Colorado Court of Appeals, 2022

Peo v. Talamantes

Peo v. Talamantes
Colorado Court of Appeals · Decided January 20, 2022

Peo v. Talamantes

Opinion

19CA1450 Peo v Talamantes 01-20-2022
COLORADO COURT OF APPEALS
Court of Appeals No. 19CA1450
Arapahoe County District Court No. 16CR3391
Honorable Ben L. Leutwyler III, Judge
The People of the State of Colorado,
Plaintiff-Appellee,
v.
Francisco Martin Talamantes,
Defendant-Appellant.
JUDGMENT AND SENTENCE AFFIRMED
Division V
Opinion by JUDGE YUN
Dunn and Welling, JJ., concur
NOT PUBLISHED PURSUANT TO C.A.R. 35(e)
Announced January 20, 2022
Philip J. Weiser, Attorney General, Elizabeth Rohrbough, Senior Assistant
Attorney General, Denver, Colorado, for Plaintiff-Appellee
Krista A. Schelhaas, Alternate Defense Counsel, Littleton, Colorado, for
Defendant-Appellant
1
¶ 1 Francisco Martin Talamantes appeals the district court’s
judgment convicting him of felony murder, burglary, aggravated
motor vehicle theft, arson, and tampering with physical evidence, as
well as five habitual criminal counts. He also appeals his sentence
of life in prison plus 126 years. We affirm the judgment and
sentence.
I. Background
¶ 2 At about 2 a.m. on Thanksgiving 2016, Talamantes drove two
other men to an Aurora motel in a stolen vehicle. According to the
People, the men went there with the aim of confronting people at a
party. Talamantes considered someone at the party a snitch whom
he wanted to harm, while one of the other two men believed that
there were individuals at the party who owed him money and whom
he wanted to rob.
¶ 3 Surveillance footage shows the three men, led by Talamantes,
enter a room on the second floor of the motel. Talamantes carried a
BB gun, while the other two men each carried a firearm. While
inside, one of the other two men demanded the victim’s cell phone
and, when the victim refused to comply, shot and killed him. The
2
three men then fled in the stolen car. After leading the police on a
chase, Talamantes set fire to the car.
¶ 4 The People charged Talamantes with, as pertinent here, first
degree felony murder, § 18-3-102(1)(b), C.R.S. 2016; first degree
burglary, § 18-4-202(1), C.R.S. 2021; second degree kidnapping,
§ 18-3-302(1), (4), C.R.S. 2021; first degree aggravated motor
vehicle theft, § 18-4-409(2), (3)(b), C.R.S. 2021; second degree
arson, § 18-4-103(1), C.R.S. 2021; tampering with physical
evidence, § 18-8-610(1)(a), C.R.S. 2021; five habitual criminal
counts, § 18-1.3-801, C.R.S. 2021; and two crime-of-violence
sentence enhancers, § 18-1.3-406(2)(a)(I)(A), C.R.S. 2021 (using,
possessing, or threatening the use of a deadly weapon);
§ 18-1.3-406(2)(a)(I)(B) (causing serious bodily injury or death to a
non-participant).
¶ 5 The case proceeded to trial. As relevant to this appeal, the
People argued that Talamantes was guilty of burglary (and felony
murder based on burglary) either as a principal or a complicitor.
They argued that he was guilty of kidnapping and robbery (and
felony murder based on those crimes) as a complicitor.
Talamantes’s defense was that he was in the wrong place, with the
3
wrong people, at the wrong time; that he did not know his associate
was going to shoot anyone; and that he did not go into the motel
room with the intent to commit any crime. But he conceded that he
was guilty of the arson and tampering charges.
¶ 6 The jury found Talamantes guilty of felony murder “based on
the commission or attempted commission” of both robbery and
burglary. It found him guilty of first degree burglary “based on the
commission or attempted commission” of assault, menacing, and
harassment. It also found him guilty of first degree aggravated
motor vehicle theft, second degree arson, and tampering with
physical evidence. The jury found Talamantes not guilty of second
degree kidnapping. The court later found him guilty of all five
habitual criminal counts.
¶ 7 After entering judgment of conviction, the district court
sentenced Talamantes to life in prison for felony murder, plus a
consecutive 126 years for the burglary, motor vehicle theft, arson,
and tampering charges.
1
1
Following a separate trial, the shooter was convicted of first degree
felony murder and burglary. See People v. Garcia, (Colo. App.
No. 18CA0776, June 24, 2021) (not published pursuant to C.A.R.
4
¶ 8 Talamantes now appeals the judgment of conviction and his
sentence.
II. Analysis
¶ 9 Talamantes makes four arguments. First, he contends that
the district court’s complicity instruction was plainly erroneous.
Second, he argues that prosecutorial misconduct violated his right
to a fair trial. Third, he argues that his convictions for burglary and
felony murder violated his right to be free from double jeopardy.
