Ian Walter vs. State of San Andreas

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Ian Walter
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Ian Walter vs. State of San Andreas

Post by Ian Walter »

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Appellant Name: Ian Walter
Appellant Attorney(s): Self-Represent
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Trial Docket Number:
Presiding Trial Judge: Joseph Horton
Notice of Appeal Filed: N/A
  • [ ] Before Verdict
    [X] After Verdict
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Reason for Notice of Appeal:
  • [ ] Motion to be overturned
    [X] Errors in the trials procedure
    [X] Errors in the judge's interpretation of the law
    [ ] New evidence proving appellants innocence
Grounds for Appeal: (Maximum 150 words)
  • There were several procedural issues during the trial which have negatively prejudiced the Defendant's right to a fair trial. Given that the Defendant is limited to 150 words, the Defendant will not fully expand on these issues at this time and will reserve detailed arguments for the Court when applicable.

    1. Denial of the motion to involuntarily dismiss - The court erred in dismissing the motion by acknowledging the procedural and jurisdictional errors committed by the Government, but then improperly claiming the Attorney General taking the case resolved these issues. This was also affirmed by the Court of Appeals here.

    2. Due Process Violation / Improper application of Lesser included doctrine - In the minutes before trial, the Attorney filed a motion to amend the charges from singularly AM01 to AF01 and GF22. The judge did not allow the GF22 charge to be heard, noting the delay in such motion, but agreed to allow the prosecution to amend the charge to AF01. The Defendant prepared their entire defense strategy over AM01 and then was forced with less than an hour to suddenly defend against AF01. The Defendant prevailed in defending themself against AF01, and although the charge was AMENDED from AM01 to AF01, the Defendant was still found guilty of AM01. This is a due process violation.

    Branch Administrator Kant told the Defendant this was because of the lesser included offenses doctrine. This is not the proper application of the doctrine. 1) AF01 and AM01 are different charges, and do not constitute lesser included of each other. AF01 is the "Intentional disregard for life and/or property through the operation of an aircraft." and AM01 is the "Failing to use reasonable care while operating an aircraft, which could lead to personal injuries and damages to property." The only commonality between these two offenses is the operation of an aircraft. Each offense could be committed without committing the other, which is fatal to the doctrine. One offense requires some showing of "intentional disregard" and the other requires some showing of "failing to use reasonable care", which does not require intent. Both offenses have distinct differences between each other, and one could be committed without committing the other.

    The prosecution decided to AMEND the charge from AM01 to AF01, therefore abandoning the AM01 charge. The Defendant was not being charged with both. In precedence (#23-CM-0009, State of San Andreas v. Aya Kasumi), Defendants when charged under this doctrine were charged with both offenses, one primarily and one secondarily. This did not happen here.

    3. Error in interpretation of the prosecution's burden of proof / unequal enforcement

    The Defendant pointed to numerous mischaracterizations of evidence, and even evidence pointing to their innocence. Yet, the judge did not consider this evidence in their verdict. There was also a unequal enforcement of the law (another due process violation), given the fact the LSPD's airship committed the same offenses highlighted by the prosecutor in their closing arguments, yet the only person charged was the Defendant.
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Sheriff Ian Walter
Los Santos County Sheriff's Department — "A Tradition of Service"

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Hope Kant
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Re: Ian Walter vs. State of San Andreas

Post by Hope Kant »

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San Andreas Judicial Branch

San Andreas Court of Appeals
"EQUAL JUSTICE UNDER LAW"

SUMMARY DISMISSAL


IN THE SAN ANDREAS COURT OF APPEALS

Ian Walter v. State of San Andreas

A Summary Dismissal was entered in the above appeal on the 28th day of December, 2025.


Reviewing the Appellant’s Argument

The Appellant argues that their right to due process was violated when the Prosecution moved, minutes before trial, to amend the sole charge from AM01 to AF01. Although the trial court rejected the late addition of GF22, it permitted the amendment to AF01. The Appellant contends that their defense strategy had been prepared exclusively for AM01, and that they were afforded less than an hour to adjust to a materially different charge requiring proof of intentional disregard rather than negligence.

