State v. Rodriguez ( 2016 )


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    1          IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO
    2 STATE OF NEW MEXICO,
    3          Plaintiff-Appellee,
    4 v.                                                             NO. S-1-SC-34581
    5 RIGOBERTO RODRIGUEZ,
    6          Defendant-Appellant.
    7 APPEAL FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF BERNALILLO COUNTY
    8 Kenneth H. Martinez, District Judge
    9 Bennett J. Baur, Chief Public Defender
    10 Kimberly Chavez Cook, Assistant Appellate Defender
    11 Santa Fe, NM
    12 for Appellant
    13 Hector H. Balderas, Attorney General
    14 Kenneth H. Stalter, Assistant Attorney General
    15 Santa Fe, NM
    16 for Appellee
    17                                             DECISION
    18 CHÁVEZ, Justice.
    1   {1}   Defendant Rigoberto Rodriguez was convicted of multiple felony counts for
    2 his participation in a double murder. A jury convicted Defendant of two counts of
    3 premeditated first-degree murder by a deliberate killing, two counts of felony murder
    4 with armed robbery as the predicate felony for both counts, and four counts of
    5 conspiracy. The district court merged the two convictions for felony murder with the
    6 two first-degree murder convictions. The court did not merge any of the conspiracy
    7 convictions.
    8   {2}   Defendant raises several issues on appeal that can be grouped into four
    9 categories. First, Defendant argues that the district court erred in admitting time lines
    10 and maps regarding calls from various cell phones for lack of foundation, stating
    11 more specifically for the first time on appeal that the basis for the objection was
    12 hearsay and a violation of the Confrontation Clause. U.S. Const. amend. VI; N.M.
    13 Const. art. II, § 14. Second, Defendant claims that the evidence was not sufficient to
    14 support his convictions under the Due Process Clause. U.S. Const. amend. V; N.M.
    15 Const. art. II, § 18. Third, Defendant maintains that the district court failed to instruct
    16 the jury on attempted armed robbery when the predicate felony for felony murder was
    17 either armed robbery or attempted armed robbery. See UJI 14-202 NMRA; UJI 14-
    18 2801 NMRA. Fourth, Defendant contends that the Double Jeopardy Clause requires
    2
    1 that three of the four conspiracy convictions be vacated because there was only one
    2 overarching conspiracy. U.S. Const. amend. V; N.M. Const. art. II, § 15. For the
    3 following reasons, we affirm all of Defendant’s convictions except for three of his
    4 conspiracy convictions.
    5 I.      BACKGROUND
    6   {3}   On January 27, 2010, Jarlena Anderson was in her bedroom watching
    7 television in a house that was also occupied by her sister, Connie Maldonado (victim
    8 Connie), and David Maldonado (victim David), who was victim Connie’s ex-
    9 husband. Although Jarlena’s bedroom door was closed, the walls were thin enough
    10 for her to hear victim David talking on the phone. Victim David said that he was
    11 home alone, even though victim Connie and Jarlena were also there. Jarlena
    12 overheard victim David tell victim Connie that “Rico” or “Rigo” was coming over.
    13 Approximately five or ten minutes later Jarlena heard a beep from the home’s alarm
    14 system, which suggested to her that someone had entered the house from the garage.
    15 She heard victim David say that he “didn’t have anything” and, in her opinion, “you
    16 could tell that there was fear in his voice.” Next she heard victim Connie say “Don’t
    17 do this here. Don’t do this at my mom’s house . . . .” A male voice told victim
    18 Connie to “shut the f*** up.” Victim Connie said that “all they had was leather
    19 jackets.” For a moment everything was silent, then Jarlena heard a single gunshot.
    3
    1 After the gunshot, which killed victim David, Jarlena heard two men speaking in
    2 Spanish, but she did not understand what they said. Jarlena then heard victim Connie
    3 say “Why are you doing this, Rigo? Don’t do this. I won’t tell.” Jarlena waited for
    4 a few minutes until it sounded as though the intruders had left, then ran across the
    5 street to her sister Benita’s house. Jarlena and Benita returned to Jarlena’s house,
    6 where they saw the victims’ bodies and called 911 at 7:20 p.m. As we will discuss
    7 later in this decision, the timing of the call to the police was significant because cell
    8 phone records for phones belonging to both of the victims, Defendant, and his two
    9 alleged accomplices recorded that there had been calls between their phones shortly
    10 before the murders occurred, but not afterwards.
    11   {4}   Victim David was shot in the head by a bullet fired from six inches to a few
    12 feet away. Victim Connie bled to death from numerous stab wounds to her face,
    13 scalp, and neck. Victim Connie also had multiple cuts on her hands and wrists
    14 consistent with trying to defend herself from a knife attack.
