Donald M. Lynch v. Commonwealth of Kentucky

CourtKentucky Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 22, 2022
Docket2021 SC 0022
StatusUnknown

This text of Donald M. Lynch v. Commonwealth of Kentucky (Donald M. Lynch 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
Donald M. Lynch v. Commonwealth of Kentucky, (Ky. 2022).

Opinion

RENDERED: MARCH 24, 2022 TO BE PUBLISHED

Supreme Court of Kentucky 2021-SC-0022-MR

DONALD M. LYNCH APPELLANT

ON APPEAL FROM OHIO CIRCUIT COURT V. HONORABLE THOMAS O. CASTLEN, SPECIAL JUDGE NO. 18-CR-00219

COMMONWEALTH OF KENTUCKY APPELLEE

OPINION OF THE COURT BY JUSTICE LAMBERT

AFFIRMING

Donald Lynch (Lynch) was found guilty of first-degree rape, murder,

abuse of a corpse, first-degree trafficking in a controlled substance, and

tampering with physical evidence. He was sentenced to life in prison without

parole after the jury found he committed murder during the commission of

rape. He now appeals the resulting sentence as a matter of right.1 After

review, we affirm.

I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

Amanda Riley (Amanda) took her daughter to the doctor on the morning

of December 16, 2016. Amanda’s mother, Sharon Ellis (Ellis), gave Amanda

the child’s insurance card before she left. Amanda stopped by the house of her

1 Ky. Const. § 110(2)(b). estranged husband, Heath Riley (Heath), to get the child’s health-care debit

card. They argued, he refused to give it to her, and she left. Amanda then took

her daughter to the doctor, returned home, left again to run some errands, and

then returned home again. Amanda left home once more that evening. Ellis

did not see who had picked her up.

Amanda’s body was found floating in the waters of the Peabody Wildlife

Management Area early the next morning by a trapper. Her daughter’s

insurance card was discovered in her pocket after police retrieved her body

from the water. The insurance card led police to Heath, who identified her

body. Amanda’s cell phone and a pack of cigarettes were located at the top of a

boating ramp near where her body was discovered.

Police notified Ellis that Amanda had died. While the police were still at

Ellis’s home, Amanda’s boyfriend, Joshua Estep (Estep), called Ellis because he

was concerned that he had not heard from Amanda. Ellis informed him that

Amanda had died. Estep was in Florida at the time. He belonged to a local

chapter of a motorcycle club.

Police immediately started investigating the details of Amanda’s life.

Lynch’s name came up several times during the course of their investigation.

One of Amanda’s friends provided police with Lynch’s phone number. Lynch’s

phone number was in Amanda’s phone under the name “Matt Dodge.”

Amanda’s cellphone contained text messages between the two. She had

texted Lynch early on the evening of the 16th and asked him if he had

2 methamphetamine, and offered him gas money if he would come pick her up.

Lynch texted Amanda when he arrived at her house. Lynch had deleted the

texts between him and Amanda and had attempted to delete all other data from

his cell phone, including a text message from James Johnson, which said

“hope you ain’t been out at your usel [sic] nighttime hangout in the last couple

days.”

Lynch gave a statement to police several days after Amanda’s death. He

claimed that he and Amanda had been together on the night she died, but that

he had smoked methamphetamine with her and then left her in the middle of

the road, though he was not certain where.

An autopsy was performed on Amanda’s body. She died from blunt force

trauma to the head. She had lacerations to her scalp, bruising and contusions

on her arms, and broken bones in her right arm and hand. Post-mortem

testing revealed that Amanda had methamphetamine in her blood. The

examiner also completed a rape kit, which revealed that Lynch’s DNA was

present. Subsequent testing performed on Lynch’s clothing would show that

Amanda’s blood was present on Lynch’s right shoe.

Cell location data analysis was completed on Lynch and Amanda’s

cellphones. The data reflected that Lynch and Amanda’s cellphones were in

close proximity for much of the night. Between 7:30 p.m. and 9:00 p.m.

Lynch’s phone left the wildlife management area. Amanda’s did not leave the

area, and her phone did not move at all for the remainder of the night.

3 In January 2017, about a month after the murder, Joseph Cox (Cox) was

walking along Rochester Road—which runs near the Peabody Wildlife

Management Area—when he found a purse under a bridge. Cox testified that

when he found it, the purse was soaking wet and he put it on a sheet to dry

and waited until the next day to go through it. Cox found Amanda’s

identification in the purse, and, after recognizing her name from the news,

notified the police. He did so not by calling the police, but instead by riding

around in search of a patrol car. He stopped for food and saw a Kentucky

State Trooper nearby. He gave the purse to police at that time.

The Commonwealth theorized that Lynch had raped Amanda, she got out

of his truck, and then he murdered her. The Commonwealth pointed to the

bruising and defensive wounds on Amanda’s body, the semen present in her

vagina, anus, and underwear, and the sheer amount of trauma to her head and

body when arguing that the murder occurred in the course of rape.

At trial, Lynch chose not to testify. Defense counsel asked the trial court

to allow Lynch’s waiver of his right to testify to be on the record. The record

reflects that the following exchange occurred after the trial court dismissed the

jury for a brief recess and asked everyone present to step out of the courtroom:

Court: [Defense counsel], you wanted to put something on the record?

Defense Counsel: Yes, sir. Mr. Lynch is choosing to exercise his right not to testify. And, uh. . .

Court: You want to ask him some questions [on the record] and make sure he . . .?

Defense Counsel: Yes, sir. 4 Court: Okay. Go right ahead.

[. . .]

Defense Counsel: Are you Donald Matthew Lynch?

Lynch: Yes, sir.

Defense Counsel: And do you understand that you have a right to testify here today, and that’s only something you decide?

Defense Counsel: Has it also been explained to you that you have a right not to testify?

Defense Counsel: Now, Mr. Lynch, based on this knowledge you have—that you have a right to testify or right not to testify—that is completely your choice. What are you choosing to do?

Lynch: I am choosing not to take the stand and testify due to the fear of retaliation on certain things or, say, things come out.

Defense Counsel: Okay, so you’re choosing not to testify?

Defense Counsel: Judge, I think that’s all I have of this witness.

Court: What was the reason?

Lynch: Fear of retaliation due to certain affiliations of witnesses and relations to motorcycle clubs. Physical health reasons that might arise later if I do [testify].

5 Court: I don’t quite follow the logic of that. So, you’re being tried for murder here, and you’re saying that for fear of retaliation you don’t want to testify in your defense?

Lynch: Fear and retaliation by certain people who have been called to the stand. Their affiliation with certain clubs and relations to a lot other people around based on knowledge I have of that person and the club, he’s affiliated with, I choose not to testify. It puts my life and the family of mine that is still alive in danger, because he has been to a state where my family is living, the surviving members of my family.

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