Author: Stephen Aarons

  • Rape Charges Dismissed

    Taos NM – Deputy Eighth Judicial District Attorney announced that all charges against Frankie Giron are being dismissed. A three-day jury trial had been scheduled later this month on criminal sexual penetration charges. Santa Fe defense attorney Steve Aarons explained that his client had told police when he was arrested that the woman had consented to sex and had made plans to see him again for a second date at the Gorge bridge.

  • 2018 Marquis Who’s Who in the World

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  • 2018 Southwest Super Lawyers

    Dear Stephen D Aarons,

    Congratulations on your selection to the 2018 Southwest Super Lawyers list!

    Sincerely,

    Bruce Harries
    Associate Publisher
    651-244-6795
    bruce.harries@thomsonreuters.com
  • Conviction in Taos CSP Case

    After a four day trial in Taos before Judge Emilio J. Chavez, David Lewis was convicted of all four counts of criminal sexual penetration (CSP) of a minor. He was remanded into custody for a 60-day evaluation before his sentence in January 2018. He will receive a minimum of eighteen years in prison with the maximum exposure in excess of sixty (60) years.

  • Acquittal in Las Cruces Federal Drug Case

    United States v. Manuel Pavón-Rodríguez

    United States District Court – District of New Mexico – Case No. 2:17-cr-01923-JB-2

       After a four day trial in Las Cruces Federal Court before Judge Robert Brack, a 12-person jury returned with four “not guilty” verdicts as to Manuel Pavón-Rodríguez. His attorney, Stephen D Aarons, explained that Mr. Pavón-Rodríguez had been indicted by the grand jury for possession with intent to distribute 246 pounds (111 kilograms) of illegal drugs. Mr. Pavón-Rodríguez and his co-defendant, John Milne, were arrested near Rodeo New Mexico and the drugs were discovered in five burlap backpacks in the back of Milne’s Ford Explorer. Mr. Milne was represented by two federal public defenders and he was convicted on all counts.

    Mr. Pavón-Rodríguez testified that he had emigrated to New Mexico over 15 years ago and is living in Santa Fe with his wife and four children. He needed to return to his birthplace after the death of h is parents to check up on his two brothers, one of whom has Downs Syndrome. He hired an outfit to return him illegally across the border. Others being transported earned their way by carrying the heavy back packs each loaded with 50-100 pounds of contraband, but Mr. Pavón-Rodríguez had paid a full fare and did not carry any drugs. Although Mr. Pavón-Rodríguez was released after his acquittal by all twelve jurors, it was not clear whether his immigration lawyer could obtain a stay from deportation given his family situation. Without any felony drug conviction, however, he will be eligible to apply in the future to become a permanent resident or naturalized citizen.


    Después de un juicio de cuatro días en el Tribunal Federal de Las Cruces ante el juez Robert Brack, un jurado de 12 personas regresó con cuatro veredictos de “no culpable” en cuanto al Manuel Pavón-Rodríguez. Su abogado, Stephen D Aarons, explicó que el Sr. Pavón-Rodríguez había sido acusado por el gran jurado de posesión con la intención de distribuir 246 libras (111 kilogramos) de drogas ilegales. El Sr. Pavón-Rodríguez y su codemandado, John Milne, fueron arrestados cerca de Rodeo New Mexico y las drogas fueron descubiertas en cinco mochilas de arpillera en la parte trasera del Ford Explorer de Milne. El Sr. Milne estuvo representado por dos defensores públicos federales y fue condenado por todos los cargos.

    El Sr. Pavón-Rodríguez testificó que había emigrado a Nuevo México hace más de 15 años y que vive en Santa Fe con su esposa y cuatro hijos. Tenía que regresar a su lugar de nacimiento después de la muerte de los padres de H para controlar a sus dos hermanos, uno de los cuales tiene el síndrome de Downs. Él contrató un equipo para devolverlo ilegalmente al otro lado de la frontera. Otros que se transportaban ganaban llevándose los pesados ​​mochilas cargadas con 50 a 100 libras de contrabando, pero el Sr. Pavón-Rodríguez había pagado una tarifa completa y no llevaba drogas. Aunque el Sr. Pavón-Rodríguez fue liberado después de su absolución por los doce miembros del jurado, no estaba claro si su abogado de inmigración podría obtener una suspensión de la deportación dada su situación familiar. Sin embargo, sin una condena por delitos graves de drogas, podrá postularse en el futuro para convertirse en residente permanente o ciudadano naturalizado.

