Jason Dickerson v. Commonwealth of Kentucky

485 S.W.3d 310, 2016 Ky. LEXIS 109, 2016 WL 1068344
CourtKentucky Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 17, 2016
Docket2014-SC-000507-MR
StatusUnknown
Cited by73 cases

This text of 485 S.W.3d 310 (Jason Dickerson 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
Jason Dickerson v. Commonwealth of Kentucky, 485 S.W.3d 310, 2016 Ky. LEXIS 109, 2016 WL 1068344 (Ky. 2016).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT BY

JUSTICE NOBLE

The ■ Appellant, Jason Dickerson, was convicted-of murder and four counts of first-degree criminal abuse, and was sentenced to life in prison. On appeal, he complains about the admission of evidence, of his abuse of his spouse, the admission of hearsay statements made to an examining pediatrician and to an investigating detective, and several instances of alleged pros-ecutorial misconduct during cross-examination of his expert witness and in closing arguments. We affirm.

I.. Background

On September 29, 2011, two-year-old Watson Adkins died as a result of severe physical trauma to his abdomen, ‘among other parts of his body. The parties dispute the nature of the injury or injuries that ultimately caused the boy’s death, but it is largely indisputable that he suffered severe physical abuse in the weeks or mbnths leading up to his death.

The events leading to Watson’s tragic death, began earlier that year when he and his four siblings—Braxton (the oldest, then age 6), 1 Cameron, Alyssa, and Mary (the youngest, then' an infant)—were temporarily removed from the custody of their mother, Rhoda Lewis, by the Cabinet for Health and Family Services due to poor living conditions in the home and Lewis’s issues with substance abuse. Lewis cooperated and helped the Cabinet arrange for the children to be placed in the custody of her sister and brother-in-law, Gladys and Jason Dickerson, 2 in February 2011.

When -the children first moved in with the couple, the Appellant was employed on a full time basis, and Gladys was their primary, day-to-day caregiver. But when Dickerson lost his job in April, Gladys obtained full-time employment with a nursing home, where she'worked nightly shifts from 6:00 p.m. to 6:00 a.m. The children began attending day care, although Dickerson, who remained at home during the day, would keep some or all of them home on occasion.

On the morning that Watson died, Dickerson left their house in Prestonsburg and went -with his parents to work on renovations to a trader in Johnson County that the couple was planning to move into. Throughout the course of the day, the three laid new tile in the kitchen and carpet in a living room, mounted a mirror in a bathroom, and repaired a sink and bathtub.

Shortly after 5:00 p.m., Gladys called 911 about Watson. During the lengthy call, she told the dispatcher that a big “white-headed boy” had attacked and hurt him the previous day while they were playing outside near the Johnson County trailer. Gladys can also be heard' on the' 911 recording purporting, to attempt CPR on the child, stating she had heard “some whistling” and felt two heartbeats while doing so. It would eventually become *317 clear that the child had already died before this call was made.

The statement Gladys initially gave to police essentially mirrored the two her husband would later give police. But her statement differed significantly from the testimony she later gave at his trial, which is summarized below. Notably, she initially rehashed the story about the “white-headed boy” to police, which she later admitted was made up (according to her, at her husband’s insistence). She also stated that she had seen no significant bruises on- the child prior to her administration of CPR while on the phone with the 911 dispatcher, with any bruising purportedly having been caused by her CPR attempts.

Jason Dickerson’s first interview with police took place the same day. He, too, identified a “little white-headéd hoy” at the trailer park in Johnson' County as the source of most of Watson’s injuries, which he claimed included only small bruises on his knees and back. The child also had a cut on the back of his head that, Dickerson told police, he received by accidentally hitting his own head on a towel rack. 3 He stated that the child -had not complained, of any pain before going to .-bed- the previous night. He explained that he disciplined the children only with time-outs, no television, and smacks on the hand, and he told police that neither he nor Gladys ever hit the children. When advised that Watson’s body had been severely bruised all over, he replied, “No child should have to go through that.” He also told.police that Lewis had been making two or three anonymous calls per day to social services about them.

A couple days later, police arrested Dickerson and interviewed him a second time. Continuing to deny any wrongdoing, he told police that Lewis had “mind control” over her children and had made the anonymous calls to social services because she wanted to make their life a “living hell.” -He claimed she did not want her children to remain in their care because she did not want them to be happy. Contrary to his first statement, he said Watson actually had complained about stomach pain the night before his death and that Gladys had given the ¡child a stool softener in response; he also stated that Watson fell 1 asleep 'after taking the stool softener. He stated his wife had told him that when she found the boy’s body, she had administered CPR, performed, the Heimlich maneuver, smacked his face, and felt his heart beat. He claimed she had thus been the cause of Watson’s bruises and that they had “talked about that over and over and over.” He reiterated his and Gladys’s disciplinary techniques * and denied ever hitting them with a belt, even if that’s what the children might have claimed to child-advocacy personnel.

The interviewing detective told Dickerson that'he did not believe his story and that “the kids said you stomped that little kid, and they are covered in' bruises.” Dickerson responded, “I never stomped or hit them. I will admit that I have whipped them. I have never done anything to hurt one of them.” He added, “I have whipped them, and Gladys has whipped them.”

Police also followed-up on the story about the white-headed boy by interviewing neighbors who lived in the Johnson County trailer park and who had witnessed (and supervised) Watson and his siblings playing on the playground with other children. All those interviewed ap *318 parently refuted the story, or at least none could confirm that there was any truth to it. Four of the Johnson County neighbors interviewed by police testified at trial to this effect.

Both the Appellant and his wife were charged with Watson’s murder and four counts of first-degree criminal abuse of Watson and the other children. (Unlike her four older siblings, the infant Mary was spared from any abuse.) They were tried separately, with Dickerson’s trial being held first. Gladys testified against him at his trial, where she recanted her statements to police as being lies. She testified about Dickerson’s physical abuse of the children and of Watson in particular (consistent with both Braxton’s testimony and the medical evidence described below), and she explained that she had given false statements, and otherwise failed to report the child abuse, because she was scared of her husband, who physically abused her as well.

The evidence of Watson’s and the other children’s injuries—including autopsy reports, photographs, and medical examinations—was extensive. Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
485 S.W.3d 310, 2016 Ky. LEXIS 109, 2016 WL 1068344, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jason-dickerson-v-commonwealth-of-kentucky-ky-2016.