Heglemeier v. State

878 P.2d 294, 110 Nev. 806, 1994 Nev. LEXIS 101
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 26, 1994
Docket22748
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 878 P.2d 294 (Heglemeier v. State) 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
Heglemeier v. State, 878 P.2d 294, 110 Nev. 806, 1994 Nev. LEXIS 101 (Neb. 1994).

Opinion

*808 OPINION

By the Court,

Steffen, J.:

Appellant Paul Robert Heglemeier was tried by a jury and convicted of conspiracy to commit robbery, attempted robbery with use of a deadly weapon, and murder in the first-degree with use of a deadly weapon. His first-degree murder conviction resulted in a life sentence with the possibility of parole, enhanced by an identical consecutive sentence for use of a deadly weapon. Heglemeier also received sentences of six years on the conspiracy count, and seven and one-half years for attempted robbery with an additional consecutive seven and one-half years for use of a deadly weapon. On appeal, Heglemeier raises a number of issues, the most significant of which challenges the sufficiency of the evidence to corroborate the testimony of his accomplice. After careful review, we are persuaded that Heglemeier was fairly tried and convicted on all counts. We therefore affirm.

FACTS

The fact-intensive nature of the primary issue on appeal requires a detailed recital of the facts. Certain of the facts will be addressed or reemphasized in connection with our discussion of the legal issues appearing later in this opinion.

Shortly after midnight on December 15, 1988, two armed men wearing masks entered the Kopper Keg Lounge in Las Vegas. The intruders announced their intention to rob the place and ordered three adult male patrons, Mattheas, Wegneg and Earl, and a female employee, Zornes, to go to the restroom. A second female employee, Conrad, was in the kitchen while the other four occupants of the lounge were being confronted by the gunmen. Patrons Earl and Mattheas refused to obey the masked intruders. Earl commenced struggling with one of them and was shot by both gunmen. The man struggling with Earl fired once or twice, causing Earl to fall to the floor, and the other gunman then fired *809 six to eight shots at the stricken patron. Both intruders then fled. 1 Mattheas ran to the front door of the lounge and saw a white Camaro leaving the area.

Earl was pronounced dead at the scene. Although the deputy coroner initially observed three gunshot wounds suffered by the victim, a later autopsy revealed that Earl had sustained six bullet wounds. The body contained one .38 special bullet and five nine-millimeter bullets or bullet fragments. Nine nine-millimeter shell casings were found by investigating officers at the scene of the crime.

Eyewitnesses were unable to identify or describe the gunmen because of their masks. However, Mattheas opined that the offenders were Caucasian because of the way they talked, and the witnesses agreed that one of the two men was several inches taller than the other. Patron Wegneg stated that one gunman wore blue jeans and tennis shoes, and that both were carrying duffle bags.

The crime remained unsolved until June, 1990, when an anonymous informant called the Federal Bureau of Investigation and identified the perpetrators as Stephen Becker and Paul Hegle-meier. The informant also told the FBI that the vehicle used in the crime was registered to Heglemeier’s girlfriend and that it may have been light blue in color. Armed with the foregoing information from the FBI, police officers interviewed Becker during his incarceration for an unrelated crime. Becker denied involvement in the homicide and disclaimed knowing Heglemeier, a disavowal refuted by a police review of prison records revealing Heglemeier as one of Becker’s documented visitors. 2

Eventually, several inmates informed police that Becker had admitted shooting a man in the Kopper Keg Lounge in Las Vegas several years earlier. Becker allegedly told a prison informant that he and Paul Heglemeier had committed the crime and that they had both shot the victim. Becker reportedly fired his father’s .357 magnum revolver while struggling with the victim, and Heglemeier shot the ill-fated patron with a nine-millimeter pistol. The informant also advised investigating officers that Becker had indicated that the barrel on the nine-millimeter weapon was changed and possibly discarded. When Becker was released from jail on the unrelated offense, he told Heglemeier to change the *810 barrel on Heglemeier’s nine-millimeter gun. Becker knew that Heglemeier had access to another nine-millimeter handgun, and, according to Becker, Heglemeier switched barrels in his presence.

As a result of information obtained from the informants, police secured a search warrant and seized a .357 magnum revolver found at the home of Becker’s father. The revolver was admitted as evidence in Heglemeier’s trial.

Further investigation also disclosed that Heglemeier was incarcerated in the Nevada prison system in July 1989, and that one of the females who visited him in prison was Elizabeth Wilmarth. Police were able to confirm that Wilmarth had a nine-millimeter firearm registered in her name as of February 1988, and that the weapon had been purchased by her from American Shooters Supply in Las Vegas. Joseph Montoya, an owner of the gun supply shop, testified that Heglemeier was with Wilmarth when she purchased the weapon and that, to the best of his knowledge, Heglemeier was also with her when she sold the gun back to the same dealer. Montoya’s recollection concerning the latter occasion was based upon the fact that Wilmarth came in with somebody, that he remembered her being with Paul [Heglemeier], and that he always associated Wilmarth with Heglemeier.

Police were directed to the subsequent purchaser of the nine-millimeter weapon previously owned by Wilmarth and were able to secure and test the firearm. Richard Good, a police firearms examiner, testified that the nine-millimeter bullets recovered from Earl’s body were not fired from the barrel of the gun Wilmarth resold to American Shooters Supply. Good also testified that the barrel on the Smith & Wesson handgun was made of stainless steel and rifled with five lines and grooves, features not available on that particular model as originally manufactured. However, Good stated that a ballistics test of the nine nine-millimeter casings found at the crime scene proved that the Wilmarth weapon fired all of the cartridge casings. Good opined that the match was positive.

According to Good, a .357 caliber handgun could chamber a .38 special bullet, and his examination of a test bullet fired from the .357 magnum revealed the same class of characteristics as the .38 caliber bullet removed from Earl’s body. Because of the damaged condition of the bullet retrieved from the body during autopsy, Good was unable to “positively” match the bullet with the .357 handgun owned by Becker’s father.

Wilmarth lived with Heglemeier from about September 1987 to June of 1988 when the couple separated. She admitted purchasing a nine-millimeter handgun from American Shooters Supply in *811 February of 1988, and Heglemeier admitted being with Wilmarth on the occasion of the purchase. Wilmarth testified that she kept the weapon in the bottom drawer of her bedroom dresser and that she took the gun with her when she left Heglemeier and moved to a townhouse.

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Related

Atkinson v. Stateline Hotel Casino & Resort
2001 UT App 63 (Court of Appeals of Utah, 2001)
Heglemeier v. State
903 P.2d 799 (Nevada Supreme Court, 1995)

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Bluebook (online)
878 P.2d 294, 110 Nev. 806, 1994 Nev. LEXIS 101, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/heglemeier-v-state-nev-1994.