Beaumont v. Commonwealth

295 S.W.3d 60, 2009 WL 3170458
CourtKentucky Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 1, 2009
Docket2007-SC-000486-MR
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 295 S.W.3d 60 (Beaumont 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
Beaumont v. Commonwealth, 295 S.W.3d 60, 2009 WL 3170458 (Ky. 2009).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

On June 5, 2007, Appellant, Tywan Beaumont, was found guilty by a Jefferson Circuit Court jury and convicted of complicity to murder, complicity to robbery in the first degree, complicity to assault in the second degree, and complicity to tampering with physical evidence. For these crimes, Appellant was sentenced to fifty (50) years imprisonment. Appellant now appeals his conviction as a matter of right. Ky. Const. § 110(2)(b).

I. BACKGROUND

On December 8, 2004, Phillip Thomas was living with his mother, Shirley Thomas, and his wife, Jutta Whitlow, on Camden Avenue in Jefferson County. Jutta was a freshman in college at the time and had just finished her last day of school for the semester. Earlier in the evening, Phillip had taken her out for dinner and then dropped her off at the house by herself. Phillip had recently started his own entertainment company and, at approximately 9:00 p.m. that night, left his home for a business meeting in Shively (an apartment complex), near Ramser Court. Shirley Thomas had been at a church meeting and choir practice that night and did not arrive home until later in the evening.

In December of 2004, Jamilah McNeely lived in an apartment complex on Ramser Court in Shively. Jamilah had known Appellant for three to four years and they had a child together. She had known Appellant’s friend, Christian Walker, for about the same amount of time that she had known Appellant. She recalled that on the evening of December 8th, Appellant and Walker picked her up from work at about 8:00 p.m. Walker, driving Appellant’s car, dropped both her and Appellant off at her apartment and then left. 1 Not long after Appellant had gone inside to lie down and rest, Walker returned and Appellant, hearing the car horn, left with him.

Meanwhile, Phillip’s business meeting ended and he returned home to Camden Avenue between 9:30 and 9:45 p.m., just a few minutes after his mother, Shirley, had returned from choir practice. Arriving at his house, Phillip parked his car in the backyard. As Phillip was about to exit his car, he noticed in the rearview mirror a person “flash” by. The man, armed with a handgun and wearing a ski mask, jumped over the trunk of Phillip’s car and immediately pointed the gun at Phillip’s face. 2 Phillip, still seated inside the car, then noticed another man pacing back and forth at the side of the house. He was also armed with a handgun and wearing a ski mask. 3 Both men began yelling at Phillip and demanding that he give them his money and any drugs he had. The first gunman threatened to kill Phillip if he did not *63 comply. Phillip, however, only had $4.00, prompting the gunmen to begin rifling through his pants pockets.

At this point, Jutta, who was inside the house, heard Phillip turn off his car engine. Though he did not sound panicked, he called her name twice. Jutta walked into the kitchen and looked out the window over the sink. She saw Phillip, now outside the car, and a taller man standing behind him. 4 Jutta then opened the kitchen door to better see what was going on. As she did so, the taller man immediately turned around and shot Jutta, hitting her in the upper left groin.

Phillip testified that immediately after the taller man had shot Jutta, the gunman ran around the side of the house toward the front yard and yelled, “Come on!” At some point after that the shorter gunman left, also running around the house toward the front yard. Jutta, bleeding, made her way to the front of the house where she met Shirley between the kitchen and the living room. In an effort to escape without further injury, Shirley grabbed a cordless phone, and Jutta held Shirley’s arm while they ran toward the front door.

Adam McMillan lived two houses down from the Thomas house and on the night of December 8, 2004, heard shouting from the alley. As he walked towards the door, he heard a gunshot. He saw two men in black jackets standing on the driver’s side of a car yelling for money. Adam could hear one of the gunman say, “Give me the fucking money!” In response, he heard someone else say, “Calm down, I’m giving you the money.” Wanting to protect himself, Adam ran through the house and out the front door to get his pistol from his truck. 5

While Adam was at his truck, he saw an African American man in a dark jacket running towards him and getting in a parked car. The man, who Adam estimated to be about 6' 3", jumped into the car, backed it down Camden Avenue, and drove away. Then, as Adam was putting a shell in the chamber of his gun, he heard two more gunshots. As he looked up at the Thomas house, Adam saw a shorter gunman running straight toward him. Believing that the gunman was raising a weapon toward him, Adam shot twice at the man, hitting him in the shoulder. As the man ran away between two houses and toward the backyard of Phillip’s house, Adam spotted Jutta step off the front porch with blood on her leg. He also saw Shirley Thomas lying on her back on the porch.

During this time, Phillip, who had remained in his car, heard a gunshot being fired from the front of the house. The shorter gunman then came back on the opposite side of the house, firing his gun at Phillip before fleeing down an alley. The bullet missed Phillip, hitting the tire of his car. Phillip stayed in the car three to four seconds and then ran to the front of the house to see what had happened. When Phillip got to the front porch, he saw his mother lying down and discovered that she had been shot in the chest. He laid her head on his lap and Adam, also now at the scene, attempted CPR without success. 6

Jutta recalled that as she and Shirley were running out the front door of the house and down the porch steps, she immediately saw a shorter gunman coming *64 around the side of the house. He began shooting at them at close distance. 7 As the gunman turned to shoot, Shirley screamed and pushed Jutta back into the doorway. When Jutta realized that Shirley had been shot, Jutta crawled into the house, grabbed a phone to call 911, and hid in a closet. Once there, she heard more shots being fired.

Between 11:00 and 11:30 p.m. that night, Dewayne Ezzard was leaving his house for work. Dewayne lived a couple of blocks from Camden Avenue and across from Wyandotte Park. While in his car, he noticed someone running through Wyandotte Park (near the Thomas house), trying to flag him down. 8 When Dewayne arrived at work that night, one of his fellow workers stated that his aunt had just been shot right around the corner.

Jamilah was across the hall at a friend’s apartment when Appellant finally returned. She testified that Appellant was crying and shaking and that he had driven back to her apartment alone. Appellant told Jamilah that he and Walker were in a backyard robbing a man and that he might have shot a woman who had come to the back door of the home with a weapon or a broom. 9

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
295 S.W.3d 60, 2009 WL 3170458, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beaumont-v-commonwealth-ky-2009.