site
stats

The State v. Jodi Arias… and Juan Martinez

Due to AZ Mirror website access being blocked for non-US readers, Michael Kiefer’s full article has been reproduced below:

  • Click here to read the Opinion Document (29 pages)
  • Click here to read the Decision Document (16 pages)

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

From The AZ Mirror, March 27th:

The State of Arizona v. Jodi Arias … and Juan Martinez

The case caption said, “State of Arizona v. Jodi Ann Arias,” but it might just as well have said “State of Arizona v. Juan M. Martinez.”

Not surprisingly, the Arizona Court of Appeals upheld Arias’s conviction and life sentence for the brutal 2008 murder of her sometime lover, Travis Alexander.

In her appeal, Arias alleged that she had been denied a fair trial because of the circus-like atmosphere in the courtroom and excessive publicity. She also claimed that misconduct by Martinez, the deputy county attorney who led the prosecution, thoroughly tainted the procedure. And she said that Martinez had improperly dismissed potential jurors because they were female, and especially if they had experienced domestic violence.

The three-judge panel dispatched the jury-selection issues in a separate memorandum opinion, meaning it could not be cited as precedent.

Then, in the main opinion, they quickly dispelled the publicity argument, saying that it did not sway the jury.

But what was surprising is the number of pages — 20 out of 29 — devoted to Martinez’s behavior during trial: how he bullied witnesses and Arias herself, suggested that a psychologist had romantic feelings for Arias, appealed to the juror’s passions and fears, and promoted himself by signing autographs on the courthouse steps.

“Prosecutorial misconduct undeniably permeated this case,” Judge Jennifer Campbell wrote for the majority. “Rather than a few isolated missteps, a pattern of intentional misconduct saturated the trial.”

Still, it was not enough to award Arias a new trial. The jury would still have come back with a guilty verdict, the panel concluded.

And in a case where there was “overwhelming evidence of guilt,” Campbell wrote, it was not prudent to “reverse convictions merely to punish a prosecutor’s misdeeds or to deter future misconduct.”

Instead, the panel made the rare decision to refer Martinez to the State Bar of Arizona, the semi-governmental state board that licenses and disciplines attorneys, for possible disciplinary action.

That, in effect, is a Bar complaint, and one that comes from high up the judicial food chain.

In a concurring opinion that almost read like a dissent, Judge Kenton Jones wrote, “Yet, here we are, confronted with a prosecutor whose repeated misconduct toward the superior court, other attorneys, principals, and witnesses in a criminal case was not only abhorrent to the rules of professional conduct — and clearly unnecessary to obtain a conviction — but broadcast over and over again, hour after hour each day, throughout a sixty-seven-day trial and the non-stop hours of nationwide media coverage that followed.“

Jones seemed to question why the Bar hasn’t already dealt with Martinez and his repeated Bar complaints. More on that later.

Arias and Alexander carried on an obsessive and combative sexual relationship for nearly two years. Arias had moved from Arizona to get away from it, but couldn’t stay away. And while ostensibly on a cross-country trip to Salt Lake City, via Monterey, California, and Utah National Parks, she swung down to Mesa for one more tryst with Alexander.

Five days later, Alexander’s decomposing body was found in the shower of his Mesa home.  He had been shot in the head, stabbed 27 times and his throat was slit. Arias admitted killing him, but swore it was in self-defense.

A jury did not believe her, and after a tumultuous live-streamed trial, convicted her of first-degree murder in 2013. But they could not reach a unanimous decision on whether to sentence her to death. Arias went back to trial in 2015, and the second jury deadlocked, as well, resulting in a mandatory natural life sentence for Arias.

I sat through both trials. I interviewed Arias and talked to her on the phone a few times. I know her defense team. I also have known and reported on Martinez for nearly 20 years. I have weathered the ongoing social-media shit storm from all of their obsessed fans and haters.

I have no doubt that Arias killed Alexander. She admitted it. I also don’t doubt she did it in a fit of rage.

Unlike the Court of Appeals panel, I never bought into the circumstantial evidence that Martinez used to prove premeditation. Martinez harped on the fact that she had extra gas cans in her car; so do a lot of Western folks who plan to drive cross country and camp at national parks. She rented a car; hers was a clunker. She dyed her hair; women often do that. 

