Lead Opinion
OPINION
Appellant Juan Humberto Castillo-Alvarez challenges his convictions for second-degree murder and kidnapping, in violation of Minn.Stat. §§ 609.19, subds. 1(1), 2(1), 609.25 (2012). Castillo-Alvarez contends that Minn.Stat. § 609.045 (2012) and the Double Jeopardy Clause of the Minnesota Constitution bar the prosecution in this case. He also asserts that the district court erred in admitting evidence of his unrecorded statement to law enforcement. Because neither section 609.045 nor the Minnesota Constitution bar the prosecution and because the district court properly admitted Castillo-Alvarez’s unrecorded statement, we affirm.
This case arises from the June 1997 kidnapping and murder of 15-year-old Gregory Sky Erickson. Erickson lived in Estherville, Iowa and started using and selling drugs in 1996. Castillo-Alvarez also lived in Estherville and owned a Mexican restaurant. Castillo-Alvarez was a drug dealer who fronted drugs to street-level dealers.
In December 1996 a street-level dealer, Luis Lua, fronted Erickson one pound of marijuana. Erickson was expected to pay Lua $1400 after the marijuana was sold, and Lua then would be able to pay a debt Lua owed to Castillo-Alvarez. Erickson was not able to sell the marijuana because
On June 5, 1997, Lua and two other people, Ben Alden and Shawn Knakmuhs, confronted Erickson. Erickson was found in a closet at E.S.’s apartment. Knakmuhs demanded that Erickson deliver Ortiz’s drugs or return Ortiz’s money. Erickson gave the group some methamphetamine, and Knakmuhs took $50. Lua then pointed a pistol at Erickson and told Erickson that he had one day to repay the rest of his debt. Later, when the group weighed the drugs Erickson gave them, Lua and Ortiz became angry because Erickson lied about the amount of drugs he had given them.
The next day, Lua, Ortiz, Alden, Knak-muhs, Juan Astello and several other men armed with multiple guns, including a Lor-cin .380 handgun that Lua received from Castillo-Alvarez, confronted Erickson. Alden went into E.S.’s apartment to see if he could resolve the situation, but Erickson was not there. The rest of the group entered the apartment. Lua then sent Alden to retrieve Erickson.
When he later arrived at E.S.’s apartment, Erickson was taken into the bedroom and assaulted. At one point, Lua put an unloaded gun in Erickson’s mouth and pulled the trigger. Lua then told Erickson that they were taking him to see “the man” and Erickson would be “lucky if the man let him live.” Lua told Erickson if he ran, Lua would shoot him.
Lua and other men drove Erickson to Castillo-Alvarez’s restaurant in Esther-ville. Erickson’s hands were tied behind his back. When they arrived at the restaurant, Castillo-Alvarez got into the car with Lua. When Castillo-Alvarez emerged from the car, Castillo-Alvarez told Ramiro Astello “that [they] were supposed to take [Erickson], give him a beating and let him walk back to town” and that Lua would tell them “what would be next.”
Lua and four men drove to a secluded area. Erickson was pulled from the car and was assaulted again. Lua pulled out a gun and pointed it at Erickson. Astello asked Lua what he was doing, and Lua responded that Castillo-Alvarez told him to kill Erickson and leave his body in Minnesota.
Instead of shooting Erickson there, a large garbage bag was placed over Erickson’s head, and Erickson was put in the trunk of the ear so he would not bleed on the back seat. The group drove to an abandoned farmhouse in Jackson County, Minnesota. Erickson was taken into the basement and killed. Lua shot Erickson first with the gun Castillo-Alvarez had given him, and then Erickson was shot by another man.
The next day, Lua and Knakmuhs attempted to set fire to the farmhouse so Erickson’s body could not be identified. They poured gas around the basement, including Erickson’s body. The fire burned part of the basement but not the entire house. Erickson’s partly burned body was found one week later.
