Lead Opinion
¶1 A group was busy spray-painting a wall when Victim interrupted their evening activity. Upset by the intrusion, one of the group members stabbed Victim twice in the chest and once in the back, while others threw rocks and beer cans and unleashed two dogs to attack Victim. Police, with the help of Witness, later identified defendant John E. Gallegos as the one who stabbed Victim and arrested him that night. Upon arresting Gallegos, police found blood on Gallegos's shirt, pants, and ear, as well as on a folding knife in his pocket. Victim survived the attack and, after viewing a photo lineup at the hospital, identified Gallegos as the person who stabbed him. While in custody at the police station, Gallegos kicked and spit at a police officer and also used a chair to smash a hole in a wall.
¶2 For his involvement in the stabbing, Gallegos was convicted of attempted murder, possession of a dangerous weapon by a restricted person, using a dangerous weapon in a fight, graffiti, and consumption of alcohol by a minor (the Stabbing Charges). For his actions at the police station after his arrest, Gallegos was also convicted of assault by a prisoner, propelling a substance or object at a peace officer, and damaging a jail (the Police Station Charges). He appeals, arguing that (1) trial counsel was ineffective for not moving to sever the Stabbing Charges and Police Station Charges and (2) police lacked reasonable suspicion to stop him the night he was arrested. Gallegos also seeks remand pursuant to rule 23B of the Utah Rules of Appellate Procedure. We deny the rule 23B motion and otherwise affirm.
BACKGROUND
¶3 Victim's RV, in which he was staying, had broken down. With the permission of a library security officer, Victim parked the RV at the library lot for the night. Later that evening, Victim heard someone using a spray can outside. Intending to pay the vandals twenty dollars to leave his RV alone, Victim left his RV and approached the bathroom of a nearby park, where he saw someone spray painting the wall.
¶4 As Victim approached, a group of men emerged from behind the bathroom and surrounded him. Gallegos began yelling at Victim and threw what Victim thought were punches at his chest. But when Victim suddenly began struggling to breathe, he realized he had been stabbed.
¶5 The other men joined in the attack, throwing rocks, cans, and other debris. As Victim tried to escape, a large rock hit him on the head. Someone in the group yelled "Attack," and two dogs lunged at Victim, biting his leg. Victim continued to retreat, dragging along the dog that had clamped down on his leg. Gallegos again stabbed Victim, this time in the back. Just before losing consciousness, Victim crawled to a nearby truck and asked for help.
¶6 Witness, who was one of the truck's occupants, testified that he saw a group of men and dogs chasing Victim. Witness saw Gallegos standing roughly ten feet in front of the group and swinging something at Victim. The rest of the group stood back and threw cans at Victim.
¶7 The police first interviewed another witness (Bystander) who had been at the park. Bystander reported seeing several Hispanic men wearing white jerseys with dark numbers run toward a nearby dead-end street, where a Toyota Camry shortly emerged and headed away from the scene. After reporting this information to the police, Bystander saw the Camry return to the same street. Nearby officers were alerted to look for Hispanic men, wearing white jerseys or shirts, in a Camry on a dead-end street. Only later did the police receive a more detailed description from Witness-who had stood ten feet away from and was threatened by Gallegos-that Gallegos was actually wearing dark clothes.
¶8 An officer arrived at the dead-end street and saw a parked Camry with a man, Gallegos, wearing dark-colored clothes, standing nearby with two women. Without activating the patrol car's overhead lights, the officer parked and got out. The three people near the Camry began walking away and were about to go behind a house. The officer, with his flashlight on, yelled, "Hey, come back and talk to me." The officer testified that he yelled so Gallegos could hear him but did not command Gallegos to comply. Gallegos returned to speak with the officer.
¶9 Not realizing that Gallegos was, in fact, the suspect in the stabbing, the officer asked Gallegos what he was doing in the area. Gallegos responded that he was on his way to a friend's house. The officer noticed tattoos on Gallegos's hands and asked if he was in a gang. Gallegos told the officer that he used to be a member of the South Side Colonia
¶10 Having concluded his encounter with Gallegos, the officer drove to the park where the stabbing occurred. There, the officer learned from other officers that the attacker was, in fact, a member of the South Side Colonia Chiques gang and wore dark clothing instead of white. Realizing that Gallegos matched the updated description, the officer inspected Gallegos's knife more closely, unfolding it and finding blood on the blade. The
officer reported his encounter, and Gallegos was apprehended shortly thereafter.
