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Date: 04-26-2024

Case Style:

STATE OF KANSAS v. BERNARD L. SMITH

Case Number: 125685

Judge: Melissa Taylor Standridge

Court: IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF KANSAS (Shawnee Count)

Plaintiff's Attorney: Lance J. Gillett, assistant district attorney, argued the cause, and Marc Bennett, district attorney, and Kris W. Kobach, attorney general

Defendant's Attorney:




Click Here For The Best Topeka Criminal Defense Lawyer Directory





Description:

Topeka, Kansas criminal defense lawyer represented the Defendant charged with first-degree felony murder, aggravated kidnapping, aggravated battery,
and battery



On July 2, 2020, Candi Morris arrived at the Wichita Police Department to report
a potential murder that had occurred the day before at her residence located on South San
Pablo Lane, where she lived with Matthew Small and Ariana Cook. Morris said that the
day before, July 1st, she left home to run errands. As she was leaving, Morris saw GarciaMartinez get out of a tan car and go inside her house. Garcia-Martinez was with a Black
man that Morris did not know. The man was later identified as Roy Hayden. After about
an hour, Morris arrived back home but was at first unable to get inside because the door
was locked.
3
After someone finally opened the door, Morris went inside and tripped over
Hayden, who was on the ground near the front door. Morris said Hayden's eye was
swollen, his face "looked like hamburger meat," and he was not moving. According to
Morris, several individuals were inside the residence, including Cook, Lawrence Bailey,
Carlos Delgado, and Garcia-Martinez. Bailey stood by the front door with a gun and told
the men to "shut [Hayden] up." Morris saw Garcia-Martinez stomp on Hayden's chest and
head and said he and Delgado punched Hayden before dragging him into the bathroom.
Morris was forced into a bedroom but heard sounds coming from the bathroom that
sounded like the men were hitting Hayden with a hammer and Hayden was begging for
his life. After about 20 minutes, Morris saw Garcia-Martinez and Delgado carry Hayden
out of the house and drive away in the tan car. Hayden was wrapped in a blue curtain or
sheet and had white trash bags over his head. Morris said she was then forced to clean the
bathroom, where she used soap and bleach to clean up blood and pieces of flesh.
Eventually, Morris managed to escape from the house, and she reported the incident to
the police. Morris was unsure of Hayden's condition and was very concerned that he
might be dead or dying.
Based on Morris' statements, law enforcement obtained a search warrant for the
South San Pablo residence and conducted a search. It appeared the residence had been
recently cleaned. Law enforcement seized five trash bags from the kitchen which
contained several items of potential evidentiary value, including empty bottles of bleach,
hydrogen peroxide, cleaning supplies, bloody rags, clothing, and shoes. They discovered
bloodstains on the floor in the living room and the bathroom, as well as in the hallway
leading to the bathroom. Law enforcement also located multiple hammers, several loaded
firearms, and a wallet containing identification and credit cards belonging to Hayden.
The next day, law enforcement located and interviewed Delgado. Delgado
admitted that he was at the South San Pablo residence on July 1, 2020, with Small, Cook,
4
and Bailey. Delgado said that Garcia-Martinez arrived with Hayden, who the group did
not know. Delgado claimed the group was high on methamphetamine, causing them to
become increasingly paranoid that Hayden was a law enforcement officer. He said they
grew suspicious when Hayden turned down Cook's sexual advances and refused to let her
pull his pants down to see if he was wearing a wire. Hayden also declined to give his
wallet to Small. When Hayden stood up from the couch and tried to leave, Bailey pointed
a gun at him and told him to sit back down. Hayden stood up again, and Bailey hit him on
the head with a crowbar. Hayden started bleeding and fell back onto the couch, where
Bailey hit him again with the crowbar.
According to Delgado, Bailey told him and Garcia-Martinez to "'take care of this
situation.'" Delgado said that Garcia-Martinez kicked Hayden in the head several times.