After Erickson’s body was found, police executed a search warrant at Castillo-Alvarez’s restaurant. During the search, the Lorein .380 that Lua used to shoot Erickson was found in a false ceiling. But
In 2004, Castillo-AIvarez was located in Mexico, extradition proceedings began, and the State of Iowa charged Castillo-AIvarez with second-degree murder, kidnapping, and conspiracy. State v. Castillo-Alvarez, No. 08-0868,
Following a jury trial in Iowa, Castillo-AIvarez was convicted on all charges. In September 2009, a divided panel of the Iowa Court of Appeals reversed the convictions based on a violation of Iowa’s speedy trial rule, Iowa R.Crim. P. 2.33(2)(b). State v. Castillo-Alvarez, No. 08-0868,
Five months later, in February 2010, the Jackson County Attorney in Minnesota charged Castillo-AIvarez with two counts of aiding and abetting second-degree murder and one count of aiding and abetting kidnapping. Castillo-AIvarez filed a motion to dismiss, arguing that Minn.Stat. § 609.045 and the Double Jeopardy Clause of the Minnesota Constitution, Minn. Const, art. I, § 7, barred the Minnesota prosecution. In the same motion, Castillo-AIvarez sought to suppress his statement to Agent Birnie because it was not electronically recorded as required by Minnesota law. See State v. Scales,
A Minnesota jury found Castillo-AIvarez guilty on all counts. The district court convicted Castillo-AIvarez of second-degree murder and kidnapping, and sentenced him to 48 months for the kidnapping conviction and 480 months for the second-degree murder conviction.
Castillo-AIvarez appealed to the Minnesota Court of Appeals arguing, among other issues, that Minn.Stat. § 609.045 and the Double Jeopardy Clause of the Minnesota Constitution barred the Minnesota prosecution and that the district court erred in admitting evidence of Castillo-Alvarez’s unrecorded interrogation. The court of appeals affirmed, concluding: section 609.045 did not preclude a Minnesota prosecution because Castillo-Alvarez’s Iowa conviction was overturned on appeal; applying the dual-sovereignty doctrine, the Minnesota prosecution did not violate the Double Jeopardy Clause of the Minnesota Constitution; and the district court did not err when it admitted Castillo-Alvarez’s unrecorded statement because “the
I.
We turn first to Castillo-Alvarez’s contention that Minn.Stat. § 609.045 bars the Minnesota prosecution. Section 609.045 states:
If an act or omission in this state constitutes a crime under both the laws of this state and the laws of another jurisdic•tion, a conviction or acquittal of the crime in the other jurisdiction shall not bar prosecution for the crime in this state unless the elements of both law and fact are identical.
(Emphasis added). Issues regarding statutory interpretation present questions of law that we review de novo. State v. Grigsby,
Castillo-Alvarez contends that Minn.Stat. § 609.045 barred the Minnesota prosecution because his Iowa conviction involved offense elements that were identical in law and fact. As a threshold matter, the State contends that Castillo-Alvarez’s Iowa conviction does not fall within the meaning of the word “conviction” as used in section 609.045 because the Iowa conviction was set aside on appeal. Castillo-Alvarez responds by relying on Minn.Stat. § 609.02, subd. 5 (2012), which defines “conviction” generally as “a verdict of guilty by a jury or a finding of guilty by the court” that is “accepted and recorded.” Based on this definition, Castillo-Alvarez contends that his Iowa conviction constitutes a “conviction” under the plain language of section 609.045. We disagree.
In State v. Spaulding,
Castillo-Alvarez urges us to reject the analysis in Spaulding and Schmidt because we cannot add words to the statute, including words requiring that the conviction be final. But the statutory language at issue in this case is materially indistinguishable from the language of section 609.035. Section 609.045 was enacted at the same time as section 609.035. Act of May 17, 1963, ch. 753, 1963 Minn. Laws 1185, 1188-89 (codified at Minn.Stat. §§ 609.035, .045) (showing the adoption of statutes relating to successive prosecutions in one act). And the broad purpose of the two sections is the same — to protect defendants from being punished twice for the
Finally, as the federal courts have explained, a conviction that has been reversed is a legal nullity. See, e.g., United States v. Brest,
For all of these reasons, we conclude that the word “conviction” as used in section 609.045 means the same thing as “conviction” in section 609.035. This interpretation requires a final conviction, one that has not been set aside on appeal, in order for the statute to bar another prosecution.