¶11 Upon arresting Gallegos, the officers found drops of blood by Gallegos's ear and on his hands, along with blood stains on his shirt and pants. He also had blue residue on his hands. Gallegos explained that he had been boxing that day and had also fallen while running away from police earlier that night. While all of the blood samples were not tested, lab results showed that the blood on Gallegos's knife, shirt, pants, and ear matched Victim's DNA.
¶12 While in custody at the police station, Gallegos noticed photographs of fellow gang members on the wall. Gallegos became angry and, while in handcuffs, started to walk away from officers. An officer caught him at the door, and Gallegos kicked the officer in the leg before being subdued. Officers led Gallegos to an interview room where he spit in an officer's face. Alone in the room, Gallegos began yelling and banging on the walls. Officers returned to the room to find chairs overturned and a fresh hole in the wall.
¶13 The next day, officers went to the hospital to interview Victim about the stabbing and to show him a photo lineup. Victim had not taken medication for five hours and confirmed to the officers that he was thinking clearly during the interview. Based on the photo lineup, Victim identified Gallegos as the man who stabbed him.
¶14 The State charged Gallegos for his involvement in the stabbing and for his violent behavior at the police station. The case proceeded to trial, and Gallegos moved to suppress evidence stemming from the encounter Gallegos had with the officer on the dead-end street, arguing that the officer lacked reasonable suspicion to stop Gallegos.
¶15 The trial court ruled that Gallegos's conversation with the officer was a consensual encounter and thus did not require the officer to have reasonable suspicion. In doing so, the court acknowledged that "under certain circumstances an officer yelling at someone to stop ... immediately conveys a sort of Level 2 ... scenario," but that an encounter with police is "entirely fact intensive and [yelling] hey come back and talk to me isn't necessarily stop, police." Rather, it "actually invites a voluntar[y] return." The court concluded,
[W]hen you look at the entire circumstances in addition to [the police officer's statement to Gallegos], that he was talked to, he wasn't placed in custody, there weren't lights going on, there weren't sirens, he didn't have his gun drawn, there weren't other officers around, [and] his ingress and egress wasn't blocked by a show of force ... this was a consensual encounter ... even to the point where [Gallegos] allows the officer to search him.
The court further reasoned that it was "consensual to the point where the officer established enough of a rapport with [Gallegos] to say you shouldn't be carrying this knife in your condition and ... instead of arresting him for possession of a weapon while intoxicated or something like that he gave him the option of just coming down to the police station the next day and picking it up." And the fact that Gallegos told the officer to just keep the knife, in the view of the court, "convey[ed] nothing more than a consensual conversation between the two individuals."
¶16 Prior to trial, Gallegos personally addressed the court regarding issues he was having with his trial counsel and his desire to sever the charges against him. Because all of the charges stemmed from "one joint act," Gallegos's trial counsel believed the charges could not be severed. The trial court agreed to hear Gallegos but explained to him that it "usually will not consider severing charges unless grounds can be stated for severance." Gallegos explained his frustration with counsel, but his counsel argued that Gallegos wanted the charges severed because there was little evidence on some of the charges, such as his graffiti charge. The court denied the motion to sever and explained, "It may actually even be that prior to submission to the jury, the Court may determine that there [is] a reasonable doubt on the graffiti charge and it may not send that to the jury."
¶17 After the court denied the motion to suppress and the motion to sever, the case went to trial, and Gallegos was convicted on all charges. Gallegos appeals.
ISSUES AND STANDARDS OF REVIEW
¶18 Gallegos raises three issues for our review. First, Gallegos filed a motion for remand under rule 23B of the Utah Rules of Appellate Procedure. "A remand under rule 23B is available only upon a nonspeculative allegation of facts, not fully appearing in the record on appeal, which, if true, could support a determination that counsel was ineffective."
State v. Crespo
,
¶19 Second, Gallegos contends that his trial counsel was ineffective for failing to move for severance of the Stabbing Charges and the Police Station Charges.
¶20 Third, Gallegos contends that "the police lacked reasonable suspicion to stop [Gallegos] because he did not match the description of the alleged suspect." This presents a mixed question of law and fact.
We review a trial court's decision to grant or deny a motion to suppress for an alleged Fourth Amendment violation as a mixed question of law and fact. While the court's factual findings are reviewed for clear error, its legal conclusions are reviewed for correctness, including its application of law to the facts of the case. Accordingly, we review as a matter of law whether a specific set of facts gives rise to reasonable suspicion.
