BOSSE v. STATE

2017 OK CR 10, 400 P.3d 834, 2017 WL 2376976, 2017 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 11
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma
DecidedMay 25, 2017
DocketD-2012-1128
StatusPublished
Cited by49 cases

This text of 2017 OK CR 10 (BOSSE v. STATE) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
BOSSE v. STATE, 2017 OK CR 10, 400 P.3d 834, 2017 WL 2376976, 2017 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 11 (Okla. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinions

OPINION

SMITH, JUDGE:

¶ 1 Shaun Michael Bosse was tried by jury and convicted of .Counts I, II and III, First Degree Murder in violation of 21 O.S.Supp. 2009, § 701.7(A); and Count IV, First Degree Arson in violation of 21 O.S.2001, § 1401(A), in the District Court of McClain County, Case No. CR-2010-213. For each of Counts I — III, the jury found that Bosse knowingly created a great risk of death to more than one person, that each murder was heinous, atrocious or cruel; and that each murder was committed for the purpose of avoiding or preventing a lawful arrest or prosecution. In accordance with the juryls recommendation the Honorable Greg Dixon sentenced Bosse to three sentences of death (Counts I — III), and thirty-five (35) years imprisonment and a fine of $25,000.00 (Count IV), to run consecutively. Bosse appealed from these convictions and sentences and raises fifteen propositions of error in support of his appeal.

¶ 2 This Court affirmed Bosse’s convictions and sentences, Bosse v. State, 2015 OK OR 14, 360 P.3d 1203 (2015). In Bosse v. Oklahoma, 580 U.S. -, 137 S.Ct. 1, 196 L.Ed.2d 1 (2016), the United States Supreme Court granted Bosse’s petition for writ of certiorari, vacated the judgment, and remanded this case for further consideration in light of the strictures imposed on admission of victim impact evidence in Payne v. Tennessee, 601 U.S. 808, 111 S.Ct. 2597, 115 L.Ed.2d 720 (1991). This Court ordered the parties to. submit briefs on that issue. This Opinion reflects our consideration of those briefs, as well as the other appellate briefs filed in the case, and- replaces our original Opinion.

¶3 On July 23, 2010,'Katrina Griffin, her eight-year-old son Christian and her six-year old daughter Chasity were found dead in a mobile home near Dibble, where they lived on the same rural property as her father and stepmother, Ginger. Katrina, a single mother, had a seizure disorder and received Social Security disability payments. At the time of her death, she did not drive and she did not have a job. A few months before her death, after receiving SSD payments, Katrina bought furniture, televisions and a laptop computer for the trailer, She spent a lot of time online on her laptop, and she and the children watched movies and television and played video games at home. Katrina put her initials,. KRG, on many of her possessions, including video games and movies. Katrina and Bosse met online in early July 2010. Bosse visited Katrina at the trailer several times before her death and stayed overnight at least once, Bosse met Katrina’s stepmother, Ginger, One weekend when the children visited them father, Bosse stayed overnight and met Katrina’s cousin, Heather Molloy, and Heather’s boyfriend, Henry Price. Katrina told Molloy that - her relationship - with Bosse was the best she’d been in.

¶ 4 On the evening of July 22, 2010, while Bosse was visiting, Katrina realized some of Christian’s video games were missing. Katrina asked Ginger whether Christian had left any games there, and. Ginger said he’d taken them home. Katrina talked to her mother, Rebecca Allen, several times that night, beginning at about 10:00 p.m. Katrina said Bosse was with her and the children. -Katrina told Allen that she thought Price had taken the games. Katiina tried several times to call and text Molloy without-success, Katrina told Allen that Bosse was driving her to Malloy’s [841]*841house, and one text message to Molloy said that Katrina had come over and banged on the door. Eventually Katrina called the McClain County Sheriffs Office. About 11:50 p.m., Deputy Cunningham arrived to take a missing property report. Katrina, the children, and Bosse were there. Katrina told Cunningham that about fifteen video games were missing, and she thought they had been gone since Molloy and Price visited the previous Saturday. Sometime between 12:30 a.m. and 1:00 a,m., Katrina phoned Allen, saying the deputy had left and she was going to bed.

¶ 6 Ginger Griffin left for work on July 23rd at around 7:00 a.m. She looked at Katrina’s trailer, but saw neither smoke nor Bosse’s truck. At 8:55. a.m. a neighbor, Daryl Dobbs, drove by and saw smoke coming from the top of Katrina’s trailer, near the back door, Dobbs called 911 and reported the fire, drove to the trailer, and honked his horn. He tried to open the storm door, but it was jammed, so he walked around the trailer hitting the walls and windows, without response. Dobbs looked into the windows, but could not see anything; it was pitch black. The back door was locked. Dobbs used a garden hose to spray water on the trailer roof above the back door. Later, Dobbs opened the front screen door and banged on the closed front door. There was a small hole, about the size of a golf ball, in the window to the left of the front door. Neither the front nor back doors were damaged, and there was no smoke from the doors or windows, other than a trickle from the small hole in the front window. Dobbs disconnected the trailer’s propane tank and turned off the electricity.

¶ 6 The Dibble police chief, Walt Thompson, responded to the 911 call shortly after 9:00 a.m. He saw smoke coming from the west roof line, near the middle of the trailer. The windows were unbroken, but he could not see inside because the trailer was filled with black smoke. Thompson broke a window at the trailer’s far southeast corner, leaned inside, and shouted, but nobody responded. The front door opened when it was touched, and the men on the porch were forced back by heat and heavy black smoke. Both men noticed the smoke was heavier and darker than each one had seen rising from the back of the trailer. Soon flames began to roll out the front door. By this time, they were aware that Katrina and the children might be inside. Dibble volunteer firemen Bill Scott and Mark Palmore arrived, and fought their way through the front door. In heavy smoke, they cleared the two bedrooms and bathroom on the trailer’s north end, before running low on oxygen. Washington volunteer firemen Derek Cheek and Gary Bolster, in turn, entered the trailer and began to search the south side through thick black smoke. They extinguished small flames in the living room, kitchen and utility room. The master bedroom door was shut and warm to the touch. The door had a hole in it, which appeared to have been there before the fire started. When Cheek opened it, they saw the bodies of Katrina and Christian on the floor. Heat was building up, and the two had to retreat before finishing their search for Chasity. While there were no flames as they left, within fifteen minutes flames appeared. It took firefighters an hour and a half to contain the fire. They focused on suppressing the flames nearest the victims, to preserve what they could of the crime scene.

¶ 7 When firefighters reentered the trailer, the fire had burned significant parts of the master bedroom, including the wall to the closet. The walls in the south part of the trailer were burned, the trailer was filled with charred debris, and the floor decking was saturated with water. The bodies of Katrina and Christian were charred and covered in debris. The fire began in the love seat on the living room’s west wall. The State’s experts testified it could have burned for at least four hours before Dobbs saw smoke at 8:55 a,m., smoldering until the front door opened to reignite the flames.

¶ 8 Chasity’s body, severely charred, was in the closet of the master bedroom, underneath a pile of debris. A chair had been put under the outside knob of the closet door, preventing it from being opened from the inside. Chasity was burned from the waist down — her legs were charred to the muscle and bone was exposed.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2017 OK CR 10, 400 P.3d 834, 2017 WL 2376976, 2017 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 11, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bosse-v-state-oklacrimapp-2017.