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Nicholas Maxie v. State of Alaska (5/19/2023) ap-2747

Nicholas Maxie v. State of Alaska (5/19/2023) ap-2747

                                                            NOTICE
   

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            formal errors to the  attention of the Clerk of the Appellate Courts:   

            

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                   IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF ALASKA   

  

  

NICHOLAS MAXIE,                                                           

                                                                               Court of Appeals No. A-13728   

                                         Appellant,                          Trial Court No. 4BE- 19-00197 CR   

  

                                                                          

                               v.                                         

                                                                                            O P I N I O N   

STATE OF ALASKA,                                                          

  

                                                                          

                                         Appellee.                                No. 2747  -  May   19, 2023   

                                                                          

  

                     Appeal  from   the  Superior  Court,  Fourth   Judicial  District,   

                     Bethel, William T. Montgomery, Judge.   

                      

                     Appearances:   David    T.   McGee,    Attorney   at   Law,   under  

                     contract  with  the  Public  Defender  Agency,   and  Samantha   

                     Cherot, Public Defender, Anchorage, for the  Appellant.  Eric A.   

                     Ringsmuth,  Assistant  Attorney   General,  Office  of   Criminal   

                     Appeals,   Anchorage,  and  Treg  R.  Taylor,  Attorney   General,   

                     Juneau, for the Appellee.   

                      

                     Before: Wollenberg, Harbison, and Terrell, Judges.   

                      

                     Judge HARBISON.   

                      



                    Nicholas  Maxie  was  convicted,  following   a  jury   trial,  of   third-degree   



assault, leaving  the scene of  an accident, and  first-degree  failure to  stop  at  the direction   



of  a police  officer  for  repeatedly  ramming  a four-wheeler  into  an occupied taxicab  on  a  



winter  evening  in  Bethel, and  then  driving  away  from  police  as they  tried to  apprehend  


----------------------- Page 2-----------------------

       1  

him.   Maxie   appeals,   contending   that   the   trial   court's   instruction   on   eyewitness   



identification   did  not   include   all   of  the information  that  was necessary   for  the jury  to   



evaluate the testimony  provided  by  several  eyewitnesses. According  to  Maxie,  the jury   



instruction   should  have   described recent   scientific research explaining  the limitations   



on  the accuracy  of  eyewitness identifications, particularly where the fallibility  of  such   



identifications  may   be  counterintuitive.   Maxie  maintains  that   the  instructional   error   



appreciably affected the verdicts, requiring  reversal  of his convictions.   



                   For  the  reasons  explained  below,  we  hold   that   the  verdict   was  not   



appreciably   affected   by   the  omission   of   the  additional   information   from   the  court's   



instruction.  We accordingly affirm Maxie's convictions.   



                     



          Background facts and proceedings   



                   At   around   9:00  p.m. on   a February   evening  in  2019, Jerilyn  Ulroan  was   



riding in a taxicab  in Bethel. When the taxicab stopped to pick up another passenger, a   



green  Honda four-wheeler with   a windshield   drove up  to  the  driver's   side  of  the cab.  



According   to   Ulroan,   the  driver   of   the  four-wheeler  -   who   was  later  identified  as   



Maxie -  seemed drunk and appeared to  have blood on his chin. The driver  repeatedly   



rammed   his  four-wheeler  into   the  cab,  causing   Ulroan   to   think   that   the  taxi  might   



explode.   



                   Two  high  school   students, Robert  Charlie and  Eugene  Alexie, witnessed   



the event. At  trial, Charlie  testified that  he  heard  a bumping  noise and  observed  a green   



four-wheeler  with a windshield  ramming  a taxicab. Charlie told the jury that the driver   



of  the four-wheeler was wearing  a  big  coat. Alexie also  described  seeing  a green  four- 



wheeler,  driven  by  a man wearing  a big  coat, bump  a taxicab  a total  of  six  times.  Alexie,   



Charlie,   and   Ulroan   all   testified  that   the four-wheeler   drove off   before police   could   



contact the driver.    



                                                            

     1  

          AS 11.41.220(a)(1)(A), AS 28.35.050(b), and AS 28.35.182(a)(1), respectively.   