State v. Sanchez-Granado
,
ANALYSIS
I. Rule 23B Motion
¶21 Gallegos has filed a motion for remand under rule 23B of the Utah Rules of Appellate Procedure, seeking remand for five issues: (1) failure to call an eyewitness expert who had been retained and who had submitted a report; (2) failure to call a forensics expert; (3) failure to move to sever the Stabbing Charges from the Police Station Charges; (4) failure to move to "sever" evidence of gang association; and (5) an opportunity to "explore" a variety of other complaints contained in an affidavit of Gallegos (including claims of excessive force, lost blood evidence, failure to provide unspecified documents, improper closing arguments by the prosecutor, and arguing that the prosecutor "visibly, but not audibly" coached witnesses).
¶22 We have reviewed Gallegos's motion, the associated affidavits, and the State's response. We deny the motion. We address Gallegos's issue regarding severance because the relevant facts are already in the record. The other assertions fail because Gallegos has not explained how the evidence would have likely changed the result of the trial. Specifically, Gallegos does not squarely confront the majority of the evidence supporting the verdict.
¶23 To be successful, a rule 23B motion (1) must be supported by an affidavit alleging facts outside the existing record, (2) those facts must be non-speculative, and (3) the alleged facts must, if true, support a determination that counsel's ineffectiveness prejudiced the result.
State v. Tirado
,
¶24 When analyzing evidence under the Strickland standard,
[a] court must consider the totality of the evidence before the judge or jury and then ask if the defendant has met the burden of showing that the decision reached would reasonably likely have been different absent the errors. Thus, the defendant must show that there is a reasonable probability that, but for counsel's unprofessional errors, the result of the proceeding would have been different. Ultimately, a reasonable probability is a probability sufficient to undermine confidence in the outcome.
State v. Garcia
,
¶25 Gallegos's rule 23B motion fails to meet the
Strickland
standard. Gallegos does not acknowledge in his motion that Victim's blood was found on his knife, shirt, pants, and ear.
¶26 We further comment on Gallegos's inability to carry his burden in demonstrating that his counsel was deficient for not calling an eyewitness expert. Trial counsel is not required to call an eyewitness expert to testify.
See
State v. King
,
¶27 Here, there was a conceivable basis for trial counsel's decision. Trial counsel could have reasonably calculated that putting this expert on the stand carried too significant a possibility that cross-examination by the State would serve only to solidify and repeatedly highlight the State's arguments concerning factors that made the eyewitness identification credible. Gallegos's rule 23B motion fails to address this or other reasonable bases trial counsel may have considered in deciding not to call the eyewitness expert.
¶28 The rule 23B motion is denied.
II. Ineffective Assistance for Not Moving to Sever
¶29 Gallegos argues that his trial counsel was ineffective for not moving to sever the Stabbing Charges from the Police Station Charges. Because the Stabbing Charges were neither connected in their commission nor part of a common scheme or plan with the Police Station Charges, we agree that a motion to sever would have likely been successful. We further agree that Gallegos's attorney performed below an objectively reasonable standard by not moving to sever. However, Gallegos was not prejudiced by his counsel's deficient performance.
¶30 The Sixth Amendment guarantees defendants the right to effective assistance of counsel. U.S. Const. amend. VI ;
Strickland v. Washington
,
A. Deficient Performance
¶31 When challenging trial counsel's failure to make a motion, part of a defendant's burden under the deficient performance prong is to show that the motion would have been successful had it been made.
See
State v. Bond
,
1. Successful Claim for Severance
¶32 We first examine whether Gallegos's motion to sever would have been successful, and we conclude that it likely would have.
¶33 Utah law allows the joinder of offenses in some circumstances. Specifically, "joinder of multiple offenses is appropriate if the requirements of Utah Code section 77-8a-1(1) are met and neither the defendant nor the prosecution is prejudiced as a result of the joinder."
State v. Balfour
,
(1) Two or more felonies, misdemeanors, or both, may be charged in the same indictment or information if each offense is a separate count and if the offenses charged are:
(a) based on the same conduct or are otherwise connected together in their commission; or
(b) alleged to have been part of a common scheme or plan.
...
(4) (a) If the court finds a defendant or the prosecution is prejudiced by a joinder of offenses or defendants in an indictment or information or by a joinder for trial together, the court shall order an election of separate trials of separate counts, grant a severance of defendants, or provide other relief as justice requires.