And fourth, he contends that the court erred by sentencing him to a
consecutive 126 years on top of his sentence to life in prison. We
address each of his arguments in turn.
A. Complicity Instruction
¶ 10 Talamantes contends that the district court plainly erred by
giving the jury an outdated complicity instruction. We disagree.
1. Additional Facts
¶ 11 The district court provided the jury with the following
Instruction 27 on complicitor liability:
35(e)) (reversing and remanding for a new trial based on violations
of CRE 403). The third associate was found dead hours after the
motel murder and never charged.
5
Complicity is not a separate crime. Rather, it
is a legal theory by which one person may be
found guilty of a criminal offense that was
committed in whole or in part by another
person.
To be found guilty as a complicitor, the
prosecution must prove each of the following
circumstances beyond a reasonable doubt:
1. A crime must have been committed.
2. Another person must have committed all or
part of the crime.
3. The defendant must have had knowledge
that the other person intended to commit all or
part of the crime.
4. The defendant must have had the intent to
promote or facilitate the commission of the
crime.
5. The defendant must have aided, abetted,
advised, or encouraged the other person in
planning or committing the crime.
This instruction tracked the model instruction in use at the time of
his trial in January 2019, see COLJI-Crim. G1:06 (2017), and
Talamantes did not object to it.
¶ 12 Next, the court instructed the jury that
the elements of the crime of first degree
burglary are:
1. That the defendant,
6
2. in the State of Colorado, at or about the
date and place charged,
3. knowingly,
4. entered unlawfully, or remained unlawfully
after a lawful or unlawful entry,
5. in a building or occupied structure,
6. with intent,
7. to commit therein the crime(s) of
kidnapping, (see instruction 21), and/or
menacing (see instruction 20), and/or assault
(see instruction 20) and/or harassment (see
instruction 20), and
8. in effecting entry or while in the building or
occupied structure or in immediate flight from
the building or occupied structure,
9. the defendant or another participant in the
crime committed the crime of assault or the
crime of menacing against any person.
Other instructions provided the jury with the elements of the
offenses of kidnapping, menacing, assault, and harassment.
¶ 13 As it deliberated, the jury sent the district court a question:
“Does the notion/definition of ‘complicity’ (Instruction 27) apply to
all aspects of all charges; specifically, does the definition of
complicity apply to sub-distinctions/rulings of count two [first
degree burglary] subsections. Defense counsel asked the court to
7
refer the jury back to the instructions. The prosecutor, however,
noted that “even recently our Supreme Court has said that [the
notion of complicity] has to apply to intent, and it has to apply to
mens rea,” and suggested to the court that “the answer is quite
clearly yes.”
¶ 14 The court decided to answer the jury’s question “simply” with
yes.” It reasoned that this answer was certainly a correct
statement of the law and that it would clarify the confusion the
jury has expressed through this question, without unnecessary
elaboration.
¶ 15 When the jury returned its first degree burglary verdict, it
unanimously found, beyond a reasonable doubt, that Talamantes
was guilty of the burglary based on “the commission or attempted
commission” of assault, menacing, and harassment.
2. Standard of Review and Preservation
¶ 16 The district court has a duty to instruct the jury correctly on
the applicable law. Townsend v. People, 252 P.3d 1108, 1111 (Colo.
2011). We review the court’s instructions as a whole de novo to
determine whether they accurately informed the jury of the
governing law. Riley v. People, 266 P.3d 1089, 1092-93 (Colo.
8
2011). But so long as the instructions are “correct statements of
the law and fairly and adequately cover the issues presented,” the
court has substantial discretion in formulating” them. People v.
Payne, 2019 COA 167, ¶ 16 (citation omitted). We therefore review
a court’s decisions on the form and style of instructions for abuse of
discretion. Townsend, 252 P.3d at 1111.
¶ 17 The parties agree that Talamantes did not preserve this issue
for appeal, so our review is for plain error. Hagos v. People, 2012
CO 63, ¶ 14; see also Crim. P. 52(b). A plain error is one that is
obvious and substantial. Hagos, ¶ 14. An error is obvious if it
contravenes a clear statutory command, a well-settled legal
principle, or Colorado case law. Scott v. People, 2017 CO 16, ¶ 16.
An error is substantial, in turn, if it so undermines the fundamental
fairness of the trial itself as to cast serious doubt on the reliability
of the judgment of conviction. Hagos, ¶ 14. In the jury instruction
context, the defendant must demonstrate not only that the
instruction affected a substantial right, but also that the record
reveals a reasonable possibility that the error contributed to his
conviction.’” Hoggard v. People, 2020 CO 54, ¶ 13 (quoting
People v. Miller, 113 P.3d 743, 750 (Colo. 2005)).