                                                           -  2  -                                                     2747 
  


----------------------- Page 3-----------------------

                                Bethel Police Officer Eric Pavil responded to the scene. As Pavil arrived,   



a  green   four-wheeler   with   a  windshield   passed   by,  so   he  followed  it,  attempting   to   



contact the drive                       r. According to his testimony,                                            Pavil activated                      the  lights and sirens                             of   



his patrol vehicle                         , but the four                  -wheeler  continued   driving,   traveling   at a high rate of                                                                         



speed, going into the oncoming traffic lane, and swerving                                                                                 on the icy roads                       . Early in the                   



pursuit,  Pavil,  who   was  familiar  with   Maxie  from   previous  interactions  with   him,   



radioed that he thought the four                                           -wheeler driver "look[ed]  like Nicholas Maxie from  the  



back."  After a few minutes, Pavil lost sight of the four                                                                       -wheeler. Then, a short time later,                                               



he saw it coming towards him on the road, and  he gave chase once again.    



                                Pavil  later testified that, at one point, he                                                     got close enough to the driver to                                               



identify him as Maxie. Pavil estimated                                                         that  he was  not more                              than five feet away from                                       



Maxie at that time, an                                d  he stated that                     they were both underneath a lighted lamp post,                                                                        



traveling five to ten miles per hour. Pavil rolled down his window to get Maxie to stop,                                                                                                                          



but Maxie kept driving.   



                                A   second   police   officer,  William   Charles,   who   also   knew   Maxie  from   



previous interactions, participated in law enforcement efforts to apprehend the driver of                                                                                                                         



the four-wheeler.   Charles and Pavil followed                                                                  the four-wheeler, attempting to get the                                                           



driver to stop, but                        they lost sight of the four                                -wheeler multiple times. Approximately one                                                                  



hour   into   the  pursuit,   when   the  officers  had   lost   sight   of   the  four-wheeler,  Charles   



noticed a              green four               -wheeler parked on the tundra                                          with a person seated on it.                                    According   



to Charles,                he approached the four                                -wheeler, and when he got close                                              (approximately three                                



feet away)                ,  he could see that                        the person on it                       was Maxie, but Maxie then drove away                                                             .  



Charles later testified that he heard                                                Pavil  earlier in the pursuit radioing that he thought                                                                       



the  driver  was Maxie,  but Charles asserted that                                                                   his identification was indepen                                           dent of             



Pavil's suggestion.   



                                Each   time  the  officers  resumed  their   pursuit   of   the  four-wheeler,  they   



identified the four-wheeler as the same one that rammed the cab                                                                                          because it matched the                          



description in                    the report: a green four                              -wheeler with a windshield                                      . Pavil corroborated the                                  



                                                                                                  -  3  -                                                                                            2747 
  


----------------------- Page 4-----------------------

 description given by Alexie and Charlie, that the driver was wearing a big coat. The                                                                                                                                          



 officers also  testified they were able to identify Maxie because they were                                                                                                                     acquainted   



 with him from previous contacts                                                  . Both officers                      estimated that pri                          or to this incident, they                                   



 had interacted with  Maxie one to two times each  month, and Pavil  stated that  he spoke   



 to Maxie  in the grocery store just  days before the incident.   



                                  The police  were unable to stop the green four                                                                   -wheeler or contact the driver                                              



 on the            night of the incident                                , and they were similarly unable to locate the green four                                                                                         - 



 wheeler after the incident. Maxie's   face was not visibly injured when police arrested                                                                                                                                       



 him two days later                             , and neither officer noticed blood on his face during the chase.                                                                                                  



                                  One  of the                    other trial witnesses                               , Sammie Waska,   testified that he                                                      knew   



 Maxie because Maxie  used  to   date Waska's   daughter. Waska stated that he observed                                                                                                                                        



 Maxie with a                      green four                -wheeler with a windshield                                            on  the same evening of the taxi                                               cab- 



 ramming incident                              . Maxie  knocked   on   Waska's door   and   appeared to be                                                                                     intoxicated,   



 which prompted Waska to call                                                     the police.  Officer   Charles responded  to  Waska's  call   



but  did  not locate Maxie at Waska's residence.   



