Memorandum Decision
T1 While an inmate at the Utah State Prison, Dexter Davis got into a scuffle with a corrections officer, Sgt. Benjamin Vanzant.
12 "Any prisoner who commits assault, intending to cause bodily injury, is guilty of a felony of the third degree." Utah Code Ann. § 76-5-102.5 (LexisNexis 2008). Assault includes any "attempt, with unlawful foree or violence, to do bodily injury to another," and any "act, committed with unlawful force or violence, that causes bodily injury to another or creates a substantial risk of bodily injury to another." Id. § 76-5-102(a), (c).
3 Davis tacitly concedes that, if believed, the testimony of the two corrections officers would support the elements of the charged offense. But Davis contends that the officers' testimony was "so inconsistent and substantially unreliable" that no reasonable jury could have believed it.
T4 In determining whether the evidence was sufficient to support the jury's verdict, we do not "sit as a second trier of fact." State v. Boyd,
[4-61 15 Because we defer to the fact finding of the jury, this court may "exercise its discretion to disregard inconsistent witness testimony only when the court is convinced that the credibility of the witness is so weak that no reasonable jury could find the defendant guilty beyond a reasonable doubt." State v. Robbins,
16 This is not such a case. Davis was not convicted on the contradictory testimony of a sole uncorroborated witness. Two adult eyewitnesses testified to the incident. Sergeant Vanzant testified that Davis threw a "closed-fist overhand right" punch that landed on his arm, leaving a "good-sized bruise.
1 7 Davis makes a plausible case on appeal that the jury should have discredited this testimony. He argues that the officers' accounts suffered from various flaws: Sergeant Vanzant could not remember which arm Davis hit; the officers may have shaped and coordinated their stories for trial; Sergeant Vanzant had a motive to fabricate; and the other officer, as his subordinate, had a motive to back him up. But these are jury questions. On appeal "[wle do not re-evalu
T8 Affirmed.
Notes
. Or at least a bruise: Davis notes that the State offered no evidence "matching the bruises on Sergeant Vanzant's arm with Davis's knuckle pattern."