    15   {5}   There were no eyewitnesses to the murders, DNA evidence did not implicate
    16 Defendant or his conspirators, and bloody footprints found at the scene were
    17 inconclusive. The State’s case was based largely on circumstantial evidence and
    18 buttressed by Mario Martinez, who testified that Defendant had told him the details
    4
    1 of how Defendant and Jaime Rodriguez murdered the victims.
    2 II.     DISCUSSION
    3 A.      The Cell Phone Evidence Was Admissible
    4   {6}   Evidence presented by the State at trial included phone calls that occurred
    5 shortly before the murders between cell phones that were alleged to belong to the
    6 victims; Defendant; Jaime Rodriguez, who is Defendant’s brother; and Cassandra
    7 Kelso, who is Defendant’s girlfriend and the owner of the getaway car. Amber
    8 Dugan, an employee of Rocky Mountain Information Network, which provides
    9 assistance to police departments, was the State’s final witness regarding the cell
    10 phone evidence. The purpose of her testimony was to introduce charts of cell phone
    11 calls between the victims and their accused murderers based on cell phone records
    12 that had been admitted into evidence.
    13   {7}   The Dugan exhibits that are at issue on appeal are Exhibits 122 through 125.
    14 When preparing her exhibits, Dugan relied on Sprint Nextel and Cricket records that
    15 had previously been admitted into evidence without objection as Exhibits 115, 119,
    16 and 120. Exhibit 122 is a map based on Cricket records showing the latitudes and
    17 longitudes of the towers pinged by 315-1436, which was victim David’s phone, and
    18 435-5944, which was Kelso’s phone, to indicate the locations of the phones between
    5
    1 the hours of 6:00 and 11:59 p.m. on the night of January 27, 2010. The map legend
    2 lists the phone numbers as being “Potentially Associated with Listed Names.” The
    3 map shows the location of the crime scene and that both phones were communicating
    4 with the same tower near the crime scene. The map also identifies where Defendant
    5 was staying and shows that Kelso’s phone was communicating with a tower near
    6 Defendant’s house both before and after the murders.
    7   {8}    Exhibit 123 is a chart based on Sprint Nextel records showing calls dialed from
    8 and received by Defendant’s cell phone, 353-6451, between 6:00 and 7:00 p.m. on
    9 the night of the murders. Four of the twelve calls were between Defendant’s cell
    10 phone and victim David’s cell phone, 315-1436. The other eight calls were between
    11 Defendant and Jaime.
    12   {9}    Exhibit 124 is a chart based on Cricket records showing calls dialed from and
    13 received by Kelso’s cell phone between 6:00 and 7:30 p.m. on the night of the
    14 murders. Six of the twelve calls before the murders occurred were to 353-6450, a
    15 phone that Defendant shared with Kelso. Three of the other calls were to Jaime, one
    16 call was to victim Connie, and two calls were to victim David.
    17   {10}   Exhibit 125 is a chart based on Cricket records showing calls dialed from and
    18 received by victim David’s cell phone, 353-6451, between 6:38 and 7:06 p.m. on the
    6
    1 night of the murders. Four calls were with Defendant’s cell phone and two were with
    2 Kelso’s cell phone, 435-5944.
    3   {11}   Early during Dugan’s testimony and just after she identified Exhibits 115, 119,
    4 and 120 as the records she received in the case, defense counsel asked to approach
    5 the bench, where he objected to what he anticipated would be Dugan’s testimony.
    6 The ground for his objection was the lack of foundation for Dugan to testify that 353-
    7 6451, the phone that was registered to Hector Rodriguez, belonged to Defendant, and
    8 the phone registered to Casandra Mendosa belonged to Cassandra Kelso. The district
    9 court denied Defendant’s objection, stating that the evidence would be “more of a
    10 compilation and summary of the evidence that has preceded it,” and therefore the
    11 objection for lack of foundation went to the factual weight the jury could determine
    12 to give the evidence rather than admissibility of the evidence as a matter of law.
    13   {12}   We examine the admission of this evidence for an abuse of discretion. State v.
    14 Stanley, 
    2001-NMSC-037
    , ¶ 5, 
    131 N.M. 368
    , 
    37 P.3d 85
    . We will reverse the
    15 district court’s evidentiary ruling only if we conclude that the ruling is clearly
    16 untenable or not justified by reason because the ruling is against the logic, facts, and
    17 circumstances of the case. See State v. Rojo, 
    1999-NMSC-001
    , ¶ 41, 
    126 N.M. 438
    ,
    18 
    971 P.2d 829
    . We conclude that the district court did not abuse its discretion because
    7
    1 prior testimony and exhibits that had been admitted into evidence supplied the
    2 foundation for the Dugan exhibits marked as Exhibits 122 through 125.
