Kassceen Lazane Weaver v. Commonwealth of Virginia

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedJuly 29, 2025
Docket0285242
StatusUnpublished

This text of Kassceen Lazane Weaver v. Commonwealth of Virginia (Kassceen Lazane Weaver v. Commonwealth of Virginia) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kassceen Lazane Weaver v. Commonwealth of Virginia, (Va. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA UNPUBLISHED

Present: Chief Judge Decker, Judge Friedman and Senior Judge Clements Argued at Richmond, Virginia

KASSCEEN LAZANE WEAVER MEMORANDUM OPINION* BY v. Record No. 0285-24-2 JUDGE JEAN HARRISON CLEMENTS JULY 29, 2025 COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF CHESTERFIELD COUNTY Edward A. Robbins, Jr., Judge

Paul C. Galanides (Stephen A. Mutnick; Winslow, McCurry & MacCormac, PLLC, on brief), for appellant.

Elizabeth Kiernan Fitzgerald, Assistant Attorney General (Jason S. Miyares, Attorney General, on brief), for appellee.

Kassceen Lazane Weaver appeals his convictions for felony murder, child neglect, and

concealing a dead body. He first argues that the trial court erred by not suppressing evidence

obtained during the execution of two search warrants he claims were invalid. He also argues that

the trial court abused its discretion by admitting an expert report at trial and by denying two

proposed jury instructions. Finally, he challenges the sufficiency of the evidence supporting

each of his convictions. We affirm.1

BACKGROUND

We recite the facts “in the ‘light most favorable’ to the Commonwealth, the prevailing

party in the trial court.” Hammer v. Commonwealth, 74 Va. App. 225, 231 (2022) (quoting

* This opinion is not designated for publication. See Code § 17.1-413(A). 1 Weaver has withdrawn his assignment of error concerning the late filing of the Commonwealth’s expert notice. Commonwealth v. Cady, 300 Va. 325, 329 (2021)). Doing so “requires us to ‘discard the

evidence of the accused in conflict with that of the Commonwealth, and regard as true all the

credible evidence favorable to the Commonwealth and all fair inferences to be drawn

therefrom.’” Cady, 300 Va. at 329 (quoting Commonwealth v. Perkins, 295 Va. 323, 324

(2018)).

Weaver began dating Dina Weaver (“Dina”) in 1993, and the two were married in

September 2015. The couple’s first child, L.W., was born at a hospital in 2011. Their second

child, A.W., was born at home in September 2015. Dina worked 12-hour shifts as a pharmacist,

while Weaver stayed home and was the primary caregiver for both children. Nobody but

Weaver watched the children, nobody visited the home, and Weaver did not permit the children

to leave the home.

Unlike L.W., who “was an easy baby,” A.W. was “slow” to meet childhood milestones,

like walking and talking. According to Dina, Weaver refused to let A.W. see a pediatrician

because he “really didn’t believe in doctors.” Thus, A.W. never visited a doctor during his

lifetime.

Weaver regularly complained to Dina that A.W. cried every day and could not be

consoled or satisfied. According to Dina, Weaver “didn’t have as much patience with [A.W.] as

he had with [L.W.]” Weaver was “very rough” and “[j]ust very, very aggressive with” A.W.

When A.W. cried, Weaver would hit him with a belt or his hand. Weaver was 6 feet, 3 inches

tall and weighed around 200 pounds, while A.W. weighed “[m]aybe 30 pounds.” A.W. “always

had bruises on him in some way or another” “[b]ecause he was always being punished.” Dina

testified that Weaver once kicked A.W., who “fell forward and his front tooth got pushed up into

-2- his jaw.”2 She also described A.W. as “clumsy” and described how he once fell off the bed of

his own accord, after which he seemed “fine.”

In mid-October 2018, A.W. cried until he passed out. When Dina revived him with CPR,

he looked at her “dazed” and “confused” and put his hand on his head. He “act[ed] normal after

that.” On a separate occasion “around that period,” A.W. “projectile vomited out of the blue,

which never happened.”

Around 6:30 p.m. on October 23, 2018, nine days after A.W. had passed out, Weaver

called Dina while she was at work and told her that A.W. was not breathing, “[j]ust like last

week.” Weaver asked Dina to “[c]ome home now” but she could not do so immediately because

Weaver had driven her to work. Dina told Weaver to call 911 or take A.W. to the hospital,

which was about a quarter of a mile away from the couple’s house. When she told him that,

Weaver stated that A.W. was “coming to.” Dina advised him to try CPR. Eventually, Dina

received a ride home from her coworker’s mother. She talked to Weaver during the drive, who

assured her that A.W. was awake, “okay,” and “all right.”

Dina arrived home between 40 minutes and an hour after Weaver called. When she got

home, she ran upstairs to find A.W. lying on the floor covered in vomit. He was neither

breathing nor alert. Dina tried to perform CPR but it had no effect. She “begged” Weaver to let

her take A.W. to the hospital but he refused, claiming that if they did so they would lose custody

of L.W. because of A.W.’s bruises. As Dina continued her attempts to revive A.W., Weaver

stated, “[h]e’s gone.”

Neither Dina nor Weaver notified the police or anybody else about A.W.’s death.

Instead, Dina washed A.W.’s body and placed him in his crib. She did not see any new bruises

2 Dina admitted during cross-examination that she had previously told the police that A.W. fell but omitted that Weaver had kicked him. -3- or cuts on his body when she washed him. Weaver then wrapped A.W.’s body in linens and

placed him in a plastic storage bin. They kept the storage bin in A.W.’s room for some time.

Once it started to smell, Weaver bought a deep freezer. He put the storage bin in the freezer and

put the freezer in the garage. Dina claimed that she and Weaver discussed “[i]n passing” buying

land and burying the body, but she denied that there were any religious motives to keep the body

in the freezer. She testified that they did not tell anybody that A.W.’s body was in the freezer

because they “[d]idn’t want to” and “it was a crime.”

On May 3, 2021, more than two and a half years after A.W.’s death, Dina called her

brother Dominic Minnitte while she was at work and told him that A.W.’s body was in the

freezer. Minnitte was living in Connecticut at the time and did not have much contact with Dina

because he ordinarily could not reach her by phone.

Minnitte reported Dina’s statements to Chesterfield County Police Detectives Nicholas

Frazier and Joanna Hartsook. Hartsook then applied for a search warrant of the Weavers’ home

(“search warrant A”). The affidavit for search warrant A, which was not shown to the jury at

trial, relayed Minnitte’s statements to the police that Dina had called him the day before, told

him the circumstances of A.W.’s death, and told him that A.W.’s body was still in a freezer

inside the Weavers’ home. Minnitte also told the police that Dina had told him that Weaver was

physically abusive and that she was afraid Weaver would kill her. Hartsook wrote in the

affidavit that she “found [Minnitte] to be credible and consistent in his recounting about Dina’s

statements.” The magistrate issued the search warrant, authorizing the police to search for and

seize surveillance cameras, blankets and bedding, the freezer and its contents, any documents

bearing A.W.’s name, printed family photos, firearms, and computers and electronic storage

devices “to include all data contained therein.”

-4- The police executed the warrant and located the freezer in the garage. The garage door

was locked so that it could not be accessed from inside the house. Inside the freezer was a

plastic container underneath “a lot of frozen turkeys and bags of ice.” The police removed the

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