Butler v. State

108 S.W.3d 18, 2003 Mo. App. LEXIS 5, 2003 WL 41708
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 7, 2003
DocketWD 61053
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 108 S.W.3d 18 (Butler v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Butler v. State, 108 S.W.3d 18, 2003 Mo. App. LEXIS 5, 2003 WL 41708 (Mo. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

JOSEPH M. ELLIS, Chief Judge.

Ivron Butler was convicted by a Clay County jury of forcible sodomy, § 566.060, RSMo Cum.Supp.1993; and felonious restraint, § 565.120, RSMo 1994; as well as two counts of armed criminal action, § 571.015, RSMo 1994. Butler was found to be a prior and persistent offender under §§ 558.016 and 557.036, RSMo 1994, and was sentenced to consecutive terms of life imprisonment for forcible sodomy, § 566.060.2, RSMo Cum.Supp.1993; seven years for felonious restraint, § 558.011.1(3), RSMo Cum.Supp.1993; and 100 years each for the two counts of armed criminal action, § 571.015.1, RSMo 1994. Butler’s convictions were affirmed by this court on direct appeal. State v. Butler, 24 S.W.3d 21 (Mo.App. W.D. banc 2000).

Butler subsequently filed a Rule 29.15 motion for post-conviction relief. Following an evidentiary hearing, the motion court denied his motion finding that trial counsel’s decision not to challenge inadmissible statements by the State’s forensic chemist about a hair sample comparison was reasonable trfál strategy and could not have prejudiced Butler. The motion court further found that counsel was not ineffective for failing to retain a hair analysis expert for the defense. Butler brings this appeal challenging those findings.

Viewed in the light most favorable to the underlying verdict, the evidence presented at trial established the following:

*20 [A]t approximately 9:30 p.m. on the evening of August 31, 1993, two boys, sixteen-year-old J.L. and thirteen-year-old N.E., were sitting by a lake and boat storage area at the Lakeview Terrace Mobile Home Court in Clay County where they lived. A man walked by a couple of times and asked them whether they had seen someone waiting around who was supposed to help him take his boat out of storage. When the boys told him they had not, the man left. The man later came back, and offered to pay them money to help him get his boat ready to take to the lake. J.L. and N.E. agreed, and the man left again after telling the boys he was going to his house to get the combination to unlock the boat storage area. He returned five to ten minutes later and told the boys he could not find the combination, but he knew where they could jump over the fence.
J.L. and N.E. began walking through a wooded area around the fence and the man followed behind. As they were walking, the boys heard the man ask, “Who is going to be the hero?” J.L. and N.E. turned around and saw that the man had a gun in his hand. He told the boys that, if they cooperated, they would be all right. The man ordered N.E. to lay on the ground, and ordered J.L. to lay on top of N.E. The man tied J.L.’s hands behind his back with a rope, moved him onto the ground next to N.E., and tied N.E.’s hands behind his back. The man h^d anal intercourse with J.L.
While the boys were on the ground, N.E. tried twice to look at the man’s face; however, the man told N.E. to turn his head and pushed N.E.’s head away. While the man was still sodomizing J.L., N.E. jumped to his feet and ran. As N.E. was running away, the man told him to stop or he would shoot him, but N.E. escaped. After briefly chasing N.E., the assailant turned around and came back to J.L. He untied J.L., told him not to say anything, and ran away. N.E. went to the house of a friend whose father was a police officer. The friend’s father reported the incident to the police. J.L. ran to his own home. Ten minutes after he arrived home, the police came. A crime scene technician collected his clothing, which was new and had never been worn before that day. The police recovered an unidentified head hair from J.L.’s shirt and an unidentified pubic hair from J.L.’s underwear.
The following year, Mr. Butler, who lived in the same mobile home park, became a suspect. In April of 1995, 20 months after the crime occurred, the police collected hair and blood samples from Mr. Butler. Mr. Butler was subsequently indicted on one count of forcible sodomy, one count of felonious restraint, and two counts of armed criminal action.
Mr. Butler’s first trial on these charges ended in a mistrial. The second trial took place on July 22-24, 1996. Both N.E. and J.L. testified regarding the assailant’s appearance. N.E. testified that the assailant was a man about 30 years old, of average weight, roughly five feet ten inches tall, with a couple of days’ beard stubble on his face, wearing a ball cap with black letters on the front, and a Jack Daniels T-shirt.
In contrast, in his initial statement to police right after the incident, J.L. had described the assailant as being a stocky-built white male, twenty to thirty years old, five feet seven inches tall, weighing approximately 170 pounds, with brown curly hair which extended “a little bit” beyond the ball cap in front, with a couple of days’ beard stubble on his face, and wearing a Jack Daniels T- *21 shirt and a silver wristwatch with a metal wristband. At trial, J.L. gave a more general description, stating that the assailant was five foot seven or eight, wearing dark clothing and a baseball hat.
At the time of the trial, Mr. Butler was 32 years old, five feet nine inches tall, 185 to 190 pounds in weight, with straight brown hair, a rather severe receding hairline, and a mustache. The State offered no evidence that he had ever had curly brown hair, that he recently gained weight, that he had clothing or a watch matching that worn by the perpetrator, or that he had a boat in the boat storage area or had a combination to the lock to the boat storage area. He said he did not. Neither N.E. nor J.L. could identify Mr. Butler by sight or voice as the assailant. On the other hand, Mr. Butler lived in the trailer park and was familiar with it, and he admitted that he was in the park — he said he supposed he was in his trailer — at the time of the crime. He had no witnesses to his whereabouts. And, like the perpetrator, he could be described as being of average height and weight and about 30 years old.
In addition to the boys’ testimony and the general testimony about Mr. Butler’s appearance and where he lived, the State offered the expert testimony of Darvine Duvenci. Ms. Duvenci was employed by the Regional Crime Lab in Kansas City, where she worked in the trace evidence and serology section of the chemistry department. Her work with trace evidence involves the analysis of microscopic items of evidence such as hair, fibers, paint chips, glass, and other materials, while serology involves the genetic analysis of body fluids. Ms. Du-venci had been a forensic chemist for twelve years, and estimated that she performed approximately 100 hair comparisons a year.
Ms. Duvenci testified as to the limitations of comparative microscopy of hair. She stated unequivocally that such use of such comparisons to positively identify individuals is not accepted by the scientific community as reliable. Ms. Duvenci testified that, while she is able to state that hair from an unidentified individual “matches” the hair of an identified individual, she is unable to determine what percentage of the population could have contributed the unidentified hair. Thus, according to Ms.

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Bluebook (online)
108 S.W.3d 18, 2003 Mo. App. LEXIS 5, 2003 WL 41708, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/butler-v-state-moctapp-2003.