    3   {13}   Agent Paul Hernandez from the United States Marshals Service, who
    4 investigated the ownership of the phones and the phone calls that were placed near
    5 the time of the murders did not testify, but the results of his investigation were
    6 referenced by Detective Paige Lavilla, who was the lead detective on the case and
    7 who investigated the cell phone records with Agent Hernandez. Detective Lavilla’s
    8 testimony regarding which cell phone number belonged to which person is set out in
    9 summary format for ease of reading. She testified that
    10          315-1392 belonged to victim Connie;
    11          315-1436 belonged to victim David;
    12          353-6451 was registered to Hector Rodriguez, but belonged to
    13          Defendant Rigoberto Rodriguez;
    14          353-6450 belonged to Defendant and Kelso;
    15          319-9680 belonged to Jaime Rodriguez; and
    16          435-5944 was registered to Casandra Mendosa, but actually belonged
    17          to Cassandra Kelso.
    18   {14}   Detective Lavilla acknowledged during direct examination that Agent
    19 Hernandez conducted the investigation to determine which phones belonged to
    8
    1 Defendant and to Kelso. During both cross-examination and recross-examination,
    2 Defendant emphasized that Detective Lavilla relied exclusively on Agent Hernandez
    3 to tie the phones registered to Hector Rodriguez and Casandra Mendosa to Defendant
    4 and Cassandra Kelso, respectively. Thus, rather than objecting to Detective Lavilla’s
    5 testimony as hearsay during trial or moving to strike her testimony, Defendant left it
    6 for the jury to give the testimony the weight that the jury thought it deserved.
    7   {15}   Three other witnesses testified prior to Detective Lavilla about the cell phone
    8 numbers and who used the phones. Mario Martinez, who knew Defendant, testified
    9 that Defendant told him that Defendant and Jaime had committed the murders, and
    10 Martinez also testified about the details of the murders that Defendant had told him.
    11 Regarding the phone numbers, Martinez testified that
    12          353-6451 belonged to Defendant;
    13          353-6450 belonged to Defendant and Kelso; and
    14          319-9680 belonged to Jaime Rodriguez.
    15   {16}   Jarlena, victim Connie’s sister, testified that victim Connie’s phone number
    16 was 315-1392 and victim David’s was 315-1436. Sylvia Duran, who was Jaime’s
    17 girlfriend at the time of the murders, testified under subpoena about the ownership
    18 and users of the cell phones in question. The only phone number that was not
    9
    1 accounted for by witnesses other than Detective Lavilla was 435-5944, which
    2 Detective Lavilla testified that Agent Hernandez told her belonged to Kelso.
    3   {17}   The State also introduced phone records from Sprint Nextel and Cricket.
    4 Norman Ray Clark, III, a records custodian with Sprint Nextel, authenticated various
    5 phone records that were admitted into evidence without objection. The records
    6 admitted as Exhibit 114 were for 353-6451, which Detective Lavilla and Martinez
    7 both attributed to Defendant. Phone number 353-6451 was associated with a prepaid
    8 phone, and the subscriber was listed as Hector Rodriguez. Addresses and names for
    9 Sprint Nextel prepaid phones are not verified, and if a customer does not give an
    10 address, Sprint Nextel assigns a standard address in Irvine, California, which was
    11 done with this prepaid phone number.
    12   {18}   Sprint Nextel call records also confirmed the cell phone identification. Exhibit
    13 115 is the complete call record in this case for 353-6451, which was Defendant’s cell
    14 phone, and Exhibit 123 is the summary of relevant calls in this case prepared by
    15 Clark. Between 6:39 and 6:51 p.m. on the night of the murders, Defendant’s phone,
    16 353-6451, placed two calls and received two calls from victim David’s phone, 315-
    17 1436. Phone number 353-6451 also received two calls from Jamie’s phone, 319-
    18 9680, during this same time frame. At 7:05 p.m., Defendant’s phone moved so that
    10
    1 it was communicating with a cell phone tower on top of Sandia Crest, which has a
    2 much broader range than some of the other cell phone towers, and indicates that the
    3 phone was somewhere on the west side of Albuquerque. The murder scene was on
    4 the west side of Albuquerque. No activity was reported for Defendant’s phone, 353-
    5 6451, between 7:05 and 11:07 p.m.
    6   {19}   Matthew Kase, a subcontractor who assists cellular service providers with legal
    7 compliance services for phone records, produced documents for Cricket concerning
    8 victim David’s phone number, 315-1436, and Kelso’s phone number, 435-5944.
