Knight v. Commonwealth

587 S.E.2d 736, 41 Va. App. 617, 2003 Va. App. LEXIS 550
CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedNovember 4, 2003
Docket0555022
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 587 S.E.2d 736 (Knight v. Commonwealth) 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
Knight v. Commonwealth, 587 S.E.2d 736, 41 Va. App. 617, 2003 Va. App. LEXIS 550 (Va. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

FRANK, Judge.

James Edward Knight, II (appellant), was convicted by a jury of capital murder, in violation of Code § 18.2-31(12). 1 On appeal, he contends the evidence was insufficient as a matter of law to prove premeditation. For the reasons stated, we affirm his conviction.

BACKGROUND

On July 31, 2000, when Cheyenne Knight was born to appellant and Alana Jackson, she suffered from gastrochisis, a condition where “the intestinal content are [sic] outside the abdomen.” Surgery corrected the condition. On September *619 7, 2000, at her first visit to the doctor’s office after leaving the hospital, Cheyenne weighed six pounds and two ounces and was healthy.

On September 10, 2000, at approximately 4:04 a.m., paramedics responded to an emergency call at appellant’s mother’s house. Cheyenne was “basically flaccid and lifeless.” Thomas Hoover, a paramedic, noticed “a deformity to the child’s head,” which “appeared to be swollen.” Hoover asked whether she had fallen. Appellant responded, “[T]he child was in the bed.” Cheyenne was transported to Southside Community Hospital, accompanied by appellant and the paramedics. Several witnesses testified appellant was crying, “very upset, very panicked” on the morning the paramedics arrived.

A triage nurse at Southside asked appellant, “Did the baby suffer any kind of fall or anything like that?” Appellant responded in the negative. The nurse confirmed the baby’s head was “[v]ery misshapen on the right side.”

An emergency room physician, Janette Mamuric, interviewed appellant at the hospital, asking whether the child suffered any trauma. Again, appellant replied in the negative. A CAT scan revealed skull fractures. Dr. Mamuric testified that, had she been told the child suffered a traumatic injury, a proper diagnosis and treatment would have been expedited.

Cheyenne ultimately was transported to MCV hospital in Richmond. Dr. Samuel T. Bartle examined Cheyenne and opined that she had “some type of blunt force” injury to the skull. He described her condition as a “very significant close head injury,” involving several skull fractures and bleeding in or around the brain. He noted, “Injuries like this you would see in a child who has been in a car, in a car [c]rash, that was ejected and was thrown so many feet after traveling 55 miles per hour.” Dr. Bartle further explained that such trauma injuries have a “golden hour,” referring to the need to have the victim transported immediately following the injury to a trauma center. After this “golden hour,” “the percentage of survival drops off.” He also explained that, since an infant’s skull is “much more plastic,” “more force is required to *620 fracture an infant’s skull than it does [sic] to [fracture] an adult skull.”

Dr. William T. Gromley, a forensic pathologist, performed the autopsy. He testified the injuries to the child’s head were “primarily in this frontal portion of the head and on the right side.” The cause of death was “blunt force injuries to the brain.” The pathologist could not opine whether more than one blow caused the injuries.

On the evening of September 10, 2000, appellant and his mother arrived at the Lunenburg County Sheriffs Office. Jeff Paul, a deputy sheriff who knew nothing about the death of Cheyenne, interviewed appellant. Paul read appellant his rights under Miranda v. Arizona, 384 U.S. 436, 86 S.Ct. 1602, 16 L.Ed.2d 694 (1966). Appellant then explained that he was taking care of Cheyenne and that she began to cry. He went into her room and decided to stay with his daughter and watch television. As he reached over Cheyenne to get some VHS tapes, the tapes dropped, and one tape hit her on the head. When appellant picked her up, he noticed “the side of her head was swollen,” and her breathing was difficult. He took the child to his mother’s bedroom, and she called the rescue squad.

Appellant told Deputy Paul that, when the medical personnel at the hospital asked what had happened, he replied he did not know rather than telling them about the tapes. He explained, “I did not want anyone thinking bad of me,” adding, “the last thing I needed was someone coming in and making me seem like a bad father.”

Deputy Paul and Sheriff Wesley D. Adams later interviewed appellant at his mother’s home. The interview was videotaped in the room where the incident occurred. Appellant repeated his story that Cheyenne was injured when some videotapes accidentally fell on her. After they turned off the video recorder, Sheriff Adams told appellant he did not believe falling videotapes “could have killed that child.” The sheriff asked appellant if he wanted to “tell us what really happened.” Appellant said he would. Everyone returned to the same *621 room in the house and continued video recording the interview.

This time, appellant explained to the officers that he had been asleep and awoke to hear the infant’s crying. He tried to feed her, but she would not eat. She kept crying. He explained, “I was not angry with her, but before I knew it, I had struck her in the back of the head with my right fist.” Appellant weighed approximately 200 pounds at the time.

After he was taken to the magistrate and charged, appellant gave a signed, written statement to the officers confirming the videotaped statement.

After gathering some information from the medical examiner, Deputy Paul interviewed appellant again, this time while appellant was in jail. Appellant “seemed to be in good spirits and was happy to see” the deputy. During this interview, appellant was calm and did not cry.

In his statement at the jail, appellant said he had fed Cheyenne, but afterwards she started crying. He tried to feed her again, “but she wouldn’t take the bottle.” He then “squeezed her stomach and she passed gas.” He began feeding the child again, but she stopped drinking and started to cry. He then “choked her until her face started turning blue, and [he] then stopped choking her and laid her on the bed.” When the child continued to cry, he “struck her on the side of her head,” hitting her “hard enough to push her into the wall.” Because the child then started to get quiet, he placed her on her stomach and put a pillow on top of her.

Appellant then left the room and fell asleep while watching television. However, he was awakened by Cheyenne’s crying and returned to the infant’s bedroom. At that point:

She was still crying, so I walked over to the bed and hit her again through the pillow. I hit her harder this time and there was a loud pop.

Appellant again explained why he did not tell the medical personnel or the police what occurred. “I didn’t tell anyone what happened because I didn’t want social services to take *622 my daughter from me.” Appellant told Deputy Paul, “[D]uring the process of harming his daughter, he was never angry.”

At trial, appellant gave yet another version of the incident. He claimed Cheyenne was crying around 3:20 a.m. and woke him.

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Bluebook (online)
587 S.E.2d 736, 41 Va. App. 617, 2003 Va. App. LEXIS 550, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/knight-v-commonwealth-vactapp-2003.