Bartley v. Commonwealth

400 S.W.3d 714, 2013 WL 3121981, 2013 Ky. LEXIS 291
CourtKentucky Supreme Court
DecidedJune 20, 2013
DocketNo. 2011-SC-000683-MR
StatusPublished
Cited by50 cases

This text of 400 S.W.3d 714 (Bartley v. Commonwealth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Kentucky Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bartley v. Commonwealth, 400 S.W.3d 714, 2013 WL 3121981, 2013 Ky. LEXIS 291 (Ky. 2013).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Justice ABRAMSON.

Donna Bartley appeals as a matter of right from a Judgment of the Monroe Circuit Court convicting her of first-degree assault, in violation of Kentucky Revised Statute (KRS) 508.010, and of first-degree criminal abuse, in violation of KRS 508.100. In accord with the jury’s recommendation, the trial court sentenced Bart-ley to consecutive terms of imprisonment of twenty and ten years, respectively. Bartley and co-defendant Rita Mitchell, Bartley’s friend and roommate of many years, were jointly charged with having neglected and abused Bartley’s disabled son, K.B.1 Bartley contends that the trial court erred (1) by failing to acknowledge her right to conflict-free counsel; (2) by not dismissing the assault charge; (3) by [716]*716inadequately instructing the jury with respect to the alleged assault; (4) by failing to instruct the jury with respect to a lesser included offense of assault; (5) by denying Bartley’s pre-trial motion for a continuance; and (6) by denying her motion for a mistrial when one of the Commonwealth’s medical witnesses improperly testified that K.B. may have been subjected to cigarette burns. Convinced that Bartley was lawfully charged and fairly convicted, we affirm the trial court’s Judgment.

RELEVANT FACTS

The proof at trial tended to show that for several years prior to the spring of 2010, Bartley, Mitchell, and Bartley’s three children lived together in Bartley’s mobile home on Mudlick Flippin Road in Tomp-kinsville. Mitchell, a recipient of social security disability income benefits, testified that in exchange for her food and lodging she helped care for Bartley’s children and the home and allowed Bartley to take control of her social security checks. In particular, she helped care for K.B., Bartley’s eldest child, who, as a result of cerebral palsy, mental retardation, and possibly autism, is severely disabled.

In the late spring or early summer of 2010, Bartley and her two younger children, teenagers at the time, moved from the Tompkinsville mobile home to a new home in Glasgow. Mitchell (who herself suffers from chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and depression) and the then twenty-four year old KB. remained in Tompkinsville. The plan, apparently, was to have the mobile home moved to Glasgow near to where the others were living, but for whatever reason that move did not occur. Instead, Bartley increasingly disassociated herself from her son and Mitchell and from their circumstances. Although she remained in control of the purse strings, including Mitchell’s and K.B.’s social security benefits, she ceased to make the mortgage payments on the mobile home; ceased to provide for trash removal; ceased to pay for water service, which in August 2010 was discontinued; and visited the mobile home only on weekends, delivering food and a few gallons of water. Bartley apparently ignored the deplorable and worsening conditions in which her son and Mitchell were living.

Matters came to a head in October 2010. By then the mortgagee bank was contemplating foreclosure on the mobile home. A bank representative sent to inspect the property found his attempts thwarted by a large number of stray dogs gathered in the yard. Concerned by the dogs, by a bad smell pervading the area (perceptible as far as 100 feet from the door), and by statements from neighbors that a boy was being kept inside the premises, the inspector reported the situation to the Monroe County Sheriffs office. Soon thereafter, a deputy sheriff, assisted by a social worker from the local Cabinet for Family and Health Services office, entered the home with Mitchell’s consent. They immediately encountered an almost unbearable stench, arising, at least in part, from the numerous dogs milling about and their excrement, which had been allowed to accumulate on the floors and furniture. Mitchell told them that K.B. was in the home.

The deputy sheriff and social worker then summoned emergency medical assistance, and when the E.M.S. workers arrived, they all proceeded to a back bedroom, locked from the outside, where they found K.B. Photographs they took graphically confirmed that amid heaps of snack wrappers, food scraps, and empty soft drink cans, K.B. was lying naked on a mattress, which was covered with nothing but a sheet of plastic. Through long use, apparently, the center of the mattress had become hollowed out, and in the depres[717]*717sion where KB. was lying was a puddle, inches deep, of his own urine and feces. His hair was matted; his toenails and fingernails, several inches long, were caked with grime; sores and feces on his skin had attracted numerous flies; and he was too weak to move. KB.’s language abilities are very limited, but he repeatedly asked the rescuers for “coke” and “cookie.” Initially, even the E.M.S. workers were unsure how to proceed, but eventually, with additional assistance from some volunteer firefighters, K.B. was removed to the Monroe County Medical Center. Several people involved in this rescue testified at trial. They expressed shock at the deplorable conditions in which KB. had been found, describing it as “a scene from a horror movie” and “as close to a Holocaust scene as I will ever see.”

Several of the medical personnel who treated KB. also testified, including the nurses who bathed him and fed him during his two week hospital stay2. The nurses described KB. as having been covered in feces literally from head to toe. They washed it from his hair, from the length of his body, and from his feet. It was caked behind his long fingernails; and it was on his teeth. The foul odor clung to him for many days as did the stain upon his skin. It was also several days before K.B. could resume normal eating. He had arrived at the hospital very hungry, but when the nurses fed him ordinary food, he vomited. Consequently, for several days, he was given baby food while his digestive system recovered.

The physician who treated him testified that K.B.’s digestive problem, apparently the result, in part at least, of a gas blockage in the small bowel, was serious and could have been fatal, had it not been treated.3 Likewise, KB.’s contact with his feces, particularly the feces in his mouth, had exposed him to a very serious risk of bacterial, especially E-coli, infection and sepsis, which is potentially fatal.

In addition to having been exposed to those potentially grave conditions, K.B. had also suffered, according to the doctor, a number of lesser, but significant, injuries. His skin had developed bed sores and papules — raised red dots — that K.B. had scratched open. His skin had also sagged and wrinkled due to his extreme weight loss. More seriously, KB.’s left clavicle had become displaced and his left shoulder had collapsed inward, a result, the doctor believed, of his having lain too long and too uninterruptedly on that side. His muscles had atrophied to the point that he had lost much of his mobility; only months later would he finally regain the ability to walk. He had become deficient in several vitamins, including the fat soluble vitamins A and D. His teeth, too, were severely decayed, and, indeed, all were removed within a year of his release from the hospital. Asked whether KB.’s condition could have developed in the two weeks immediately prior to his rescue, the doctor explained that it could not have.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
400 S.W.3d 714, 2013 WL 3121981, 2013 Ky. LEXIS 291, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bartley-v-commonwealth-ky-2013.