    9 Exhibit 118 shows the subscriber profiles for 315-1436 and 435-5944 and identifies
    10 Connie Ortega as the registered owner of 315-1436, with the address the same as the
    11 house where the murders took place. Jarlena testified that both victim David and
    12 victim Connie used that phone. Detective Lavilla testified that victim Connie’s cell
    13 phone, 319-1392, remained in the house where the murders took place and that she
    14 confirmed that the number of victim David’s cell phone was 315-1436. Casandra
    15 Mendosa is listed as the registered owner of 435-5944. The 435-5944 phone is a
    16 PayGo phone without a contract. Cricket does not verify names associated with
    17 PayGo phones, and instead lists whatever name the customer provides on an online
    18 form. As with the Sprint Nextel records, the best evidence of who actually uses a
    11
    1 phone is not necessarily the subscriber profile, although the subscription documents
    2 are evidence for a jury to weigh with all of the other evidence to determine whether
    3 the State adequately established ownership and use of the phones in question.
    4   {20}   Exhibit 119 contains the call detail records for victim David’s phone, 315-
    5 1436, from December 27, 2009 through January 27, 2010. Exhibit 120 contains the
    6 full call detail records for Kelso’s phone, 435-5944, for the same time period. Exhibit
    7 120 indicates that Kelso called victim Connie’s phone, 315-1392, at 6:56 p.m. and
    8 victim David’s phone, 315-1436, at 6:57 p.m. and 7:05 p.m. on the night of the
    9 murders. At 7:05 p.m. both Kelso’s and victim David’s phones were using the same
    10 cell phone tower. Exhibit 121 is a list of Cricket cell towers in Albuquerque with
    11 each tower’s latitude and longitude. Exhibits 119 and 121 indicate that victim
    12 David’s phone moved across the city after his death. Detective Lavilla had already
    13 testified that she tracked Defendant’s and victim David’s cell phones after the
    14 homicides occurred to a La Plata address where Jaime and Kelso lived with Jaime’s
    15 girlfriend, Sylvia Duran, and where Defendant was staying. In addition, a black
    16 Chevy Impala owned by Cassandra Kelso and described as the getaway car was also
    17 located at the La Plata address.
    18   {21}   Defendant did not object to any of this detailed testimony and the
    12
    1 accompanying exhibits when it was proffered, although he challenged it on cross-
    2 examination. Accordingly, we conclude that the district court did not abuse its
    3 discretion in overruling both Defendant’s objection for lack of foundation and
    4 admission of the Dugan exhibits.
    5   {22}   However, for the first time on appeal, Defendant contends that the testimony
    6 of Detective Lavilla and Dugan was inadmissible hearsay, and it violated his
    7 constitutional rights to confront and cross-examine witnesses against him. We
    8 decline to review these newly-raised objections because these arguments were not
    9 made to the district court, and defense counsel may have elected to cross-examine
    10 witnesses on the subject instead of objecting to the admissibility of the evidence in
    11 an effort to create doubt, as opposed to insisting that the prosecution bring in
    12 additional witnesses to repeat material that had already been admitted as evidence.1
    13 See State v. Neswood, 
    2002-NMCA-081
    , ¶ 18, 
    132 N.M. 505
    , 
    51 P.3d 1159
    14 (declining to review an evidentiary objection that was not made at the time the
    15 evidence was offered).
    16   {23}   If we were to review the admission of Detective Lavilla’s and Dugan’s
    17 testimony we would do so under a “plain error” analysis because Defendant’s hearsay
    1
    18        The prosecution offered to bring Agent Hernandez to testify; however,
    19 whether Defendant declined the offer is not in the record.
    13
    1 and confrontation objections were not preserved. To conclude that there was plain
    2 error, we “must be convinced that admission of the testimony constituted an injustice
    3 that created grave doubts concerning the validity of the verdict.” State v. Montoya,
    4 
    2015-NMSC-010
    , ¶ 46, 
    345 P.3d 1056
     (internal quotation marks and citation
    5 omitted). Importantly, the alleged errors must be evaluated in the context of all of the
    6 testimony. 
    Id.
     We are not convinced that the admission of the evidence from
    7 Detective Lavilla and Dugan creates grave doubts concerning the validity of the
    8 guilty verdicts because of the additional evidence that proves Defendant’s guilt
    9 beyond a reasonable doubt. Therefore, we next turn to Defendant’s contention that
    10 the verdicts are not supported by the evidence.
