sex offender and the court entered judgment
on the felony to register offense.
              This appeal followed.

       Why we conclude that the court’s failure to redact “sex offender” from the
       failure to register charge was not plain error
              On appeal, Hinson argues that the jury should have been told that he was
charged with “failure to register,” not with “failure to register as a sex offender.” He
contends that the additional information that he was a sex offender was irrelevant and
prejudicial to his defense.
              But the duty to register as a sex offender only arises if a defendant has been
convicted of a sex offense as defined in AS 12.63.100(6).6 In the superior court, Hinson
never offered to stipulate that he had been convicted of a sex offense that gave rise to his
duty to register as a sex offender. And Hinson has not explained how, without the
stipulation, the State could otherwise have proved that Hinson had a duty to register with
the Alaska Department of Public Safety.
              Hinson also failed to preserve this claim in the superior court. His attorney
never asked the superior court to keep the full statutory definition of the offense from the
jury. To the contrary, when the judge raised this issue sua sponte, Hinson’s attorney
expressly declined to object to the prosecutor informing the jury that Hinson was a sex
offender and convicted of a misdemeanor sex offense.

   6
       See AS 12.63.010 (requiring sex offenders to register); AS 12.63.100(5)-(6) (defining
a sex offender as a person convicted of a sex offense and enumerating the crimes that qualify
as a “sex offense”).

                                           –5–                                         2508

               Hinson now argues that, because the superior court raised this issue sua
sponte and was clearly on notice of the legal issue, we should disregard the usual
requirement of a contemporaneous objection and review his claim as though it had been
preserved. This argument is meritless. As the State points out, because the defense
attorney disclaimed any objection to telling the jury that he was charged with “failure to
register as a sex offender,” the trial court never made a legal ruling for us to review and
our review is therefore limited to plain error.
               We find the reasoning of State v. McLaughlin7 persuasive on this issue. In
McLaughlin, the defendant was charged with “felon in possession” — that is, possession
of a concealable firearm by a convicted felon.8 In the trial court, McLaughlin offered to
stipulate that he had a prior felony, and he asked the judge to withdraw that element from
the jury’s consideration. The State declined the offered stipulation but the judge
nonetheless granted McLaughlin’s request, ruling that the jury would only consider
whether McLaughlin knowingly possessed a concealable firearm (unless the prior felony
became relevant for some other purpose).9
               The State petitioned for interlocutory review of this ruling, and we reversed
the trial court’s decision. We acknowledged that McLaughlin had a strong evidentiary
argument to exclude the evidence of his prior felony — because once a defendant
concedes a prior conviction, that conviction normally has no evidentiary value apart from
the impermissible inference that the defendant has a propensity to commit crimes.10

   7
        860 P.2d 1270 (Alaska App. 1993).
   8
        Id. at 1271.
   9
        Id. at 1272.
   10
        Id. at 1273-74.

                                            –6–                                       2508

Nevertheless, we concluded that there were policy concerns that militated against
withholding this information from the jury.
               Our first concern stemmed from the necessity of a jury instruction to
address why the defendant faced criminal penalties for “firearm possession” — conduct
that was not normally a crime. We concluded that instructing the jury not to consider
this question would have only exacerbated the potential for prejudice: jurors who knew
it was illegal for a felon to possess a firearm would simply assume McLaughlin had a
prior felony, while less knowledgeable jurors would still likely speculate about the
issue.11
               Our second concern was that hiding this type of information from the jurors
— information central to the nature of the criminal charge — would encourage mistrust
of the criminal justice system.12 We concluded that the better approach (one that courts
regularly follow in other circumstances) was to trust the jurors to make proper use of the
evidence without being swayed by its potential to prejudice the accused.13
               We ultimately concluded that the statutory definition of the crime charged
is relevant information for the jury in any given case.14 And this principle “holds true
regardless of which elements of the crime are actually disputed, for without knowing the
true nature of the charges, the jury is deprived of context for consideration of the issues
actually in dispute.”15

   11
        Id. at 1275.
   12
        Id. at 1277.
   13
        Id.
   14
        Id.
   15
        Id.

                                           –7–                                       2508

              We believe that this reasoning has equal force here. Instructing the jury not
to consider why Hinson had been charged with “failure to register” would likely have
the same result: jurors who were aware of the sex offender registration law would
simply assume that Hinson was a sex offender, and all the court would accomplish by
disguising the nature of the charge would be to engender distrust of the legal process.
Jurors who were less knowledgeable would no doubt speculate about Hinson’s criminal
history — particularly since the core of the State’s proof was the forms Hinson had
signed acknowledging his duty to notify the Department of Public Safety of his change
of address — forms that would have required substantial redaction to remove any
reference to a sex offense.
              We also conclude that it was necessary for the jurors to understand the
specific nature of Hinson’s duty to register so that they could fairly evaluate whether the
State had proved the intent element of the offense, which was the main dispute at
Hinson’s trial. If a juror imagined that Hinson’s duty to register was equivalent to, for
instance, the duty to inform the Department of Motor Vehicles of a change of address,
the juror might conclude that Hinson could have easily overlooked the duty —
particularly in the midst of the breakup of a long relationship. But the same juror might
reach a different conclusion if the juror knew that the duty at stake was Hinson’s duty
to update his sex offender registry.
              We therefore find that the superior court did not commit plain error by
allowing the jury to hear that Hinson had been charged with “failure to register as a sex
offender.”