9
3. Governing Law
¶ 18 “The United States and Colorado Constitutions guarantee the
defendant in a criminal case both the right to have a jury decide his
case and the right to have the prosecutor prove to that jury, beyond
a reasonable doubt, every element of the charged offense.Griego v.
People, 19 P.3d 1, 7 (Colo. 2001); see also U.S. Const. art. III, § 2,
cl. 3; U.S. Const. amends. VI, XIV; Colo. Const. art. II, §§ 16, 23,
25.
¶ 19 According to the complicity statute, “[a] person is legally
accountable as principal for the behavior of another constituting a
criminal offense if, with the intent to promote or facilitate the
commission of the offense, he or she aids, abets, advises, or
encourages the other person in planning or committing the offense.
§ 18-1-603, C.R.S. 2021.
¶ 20 In People v. Childress, 2015 CO 65M, ¶ 2, our supreme court
addressed the reach of complicitor liability, concluding that it “is
not limited to crimes defined as containing a culpable mental state
but “can extend to strict liability offenses.” In doing so, the
supreme court defined the “dual mental state necessary for
complicitor liability, requiring that the complicitor have both
10
(1) the intent, in the commonly understood
sense of desiring or having a purpose or
design, to aid, abet, advise, or encourage the
principal in his criminal act or conduct, and
(2) an awareness of those circumstances
attending the act or conduct he seeks to
further that are necessary for commission of
the offense in question. By “circumstances
attending the act or conduct,” we intend those
elements of the offense describing the
prohibited act itself and the circumstances
surrounding its commission, including a
required mental state, if any . . . .
Id. at ¶ 29.
¶ 21 According to a comment to the 2015 model jury instructions
on complicity, Childress “substantially modified” the supreme
court’s earlier decision in Bogdanov v. People, 941 P.2d 247 (Colo.),
amended, 955 P.2d 997 (Colo. 1997), disapproved of on other
grounds by Griego, 19 P.3d 1. The Model Criminal Jury
Instructions Committee (Committee) therefore said that it was
currently reviewing these instructions. COLJI-Crim. G1:06 cmt. 2
(2015). The 2017 model jury instruction on complicity, however
the one in use at the time of Talamantes’s trial contained
elements identical to those in the 2015 model instructions.
Compare COLJI-Crim. G1:06 (2017), with COLJI-Crim. G1:06
(2015). “[W]hile simply following model instructions does not
11
provide ‘safe harbor that insulates instructional error from reversal,’
it certainly makes any error that occurred . . . less obvious.”
Hoggard, ¶ 17 (citation omitted).
4. Discussion
¶ 22 Talamantes asserts that, in the wake of Childress, and based
on a new model instruction released after his trial,
2
a complicity
jury instruction for the crime of first degree burglary should
specifically state that the following elements must be proved:
1. Another person committed the crime of first
degree burglary, as defined at the end of this
Instruction, and
2. the defendant, with the desire or the
purpose or design to aid, abet, advise, or
encourage the other person in planning or
committing that crime,
3. aided, abetted, advised, or encouraged the
other person in planning or committing that
crime, and
4. the defendant was aware of all of the
elements of that crime, as defined at the end of
this Instruction.
For purposes of this Instruction, another
person committed the crime of first degree
2
Talamantes’s proposal resembles the 2018 model instruction on
complicity. COLJI-Crim. J:03 (2018). That model instruction,
which was released two weeks after his trial, adds the requirement
that “the defendant was aware of all of the elements of that crime.”
12
burglary if the prosecution proves each of the
following elements beyond a reasonable
doubt . . . .
He argues that the district court’s complicity instruction violated
due process because, unlike the instruction above, it (1) lowered the
burden of proof; (2) improperly included the “all or part of”
language; and (3) “allowed the jury to intermix the various offenses
for each element of the complicity instruction.
¶ 23 First, we disagree that, by failing to expressly require the jury
to find that Talamantes was aware of the shooter’s intent to commit
kidnapping, menacing, assault, or harassment inside the motel
room, the court’s complicity instruction improperly lowered the
burden of proof. The court’s instruction informed the jury that to
find Talamantes guilty as a complicitor of any crime e.g., first
degree burglary it had to find that he “had the intent to promote
or facilitate the commission of the crime” and that he had
“knowledge that the other person intended to commit all or part of
the crime.” It thus directed the jury to the elements of “the
crime” first degree burglary contained in a separate
instruction. That instruction included the requirement of intent to
commit kidnapping, menacing, assault, or harassment. Read as a
13
whole, then, the instructions ensured that the jury would find
Talamantes guilty of first degree burglary as a complicitor only if he
was aware of the principal’s intent to commit kidnapping,
menacing, assault, or harassment inside the motel room. See
Childress, ¶ 29.