    11 B.       The Evidence Was Sufficient to Sustain Defendant’s Convictions
    12   {24}   Appellate courts are bound by the facts that are established and found by the
    13 jury at trial. See State v. Sutphin, 
    1988-NMSC-031
    , ¶ 23, 
    107 N.M. 126
    , 
    753 P.2d 14
     1314 (“A reviewing court may neither reweigh the evidence nor substitute its
    15 judgment for that of the jury.”). Credibility is an issue for the jury to decide. See
    16 State v. Cabezuela, 
    2011-NMSC-041
    , ¶ 45, 
    150 N.M. 654
    , 
    265 P.3d 705
     (“[T]he jury
    17 is free to reject Defendant’s version of the facts.” (internal quotation marks and
    18 citation omitted)); see also State v. Garcia, 
    2011-NMSC-003
    , ¶ 5, 
    149 N.M. 185
    , 246
    14
    
    1 P.3d 1057
     (“New Mexico appellate courts will not invade the jury’s province as fact-
    2 finder by second-guess[ing] the jury’s decision concerning the credibility of
    3 witnesses, reweigh[ing] the evidence, or substitut[ing] [our] judgment for that of the
    4 jury.” (first three alterations in original) (internal quotation marks and citation
    5 omitted)).
    6 i.       The evidence was sufficient to convict Defendant of armed robbery
    7   {25}   Defendant maintains that there was no evidence that victim David’s cell phone
    8 was the motivation behind any use of force against him, and that even though the
    9 phone was stolen, the State failed to prove that “force or threatened use of force [was]
    10 the lever that serve[d] to separate the property from the victim.” Defendant’s
    11 argument is without merit. See State v. Bernal, 
    2006-NMSC-050
    , ¶ 28, 
    140 N.M. 12
     644, 
    146 P.3d 289
     (internal quotation marks and citation omitted). The jury was
    13 instructed that, to convict Defendant of armed robbery, they had to find beyond a
    14 reasonable doubt that “[D]efendant took the cellular phone by force or violence or
    15 threatened force or violence.” See UJI 14-1621 NMRA; NMSA 1978, § 30-16-2
    16 (1973).
    17   {26}   Killing victim David is precisely the use of force that served as the lever to
    18 separate victim David from his property. See Bernal, 
    2006-NMSC-050
    , ¶ 28
    15
    1 (“Robbery is not merely a property crime, but a crime against a person.”). Victim
    2 David’s body lay with his pants pockets turned inside out at the crime scene. The
    3 jury could draw the reasonable inference that David’s body was robbed after he was
    4 murdered. In addition, Martinez testified that Defendant told him that the reason he
    5 and his brother Jaime killed the victims was to rob them, and Jarlena overheard David
    6 say, in a frightened voice, “he didn’t have anything,” and Connie say “all [we] had
    7 was leather jackets.”
    8   {27}   Based on the evidence presented at trial, the jury could have reasonably
    9 inferred that Defendant came to the victims looking to rob them of drugs, money, or
    10 objects of value, and when the victims told them they had nothing, Defendant killed
    11 them, searched them, and took victim David’s phone. Therefore, substantial evidence
    12 supports the armed robbery convictions.
    13 ii.      There was sufficient evidence to connect Defendant to the murders
    14   {28}   Defendant argues that there was insufficient evidence of the killers’ identities
    15 to connect him to the crimes because there is no DNA evidence that connects him to
    16 either the crime scene or the victims, and the police never tied a murder weapon or
    17 bloody shoes to him. Defendant also argues that Jarlena’s testimony that she thought
    18 she heard the name “Rico,” but could have heard “Rigo,” is not proof beyond a
    16
    1 reasonable doubt.
    2   {29}   Defendant’s arguments are not persuasive. The names “Rico” and “Rigo” are
    3 similar enough to support the jury’s reasonable inference that Jarlena actually heard
    4 victim David say “Rigo,” which is Defendant’s name. The cell phone evidence is
    5 circumstantial evidence that Defendant and victim David communicated with each
    6 other before the murders, but not afterward. Detective Lavilla testified that she was
    7 able to determine an approximate location where victim David’s cell phone ended up
    8 after the murders. She identified the location as 120 La Plata, Northwest, Apartment
    9 15, where Jaime, Sylvia Duran, and Cassandra lived, and where Defendant was
    10 believed to be staying. This address was also where Cassandra Kelso’s black Chevy
    11 Impala was located, the car that Martinez testified that Defendant told him was used
    12 during commission of the crime. The State introduced Motor Vehicle Division
    13 records indicating that a 2005 gray or charcoal Chevy Impala was registered to
    14 Cassandra Kelso, which matched the license plate and vehicle identification number
    15 of the Impala found at the La Plata address. A canvassing of neighbors in the vicinity
    16 of the murders revealed what a neighbor described as a suspicious dark Chevy Impala
    17 around the time of the murders.