¶34 Pursuant to the joinder statute, to determine whether a motion to sever would be successful, we must decide whether the Stabbing Charges and the Police Station Charges were based on the same conduct or were otherwise connected in their commission. We then must decide whether the charges were part of a common scheme or plan.
a. The Offenses Were Not Connected in their Commission
¶35 The statute governing joinder requires only that the offenses be "connected together in their commission."
State v. Burke
,
¶36 On the other hand, we have concluded that the commission of certain crimes was not sufficiently connected where "[o]ther than the fact that all of the conduct was committed by [a defendant], the charges were not directly related to one another."
State v. Hildreth
,
¶37 The case before us is far more analogous to
Hildreth
than to the others. Gallegos stabbed Victim in a park and was later apprehended. Then, while at the police station, Gallegos acted violently, resulting in additional charges. Gallegos's violent behavior at the police station did not "facilitate[ ] flight" from the earlier attack, nor could the later crimes be characterized as "a single [violent] spree," as we would characterize a string of robberies, for example.
See
Benson
,
¶38 To be sure, this case is unlike
Hildreth
in that the charged acts here occurred on the same night, and there is an abstract connection between the charged offenses in that Gallegos was detained at the police station for his involvement in the stabbing. The State argues that the charges were connected due to the fact that Gallegos was tagging gang territory when he attacked Victim and "continued in this aggressive arc" after seeing pictures of gang members on the wall at the police station. But that abstract connection, in our view, is not the type of distinct connection described in our previous cases.
See
Burke
,
b. Common Scheme or Plan
¶39 We next examine the second prong of Utah code section 77-8a-1(1) -whether the charged conduct was part of a common plan or scheme.
¶40 We conclude that the Stabbing Charges and the Police Station Charges do not share a common scheme or plan. The only similarity in the conduct is that Gallegos acted violently in both situations. But this is not strikingly similar conduct, such as where a person carries out multiple crimes similar in minute detail.
See
State v. Lee
,
¶41 In the first instance, Gallegos stabbed a person for intruding on his efforts to spray paint a bathroom wall. In the second, Gallegos attacked and spit on a police officer and put a hole in a wall while confined at a police station. Other than a broad category of violence, there is no "visual connection between the crimes."
Hildreth
,
¶42 Having determined that the Stabbing Charges and the Police Station Charges were unconnected in their commission and not part of a common scheme or plan, we conclude that a motion to sever would have succeeded at trial. See id. ¶ 37 (concluding that a trial court "exceeded its permissible range of discretion in denying [a] motion for severance" where the charges were not connected in their commission nor part of a common scheme or plan).
2. Sound Trial Strategy
¶43 Next, to determine if Gallegos's counsel performed deficiently, we analyze whether failing to file a motion to sever could conceivably advance a sound trial strategy. We see no legitimate strategy under the circumstances, and neither party asserts that Gallegos's trial counsel refrained from objecting to advance a particular strategy. And, as discussed above, a motion to sever would have succeeded had counsel made the motion. Counsel's performance was therefore deficient.
See
State v. Hallett
,
B. Probability of a Different Result
¶44 Having determined that trial counsel's performance was deficient, we turn to the second
Strickland
requirement, which obligates a defendant to show that "there is a reasonable probability that, but for counsel's unprofessional errors, the result of the proceeding would have been different."
Strickland v. Washington
,
¶45 Under this standard, we conclude that Gallegos was not prejudiced by his counsel's deficient performance. Because there is strong evidence against the charged conduct, our confidence in the outcome of the trial is not undermined.
¶46 First, the evidence against Gallegos in relation to the Stabbing Charges was overwhelming. On the night of the stabbing, Gallegos was arrested with Victim's blood on his clothes and behind his ear. An officer found a knife covered in Victim's blood in Gallegos's pocket. Victim identified Gallegos as the person who stabbed him based on a photo lineup. We admit that evidence of
Gallegos spitting at an officer, kicking an officer, and putting a hole in a wall at the police station would certainly not endear Gallegos to a jury. But evidence of Gallegos's violent behavior at the police station could not reasonably have impacted Gallegos's conviction on the Stabbing Charges in the sense that it made the difference in the jury's decision to convict; the evidence against him was simply too great. And Gallegos offers no persuasive explanation of how severing his charges would have produced a different outcome at trial, further supporting our conclusion that severing the charges would not have made a difference.