But you don’t need days and weeks of scheming to allege premeditation. A few minutes of reflection are enough.

Just days before the trial began, Martinez changed the physical facts of the case, switching from a theory that Arias first shot Alexander, then stabbed him and slit his throat to a new theory that she first stabbed him, then slit his throat and then finished him off with a shot. Perhaps just coincidentally, that makes the crime seem colder, crueler, more heinous — aggravating factors that would allow for a death sentence.

Years ago, an Arizona Supreme Court justice told me she never understood why some prosecutors felt they had to exaggerate and embellish in slam-dunk cases.

Juan Martinez stands out in that group.

The case-law language about the court’s refusal to throw out cases to punish a prosecutor in the Arias case was cited to an Arizona Supreme Court opinion, State of Arizona v. Bryan Hulsey. (It actually first appeared in an earlier case.) Hulsey killed a Glendale police officer in 2007 and was sentenced to death. Martinez was the prosecutor.  

The misconduct allegations did not merit reversal, the court ruled. Hulsey was instead granted a new sentencing under case law from another case involving prosecutor misconduct, State of Arizona v. Shawn Lynch.

Lynch was convicted and sentenced to death for murdering a man in Scottsdale in 2001. The prosecutor? You guessed it: Juan Martinez. When Lynch appealed his case to the Arizona Supreme Court, he alleged numerous instances of misconduct by Martinez. The justices upheld the sentence and the conviction despite the alleged misconduct.

But then Lynch’s case went up to the U.S. Supreme Court, and the justices there noted that Martinez had told the jury that, if they didn’t sentence Lynch to death, he might get out on parole and kill again. Except there was no parole for first-degree murder in Arizona at the time of Lynch’s sentencing. If the jury had spurned death, Lynch would have been sentenced to natural life in prison with no chance of release. 

The high court threw out the sentence and Lynch died of hepatitis C before he could be retried.

But findings of prosecutor misconduct are not de facto Bar complaints. And the two things are not synonymous, even if they may overlap. Prosecutor misconduct is determined by a judge. Bar complaints are about attorney ethical misconduct, which is determined by the Bar. Prosecutor misconduct refers to actions taken during trial; ethical misconduct relates to how an attorney interacts with clients and judges and other sworn officers of the court.

For example, in a footnote, the opinion in Arias’s appeal referred to a sidebar at Judge Sherry Stephens’s bench during the trial, when Martinez said that if he were married to defense attorney Jennifer Willmott, he would “fucking kill myself.” The appellate court noted that the utterance was not heard by the jury and therefore was not an instance of prosecutor misconduct.

But it was alleged in a Bar complaint as ethical misconduct because it occurred between officers of the court.

Martinez has been the subject of numerous Bar charges since the Arias trial. Several were dismissed, earning Martinez the nickname “Teflon Juan.”  

There are a number pending, including for comparing a Jewish attorney to Hitler; for lying about his sexual affair with a blogger during the Arias trial and about how long he stayed in touch with a juror dismissed from the Arias trial who sent him photos of her naked breasts; and for revealing information about another Arias juror.

The Maricopa County Attorney’s Office has spent hundreds of thousands of dollars in attorney’s fees defending Martinez against them. That may end, as the office has moved to fire Martinez – not for prosecutor or ethical misconduct, but for HR misconduct in the #MeToo era.  

Martinez was accused not only of inappropriate approaches to women in his office, but for retaliating after they reported him.

What happens now remains to be seen. If the county legal help is cut off, can Martinez continue to fight the Bar charges? Will he defend himself? Or will he be forced to enter into a disciplinary deal with the Bar?

Nor has Arias reached a dead end. She can still appeal to the Arizona Supreme Court. She can petition the Maricopa County Superior Court for post-conviction relief if she thinks there is new evidence or that her attorney was ineffective. Then it can bounce around the federal courts for decades.  

Consider the notorious case of Debra Milke, who was convicted of having her four-year-old son murdered in 1989 and sentenced to death. After spending 24 years in custody — one year shy of a life sentence — her conviction and sentence were overturned in the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals because of prosecutorial misconduct. The Arizona Court of Appeals ruled that double jeopardy would attach if she were retried. She is free today.

As Yogi Berra said, “It ain’t over til it’s over.”