    18   {30}   Martinez’s testimony is also evidence of Defendant’s involvement in the
    17
    1 murders. Detectives Russ Landavazo and Scott Elliot initially interviewed Martinez
    2 on February 10, 2010. Landavazo testified that Martinez knew details of the murders
    3 that the police had not yet released to the public. Martinez stated that the killer threw
    4 out a pair of shoes because they had blood on them. Martinez identified the dark
    5 Impala that he was told was used as the getaway vehicle, and he stated that the gun
    6 used in the murders had been given to Jeannie Arreguin. Detective Lavilla testified
    7 that she was not aware of any leaks of non-public information. Detective Lavilla also
    8 testified that Martinez’s statements were consistent with the crime scene, including
    9 the order in which the victims were murdered, a description of bloody footprints
    10 found at the scene, and that three people, in addition to the victims, were involved in
    11 the murders.
    12   {31}   On February 10, 2010, Martinez initially told police that Defendant contacted
    13 him hoping to get rid of a gun he used during the commission of the crime, and
    14 Martinez suggested that he give it to Jeannie Arreguin, who was a mutual friend of
    15 Martinez and Defendant. On February 11, 2010, Jeannie gave a statement to the
    16 police. Detective Lavilla stated that during her interview, Jeannie said that Defendant
    17 told her that Jaime “cut a woman with a knife” and “he was there.” Jeannie also knew
    18 that somebody had been shot, and Martinez had given her a .38 semiautomatic pistol
    18
    1 that she sold the next day. She represented to Detective Lavilla that she sold the gun
    2 to her son’s friend. The murder weapon was not recovered, but a .38 caliber bullet
    3 was taken from victim David’s body. Therefore, taken as a whole, and viewed in the
    4 light most favorable to the verdict, see State v. Astorga, 
    2015-NMSC-007
    , ¶ 57, 343
    
    5 P.3d 1245
    , the cumulative evidence presented by the State supports the jury’s
    6 conclusion that Defendant committed the murders.
    7 iii.     The evidence was sufficient for a jury to find that victim Connie was
    8          murdered with deliberate intent on a theory of accomplice liability
    9   {32}   Defendant argues that the evidence suggests at best that the intent to kill victim
    10 Connie developed spontaneously, which only supports a second-degree murder
    11 conviction. We disagree. The evidence was sufficient to support the jury’s verdict
    12 that Defendant was guilty of first-degree murder and conspiracy to murder victim
    13 Connie.
    14   {33}   First-degree murder requires evidence of a “deliberate” intent to kill. NMSA
    15 1978, § 30-2-1(A)(1) (1994). Deliberate intent requires a “calculated judgment” to
    16 kill, as opposed to a “mere unconsidered and rash impulse.” UJI 14-201 NMRA.
    17 That calculated judgment, however, “may be arrived at in a short period of time.” Id.
    18 In New Mexico, “ ‘[a] person may be charged with and convicted of the crime as an
    19 accessory if he procures, counsels, aids or abets in its commission and although he
    19
    1 did not directly commit the crime and although the principal who directly committed
    2 such crime has not been prosecuted or convicted.’ ” State v. Carrasco, 1997-NMSC-
    3 047, ¶ 6, 
    124 N.M. 64
    , 
    946 P.2d 1075
     (quoting NMSA 1978, § 30-1-13 (1972)). An
    4 accomplice “who aids or abets in the commission of a crime is equally culpable as the
    5 principal.” Carrasco, 
    1997-NMSC-047
    , ¶ 6. An accomplice who is guilty of aiding
    6 and abetting receives the same punishment as the principal. 
    Id.
    7   {34}   The district court instructed the jury on accomplice liability as to all charges
    8 with the exception of felony murder. Based on the evidence presented at trial, the
    9 jury could have found that although Defendant did not kill victim Connie himself, he
    10 is guilty as an accomplice to Jaime’s deliberate murder of victim Connie. The
    11 evidence presented by the State supports that a rational jury could have concluded
    12 that Defendant and Jaime discussed what to do about victim Connie, ignored her
    13 pleas for mercy, and then murdered her with a knife during a vicious struggle. After
    14 Jarlena heard a gunshot, she heard two men speaking in Spanish, although she could
    15 not understand them, and she also heard victim Connie begging for her life. A
    16 rational jury could infer from this testimony that Defendant and Jaime discussed
    17 killing victim Connie, and the testimony that Defendant spoke with Jaime in Spanish
    18 met the accomplice liability element for counseling or encouraging Jaime to
    20
    1 deliberately murder victim Connie. See § 30-1-13. Therefore, substantial evidence
    2 supports the conviction for first-degree murder by deliberate intent on a theory of
    3 accomplice liability. Accordingly, we affirm Defendant’s conviction for deliberate
    4 intent murder as to victim Connie based on accomplice liability.