¶ 24 To the extent that the court’s instruction did not explicitly
direct the jury to find that he “was aware of all of the elements of
that crime,” including the principal’s mental state, we conclude that
the omission if erroneous was not obvious. As mentioned
above, the court’s instruction tracked the model instruction in use
at the time, COLJI-Crim. G1:06 (2017). Hoggard, 17. And though
the 2015 model instructions indicate that Childress “substantially
modified” the court’s earlier precedent and that the Committee was
“currently reviewing” its complicity instructions, COLJI-Crim. G1:06
cmt. 2 (2015), the Committee had not actually changed anything by
the time of Talamantes’s trial, almost four years later.
¶ 25 Second, we disagree that the district court plainly erred by
including “all or part of” in the elements (1) [a]nother person must
have committed all or part of the crime” and (2) [t]he defendant
must have had knowledge that the other person intended to commit
14
all or part of the crime.” The “all or part of” language does not
appear in the current model instruction. In Bogdanov, 941 P.2d at
256, however, our supreme court explained that this language
applies to “the fact pattern wherein the principal and at least one
other person, possibly the defendant, together commit the essential
elements of the crime.” By contrast, when the defendant has
committed none of the elements of the crime and one principal
alone has committed them all, the Bogdanov court saw no need
for the instruction to contain the all or part of language. Id.; see
also COLJI-Crim. G1:06 cmt. 4 (2015) (including the “all or part of
language “[c]onsistent with the supreme court’s direction in
Bogdanov”).
¶ 26 Its inclusion in the latter situation, however, is usually
superfluous rather than prejudicial. See Bogdanov, 941 P.2d at
252, 256 (rejecting the defendant’s contention that the “all or part
of” language allowed the jury to find him guilty even if he did not
know the principal intended to commit the crime but, rather, knew
only that the principal intended to commit part of the crime);
People v. Osborne, 973 P.2d 666, 670 (Colo. App. 1998) (“[I]f the
principal committed the crime in its entirety and the complicitor did
15
not perform any of the elements of the offense, then the inclusion of
the ‘all or part’ language of the instruction is superfluous and any
error is harmless.”). Thus, the court did not plainly err by including
the “all or part of” language in its complicity instruction.
¶ 27 Third, relying on Butler v. People, 2019 CO 87, Talamantes
argues that the district court’s complicity instruction, by referring
generically to “a crime” and “the crime,” allowed the jury to
“intermix” different offenses in the instruction. That case, however,
did not concern jury instructions; the issue in Butler, ¶ 11, had to
do with the sufficiency of the evidence supporting the defendant’s
money laundering conviction under a complicity theory. The
supreme court’s statement that, [b]y focusing on the entire
operation rather than the specific acts charged, the court of appeals
lowered the bar for the prosecutionis therefore inapposite here.
See id. at ¶ 17. Instead, reading the court’s instructions as a whole,
they clearly informed the jury that complicity was a theory of
liability potentially applicable to each of the charged offenses.
¶ 28 We are not persuaded otherwise by Talamantes’s argument
that the jury’s question about the complicity instruction proves the
instructions inadequacy. The jury’s question “Does the
16
notion/definition of ‘complicity’ (Instruction 27) apply to all aspects
of all charges; specifically, does the definition of complicity apply to
sub-distinctions/rulings of count two [first degree burglary]
subsections” arguably shows that it was confused about how to
apply the complicity instruction. But the court’s answer “yes”
removed any confusion. It told the jury to apply the definition of
complicity to the “sub-distinctions” of first degree burglary,
including the intent to commit any of one or more crimes inside the
motel room.
¶ 29 Accordingly, we conclude that the district court’s complicity
instruction was not plainly erroneous.
B. Prosecutorial Misconduct
¶ 30 Talamantes next contends that, from voir dire through closing
arguments, the prosecutors made improper, misleading statements
about complicity, reasonable doubt, and Talamantes’s veracity that
violated his right to a fair trial. We disagree.
1. Standard of Review and Governing Law
¶ 31 In reviewing a claim of prosecutorial misconduct, we employ a
two-step analysis. Wend v. People, 235 P.3d 1089, 1096 (Colo.
2010). First, we ask whether the prosecutor’s conduct was
17
improper based on the totality of the circumstances. Id. Second, if
the prosecutor’s conduct was improper, then we ask whether the
conduct warrants reversal under the proper standard of review. Id.
¶ 32 At the first step of the analysis, it is well settled that in closing
argument a prosecutor may not convey an opinion about the truth
or falsity of a witness’s testimony; nor may the prosecutor suggest
personal knowledge of evidence unknown to the jury.”
Domingo-Gomez v. People, 125 P.3d 1043, 1049 (Colo. 2005). And
during voir dire, a prosecutor may not misstate the law. People v.
