Futrell v. Commonwealth

471 S.W.3d 258, 2015 Ky. LEXIS 1861, 2015 WL 5626423
CourtKentucky Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 24, 2015
Docket2013-SC-000184-MR; 2013-SC-000200-MR
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 471 S.W.3d 258 (Futrell 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
Futrell v. Commonwealth, 471 S.W.3d 258, 2015 Ky. LEXIS 1861, 2015 WL 5626423 (Ky. 2015).

Opinions

. OPINION OF THE COURT BY

JUSTICE ABRAMSON

Jared Futrell and Kayla Lord appeal as of right from Judgments of the Wayne Circuit Court convicting each of them of wanton murder and sentencing each, in accord with the jury’s recommendation, to a maximum term of twenty-five years in prison. Lord and Futrell (Appellants) were found guilty of having participated, as principal or as accomplice, in the wanton killing of Lord’s seventeen-month-old son. Appellants were tried jointly, and because their cases thus overlap to a large extent, both factually and procédurally, we have consolidated the two appeals for consideration in this single Opinion.

Also overlapping are the issues raised, because Appellants make the identical allegations of error. Each contends that he or she is entitled to be acquitted because the Commonwealth failed to prove his or her guilt. If that relief is denied, each further [265]*265contends that for a number of reasons the case should be retried. The trial court erred, Appellants maintain: (1) by failing to excuse two potential jurors for cause; (2) by allotting them too few peremptory juror challenges; (3) by recognizing a child-abuse pediatrician as an expert witness; (4) by allowing that witness to'opine that the injuries suffered by the child, in this case were not the result of an accident; (5) by admitting evidence of both parties’, prior bad acts; (6) by admitting into, evidence gruesome autopsy photographs; (7) by denying Appellants a full opportunity, to cross-examine one of the Commonwealth’s witnesses; (8) by giving a wanton murder jury instruction that incorporated unproved theories of the .crime; (9) by giving a combination “principal or accomplice” jury instruction; and (10) by refusing to give jury instructions on.the lesser included offenses of first-degree manslaughter, and reckless homicide. We agree with Appellants that in both cases the trial court abused its discretion, by refusing to remove for cause two unqualified prospective jurors and that under Gabbard v. Commonwealth, 297 S.W.3d 844 (Ky. 2009), it is necessary to reverse and remand for additional proceedings. Other issues will be addressed only to the extent that they could recur upon a retrial.

RELEVANT FACTS

The Commonwealth’s proof tended to show that at about 7:55 a.m. on July 16, 2011 Lord and her boyfriend,.. Futrell, brought Lord’s seventeen-month-old son, Staten Stephenson, to the Wayne County Hospital emergency room. An emergency-room nurse, Tabitha Watters, testified that Futrell, distraught and hugging the child against his chest, carried the child through the lobby area directly into an examining room. He was soon followed by Lord, although it was the nurse’s impression that Lord had stayed behind momentarily to attend to her makeup. The child was dressed in. only a diaper, and the nurse testified that he was “covered in bruises.” She charted at the- time six bruises, but she testified that there were more than that1 — on the front and back of the head, on the cheek, on the right arm, on both sides of the abdomen extending around to the back, and on the right thigh.

The emergency room physician, Dr. Glenn Proudfoot, testified that initially' the child was not' breathing, had a ghastly pallor, and appeared to be dead. The child also had a grossly distended and taut abdomen," a sign, according to the doctor, that the abdomen was full of air. Concerned that pressure from the abdomen would interfere with efforts to breathe artificially for the child, Dr. Proudfoot attempted to release the air by inserting an “NG” (naso-gastrial) tube down the child’s esophagus and into his stomach.1 .The doctor found, however, that the tube would not go all the way down. When the doctor withdrew the tube he observed what appeared to be (and what later was determined to be) chewing gum on the end of it. Dr. Proudfoot then, inserted (after three tries to get the right fit) an endotracheal breathing tube into one of the child’s lungs.

Notwithstanding the setback with the NG tube, Dr. Proudfoot eventually succeeded in restoring Staten’s vital signs, and arrangements were made to airlift him to the University of Kentucky Medical Center. The child was placed in the helicopter, but before the helicopter could depart, he again lapsed into cardiac arrest [266]*266and was returned to the emergency room. Dr. Proudfoot then determined that relieving the pressure in the child’s abdomen was essential. Although he had never before performed the procedure, he inserted a large IV needle into the abdominal cavity. He testified that air immediately escaped through the needle with an audible rush. As soon as the abdominal pressure was relieved, the doctor testified, the child’s vital signs stabilized so as to allow his evacuation to UK. Dr. Proudfoot testified that the discovery of the gummy substance on the NG tube suggested at the time that Staten may have choked on chewing gum, but he could not know that to any degree of certainty, and he deliberately did not tell the family that that was the case. Asked by the Commonwealth how gum could have migrated from the airway to the esophagus, the doctor admitted that he did not know and had never heard of such a case, but, he testified, he did not think it impossible.

At the UK Medical Center, Staten was initially treated by Dr. Marion Turner. Dr. Turner testified that the child “looked horrible,” that he was pale, cold, and was covered with bruises. His condition was highly unstable and required full life support for several hours. Even before he could be stabilized, surgery was required to repair a stomach rupture revealed by a CT scan. During the surgery, doctors discovered that Staten’s small intestine was also damaged, an injury that required additional surgeries to repair. The CT scan and a later MRI revealed numerous traumatic injuries to the child’s head, torso, and abdomen, including brain injuries severe enough to cause the cardiac arrest, which in turn, according to the doctor, caused injuries to other organs.

Once the child had been stabilized, he was photographed. At trial, Dr. Turner used the photographs to point out for the jury numerous traumatic bruises to the child’s head, ears, back, and right arm. Dr. Turner testified that it was soon apparent that the brain injury was irreversible. Not long after that determination Lord and the child’s father, Johnny Stephenson, agreed to have the child removed from life support.

Dr. Glenn Elmore, who in July 2011 was a resident at the UK Medical Center, testified that the removal from life support took place at about 10:00 pm on July 26, ten days after the child’s appearance at the Wayne County Hospital emergency room. Dr. Elmore testified that Lord requested and was allowed to hold the child until his breathing ceased at about 1:40 am on July 27. A few minutes after the child’s passing, according to Dr. Elmore, he overheard Lord say to the friend accompanying her, “I killed him.” Later, during her testimony, Lord claimed that her remark was a reference to her consent to the removal of life support, not a confession to homicide.

About eight hours after Staten Stephenson’s death, Dr. Victoria Graham, a forensic pathologist and an assistant Kentucky state medical examiner, performed the autopsy. Illustrating her findings with photographs taken in the course of her examination, Dr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
471 S.W.3d 258, 2015 Ky. LEXIS 1861, 2015 WL 5626423, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/futrell-v-commonwealth-ky-2015.