                                  Maxie's case proceeded to  a jury  trial. At trial                                                                    , Maxie's  defense was that   



 the State could not meet its burden                                                    of  proving  that he                          was the driver of the four                                     -wheeler.   



                                  Because identity was the only contested issue at trial, Maxie requested a                                                                                                                    



jury   instruction   on   eyewitness  identification,  comporting   with   the  Alask a  Supreme  



                                                                                         2  

 Court's decision  in   Young v. State                                                  ,  and he              submitted a proposed jury instruction                                                           . The   



 State also submitted a proposed instruction.                                                                  The trial court agreed to give an instruction                                                                   



 on eyewitness identification, but after reviewing the propo                                                                                        sals  submitted by each party,                                             



 the court crafted a hybrid instruction, using parts from each of the two proposals                                                                                                                          .    



                                                            

         2        Young v. State, 374 P.3d 395 (Alaska 2016).   



                                                                                                         -  4  -                                                                                                 2747 
  


----------------------- Page 5-----------------------

                     Maxie  was  convicted   of   third-degree   assault,  leaving   the  scene   of   an   

accident, and  first-degree  failure to  stop  at  the direction  of  a police  officer.3  

                                                                                                                      This appeal   



followed.   



                       



           Young v. State  and the disputed jury instruction in this case   



                     In   2016,  the  Alaska   Supreme  Court   decided   Young   v.   State,  which   



                                                                                                           4  

changed   the  law  in   Alaska  governing   eyewitness  identifications.   Prior   to   Young,  



Alaska courts had  followed  the two-part test  established  by  the United States Supreme  



Court    in    Manson    v.    Brathwaite   to    determine   the   admissibility    of    eyewitness   



                        5  

identifications.   



                     In   Young,  the  supreme  court   held   that   the  Brathwaite   test   provided   



                                                                                                                 6  

insufficient protection  against  the  risks  of  eyewitness  misidentification.  The   supreme   



court  explained  that  scientific research has identified several  factors, known  as "system   



variables"  and   "estimator   variables,"  that   are  relevant   to   evaluating   the  risk   of   a   



                            7  

misidentification.   System   variables  "are  manipulable  and   can   be  influenced   by   the   

criminal  justice   system   (such   as the instructions given   a witness during   a lineup)."8  

                                                                                                                                          



Estimator  variables "cannot  be influenced by  the criminal  justice  system  because they   



are related  to  environmental  conditions and  personal  characteristics (such  as the stress   



                                                            

     3     The jury   also found Maxie guilty   of   reckless driving, AS 28.35.400,   but the trial   



court merged this guilty   verdict into the conviction for first-degree failure to stop at the  

direction of a police officer.   



     4  

           Young, 374 P.3d 395.   



     5  

          Id.  at 405-06 (citing Manson v. Brathwaite , 432 U.S. 98 (1977)).   



     6    Id.  at 412-13.   



     7    Id.  at 417.   



     8    Id.   



                                                                 -  5  -                                                         2747 
  


----------------------- Page 6-----------------------

                                           9  

of the moment).                         "  In evaluating these variables, the                                                      Young  court crafted a new test for                                                    



determining wh                          ether eyewitness identifications should be admitted into evidence. We                                                                        



                                                                                                                                            10  

recently described that test in detail in  Brigman v. State .                                                                                    



                                 The   issue    in    this   case   does    not    concern    whether    the   eyewitness   



identifications   should   have  been   admitted  into   evidence.  Rather,  it   concerns  the   



instruction   the  court   provided   to   the  jury   about   how   to   evaluate  the  reliability   and   



accuracy of the eyewitness identifications that were already admitted into evidence.   



