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MAINE SUPREME JUDICIAL COURT
Reporter of Decisions
Docket: Ken-03-490
Submitted
On Briefs: March 24, 2004
Decided: May
4, 2004
Panel: SAUFLEY,
C.J., and CLIFFORD, RUDMAN, DANA, ALEXANDER, and LEVY, JJ.
STATE OF MAINE
v.
ANDREW HIGBIE
ALEXANDER,
J.
[¶1] Andrew Higbie appeals from a judgment of conviction for
criminal use of a laser pointer (Class D), 17-A M.R.S.A. § 1002-A(1)(B) (Supp.
2002), entered after a jury verdict by the Superior Court (Kennebec County, Studstrup,
J.). Higbie asserts that the evidence is
insufficient to support the conviction and that the trial court erred in
responding to a question from the jury and excluding a defense witness. Finding the evidence sufficient, and
there being no error in the challenged rulings of the trial court, we affirm.
I. CASE HISTORY
[¶2] On the evening of October 7, 2001,
Jeremy Buzzell, a Clinton police officer, in uniform and driving a marked
police cruiser, was on patrol on the Bellsqueeze Road in Clinton. Officer Buzzell was accompanied by the
local animal control officer who was not in uniform, but was in training to
become a police officer. Shortly
after completing a traffic stop, while driving on the road, Buzzell and his companion
noticed a red circle of light or red laser beam moving around inside the
cruiser. They then noticed an
individual near a garage crouched down pointing a rifle at them. Officer Buzzell directed the cruiser's
spotlight at the individual holding the rifle and recognized Higbie. Subsequently, Higbie admitted to
acquaintances that he had pointed the laser sight on his rifle at the police
cruiser.
[¶3] Higbie was charged by complaint with
criminal threatening (Class D), 17-A M.R.S.A. § 209(1) (1983); reckless conduct
(Class D), 17-A M.R.S.A. § 211(1) (1983); and criminal use of a laser
pointer (Class D), 17-A M.R.S.A. § 1002-A(1)(B). Higbie transferred the case from District Court to Superior
Court and requested a jury trial. See
M.R.
Crim. P. 22.
[¶4] At the trial, the State presented testimony
from the occupants of the cruiser and Higbie's acquaintances to support its
charges arising from Higbie having pointed the rifle and its laser sight at the
cruiser and the officers in it.
After the State rested, Higbie testified, asserting that he had aimed
the rifle and its laser sight behind the cruiser to get Officer Buzzell's
attention but that he did not intend to place the officer in fear or create any
risk. Higbie then sought to call
his mother as a witness to testify that he had been raised to have respect for
firearms and to be safe and careful in handling firearms. The testimony was offered to support
the credibility of Higbie's claim that he did not point the rifle and the laser
sight at Officer Buzzell. On the
State's objection, the court excluded this testimony.
[¶5] During the jury's deliberations, the
jury sent a note to the court asking for clarification of its instruction
regarding criminal use of a laser pointer. Specifically, the jury asked: "Does at an officer mean at or
in the cruiser?" The court
responded by reinstructing the jury on the elements of the offense, including
instructing the jury that, to convict Higbie, they had to find beyond a
reasonable doubt "that the defendant pointed a laser pointer at another person
while the pointer is emitting a laser beam and . . . that the other person was
a law enforcement officer in uniform."
The court then reminded the jury that it was up to them to decide
whether the evidence in the case proved the elements of the charge and the
court recessed the jury to continue their deliberations. Higbie objected to this instruction,
asserting that the jury should have been advised that "at an officer" did not
mean "at or in the cruiser."
[¶6] The jury found Higbie guilty of criminal
use of a laser pointer. He was
found not guilty of criminal threatening and reckless conduct. Upon the conviction, the court fined
Higbie $700. He then brought this
appeal.