Carter, 2015 COA 24M-2, ¶ 71. A prosecutor may, however, “point
to circumstances that raise questions about, or cast doubt on, a
witnesss testimony, and may draw reasonable inferences from the
evidence as to the credibility of witnesses.” People v. Sommers,
200 P.3d 1089, 1096 (Colo. App. 2008) (quoting People v. Welsh,
176 P.3d 781, 788 (Colo. App. 2007)).
¶ 33 Turning to the second step, when, as here, the defendant did
not contemporaneously object to the alleged prosecutorial
misconduct, we review it for plain error. People v. Lovato, 2014
COA 113, ¶ 58. “To constitute plain error, prosecutorial
misconduct must have been so flagrant, glaring, or tremendously
18
improper that the trial court should have intervened sua sponte.”
People v. Cordova, 293 P.3d 114, 121 (Colo. App. 2011). We
evaluate the misconduct claim “in the context of the argument as a
whole and in light of the evidence before the jury.” People v.
Geisendorfer, 991 P.2d 308, 312 (Colo. App. 1999). A prosecutor’s
misstatement in closing argument thus rarely rises to the level of
plain error. People v. Ujaama, 2012 COA 36, ¶ 70. Misconduct
does so only when “its probable effect is a verdict based on bias and
prejudice rather than on the relevant facts and applicable law.” Id.
2. Discussion
¶ 34 Talamantes takes issue with the prosecutors’ comments on
three topics: complicity, reasonable doubt, and his own
truthfulness. We address each topic separately.
a. Complicity
¶ 35 Talamantes points to multiple times, particularly during voir
dire and closing argument, when the prosecutor made what he
deems misleading statements about complicity. During voir dire,
for example, one of the prosecutors asked a prospective juror
whether they were okay with the fact that “[i]f you knew a robbery
was going to go down, even without a gun, and somebody pulls a
19
gun, the law says you are still on the hook for that, too. And
during closing argument, the prosecutor contended that
Talamantes was guilty as a complicitor because he was “an active
participant,” “actively involved in many bad things that happened in
the early morning of Thanksgiving 2016,” and “actively involved in a
series of events that led to [the victim] violently losing his life.
¶ 36 Talamantes is correct that none of these statements fully
explain Childress’s conclusion about the “dual mental state
requirement” of complicitor liability i.e., that a complicitor must
have both an intent to aid the principal and an awareness of those
circumstances attending the act or conduct he seeks to further that
are necessary for commission of the offense.” But the prosecutor’s
statements during closing argument, when considered as a whole
and in context, were permissible comments on the evidence.
People v. Walters, 148 P.3d 331, 334 (Colo. App. 2006). He was not
instructing the jury about the law on complicity. As for voir dire,
though he may have used the metaphor loosely, the prosecutor
again was not trying to inform the prospective jurors about the law
of complicity. Carter, ¶ 71. Rather, in context, he was testing
20
whether the prospective jurors held beliefs that would prevent them
from reaching a guilty verdict based on complicitor liability.
¶ 37 In sum, the prosecutor’s statements about complicity were not
improper.
b. Reasonable Doubt
¶ 38 Talamantes asserts that the prosecutors made several
statements that “trivialized” reasonable doubt.
¶ 39 First, during voir dire, one of the prosecutors asked,
“Understanding that beyond a reasonable doubt is still really the
highest standard in any justice system in the world, understanding
its really high, is it something less than I know 100 percent that
this thing is true? He continued, “Ninety, 91, 98, 98.99999
whatever. Can it be less than a hundred?”
¶ 40 Then, during Talamantes’s closing argument, defense counsel
used the following hypothetical to describe reasonable doubt:
[I]magine that you are driving down the street
in your vehicle, and you are approaching an
intersection, and you get to a street in front of
you that these people have a stop sign. You
dont have a stop sign.
So you are driving down the street, but you see
a car kind of coming up. You are not sure,
maybe going a little fast, not sure if they are
21
going to stop. In that situation, maybe you
touch the brakes. Maybe you just take your
foot, and you put your foot over the brake and
cover the brake, just being precautious in case
that person doesnt want to stop at that stop
sign they are going to run through it, and they
hit you.
You hesitate.
Thats based on your reason and common
sense. Thats you assessing the situation and
hesitating. Thats the type of doubt we are
talking about now. You may never hit the
brakes. You might put your foot over the
brake, cover it, take it back off, continue
without slowing down, but you hesitated for no
matter how long, thats the type of doubt we
are talking about.
¶ 41 During rebuttal closing argument, the prosecutor called
defense counsel’s hypothetical “a really bad and a really
nonsensical explanation and illustration of what reasonable doubt
is and is not.The prosecutor said that the application of
reasonable doubt involves a hypothetical reasonable person
engag[ing] in the same deliberative process
that every single one of us, every single one of
you, do every single day about ordinary life
decisions, right?
Reasonable doubt isn’t some unattainable,
unknown standard, guys. It’s the same
standard of deliberation and decision making
that we use every single day to make all
manner of normal decisions.