     

    Count 1: On or about June 23, 2017, in Hidalgo County, in the District ofNew Mexico, and elsewhere, the defendants, JOHN LEROY MILNE and MANUEL PAVON-RODRIGUEZ, unlawfully, knowingly and intentionally combined, conspired, confederated, agreed, and acted interdependently with each other and with other persons whose names are known and unknown to the Grand Jury to commit an offense defined in 21 U.S.C. §§ 841(a)(l) and (b)(1)(B), specifically, distribution of 100 kilograms and more of marijuana. In violation of 21 U.S.C. § 846. Verdict: NOT GUILTY

    Count 2: On or about June 23, 2017, in Hidalgo County, in the District of New Mexico, the defendants, JOHN LEROY MILNE and MANUEL PAVON-RODRIGUEZ, unlawfully, knowingly and intentionally possessed with intent to distribute a controlled substance, 100 kilograms and more of a mixture and substance containing a detectable amount of marijuana. In violation of 21 U.S.C. §§ 841(a)(1) and (b)(1)(B), and 18 U.S.C.§ 2. Verdict: NOT GUILTY

  • Charges Dismissed against Robbery Suspect

    • By Phaedra Haywood | The New Mexican

    Two men who were held at gunpoint during a robbery of their medical cannabis production plant in 2013 broke down Monday while describing the ordeal during a jury trial of one of the defendants.

    “He put the gun to my head and and said, ‘stay calm,’ ” said Peter Ferrera a partner in the business, his voice cracking. “And I stayed calm and I just laid there with my head on the desk and the the gun to my head. I felt like I was gonna die. I felt like I wasn’t ever going to get to see my family again and that’s all I could think about.”

    Reyes Barela, 32, the defendant, is one of four men police believe were involved in the heist. The robbers tied the two businessmen to chairs and made off with $30,000 to $50,000 worth of cannabis that had been dried, cured and made ready for sale. They also stole Baker’s vehicle.

    Mark Baker, Ferrera’s friend and business partner, also became emotional recounting the robbery. Baker said he’d been working in another room that day and entered the area where Ferrera was after hearing loud voices.

    “Immediately there was a gun in my face, a barrel in my face,” said Baker who described his assailant as slight of build with “buggy eyes and a very big handgun.”

    “I immediately dropped my head and put my hands up and said, ‘Whatever you need. Whatever you want I will help you.’ I didn’t want to get shot in the head. I felt like if I threatened this guy the least amount he might pull the trigger.”

    Baker said he got out of the medical cannabis business because of the robbery.

    Neither eyewitness positively identified Barela, saying they did not get a good look at the robbers’ faces.

    Police Detective Paul Prentice testified that the initial investigation into the robbery turned up no useful leads. It was essentially a cold case until 2015, when a suspect in another case provided a tip that led police to Barela and several other men.

    Prosecutors showed a videotape Monday of their interview with Barela in which he repeatedly asked for assurance that the detectives would help him avoid jail time if he cooperated. He denied taking part in the robbery, then admitted being there but said he didn’t have a gun.

    Barela, of Rio Rancho, is charged with 12 felony counts. They include two counts of first-degree kidnapping — presumably for preventing the men from leaving the building during the robbery — two counts of robbery, two counts of aggravated assault with a deadly weapon, two counts of false imprisonment, theft of a motor vehicle, tampering with evidence and conspiracy to commit armed robbery.

     

    According to court records, Jose Nava, one of the other men whose names were mentioned in connection with the case faced charges almost identical to Barela’s until Sept. 21. Then the district attorney dismissed them. A man whom Prentice identified as someone who had placed himself at the crime scene and identified the others in 2015 does not appear to have been charged in the case.

     

    Nava’s attorney, Stephen Aarons, said Monday the charges against Nava were dismissed after the informant who placed Nava at the scene recanted. Aarons also said Nava had “a pretty ironclad alibi” that he was at work when the robbery happened.

     

    Barela is also the defendant in another pending case in the Santa Fe-area judicial district in which he’s charged with four counts of armed robbery and four counts of conspiracy. He was also charged with armed robbery and conspiracy to commit armed robbery in a 2015 case originating in Rio Rancho that was dismissed in May. And a Santa Fe jury in July acquitted Barela in a 2015 case in which he faced charges of aggravated burglary, conspiracy to commit aggravated burglary and larceny.