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

UPDATE: The JAA Appellate Fund total currently stands at $99,192.34 — so let’s be sure to keep the momentum rolling so the fund total can push on towards the ultimate target of $250,000. That in turn will help towards covering all the legal fees associated with appealing Jodi’s wrongful conviction.

All donations via Justice4Jodi.com go directly to the fund. It is also the ONLY website authorized to collect donations.

In addition, please DO NOT, under any circumstances, donate through any other website or Facebook page/group claiming to be “official” and/or acting with Jodi’s approval or authorization. The same applies to any “Jodi Membership Clubs”, groups or fake Trust funds that have been set up. These sites are bogus – they continue to steal money from Jodi’s future – and they should be actively avoided. If you are aware of any such sites, please help Jodi by clicking here and reporting them.

Remember… each day that passes takes us one day closer to Jodi’s release date.

we are team jodi - and we will be victorious

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

As always, be sure to leave your thoughts & comments below…

SJ
Team Jodi #WINNING <<<

Click the banner below to read Jade’s post – “Justice Denied: Why The Jurors Got It Wrong & How The Facts Decimate The State’s Case Against Jodi Arias.”:

Read - Justice Denied - Why The Jurors Got It Wrong & How The Facts Decimate The State's Case Against Jodi Arias

32 Comments

  1. Came across this was thinkIng does she have because a mental disability schizophrenia

    And it’s desperado days in az

    “Crime of passion law”

    “Invisible elements”

    The weather heat exhaustion I go cray and it’s cold

    Delirium
    Serious disturbance in mental abilities that results in confused thinking and reduced awareness of surroundings.
    Common causes of this symptom
    Delirium can have causes that aren’t due to underlying disease. Examples include intoxication or sleep deprivation.

    Commits second degree murder as a crime of passion. This means that the crime was not premeditated, but is instead the result of “sudden quarrel or heat of passion or as a result of provocation.” Causes the death of another through recklessness.

    Crime of passion (continued)

    What causes crimes of passion?
    The different reasons for crimes of passion are numerous. Common motives include jealousy, revenge, fear and anger. These feelings may be conscious or unconscious. The act of killing may be spontaneous or premeditated.

  2. Something is going on with a motion to strike the caricature of a “memorandum and opinion” report from the CoA but it seems these are only formaluties regarding names of Jodi’s counsel.

    I guess this report/result cannot be motioned for reconsideration correct?

    https://www.google.de/url?sa=t&source=web&rct=j&url=http://apps.supremecourt.az.gov/aacc/appella/1CA/CR/CR150302.PDF&ved=2ahUKEwj_oJXMkcToAhVVmXIEHZ__BAQQFjAAegQIARAB&usg=AOvVaw3fNDGJ9KikTLMkSfb8Gj9B

  3. What makes you think the panel’s decision can’t be appealed to the whole CoA? My guess would be that that will be a judgment call by Jodi’s attorneys, but I don’t know the rules.

    • Hi Alan,

      someone close to Jodi, she visits her regularly, told me it’s final and I also read it somewhere.
      Still, it’s not entirely clear/obvious how reliable both sources are regarding such specific legal matters. That’s why I’m asking if there’s a law professional here, who is also familiar with AZ law, who can answer that question with 100 % certainty.
      From a rational/reasonable standpoint, but law people/rules are not rational/reasonable at all, it should be allowed to question the decision, especially when these (likely biased or politically corrupted) morons from the Court of Appeals impudently surf the wave of “overwhelming evidence” over the whole length of that piece of garbage but as nothing more than a shallow and empty word shell but then go ahead and provide literally nothing to back it up, but only 1 very weak even illegally provided point of circumstancial “evidence” (the burglary/gun) and 3 points of no evidence value whatsoever, much less “overwhelming” (renting a car on the trip, use of gas cans in the desert, temporarily switched off phone but switched on again IN AZ).
      That whole caricature of a report/decision regarding the case is a fucking joke and an insult to intelligence, at least for people with an attention span > 0 and some intellectual capabilities, honesty and decency, except for the major part about the misconduct by the prosecution. But even here the ridiculously absurd conclusion regarding the misconduct, that it didn’t result in an unfair/tainted trial, is like an impudent slap in the face for anyone who reads this crap and can think for 10 cents.