                                 This issue was also addressed in                                                    Young. The court recognized that e                                                       ven   



when a judge decides to  admit  an eyewitness identification, the judge should  "provide  



                                                                                                                                                                                       11  

the  jury   with   an  instruction   appropriate  to   the  context   of   the  case."                                                                                                       The  court   



accordingly held that                                  if eyewitness identification is a significant issue in a case,                                                                                        "the   



trial court should issue an appropriate jury instruction that sets out the relevant factors                                                                                                                               



                                                     12  

affecting  reliability."                                   The court asked                          the Alaska  Criminal Pattern Jury Instructions                                                                        



Committee   to   draft   a model   instruction   appropriate  for use                                                                                     in   future cases   that was                                    



                                                                                                                                    13  

"consistent with the principles" announced in   Young.                                                                                     



                                 In   making   this  request,  the  court   emphasized   that   the   reliability   of   



eyewitness    identifications   is    outside   the   jury's   common    knowledge   and    often   



contradicts commonsense understandings:   



                                 While it is the province of the jury to determine credibility                                                                                          

                                 of   witnesses,  the  reliability   of   eyewitness   identifications   

                                 frequently is not a matter within the knowledge of an average                                                                                          

                                 juror.   Many    of    the    factors   that    affect    reliability    are   



                                                            

        9       Id.   



         10     Brigman v. State, 513 P.3d 1072 (Alaska App. 2022).   



         11  

                 Young, 374 P.3d at  427.   



         12  

               Id . at 428.   



         13  

               Id .   



                                                                                                      -  6  -                                                                                               2747 
  


----------------------- Page 7-----------------------

                                  counterintuitive                              and,            therefore,                    not          coterminous                          with   

                                  common sense. Thus, while science has firmly established                                                                                                   

                                  the inherent unreliability of human perception and memory,                                                                        

                                  this  reality   is  outside   the  jury 's  common   knowledge,   and   

                                                                                                                                                                             [14]  

                                  often contradicts jurors commonsense understandings.                                                                                                



                                  Maxie's trial  was held  in  June 2019. At  that  time,  the criminal  pattern jury                                                                                                           



instructions committee had not yet issued a model instruction.                                                                                                   Maxie therefore drafted   



his own instruction based on                                               Young  and proposed it to the court.                                                         



                                  Maxie's instruction   emphasized that eyewitness identifications are often                                                                                                                    



unreliable and explained that scientific research has revealed several defects in human                                                                                                                                         



memory.   For    example,    Maxie's   proposed    instruction    stated    that    "[e]yewitness   



identification evidence must be scrutin                                                               ized   carefully,"   that   "[h]uman memory   is not   



foolproof,"  and  that  "[eyewitness]  identifications,  even  if  made in  good   faith, may  be   



mistaken."    



                                  Maxie's  proposed   instruction   also   described  a  series  of   factors  that,   



according to scientific research, can affe                                                             ct eyewitness identifications. For example, the                                                                          



proposed  instruction  stated that  "a  brief  or  fleeting  contact  is less likely  to  produce  an   



accurate  identification,"   that   the  "greater  the   distance  between   an   eyewitness  and   a   



perpetrator, the higher the ris                                             k   of   a mistaken identific                                    ation,"   and  that   "high   levels of   



stress can  reduce  an  eyewitness's ability  to  recall  and  make an  accurate identification."   



                                  The  State  proposed   its  own   much   shorter   instruction   on   eyewitness   



identification. Like Maxie's proposed   instruction, the   State's instruction   emphasized   



that  "evidence  of  an  eyewitness's identification  should  be evaluated  with  care," and  it   



listed a series of factors for jurors to consider in evaluating whether the witness made                                                                                                                                        



an accurate and reliable identificat                                                    ion.   



                                  But   unlike Maxie's proposed   instruction, the State's instruction   did   not   



reference scientific research on eyewitness identifications, and it did not explain that                                                                                                                                        



                                                            

         14  

                Id.  (citations and internal quotation marks omitted).   



                                                                                                         -  7  -                                                                                                  2747 
  


----------------------- Page 8-----------------------

eyewitness identifications are often unreliable. It also did not explain                                                                                                                      how   the listed   



factors affected the accuracy and reliability of identifications. It stated, for example,                                                                                                                                               



that   one  factor   to   be   considered   was  "How   long   was   the  witness  able  to   see  the   



perpetrator?" but  it  did  not  explain  that  a brief  or  fleeting  contact  is less likely  to  produce   



an accurate identification.   



