Bixler v. Commonwealth

204 S.W.3d 616, 2006 Ky. LEXIS 188, 2006 WL 2454712
CourtKentucky Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 24, 2006
Docket2004-SC-000215-MR
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 204 S.W.3d 616 (Bixler 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
Bixler v. Commonwealth, 204 S.W.3d 616, 2006 Ky. LEXIS 188, 2006 WL 2454712 (Ky. 2006).

Opinions

Opinion of the Court by

Justice ROACH.

Appellant, Rodney T. Bixler, was convicted of murder and theft by unlawful taking over $300. On appeal, he raises only two claims of error: (1) that the trial court erred by allowing the prosecution to question him about, and comment during argument on, his wife’s failure to testify for him; and (2) that the prosecutor repeatedly misstated the evidence during closing argument. Finding no merit in these claims, we affirm.

I. Background

On October 21, 2000, Appellant went to a bar in Lawrenceburg, Kentucky with several people, including a woman named Daisy Whitaker. The group left the bar around midnight to go to a party at a private residence. At the party, Appellant and Whitaker talked and danced together. Some time later, Appellant and Whitaker left the party together in Whitaker’s car. Two other people — Roberta Ragland and Mitchell Cunningham — left the party at the same time. Ragland and Cunningham followed Whitaker’s car for a short time until it turned toward Whitaker’s house. Neither Cunningham nor Ragland saw the other couple arrive at Whitaker’s house.

Early the next morning, Whitaker’s car was found abandoned near an apartment complex in Lexington, which is about a thirty-five to forty-minute drive from Law-renceburg. The police officer who found the car recalled having first seen it at approximately 4:00 a.m. A small crowd was gathered around the car, but the crowd quickly dispersed when the officer drove up. When he approached the car, he noticed that its windows were down and the keys were still in the ignition. The officer checked the glove box and found the bill of sale, which showed the name and address of the owner. He then reported the car to the Lawrenceburg Police Department and had the car towed to an impound lot. At approximately 7:00 a.m., Officer Greg Boblitt and another officer of the Lawrenceburg Police Department went to Whitaker’s residence to check on her in response to the report about her car having been abandoned. No lights were on and the doors were locked. No one answered the door, so the officers assumed no one was home and left.

Amanda Hayes, Whitaker’s granddaughter, also lived in the house, but she was not home when the police visited early that morning. Hayes returned home approximately four hours after the police visit. She found Whitaker dead and called 911.

Officer Boblitt returned to the scene, where he found the body naked and lying face-down in the bathtub. The County Coroner pronounced the victim dead at the scene and attended the autopsy performed by the medical examiner the next day. From the autopsy, the medical examiner found that Whitaker had died of asphyxia from strangulation or suffocation. She also found that Whitaker had bruises and abrasions on her neck, eyes, mouth, shoulders, arms, feet, torso, and left knee.

Appellant claimed he learned of Whitaker’s death a couple of days later. He contacted the police, claiming he had information about the night of Whitaker’s death. He called one of Whitaker’s relatives and expressed sorrow over her death. On October 24, 2000, he gave a statement to the police in which he admitted having been with Whitaker the night she died and having visited her residence. He claimed that at approximately 2:00 a.m. on October 22, 2000, after leaving the party at the [619]*619private residence, he and Whitaker had gone to her house and had consensual sex. He claimed that Whitaker had wanted him to spend the night, but that he had wanted to go home, so she drove him to his wife’s house. He got out of the car and watched Whitaker drive away, claiming that was the last time he saw her. He noticed that his cell phone was missing, so he walked a short distance to his parent’s house to call his wife. He then walked back to his wife’s house, where he changed his five-month old son’s diaper and fell asleep across the foot of his wife’s bed.

Appellant also claimed during the interview with the police that he met Whitaker on another occasion several weeks before her death, that he had gone home with her then, and that he knew of Whitaker through his father, who had been “with” the victim, implying that they had been in a sexual relationship.

Despite Appellant’s claim that he last saw Whitaker alive and well, the investigation quickly focused on him. Two pubic hairs recovered from the victim’s car — one from a fitted bed sheet found in the car and one from the door jamb — were similar to Appellant’s hair. DNA testing of the hair found in the door jamb indicated it came from Appellant. More hair, along with blood and semen stains, was found on bed sheets in Whitaker’s home, though this hair did not match Appellant’s, and DNA testing indicated that the blood and semen on the sheets did not match Appellant. No blood was found on the shoes and clothing collected from Appellant during the investigation. DNA testing of semen from a vaginal swab of the victim indicated that it matched Appellant. A pillow with blood on it was found in the victim’s car. Two pairs of panties were found in the bathroom near the victim’s body. These garments were turned over to the forensics lab, which did not test them. Fingernail clippings were taken from the victim, but they were never tested because no scratches had been found on Appellant (or any other suspect).

Prior to trial, Officer Mike Schell, the police officer leading the investigation interviewed Appellant’s wife, Stephanie Bix-ler. At trial, Officer Schell testified that Ms. Bixler had given him a statement in which she claimed her husband had come home in the early morning hours of October 22, 2000. Appellant’s attorney did not object to this testimony. In fact, on cross-examination, Appellant’s attorney questioned the officer further about Ms. Bix-ler’s statement. Officer Schell again stated he had taken a statement from Ms. Bixler and that she claimed her husband came to her house early in the morning on October 22, 2000. Officer Schell also testified about his interview with Appellant.

Several other witnesses, including Roberta Ragland and Mitchell Cunningham, testified as to the events the night of Whitaker’s death, including the activities at the bar and the party at the private residence. Ragland also testified that the victim had had several Hispanic boyfriends. She stated while she had never seen any of these boyfriends hurt the victim, in the early summer of 2000, she had seen the victim with bruises. She had also heard that the victim had fought with one of her boyfriends and that one of the victim’s boyfriends had forced her to drive to Lexington and caused her to wreck her car. She also testified that in 2000, some of the victim’s neighbors had threatened to burn down the victim’s house.

The Lexington police officer testified at trial about finding the victim’s car in Lexington.

Two women, Ashley White and Vickie Warren, testified that in the early morning of Sunday, October 22, 2000, they saw Appellant in Lexington in the area where the victim’s car was found abandoned. [620]*620Both women admitted to being convicted felons and to having used drugs that night. White testified that she actually saw Appellant two times, once at approximately 9:30 to 10:00 p.m. on Saturday night and again at approximately 7:00 am on Sunday morning. She stated that Appellant was in a green sedan, that she had at one point been in the car with Appellant and several other people, and that Appellant told her there was $500 in cash and eight ounces of crack cocaine in the car.

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Bixler v. Commonwealth
204 S.W.3d 616 (Kentucky Supreme Court, 2006)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
204 S.W.3d 616, 2006 Ky. LEXIS 188, 2006 WL 2454712, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bixler-v-commonwealth-ky-2006.