Looney v. State

826 P.2d 775, 1992 Alas. App. LEXIS 17, 1992 WL 36431
CourtCourt of Appeals of Alaska
DecidedFebruary 28, 1992
DocketA-3783
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 826 P.2d 775 (Looney v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Alaska primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Looney v. State, 826 P.2d 775, 1992 Alas. App. LEXIS 17, 1992 WL 36431 (Ala. Ct. App. 1992).

Opinion

OPINION

MANNHEIMER, Judge.

Michael B. Looney was convicted of first-degree assault, AS 11.41.200(a)(1), and fourth-degree assault, AS 11.41.230(a)(1), following a jury trial in the Anchorage superior court. For the crime of first-degree assault, Superior Court Judge Mark C. Rowland sentenced Looney to 20 years’ imprisonment with 5 years suspended. For the crime of fourth-degree assault, Judge Rowland sentenced Looney to a concurrent term of 1 year’s imprisonment.

Looney appeals his first-degree assault sentence, contending it is excessive. We affirm.

On the evening of November 24, 1989, Richard Hunter was driving in south Anchorage when he saw a disabled vehicle on the side of the road. The driver of the disabled vehicle was Michael Looney. Even though Hunter did not know Looney, Hunter stopped his van and helped Looney push the vehicle to the nearby residence of Looney’s mother.

When they arrived, Looney invited Hunter into the house to meet his mother and her boyfriend. Later in the evening, Looney’s sister, April, arrived. Looney, Hunter, and April Looney decided to go drinking and dancing.

Looney told his companions that before they could go drinking he needed to visit the home of Leanne Reed, his common-law wife, to retrieve identification so that he would be admitted to the bars. (Looney was 24 years old.) Looney called Reed and asked if he could come to her house. Reed told him to stay away. However, an hour later, Looney rang Reed’s doorbell and asked her to let him in.

Looney knew that his visit to Reed’s house was illegal. Two weeks before (on November 9), Leanne Reed had obtained a domestic violence writ against Looney after he punched her in the eye, nose, and arm.

Reed told Looney to leave. Looney left her door, and Reed went to bed. However, a short time later, Reed heard the sound of breaking glass; Looney had broken into Reed’s house through a front window. *777 Reed telephoned her father for assistance and then went to confront Looney. Before help arrived, Looney attacked Reed, beating her with his fists, then knocking her down and kicking her. Reed suffered bruises to her head and arm, a cut lip, and a broken tooth.

During the attack, Looney asked Reed if she had called the police. Reed said she had. Looney then forced Reed to call 911 and directed her to tell the emergency operator that everything was all right. Reed dialed the phone but remained silent when the operator answered. Looney became more enraged and yanked the telephone out of the wall.

Meanwhile, April Looney (who had been waiting in Hunter’s van) entered Reed’s house and tried to get her brother to leave. Looney chased his sister around the house but eventually calmed down and left the house.

Looney, Hunter, and April Looney drove to a restaurant, but they were refused entry because all three of them had been drinking and because Looney’s hand was bleeding from a cut he had sustained when he broke through Reed’s window. April Looney elected to stay at the restaurant and call a friend to pick her up and take her home. Looney and Hunter headed for another bar.

Arriving at the bar, Looney was again refused entry because of his intoxication and because Looney could not produce proof of his age. Looney and Hunter were able to purchase liquor at a liquor store; they then went back to Looney’s house. While they were drinking, Looney and Hunter began to discuss firearms. Looney took out three firearms: a .22 caliber rifle, a .30-’06 rifle, and a 9 mm semi-automatic pistol. Between 3:00 and 4:00 on the morning of November 25, the two men decided to drive south on the New Seward Highway and shoot these weapons.

Looney and Hunter first began shooting the .30-’06 rifle, but it jammed after several shots. They tried firing the .22 caliber rifle, but it jammed immediately. The two men spent the next hour drinking and firing shots from the 9 mm pistol.

Hunter went to the back of the van to urinate. When he returned, Looney was nowhere to be seen. Hunter walked around the van, calling Looney’s name, but Looney kept out of sight and made no response. As Hunter returned to the driver’s side of the van, he saw Looney walk toward him from the rear of the van. Looney was holding the 9 mm pistol. Without warning, Looney pointed the pistol at Hunter and fired.

This first shot struck Hunter near his hip; he crumpled to the ground. Looney hesitated a moment, and then, laughing, began shooting again at Hunter as he lay on the ground. Looney stopped only when he had exhausted the ammunition in the pistol.

Hunter, who had been hit several times, watched Looney go back inside the van. Correctly surmising that Looney was going back to find more ammunition and reload the handgun, Hunter crawled away from the van and rolled himself down the highway embankment to the Alaska Railroad tracks.

Looney first tried to drive the van away, but the vehicle became stuck in the snow. Looney then walked down the embankment to where Hunter lay. Pointing the 9 mm pistol at Hunter’s head, Looney told him to surrender his money. After Hunter had given Looney his money (approximately $30 to $40), Looney raised the pistol and pointed it at Hunter’s head. Hunter, pleading for mercy, raised his hands in front of his face. Looney fired. The bullet struck a finger of Hunter’s left hand, the force of the blow pushing Hunter’s hands against his head. Hunter collapsed and feigned death.

Looney climbed back up the embankment, entered Hunter’s van, and drove away, northbound toward Anchorage. Heavily intoxicated, he apparently fell asleep while driving; the police found the van in a ditch, with Looney still behind the wheel. The police recovered the 9 mm pistol in the snow nearby. A round of ammunition was jammed in the pistol’s action, indicating that Looney may have tried *778 to shoot Hunter one more time but was unable to.

Hunter was rescued by a pair of rock climbers who discovered him when they came to practice on the cliffs overlooking the Seward Highway. Hunter was in critical condition. He had been shot in his right thigh, his abdomen, his right knee, and the little finger of his left hand. He had two additional grazing wounds, one on his right leg and another on his left rib cage. Hunter was suffering from serious blood loss because the bullet in his right knee had severed a major artery. The bullet that entered his abdomen had struck his spine, paralyzing his right leg. Moreover, Hunter had lain exposed for two hours in twenty-degree weather. Six hours of surgery saved Hunter’s life, but his right leg is permanently paralyzed.

For his attack on Richard Hunter, Looney was indicted for attempted murder and first-degree assault. For his attack on Leanne Reed, Looney was indicted for fourth-degree assault. At trial, Looney defended on a diminished capacity theory. The jury was unable to agree on a verdict on the attempted murder charge, but the jury convicted Looney of first-degree assault and fourth-degree assault. The State elected not to retry Looney on the attempted murder charge.

Looney was a first felony offender for presumptive sentencing purposes.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
826 P.2d 775, 1992 Alas. App. LEXIS 17, 1992 WL 36431, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/looney-v-state-alaskactapp-1992.