                                   The trial   court   expressed   discomfort   with   Maxie's proposed   instruction   



because  it   described  the  results  of   scientific  research,  which   the  court   viewed   as   



equivalent to presenting scientific evidence rather than explainin                                                                                                            g the law. The court                                      



acknowledged   that   the  supreme  court   had   addressed   and   endorsed   much   of   that   



scientific  evidence   in   Young,  but   the  court   explained   that   "none   of   that   [scientific   



evidence]  has been  presented  in  this specific case." The court  ruled  that  given the lack                                                                                                                                         



of scientific evidence presented in Maxie's case, it did not "feel like [it had] the ability   



to go that far" -  i.e., to instruct the jury about the results of scientific research.   



                                   The  court   accordingly   declined   to   give  the  more  expansive   instruction   



requested by Maxie                                  .  The court instead crafted its own instruction, which it described as                                                                                                             



a "hybrid" of Maxie's proposed instruction and the State's. The hybrid instruction was   



somewhat   more  detailed  than   the  State's,  but   it   did   not   include  any   reference   to   



scientific research, did not suggest that eyewitness identifications are often mistaken,                                                                                                                                                



and   did   not   explain   how   the  listed  factors  affected  the  accuracy   of   eyewitness   



identifications.                                       



                                   In  early   2020,  after  Maxie's  trial,  the  Alaska  Criminal   Pattern   Jury   



Instructions Committee   approved a pattern jury instruction for use in cases involving                                                                                                                                                 



eyewitness  identification.   Much   like  Maxie's  proposed   instruction,  and   unlike  the   



instruction given by the trial court in this case, the pattern instruction caut                                                                                                                      ioned jurors                       



that eyewitness identifications can be unreliable, explained that this view was supported                                                                                                                                               



                                                                                                             -  8  -                                                                                                     2747 
  


----------------------- Page 9-----------------------

by   scientific  research,  and   described  in   detail   how   different   factors  affected  the   

reliability and accuracy of eyewitness identifications.15  

                                                                                     



                    In  a use note  attached  to  the pattern  instruction, the committee  explained   



that   the "instruction   is unique   among  jury   instructions, and   the committee   struggled   



with  the  Young   court's direction  to   characterize  the state of   scientific knowledge that   



                                                                                         16  

usually   comes to  juri es in   the form   of   expert   testimony."                        The committee   explained   



that "[t]he state of scientific knowledge evolves over time, and eyewitness instructions   



                                                                                                             17  

will need to be revised to remain consistent with scientific knowledge."                                         



                      



           Why we affirm Maxie's convictions   



                    On  appeal, Maxie argues that  the trial  court  erred  when  it  refused  to  give   



his proposed  instruction. Maxie argues that  his instruction  closely  resembles the pattern   



instruction, and  that  the pattern  instruction  more accurately  reflects the supreme court's   



intent in   Young.   



                    When the trial   court   declined   to   give Maxie's proposed   instruction, the   



court   explained  that   it  would  not  give an   instruction  to  the jury   on   scientific research   



that  had  not  been  presented in  the context of  Maxie's specific case,  particularly when   



the criminal  pattern  jury  instructions committee  had  not  yet  promulgated an appropriate   



instruction. We understand   the court's reluctance   to   instruct   the jury   about   scientific   



principles  where,   as  here,  the  defendant  did   not   present   expert  testimony,  scholarly   



articles,   or  treatises to   support  the proposed   instruction. But  the   Young   court   directed   



trial  courts,  in  cases where  eyewitness identification  is a significant  issue,  to  "issue an   



appropriate  jury   instruction   that   sets  out   the  relevant   factors  affecting   [eyewitness]   



                                                            

     15  

          Alaska Criminal Pattern Jury Instruction 1.24 (2020).   



     16  

          Use Note for Alaska Criminal Pattern Jury  Instruction 1.24 (2020).   



     17  

          Id.   