Once Hayden lost consciousness, Bailey told the men to clean up the blood and get rid of
the body. When Hayden started to move, Bailey shot his gun in Hayden's direction.
Delgado did not know whether Hayden was hit by the shot because there was already so
much blood. Delgado said that he and Garcia-Martinez were left to "finish what
happened" and described the situation as "[k]ill or get killed." Complying with Bailey's
orders, they carried Hayden to the bathroom and put him in the bathtub. At some point,
Hayden regained consciousness and tried to get up, so they held Hayden down and tied
his hands and feet with wire and a dog leash. Garcia-Martinez then hit Hayden in the
head with a hammer. As Hayden continued to struggle, Delgado held him down while
Garcia-Martinez put three trash bags over Hayden's head. When Hayden finally stopped
moving, they wrapped him in a blue blanket and put Hayden in the trunk of his car. After
driving to various locations to seek help, Delgado claimed Garcia-Martinez eventually
dropped him off at a Sonic restaurant. Delgado denied knowing where Garcia-Martinez
took Hayden.
5
Days later, on July 6, 2020, law enforcement responded to a report of an
abandoned gold Volvo in a Wichita parking lot. Video footage from a nearby business
showed the Volvo had been left in the parking lot on the morning of July 1st. Upon
arrival, law enforcement noted a strong odor of decomposition coming from the car.
Inside the trunk, they discovered Hayden's decomposed body, along with a blue blanket,
a duffle bag, and a pair of shoes. Hayden's hands and legs were bound together. Four
garbage bags and a pillowcase were secured around his head. Hayden had hemorrhage
marks and bruises around his neck, and there was evidence of blunt force trauma to his
head and face. His legs were bruised, and he had a gunshot wound on his right leg. The
coroner determined that Hayden's cause of death was asphyxia, with contributing
conditions that included blunt force head trauma, the gunshot wound to his leg, and
methamphetamine use. The coroner found Hayden's blunt force head trauma significant
but could not say whether it was fatal due to the body's decomposition. The coroner also
could not say whether Hayden was dead before he was put in the trunk of the car.
The State charged Garcia-Martinez with first-degree felony murder, aggravated
kidnapping, and two counts of aggravated battery. To support the felony-murder charge,
the State alleged Garcia-Martinez killed Hayden while committing the inherently
dangerous felony of aggravated kidnapping.
The case proceeded to a jury trial, where the State presented the evidence outlined
above. Garcia-Martinez testified in his defense, alleging compulsion. Garcia-Martinez
admitted to bringing Hayden to the South San Pablo residence. When asked what
happened there, he said, "I was in fear for my life, and in fear for the safety of my family
throughout the course of this incident." On cross-examination, Garcia-Martinez admitted
that although Hayden had no weapons and never threatened or hurt anyone, he was
beaten with a crowbar, punched, and kicked. Garcia-Martinez admitted that he carried
Hayden from the living room to the bathroom and hit him on the head with a hammer, but
6
he denied kicking Hayden in the head or putting bags over his head. Garcia-Martinez
claimed he did not know Delgado and denied driving Hayden's car. But he did admit that
he helped another man carry Hayden to the car and put Hayden in the trunk. GarciaMartinez maintained that he acted out of fear for his life.
The jury found Garcia-Martinez guilty of felony murder, aggravated kidnapping,
one count of aggravated battery, and one count of the lesser included offense of battery.
The district court imposed a controlling hard 25 life sentence consecutive to a 13-month
term of imprisonment.
Garcia-Martinez directly appealed his convictions to our court. Jurisdiction is
proper. K.S.A. 22-3601(b)(3)-(4) (life sentence and off-grid crimes appeal directly to the
Supreme Court).
ANALYSIS
Garcia-Martinez raises two issues on appeal. First, he argues the State presented
alternative means of committing aggravated kidnapping—"taking or confining"—but
failed to produce sufficient evidence to support each alternative means. Second, he
contends the district court erred in refusing to issue a unanimity instruction because the
