In the Interest of: J.R.

CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 19, 2021
DocketED109245
StatusPublished

This text of In the Interest of: J.R. (In the Interest of: J.R.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In the Interest of: J.R., (Mo. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

In the Missouri Court of Appeals Eastern District DIVISION THREE IN THE INTEREST OF: J.R. ) No. ED109245 ) ) ) Appeal from the Circuit Court of the ) City of St. Louis ) Cause No. 2022JU-00248 ) ) Honorable Barbara T. Peebles ) ) Filed: October 19, 2021

OPINION

J.R. (“Juvenile”) appeals the judgment adjudicating him delinquent after a bench trial

pursuant to § 211.031.1(3).1 The trial court found that Juvenile shot a firearm at two women and

discharged a firearm into a habitable structure--conduct that, had he been an adult, would have

constituted the crimes of assault in the first degree and unlawful use of a weapon. In his two

points on appeal, Juvenile challenges the exclusion of a video and the sufficiency of the

evidence. Exclusion of the video constituted prejudicial error. Therefore, we reverse and remand.

1 Mo. Rev. Stat. 2000.

1 I. Factual and Procedural Background

The Juvenile Officer put on the following evidence at the September 29, 2020 bench trial.

D.J.2 testified that she was asleep in her home at 12:30 p.m. on Sunday, May 30, 2020, when her

sister woke her up to tell her there were kids throwing things at her car and house. D.J. said there

were 20 or 30 kids out front throwing bottle rockets, water balloons, Jell-O balloons, and sticks.

She went outside and moved her car to the back of the house. Then D.J. saw Juvenile messing

with her car again and told him to get away from it. Juvenile told D.J. to send her sister out to

fight with his girlfriend. D.J. told him that was not happening.

Shortly thereafter, Juvenile brought a chair up to D.J.’s front porch, sat down, and would

not leave when she asked. At this point, D.J. was standing inside her house looking out the door,

which was opened part way. She said that while Juvenile was sitting there, he showed her a gun

he had clutched in his pants. D.J. was on the phone with her friend, M.S., who lived nearby, and

asked her to come over. When M.S. arrived, Juvenile said he had been looking for her. D.J.

testified that at that point, Juvenile stepped out onto the street, pulled the gun from his waistband,

and held it in the air. Then, she said, “he shoots the gun.” After the shot was fired, D.J. said she

snatched M.S. and pulled her into the house, kept the door cracked about six inches, and then

fired her own gun--a .40 caliber--through that opening. D.J. testified that she saw Juvenile

shooting back at her and her house, and that another person was shooting also: “He shot multiple

times, and then someone else shot at me as well. So there [were] two people shooting at me.”

D.J. said the other person was “some girl named [J.]”3

2 D.J. and M.S. are adults, but to protect the identity of the minors involved in the case, all parties will be referred to by their initials. 3 This girl was referred to at trial only by her first name.

2 The police arrived about 20 to 30 minutes after the shooting stopped. One girl among the

children outside of the house had been shot and was taken to the hospital.4 D.J. testified that

when the police brought Juvenile to her and asked if this was the guy, she said yes. She did not

tell the police anything about the girl shooter that day, claiming she was “too hysterical.”

According to D.J., Juvenile had been coming to her door showing her his gun and making threats

for weeks and he and other kids had been harassing her for months. She had never reported this

to the police.

M.S. testified that she saw Juvenile pull a small black gun out of his pants right before

D.J. snatched her into the house. Once inside, M.S. laid on the floor and heard multiple gunshots

being fired. She did not actually see Juvenile fire the gun. M.S. testified that when the police

arrived, Juvenile was trying to walk away, so she told the police to stop him. She also testified

that she found out later there was another shooter, a girl, and that a neighbor had recorded the

incident. M.S. got the video a few days later and reported it to the police.

D.J.’s teenage sister, R.S., testified that she had been in a fight with some girls prior to

the day of this incident and that, for a couple of months, Juvenile had been coming to D.J.’s

house trying to get R.S. to fight the girls again. R.S. testified that she was looking out the

window and saw Juvenile step to the street and “cock the gun back.” R.S. testified that “after

[Juvenile] got done firing the gun,” a girl with blue and black braids “picked up the gun and

fired, emptied out the whole clip into our house. And that’s when my sister fired back.” Several

short videos taken on R.S.’s phone from inside the house were admitted into evidence. None of

them show Juvenile or anyone else shooting at M.S., D.J., or her house. On one video, a boy is

4 The charges against Juvenile did not include this girl’s injury, and the evidence at trial suggested she had been hit by a bullet from D.J.’s gun.

3 seen handing a chair to Juvenile. The rest of the videos depict chaotic screaming and crying

inside the home.

The evidence technician officer who investigated the crime scene testified that she

searched D.J.’s house and porch, the walkway leading from the porch to the street, the street, and

the sidewalk area across the street. Thirteen cartridge casings fired from two types of guns were

recovered: seven 9mm casings were found in the street, and six .40 caliber casings were found on

the walkway, front porch, and inside D.J.’s house.5 Sometimes casings go missing--they can roll

or be kicked away--the officer said, but she had tried to be as thorough in her search as possible.

Only D.J.’s .40 caliber weapon was seized, no other gun was ever found. Photographs of the

ballistics damage to D.J.’s home were also admitted into evidence.

Juvenile put on the following evidence. An investigating officer testified that after the

day of the incident, he received a video purportedly taken from inside a neighbor’s house. He did

not know who recorded it. The officer testified “it’s a bad video” and said he could not “really

tell what exactly is going on.” He agreed that the video shows somebody on the street shooting,

but he could not tell if that person was male or female. He also pointed out that the video is not

dated or time stamped.

B.E., another teenager outside of D.J.’s house that day, testified that she was there during

the entire shooting incident. B.E. said that at first there was just arguing, then a girl grabbed a

gun from Juvenile’s pants and shot it once into the air, at which point D.J. started shooting into

the crowd of kids and hit a girl. “And then that’s when [J.], she started shooting at the house and

she let out all the bullets.” B.E. testified that she never saw the gun in Juvenile’s hand and never

5 D.J. told police the day of the incident that she had only fired her gun once, and at trial claimed not to recall telling them that nor whether she had actually fired more than once.

4 saw him fire it. Though she was still there when the police arrived and knew they were taking

Juvenile into custody, B.E. did not tell them what she had seen.

During B.E.’s testimony, Juvenile attempted to introduce into evidence the video taken

from the neighbor’s house. When shown the video exhibit, B.E. was asked if she had seen what

was on the video, and she said yes. Then she was asked, “Do you know what it shows?” Again,

B.E. said yes and started to describe what it showed when the Juvenile Officer objected, claiming

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