22
¶ 42 As an initial matter, though it is improper to “trivialize” the
state’s burden by quantifying the reasonable doubt standard,
People v. Camarigg, 2017 COA 115M, ¶ 44, the prosecutor’s
statement during voir dire did not so. The prosecutor’s statement
quantifying reasonable doubt (questioning whether “beyond a
reasonable doubt” might mean “[n]inety, 91, 98, 98.99999” percent)
was made for a permissible purpose: “to convey the difference
between proof beyond a reasonable doubt and proof beyond all
doubt.” Id. at ¶ 49. In context, the prosecutor’s statement was
intended to tease out the prospective jurors’ views on the state’s
burden of proof rather than to trivialize it. Cf. Pettigrew v. People,
2022 CO 2, ¶ 45 (“[T]he fact that the court’s comment came in the
course of a colloquy designed to tease out a particular prospective
juror’s possible bias rather than as part of the court’s general
explanation of the law . . . reduces the statement’s potential
impact as an erroneous instruction of law.”).
¶ 43 The prosecutors statement about reasonable doubt during
rebuttal closing, however, was improper. It is improper to “equate
the burden of proof to an everyday choice,” as the prosecutor did
here. Id. at ¶ 46; see also People v. Vialpando, 2020 COA 42,
23
¶¶ 54-55 (concluding that the prosecutor trivialized reasonable
doubt by asking potential jurors whether they could recognize,
beyond a reasonable doubt, the American flag in the courtroom
even though it was folded and not entirely visible” and whether, if a
potential juror was on the gameshow “Who Wants to be a
Millionaire,” she could identify the flag for the million-dollar
question) (cert. granted Oct. 12, 2020); cf. Tibbels v. People, 2022
CO 1, ¶ 3 (concluding that a trial court’s voir dire comments
equating reasonable doubt with evaluating a home purchase
lowered the prosecution’s burden of proof).
¶ 44 In context, however, the prosecutors statement, though
improper, was not so flagrantly, glaringly, or tremendously
improper that the district court should have intervened sua
sponte.” Cordova, 293 P.3d at 121.
¶ 45 First, the district court itself correctly instructed the jury on
the definition of reasonable doubt. The court also told the jury, “It
is my job to decide what rules of law apply to the case. While the
attorneys may comment on some of these rules, you must follow the
instructions I give you.” Absent an indication to the contrary, we
24
presume that the jury followed the court’s instructions. People v.
Lomanaco, 802 P.2d 1143, 1145 (Colo. App. 1990).
¶ 46 And second, the prosecutor’s statements in rebuttal closing,
which improperly equated reasonable doubt to everyday
decision-making, Camarigg, ¶ 46, were made in response to defense
counsel doing the same thing equating reasonable doubt with
approaching an intersection and wondering whether oncoming
traffic would stop.
¶ 47 Under these circumstances, we conclude that the prosecutors
comment on reasonable doubt during rebuttal closing argument,
though improper, does not warrant reversal.
c. Comments on Talamantes’s Veracity
¶ 48 Finally, Talamantes asserts that the prosecutors improperly
expressed their personal opinions on his guilt and veracity.
Specifically, he points to closing argument, during which one of the
prosecutors tried to refute the idea that the shooter was in the car
and forced Talamantes to set fire to it. The prosecutor questioned
why, if the shooter was in the car, none of the responding police
officers saw the shooter fleeing from it. He described the idea as
“fantastical, “manifestly made up,” and “manifestly impossible.”
25
He said, “It is a creation. It is fake. It is not real. It is something
that this Defendant creates when he knows he’s going up the creek
a little bit.” Then, the other prosecutor began her rebuttal closing
argument with the following:
Ladies and gentlemen, to conceive of Francisco
Talamantes of being not guilty, to conceive of
Francisco Talamantes as being nothing more
than an innocent bystander, who got caught
up with the wrong people with the wrong
crowd at the wrong time, then one must
necessarily concede [sic] of Francisco
Talamantes as being deaf, dumb, mute, and
blind.
¶ 49 As Talamantes correctly points out, it is an improper
expression of personal opinion for a prosecutor to use any form of
the word “lie” to describe a witness’s testimony. Domingo-Gomez,
125 P.3d at 1051. “In cases that turn on the credibility of witness
testimony,” however, the line between [proper] argument about
whether the jury can rely on the testimony of witnesses and
improper expressions of personal opinion becomes hard to draw.
Id. Here, the prosecutor’s statements properly asked the jurors to
disbelieve Talamantes’s explanation that the shooter forced him to
burn the stolen car and asked them, instead, to believe police
26
officers responding to the scene, who did not see the shooter fleeing
from the car with Talamantes.
¶ 50 Thus, we conclude that the prosecutors’ statements on
Talamantes’s veracity were not improper.