The Appellant further argues that, after the Prosecution amended the charge to AF01, the original AM01 charge was abandoned. Despite this, the trial court ultimately found the Appellant not guilty of AF01 but guilty of AM01, reasoning that AM01 constituted a lesser included offense of AF01. The Appellant asserts that this was an improper application of the doctrine, as the two offenses contain distinct and non-overlapping element.

Denial of the Motion to Involuntarily Dismiss

The Court of Appeals will start by addressing the claim in regards to the denial of the motion to involuntarily dismiss. To begin, the court reviewed the findings of the lower court. In cases where there are procedural, jurisdictional, evidential, or general errors from either an investigating body or law enforcement personnel, the court must look at the following principals in regards to the evidence:
  • Curability. Asks 'can the problem be fixed without ending the case?'
  • Independence. Asks 'did this evidence come from a clean source, or is it still tied to the mistake?'
  • Prejudice. Asks 'did the mistake actually hurt the defendant in a meaningful way?'
While we will not being going in depth into this topic, as it will be a matter for the Supreme Court to address if the appellant chooses to move further, both the lower court and the Court of Appeals found that the bodycam and witness statements obtained through the Prosecutions own investigation, gave enough merit to the case outside of the tainted investigation by the SAGOV Representative.

Application of Lesser Included Doctrine


The Court of Appeals role is not to retry cases or substitute its judgment for that of the Superior Court, but to ensure that the law has not been misinterpreted, that constitutional rights have not been breached, and that basic principles of fairness and courtroom procedure have been maintained. Absent a grave or egregious violation of these principles, the Court must defer to the findings and rulings of the trial court.

In this instance, the Court does not find such a violation. AF01 - Reckless Operation of an Aircraft requires a showing of intentional disregard for life and or property, while AM01 - Negligent Operation of an Aircraft requires a showing that the operator failed to exercise reasonable care. While the two offenses are not identical, they arise from the same course of conduct and differ primarily in the degree of culpability required.

The Superior Court found that the evidence did not support a finding of intentional disregard, but did support a finding that the Appellant failed to exercise reasonable care. Given the structure of the penal code and the limited range of offenses applicable to the conduct at issue, AM01 represents the logical lesser offense once AF01 was not sustained.

The Court of Appeals does not find that this application constitutes an egregious error or an improper expansion of criminal liability. Rather, it reflects a reasonable exercise of judicial judgment within a simplified statutory framework. The Appellant has not demonstrated that this interpretation deprived them of due process or resulted in an unfair trial.


Misapplication of Burden of Proof & Unequal Enforcement of Law


The Appellant argues that the Superior Court misapplied the Prosecution’s burden of proof by failing to properly weigh all the evidence and further contends that unequal enforcement of the law constituted an error. The Superior Court articulated the applicable legal standards, evaluated the evidence presented, and made factual findings supporting its conclusion that the Appellant failed to exercise reasonable care while operating the aircraft. The existence of alternative interpretations does not render the verdict erroneous on appeal unless new evidence can be provided by the defendant of the original case.

With respect to claims of unequal enforcement, the Court notes that the actions of third parties not before the court do not bear on the validity of the conviction at issue. Charging decisions involving other individuals or entities are not adjudicated within the scope of this proceeding and do not establish a due process violation in the absence of evidence that the Appellant was treated arbitrarily or unlawfully.

Accordingly, this claim does not warrant a full review by the Court of Appeals and is summarily dismissed.

The Court further notes the Appellant’s reference to an informal, post-trial interaction with a member of the Judiciary. The Court makes clear that either party on a case may not create grounds for judicial disqualification by initiating unsolicited discussion of their case outside of formal proceedings and then relying on that interaction as a basis to challenge appellate review.

Judicial disqualification or conflict of interest is not triggered by casual or explanatory remarks offered after the conclusion of a case, particularly where no new facts were discussed and no guidance was given regarding the outcome of an appeal. To hold otherwise would permit counsel to undermine the appellate process by unilaterally injecting themselves into informal conversations and later asserting bias or impropriety.

The review of the Court of Appeals is confined to the record, the verdict, and the arguments properly raised on appeal. Informal post-trial conversations initiated by either counsel on a case do not alter that review and do not preclude a Justice from fulfilling their Judicial duties.

So ordered,

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Branch Administrator
San Andreas Judicial Branch
505-9925 — [email protected]
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