    Barela’s trial will continue Tuesday.

    Contact Phaedra Haywood at 986-3068 or phaywood@sfnewmexican.com. Follow her on Twitter at @phaedraann.

    [/column]

  • Ironclad Alibi Causes Dismissal

    Robbery of Cannabis Facility | Santa Fe New Mexican Article by Phaedra Haywood

    According to court records, Jose Nava, one of the other men whose names were mentioned in connection with the case faced charges almost identical to Barela’s until September 21. The the district attorney dismissed them. A man whom Prentice identified as someone who had placed himself at the crime scene and identified the others in 2015 does not appear to have been charged in the case.

    Nava’s attorney, Stephen Aarons, said Monday the charges against Nava were dismissed after the informant who placed Nava at the scene recanted. Aarons also said Nava had a “pretty ironclad alibi” that he was at work when the robbery happened.

  • Global Awards 2017 Winner Notification Criminal Law Firm of the Year – USA

    From: Navdeep Poonia
    Sent: Thursday, September 7, 2017 3:36 PM
    Subject: Global Awards 2017 – Winner Notification

    Good morning,
    Finance Monthly is delighted to inform you that following your recent shortlist announcement you are confirmed as the winner of a Finance Monthly Global Award 2017 for the following area:

    FINANCE MONTHLY GLOBAL AWARDS 2017

    SECTOR WINNER Criminal Law Law Firm of the Year USA

    Finance Monthly offer you our warmest congratulations and kindly ask for your immediate assistance as we begin the process of formulating the Finance Monthly Global Awards 2017 edition and commence production of commemorative trophies. The opportunity now presents itself for you to be featured within the winners’ edition as a profiled individual/firm.

    Finance Monthly Global Awards Edition 2017
    Now entering its 9th year, the Global Awards edition will be published in October. This specially commissioned awards edition will be produced in both hard copy and digital formats and distributed to the entire Finance Monthly readership of over 195,000+.

    The Finance Monthly Global Awards Edition is designed as a platform for individuals and firms to showcase their achievement to our corporate readership through an interview, biography and/or an advert. Additionally, it will also be free to view on our new dedicated awards site for a period of 12 months.

    Voting Process
    This time around competition has been fiercer than ever.

    Between March and May, a total number of 18,952 votes were registered.

    The following points were considered during the final selection process:

    The number of nominations received

    Supporting material, covering statements and evidence supplied

    Amount of documented activity in the last 12 months when compared to industry peers

    Involvement in significant deals, cases or notable work

    Recognised financial and/or legal expertise (by peer group)

    Innovation in client care

    Size (value) of involvement within transactions, deals and cases

    Previous accolades and entries within recognised financial and legal guides

    Navdeep Poonia Awards Manager
    t: 0044 (0) 1543 267632
    e: navdeep.poonia@finance-monthly.com
    w: finance-monthly.com

     

  • State v. Saavedra (NM App 2017)

    [column width=”1/1″ last=”true” title=”” title_type=”single” animation=”none” implicit=”true”]

    COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO

    No. 36,225

    STATE OF NEW MEXICO, Plaintiff-Appellee,
    v.
    CINDERELLA SAAVEDRA, Defendant-Appellant.

    APPEAL FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF SAN MIGUEL COUNTY
    Gerald E. Baca
    , District Judge

    Hector H. Balderas, Attorney General Santa Fe, NM for Appellee

    Aarons Law Firm PC Stephen D. Aarons Santa Fe, NM for Appellant

    MEMORANDUM OPINION

    HANISEE, Judge.

    Page 2

    {1} Defendant appeals from her conviction of aggravated battery without great bodily harm. We previously issued a notice of proposed summary disposition in which we proposed to affirm. Defendant has filed a memorandum in opposition thereto. After due consideration, we remain unpersuaded.

