State v. Mendez
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The case involves Francisco Alejandro Mendez, who was charged with multiple crimes following a crime spree in Topeka, Kansas, in April 2019. Mendez and his accomplices stole a car at gunpoint, shot at a group of Washburn University students, killing one, and robbed several people at gunpoint. Mendez was convicted by a jury of premeditated first-degree murder, attempted first-degree premeditated murder, and aggravated robbery.
The Shawnee District Court sentenced Mendez to a life sentence plus 492 months in prison. Mendez appealed, raising nine claims of error, including insufficient evidence of premeditation, erroneous jury instructions, unconstitutional vagueness of the premeditated murder statute, insufficient evidence for some aggravated robbery convictions, multiplicity of charges, denial of a motion to suppress, prosecutorial error, erroneous jury instructions on "knowingly," and cumulative error.
The Kansas Supreme Court reviewed the case. It found sufficient evidence to support the premeditation finding, noting that the time between the initial encounter and the shooting was enough for Mendez to form premeditation. The court also found that the aiding and abetting instruction, while legally inappropriate, was not clearly erroneous. The court declined to address the constitutionality of the premeditated murder statute as it was not raised in the lower court.
The court reversed three of Mendez's aggravated robbery convictions due to insufficient evidence, as there was no proof that property was taken from those victims. However, it upheld the conviction for the aggravated robbery of Clark, finding that as a passenger, he had possession and control of the car. The court also found that the traffic stop leading to Mendez's arrest was lawful and that the prosecutorial error in stating premeditation could be formed in one second was harmless. The court concluded that the cumulative error doctrine did not apply as only one error was identified.
The Kansas Supreme Court affirmed Mendez's convictions for premeditated first-degree murder, attempted first-degree premeditated murder, and the remaining aggravated robbery convictions, while reversing three aggravated robbery convictions.
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