Commonwealth of Kentucky v. Edward Lackington

CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedDecember 1, 2022
Docket2021 CA 000089
StatusUnknown

This text of Commonwealth of Kentucky v. Edward Lackington (Commonwealth of Kentucky v. Edward Lackington) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth of Kentucky v. Edward Lackington, (Ky. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

RENDERED: DECEMBER 2, 2022; 10:00 A.M. NOT TO BE PUBLISHED

Commonwealth of Kentucky Court of Appeals

NO. 2021-CA-0089-MR

COMMONWEALTH OF KENTUCKY APPELLANT

APPEAL FROM JEFFERSON CIRCUIT COURT v. HONORABLE ANNIE O’CONNELL, JUDGE ACTION NO. 19-CR-001640

EDWARD LACKINGTON APPELLEE

OPINION AFFIRMING

** ** ** ** **

BEFORE: GOODWINE, JONES, AND MAZE, JUDGES.

JONES, JUDGE: In June 2019, the Jefferson County Grand Jury indicted Edward

Lackington for the murder of his friend and neighbor, Steven Oerther. The

Commonwealth now appeals from the Jefferson Circuit Court’s order granting

Lackington’s motion to dismiss the indictment against him pursuant to KRS1

503.085. After a careful review of the record and the law, we affirm.

1 Kentucky Revised Statutes. I. BACKGROUND

At the time of the incident of this case, Lackington resided in a small

apartment building in Jefferson County consisting of four units. Two of these units

are on the first floor, two are on the second, and both floors of the building are

connected by an internal stairway with a landing. All of the residents of the

building were essentially one extended family. Lackington lived in one unit, and

his sister, Irene, lived in another unit with Oerther, her long-time paramour.

Irene’s daughter, Misty, resided in a third unit, and the fourth unit was occupied by

Oerther’s mother and sister.

Irene and Oerther had been romantically involved for about twenty

years, but their relationship had suffered over the past year due to Oerther’s

alcohol and drug abuse. According to Irene, Oerther was belligerent when he

drank, and he had also started smoking methamphetamine the previous September.

This resulted in the couple engaging in loud arguments with increasing frequency.

There is nothing in the record to indicate Oerther ever struck Irene during one of

these arguments, although Misty asserted that Oerther had “put holes in the wall by

her head when he’s been drinking.”

Oerther’s relationship with Lackington had also deteriorated. Both

men were approximately sixty years old and had previously been close friends.

However, according to Irene, her brother had been afraid of Oerther since an

-2- incident in April when Oerther physically attacked him. Apparently, Oerther and

Irene were having an argument when Lackington showed support for his sister.

Oerther taunted Lackington, asking him if he was going to go retrieve his handgun.

Lackington responded by saying that he was already carrying it. Oerther told

Lackington he was not afraid of the gun, then charged at Lackington and attempted

to punch him. Irene then pulled Oerther away. Irene said her brother carried the

gun because he was slight in stature and fearful, and the gun was his way of trying

to protect himself. She also stressed that Lackington never acted in a

confrontational way because he carried a gun.

On June 4, 2019, Oerther started drinking whiskey around 11:00 a.m.

or noon. He argued with Irene throughout the day as she was placing household

items in boxes. Irene intended to place these items in a storage unit, but Oerther

believed she was preparing to move out thereby ending their relationship. The

argument progressed as Oerther kept drinking. By nightfall, he had consumed

what Irene described as three half-pints of whiskey, and his agitation had grown to

the point where he was punching and throwing boxes inside the apartment.

Oerther escalated the argument by taking Irene’s car keys and her cell phone away

from her.

Misty became involved in the altercation while trying to help her

mother find her car keys outside; Oerther told Irene he had thrown the keys into a

-3- ditch. When they came back inside the hallway of the building, Oerther began a

tirade which included statements such as Irene was “throwing twenty years away”

and that she did not love him. By this time, Oerther’s anger had significantly

increased, and he was yelling at Irene while in her face at close range. Misty

described him as completely enraged, with a very red face, and she believed he

was going to hit her mother. For her part, Irene was afraid Oerther was going to

hurt Misty for intervening in the situation. Neither Irene nor Misty had ever seen

Oerther angered to this degree on any previous occasion.

Misty placed herself between Oerther and Irene, continuing to argue

with Oerther as Irene went outside. At this point, Oerther grabbed Misty by the

shoulders and shoved her hard to one side. Misty stated that Oerther did not hit her

with a fist, but “knocked [her] out of the way.” She said she fell backward and

sideways but did not fall to the ground. Because of the shove, she was not facing

in the correct direction to view what happened next, but she believed Oerther was

“going after” Lackington, who had appeared on the landing at the top of the stairs.

A single shot rang out, and Oerther fell near the foot of the stairs with a gunshot

wound in his chest. Despite Misty and Irene’s attempt to stanch the bleeding and

perform chest compressions, Oerther died at the scene.

Lackington told police he came to the stairway because he heard the

altercation and was afraid Oerther was going to hurt his sister or his niece.

-4- However, when Oerther began to charge at him with a look of drunken rage, he

feared for his own life. Lackington said Oerther was the sort of person who slaps

people and pushes them around, referring to the incident in April when Oerther had

attacked him. Lackington also described the significant size difference between

the two men. Lackington was about five feet six inches tall and weighed about one

hundred fifty pounds, while Oerther was about six feet tall, weighed about one

hundred eighty-five pounds or more, and was very muscular. Lackington was

emphatic about how he was disabled and that Oerther could have “killed [him] in

one or two hits.”2 Finally, Lackington told police he did not want to kill Oerther,

he “just wanted him to stop.”

After conducting interviews with Irene, Misty, and Lackington, police

investigators arrested Lackington for murder. They told Lackington that there

were inconsistencies in his account that made them disbelieve his assertions

regarding self-defense or protection of others. First, they pointed out that

Lackington’s initial statement, in front of the police and Irene, was that he was

trying to shoot Oerther in the arm, and this differed from his later statement that he

did not have time to aim before he shot. Lackington explained that he did not want

2 The exact nature of Lackington’s disability is not entirely clear. During his police interview, Lackington described himself as being in generally poor health, suffering from clogged arteries, blood clots, and a bilateral pulmonary embolism. Later, at the August 13, 2020 hearing, Lackington’s counsel argued to the court that Lackington suffers from heart problems and strokes.

-5- his sister to think he was trying to kill her boyfriend when he shot him. The

investigators also pointed out that Lackington said Oerther pushed Misty to the

ground, but this was contradicted by Misty herself, who said she never actually fell

to the ground when Oerther shoved her. The investigators also asserted that

Lackington made inconsistent statements about whether he was afraid for Misty

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