    {2} In her memorandum in opposition, Defendant reiterates her position that her testimony that she hit the victim “out of panic” was sufficient to warrant an instruction on simple battery as a lesser included offense because it supported her theory that she did so without any intent to injure the victim. [MIO 2] Defendant argues that her testimony established that she was having a panic attack, citing the fact that, in closing argument, the prosecutor characterized her testimony as having said that she was having a panic attack. [Id.] However, the memorandum in opposition acknowledges that Defendant’s exact words were that she hit the victim over the face and head “out of panic” and does not challenge our observation that prior to doing so and breaking the pool stick in half in the process, Defendant had become enraged, had pushed the victim to the ground, had armed herself with the pool stick after the two had been separated, had instigated the victim to come out of her room again, and had warned the victim not to approach her. [Id.; RP 195-97] Regardless of the prosecutor’s subsequent characterization of Defendant’s testimony, we remain unpersuaded that her isolated statement that she acted “out of panic[,]” without more, “tend[ed] to

    Page 3

    establish that [simple battery was] the highest degree of crime committed.” State v. Pettigrew, 1993-NMCA-095, ¶ 5, 116 N.M. 135, 860 P.2d 777. Contrary to Defendant’s assertion, our notice of proposed summary disposition did not state that “no reasonable jury could believe Defendant when she testified that she struck out of panic.” [MIO 5] Rather, we proposed to hold that her testimony, coupled with the other evidence presented at trial, was “inconsistent with a lack of intent to injure.” [CN 4] Defendant’s reliance on State v. Skippings, 2011-NMSC-021, 150 N.M. 216, 258 P.3d 1008, is misplaced. [MIO 5-6] In Skippings, the victim died after she and the defendant “became entangled, with [the v]ictim straddling [the d]efendant. [The d]efendant sought to extricate himself from [the v]ictim and forced her off of him, resulting in her landing on the asphalt roadway and cracking her skull.” Id. ¶ 6. Unlike the present case, there was no evidence in Skippings that the defendant had armed himself in advance with any type of weapon, and there was evidence in addition to the defendant’s testimony to suggest that he was merely trying to free himself from the victim. Id.

    {3} Defendant further cites State v. Seal, 1966-NMSC-123, 76 N.M. 461, 415 P.2d 845 (reviewing the sufficiency of the evidence to support conviction of simple battery), and State v. Hill, 2001-NMCA-094, 131 N.M. 195, 34 P.3d 139 (reviewing the denial of requested self defense, resisting, obstructing, or evading an officer, and

    Page 4

    entrapment instructions). [MIO 6] Neither one of these cases addresses the issue before us, and thus we fail to see how they support Defendant’s position.

    {4} Defendant further argues that our observation that her testimony was relevant to the issue of self-defense requires reversal. [MIO 7-8] Defendant cites a thirty-year-old out-of-state case dealing with imperfect self-defense as authority for the proposition that ” ‘one who truly believes that there is a need for self[-]defense cannot be said to act with intent to injure.’ ” [MIO 7] (quoting People v. McKelvy, 239 Cal. Rptr. 782 (1987)) (internal quotation marks and alterations omitted). However, the language relied upon by Defendant was dictum by a single judge, and Defendant fails to cite any authority demonstrating that it has been adopted in that jurisdiction or ours. [Id.] See In re Adoption of Doe, 1984-NMSC-024, ¶ 2, 100 N.M. 764, 676 P.2d 1329 (stating that where a party cites no authority to support an argument, we may assume no such authority exists). As such, we remain unpersuaded.

    {5} Defendant further argues that the jury’s questions whether “[the battery] can be thoughtless and spur of the moment?” and “what constitutes purpose and intention to harm?” establish that reversal is in order. [MIO 3] At most, the first inquiry demonstrates that at least one juror questioned the essential element of specific intent, whereas the second inquiry merely demonstrates that at least one juror wished to receive additional definitions. As such, we hold that these questions do not establish

    Page 5

    that there was “some evidence tending to establish that [simple battery was] the highest degree of crime committed.” Pettigrew, 1993-NMCA-095, ¶ 5. For the same reason, we hereby deny Defendant’s motion to supplement the record proper with these jury questions.

    {6} Therefore, and for the reasons stated in our calendar notice, we affirm.

    {7} IT IS SO ORDERED.

    /s/_________
    J. MILES HANISEE, Judge

    WE CONCUR:

    /s/_________
    MICHAEL E. VIGIL, Judge

    /s/_________
    TIMOTHY L. GARCIA, Judge

    This memorandum opinion was not selected for publication in the New Mexico Appellate Reports. Please see Rule 12-405 NMRA for restrictions on the citation of unpublished memorandum opinions. Please also note that this electronic memorandum opinion may contain computer-generated errors or other deviations from the official paper version filed by the Court of Appeals and does not include the filing date.

     

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