In sum, when Minnesota filed its complaint against Castillo-Alvarez, the Iowa convictions had been reversed on appeal. Consequently, they were not convictions for purposes of MinmStat. § 609.045.
II.
We turn next to Castillo-Alvarez’s argument that the Double Jeopardy Clause in the Minnesota Constitution, Minn. Const, art. I, § 7, bars his prosecution. The interpretation and application of the Minnesota Constitution is a legal question that we review de novo. United Prairie Bank-Mountain Lake v. Haugen Nutrition & Equip., LLC,
Castillo-Alvarez concedes that the United States Supreme Court has interpreted the language of the Double Jeopardy Clause of the United States Constitution to allow successive state prosecutions when the defendant’s act transgresses the laws of both states. See Heath v. Alabama,
We have recognized that we can “interpret our state constitution to afford greater protections of individual civil and political rights than does the federal constitution.” Kahn v. Griffin,
Here, the state and federal double jeopardy clauses use substantially similar language. See Fuller,
The Supreme Court’s conclusion in Heath that the federal double jeopardy clause allows successive state prosecutions when a defendant’s act transgresses the laws of both states “is founded on the common-law conception of crime as an offense against the sovereignty of the government.”
Having reviewed the Supreme Court’s previous decisions and approach to the law, we conclude that the Court’s decision in Heath does not reflect a sharp or radical
III.
We turn next to Castillo-Alvarez’s argument that the district court’s admission of his unrecorded out-of-state interrogation by federal and Iowa law enforcement violated the rule announced in State v. Scales,
As a threshold matter, we must consider an issue of first impression: whether the rule announced in Scales applies to interrogations conducted outside Minnesota. See State v. Sanders,
A.
Over the years, we have used three different choice-of-law approaches to resolve issues relating to the admission of evidence collected in another jurisdiction. Fleeger v. Wyeth,
Under the traditional choice-of-law approach, when choice-of-law questions arose, the law of the forum (“lex fori ”) controlled procedural conflicts, including evidentiary matters. Moore v. Lillehau-gen,
In Milkovich v. Saari, we first departed from the traditional choice-of-law approach.
In Lucas, a Minnesota defendant sought suppression of tape-recorded phone conversations made in Wisconsin that would have been inadmissible under Wisconsin law but were admissible under Minnesota law. Id. at 736. As we noted in Lucas, under the exclusionary rule, a forum state must suppress evidence when: (1) evidence was illegally obtained under the law in both the search jurisdiction and the forum state; or (2) evidence was illegally obtained in the search jurisdiction, and forum-state officers participated in the search. Id. at 736-37. Evidence is not suppressed, however, when: (1) evidence was illegally obtained under the law of the search jurisdiction but was legally obtained pursuant to forum-state law and forum-state officers were not involved in the search; or (2) the seizure of evidence was valid under the law of the search jurisdiction, but was not lawful if it occurred in the forum state. Id. at 737. In Lucas, we held that “it is preferable to use an exclusionary rule analysis rather than a traditional conflicts of law approach to determine the admissibility of evidence obtained in another state.” Id. Because the collection of the evidence in Lucas did not violate Minnesota or Wisconsin law and Minnesota officers were not involved in the search, we held that the district court had correctly admitted the evidence. Id.
In light of the inadequacy of both the traditional choice-of-law analysis and the exclusionary rule, we applied the most significant relationship approach to determine the admissibility of evidence collected out of state in violation of the Minnesota physician-patient privilege. Id. at 175-76. Under this approach, the law of the state with the most significant relationship to the evidence controls, even if it conflicts with the law of the forum, unless applying the law of the state with the most significant relationship would be contrary to a strong public policy in the forum. Id. at 175. We held that the most significant relationship approach was preferable because it recognized “both the substantive ... [and] procedural nature of the privilege statute.” Id.
Although not a perfect fit for the circumstances that exist in the privilege context, the Scales rule is similar to the privilege at issue in Heaney because the Scales rule has both a procedural and substantive purpose. See, e.g., Waddell,
B.