jury heard evidence of multiple acts that could have supported his aggravated kidnapping
conviction. We address each argument in turn.
1. Alternative means
Garcia-Martinez argues the State presented alternative means of committing
aggravated kidnapping, but the evidence was insufficient to support a finding of guilt on
each of the alternative means on which the jury was instructed. Because the aggravated
7
kidnapping charge also served as the inherently dangerous felony supporting GarciaMartinez' felony-murder charge, he seeks reversal of both convictions. See K.S.A. 21-
5402(a)(2), (c)(1)(B).
Framing the issue primarily as a claim of instructional error, the State suggests
Garcia-Martinez invited any error by requesting a jury instruction containing both alleged
alternative means. But Garcia-Martinez does not challenge the district court's jury
instructions. Rather, he argues the evidence is insufficient to support the alternative
means of aggravated kidnapping as charged by the State and set forth in the jury
instructions. See State v. Smith, 317 Kan. 130, 132, 526 P.3d 1047 (2023) (alternativemeans issue "implicates whether there is sufficient evidence supporting the conviction").
Standard of review and relevant legal framework
An alternative-means crime is one that can be committed in more than one way.
State v. Rucker, 309 Kan. 1090, 1094, 441 P.3d 1053 (2019). The Legislature creates an
alternative-means crime by enacting criminal statutes which list distinct alternatives for a
material element of the crime. See State v. Brown, 295 Kan. 181, 199-200, 284 P.3d 977
(2012). A district court presents the jury with an alternative-means crime when it issues
jury instructions that incorporate more than one of the distinct statutory alternatives for a
material element of the crime. State v. Sasser, 305 Kan. 1231, 1239, 391 P.3d 698 (2017).
So if a statute contains alternative means and both means are submitted to the jury,
"'sufficient evidence must support each of the alternative means charged to ensure that
the verdict is unanimous as to guilt.'" State v. Cottrell, 310 Kan. 150, 157, 445 P.3d 1132
(2019).
In contrast, when criminal statutes "merely describe a material element or a factual
circumstance that would prove the crime," the Legislature has created "options within a
8
means." Brown, 295 Kan. at 194, 196-97. Options within a means describe secondary
matters that "do not state additional and distinct ways of committing the crime" and thus
do not implicate statutory jury-unanimity protections. 295 Kan. at 196-97.
Analysis of an alternative-means claim must first consider whether the district
court presented an alternative-means crime to the jury. This determination involves
consideration of the relevant statute's language and structure to decide whether the
Legislature meant to list distinct alternatives for an element of the crime. "Issues of
statutory interpretation and construction, including issues of whether a statute creates
alternative means, raise questions of law" over which this court has unlimited review.
Brown, 295 Kan. at 193-94. If alternative means were not presented, the error inquiry
ends. 295 Kan. at 200.
Statutory analysis
To determine whether a statute presents alternative means of committing a crime,
"a court must analyze whether the legislature listed two or more alternative distinct,
material elements of a crime—that is, separate or distinct mens rea, actus reus, and, in
some statutes, causation elements." Brown, 295 Kan. at 199-200. The Brown court
recognized that the structure of a statute may be a clue to legislative intent, such as by
separating intended alternatives into distinct subsections. 295 Kan. at 200. But a statute's
structure is not dispositive. See State v. Foster, 298 Kan. 348, 354-55, 312 P.3d 364
(2013) ("Regardless of the statutory structure, the legislature may list multiple descriptors
within a single means of committing a crime that Brown labeled 'options within a
means.'"). As we noted in Brown, a court considering alternative means should determine
the purpose of the disjunctive "or":
9
"Is it to list alternative distinct, material elements of a crime—that is, the necessary mens
rea, actus reus, and, in some statutes, a causation element? Or is it to merely describe a
material element or a factual circumstance that would prove the crime? The listing of