                                           –8–                                       2508

        Why we conclude that Hinson has not shown plain error with regard to the
        evidence of his underlying sex offense
              Hinson next argues that the superior court committed plain error by
allowing the State to identify his underlying sex offense as attempted third-degree sexual
abuse of a minor (a misdemeanor), and to introduce documents setting out the sentence
he received (6 months). He argues that this evidence had no relevance to the charges
against him and that it prejudiced his defense.
              But Hinson did not object to the admission of this evidence at trial. Indeed,
when the judge sua sponte called a bench conference to discuss this matter, the defense
attorney stated that he had no objection to the admission of the judgment of conviction.
              It is true that, by this point, the prosecutor and several witnesses had already
identified Hinson’s underlying sex offense. But when the judge invited the defense
attorney to object to admission of the judgment, the attorney said nothing to suggest that
he was withholding his objection because the prejudice to his case had already occurred;
the attorney simply declined to object, as had been the case throughout the trial.
              Faced with these circumstances, we believe that the trial judge could
reasonably assume that the defense attorney had made a tactical decision that it would
be better for the jurors to know that Hinson had been convicted of a relatively minor sex
offense — a misdemeanor for which he received a sentence of only 6 months to serve
and a probationary term — than for the jurors to speculate about the more serious sex
crimes that Hinson might have committed.16 We therefore find no plain error.

   16
       Cf. Moreno v. State, 341 P.3d 1134, 1143-45 (Alaska 2015) (plain error review is
precluded where the record is clear that counsel made an intentional and informed choice not
to object or where the benefit conferred on the defendant by counsel’s action is readily
apparent).

                                            –9–                                         2508

        Why we conclude that the prosecutor’s closing argument was not plain
        error
              Hinson claims that the prosecutor’s summation to the jury included
improper argument calculated to appeal to the passions and prejudices of the jury.17
Specifically, he claims that the following remarks, which occurred at the beginning of
the prosecutor’s summation, constitute reversible error:
              At jury selection ... I asked a lot of you, why do you look up
              people in the sex offender registry? Because you want to
              know where people are living. You want to know this
              information because the community wants to know this
              information because people are buying houses and they rely
              on that information. People have children that go trick or
              treating. They rely on that information to protect their kids.
              They rely on the information in the registry that it’s going to
              be truthful and accurate. The community, the State of Alaska
              relies on that information.
The defense did not object to these remarks.
              On appeal, the State argues that the remarks were not improper because a
prosecutor is permitted to comment on the valid purposes underlying a law when those
purposes are relevant — for example, to address concerns about potential jury
nullification. Although we agree with this general principle, and agree that a simple
reference to the underlying legislative purpose of the residency requirement would not
necessarily have been improper, we conclude that the prosecutor’s remarks here —
specifically, her references to children trick or treating and the larger community dangers
posed by sex offenders — exceeded the bounds of permissible argument and improperly

   17
       See Patterson v. State, 747 P.2d 535, 538 (Alaska App. 1987) (arguments calculated
to appeal to the passions and prejudices of the jury are improper).

                                          – 10 –                                     2508

encouraged the jury to decide the case based on emotional considerations rather than the
evidence.18
              We do not agree, however, with Hinson’s contention that these remarks
constitute plain error or that they represent such egregious prosecutorial misconduct as
to “undermine the fundamental fairness of the trial.”19 These were isolated, brief remarks
that were not repeated in the remainder of the prosecutor’s opening summation or in her
rebuttal — both of which were otherwise measured in tone and properly focused on the
evidence at trial.20 Thus, when viewed in the context of the record as a whole, we
conclude that the prosecutor’s remarks, although improper in their appeal to the jury’s
emotions, do not constitute plain error and do not require reversal of Hinson’s
conviction.

        There was sufficient evidence to convict Hinson of marijuana possession
              Lastly, Hinson argues that there was insufficient evidence to convict him
of sixth-degree controlled substance misconduct because the State failed to prove that
the marijuana found in the center console of his vehicle belonged to him.
              To support this claim, Hinson points to cases in which the Alaska Supreme
Court and this Court have held that a defendant’s mere presence in a car containing drugs
is insufficient to establish knowing possession of those drugs.21 But in those cases, other

   18
       See Patterson, 747 P.2d at 538-41; see also American Bar Association, Criminal
Justice Standards for the Prosecution Function, Standard 3–6.8(c) (4th ed.).
   19
      Cook v. State, 36 P.3d 710, 729 (Alaska App. 2001); Potts v. State, 712 P.2d 385, 390
(Alaska App. 1985).
   20
        Rogers v. State, 280 P.3d 582, 589 (Alaska App. 2012).
   21
      Egner v. State, 495 P.2d 1272, 1273-74 (Alaska 1972); Marion v. State, 806 P.2d 857,
860 (Alaska App. 1991).

                                          – 11 –                                     2508

people who might have possessed the contraband were present.22 Here, Hinson was the
owner and sole occupant of the vehicle. Moreover, the trooper testified that Hinson
made furtive movements, reaching from his waistband and moving his hand toward the
center console where the drugs were found. And when the trooper found the marijuana,
Hinson did not deny ownership of it. Instead, he said, “Hey, it’s not a gun, it’s just a
little ... bit of weed.” We conclude that this evidence was sufficient for the jury to
conclude that Hinson knowingly possessed the marijuana, and that he was therefore
guilty of sixth-degree misconduct involving a controlled substance.

        Conclusion
              The judgment of the superior court is AFFIRMED.

   22
        Egner, 495 P.2d at 1273-74; Marion, 806 P.2d at 860.

                                         – 12 –                                   2508