¶47 Second, we similarly conclude that evidence of the Stabbing Charges did not prejudice Gallegos in his convictions stemming from the Police Station Charges. Even though the Stabbing Charges are more gruesome and serious, the evidence supporting convictions for the Police Station Charges was overwhelming. Multiple officers witnessed Gallegos's violent behavior at the police station, and Gallegos points to no meaningful dispute of that evidence. Thus, even though those charges were tried in conjunction with another potentially inflammatory set of charges, the amount of evidence against him, coupled with the apparent lack of any meaningful disagreement concerning that evidence, sustains our confidence in the ultimate outcome.
¶48 Because Gallegos has not shown that a more favorable outcome at trial was likely had the charges been severed, we reject his ineffective assistance of counsel argument.
III. Reasonable Suspicion
¶49 Gallegos argues that the trial court erred in denying his motion to suppress because it "base[d] its finding on whether [Gallegos] was arrested, where the critical inquiry was whether the officer had reasonable suspicion to make the stop." We disagree. Even assuming the encounter was a level two stop, as Gallegos argues, the officer had reasonable, articulable suspicion to temporarily seize Gallegos.
¶50 The Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution guarantees the "right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures." U.S. Const. amend. IV. In determining whether a seizure is reasonable under the Fourth Amendment, courts analyze the three constitutionally permissible levels of police stops.
See
State v. Johnson
,
¶51 Our supreme court has stated,
It is settled law that a police officer may detain and question an individual when the officer has reasonable, articulable suspicion that the person has been, is, or is about to be engaged in criminal activity. To detain an individual under such circumstances, the officer's suspicion must be supported by specific and articulable facts and rational inferences, and cannot be merely an inchoate and unparticularized suspicion or hunch.
State v. Simons
,
¶52 Here, the officer was instructed, based on eyewitness accounts, to look for Hispanic males wearing white clothes in a Toyota Camry on a specific dead-end street. The officer arrived at the dead-end street within a minute or two of receiving the description. Gallegos was wearing dark clothes instead of white and was standing with two women instead of other men. Nevertheless, he was (1) standing next to a Toyota Camry, (2) on the dead-end street where the attackers had fled and where the Camry returned, and (3) engaged with the officer within minutes of the officer receiving an instruction from dispatch to investigate the area. A reasonable officer, seeing the parked Camry, could conclude that Gallegos had been in the vehicle, or at least knew its occupants, because he stood next to it.
¶53 The case law Gallegos relies on to support his argument is inapposite. In
State v. Swanigan
,
¶54 But Gallegos was not merely in a neighborhood where crimes had been reported. He was, only minutes after the crime was reported, standing next to the suspect vehicle on the very street to which witnesses reported seeing the attackers and their vehicle flee. Furthermore, neither of the cases Gallegos cites relied on eyewitness accounts. Here, the officer knew, based on eyewitness reports, that (1) he was looking for Hispanic males who had recently fled down the dead-end street, (2) a Camry had picked up the suspects, and (3) the Camry had just returned to the dead-end street. These are articulable facts giving rise to reasonable suspicion that Gallegos-who is Hispanic and was right next to the Camry, on the dead-end street, minutes after the officer had received the report-was involved with the fleeing suspects.
See
State v. Markland
,
¶55 We conclude that even if the officer's encounter with Gallegos was a level two stop, the officer had reasonable, articulable suspicion that supported briefly detaining Gallegos. Thus, the trial court did not err in denying the motion to suppress.
CONCLUSION
¶56 We deny Gallegos's rule 23B motion with respect to the failure to call an eyewitness expert and issues related to evidence because there was a conceivable basis for his trial counsel's strategy and because Gallegos was not prejudiced by these alleged deficiencies. We also conclude that, even though Gallegos's counsel performed deficiently by failing to make a motion to sever the Stabbing Charges from the Police Station Charges, counsel's failure does not undermine our confidence in the result at trial. We further conclude that the trial court properly denied Gallegos's motion to suppress because the officer had reasonable, articulable suspicion to temporarily seize Gallegos. We therefore affirm Gallegos's convictions.
It is important to note that both Victim and Witness saw that only a single person-Gallegos-was ever close enough to stab Victim.
The briefs and much of the record transcripts and other documents refer to the gang as the South Side "Colonial" Chiques. We believe this is a typographical error. At least one presentence report identifies Gallegos's gang as "La Colonia Chiques Surrenos." Further, "Colonia Chiques" is used in informational materials supplied by the Salt Lake Area Gang Project. See Gang Names & Alliances in the Salt Lake Area, http://www.wvc-ut.gov/DocumentCenter/View/6752/Gang-Handouts [https://perma.cc/58DC-MT9A].