    5 C.       Failure to Instruct the Jury on Attempted Armed Robbery as a Predicate
    6          Felony for Felony Murder Was Not Fundamental Error
    7   {35}   Defendant appeals his felony murder convictions on the ground that the district
    8 court committed fundamental error by instructing the jury only as to armed robbery,
    9 when it should have been attempted armed robbery. See UJI 14-202; UJI 14-2801.
    10 Defendant believes that failing to give the jury an instruction defining “attempt”
    11 constitutes fundamental error. These claims are without merit.
    12   {36}   Robbery may serve as a predicate felony for felony murder in New Mexico.
    13 See State v. Frazier, 
    2007-NMSC-032
    , ¶ 27, 
    142 N.M. 120
    , 
    164 P.3d 1
    . Attempt
    14 crimes are lesser included offenses of their associated completed crimes. State v.
    15 Andrada, 
    1971-NMCA-033
    , ¶¶ 7, 11-12, 
    82 N.M. 543
    , 
    484 P.2d 763
    . Defendants
    16 generally have “the right to have instructions on lesser included offenses submitted
    17 to the jury. This right depends, however, on there being some evidence tending to
    18 establish the lesser included offenses.” State v. Anaya, 
    1969-NMSC-130
    , ¶ 7, 80
    
    19 N.M. 695
    , 
    460 P.2d 60
    . It has been well established that “it is not error to refuse to
    21
    1 instruct on a lesser included offense unless there is some evidence tending to
    2 establish the lesser included offense.” Andrada, 
    1971-NMCA-033
    , ¶ 9. Fundamental
    3 error exists if a conviction “shock[s] the conscience because either (1) the defendant
    4 is indisputably innocent, or (2) a mistake in the process makes a conviction
    5 fundamentally unfair notwithstanding the apparent guilt of the accused.” Astorga,
    6 
    2015-NMSC-007
    , ¶ 14 (alteration in original) (internal quotation marks and citation
    7 omitted); see also Rule 12-216(B)(2) NMRA.
    8   {37}   The district court instructed the jury, inter alia, on first-degree murder by
    9 deliberate killing, second-degree murder, voluntary manslaughter, and first-degree
    10 felony murder for each count of murder. The predicate felony element in the felony
    11 murder instructions submitted to the jury is “[t]he defendant Rigoberto Rodriguez
    12 committed or attempted to commit the crime of Armed Robbery under circumstances
    13 or in a manner dangerous to human life.” The district court specifically instructed the
    14 jury on the elements of armed robbery, but not on attempted armed robbery, and the
    15 jury convicted Defendant of the completed crime of armed robbery. Because armed
    16 robbery may serve as a predicate felony for felony murder, and the jury convicted
    17 Defendant of armed robbery on the theory that Defendant took either victim David’s
    18 or victim Connie’s cell phone by force or violence, the predicate felony element of
    22
    1 felony murder was satisfied. Frazier, 
    2007-NMSC-032
    , ¶ 27. Victim David was
    2 dead, and his corpse lay with his pockets turned inside out. This is evidence that (1)
    3 indicated that he was robbed of his cell phone, and (2) supported a reasonable
    4 inference that Rigoberto and Jaime Rodriguez visited the victims with the intent to
    5 rob them, so that the jury had sufficient evidence to convict Defendant of robbery.
    6 See Bernal, 
    2006-NMSC-050
    , ¶ 28 (stating that the crime of robbery requires a use
    7 of force or intimidation against the victim). Therefore, it was not error for the district
    8 court to refuse to instruct on the lesser included offense of attempted robbery when
    9 the evidence indicated that if Defendant had indeed robbed the victim, he completed
    10 the robbery, and there was no evidence tending to establish mere attempted robbery.
    11 Andrada, 
    1971-NMCA-033
    , ¶¶ 9, 12, 15. Indeed, Defendant’s conviction for felony
    12 murder on the basis of completed armed robbery does not shock the conscience.
    13 Defendant is not indisputably innocent. There was no mistake in the process that
    14 makes Defendant’s felony murder conviction fundamentally unfair, notwithstanding
    15 his apparent guilt. Thus, Defendant’s argument fails, and we deny his request to
    16 vacate his felony murder convictions.
