20251118_C368093_70_368093.Opn.Pdf

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 18, 2025
Docket20251118
StatusUnpublished

This text of 20251118_C368093_70_368093.Opn.Pdf (20251118_C368093_70_368093.Opn.Pdf) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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20251118_C368093_70_368093.Opn.Pdf, (Mich. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

If this opinion indicates that it is “FOR PUBLICATION,” it is subject to revision until final publication in the Michigan Appeals Reports.

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF MICHIGAN, UNPUBLISHED November 18, 2025 Plaintiff-Appellee, 10:43 AM

v No. 368093 Ingham Circuit Court BRAD COURNAYA, LC No. 21-000303-FC

Defendant-Appellant.

Before: GADOLA, C.J., and BOONSTRA and SWARTZLE, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

Defendant appeals by right his jury-trial conviction of one count of first-degree murder, MCL 750.316(1)(a). The trial court sentenced defendant as a habitual offender, third offense, MCL 769.11, to life in prison without parole. We affirm.

I. PERTINENT FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

This case involves the disappearance and presumptive death of Krista Lueth, who was last seen alive on November 11, 2008, and whose body was never recovered. In 2008, Lueth, then 34 years old, lived in the upstairs apartment of a house on Eureka Street in Lansing with her cat, Moey. Lueth was taking classes in entomology and horticulture at Michigan State University (MSU), as well as working part-time for a civil engineering consulting firm and volunteering and taking classes in gardening at the Hunter Park Community Gardens in Lansing.

Todd Olson is defendant’s cousin. According to Olson, he and Lueth had a sexual relationship for several years, despite Olson being married with children. Olson introduced Lueth to defendant in 2007, and defendant and Lueth began dating shortly thereafter. Defendant moved in with Lueth in the spring of 2008. Both Olson and defendant had permission from the owner to hunt deer on a 40-acre parcel of property on Gunnell Road in Dimondale (the Gunnell Road property).

On November 6, 2008, defendant used Lueth’s credit card to pay 300 dollars for a 45- minute call to a pay-by-the-minute adult entertainment phone line. Defendant made this call from a cell phone with a number ending in 1036. Defendant owned another cellular phone with a

-1- number that ended in 2637. Defendant and Lueth broke up on or around that day; defendant then moved his belongings out of Lueth’s apartment and moved in with his mother, Donna Cournaya, in Mason. Donna testified that defendant told her that he and Lueth broke up because they “just didn’t get along.” Defendant wrote Lueth a check for 300 dollars on November 6. Richard Stilgenbauer, who rented the downstairs apartment at the Eureka Street home from Lueth, testified that defendant seemed calm while removing his belongings from the upstairs apartment.

Also on November 6, 2008, Lueth called Olson and told him she wanted to end their relationship. Lueth also contacted End Violent Encounter (EVE), an organization in Lansing that primarily provides resources and advocacy for victims of domestic violence, and asked for information about obtaining a personal protection order (PPO), although EVE’s records did not reflect the specific content of the call.

Lueth had dinner with a friend, Murray Stewart-Jones, on November 7, 2008. Stewart- Jones testified that Lueth had sent her a text message saying that she had broken up with defendant. Stewart-Jones had the impression that Lueth was “just kinda getting her life back together and doing good in school and that kind of thing.” Stewart-Jones described Lueth as “lookin’ good” and that she seemed like “she was heading in the right direction.” Stewart-Jones and Lueth had brunch the following day.

Lueth and defendant met at Leo’s Lodge, a restaurant in Lansing, in the afternoon or early evening of November 10, 2008, after which defendant dropped Lueth off at her work. Later that evening, Lueth sent her supervisor an email discussing work matters. The email indicated that Lueth had accepted an internship offer from a professor at MSU and discussed Lueth’s plan to “tie up all the loose ends” on projects she was working on at the firm before MSU’s classes started the following semester. Lueth and her supervisor had plans to drive to Ann Arbor on November 15th to meet with surveyors regarding a project.

On the day of Lueth’s disappearance (November 11th), she paid two utility bills and made a small purchase at Bruegger’s Bagels in East Lansing. She attended a lab session of her entomology class, took an exam, and took her partially-completed insect collection project home to work on over the weekend. She had a phone conversation with her supervisor discussing the trip to Ann Arbor planned for the 15th. Defendant (using his phone with the 2637 number) and Lueth exchanged several text messages on November 11, and defendant called Lueth six times between 4:08 and 4:43 p.m., with the majority of those calls appearing to go to voicemail or otherwise going unanswered. Lueth called defendant’s cellular phone from her cellular phone at 5:11 p.m.; this was the last call ever made on her phone.

Lueth did not attend a gardening class at Hunter Park at 5:30 p.m., despite having made plans with the community garden director to do so. According to the director, Lueth had a perfect attendance record before November 11, 2008. Neither Lueth’s nor defendant’s phone made any calls or connected to any cell towers between 5:11 p.m. and 7:10 p.m. Lueth’s phone received an incoming call at 8:03 p.m., which was not answered; the phone connected to a cell tower near US- 127 South and College Road. Lueth’s phone never connected to another cell tower. Defendant’s phone connected to this same tower at 8:14 and 8:16 p.m., when defendant phoned Olson twice; these calls had a combined duration of 315 seconds (five minutes, fifteen seconds). Olson testified at trial that defendant told him that a wheel on his truck had “locked up,” and that defendant asked

-2- him for help. Olson testified that he did not know why defendant would call him, as he was not a car expert and had no special tools or expertise that would have aided defendant. Olson recalled that he told defendant to call a tow truck, but he did not remember whether defendant told him that one was already on its way. Olson claimed not to remember what else he and defendant discussed during the two calls.

Ingham County Sheriff’s Deputy Eric Jungel was on road patrol on the night of November 11, 2008. He observed a truck pulled off the road on US-127 South near College Road. Although Deputy Jungel had no independent memory of the incident by the time of trial, he had recorded in his daily log that he stopped for a “motorist assist” at 8:05 p.m. The license plate number Deputy Jungel recorded indicated that the truck belonged to defendant. Deputy Jungel contacted a towing company and left at 8:10 p.m. Records from the towing company indicated that the vehicle was towed to Donna’s house in Mason.

Lueth was never seen or heard from again. She did not attend her entomology class the following day despite having never missed a class, and she did not show up for work. She never contacted any of her friends or family and never accessed any of the funds in her bank account or used her credit card. Defendant never called Lueth’s phone after November 11, 2008. Stewart- Jones entered Lueth’s apartment on November 14, 2008 after discussing Lueth’s disappearance with Lueth’s father and growing concerned. Stewart-Jones discovered Lueth’s cat in Lueth’s apartment with no food or water. Lueth’s personal belongings and toiletries were still in the apartment. Lueth’s father reported her to the Michigan State Police (MSP) as a missing person on November 15, 2008.

Donna testified that defendant borrowed her car on November 12, 2008, after dropping her off at work. According, to Donna, defendant returned the car covered in mud.

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