The dissenting opinion highlights Witness's identification of Gallegos as problematic evidence, in part because Witness identified Gallegos as the attacker during a police "showup." Infra ¶ 62. Witness told the police that he could "[w]ithout a doubt" identify the stabber. Officers drove Witness to the street where Gallegos had been arrested. An officer shined a spotlight on Gallegos, the only suspect present, and Witness indicated that Gallegos was the attacker who confronted him at the park.
We agree with the sentiment expressed by the dissent that this type of identification is problematic.
See
State v. Ramirez
,
Gallegos also argues in the alternative that the trial court erred in denying his motion to sever. At trial, Gallegos's argument to the court was that evidence supporting his graffiti conviction was weak compared to the other charges and thus should be severed. On appeal, Gallegos contends that the Stabbing Charges should have been severed from the Police Station Charges. Because the argument before the trial court was substantially different from what is argued on appeal, and because trial counsel argued only why he thought a motion to sever would fail, we conclude that the issue is unpreserved.
See
438 Main St. v. Easy Heat, Inc.
,
In his rule 23B motion, Gallegos asserts that the root of his counsel's ineffectiveness was in failing to meet with Gallegos often enough to "gather evidence in support of [Gallegos's] claims."
The dissenting opinion agrees that the rule 23B motion should be denied except as it pertains to trial counsel's (1) failure to meet with Gallegos for more than a few minutes until three weeks before trial and (2) decision not to call an expert on eyewitness identification who had been retained by predecessor counsel. See infra ¶60.
The dissenting opinion characterizes "the eyewitness accounts of both Victim and Witness" as "some of the most powerful evidence at the State's disposal." Infra ¶62. While compelling, the eyewitness accounts are not the most powerful evidence in this case. The most powerful evidence is that Gallegos possessed a knife with Victim's blood on it and was otherwise covered with Victim's blood when arrested-facts that remain unchallenged in Gallegos's rule 23B motion and arguments on appeal. This blood evidence is especially compelling where both Victim and Witness testified that there was only one attacker who was in close proximity to Victim. The other attackers were described as "st[anding] back." Thus, the unrefuted evidence of Victim's blood in several locations on Gallegos's person becomes even more compelling-and untainted by any issues of false identification.
The dissenting opinion resists this
strong
presumption, remarking that an affidavit from another attorney asserts that trial counsel's contract to provide indigent defense services had been terminated for failure to complete work assigned to him on an unrelated case.
See
infra
¶61 n.14. Our task, however, is not to allow trial counsel's reputation to color our conclusions, but to determine only whether counsel performed deficiently in this instance.
See
Anderson v. Collins
,
Evidence of substandard performance by Gallegos's counsel in another case does not inform us of any specific conduct or decision in the matter at hand. We do not downplay this affidavit as the dissent suggests.
See
infra
¶61 n.14. Instead, we view the affidavit under the established standard applicable to a rule 23B motion, a standard that the dissent overlooks: Is there evidence that, if presented after it is established on remand, would support
both
prongs of the
Strickland
test-deficient performance and prejudice?
See
State v. Griffin
,
Specifically, Gallegos points to
no
evidence on the issue of trial counsel's failure to meet with him that he anticipates eliciting on remand, but he is required to do so: "[T]he defendant must provide allegations of fact that are not speculative."
Id.
¶ 19. Speculative facts are those which are the fruit of mere guesswork or conjecture.
Id
. This is all Gallegos offers as it pertains to trial counsel not meeting with him until weeks before trial. Gallegos does not claim, for example, that the failure to meet with him resulted in available evidence not being investigated or offered, nor does he claim a witness existed who was not contacted, nor does he claim that an alternate defense theory was not somehow explored. Because Gallegos identifies no specific evidence and offers no explanation as to how the evidence would inform the issue of ineffective assistance, the only purpose of remand on this issue would be to establish that his attorney had not met with him-a fact that the dissent ably points out is already in the record,
see
infra
¶61, and therefore is not a proper basis for remand,
see
Griffin
,
The dissenting opinion takes exception to our analysis of whether defense counsel was deficient, stating that "the majority speculates about some of the reasons why counsel might have reached this conclusion but, at least at this point, I find those potential reasons unconvincing. We simply do not know, on this record, why trial counsel elected not to call the expert."