    17 D.     The District Court Should Have Vacated One of the Conspiracies to
    18        Commit Murder and the Two Conspiracies to Commit Armed Robbery
    19        and Tampering with Evidence as Merging with a Single Overarching
    20        Conspiracy to Commit Murder
    23
    1   {38}   Defendant was convicted of conspiracy to murder victim David, conspiracy to
    2 murder victim Connie, conspiracy to commit armed robbery, and conspiracy to
    3 tamper with evidence.         Defendant contends that punishing him for all four
    4 conspiracies violates the Double Jeopardy Clause because the State did not overcome
    5 the presumption that multiple crimes are a part of one overarching conspiratorial
    6 agreement. State v. Gallegos, 
    2011-NMSC-027
    , ¶ 55, 
    149 N.M. 704
    , 
    254 P.3d 655
    ;
    7 see also U.S. Const. amend. V; N.M. Const. art. II, § 15. “Conspiracy consists of
    8 knowingly combining with another for the purpose of committing a felony within or
    9 without this state.” NMSA 1978, § 30-28-2(A) (1979). The punishment for
    10 conspiracy depends on the highest crime conspired to be committed. Section 30-28-
    11 2(B). Our analysis of the double jeopardy question is governed by Gallegos, 2011-
    12 NMSC-027, ¶ 30.
    13   {39}   We begin with the “rebuttable presumption that multiple crimes are the object
    14 of only one[] overarching, conspiratorial agreement subject to one[] severe
    15 punishment set at the highest crime conspired to be committed.” Id. ¶ 55. The State
    16 has a heavy burden to overcome the presumption of one agreement, but it may do so
    17 if it establishes that (1) the location of the conspiracies is not the same, (2) there is not
    18 a significant degree of temporal overlap between the charged conspiracies, (3) there
    24
    1 is not an overlap of personnel between the conspiracies, (4) the overt acts that are
    2 charged, and (5) the roles played by the defendant in the charged conspiracies are not
    3 similar. Id. ¶¶ 42 (citation omitted), 56.
    4   {40}   When we examine the evidence in this case, it is clear that the State cannot
    5 meet its heavy burden of overcoming the presumption of one agreement. The
    6 location of the crimes of murder and of armed robbery was the same. The crimes of
    7 armed robbery, murder, and tampering with evidence were committed with a
    8 significant degree of temporal overlap. The members of the conspiracy did not
    9 change—Defendant and Jaime committed the armed robbery and murders, with Kelso
    10 driving her car to get them to and from the crime scene. The acts charged—murder
    11 and armed robbery—were acts that could or did cause death or serious injury.
    12 Defendant shot and killed victim David, he disposed of his shoes that had blood on
    13 them because he stepped in a pool of blood at the crime scene, and he disposed of the
    14 gun he used during the armed robbery and murder. The jury could reasonably draw
    15 the inference that Defendant encouraged his brother to kill victim Connie with a
    16 knife. All of this evidence points to one overarching conspiracy to commit murder
    17 and armed robbery and then to destroy evidence of the crimes to avoid prosecution.
    18 Although the State points out that Defendant was told by victim David that he was
    25
    1 alone at the house, this does not point to a separate conspiracy. Much like the
    2 objective of avoiding prosecution by disposing of the gun and the bloody shoes, the
    3 objective of avoiding prosecution by killing the eyewitness is part of the overarching
    4 conspiratorial agreement. See id. ¶ 62 (stating that the objectives of a single
    5 agreement may change without creating a new agreement so that a conspiracy to
    6 commit kidnapping should be understood as a continuous agreement that eventually
    7 embraces murder as an objective).
    8   {41}   Because we conclude that the State did not overcome the presumption of one
    9 overarching conspiracy, the appropriate remedy is to vacate three of the four
    10 conspiracy convictions and remand to the district court to impose a sentence on
    11 Defendant for the highest crime conspired to be committed. That crime is conspiracy
    12 to commit first-degree murder. See § 30-28-2(B)(1); NMSA 1978, § 30-2-1(A)
    13 (1994).
    14 III.     CONCLUSION
    15   {42}   We affirm all of Defendant’s convictions with the exception of three of his
    16 conspiracy convictions. We remand to the district court to vacate the convictions for
    17 conspiracy to commit the murder of Connie Maldonaldo, conspiracy to commit armed
    18 robbery, and conspiracy to commit tampering with evidence. The judgment and
    26
    1 sentence should be amended to reflect a sentence for the crime of conspiracy to
    2 commit first-degree murder. All of Defendant’s other convictions and sentences are
    3 affirmed.
    4   {43}   IT IS SO ORDERED.
    5                                              ______________________________
    6                                              EDWARD L. CHÁVEZ, Justice
    7
    8 WE CONCUR:
    9 ___________________________________
    10 CHARLES W. DANIELS, Chief Justice
    11 ___________________________________
    12 PETRA JIMENEZ MAES, Justice
    13 ___________________________________
    14 BARBARA J. VIGIL, Justice
    15 ___________________________________
    16 JUDITH K. NAKAMURA, Justice
    27