II. LEGAL ANALYSIS
[¶7] Under the Criminal Code, there are
several alternate means of committing the crime of criminal use of laser
pointers. 17-A M.R.S.A. § 1002-A
(Supp. 2002). The alternative
applicable to this case states that:
1. A person is
guilty of criminal use of a laser pointer if the person intentionally, knowingly
or recklessly points a laser pointer at another person, while the laser pointer
is emitting a laser beam, and:
. . . .
B. That other person is a law enforcement
officer in uniform.
Id. § 1002-A(1)(B).
[¶8] Higbie contends that rather than
reinstructing the jury regarding the law, the court should have explicitly
answered the jury's question by stating that the term "at a law enforcement
officer" does not mean at or in the cruiser in which an officer may be riding. In discussing Higbie's objection to its
instruction, the court declined to take Higbie's approach, stating that it
would instruct the jury "in a more positive way in terms of what the statute
says." The court then reinstructed
according to the law, emphasizing that the jury had to find that the laser beam
was pointed at a law enforcement officer in uniform and reminding the jury that
it was up to them to determine whether sufficient facts had been proven to
support the conviction.
[¶9]
The trial court took the proper
approach in instructing the jury positively with respect to what facts the
State had to prove to obtain a conviction, leaving it to the jury to decide
whether those facts had been proven.
Once the trial court has instructed the jury on each element of a crime
that the State must affirmatively prove to obtain a conviction, and on any
justifications or lesser included offenses generated by the evidence, the court
is not required to separately instruct the jury on what would be insufficient
to support a conviction or that the State must disprove certain facts or
alternative explanations that the defense believes may create a reasonable
doubt regarding the offense. See State v. Bridges, 2003 ME 103, ¶ 43, 829
A.2d 247, 259 (stating that the trial court must instruct on defenses or lesser
included offenses rationally supported by the evidence, but need not instruct
on defendant's view of methods for generating reasonable doubt); see also
State v. Knight,
2002 ME 35, ¶ 20, 791 A.2d 110, 116; State v. Kim, 2001 ME 99, ¶¶ 9-10,
773 A.2d 1051, 1055; State v. Rich, 592 A.2d 1085, 1089 (Me. 1991); State v.
Libby,
546 A.2d 444, 450 (Me. 1988).
[¶10] With the jury properly instructed,
Higbie's admission that he had pointed the laser sight at the cruiser, and the
cruiser's occupants' testimony that they saw the red light of the laser moving
around inside the cruiser and saw Higbie's rifle pointed at them, were
sufficient to support the conviction.
Higbie's objection that the conviction must be vacated because the
person with Officer Buzzell was not in uniform is of no consequence. Officer Buzzell was in uniform and the
evidence was sufficient to support the jury's finding that the laser pointer
was pointed at him.
[¶11] Higbie's final point, that the court
erred by not permitting his mother to testify that he had been raised to be
careful with firearms and that he was careful with firearms, is
unpersuasive. The testimony
offered was irrelevant to whether, on the evening in question, Higbie was being
careful with his laser sight. See M.R. Evid. 402. Further, the mother's testimony that
Higbie was raised to be careful with firearms is not appropriately used to
support the credibility of Higbie's testimony that he was careful with firearms
on that evening and did not point his laser sight at the officer. Testimony as to how Higbie was raised
and how he acted in the past is not indicative of a pertinent character trait
and does not inform the question of whether Higbie acted intentionally or
recklessly with his laser sight on the evening in question. See M.R. Evid.
404(a)(1). See also State v.
Willette,
2002 ME 165, ¶¶ 14-15, 809 A.2d 617, 621-22 (stating that past
positive performance evaluations are irrelevant to the issue of whether
employee intended to steal from employer).
The
entry is:
Judgment affirmed.
__________________
Attorneys for State:
Evert N.
Fowle, District Attorney
Darrick
X. Banda, Asst. Dist. Atty.
95 State
Street
Augusta,
ME 04330
Attorney
for defendant:
Robert E.
Sandy Jr., Esq.
Sherman
& Sandy
P O Box
499
Waterville, ME 04903-0499