Infra
¶68. However, the long-established standard-whether there was "any
conceivable
tactical basis for counsel's actions"-invites, if not requires, an appellate court to speculate and does not require that defense counsel's actual reason for not calling an expert be articulated.
State v. King
,
The "strong presumption" in favor of finding trial counsel's assistance adequate, coupled with an express burden on a defendant to persuade the appellate court that there is
no
conceivable tactical basis for a decision, can only be conscientiously administered post trial when an appellate court attempts to conceive of an appropriate strategy.
State v. Clark
,
Typically, where "it is easier to dispose of an ineffectiveness claim on the ground of lack of sufficient prejudice, we will do so without analyzing whether counsel's performance was professionally unreasonable."
Archuleta v. Galetka
,
Because the statutory provisions in effect in 2015-when Gallegos alleges his counsel failed to file a motion to sever the Stabbing Charges from the Police Station Charges-do not differ in any material way from those now in effect, we cite the current version of the Utah Code for convenience.
The dissent is "not necessarily persuaded that the prejudicial effect of the failure to sever, standing alone, would have raised a 'significant possibility' of a different outcome, given the relative strength of the State's evidence."
Infra
¶70. Rather, the dissent would prefer to wait and see whether Gallegos is able to demonstrate his attorney's lack of preparation and ineffective assistance in calling an eyewitness expert before making a prejudice determination on severance. This approach, however, is little more than a fishing license for Gallegos.
See supra
Part I. To repeat, on a rule 23B motion, it is a defendant's burden to show that non-speculative facts would support a determination that counsel's ineffectiveness prejudiced the result.
State v. Tirado
,
Concurrence Opinion
¶57 I concur with the majority's analysis in Section III in its entirety. I also concur with the majority's analysis in Section II.A. I disagree, however, with the conclusions the majority reaches in much of Section I and most of Section II.B, and due to this disagreement I cannot join in the majority's resolution of this appeal, at least not at this stage of the proceedings.
¶58 The majority persuasively explains that Gallegos's trial counsel performed deficiently by failing to seek a separate trial for the Police Station Charges. The majority concludes, however, that his attorney's deficient performance did not prejudice Gallegos, because "the evidence against him [on the Stabbing Charges] was simply too great."
See
supra
¶46. While I certainly acknowledge that the State introduced several pieces of powerful evidence at trial that indicated Gallegos's guilt, at this point I cannot agree-at least not where Gallegos has raised other questions about the effectiveness of his attorney in a rule 23B motion that, in my view, must first be resolved-that there is no "reasonable probability that, but for counsel's unprofessional errors, the result of the proceeding would have been different."
See
Strickland v. Washington
,
¶59 As an initial matter, I note that
Strickland
's "reasonable probability" standard is not the same as the "more likely than not" standard applied in civil cases. Our supreme court has stated that the "more likely than not" standard is "more demanding" than the "reasonable probability" standard.
See
Tillman v. State
,
¶60 Aside from the one irregularity that the majority and I agree upon-counsel's failure to seek severance-I am also concerned with two of the issues
¶61 With regard to the first issue, Gallegos avers in his rule 23B affidavit that his trial counsel was appointed to represent him in August 2014, but that counsel did not meet with him (outside of a handful of brief discussions in the courthouse holding cell) until May 18, 2015, less than three weeks before trial. In this case, it is impossible to dismiss these averments as the self-serving statements of an imprisoned defendant, because
trial counsel himself admitted to these facts on the record at a pretrial hearing just a few weeks prior to trial. After Gallegos complained to the court that he had only spent a grand total of "five[ ] [or] six minutes in ten months" with his counsel, despite having "tried sending him letters" and "calling him," trial counsel did not dispute Gallegos's account, stating on the record that he had been busy with a capital murder case and that "[j]ust because I haven't met with him doesn't mean I'm not prepared for trial."
¶62 With regard to the second issue, some of the most powerful evidence at the State's disposal was the eyewitness accounts of both Victim and Witness, who both (in varying ways) identified Gallegos as the stabber. Witness did so at a police "showup" that took place on the night in question, in which Gallegos was the only potential suspect for Witness to choose from. Victim did so the next day, by way of a photo lineup.
¶63 Our supreme court has acknowledged that eyewitness identification evidence can be problematic, because jurors tend to overvalue it while overlooking its inherent flaws.