                                                              -  9  -                                                        2747 
  


----------------------- Page 10-----------------------

                               18  

 reliability."                       In issuing this directive, the                                                 Young   court   further   explained   that   "while   



 science  has  firmly   established   the  inherent   unreliability   of   human  perception   and   



 memory, this reality   is outside the jury's common   knowledge,   and   often contradicts   



                                                                                                     19  

jurors commonsense understandings."                                                                        



                                    We accordingly conclude that the supreme court intended that trial courts                                                                                                                          



 would issue instructions informing the jurors that scientific research has suggested that                                                                                                                                             



 eyewitness  identifications  can   be  unreliable.   Indeed,  because  the  unreliability   of   



 eyewitness identifications is "not a matter within the knowledge of an average juror                                                                                                                                            "  



 and often contradicts common                                                     sense, a prohibition on references to scientific research                                                                                            



 would make it extremely difficult to comply fully                                                                                         with the spirit of                              Young   in cases                            



 where that scientific research is relevant.   



                                    The criminal  pattern jury instructions committee evidently also interpreted                                                                                                                       



 Young  in this way. The pattern instruction refers to scientific research, although the use                                                                                                                                           



 note acknowledges that   "the committee   struggled  with  the  Young   court's direction  to   



 characterize the state of scientific knowledge that usually comes to juries in the form of                                                                                                                                            



                                                 20  

 expert testimony."                                    



                                    Our   interpretation   of   Young   is  further   supported   by   the  Young   court's   



                                                                                                                                                                                                            21  

 reliance on  the New  Jersey   Supreme Court's opinion   in   State v. Henderson                                                                                                                          .     As our   



 supreme court noted, its own analysis in   Young  "closely follows the framework set  out   



                                                                                                                                                                    22  

by the Supreme Court of New Jersey in                                                                       State v. Henderson                                  ."       After Henderson   (and   



 four years before                              Young  was decided), the New Jersey Supreme Court issued a pattern                                                                                                                     



                                                             

          18  

                   Young, 374 P.3d at 428.   



          19  

                Id.  (citations and internal quotation marks omitted).   



         20  

                Use Note for Alaska Criminal Pattern Jury Instruction 1.24 (2020).                                                                                                           



         21  

                State v. Henderson, 27 A.3d 872 (N.J. 2011).   



         22  

                   Young, 374 P.3d at 427.   



                                                                                                           -   10  -                                                                                                     2747 
  


----------------------- Page 11-----------------------

 instruction    designed    to    comport    with    Henderson .   Much    like   Alaska's   pattern   



 instruction, the New Jersey model instruction informs jurors that research has revealed   



that eyewitness identifications can be mistaken and instructs the jury about what factors                                                                                                              



                                                                                                                                                                                           23  

to consider in evaluating the reliability and accuracy of eyewitness identifications.                                                                                                            



                               For all these reasons, we conclude the trial court erred when it denied                                                                                                 



 Maxie's proposed  instruction  on  the grounds  that  it  lacked the authority  to  instruct  the   



jury  on  matters  of scientific                                    research  that  had  not  been  introduced  into  evidence  in   



 Maxie's case.    



                               We  ultimately   conclude,   however,  that   the   court's  legal  error   was  not   



prejudicial. Weighing most heavily in the balance is that this                                                                                 case does not involve a                                 



 stranger   identification. As several   courts have recognized, "identification   of   a person   



who is           well-known to the eyewitness generally does not give rise to the same risk of                                                                                                         



misidentification as does the identification of a person who is not well                                                                                            -known to the                      



                               24  

 eye-witness."                      Here, the officers who identified Maxie were not strangers to him, and                                                                                             



thus the risk of misidentification was significantly lower.                                                                          



                                                            

        23  

               New Jersey  Model Jury  Charges (Criminal), Identification (2012).   



        24  

               State v. Guilbert, 49 A.3d 705, 736  (Conn. 2012); see Haliym  v.  Mitchell ,  492  F.3d   

                                                               ("The  primary   concern  expressed  in  cases  discussing  the  

 680,  706   (6th   Cir.   2007)  

problems with eyewitness identification relates to a witness observing and subsequently   

 identifying  a stranger. Witnesses  are very  likely  to recognize under any  circumstance  the   

people in  their lives with whom they   are most   familiar,   and any  prior acquaintance with   

 another  person  substantially   increases  the  likelihood  of   an  accurate  identification."   

