Krepps v. Government of the Virgin Islands

47 V.I. 662, 2006 WL 1149216, 2006 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 24904
CourtDistrict Court, Virgin Islands
DecidedApril 13, 2006
DocketD.C. Crim. App. No. 1999/0047
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 47 V.I. 662 (Krepps v. Government of the Virgin Islands) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, Virgin Islands primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Krepps v. Government of the Virgin Islands, 47 V.I. 662, 2006 WL 1149216, 2006 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 24904 (vid 2006).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

(April 13,2006)

Following a jury trial on December 15-17, 1999, Appellant Patrick Krepps(“Krepps” or “appellant”) was convicted in the Superior Court of second degree murder. Krepps filed this appeal. While this appeal was pending, Krepps petitioned the trial court for a new trial based on newly discovered evidence. The trial court subsequently denied Krepps’ motion for new trial. This Court granted him leave to file a supplemental brief addressing the latter issue. Krepps now appeals from his conviction and the court’s denial of his motion for new trial, arguing:

1. The court’s exclusion of a police report containing statements which the appellant claims were exculpatory violated rights protected under the U.S. Constitution;
2. The admission of photographs of the murder victim was unduly prejudicial and violated his rights to due process;
3. The Court abused its discretion in denying the appellant’s motion for new trial based on newly discovered evidence, by considering facts not on the record;
[665]*6654. The court abused its discretion in finding that the testimony of Carlos Keyes and Nilka Gines was not newly discovered evidence.

The Government challenges the jurisdiction of this Court to review this appeal or, alternatively, to consider the challenges to the denial of the new trial motion which were raised in the appellant’s supplemental brief.

For the reasons which follow, this Court will assume jurisdiction to consider the issues raised in both the appellant’s opening and supplemental briefs, and further affirm the appellant’s conviction and the trial court’s denial of the new trial motion.

I. STATEMENT OF FACTS & PROCEDURAL POSTURE

On October 14, 1997, the family of Kenneth Anderson, Jr. (“Anderson”) reported him missing to police; he had not been seen since October 10, 1997. [See Affidavit of Detective Stephen Brown; Ct’s Mem. Opinion dated June 14, 2001, Supplemental Appendix (“Supplemental App.”) at 3-4]. On October 23, 1997, Anderson’s badly decomposed and partially mummified corpse was discovered in the brush near the apartment building where Krepps lived at No. 15 Western Suburb. [Supplemental App. at 3].

After that discovery, police interviewed residents of nearby No. 15 Western Suburb, where Krepps rented a room in a shared apartment. One resident reported hearing screams coming from Krepps’ room on October 10, 1997 and later hearing Krepps and another man carrying something from Krepps’ apartment. Krepps’ neighbor later noticed blood outside Krepps’ bedroom, door and under a sofa in the common area. [Id. at 5].

Police subsequently questioned Krepps who, in a written statement, admitted to having left the Company Street Pub with Anderson and another individual on October 10, 1997, and going to his apartment with them. [Statement of Krepps, Supplemental App. at 23-24]. Krepps further told police he had beaten Anderson, punching him anywhere he could, after he awoke and found a naked Anderson trying to remove his clothing. [Id. at 24].

Krepps said Anderson initially screamed as he punched him but stopped screaming after falling to the ground. Krepps said he again fell asleep and awoke just as the other male was leaving the apartment. [Id.]. [666]*666Noticing that Anderson was still on the ground and not moving, Krepps picked him up and carried him, along with his clothing, over a little hill in a nearby yard. He later threw Anderson’s shoes in the same area.

Krepps told police that when he carried Anderson to the brush, Anderson had blood on his chest and around his nose and was unconscious. [Id. at 26-27]. Krepps also noticed blood on the floor in his apartment building. He did not know if Anderson was breathing, however. [Id. at 29].

Krepps also admitted to later smelling a foul odor near his residence and said he “suspect[ed] that maybe Ken Anderson was there dead after I heard that he was missing,” although he never returned to the area to check. [Id.]. Upon a search of Krepps’ apartment, police found blood under a sofa near the door, on his mattress, and on a wall in his room.

Trial Evidence

On October 30, 1997, Krepps was arrested and charged with Anderson’s murder. His statement to police was admitted at trial. [See Sup. Ct. Crim. 394/1997, List of Exhs. at ¶ 2].

At trial, Police Detective Stephen Brown (“Detective Brown”), the lead investigator on the case, testified that as part of his duties he compiled all of the reports of other officers working on the case into one investigatory report. [See App. at 60]. He testified that, in doing so, he utilized only the information he thought “pertinent” to the investigation. [Id. at 60-65, 70-73]. Therefore, he said, unsubstantiated information from the individual officers’ reports was not included in the overall report. [Id. at 72-73]. Among the information omitted from Detective Brown’s report was information provided by at least two witnesses to Detective Marisol Colon (“Detective Colon”) regarding purported sightings of Anderson several days after he was beaten by Krepps.

The defense attempted to admit into evidence the substance of the police repoit authored by Detective Colon under the residual exception to the hearsay rule, claiming the statements contained therein were exculpatory. The trial court precluded, as inadmissible hearsay, any testimony regarding the contents of Detective Colon’s report, and Detective Colon did not testify at trial.

Following a jury trial, Krepps was convicted and judgment entered March 23,1999. This appeal followed.

[667]*667Post-Trial Motion

While that appeal was pending, Krepps filed a motion for new trial based on newly discovered evidence. That motion was premised on the defense’s “discovery” of two potentially favorable defense witnesses— Nilka Gines (“Gines”) and Carlos Keyes (“Keyes”) — in Jacksonville, FL.

Both Gines and her fiance, Keyes, were longtime friends of Krepps and had also worked with him at the Company Street Pub at the time of Anderson’s murder. Following his arrest, Krepps’ attorney was in contact with Keyes regarding his possible service as a third-party custodian for Krepps. [Supplemental App. at 103-04]. However, both Keyes and Gines testified that sometime in November 1997, they relocated to Jacksonville, FL. [Id. at 73-74; 87]. Prior to leaving the island, Keyes visited the Public Defender’s Office to notify Krepps’ attorney of his planned relocation, although he left no foiwarding address. [Id. at 74].

Gines and Keyes were also questioned by police during the investigation into Anderson’s disappearance. Gines was not identified by name in the report, but only as a pub employee. However, Keyes was identified by name. That report was provided to the defense in January 1998 — a full year prior to trial and just months after Krepps’ arrest.

An investigator for the public defender’s office, which represented Krepps, testified that, upon questioning a Company Street Pub employee, he learned sometime in December 1997 or January 1998 that Keyes had left the island. [Id. at 60-61]. However, he testified that the employee with whom he spoke did not know Keyes’ whereabouts.

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Related

Thomas v. People
60 V.I. 183 (Supreme Court of The Virgin Islands, 2013)
People v. Fenton
59 V.I. 163 (Superior Court of The Virgin Islands, 2013)
Tyson v. People
59 V.I. 391 (Supreme Court of The Virgin Islands, 2013)
Billu v. People
57 V.I. 455 (Supreme Court of The Virgin Islands, 2012)
Fontaine v. People
56 V.I. 660 (Supreme Court of The Virgin Islands, 2012)
Francis v. People
56 V.I. 370 (Supreme Court of The Virgin Islands, 2012)

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Bluebook (online)
47 V.I. 662, 2006 WL 1149216, 2006 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 24904, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/krepps-v-government-of-the-virgin-islands-vid-2006.