See
State v. Clopten
,
¶64 It does not follow from
Clopten
, however, that counsel's failure to call an eyewitness identification expert "presumptively renders counsel ineffective without regard for the circumstances of a particular case."
See
State v. Willey
,
¶65 In this case, conditions were certainly not entirely ideal, and various factors militate in both directions. Indeed, trial counsel was actually in possession of a draft report from a potential expert witness who identified several factors that might militate in Gallegos's favor and undermine Witness's eyewitness identification.
Clopten
's first category of factors "pertains to the observer" and his ability to perceive the events in question.
See
Heywood
,
¶66 The second category of factors pertains to the "event witnessed" and the "circumstances of the observation," including such things as whether the event is high-stress, lighting and visibility issues, distance, distractions, and whether a weapon was present. Id. ¶ 20 (cleaned up). The presence of any of these factors would tend to undermine the credibility of an eyewitness's identification. Many of these factors are present here-the event was high-stress; it was dark, and the scene was variably lit; and a weapon was present.
¶67 The third category of factors "pertains to the eyewitness's later identification of the suspect," including the length of time between observation and identification, and whether the identification occurred at an in-person lineup, photo lineup, or showup, and what procedures the officers used in staging the lineup or showup.
Id.
¶ 23. Some of these factors are present here, at least with regard to one of the eyewitnesses-Witness's identification occurred after a one-man showup similar to the one effectuated in
State v. Ramirez
,
¶68 One of Gallegos's previous attorneys had identified and retained an expert who could testify at trial and explain to the jury the limitations of eyewitness identification testimony. Trial counsel, however, elected not to call that (or any other) expert regarding eyewitness identification testimony, apparently because trial counsel determined that the expert would not be helpful. In its opinion, the majority speculates about some of the reasons why counsel might have reached this conclusion but, at least at this point, I find those potential reasons unconvincing. We simply do not know, on this record, why trial counsel elected not to call the expert, and in a case like this one where both (a) eyewitness identification testimony was so important and (b) there are legitimate questions about trial counsel's level of preparedness, I would grant the rule 23B motion so that more information can be gained about trial counsel's reason for making what might seem to be a questionable decision.
See
King
,
¶69 Finally, I am persuaded that the jury, in determining Gallegos's guilt on the Stabbing Charges, was-at least to some degree-affected by hearing the evidence of the Police Station Charges.
¶70 I am not necessarily persuaded that the prejudicial effect of the failure to sever, standing alone, would have raised a "significant possibility" of a different outcome, given the relative strength of the State's evidence. But I am not comfortable definitively answering the "prejudice" question in this case until after the rule 23B motion is resolved. Even the majority acknowledges that Witness's identification of Gallegos at the police showup "is problematic." See supra ¶10 n.3. It is possible that Gallegos might be able to demonstrate a "significant possibility" of a different result, depending upon the outcome of his rule 23B motion. If Gallegos is eventually able to demonstrate that his attorney was unprepared, or that his attorney acted ineffectively by failing to call an eyewitness identification expert, the contours of the "prejudice" inquiry may look a lot different.
¶71 Accordingly, I cannot join in the result that the majority reaches here. I would grant the rule 23B motion and, after reviewing the outcome of the proceedings on remand, at that point revisit the question of prejudice-that is, whether there is a "significant possibility" of a different outcome, and whether my confidence in the outcome of the trial is undermined.
I agree with the majority's analysis with regard to the other three issues raised in the rule 23B motion.
Gallegos has also produced an affidavit from another attorney who worked with trial counsel on the same capital murder case by which counsel was supposedly distracted, and this other attorney avers that trial counsel failed to do the work assigned to him on that capital murder case and that as a result "his contract ... to provide indigent defense services has been terminated." The majority downplays this affidavit, on the ground that "[e]vidence of substandard performance by Gallegos's counsel in another case" sheds no light on his performance in this case, and because ineffective assistance of counsel cannot be established by evidence of an attorney's poor general reputation. See supra ¶26 n.8. But this was not merely a reputational issue; indeed, according to trial counsel's own statement to the court, counsel's performance in the two cases are directly connected, because counsel's explanation for not meeting with Gallegos in this case was that he was ostensibly too busy with the other one.
I agree with the majority's analysis, supra ¶47, that there is not a reasonable probability that the outcome of a severed trial on the Police Station Charges would have been different, because the evidence of Gallegos's guilt on the Police Station Charges was overwhelming.