alternative distinct, material elements, when incorporated into an elements instruction,
creates an alternative means issue . . . . But merely describing a material element or a
factual circumstance that would prove the crime does not create alternative means, even
if the description is included in a jury instruction." 295 Kan. at 194.
Turning to the statute at issue, K.S.A. 21-5408 defines kidnapping as follows:
"(a) Kidnapping is the taking or confining of any person, accomplished by force, threat or
deception, with the intent to hold such person:
(1) For ransom, or as a shield or hostage;
(2) to facilitate flight or the commission of any crime;
(3) to inflict bodily injury or to terrorize the victim or another; or
(4) to interfere with the performance of any governmental or political function."
Aggravated kidnapping requires an additional element that bodily harm be inflicted on
the victim. K.S.A. 21-5408(b).
The State charged Garcia-Martinez with aggravated kidnapping under K.S.A.
2020 Supp. 21-5408(a)(3). At trial, the district court issued a jury instruction that
accurately set forth the statutory elements the State was required to prove:
"1. The defendant took or confined Roy L. Hayden by force or threat.
"2. The defendant did so with the intent to hold Roy L. Hayden to inflict bodily injury on
or to terrorize Roy L. Hayden, or another.
"3. Bodily harm was inflicted upon Roy L. Hayden.
"4. This act occurred on or about the 1st day of July, 2020, in Sedgwick County, Kansas."
10
Relying on State v. Haberlein, 296 Kan. 195, 207-08, 290 P.3d 640 (2012),
Garcia-Martinez argues the phrase "took or confined" in the first element presents
alternative means of committing the crime of aggravated kidnapping. In Haberlein, this
court analyzed various provisions of K.S.A. 21-3420, the previous version of the
kidnapping statute, to determine whether they contained alternative means. The current
statute, enacted on July 1, 2011, made an organizational change by combining
kidnapping and aggravated kidnapping into a single statute, but is otherwise nearly
identical to the version of the statute considered in Haberlein. Compare K.S.A. 21-3420
with K.S.A. 21-5408; Haberlein, 296 Kan. at 202.
The defendant in Haberlein alleged that two provisions of the kidnapping statute
presented alternative means: (1) force, threat, and deception and (2) facilitation of flight
and facilitation of the commission of any crime. 296 Kan. at 207. Although the
defendant's alternative means arguments did not include the "taking or confining"
provision of the statute, this court's analysis did:
"Haberlein does not challenge the phrase 'taking or confining' in this appeal. Those two
terms set out two alternative means of carrying out the crime of kidnapping and thus
aggravated kidnapping. 'Taking' and 'confining' each denotes a distinct actus reus and
they are, therefore, alternative means. But the phrase 'force, threat, or deception'
addresses secondary matter, merely describing ways in which the actus reus can be
accomplished. . . . Force, threat, and deception are not alternative means of committing a
kidnapping or aggravated kidnapping, and we need not reach the question of whether
sufficient proof of each was presented to Haberlein's jury." 296 Kan. at 208.
This court also held that the different subsections of the kidnapping statute create
alternative means:
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"When we examine the language of the entire statute, it appears the legislature did signal
through structure an intent to define alternative means of proving the mens rea for
kidnapping and aggravated kidnapping. It did not stop with 'intent to hold' but listed
several motivations for that intent to hold. Each of the subsections that follows states an
additional and distinct way of committing the crime, and proof of one of these additional
and distinct material elements must be shown in order to support a conviction. Thus, the
different subsections create alternative means of committing a kidnapping.
"But the language on which Haberlein relies is within subsection (b). Facilitation
of flight and facilitation of the commission of a crime are mere options within a means.
The members of the legislature grouped certain potentially distinct and potentially
overlapping items, which must mean they did not want jurors to have to split hairs over