Having concluded that the most significant relationship approach applies in this case, we consider which state had the most significant relationship to Castillo-Alvarez’s unrecorded interrogation. Castillo-Alvarez was interrogated in preparation for him “to stand trial ... in the State of Iowa.” The extradition documents do not show that a Minnesota prosecution was expected because charges had only been filed in Iowa. Further, Castillo-Alvarez was received in Texas by an FBI agent who resides in Iowa and an Iowa sheriff— providing further support that the interrogation occurred in preparation for an Iowa prosecution. Moreover, it is undisputed that Minnesota law enforcement played no role in initiating or conducting the interrogation.
Because Iowa has the most significant relationship with Castillo-Alvarez’s interrogation, the law of Iowa should apply absent a strong Minnesota public policy.
Because Iowa has the most significant relationship to Castillo-Alvarez’s interrogation and we find no strong Minnesota policy requiring us to apply the Scales rule, we hold that the district court did not err in admitting evidence of Castillo-Alvarez’s unrecorded interrogation.
Affirmed.
Notes
. The evidence at trial explained that "to front” means that one drug dealer has provided drugs to another dealer, who then sells the drugs and pays the supplier after the drugs are sold.
. Iowa R.Crim. P. 2.33(2)(b), provides that "[i]f a defendant indicted for a public offense has not waived the defendant's right to a speedy trial the defendant must be brought to trial within 90 days after indictment is found or the court must order the indictment to be dismissed unless good cause to the contrary be shown." This rule has been recognized as "more stringent than its constitutional counterpart recognized in Barker v. Wingo.” State v. Miller,
. Because the overturned Iowa convictions were not convictions for purposes of Minn. Stat. § 609.045, we need not consider whether, as Castillo-Alvarez argues, the elements of Minnesota and Iowa charges were identical in both law and fact.
. Relying on State v. Fredlund, the State argues that we recognized the dual-sovereignty doctrine in 1937.
. The concurrence asserts that our "conclusion that Scales is both a procedural and substantive rule is simply wrong” because we relied on our “supervisory power” to create the rule. Consequently, the concurrence asserts that we err in looking to the "purposes” of the rule instead of the "source of authority from which the rule was created.” The source of our authority to write the Scales rule, however, is not at issue in this case. And even if such authority were at issue, our supervisory powers are not limited to procedural matters. In State v. Graham,
Moreover, as the concurrence notes, there are many rules of evidence that, while promulgated by our court based on our "inherent judicial authority to regulate and supervise the rules that govern the admission of evidence,” State v. Obeta,
. The concurrence contends that the most significant relationship approach "is only intended to apply to the narrow scope of choice-of-law questions pertaining to privileges.” We disagree. The most significant relationship approach is applied to resolve a variety of choice-of-law issues. See State v. Schmidt,
. The concurrence asserts that we are overruling precedent by applying a choice-of-law method other than the lex fori doctrine. The concurrence is mistaken because we made the pivot away from the lex fori doctrine almost 20 years ago in Lucas. We held in Lucas that it was ‘‘preferable” to apply a doctrine other than lex fori "to determine the admissibility of evidence obtained in another state.” Lucas,
Concurrence Opinion
(concurring).
I agree with the court that neither Minn.Stat. § 609.045 (2012) nor the Minnesota Constitution bar the prosecution of Castillo-Alvarez in the State of Minnesota. I write separately to explain why the court is incorrect in concluding that our decision in State v. Scales,
I.
In Scales, we held that “all custodial interrogation ... shall be electronically recorded where feasible and must be recorded when questioning occurs at a place of detention.”
On appeal, Castillo-Alvarez argues that the district court’s admission of his out-of-state unrecorded interrogation by federal and Iowa law enforcement officials was a substantial violation of Scales. As a threshold issue, we must consider whether the Scales requirement applies to Castillo-Alvarez’s unrecorded statement given that the statement was taken outside of Minnesota. In reaching the conclusion that Scales does not apply in this case, the court relies on defective reasoning.
With respect to procedural conflicts of law, we have traditionally held that the law of the forum (lex fori) controls. Davis v. Furlong,
But the court’s reliance on Heaney is misplaced. In Heaney, we emphasized that privileges are created to “substantively protect a particular type of relationship deemed valuable to society in general” and therefore “hold a unique place in the law.”
