In Re Kirschke

53 Cal. App. 3d 405, 125 Cal. Rptr. 680, 1975 Cal. App. LEXIS 1573
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 2, 1975
DocketCrim. 26380
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 53 Cal. App. 3d 405 (In Re Kirschke) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Kirschke, 53 Cal. App. 3d 405, 125 Cal. Rptr. 680, 1975 Cal. App. LEXIS 1573 (Cal. Ct. App. 1975).

Opinion

Opinion

THOMPSON, J.

A jury found petitioner Jack Kirschke guilty of two counts of murder for the killing of his wife and her lover and found the murder to be of the first degree. We affirmed the resulting judgment of conviction in an unpublished opinion (Crim. No. 16044) and the judgment became final upon denial of Kirschke’s petition for hearing to the Supreme Court. In these collateral attacks upon the judgment, Kirschke asserts that it should be. vacated for error of constitutional dimension which denied him a fair trial. He contends: (1) the conviction is the product of false testimony of De Wayne A. Wolfer, a criminalist employed by the Los Angeles Police Department, who, at trial, supplied damaging expert testimony on ballistics, acoustics, and anatomy; (2) Kirschke was' ineffectively represented by trial counsel; (3) newly discovered evidence refutes prosecution evidence at trial which Kirschke’s attempt to establish an alibi and otherwise points to his innocence; (4) various issues decided against him on appeal were wrongly decided; and (5) various other issues which could have been raised on appeal, but which were not, compel vacation of the judgment.

We conclude that while Wolfer negligently presented false demonstrative evidence, in support of his ballistics testimony, Kirschke had ample opportunity to rebut the demonstrative evidence at trial so that the *409 negligently false evidence is not a basis for collateral attack. (In re Manchester, 33 Cal.2d 740, 742 [204 P.2d 881]; In re Waltreus, 62 Cal.2d 218, 221 [42 Cal.Rptr. 9, 397 P.2d 1001], cert. den., 382 U.S. 853 [15 L.Ed.2d 92, 86 S.Ct. 103].) We conclude further that while Wolfer’s acoustical testimony was false and while his testimony on qualifications as an expert on anatomy was also false and borders on the perjurious, the opinion evidence given by Wolfer dealing with acoustics and anatomy pertained to essentially irrelevant matter and beyond a reasonable doubt could not have affected the outcome of the trial. Finally, we conclude there is no showing of ineffectiveness of trial counsel as a demonstrable reality (People v. Reeves, 64 Cal.2d 766, 774 [51 Cal.Rptr. 691, 415 P.2d 35]), that Kirschke has not shown any newly discovered evidence, and that he is barred from raising on collateral attack issues that were decided or could, if raised, have been decided on appeal. (In re Shipp, 62 Cal.2d 547, 552 [43 Cal.Rptr. 3, 399 P.2d 571], cert. den., 382 U.S. 1012 [15 L.Ed.2d 528, 86 S.Ct. 623].) Accordingly, we deny the relief sought by petitioner.

Testimony at Trial

In essence, the evidence at trial established Kirschke’s motive and opportunity to kill. The victims were Kirschke’s wife and her lover, killed on the Kirschke bed while apparently engaged in sexual activity. Kirschke had shown great, although private, resentment at the notorious nature of his wife’s affair because of its potential to frustrate his efforts to secure a judicial appointment from a newly elected governor whom he had vigorously supported. An exculpatory statement of Kirschke to investigators of the crime in which he attempted to establish an alibi was proved false. Kirschke attempted to show his presence at the Los Angeles airport at a critical time by oral reference to a parking receipt containing a time stamp. Investigatiun showed that the receipt could not have been issued at the time stated by Kirschke.

The circumstantial weight of motive and opportunity was buttressed by evidence of the murder weapon. The victims were killed by shots from a .38 caliber gun. A revolver of that caliber had been released to Kirschke after he, as a deputy district attorney, had successfully prosecuted a defendant who had used it in a crime. Kirschke admitted that the revolver was kept loaded in a bed table next to the murder bed. While the revolver was missing after the murder and was never found, cash and other small items of considerable value in plain sight in the bedroom remained after the killings. A statement by Kirschke to his *410 secretary after the murders indicated his desire to suppress evidence that the revolver existed.

The .38 caliber revolver released to Kirschke had, in the past, been subjected to ballistic examination and test bullets had been fired from it. De Wayne Wolfer, a criminalist employed by the Los Angeles Police Department having qualified as an expert in ballistics, expressed his opinion that the earlier test bullets so matched the murder slugs that the .38 caliber revolver and no other in the world was the murder weapon. Wolfer illustrated his opinion by enlarged photographs of the test and murder bullets. While Kirschke had employed his own ballistics expert who examined the test and murder bullets at length and who was present at counsel table while Wolfer was questioned on direct and no question was raised by Kirschke at trial concerning the validity of the photographs. The defense expert on ballistics did not testify.

A sideshow developed at trial. Postmortem lividity on the body of the male victim indicated that his body had rested on its back on the bed for at least two hours after death, while the body was discovered face down on the floor beside the bed. Bloodstains on a wall indicated that the body had rolled from the bed. The defense hypothesized that the killer had moved the body after death at a time which tended to support Kirschke’s alibi although by no means to establish it. To counter the hypothesis, the prosecutor recalled Wolfer, this time qualifying him as an expert in anatomy and acoustics as well as ballistics.

Wolfer’s acoustical testimony theorized that the murder weapon may have been silenced with a towel or a lawn mower muffler in a fashion which would have prevented its discharge from being heard so that witness reports of loud noises in the early morning hours may have referred to the falling body rather than gunshots.

Wolfer qualified as an expert on anatomy by reference to his university education. He testified that, as an undergraduate, he had taken a course in human anatomy in which he and another student had dissected a cadaver from top to bottom. Having qualified as an expert, Wolfer expressed his opinion that a shift of body fluids after death could have so altered the center of gravity of the body as to cause it to roll from the bed. To emphasize its theory, and undoubtedly to present a dramatic conclusion to its case, the prosecution conducted an in-court demonstration of the Wolfer theory. The murder bed, round in shape, was brought *411 into the courtroom and placed before the jury. A male and female police officer acted the part of the victims of the crime while the path of the murder bullets was traced. The male officer then rolled from his back on the bed, landing face downward beside it.

A jury found Kirschke guilty of two counts of first degree murder. On appeal from the judgment based upon the verdict, we concluded that the prosecution’s demonstration was questionable rebuttal but that error, if any, inherent in it was harmless.

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Bluebook (online)
53 Cal. App. 3d 405, 125 Cal. Rptr. 680, 1975 Cal. App. LEXIS 1573, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-kirschke-calctapp-1975.