whether a kidnapping or aggravated kidnapping was committed to facilitate flight or the
commission of any crime. Again, we need not reach the question of whether the evidence
was sufficient on each." 296 Kan. at 209.
Since Haberlein was decided, Kansas appellate decisions have generally relied on
it for the proposition that "taking or confining" present alternative means of committing
kidnapping or aggravated kidnapping. See, e.g., State v. Couch, 317 Kan. 566, 583, 533
P.3d 630 (2023) ("By including only 'confining' and not 'taking,' the instruction
eliminated one of the alternative means of committing kidnapping or aggravated
kidnapping."); State v. Ross, No. 118,199, 2019 WL 847672, at *22 (Kan. App. 2019)
(unpublished opinion) ("'[T]aking or confining' denotes two alternative means of
committing kidnapping."); State v. Lloyd, No. 113,486, 2016 WL 6568746, at *2 (Kan.
App. 2016) (unpublished opinion) ("Our Supreme Court has defined taking and confining
as alternative means of committing the crime of kidnapping because each is a distinct
actus reus."); State v. McCoy, No. 110,827, 2015 WL 3632037, at *16 (Kan. App. 2015)
(unpublished opinion) ("'Taking' and 'confining' are alternative means of kidnapping.").
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But as the State points out, there is at least some suggestion that Haberlein's
alternative means commentary on "taking or confining" is mere dicta and therefore not
binding. See Law v. Law Co. Building Assocs., 295 Kan. 551, Syl. ¶ 1, 289 P.3d 1066
(2012) ("Dicta in a court opinion is not binding, even on the court itself, because the
court should consider the issue in light of the briefs and arguments of counsel when the
question is squarely presented for decision."); Lloyd, 2016 WL 6568746, at *7-9
(Malone, C.J., concurring) ("Although the issue of whether the phrase 'taking or
confining' constituted alternative means of committing kidnapping was not before the
court in Haberlein, the court nevertheless expressed in dicta its opinion that these
separate terms in the kidnapping statute constitute alternative means of committing the
crime."); Ross, 2019 WL 847672, at *22 (recognizing Judge Malone's concurring opinion
in Lloyd); State v. Gustin, No. 123,274, 2022 WL 816268, at *6 (Kan. App. 2022)
(unpublished opinion) (discussing dicta issue identified in Lloyd and Ross).
Citing then-Chief Judge Malone's concurring opinion in Lloyd, the State urges us
to disregard Haberlein's dicta and instead find that "taking or confining" do not present
alternative means of committing kidnapping and aggravated kidnapping. In Lloyd, Judge
Malone explained his reasoning as follows:
"Under the statute, the legislature has expressed four distinct alternative means of
committing kidnapping based on the defendant's 'intent to hold' the victim: (1) for ransom
or as a shield or hostage; (2) to facilitate flight or the commission of any crime; (3) to
inflict bodily injury or to terrorize the victim or another; or (4) to interfere with the
performance of any governmental or political function. The options within each
subsection of the statute do not state additional and distinct ways of committing the
crime, but rather constitute options within a means of committing kidnapping. Haberlein,
296 Kan. at 207. Likewise, the phrase 'accomplished by force, threat or deception' does
not constitute alternative means of committing kidnapping. 296 Kan. at 208. As stated by
the court in Haberlein, each term 'merely sets out factual circumstances that may prove
the distinct, material element of taking or confining.' 296 Kan. at 208.
13
"Applying the same analysis to the phrase 'taking or confining of any person,'
these separate terms do not constitute alternative means of committing kidnapping. Each
term merely sets out factual circumstances that may prove the distinct, material element
of taking or confining, i.e., holding the victim to accomplish one of the alternative means
of committing kidnapping set forth in the statute. The Kansas Legislature does not intend
for the terms 'taking' and 'confining' to be separate alternative means of committing
kidnapping, as evidenced by the statutory structure our lawmakers chose to employ. Our
Supreme Court's dicta to the contrary in Haberlein is wrong. See 296 Kan. at 208." Lloyd,
2016 WL 6568746, at *8-9 (Malone, C.J., concurring).