 (citation and  internal quotation marks omitted));  Rosario v. Ercole,  582 F.  Supp.  2d  541,   

 581   (S.D.N.Y.  2008)   ("Eyewitness identification by   a stranger   is even more   susceptible   

to  error  than  identification  by   someone  who  is  otherwise  familiar  with  an  alleged  

perpetrator.");  Bonnell   v.  Mitchel,   301   F.   Supp.   2d   698, 761   (N.D.   Ohio   2004)   ("The   

 danger in  eyewitness  testimony  is most pronounced when strangers  observe the  unexpected   

 commission of   a crime and sometime later try  to describe people and events involved in   

the crime. In  this  case,  while not initially  admitting it,  both  [eyewitnesses] were  acquainted   

with [the defendant] and recognized him   as the murderer. Their testimony  was therefore   

not subject to the unreliability  often present when strangers attempt to describe and identify   

persons .  .  . involved in a crime." (citation omitted)).   



                                                                                            -   11  -                                                                                      2747 
  


----------------------- Page 12-----------------------

                                        Additionally, although the instruction given by the court did not reference                                                                                                                                                



scientific  research,  the  instruction   still   told   the  jury   that   eyewitness  identifications  



should not be taken at face value                                                                   and should be examined critically. In particular, the                                                                                                          



instruction  warned  the  jury  that  "[e]yewitness identification   should  be examined  with   



care," and cautioned jurors to "consider the observations and  perceptions on which the   



identification was based, th                                                      e  witness's ability  to  make those observations and perceive   



events, and the circumstances under which the identification was made."   



                                        Furthermore,   the   court's  instruction   listed   all   but   one   of   the  estimator   



                                                                                                                                                                                         25  

variables  set   out   by   the  supreme  court's  decision   in   Young.                                                                                                                       Although   the  court's   



instruction   did   not   discuss   these   variables   as  thoroughly   as  the  current   pattern   jury   



instruction, many of these variables did not apply to the facts of this case (e.g., the                                                                                                                                                                            



presence of a weapon; whether the suspect is wea                                                                                                     ring a disguise; or the time between                                                                          



the  witness's  observation   and   their   identification   of   the  suspect).  Thus,  further   



discussion of these variables was not particularly relevant or material in the context of                                                                                                                                                                          



this case.   



                                        Ultimately, the factors that were most relevant to this case                                                                                                                -  the duration   



of   the  observation   and   the  environmental   conditions  attendant   to   it   -   were  those   



commonly understood by jurors and accordingly required little additional explanation.                                                                                                                                                                              



Jurors would understand                                                  , based on their own experiences and common sense, that if the                                                                                                                            



suspect was viewed in poor lighting conditions, from far away, for only a brief duration,                                                                                                                                                                          



or   when   the   person's   face  was  obstructed,  the  identification   would   be  less  reliable.   



Furthermore, the d                                     efense attorney relied on these factors in his closing argument, when                                                                                                                                       



he pointed out that the officers claimed to have identified Maxie as the driver of the                                                                                                                                                                             



                                                            

          25  

                    "Memory  decay/retention interval" was  the only  estimator variable not mentioned.   

But the concept that the accuracy of memory fades over time                                                                                                                             is consistent with jurors'   

everyday knowledge and common sense.   



                                                                                                                        -   12  -                                                                                                                   2747 
  


----------------------- Page 13-----------------------

four-wheeler even  though  the driver had covered  his face when  Pavil  drove by  him, and  



even  though  the officers'  observations were made after dark, in  poor  lighting, and  only   



for a short duration of  time.    



                     We  therefore  conclude  that,  even   if   the  trial   court   had   given   Maxie's   



proposed instruction, the additional  information  in Maxie's instruction  would  not have   



                                                                                            26  

appreciably affected the verdict under the facts of this case.                                   



  



           Conclusion   



                     The judgment of the superior court is AFFIRMED.   



                       



                                                            

     26  

           Young, 374 P.3d at 429-30 & n.232.   



                                                               -   13  -                                                       2747 
  

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