Montana v. Colvin
Annotate this CaseThe State appealed an order granting Daniel Colvin's motion to dismiss. In 2014, the State charged Colvin by information with attempted deliberate homicide in the September 4, 2014 shooting of Michael Aja. At the time of the incident Aja was sitting in his Jeep vehicle. Colvin claimed that he was holding the pistol inside the driver’s side window when it accidentally fired and hit Aja. On the same day as the shooting, law enforcement officers seized and impounded the Jeep as evidence. As the case developed, the position of the pistol and its distance from the victim when fired became important issues to the prosecution and the defense. The State’s theory was that the pistol shot came from several feet outside the vehicle, while Colvin’s theory was that it came from very near or inside the window. Colvin also contends that each eyewitness to the incident, including the victim, supports his theory that the shot was fired from near or inside the vehicle window. The District Court entered an order granting a defense discovery motion, requiring disclosure of “all materials known or discovered . . . pertinent to this case.” That same day the State filed a motion for leave to return a wallet and keys to Michael Aja. A few days later, the State returned the vehicle to Aja. The State did not notify the defense or the District Court that it intended to release the vehicle and did not seek leave of the District Court to do so. The District Court determined that after release of the vehicle and Aja’s daily use, the defense had no means to obtain evidence as it existed at the time the State’s expert gathered his evidence. The District Court concluded that the State’s “negligent” release of the impounded vehicle in the face of an order requiring disclosure “deprived the defense of the opportunity to investigate and prove their theory of the case. This is a fundamental violation of due process.” Finding no reversible error in the District Court's judgment, the Supreme Court affirmed granting Colvin's motion to dismiss.
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