As discussed, this court said in Haberlein that "taking or confining" provide
alternative means for committing kidnapping and aggravated kidnapping because
"'[t]aking' and 'confining' each denotes a distinct actus reus . . . ." 296 Kan. at 208. But
the acts of "taking" and "confining" are not so distinct when we look closely at the
meaning of these terms, the structure of the kidnapping statute, and the difficulty in
separately applying "taking" and "confining" to the present facts.
To determine whether the Legislature intended for "taking or confining" to set out
alternative means for committing the crime of kidnapping or aggravated kidnapping
under K.S.A. 21-5408(a), we look to the statutory language enacted, giving common
words their ordinary meanings. See State v. Keys, 315 Kan. 690, 698, 510 P.3d 706
(2022). The Kansas Criminal Code does not define the terms "take" and "confine," so we
may consult their dictionary definitions. See Midwest Crane & Rigging, LLC v. Kansas
Corporation Comm'n, 306 Kan. 845, 851, 397 P.3d 1205 (2017) ("Dictionary definitions
are good sources for the 'ordinary, contemporary, common' meanings of words.").
Relevant here, Black's Law Dictionary defines "take" as "[t]o obtain possession or
control, whether legally or illegally" and "[t]o seize with authority; to confiscate or
apprehend." Black's Law Dictionary 1754 (11th ed. 2019). And Black's Law Dictionary
14
defines "confinement" as "[t]he act of imprisoning or restraining someone; the quality,
state, or condition of being imprisoned or restrained." Black's Law Dictionary 373 (11th
ed. 2019). Read in isolation outside the context of the kidnapping statute, each term could
be construed to have a distinct actus reus—taking involves the act of obtaining
possession or seizing, while confining involves the act of imprisoning or restraining.
But in the context of our kidnapping statute, the terms are not so dissimilar. On its
face, the crime of kidnapping is commonly understood to include both taking and
confining. Indeed, kidnapping is defined as "[t]he crime of seizing and taking away a
person by force or fraud, [usually] to hold the person prisoner in order to demand
something from his or her family, employer, or government." Black's Law Dictionary
1040 (11th ed. 2019). Generally, kidnappers take victims to confine them. And a victim
who is confined has also necessarily been taken. The essence of the crime of kidnapping
is the unlawful restriction of a person's freedom. Based on this interpretation, "taking or
confining" would be considered options within a means because each term merely
describes the factual circumstances that may prove the material element of "holding the
victim to accomplish one of the alternative means of committing kidnapping set forth in
the statute." Lloyd, 2016 WL 6568746, at *9 (Malone, C.J., concurring); see Smith, 317
Kan. at 134 (Words present "only options within a means if . . . their role is merely to
describe a material element or to describe factual circumstances in which a material
element may be proven.").
And reading the phrase "taking or confining" as presenting options within a means
aligns with this court's interpretation of the kidnapping statute as a whole. As we
explained in Haberlein, the Legislature "signal[ed] through structure an intent to define
alternative means of proving the mens rea for kidnapping and aggravated kidnapping" by
separating distinct ways of committing the crime into multiple subsections. 296 Kan. at
209; see K.S.A. 21-5408(a)(1)-(4). The Legislature did not convey a similar intent to
15
define "taking or confining" as alternative means of proving the actus reus for kidnapping
and aggravated kidnapping by placing them in different subsections of the statute. See
K.S.A. 21-5408(a).
Finally, the facts in Garcia-Martinez' case illustrate why "taking or confining" do
not set forth separate and distinct actus rei. The evidence at trial established that although
Hayden voluntarily entered the residence, he did not remain there willingly. When
Hayden tried to leave, he was hit over the head with a crowbar. To prevent Hayden from
leaving, Garcia-Martinez participated in beating Hayden and transported him from the
living room to the bathroom. In the bathroom, Garcia-Martinez physically restrained
