Ice v. Commonwealth

667 S.W.2d 671, 1984 Ky. LEXIS 212
CourtKentucky Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 16, 1984
StatusPublished
Cited by168 cases

This text of 667 S.W.2d 671 (Ice 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
Ice v. Commonwealth, 667 S.W.2d 671, 1984 Ky. LEXIS 212 (Ky. 1984).

Opinions

OPINION OF THE COURT

On December 5, 1978, in a rural section of Powell County, a little girl named Donna Knox, age 7, was the victim of a particularly vicious and gruesome murder. Todd Ice, age 15, is charged as her murderer. The evidence portrays him as Jekyll and Hyde, an exemplary student and a fiendish killer.

Donna lived with her mother and father in a trailer. Todd Ice and his family were their nearest neighbors. The two families lived on opposite sides of a service road leading off of Ky. 15 at a point about six miles from Stanton and fifteen miles from [673]*673Campton. They had been neighbors for six years.

The Ice boy had been suspected and accused by the Knox family of pilfering from their trailer. The Commonwealth claims that this tragedy was motivated by Ice’s desire for revenge against the child’s father for his accusations.

The principal evidence convicting Ice was the testimony of the child’s mother, Sheila Knox. Mrs. Knox testified that she returned home with her daughter to find that her house had been broken into. As she tried to get herself and the child out of the house, she was accosted by Ice wielding a hunting knife, slashed across the back, and then forced into the bedroom where she was tied up and beaten by him. There was other testimony showing that her throat was cut, but she became unconscious before this occurred, so she could not identify the person who did it.

After Sheila Knox was unconscious, the child was murdered with a knife in the bedroom. The knife used to cut Sheila Knox’s throat and to stab and slash the child was a different knife or knives than the hunting knife originally used to slash Sheila Knox.

Although Sheila Knox identified Ice as the only person she saw in the trailer at the time, the defense claimed that another neighbor boy, Norvin Mayberry, had gone to the trailer with Ice and was responsible for slashing Sheila Knox’s throat after she became unconscious and for murdering the child.

The evidence for the defense was that shortly after the occurrence, while a patient at Northern Kentucky Treatment Center, Department for Human Resources, for evaluation of mental condition and drug abuse, Norvin Mayberry confessed to the crime repeatedly and in some detail over a period of nine or ten months. Mayberry later recanted and denied any participation.

The second aspect to the defense was to claim, in the alternative, that if Ice was guilty of the crime that he should be found not guilty by reason of insanity. This defense was based on the testimony of several psychologists and a psychiatrist to the effect that Ice was suffering from serious mental illness at the time. The psychiatrist testified he believed Ice experienced a psychotic break and disassociative reaction at the time of the crime. The psychiatric experts all agreed that Ice does not remember what happened because he could not tolerate knowing that he was involved in a crime of this nature, that he hallucinated an alibi for the time involved, and that he did not know the difference between right and wrong and could not control his behavior at that time.

After the defense’s opening statement pointing the finger of guilt at Norvin May-berry, the Commonwealth demanded and received over the objection of the defense the right to conduct polygraph tests on both Mayberry and his mother, the sole purpose of which was to prove that the Mayberrys, who would be witnesses, were telling the truth when they denied Mayber-ry had any participation in this crime. The polygraph examiner performed the tests while the trial was in progress and testified in chambers that in his opinion the test results showed Mayberry and his mother were telling the truth in disclaiming his involvement.

When Mayberry testified, he denied any involvement in the murder. Further he testified about drinking bouts with Ice using whiskey Ice had stolen from the Knox trailer, and threats Ice supposedly made against the decedent’s father for having caught him and threatened him on one occasion. He was a key witness.

Mayberry also testified about having been suspended from school the day before the occurrence, having been home with his mother at the time of the occurrence, and having confessed to the doctors at Northern Kentucky Treatment Center “to get them crazy doctors off my back.” He was also permitted to testify over objection that he and his mother took lie detector tests and passed them, and later his mother testified to the same effect.

[674]*674The polygraphist confirmed that his test results showed that Mayberry and his mother were telling the truth. He was cross-examined about failure to use “control questions” in testing, about the fact that courts generally do not admit polygraph test results, and about how the tak-, ing of drugs could affect the results of a polygraph test.

The jury deliberated thirty minutes and found Todd Ice guilty of murder.

The court then proceeded with the second stage of the trial, jury consideration of the death penalty under KRS 532.025. At the outset the prosecutor stated that the jury would simply make a recommendation as to the death penalty and the burden would rest upon the judge to make the final determination: “It will be his decision.” The Commonwealth then introduced proof that a burglary had occurred. The defense offered testimony of mitigating circumstances related to Ice’s youth, church activities, 4-H club activities and awards, good school record and intellectual ability in spite of his emotional instability and mental illness, and pointed to the fact that he had never been in trouble before, much less charged with violation of the law.

After little over an hour of deliberation, the jury brought in the death sentence.

Before considering specific allegations of error, there are several general propositions which must be discussed.1

First, RCr 9.22 requires that, as a general rule, the defendant must object to the action of the trial court in order to preserve a claim of error. Appellant cites us to cases standing for the proposition that in a case where the death penalty has been imposed by the trial court an exception exists to this contemporaneous objection rule.2 These cases hold that in a death penalty case every prejudicial error must be considered, whether or not an objection was made in the trial court. As stated in Edwards v. Commonwealth, 298 Ky. 366, 182 S.W.2d 948 (1944), at p. 374,182 S.W.2d 948: “(W)here the defendant’s life is at stake, technical rules of procedure must give way to the more lofty aim that justice may be done.” KRS 532.075, the statute regarding review of sentence by the Supreme Court in death penalty cases, adopts and incorporates these decisions in subsection 2, where it states: “The Supreme Court shall consider ... any errors enumerated by way of appeal.” In these circumstances, the question of whether objection was made at the trial level is only significant where it may reasonably be inferred that appellant intentionally failed to object for reasons of trial tactics.

Next, a significant portion of the appellant’s brief is devoted to procedures and considerations mandated for the Supreme Court under KRS

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667 S.W.2d 671, 1984 Ky. LEXIS 212, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ice-v-commonwealth-ky-1984.