C. Double Jeopardy
¶ 51 Third, Talamantes argues that the district court reversibly
erred and violated his right to be free from double jeopardy by not
merging his burglary conviction into his felony murder conviction.
We disagree.
1. Additional Background
¶ 52 Talamantes was charged with first degree felony murder based
on robbery, burglary, and kidnapping. The district court instructed
the jury that, to find Talamantes guilty of felony murder, it had to
find that he “committed or attempted to commit the crime(s) of
Robbery . . . and/or Burglary . . . and/or Kidnapping” and that, in
the course of or in furtherance of the crime (or crimes), someone
other than one of the participants died. The court separately
instructed the jury on the elements of robbery, burglary, and
kidnapping.
27
¶ 53 When the jury returned its verdicts, it unanimously found,
beyond a reasonable doubt, that both robbery and burglary were
“the basis for [its] finding of guilt for felony murder.”
2. Standard of Review and Preservation
¶ 54 “Whether convictions for different offenses merge is a question
of law that we review de novo.” Page v. People, 2017 CO 88, ¶ 6.
But Talamantes concedes that he did not preserve his double
jeopardy objection. We review unpreserved double jeopardy claims
for plain error that is, for error that is obvious and substantial.
Reyna-Abarca v. People, 2017 CO 15, ¶ 47; Hagos, ¶ 14.
3. Discussion
¶ 55 “The Double Jeopardy Clauses of the United States and
Colorado Constitutions protect an accused against being twice
placed in jeopardy for the same crime.” Woellhaf v. People,
105 P.3d 209, 214 (Colo. 2005) (citing U.S. Const. amend. V; Colo.
Const. art. II, § 18). The bar against multiplicity that is, “the
charging of multiple counts and the imposition of multiple
punishments for the same criminal conduct,” id. lies “at the core”
of double jeopardy protections, Quintano v. People, 105 P.3d 585,
590 (Colo. 2005). See also § 18-1-408(1)(a), C.R.S. 2021 (A
28
defendant “may not be convicted of more than one offense if . . .
[o]ne offense is included in the other.”).
¶ 56 In the felony murder context, this means that, because the
predicate felony is a lesser included offense of felony murder, a
defendant cannot be convicted of both offenses. See Boulies v.
People, 770 P.2d 1274, 1282 (Colo. 1989) (“An offense is lesser
included for purposes of merging into a greater offense when proof
of the essential elements of the greater offense necessarily
establishes all of the elements required to prove the lesser
offense.”). Rather, the defendant’s conviction for the predicate
felony merges into his felony murder conviction. See id.
¶ 57 Here, the jury found Talamantes guilty of felony murder based
on his commission or attempted commission (as principal or
complicitor) of burglary and robbery. He was not separately
charged with robbery, so the jury did not return a separate verdict
finding him guilty of that offense. But based on the felony murder
instruction, by finding him guilty of felony murder based on
robbery, the jury necessarily found that he committed or attempted
to commit robbery (as either principal or complicitor). See
Lomanaco, 802 P.2d at 1145 (“In the absence of any indication to
29
the contrary,” we presume that the jury follows the instructions it is
given.).
¶ 58 Accordingly, because Talamantes was convicted of felony
murder based on robbery but not convicted of robbery, merger
principles do not require that any of his convictions be vacated. Cf.
Callis v. People, 692 P.2d 1045, 1054 (Colo. 1984) (“[W]hen a
defendant is convicted of multiple felonies, all of which are alleged
as the legal predicates for the commission of felony murder, that
felony which most directly contributes to the death of the victim
should serve as the essential element of the felony murder
conviction.”).
D. Sentencing
¶ 59 Last, Talamantes argues that the district court reversibly erred
by ordering all his sentences to run consecutively. In the
alternative, he argues that the court reversibly erred by not ordering
his arson and tampering sentences, at least, to run concurrently.
We disagree.
1. Additional Background
¶ 60 At the sentencing hearing, which followed Talamantes’s
habitual criminal adjudication, the parties agreed that the district
30
court had little discretion regarding what sentences to impose. The
only available sentence for first degree felony murder was life in
prison. See § 18-1.3-401(1)(a)(I), C.R.S. 2021. And based on its
finding that he had previously been convicted of at least three
felonies arising out of separate and distinct criminal episodes,
section 18-1.3-801(2)(a)(I)(A) required the court to impose four times
the presumptive maximum sentence for each of his other
convictions. Both parties thus agreed that the court had to impose
sentences of forty-eight years for first degree burglary, forty-eight
years for first degree aggravated motor vehicle theft, twenty-four
years for second degree arson, and six years for tampering with
physical evidence.
¶ 61 The prosecutor asked for the sentences to run consecutively,
summing up to a total of life plus 126 years in prison. Talamantes,
while recognizing that “[o]bviously, the Court doesnt have too much
discretion here,” asked for the sentences to run concurrent to each
other.
