Dallas v. Mesmer

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Missouri
DecidedMarch 23, 2023
Docket2:19-cv-00090
StatusUnknown

This text of Dallas v. Mesmer (Dallas v. Mesmer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dallas v. Mesmer, (E.D. Mo. 2023).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT EASTERN DISTRICT OF MISSOURI NORTHERN DIVISION

SANDRA M. DALLAS, ) ) Petitioner, ) ) v. ) Case No. 2:19CV90 HEA ) ANGELA MESMER, ) ) Respondent. )

OPINION, MEMORANDUM AND ORDER Petitioner filed a pro se Petition for Writ of Habeas Corpus under 28 U.S.C. § 2254 [Doc. No. 1]. Respondent filed a Response to the Court’s Order to Show Cause Why Relief Should Not be Granted [Doc. No. 14]. Pursuant to Rule 8 of the Rules Governing Section 2254 Cases in the United States District Courts, this Court has determined that there are no issues asserted that give rise to an evidentiary hearing, and therefore one is not warranted. For the reasons explained below, the Response to the Court’s Order to Show Cause Why Relief Should Not be Granted is well taken, and the Petition will be denied. Factual Background Petitioner was found guilty of three counts of distribution of a controlled substance and one count of first-degree involuntary manslaughter. She was sentenced to three consecutive fifteen-year terms for the distribution convictions, and a consecutive seven-year term for her manslaughter conviction in the Missouri Department of Corrections. Petitioner appealed her conviction and sentence to the Missouri Court of Appeals. Petitioner also filed a post-conviction Rule 29.15

Motion. The Motion Court denied the motion, as did the Missouri Court of Appeals. The Missouri Court of Appeals summarized the relevant facts in its Opinion

affirming the conviction and sentence: In autumn 2013, Michelle Boner was dating Travis Welty. On October 19, the couple picked up Welty’s best friend, Darin Reid, and drove to St. Mary’s, Missouri, where they looked at a home they thought was for sale. Because Welty was a heavy drinker, Boner drove. Welty had approximately sixteen beers that day. While at the house, they were approached by Defendant, who was looking at the house too.

Defendant told the group about other houses, including her own, that were for sale. Boner, Welty, and Reid followed Defendant to approximately six other houses, then the four individuals proceeded to Defendant’s home, Welty and Defendant discussed their respective pain medications. Welty told Defendant that he took hydrocodone for his pain. When Reid heard Defendant reply that she took methadone, Reid told Defendant, “Give me some of the methadone.” Defendant replied, “I don’t give it away, but I sell it.”

Defendant had methadone at her residence because she was undergoing treatment for heroin addiction. She was admitted to Cape Girardeau Metro Treatment Center (“Cape Metro”) in November 2011. The treatment center program director testified at trial. According to the director, patients are advised about risks associated with methadone and about risks that are associated with other people using the patient’s prescribed methadone. The director testified that a major part of her duties was preventing “diversion,” i.e., patients giving or selling methadone to someone else. When new patients are admitted, they are forbidden from taking methadone home. After complying with program guidelines and taking methadone on-site for 90 days, a patient is allowed to take methadone home for daily dosing. The day she met Boner, Welty, and Reid, Defendant was permitted to take home thirteen days’ worth of medicine once every two weeks. On the fourteenth day, she would take her medicine on site and exchange her empty bottles for new methadone.

Defendant led Boner, Welty, and Reid into her home, where she opened her refrigerator and removed a bottle of methadone. Charging five dollars per capful of the liquid, Defendant poured eleven capfuls, giving one at a time to Welty, Reid, and Boner. Defendant said that a three-cap dose was safe, then gave four to Welty, four to Reid, and two to Boner (who also spilled a capful). Defendant indicated it would be about an hour before they felt the methadone’s effects. Because she did not want to be impaired while driving, Boner immediately left with Reid and Welty. She dropped Reid at his home then took Welty to a friend’s apartment, where the couple spent the night. Once there, Welty proclaimed he was “fucked up” then passed out.

Welty’s chin slumped down to his chest and his breathing became shallow. Boner noted to her host that Welty’s breathing “wasn’t right” and the host inquired whether he should call 911. At Boner’s suggestion, they put Welty on the floor instead. Boner put a blanket atop Welty and he started to snore. Thinking things were better, Boner went to sleep on the couch next to Welty’s resting place. Boner slept for about fourteen hours. When she woke, Welty was dead. Boner’s host called 911. Medical personnel and police arrived at the scene, but Boner waited until later to notify police about Defendant, Welty, and the methadone.

The coroner, a local mortician, arrived on scene and took Welty’s body to the funeral home. Because he found no wounds on Welty’s body, the coroner did not order an autopsy. He did, however, take two blood samples from Welty’s jugular vein and sent them to an Indianapolis laboratory for testing. Based on the subsequent laboratory report, the coroner concluded Welty’s cause of death was mixed drug and alcohol intoxication.

At trial, the State qualified a forensic toxicologist from the Indianapolis laboratory as an expert. The toxicologist testified that Welty’s blood alcohol content was .127 and that his blood also contained a muscle relaxant, a blood pressure medication, and an anti-seizure drug. Additionally, methadone was found in Welty’s blood at a concentration of 98 nanograms per milliliter.

The toxicologist testified that methadone is a synthetic opioid primarily used for the treatment of chronic pain and to treat withdrawal symptoms for addicts weaning themselves from heroin and other opiates. He further testified that, unlike heroin, which is a rapidly acting drug, methadone affects the human body over a long period; negative effects from methadone take at least a couple hours to manifest themselves. Methadone, according to the toxicologist, affects the body by suppressing central nervous system activity and can cause “respiratory depression,” in which a user’s breathing decreases or completely ceases. He also testified that alcohol, like methadone, suppresses central nervous system activity, and when used in combination with methadone creates an “additive effect” in which both drugs augment one another.

Other testimony and evidence concerned the dangers of methadone and of mixing methadone with other drugs. The Cape Metro director reviewed several documents used during Defendant’s treatment at Cape Metro. Defendant signed an affirmation promising to read the patient orientation booklet, which warns: “Persons without your level of tolerance cannot safely take methadone. Do not attempt to share or give your take-home medication to another person.” The director also explained another form, one she explained to Defendant before Defendant read and signed it. The second form reads, in pertinent part: When taken as prescribed by the medical director these medications are safe. However, you can experience physical problems that might require hospitalization if you use other drugs while taking methadone; for example, the use of painkillers, tranquilizers, anti- depressants, alcohol, or any other central nervous system depressant can cause respiratory distress, hypotension, inadequate blood pressure, over-sedation, coma, and even death. Defendant later signed a third form with an identical warning.

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Dallas v. Mesmer, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dallas-v-mesmer-moed-2023.