But aside from the court’s misplaced reliance on Heaney, the court’s conclusion that Scales is both a procedural and substantive rule is simply wrong. The Scales rule, while producing a substantive effect, is purely procedural. In Scales, we relied exclusively on our supervisory power in holding that all custodial interrogations must be recorded in order to be admissible in Minnesota state courts.
As I see it, the Scales rule is a procedural rule that is akin to our power to create rules of procedure and evidence within courts of the State of Minnesota. See M.D.T.,
To be sure, we have emphasized that Scales “discourages unfair and psychologically coercive police tactics.” Scales,
I also take issue with the court’s conclusion that “there is no strong Minnesota policy requiring application of the Scales rule” in this case. As I emphasized in State v. Sanders,
In sum, because the Scales rule arises from our authority to create rules of procedure and evidence within courts of the State of Minnesota, it is a procedural rule. On that basis, I would apply the lex fori approach and conclude that Scales applies to the admission of Castillo-Alvarez’s statement in a Minnesota state court.
II.
Whether the Scales violation requires suppression of Castillo-Alvarez’s statement turns on whether the failure to record the statement was a substantial violation of the Scales rule. Scales, 518
Applying the factors here, I conclude that the failure to record Castillo-Alvarez’s statement was not a substantial violation of the Scales rule. First, I would conclude that the out-of-state law enforcement officials did not willfully violate the Scales rule in taking Castillo-Alvarez’s statement. I acknowledge that in State v. Miller we stated that a Scales “violation shall be deemed wilful regardless of the good faith of the individual officer if it appears to be part of the practice of the law enforcement agency.”
III.
In conclusion, because the rule we adopted in Scales is procedural, it applies to any custodial interrogation sought to be admitted in a Minnesota court, regardless of where that interrogation occurs. However, because the Scales violation here was not substantial, the district court was not required to suppress Castillo-Alvarez’s statement. Therefore, I concur with the
. The court cites to a variety of cases from other jurisdictions to support its assertion that the "most significant relationship" approach is applied to resolve choice-of-law questions unrelated to privileges. But the court fails to point to any case in which we have applied the “most significant relationship” approach to a choice-of-law question pertaining to an evidentiary rule other than privileges. Moreover, many of the cases cited by the court from other jurisdictions are distinguishable in that they do not involve application of evidentiary rules. Finally, and most importantly, the rationale underlying application of the "most significant relationship" approach is inapplicable here. The court emphasizes that the "most significant relationship” approach has gained popularity "because the traditional choice-of-law approach is difficult to apply when a rule is not purely procedural or purely substantive.” But here, we have no such problem because Scales is purely procedural.
. Notably, we explicitly refrained from deciding whether a defendant has a substantive right to a recorded custodial interrogation under the Due Process Clause of the Minnesota Constitution. Scales,
. The court contends that "the source of our authority to write the Scales rule” is not at issue in this case, arguing instead that the Scales rule "has both a procedural and substantive purpose.” But the court ignores the critical distinction between the nature of the rule itself and the effect that the rule may have. Because Scales is a product of our supervisory authority to create evidentiary rules, it cannot be anything other than procedural for the purposes of a conflict-of-laws analysis. Moreover, the court’s citation to cases in which we have granted a new trial pursuant to our supervisory power misses the point. Those cases have no relevance here because they do not involve application of our supervisory power "to regulate and supervise the rules that govern the admission of evidence." State v. Obeta,
. The court contends that, in determining whether a particular rule is procedural or substantive in resolving a choice-of-law question, we must look to the "purposes” of the rule as opposed to the source of authority from which the rule was created. According to the court, if the rule at issue has both a procedural and substantive purpose, the "most significant relationship” approach should be applied to resolve the choice-of-law question. But because evidentiary rules are commonly promulgated with substantive purposes in mind, courts will almost always be able to identify some substantive “purpose" or "effect” underlying a rule of evidence. Indeed, by cavalierly shifting the focus of our choice-of-law jurisprudence to the "purposes” of the rule in question, the court, in effect, overrules more than 100 years of precedent in the State of Minnesota applying the lex fori approach to choice-of-law questions involving evidentiary rules. See Davis v. Furlong,
. The court cites to our decision in State v. Lucas,
Concurrence Opinion
(concurring).
I join in the concurrence of Justice Page.
