Krystal M. Scroggs v. State of Missouri

CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 1, 2022
DocketWD84643
StatusPublished

This text of Krystal M. Scroggs v. State of Missouri (Krystal M. Scroggs v. State of Missouri) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Krystal M. Scroggs v. State of Missouri, (Mo. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

In the Missouri Court of Appeals Western District KRYSTAL M. SCROGGS, ) ) Appellant, ) WD84643 ) v. ) OPINION FILED: ) November 1, 2022 STATE OF MISSOURI, ) ) Respondent. )

Appeal from the Circuit Court of Johnson County, Missouri The Honorable R. Michael Wagner, Judge

Before Division Four: Gary D. Witt, Chief Judge, Presiding, Mark D. Pfeiffer, Judge, and Louis Angles, Special Judge

Krystal Scroggs ("Scroggs") appeals the judgment of the Circuit Court of Johnson

County ("motion court"), following an evidentiary hearing, denying Scroggs's amended

motion to vacate, set aside, or correct the judgment and sentence, pursuant to Rule 29.15.1

On appeal, Scroggs argues the motion court erred in denying her amended motion because

(1) Scroggs's appellate counsel ("appellate counsel") was ineffective in failing to raise a

sufficiency of the evidence challenge to first-degree child endangerment on direct appeal

1 All rule references are to Missouri Supreme Court Rules (2021), unless otherwise indicated. because the State failed to produce sufficient evidence that Scroggs "created" a substantial

risk to the health of the baby ("M.J.S.");2 (2) appellate counsel was ineffective in failing to

raise a sufficiency of the evidence challenge to felony murder on direct appeal because the

State failed to produce sufficient evidence to support felony murder predicated on child

endangerment; (3) appellate counsel was ineffective in failing to raise a sufficiency of the

evidence challenge to abandonment of a corpse because there was insufficient evidence

that Scroggs and her husband, Matthew Scroggs ("Matthew"),3 "disposed" of M.J.S.'s body

because they never relinquished possession of it; and (4) Scroggs's trial counsel ("trial

counsel") was ineffective in failing to object and offer an additional element to the

abandonment of a corpse verdict director because, although the instruction followed MAI-

CR 3d, it was missing an element as established by caselaw. Finding no error, we affirm.

Factual Background

The tragic facts of this case, viewed in the light most favorable to the verdict, were

recounted by this Court on direct appeal in State v. Scroggs, 521 S.W.3d 649, 651-53 (Mo.

App. W.D. 2017):

In 2013, Scroggs and her husband[, Matthew,] were living in Pleasant Hill, Missouri with their three children. During the summer, Matthew's mother, Melinda Brown ("Brown") was caring for the children at her home a couple hours away from Pleasant Hill. In early June of 2013, Brown took the three children to visit Pleasant Hill. Brown noticed that Scroggs appeared to be pregnant. She returned again in July and noticed that Scroggs's breasts were enlarged, she had gained weight in her stomach, and her nose was red. This was consistent with how Scroggs looked during her previous

2 We will use these initials for the baby throughout this opinion based on the name M.J.S.'s grandmother chose for him when law enforcement created a birth certificate and death certificate. 3 Because Krystal and Matthew share the same surname, we will refer to Matthew Scroggs as Matthew. No familiarity or disrespect is intended.

2 pregnancies. Brown asked Scroggs whether she was pregnant, and Scroggs angrily denied it multiple times. Their children were returned by Brown to Scroggs and Matthew in August. Brown received a call from Matthew on November 4, 2013, requesting that Brown come to his home. When Brown arrived, Matthew looked like he had not slept and was exhausted, as if he were "crashing." His mood vacillated between sadness and anger. The three children were not at home. Matthew first patted Brown down, as if he were searching for something, and then forced Brown to hand over her keys and cell phone because he wanted to tell her something but did not want her to leave. Matthew informed Brown that Scroggs had delivered a baby [boy] at home and was in the hospital. Brown asked where [M.J.S.] was, and Matthew responded, saying, "[a]ll you need to know is that we took care of it." Matthew also told Brown that there was a stolen car between their garage and a fence. Brown spoke with law enforcement and told them a stolen car was located on the property, which she had seen the day before, and relayed the information she had received from Matthew about [M.J.S.] She informed police that she believed Scroggs and Matthew had disposed of [M.J.S.'s] body and that they both deal in drugs. When police arrived, Matthew was placed under arrest and gave his consent for a search of the residence. Police found four glass pipes used for smoking methamphetamine that had white residue on them. An additional thirty unused glass pipes were located in the upstairs of the home along with bags containing marijuana, methamphetamine residue, and additional marijuana pipes. Police discovered a blue bucket in the garage filled with what appeared to be recently poured concrete. Matthew later admitted that [M.J.S.'s] body was in the bucket and gave permission to police to remove it. The bucket was taken to the medical examiner, who removed and examined the contents. [M.J.S.] was located in the concrete inside a cardboard box for baby wipes and inside a plastic bag that also contained pacifiers, a bottle, a bib, a baby bottle brush, and formula. An additional plastic bag was also in the bucket containing the placenta wrapped in a towel. At the bottom of the bucket was a truck brake rotor. Scroggs was interviewed twice while in the hospital. She had been admitted for pneumonia and congestive heart failure. Police asked her if she was aware she had given birth to a baby boy on October 7. Scroggs hesitated and stated the birth had taken place a few days after that. Scroggs had learned that she was pregnant in June but she did not want any more children. Scroggs did not obtain any prenatal care or seek any medical treatment during her pregnancy. Although her previous three children had been born in a hospital, she said that she "wanted to do it like they did back in the day." She

3 did not obtain a midwife to help with the birth, and she and Matthew had not told anyone about the pregnancy, not even their children. Scroggs admitted to police that she used methamphetamine and marijuana throughout her pregnancy. She told a Children's Division investigator that she had only used methamphetamine prior to the pregnancy but when told that hair follicle tests would be able to determine whether that was true, she said they would probably find methamphetamine in her system and that she could not remember that last time she had used it. Scroggs claimed [M.J.S.] was born somewhere between five and seven months into pregnancy and that after he was born [he] looked fine. She claimed that she called a doctor after the birth, whom she picked out of a phone book, and the doctor told her that as long as there was not excess bleeding, everything was okay and there was nothing else she could do. Scroggs did not remember who this doctor was and could not provide any information regarding the doctor's identity. Scroggs stated that after the birth [M.J.S.] would not breast feed or take a bottle. She told police that she thought he would eventually eat, so she went to sleep. Scroggs stated that when she woke up, [M.J.S.] was "gone," as in deceased. She also stated that she had heard him make a whimpering sound before he died.

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Krystal M. Scroggs v. State of Missouri, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/krystal-m-scroggs-v-state-of-missouri-moctapp-2022.