¶ 62 The court acknowledged that “there is some discretion
permitted regarding consecutive versus concurrent, but even that is
limited.” “Given the facts of this case” and “the nature of the
31
ongoing criminal enterprise, it ordered the sentences to run
consecutively. Later in the proceeding, the court remarked that “[a]
person’s life was taken for absolutely no reason” and that the case
involved “absolutely senseless violence.”
2. Standard of Review and Preservation
¶ 63 At the sentencing hearing, Talamantes requested that the
district court impose concurrent sentences, but he did not make
the arguments he makes on appeal: that the court misunderstood
its discretion to do so and that it was required to impose concurrent
sentences for two of his convictions. Accordingly, we review those
issues for plain error that is, error that is obvious and
substantial. Martinez v. People, 2015 CO 16, ¶ 14 (Plain error
review applies “when a party raises a new argument on appeal” or
alters the grounds for his objection on appeal.”); Hagos, ¶ 14.
3. Governing Law and Discussion
¶ 64 Generally, [w]hen a defendant is convicted of multiple
offenses, the sentencing court has the discretion to impose either
concurrent or consecutive sentences.” Juhl v. People, 172 P.3d 896,
899 (Colo. 2007). And [a]s long as each sentence falls within the
range established by the legislature, we will usually uphold
32
consecutive sentences against a charge that the court abused its
discretion. People v. Montgomery, 669 P.2d 1387, 1390 (Colo.
1983). The court must, however, “state on the record the basic
reasons for imposing the sentence.” People v. Watkins, 200 Colo.
163, 167, 613 P.2d 633, 637 (1980).
¶ 65 When consecutive sentences result in an “extraordinarily long
prison term,” however, that term must be supported by evidence in
the record justifying the trial judge’s action.” Montgomery, 669 P.2d
at 1390 (quoting People v. Edwards, 198 Colo. 52, 56, 598 P.2d
126, 129 (1979)). In exercising sentencing discretion, a trial court
must consider the nature of the offense, the character and
rehabilitative potential of the offender, the development of respect
for the law and the deterrence of crime, and the protection of the
public.” People v. Fuller, 791 P.2d 702, 708 (Colo. 1990).
¶ 66 As a threshold matter, we reject Talamantes’s argument that
the district court reversibly erred because it misunderstood its
authority to impose concurrent sentences. The court’s recognition
that it had “some discretion . . . regarding consecutive versus
concurrent” belies that assertion. To the extent that the court
implied that its discretion was limited, we agree with the People
33
that, in context, the court was probably referring to the mandatory
sentences required by section 18-1.3-801(2)(a)(I)(A).
¶ 67 Nor are we persuaded by Talamantes’s argument that the
district court’s sentencing order must be vacated because the court
did not explain its reasoning. The court said that consecutive
sentences were warranted “[g]iven the facts of this case” and “the
nature of the ongoing criminal enterprise. More specifically, it
observed that a life had been “taken for absolutely no reason” and
that the case involved “absolutely senseless violence.” We perceive
no abuse of discretion there. Fuller, 791 P.2d at 708 (“If the
sentence is within the range required by law, is based on
appropriate considerations as reflected in the record, and is
factually supported by the circumstances of the case, an appellate
court must uphold the sentence.”).
¶ 68 Turning to Talamantes’s alternative argument, we disagree
that, because his convictions for arson and tampering were based
on identical evidence i.e., torching the stolen car section
18-1-408(3) required the sentences for those convictions to run
concurrently. Section 18-1-408(3) expressly grants the sentencing
court discretion to impose consecutive sentences “where multiple
34
victims are involved.” See also People v. Cullen, 695 P.2d 750, 752
(Colo. App. 1984) (When “multiple convictions arise from crimes
committed upon multiple victims, the evidence is not identical and
therefore [section 18-1-408(3)] is inapplicable.”).
¶ 69 Here, as the People point out, arson and tampering harmed
separate victims. The victim of the arson was the car’s owner, who
lost her car, while the victim of the tampering charge was the State,
whose ability to prosecute the murder was impaired. See
§ 18-8-610(1)(a) (“A person commits tampering with physical
evidence if, believing that an official proceeding is pending or about
to be instituted . . . , he . . . [d]estroys, mutilates, conceals,
removes, or alters physical evidence with intent to impair its verity
or availability in the pending or prospective official
proceeding . . . .”). Contrary to Talamantes’s assertion, nothing in
section 18-1-408(3) indicates that the legislature intended that the
provision apply only to “traditional, named victims.”
¶ 70 In sum, we perceive no error, let alone plain error, in the
district court’s imposition of consecutive sentences.
35
III. Conclusion
¶ 71 For these reasons, we affirm the judgment of conviction and
sentence.
JUDGE DUNN and JUDGE WELLING concur.

Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.