Hayden by beating him, tying restraints on his arms and legs, and suffocating him.
Finally, Garcia-Martinez transported Hayden to the trunk of his car and later abandoned
the car in a parking lot. This evidence established that Garcia-Martinez seized or obtained
control over Hayden. Thus, a rational fact-finder could conclude that a taking occurred.
And these same facts also could be viewed as evidence of confinement because they
establish the act of imprisoning or restraining. Garcia-Martinez' conduct was the same
regardless of whether he was taking or confining Hayden. Either way, the evidence was
sufficient to support Garcia-Martinez' aggravated kidnapping conviction.
In sum, we hold the phrase "taking or confining" in K.S.A. 21-5408(a) does not
present alternative means of committing kidnapping and aggravated kidnapping; rather, it
presents options within a means merely describing the factual circumstances that may
prove the material element—the actus reus—of holding the victim to accomplish one of
the four alternative means—each with distinct mens rea—of committing kidnapping. See
K.S.A. 21-5408(a) (requiring State to prove the defendant intended to hold the victim
"[1] [f]or ransom, or as a shield or hostage; [2] to facilitate flight or the commission of
any crime; [3] to inflict bodily injury or to terrorize the victim or another; or [4] to
interfere with the performance of any governmental or political function"). In so holding,
16
we expressly disapprove of any language in Haberlein that may suggest "taking" and
"confining" are distinct actus rei intended by the Legislature to create alternative means.
2. Propriety of multiple acts jury instruction
Next, Garcia-Martinez contends the district court erred by declining his request to
instruct the jury on multiple acts. When a case involves multiple acts, the jury must
unanimously agree on which specific act constitutes the crime. K.S.A. 22-3421; State v.
King, 297 Kan. 955, 977, 305 P.3d 641 (2013). To ensure a unanimous verdict in such
cases, the district court must give the jury a unanimity instruction or the State must elect
the particular act it relies on for the conviction. 297 Kan. at 978.
Garcia-Martinez claims the State presented evidence of four separate and distinct
acts that the jury could have found amounted to aggravated kidnapping, so the jurors
might have disagreed about which specific act constituted that crime. The State counters
that a multiple acts instruction was unwarranted here because the evidence established
that a single continuous incident, which could not be separated, formed the basis for the
aggravated kidnapping charge.
This court generally reviews jury instruction errors by asking whether the party
preserved the issue, whether the jury instruction is legally and factually appropriate, and
whether any error requires reversal. See State v. Holley, 313 Kan. 249, 253, 485 P.3d 614
(2021). But we use a more particularized test when, as here, a defendant challenges a
district court's failure to give a unanimity instruction in a case potentially involving
multiple acts. See State v. Harris, 310 Kan. 1026, 1039, 453 P.3d 1172 (2019). First, we
determine whether the case involves multiple acts. Second, if the case does involve
multiple acts, we consider whether an error occurred because the district court failed to
17
give a unanimity instruction and the State failed to elect which act it was relying on.
Third, if there was an error, we decide whether it requires reversal. 310 Kan. at 1039.
Under the first step, we decide "'whether the defendant's actions could have given
rise to multiple counts of the charged crime or whether the alleged conduct was unitary.'"
Harris, 310 Kan. at 1039. In Kansas, "'acts are multiple acts if they are factually separate
and distinct.'" State v. Moyer, 306 Kan. 342, 360, 410 P.3d 71 (2017). Incidents are
factually separate when either independent criminal acts have occurred at different times
or when a fresh impulse motivated a later criminal act. 306 Kan. at 360. Four factors
guide our inquiry to determine whether conduct was unitary: (1) whether the acts
occurred at or near the same time; (2) whether they occurred at the same location; (3)
whether an intervening event occurred between the acts; and (4) whether a fresh impulse
motivated any portion of the acts. Harris, 310 Kan. at 1039. When the conduct is unitary,
