FLOWERS (NORMAN) VS. STATE C/W 55759

2020 NV 1
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 30, 2020
Docket55759
StatusPublished

This text of 2020 NV 1 (FLOWERS (NORMAN) VS. STATE C/W 55759) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
FLOWERS (NORMAN) VS. STATE C/W 55759, 2020 NV 1 (Neb. 2020).

Opinion

136 Nev., Advance Opinion IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF NEVADA

NORMAN KEITH FLOWERS, A/K/A No. 53159 NORMAN HAROLD FLOWERS, III, Appellant, FILED vs. JAN 3 0 2020 THE STATE OF NEVADA, ELIZAL.ETH A. BROWN Respondent, CLERK OF '?Fr: E COURT BY CHI . EPU CLERX NORMAN HAROLD FLOWERS, III, No. 55759 Appellant, vs. THE STATE OF NEVADA, Respondent.

Consolidated appeals from a judgment of conviction and amended judgment of conviction, pursuant to a jury verdict, of burglary, first-degree murder, and sexual assault, and from an order denying a motion for a new trial. Eighth Judicial District Court, Clark County; Kathy A. Hardcastle, Senior Judge; Stewart L. Bell, Judge; Linda Marie Bell, Chief Judge. Affirmed.

JoNell Thomas, Special Public Defender, and Randall H. Pike and Clark W. Patrick, Chief Deputy Special Public Defenders, Clark County, for Appellant.

Aaron D. Ford, Attorney General, Carson City; Steven B. Wolfson, District Attorney, Pamela C. Weckerly and Charles W. Thoman, Chief Deputy District Attorneys, and Nancy A. Becker, Deputy District Attorney, Clark County, for Respondent.

SUPREME COURT OF NEVADA

(0) 197,, BEFORE PICKERING, C.J., PARRAGUIRRE and CADISH, JJ.

OPINION

By the Court, PICKERING, C.J.: A Clark County jury convicted appellant Norman Flowers of first-degree felony murder, sexual assault, and burglary in connection with the rape and murder of 18-year-old Sheila Quarles. Flowers• timely appealed his original and anaended judgments of conviction and the order denying the motion for a new trial that followed. The appeals were consolidated, briefed, and argued. Before a decision was reached, we granted Flowers motion to voluntarily dismiss these consolidated appeals due to a global plea agreement resolving the charges in this and a separate criminal case. Years later, Flowers succeeded in setting aside the plea agreement. This court subsequently granted Flowers' motion to reinstate these consolidated appeals. After supplemental briefing and reargument, we affirm. I. FACTS At the time of her death, Sheila Quarles shared an apartment with her mother, Debra, in Las Vegas. On March 24, 2005, Sheila stayed home from her job at Starbucks while her m.other went to work. Sheila spoke to her mother by phone several times that day, the last time at 1 p.m. Around 3 p.m., Debra returned to the apartment and found Sheila, face-up and nonresponsive, in a bathtub full of hot water. By the time paramedics arrived, Sheila had died. There were no signs of a forced entry into the apartment. Some items in the bathroom had been knocked over and several valuables were missing, including Sheila's cell phone, her bankcard, and jewelry. Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department (LVMPD) detectives noted that

2 Sheila had a bruised abdomen and scraped knee but saw no major external injuries. The Clark County Coroner's Office performed an autopsy. The autopsy report was not admitted into evidence, but some of the photographs documenting it were. The autopsy revealed the following: Sheila had hemorrhages under her scalp, consistent with blunt force trauma to the head; she had suffered vaginal lacerations and tears, consistent with sexual assault; she exhibited petechiae, consistent with asphyxiation; she had hemorrhages on her neck, consistent with manual strangulation; and her lungs contained froth, consistent with drowning. The lack of swelling in the vaginal lacerations and tears indicated that the sexual assault occurred less than an hour before Sheila died. LVMPD collected a vaginal swab from Sheila's body at the autopsy and her thong underwear from the crime scene. The crime lab found sperm in both. A forensic scientist in LVMPD's biology/DNA unit. Kristina Paulette, generated DNA profiles from this evidence. The profiles revealed a mixture of Sheila's DNA and that of two unknown males. LVMPD used the DNA profiles to eliminate several possible • suspects. The profiles did not initially provide any new leads, though, and the case went cold. Less than two months after Sheila's• death, on May 3, 2005, a second woman, Merilee Coote, was found dead in her Las Vegas apartment, the victim of sexual assault and manual strangulation. The crime scene yielded single-source DNA profiles from the carpet underneath Coote'S body and from her vaginal and anal swabs. Flowers and Coote knew one another through a woman Flowers had dated, and a witness placed Flowers in Coote's apartment complex at the time Coote's body was found. As part of

3 the Coote investigation, LVMPD obtained a buccal swab from Flowers. Flowers DNA profile matched the DNA profile generated from the Coote crime scene, and Flowers was arrested for the Coote sexual assault and murder. Paulette entered the DNA profiles generated from Sheila's crime scene evidence into CODIS, a DNA database. After receiving Flowers' DNA profile—generated in connection with the investigation into the Coote murder—CODIS alerted Paulette that it had identified flowers as a potential contributor to the Sheila: Quarles DNA profiles. Paulette reworked Flowers' buccal swab and confirmed that; Unlike 99.9% of the population, Flowers could not be excluded as one of the two males who contributed to the mixed DNA profiles from Sheila's crime scene. This new information led detectives to focus on Flowers as a person of interest in Sheila's sexual assault and death. Their investigation revealed that Flowers had dated Sheila's mother, Debra; for several inonths in late 2004 and met Sheila then. Two weeks before Sheila died, Flowers approached Debra and Sheila, who were sitting outside their apartment. Asked why he was there, Flowers replied that he'd been hired to do maintenance work at the apartment complex. The three spoke for approximately 20 minutes. At trial, the property manager testified that Flowers never worked at the complex. After Sheila's death but before Flowers' arrest in the Coote-6.se, Flowers exPressed his sympathy to Debra for Sheila's death, drove her to tWo grief connseling sessions, and asked Debra for updates on the investigation into Sheila's ease: Eventually, LVMPD identified George Brass • as the second contributor to the DNA mix from Sheila's crime scene. Sheila•had a casual sexual relationship with Brass, who lived With his mother • at the same

(0) 1947A <4015. 4 apartment complex as Sheila and her mother. When interviewed, Brass stated that he had consensual sex with Sheila the morning of the day she died, then drove across town to the Wal-Mart where he worked. Wal-Mart records showed that Brass clocked .in at noon, left for lunch at 4 p.m., returned to work at 5 p.m., and left for the day at 7:46 p.m. In the Sheila Quarles matter, the State charged Flowers with one count each of first-degree murder, sexual assault, burglary, and robbery, and filed a notice of intent to seek the death penalty. The State brought similar charges against Flowers in connection with Merilee Coote's death and sexual assault and the death and sexual assault of a third woman, Rena Gonzalez. The district court denied the State's motion to consolidate Sheila's case with the Coote/Gonzalez case. After an evidentiary hearing, however, the district court granted in part and denied in part the State's motion to introduce evidence relating to Coote's death and sexual assault to establish that Flowers, not Brass or someone else, killed Sheila and to refute Flower& claim that he had consensual sex with Sheila. Flowers proceeded to trial in the Sheila Quarles case in October 2008. The jury found Flowers guilty of first-degree murder on a felony- murder theory, sexual assault, and burglary.

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2020 NV 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/flowers-norman-vs-state-cw-55759-nev-2020.