State v. Ouellette
Annotate this CaseAfter a jury trial, Kenny Ouellette was convicted of reckless conduct. Ouellette appealed, arguing that the superior court erred in (1) declining to instruct the jury on his justification of self-defense to the charge of reckless conduct, and (2) failing to inform the jury of the parties' out-of-course resolution that resulted in a dismissal of a count of criminal mischief stemming from the same incident. The Supreme Court vacated the judgment of conviction, holding (1) the trial court's instruction to the jury that it could not consider self-defense as to the charge of reckless conduct was erroneous, and (2) the error was not harmless. Remanded for a new trial.
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