Furnish v. Commonwealth

267 S.W.3d 656, 2007 WL 2404430
CourtKentucky Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 26, 2008
Docket2004-SC-000387-MR
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 267 S.W.3d 656 (Furnish v. Commonwealth) 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
Furnish v. Commonwealth, 267 S.W.3d 656, 2007 WL 2404430 (Ky. 2008).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

This appeal is from a judgment based on a jury verdict imposing the death penalty upon Appellant, Fred Furnish. For reasons hereinafter explained, the issues addressed pertain only to the sentencing phase of Appellant’s trial.

This case arose on June 25, 1998, when a 66-year-old widow was found strangled to death in her Crestview Hills home. The residence had been ransacked, and jewelry and credit cards were stolen. During the guilt phase of the trial, the defense conceded that Appellant was “a thief and a burglar” and that he had been at the residence on the day of the murder, but denied the actual killing, claiming that another “mystery person” was the one who murdered the woman. After a 17-day trial, the jury found Appellant guilty of murder and other offenses including first-degree robbery and first-degree burglary.

Upon direct appeal, this Court affirmed Appellant’s conviction for murder and other related crimes but held that the trial court erred in denying Appellant the benefit of a newly enacted statutory provision which authorized a sentence of life without the benefit of probation or parole in capital murder cases. For that reason, the case was remanded for a new penalty phase where Appellant would be given an instruction on life without possibility of parole. 1

At the retrial of the penalty phase, testimony was not received with respect to Appellant’s guilt. A factual narrative, agreed upon by both parties, was read to the jury and certified copies of the convictions were introduced. The new jury recommended a death sentence. Appellant waived a presentence investigation report and requested to be sentenced immediately after the victim impact statements were presented to the court. He was again sentenced to death.

In this appeal, Appellant presents numerous assignments of alleged penalty phase error.

I. Aggravating Circumstances

Under Kentucky law, when a jury returns a verdict of death, it must designate in writing the aggravating circumstance(s) which it finds beyond a reasonable doubt. 2 In the instant case, the jury in Appellant’s initial trial designated in writing that it found the following aggravating circumstances beyond a reasonable doubt: “The offense of murder was committed while the Defendant was engaged in the commission of the offense of robbery in the first degree and burglary in the first degree and was committed for the purpose of receiving money or any other thing of monetary value, or for other profit.” As the parties agreed to the narrative of facts that was read to the second sentencing jury, a narrative that included the aggravating circumstances previously found, there was no need to require another factual finding of aggravating circumstances.

Nevertheless, Appellant argues that he was denied due process of law because the jury that ultimately sentenced him to death relied on the previous jury’s findings *660 of aggravating circumstances rather than making its own independent finding of ag-gravators. In our view, by virtue of the agreed narrative statement, Appellant stipulated to the existence of aggravators before the second sentencing jury and it was unnecessary to resubmit the issue. We note, however, that without the stipulation, the outcome of this issue could be different.

We are not persuaded by Appellant’s assertion that Apprendi v. New Jersey 3 and Blakely v. Washington 4 preclude him from stipulating to the aggravating factors. Both Apprendi and Blakely concerned the propriety of shifting certain penalty-enhancing factual determinations from the jury to the court. Those cases do not prohibit a defendant from stipulating to penalty-enhancing facts. Indeed, in both cases, the Court acknowledged that a defendant may either stipulate to the relevant facts or even consent to the judicial factfinding of certain necessary facts. Furthermore, Blakely noted that stipulating to facts or agreeing to judicial factfind-ing as to sentencing enhancements may be a prudent strategy if introduction of the relevant evidence proving such facts would prejudice the defendant. The evil sought to be eliminated by Apprendi and Blakely was nonconsensual judicial factfinding of penalty-enhancing factors which infringed a defendant’s right to have a jury find every element of the crime beyond a reasonable doubt. Moreover, nothing in KRS 532.025 prevents a defendant from stipulating to the existence of aggravating circumstances nor is it inconsistent with the general rule that criminal defendants may knowingly and voluntarily waive statutory rights. Thus, the trial court did not err in determining that Appellant permissibly stipulated the existence of the aggravating circumstances.

II. Separate Conviction

Appellant also contends that the introduction of a separate murder conviction should have been inadmissible at the retrial of his penalty phase because the conviction did not exist at the time of the original penalty phase. Specifically, in 2002, after Appellant’s convictions and original sentences in the instant case, he entered a guilty plea to the murder of another elderly woman who had been strangled in her home in 1997. The prosecution introduced evidence of this conviction in the penalty phase retrial. Appellant claims that because the prior conviction could not have been used at trial if he had not pursued his appeal, allowing its introduction at the retrial penalized him for pursuing his appeal.

While this precise issue appears to be of first impression in Kentucky, KRS 532.025(l)(b), KRS 532.055(2)(a), and our holding in Templeman v. Commonwealth 5 are instructive of the issue. KRS 532.025(l)(b) mandates that a presentenc-ing hearing be conducted before the jury in which it may consider certain mitigating and aggravating evidence, including the defendant’s record of any prior criminal convictions or absence of such prior convictions. KRS 532.055(2)(a) permits the Commonwealth during the penalty phase to introduce evidence relevant to sentencing including prior convictions of the defendant and the nature of such prior offenses.

*661 In Templeman, we explicitly held that the term “prior” referred to “the status of the defendant at the time of sentencing, not at the time of the commission of the charged crime.” 6 In Templeman,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
267 S.W.3d 656, 2007 WL 2404430, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/furnish-v-commonwealth-ky-2008.