Lay v. State

14 P.3d 1256, 116 Nev. 1185, 116 Nev. Adv. Rep. 126, 2000 Nev. LEXIS 139
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 19, 2000
Docket34197
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 14 P.3d 1256 (Lay v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lay v. State, 14 P.3d 1256, 116 Nev. 1185, 116 Nev. Adv. Rep. 126, 2000 Nev. LEXIS 139 (Neb. 2000).

Opinion

OPINION

Per Curiam:

Appellant Kevin Lamar Lay contends that the State violated Brady v. Maryland, 373 U.S. 83 (1963), by not providing him with two instances of exculpatory information. 1 One involved prior inconsistent statements by a key witness for the prosecution. The other involved statements by three witnesses that a second person had fired shots at the scene of the murder of which Lay was convicted.

FACTS

After a jury trial, Lay was convicted of first-degree murder with the use of a deadly weapon. The State sought the death penalty, but the jury fixed the penalty at life without possibility of parole. The district court sentenced Lay to two consecutive life terms without possibility of parole. This court affirmed Lay’s conviction. Lay v. State, 110 Nev. 1189, 886 P.2d 448 (1994).

The State had originally filed a twenty-two count indictment against Lay, charging him and two codefendants with the murder of Richard Carter and several unrelated crimes including attempted murder, assault with a deadly weapon, battery with a deadly weapon, trafficking and possession of a controlled substance, grand larceny, robbery, aiming a firearm at a human being, intimidating a witness to influence testimony, and racketeering. The racketeering counts were based on alleged illegal gang activity. Lay was a member and leader of the Piru Bloods, a Las Vegas gang. The racketeering counts were dismissed for lack of adequate evidence at the grand jury proceeding. The murder count was severed from the indictment, and Lay was tried on that count apart from his codefendants.

*1188 The trial

The State presented evidence that around 11:30 p.m. on June 4, 1990, Lay drove a stolen white Oldsmobile Cutlass into the' parking lot of the AM-PM market at the comer of Martin Luther King Drive and Carey Avenue in North Las Vegas and shot a gun from the car window, killing Carter.

James Haines testified that as he approached the AM-PM that night he heard two different kinds of gunshots. As he got closer he saw fire coming from the front passenger window of a car, which then drove away. Although he knew Lay, Haines did not see who was driving the car.

Dewain Norwood testified that he was in his car at the AM-PM when a car pulled up. Two people in the car shot a rifle and a pistol at about three people in the parking lot. Norwood did not see who was shooting. The driver fired the rifle out the passenger’s side window, and a person in the back seat fired the pistol out the window. The driver later stepped out of the car and shot again.

Gregory Haynes testified that he was a friend of the victim, Carter, and was inside the AM-PM store when the shooting started. He went outside, and Carter had been shot. Haynes identified Lay as the shooter. Lay was shooting out the driver’s window of a car. Haynes identified the weapon as a semiautomatic .223 rifle. It was possible that other weapons had been used, but Haynes heard no other weapons and saw no one else in the car. Haynes did not know Lay to be a member of a gang and denied being in a gang himself. Haynes admitted that after the shooting he had told police that he did not know the shooter and could not describe his face.

Cedric Stewart testified that he was with Carter when the shooting occurred. Stewart said he was formerly affiliated with a Crip gang, the Gerson Park Kingsmen, and Carter had been a member. Lay was a leader of a rival gang, the Piru Bloods. On the night in question, Stewart was speaking to Carter in the AM-PM parking lot when shots came from a car. Lay was in the driver’s seat of the car and fired what Stewart thought was a rifle out the passenger’s side window. Stewart admitted that after the shooting he had told police that he did not know who had shot Carter.

Kevin Page testified that he was driving toward the AM-PM on the night of the shooting, heard shots, and saw Lay driving a car from the AM-PM parking lot. He saw a second person in the back seat of Lay’s car. At the time of the shooting, Page was a friend of Carter and a member of the Gerson Park Kingsmen, who do not like the Bloods. Page’s former girlfriend had become Lay’s girlfriend. Page waited a year before telling anyone from law enforcement that he had knowledge of the crime.

*1189 Robin Giddens testified that she was the paramedic who treated the victim after he was shot. A man at the scene (the victim’s brother she later learned) was panicked and threatened Giddens. Giddens found the victim in shock and in extremely critical condition. He “was going down hill” as Giddens tended to him. The victim answered her questions and talked with his brother. The victim whispered to his brother, “ ‘K-Lay shot me man, he shot me.’ ” (K-Lay was Lay’s nickname.) Giddens did not put this in her paramedic report because “it’s part of the code I guess of working in gang related situations and in possibly dangerous situations that things aren’t written down.” On cross-examination, Giddens admitted that, other than her partner, she could not remember the name of the victim, his brother, fire department personnel, or any person at the crime scene that night except K-Lay.

Giles Green, M.D., performed the autopsy of Carter’s body. Carter was killed by a gunshot wound that damaged his liver and vena cava. The bullet had passed through the body, but Green concluded from the nature of the wound that the likely weapon was a high-velocity small-caliber rifle. A police identification technician found two projectiles and three shell casings at the crime scene. The casings were .380 caliber, used in a semiautomatic handgun. Inside the recovered stolen car, he found a .303 caliber shell casing, used in a rifle.

Shawn Turner testified that on the night in question he was at his mother’s house, which was across the street from Lay’s house. Sometime between 11:00 and 11:30 p.m. he saw four or five men on foot, including Lay, run up the street and go into the backyard of Lay’s house. When the men first arrived, Lay held a handgun and the others carried shotguns or rifles. After about ten minutes, the men left on foot; then fifteen or twenty minutes later, they returned by car. The AM-PM was less than a five-minute drive from Lay’s house. Turner’s brother, Lawrence Daniels, testified similarly, but Daniels testified that Lay held a rifle or shotgun and that he saw no other weapons.

The car from which the fatal shots were fired was reported stolen around 11:00 p.m. that night. After the car was recovered, Lay’s fingerprints were found on the passenger door.

Anthony Dimauro, an officer with the North Las Vegas Police Department, testified for the defense. He was one of the first officers at the crime scene and spoke to the victim, Carter, before the paramedics arrived. Carter appeared to be in too much pain to carry on a conversation. When Dimauro asked him who had shot him, Carter said that he did not know. Carter described neither the vehicle nor the shooter.

*1190 The evidentiary hearing

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
14 P.3d 1256, 116 Nev. 1185, 116 Nev. Adv. Rep. 126, 2000 Nev. LEXIS 139, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lay-v-state-nev-2000.