In the Interest of: R.S. v. DUNKLIN COUNTY JUVENILE OFFICE

CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 26, 2024
DocketSD37723
StatusPublished

This text of In the Interest of: R.S. v. DUNKLIN COUNTY JUVENILE OFFICE (In the Interest of: R.S. v. DUNKLIN COUNTY JUVENILE OFFICE) 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: R.S. v. DUNKLIN COUNTY JUVENILE OFFICE, (Mo. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

In Division

In the Interest of: ) R. S., ) ) Appellant, ) ) No. SD37723 vs. ) ) FILED: February 26, 2024 DUNKLIN COUNTY JUVENILE OFFICE, ) ) Respondent. )

APPEAL FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF DUNKLIN COUNTY

Honorable H. Mark Preyer, Judge

AFFIRMED R.S. appeals an order entered by the Juvenile Division of the Circuit Court of Dunklin

County (“juvenile court”), dismissing the juvenile cause of action and certifying R.S. to be

prosecuted as an adult pursuant to section 211.071. 1 In his sole point on appeal, R.S. contends

the juvenile court abused its discretion by certifying him to be prosecuted as an adult under the

general laws. Finding no merit in his contention, we affirm.

Factual Background and Procedural History

On May 30, 2022, when R.S. was seventeen years old, the Dunklin County Juvenile

1 Unless otherwise indicated, statutory references are to RSMo 2016, as updated through the 2021 cumulative supplement. Office (“juvenile office”) filed a petition alleging that R.S. committed, if charged as an adult, the

offenses of assault in the first degree under section 565.050, armed criminal action under section

571.015, unlawful use of a weapon under section 571.030, and endangering the welfare of a

child under section 568.045. The petition alleged R.S. “caused serious physical injury to

[victim] by shooting [her] in the stomach,” “knowingly exhibited . . . a weapon readily capable

of lethal use, in an angry or threatening manner,” and “knowingly acted in a manner that created

a substantial risk to the health” of a four-year-old child who was present in the vehicle when the

victim was shot.

The juvenile office filed a motion for certification seeking to certify R.S. for trial as an

adult pursuant to section 211.071. The motion alleged in part that R.S. should be certified for

trial as an adult because the alleged offenses involved serious physical injury, were violent in

nature, and were offenses committed against a person.

In accordance with section 211.071.6, the juvenile office filed a written report containing

information to be considered by the juvenile court in determining whether to certify R.S. as an

adult. The report indicated that R.S. had several prior referrals in the juvenile system.

According to one referral, R.S. fired a weapon from a vehicle, but the case was dismissed due to

a lack of evidence. A couple of months later R.S. was seen running away from the scene of a

shooting, but it was established that he was the victim of the shooting. R.S. had multiple

referrals for being truant from school due to missing 30 unexcused days, leaving school early

without permission, being disrespectful, and regularly skipping school, all of which resulted in a

20-day suspension from school. He was warned he could face charges of truancy if he continued

missing school. Less than a month before the charged conduct occurred, the juvenile office

received yet another referral wherein R.S.’ mother reported that he was beyond parental control,

2 “messed up the house and broke[] things.” R.S. was not adjudicated delinquent or truant from

any of these referrals.

The report also indicated that R.S.’ father specified the relationship between them was

“delicious” and he “wishes that every father and son had the same relationship.” R.S.’ mother

reported that she and R.S. had a “good relationship sometimes and a bad relationship

sometimes,” that “she at some points ha[d] to call the police department to have [R.S.] removed

from her home because he breaks stuff in her house when he gets mad but will come back and

apologize once he calms down,” and that this was a “repeated pattern” with R.S.

At the certification hearing, an officer with the Kennett Police Department testified that

the victim of the shooting told him she was a passenger in a car driven by a friend (the driver),

and another adult along with that adult’s four-year-old child who were also passengers in the car.

They were driving around looking for the driver’s husband. When they eventually located the

husband, the driver exited the car and got into an argument with another female. Victim stated

that she exited the vehicle, walked around the car to get into the driver’s seat and was standing

between the open door and the seat of the car when R.S. fired a shot that struck her in the

stomach.

Another officer testified that after the incident he advised R.S. of his Miranda rights and

interviewed him. R.S. told the officer he was just hanging out at an intersection with some of his

family members at the time and some individuals kept coming by wanting to cause problems

with some of his family members. R.S. admitted to being involved in the incident and told the

officer the gun went off after he pulled it out of his fanny pack. He said he was just “trying to hit

the car” when the gun went off, and that he was unaware the bullet fired had struck anyone.

3 Chief Deputy Juvenile Officer Campbell (“JO Campbell”) testified regarding R.S.’

previous referrals. He also testified regarding several factors of the statutory criteria as follows:

Juvenile Office: Has [R.S.] ever presented to you or, since he’s been in detention, any type of self-harming behavior or anything of that nature? JO Campbell: No, sir. Juvenile Office: Does he seem to be of stable persona and carry himself as a normal 17- year old would? JO Campbell: Yes, sir. Juvenile Office: Understand the nature of what he’s gotten himself into? JO Campbell: Yes. Juvenile Office: Now as we sit here today, are there any services that the State of Missouri has that you believe would be beneficial or helpful to this Juvenile? JO Campbell: No, sir. He -- he is, as I said, 17. He’ll be 18, I believe, in March. The – the only thing we would have would be Division of Youth Services, which would be pretty short-lived. Juvenile Office: And essentially, basically, to the -- due to the nature of these charges, do you believe DYS would be beneficial? JO Campbell: No, sir. Juvenile Office: And so at this point, are there any other programs that we have in the juvenile system -- JO Campbell: No, sir. Juvenile Office: -- that -- that could work? JO Campbell: No, sir.

The juvenile court found, in accordance with the statutory criteria set forth in section

211.071.6, that (i) the allegations against R.S. were “some of the most serious offenses described

under the Criminal Code” and the community had “a valid expectation of being protected” from

such acts; (ii) the allegations involved force and violence against people; (iii) R.S. had been

involved in multiple and repeated unadjudicated incidents; (iv) R.S. was not adjudicated as

delinquent or truant, but his behavior “has been increasingly serious” and he was described by

his mother to be “out of control”; (v) R.S. appeared to “be of normal maturity” and his behavior,

based on the written report and his conduct before the court, gave “no indication that he

suffer[ed] from any mental or physical health disability”; (vi) there were no community

programs sufficient to treat R.S. if the allegations were true, and DYS would not have enough

4 time to treat R.S. because that time would be insufficient “to rehabilitate [R.S.]” and “also insure

the protection and safety of the community[,]” as R.S. was 17 years and six months old at the

time the hearing occurred; and (vii) R.S. is African-American, but race did not impact the

determinations of the juvenile court or the juvenile office. The juvenile court concluded that

R.S.

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In the Interest of: R.S. v. DUNKLIN COUNTY JUVENILE OFFICE, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-the-interest-of-rs-v-dunklin-county-juvenile-office-moctapp-2024.