James M. Spaulding v. Commonwealth of Kentucky

CourtKentucky Supreme Court
DecidedApril 30, 2020
Docket2018-SC-0615
StatusUnpublished

This text of James M. Spaulding v. Commonwealth of Kentucky (James M. Spaulding v. Commonwealth of Kentucky) 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
James M. Spaulding v. Commonwealth of Kentucky, (Ky. 2020).

Opinion

IMPORTANT NOTICE NOTTOBE PUBLISHED OPINION

THIS OPINION IS DESIGNATED "NOT TO BE PUBLISHED." PURSUANT TO THE RULES OF CIVIL PROCEDURE PROMULGATED BY THE SUPREME COURT, CR 76.28(4)(C), THIS OPINION IS NOT TO BE PUBLISHED AND SHALL NOT BE CITED OR USED AS BINDING PRECEDENT IN ANY OTHER CASE IN ANY COURT OF THIS STATE; HOWEVER, UNPUBLISHED KENTUCKY APPELLATE DECISIONS, RENDERED AFTER JANUARY 1, 2003, MAY BE CITED FOR CONSIDERATION BY THE COURT IF THERE IS NO PUBLISHED OPINION THAT WOULD ADEQUATELY ADDRESS THE ISSUE BEFORE THE COURT. OPINIONS CITED FOR CONSIDERATION BY THE COURT SHALL BE SET OUT AS AN UNPUBLISHED DECISION IN THE FILED DOCUMENT AND A COPY OF THE ENTIRE DECISION SHALL BE TENDERED ALONG WITH THE DOCUMENT TO THE COURT AND ALL PARTIES TO THE ACTION. 2018-SC-000615-MR

JAMES M. SPAULDING APPELLANT

ON APPEAL FROM JEFFERSON CIRCUIT COURT V. HONORABLE OLU ALFREDO STEVENS, JUDGE NO. 16-CR-000358

COMMONWEALTH OF KENTUCKY APPELLEE

MEMORANDUM OPINION OF THE COURT

AFFIRMING

James M. Spaulding was convicted of wanton murder, four counts of

first-degree wanton endangerment, and first-degree fleeing or evading police.

Pursuant to the jury’s recommendation, the Jefferson Circuit Court sentenced

him to thirty-three years’ imprisonment. Spaulding now appeals as a matter of

right,1 raising three claims of error: (1) the trial court improperly instructed the

jury on wanton murder, (2) Spaulding was prejudiced by the Commonwealth’s

Moss violation2 and (3) the trial court improperly limited mitigating evidence of

details of Spaulding’s prior convictions during the sentencing phase of trial.

After review of the record and appEcable law, we affirm.

1 Ky. Const. § 110(2)(b). 2 Moss v. Commonwealth, 949 S.W.2d 579 (Ky. 1997). I. Factual and Procedural Background.

The night of February 2, 2016, Spaulding rode around Louisville with his

friend Antoine Major in Major’s F-150 truck. They stopped to get cigarettes

and beer and eventually ended up at Major’s mother’s home, where Spaulding

smoked spice,3 marijuana, did methamphetamine and drank alcohol.

Spaulding became paranoid and thought someone was out to kill him. The

next morning, Spaulding smoked more spice and marijuana and perhaps did

more meth; he could not recall. Later that evening, he bought more cigarettes

and spice, and he and Major rode around in Major’s truck into the early

morning hours of February 4th. Due to his drug hallucinations, Spaulding

became increasingly paranoid, thinking people were following them and out to

get him. Believing Major was wired by the FBI, Spaulding made Majors strip

and then threw his clothes out the window of the truck.

They stopped at a Denny’s Restaurant and Spaulding went inside and

asked for help and for someone to call the police. While inside Denny’s,

Spaulding picked up the phone and called 911 himself, reporting that he had

been robbed. Convinced people were out to get him, he left before police

arrived. Spaulding and Major then pulled into a Four Points by Sheraton Hotel

parking lot. They went inside the lobby of the hotel; Major was naked, and

Spaulding was screaming and yelling at the desk clerk to call the police.

Believing people were still out to get him, Spaulding took the elevator to the

3 Spice is a class of synthetic cannabinoids.

2 sixth floor of the hotel and ran down the hall, banging on doors and yelling for

help and for someone to call 911. He then fled down the stairs, leaving Major

inside the hotel.

Spaulding got into Major’s truck and drove to a nearby Stop-n-Go

Liquor/Convenience Store. It was about 2 a.m. at this point. A store

employee, Kahmal Zahden, was on his way out the door with his friend, as

Zahden’s shift had just ended. The other store employee, Denny Davis, was

inside. Spaulding rushed into the store, shoving Zahden and his friend back

inside, and pulled the door behind him, all the while waving his arms and

screaming for help, saying someone was trying to rob and kill him. When

Zahden picked up the phone to call 911, Spaulding jumped over the counter

and wrestled with him for the phone. When Zahden grabbed the store gun

which was kept under the counter, Spaulding fought with him for that too.

When the gun fell to the floor, Spaulding grabbed it and shot Davis, who fell to

the ground. Spaulding fired shots at Zahden, missed, then fatally shot Davis

3-4 more times before leaving the store on foot with the gun and continuing

down the street, screaming.

A nearby resident, Mark Adair, was out back of his house smoking a

cigarette when he heard someone screaming. Adair went into his house and

looked out the front window and saw a guy run up to his door and try to get in.

As Adair approached the door to keep the guy from entering, the guy shot the

lock off. The bullet stopped by a couch where Adair’s teenage son slept.

3 Adair’s 5-month-old daughter was in the next room, which was not too far from

where the bullet ended up. Adair said the shooter did not enter his home.

Spaulding ran to the house next door where Sean Allender resided with

his roommate. Allender heard screaming and pounding on the window of his

house and called the police. Allender’s bedroom window broke and the loaded

handgun went through it. Spaulding did not enter but rather ran back to

Major’s truck and drove off.

Detective Vito spotted Major’s truck as matching the description of the

one involved in the shooting at the convenience store and pulled behind it at a

red light, activating the sirens and lights. Spaulding ran the red light and a

police pursuit ensued down 1-65. As Spaulding approached the ramp to the

Waterson Expressway, he did a U-turn, hit a wall/rail of the expressway and

jumped out of the truck while it was still in gear. He stood up, put his hands

up and walked toward the officers yelling, “Just kill me, just kill me!” It took

multiple officers to subdue Spaulding and get him on an ambulance stretcher.

Spaulding bit one of the officers on the arm. In the ambulance and at the

hospital, Spaulding remained paranoid, shouting and yelling for help.

Eventually, Spaulding was discharged from the hospital to jail.

Spaulding was indicted on 13 counts, including murder, criminal

attempt to murder, first-degree robbery, first-degree burglary, criminal attempt

to commit burglary, four counts of wanton endangerment, tampering with

physical evidence, first-degree fleeing/evading police, third-degree assault, and

4 first-degree criminal mischief.4 Ultimately, the jury found Spaulding guilty of

wanton murder of Davis, four counts of first-degree wanton endangerment (one

count as to Zahden, and three counts as to Adair and his two children in the

path of the shot fired into the lock of Adair’s door), and first-degree

fleeing/evading police. The jury recommended a sentence of thirty years for

wanton murder and three years each on the remaining convictions, with the

three-year sentences to run concurrently with each other, and consecutively to

the thirty-year sentence, for a total sentence of thirty-three years. The trial

court imposed the recommended sentence and this appeal followed.

II. Analysis.

A. The Wanton Murder Jury Instruction Was Proper.

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