      So long and never forget, viruses are people as well, like companies, and want to live 🙂

      Frank

    • I wrote Jody about doing some artwork or sign autographs and I got a reply from Perryville prison or I emailed her. I think she’s a very talented artist. It is just a shame of how her appeal turned out hope for the best and thanks for pulling for maybe this will help impact for a later date.
      John Miller
      civil investigation incensed.

  4. Yeah Alan, unbelievable, also his Tweets and the cartoon teaser video about those two follow – up books he has published on Twitter/YouTube.
    I’ve commented that there…what a cheap and pathetic creature/loser. *raises eyevow*

    On a lighter note:

    As opposed to what most or rather all of us assumed, the Court of Appeals decision seems not to be final and a review is at least an option?!:

    https://documentcloud.adobe.com/link/review?uri=urn%3Aaaid%3Ascds%3AUS%3A88928f7a-7bf0-4461-9e22-1e96b5688285

    • Though just now revealed, this HR appeal is nearly two months old and presumably made effectively moot by the CoA panel’s opinion. I haven’t looked at the civil-service rules, but surely a prosecutor can be fired when a court finds he’s committed knowing rampant misconduct.

    • A vendetta, huh? Rolling my eyes. If anyone had a vendetta against them it was Jodi Arias. Lady Justice needs to step up her program in AZ. Still here praying and hoping Jodi will Be Free one day soon.

  5. FYI…I emailed Jodi and she emailed me back last night. She has a legal bill of $15,000. $7,500 was already paid but the other $7,500 is due soon. This legal bill is from the bar complaint against Juan. She doesn’t want to take the money from her appellate fund so if anyone can donate then please do. Obviously times are hard for everyone right now but if you’re able too donate any amount Jodi would appreciate it! If not, no worries. Donate at justice4jodi.com Thanks!

    • Hi Alan! You’re correct. Jodi said she wants to avoid using the principal balance in the trust but I guess any new money there wouldn’t be taken from what’s already in there. She also said the art site as well.

  6. What happens if she does get balanced pay correctly will it effect any on going future action on next appeal process.

  7. As before, it’s important to pay this bill so her lawyers will continue to represent her in the upcoming trial of the Martinez bar complaint. Remember that he hasn’t yet received any punishment at all through the bar disciplinary process and this trial is the big chance for that.

  8. What’s up everybody!!!! As you can guess, Covid-19 shutdown the whole world practically except your local grocery store but included the local library I use for PC access. Only in a pandemic!!!!!
    I see that JM got canned by AZ which I stated in another post was about time!
    I also saw that her conviction was affirmed by the COA in AZ which I would imagine, we all thought would happen. I hope that AZ was able to protect everybody in there as AZ has become a new hotspot along with most of the southwest and Florida. If anybody has any idea on how long the next appeals timeline is, they may want to post it so we can use it as an “unofficial calendar” of sorts.
    I am impressed that Perryville does allow tablets for communication.

  9. Please Donate to the Appeals Fund for Jodi’s Birthday!!!! Let’s all help her get these attorney bills paid. Please GIVE, Jodi needs our help everyone!!!!!
    HAPPY BIRTHDAY TO JODI!!!!! FREE JODI ARIZONA!!!!!
    Still Praying for Divine Intervention!

  10. Looks like the Arizona Star shining upon Martinez is about to go out. Teflon Juan may no longer be covered in teflon.

  11. Martinez agreed to disbarment today! Suddenly everything seems to be going Jodi’s way. This result is due in large part to her private lawyers, Adams and Clark, and so also to everyone who contributed to paying their bills.

  12. Help me here somebody. Does his disbarment include allegations that he shared information from Jodi’s trial outside of the court room? Isn’t it also alleged that he received information from the woman he was having an affair with? If any of these questions are fact, would that not lead to a new trial for Jodi…..the trial was tainted!
    Yes Jodi’s lawyers are worth their salt for sure.

Comments are closed.

Previous Story

Martinez Sacked

Next Story

Juan Martinez – DISBARRED – R.I.P.

Latest from Latest News

HAPPY THANKSGIVING!

From Jodi: Hello, hello, hello! It’s the most wonderful time of the year again and there’s

Nothing To Fear…

From Jodi: Hey All! I drew this cute, spooky zombie girl with Halloween in mind. Under

Fine Feral Felines

Fine Feral Felines (Foreword by Jodi Arias) Recently, I read what was probably the most adorable