Mesa v. Honorable Warren J. Granville
Annotate this CaseA grand jury indicted Jesse Mesa in May 2014 for first degree murder and other charges. Mesa was arraigned the same month. The State did not file a notice of intent to seek the death penalty, and trial was set. In April 2015, the State obtained a new indictment of Mesa alleging the same charges as the first indictment but adding other charges. Mesa was arraigned the next month. Thereafter, the State dismissed the 2014 charges. The State subsequently filed a timely notice of intent to seek the death penalty. Mesa moved to strike the State’s notice of intent, asserting that it was invalid because the State had not timely filed a notice after he was arraigned for the 2014 charges. The trial court denied the motion. The Supreme Court affirmed, holding (1) when the State complies with Ariz. R. Crim. P. 16.6 in dismissing a prosecution and obtains a new indictment, the time limits for filing a notice under Ariz. R. Crim. P. 15.1(i)(1) restart, absent bad faith by the State or prejudice to the defendant; and (2) the untimely filing of a death notice does not itself invalidate the notice but may result in sanctions, including an order striking the notice.
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