no unanimity instruction is necessary and the analysis ends. State v. Voyles, 284 Kan.
239, 244, 160 P.3d 794 (2007).
At the instructions conference, the district court denied Garcia-Martinez' request
for a unanimity instruction. Citing State v. Staggs, 27 Kan. App. 2d 865, 9 P.3d 601
(2000), the district court found the evidence established "a continuous incident that can't
be factually separated from one another" and said that a unanimity instruction would be
confusing for the jury.
Garcia-Martinez argues the district court's reliance on Staggs was misplaced
because it is factually distinguishable. He claims a unanimity instruction was warranted
because the jury heard evidence of four separate acts that it could have relied on to find
an aggravated kidnapping occurred:
18
• Garcia-Martinez aided and abetted Bailey in confining Hayden when Bailey struck
Hayden with a crowbar for attempting to leave the residence;
• Garcia-Martinez confined Hayden by kicking and beating him after he attempted
to leave;
• Garcia-Martinez confined Hayden in the bathroom by beating him with a hammer
and placing bags over his head; and
• Garcia-Martinez took and/or confined Hayden by placing him in the trunk of the
car.
Contrary to Garcia-Martinez' assertion, the district court did not reference Staggs
as a factually analogous case. Rather, the court mentioned Staggs because it was cited by
the PIK Committee in the Notes on Use section of the applicable PIK instruction as
authority for the multiple acts test. After explaining this test, the court discussed the
evidence and determined Garcia-Martinez' actions did not involve multiple acts and
instead constituted a continuous incident.
Applying the four-factor multiple acts test to the facts here fully supports the
district court's finding of unitary conduct. Starting with the first factor, the timing of the
events, the evidence establishes all the acts forming the basis for the aggravated
kidnapping charge occurred around the same time. Contrary to Garcia-Martinez' assertion
that the events occurred over the course of an entire night, the record reflects they took
place during a short window of time on the morning of July 1, 2020. Morris testified that
she saw Garcia-Martinez and Hayden arrive at the South San Pablo residence that
morning as she left to run errands. When she arrived home about an hour later, Hayden
was already on the ground. Morris saw Garcia-Martinez beat and kick Hayden and then
transport him to the bathroom, where the violence continued. Morris estimated the men
were in the bathroom for about 20 minutes before she saw Garcia-Martinez carry Hayden
outside and drive away. Video surveillance from the parking lot where Hayden's tan
19
Volvo was found showed the car driving in the area on July 1st at 7:39 a.m. and in the
parking lot at 8:30 a.m. Although it is unclear exactly when the attack on Hayden began
on the morning of July 1st, the entire incident was over before 8:00 a.m.
As for the second factor, proximity of location, the acts forming the basis of
Garcia-Martinez' aggravated kidnapping charge occurred inside or outside of the South
San Pablo residence. The attack on Hayden began in the living room and continued after
he was moved to the bathroom. Hayden's car was driven up to the residence, and GarciaMartinez put him inside the trunk. Although Garcia-Martinez later drove Hayden to a
different location, a taking and/or a confining occurred while the car was still parked
outside the residence when Garcia-Martinez moved Hayden to the trunk of the car and
confined him there.
As to the third and fourth factors, the record does not show any intervening event
separating one act from another or a fresh impulse motivating any of Garcia-Martinez'
conduct. Instead, the evidence demonstrated a causal relationship between all his actions,
which stemmed from the group's suspicion that Hayden was a law enforcement officer.
Each action was made in furtherance of the group's plan to silence and dispose of
Hayden.

Outcome:

Because Garcia-Martinez did not commit multiple acts, the unanimity instruction he claims should have been given was not necessary. As a result, the district court did not err in failing to give a unanimity instruction.


Affirmed

Plaintiff's Experts:

Defendant's Experts:

Comments:



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