Carlos Deandre Jenkins v. Commonwealth of Kentucky

CourtKentucky Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 22, 2020
Docket2019 SC 000252
StatusUnknown

This text of Carlos Deandre Jenkins v. Commonwealth of Kentucky (Carlos Deandre Jenkins v. Commonwealth of Kentucky) 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
Carlos Deandre Jenkins v. Commonwealth of Kentucky, (Ky. 2020).

Opinion

RENDERED: SEPTEMBER 24, 2020 TO BE PUBLISHED

Supreme Court of Kentucky 2019-SC-0252-MR

CARLOS DEANDRE JENKINS APPELLANT

ON APPEAL FROM FAYETTE CIRCUIT COURT V. HONORABLE KIMBERLY N. BUNNELL, JUDGE NO. 17-CR-01028

COMMONWEALTH OF KENTUCKY APPELLEE

OPINION OF THE COURT BY JUSTICE WRIGHT

AFFIRMING IN PART, REVERSING IN PART, AND REMANDING

A Fayette Circuit Court jury convicted Appellant, Carlos Deandre

Jenkins, of first-degree assault, eight counts of first-degree wanton

endangerment, tampering with physical evidence, and of being a persistent

felony offender (PFO). Jenkins was sentenced to life and fifty years, and now

appeals to this Court as a matter of right. Ky. Const. §110(2)(b).

On appeal, Jenkins alleges the trial court erred by: (1) denying a missing

evidence instruction, (2) admitting cell phone location evidence, and (3) failing

to grant a directed verdict on the PFO charge.

For the following reasons, we affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand

to the trial court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion. Specifically, we affirm Jenkins’s felony convictions, reverse his second-degree

PFO conviction, and remand for re-sentencing.

I. BACKGROUND

On the afternoon of June 12 and during the early morning hours of June

13, 2017, there were three separate shooting incidents in Lexington, Kentucky.

The first shooting happened during the afternoon of June 12 on Carneal

Road.1 There, Jenkins drove by Vincent Howard walking toward a vehicle and

fired shots at him. The second shooting (also on Carneal Road) occurred at the

residence of Summer Beatty, girlfriend of William Noland. Howard and Noland

were friends and Beatty let Howard stay upstairs at her home. Howard was at

the residence, but Noland was in jail when Jenkins drove up to Beatty’s house

and opened fire with two handguns. The third shooting ensued shortly after

the shooting at Beatty’s residence. Leading up to this final shooting, Jenkins

backed into Asante Wardlaw’s vehicle at a Thorntons gas station. Wardlaw

gave chase to Jenkins’s vehicle and got a license plate number. During the

chase, Deondre Stokes, a passenger in Jenkins’s car, fired shots at Wardlaw.

No one was seriously injured in the first and third shootings; however,

during the second shooting, thirteen-year old Amaya Catching was shot in the

back. The bullet entered Catching’s back near the shoulder blade and lodged

1 Throughout the case and briefs, Carneal Road is alternatively referred to as Carneal Drive, Carneal Road, and Carneal-Highland Drive. For clarity, we use Carneal Road in this opinion when discussing the first and second shootings. 2 in her spine, leaving her permanently paralyzed below the spinal cord injury.

Police arrested Jenkins and Stokes for the three shootings.

The Commonwealth’s theory of the case was that Jenkins (who claimed

Noland and Howard robbed him) sought revenge. Jenkins used two handguns,

a Glock 26 9mm and a stolen Glock 43 9mm, during the shootings. Stokes

was the Commonwealth’s main witness against Jenkins. Stokes was with

Jenkins during all three shootings and fired shots at Wardlaw. He accepted a

plea deal to testify against Jenkins.

Stokes told police that Jenkins would “borrow” used cars from Lucas

Hubbard, the general sales manager at the Chrysler of Lawrenceburg

dealership. Jenkins used the vehicles from the time they arrived on the lot

until they were entered in the dealership’s computer as inventory. Hubbard

allowed Jenkins to use the vehicles in exchange for drugs.

Witnesses described different vehicles at various shooting scenes. Early

in the investigation, this made it difficult for police to connect the shootings to

a single shooter. Jenkins drove a silver vehicle during the first shooting. Linda

Riley, a neighbor, described seeing a silver, teardrop-shaped vehicle with a

deep scratch on the front passenger door drive away after the first shooting

incident. Stokes confirmed Jenkins was driving a silver car that afternoon and

testified Jenkins fired the shots at Howard. After the shooting, Scott Gilfedder,

a neighbor, recovered two shell casings and a side mirror cover from a silver

car and turned those items over to a Lexington police officer.

3 Shortly after the first shooting, Jenkins swapped vehicles—this time

getting a blue 2016 Nissan Versa Note hatchback. He drove the Nissan during

the second and third shootings. According to Stokes, Jenkins drove that car to

Beatty’s residence after midnight the morning of July 13. Two of Beatty’s

neighbors described a blue vehicle leaving the scene the night of the shooting.

When police showed the witnesses vehicle photos, they identified the blue

Nissan.

Stokes said that Jenkins drove to Beatty’s residence with two Glock

handguns, one with a 32-round magazine and one with a seven-round

magazine. According to Stokes, when he and Jenkins arrived at Beatty’s

residence shortly before 3:00 a.m., Jenkins stepped out of the vehicle and

opened fire, emptying the magazines from both guns into the front of the

house. One of those shots hit Catching while she slept on a couch in the front

room. Police recovered thirty-five 9 mm shell casings at Beatty’s residence.

Stokes told police that he and Jenkins threw shell casings out the

window as they drove from Beatty’s residence. Stokes claimed they were

unable to dispose of one of the guns in a trashcan because of police cars in the

area.

Shortly after leaving Beatty’s residence, Jenkins stopped at a Thorntons

gas station to buy cigarettes. Wardlaw was getting gas at the station during

Jenkins’s stop. As Jenkins was leaving, he backed into Wardlaw’s car and did

not stop. Wardlaw followed the car and saw it side-swipe another vehicle.

During Wardlaw’s pursuit Stokes fired shots at Wardlaw on Walden Avenue.

4 Wardlaw called 911 and attempted to flee from the blue Nissan. When

Wardlaw stopped at a traffic light, the blue Nissan came up behind him and

Jenkins got out with a gun in his hand. No shots were fired at that point.

Wardlaw followed the 911 dispatcher’s instructions and returned to the

Thorntons gas station to meet with police. Later that day, a resident on

Walden Drive near where Wardlaw said shots were fired, found three shell

casings and turned them over to police. Stokes later confirmed Wardlaw’s

version of events to police.

When Jenkins attempted to return the Nissan to Hubbard, Hubbard

would not accept the vehicle once he saw the damage to the car. When

Jenkins and Stokes attempted to clean the vehicle with bleach, a suspicious

neighbor, Michael McCoy, photographed them and called police. Officer Nally

responded to the call. Nally testified that there was a strong smell of bleach

and visible residue from a recent cleaning. Nally had the vehicle towed.

Lexington Police Detective Robert Wilson was assigned as lead detective

for the Carneal Road shootings. During his investigation, Detective Wilson

located Hubbard and obtained Jenkins’s and Stokes’s names from him. Once

he had the names, Wilson tracked down two cell phone numbers used by

Jenkins and Stokes and acquired historical cell phone reports from the two

phone companies.

After Detective Wilson obtained the historical cell phone reports for

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