McPherson v. Commonwealth

360 S.W.3d 207, 2012 Ky. LEXIS 7, 2012 WL 593214
CourtKentucky Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 23, 2012
DocketNo. 2010-SC-000379-MR
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 360 S.W.3d 207 (McPherson v. Commonwealth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Kentucky Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McPherson v. Commonwealth, 360 S.W.3d 207, 2012 Ky. LEXIS 7, 2012 WL 593214 (Ky. 2012).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Justice ABRAMSON.

Britton McPherson appeals as of right from a Judgment of the Muhlenberg Circuit Court convicting him of murder and sentencing him in accord with the jury’s recommendation to life in prison. McPherson was found guilty of the June 29, 2008 slaying of Lora Milligan on a farm road outside Central City. He claims on appeal that he was denied a fair trial because he was not allowed to question Tamala Parker, his former girlfriend and alleged accomplice in the murder, concerning a prior conviction and her other prior run-ins with the police, and because he was denied a missing evidence instruction concerning Parker’s interrogation by a St. Louis homicide detective. McPherson also maintains that his sentencing by a second jury impaneled after the initial jury could not agree on a sentence runs afoul of his right to judicial sentencing as provided by Kentucky Revised Statute (KRS) 532.055. Finding no error, we affirm McPherson’s conviction and sentence.

RELEVANT FACTS

The Commonwealth’s proof, developed in the course of a three-day trial, gave a disturbing glimpse of the drug culture in Muhlenberg County. The victim, Milligan, Appellant McPherson, and Parker were all acquaintances of many years. They frequently exchanged and shared drugs, including narcotic pain medicines, and used them in each other’s company. In 2007, Milligan, in trouble for having passed bad checks, agreed to cooperate with officers in the Pennyrile Narcotics Task Force by recording others in the act of selling drugs. One of the persons against whom she gathered evidence was Richard Smith, characterized at trial as a “well known drug dealer” in the area. Smith was another long-time acquaintance of McPherson, a particularly close one. Evidence against Smith had led to his indictment for trafficking, and his trial was scheduled for July 2008. It was known apparently that Lora Milligan was to be one of the witnesses against him. According to Parker’s testimony, in June 2008 Smith offered McPherson “cash and pills” for the murder of Milligan. McPherson in turn recruited Parker, with whom he had been living for several months. Initially, Parker testified, she rejected the idea, but desperate for money she eventually agreed.

On the morning of June 29, McPherson and Parker drove Milligan to a secluded spot on Hall Road in Muhlenberg County ostensibly to “get high.” According to Parker, Milligan had trouble injecting herself and would let Parker do it for her. The plan was for Parker to inject Milligan with insulin instead of morphine, a switch McPherson anticipated would be fatal. Parker testified that at the last moment she lost her nerve and emptied the syringe of insulin onto the floor of the car.

That plan having failed, McPherson then borrowed a 9-mm handgun from his half-brother, Shannon Geary, a favor Geary agreed to in exchange for morphine. McPherson then stole three rounds of ammunition from the Rural King store in Central City. Thus armed, in the early evening of June 29, about six o’clock according to Parker, McPherson and Parker again arranged to drive Milligan out of town, this time to a gravel farm road off of Moorman Cemetery Road.1 There, according to Parker, while she and Milligan were [211]*211walking side-by-side, McPherson rushed up behind Milligan and shot her in the head.

After the shooting, McPherson and Parker drove back to Central City to an apartment where their friends, Keith and Tracy Presley, were staying. From there, Parker testified, McPherson contacted Smith. He then left for a short time and when he returned was in possession of a large wad of cash amounting to several hundred dollars. The two couples then drove to Moor-man where McPherson returned the gun to Shannon Geary. Then, with McPherson paying for everything, the foursome obtained drugs, food, and a motel room for the night. During the evening, Parker testified, she revealed the murder to the Presleys, and it was her belief that McPherson told them of it too. She testified that she and McPherson stayed at different area motels the next few nights and that on July 3, 2008, after McPherson had received another couple of hundred dollars from Smith, they bought bus tickets and left Kentucky for St. Louis.

In the meantime, Milligan’s body was discovered on July 2. Underneath the body, the police found Milligan’s cell phone, and they were able to determine that the last calls to and from that phone were from and to a phone registered to Parker. Parker was wanted for having violated her parole, so when the police learned that she had purchased bus tickets to St. Louis, they contacted officials there who arrested Parker at the bus station on the evening of July 3. Initially, McPherson was not detained, but he elected to stay with Parker. A St. Louis homicide detective, Detective Harrington, interviewed Parker, and she gave a statement impheat-ing herself and McPherson in the killing. At the same time, Keith Presley had contacted the Kentucky State Police in Muh-lenberg County, and he and his wife gave statements recounting what Parker and McPherson had told them and also what the four of them had done together on June 29 and the following days.

In August 2008, a Muhlenberg County grand jury indicted Parker and McPherson separately for Milligan’s murder. Parker eventually pled guilty to second-degree manslaughter and agreed to testify against both McPherson and Richard Smith in exchange for a ten-year sentence enhanced to twenty years by virtue of her PFO status. McPherson’s case was tried in March 2010. In addition to Parker’s testimony, the Commonwealth’s case included ballistics evidence confirming that the murder weapon was indeed a gun belonging to Shannon Geary’s mother and forensic evidence identifying a fiber found on Milligan’s shirt as having come from the car that Parker and McPherson were driving. Shannon Geary testified that he had loaned his mother’s gun to McPherson on June 29 and that McPherson, together with Parker and the Presleys, had returned the gun that same evening. Mark Adams, McPherson’s cellmate for a time, testified that McPherson had talked of having shot an informant in the head. Finally, the Presleys testified about Parker burning Milligan’s ID card, McPherson suddenly acquiring a large amount of cash and the visit they all paid to Shannon Geary. The Presleys also testified that both Parker and McPherson admitted killing Milligan.

McPherson put on an alibi defense buttressed with evidence of an alternate perpetrator. Richard Smith’s cousin, Jack Higgs, who admitted that he was a convicted felon and that he and McPherson had been close friends for years, testified that early in the afternoon of June 29, he and McPherson had driven to Nashville in Higgs’s car. Before they left, according to Higgs, McPherson had told him about a [212]*212gun that he, McPherson, had borrowed to frighten someone in Louisville who had “ripped him off’ and to get his money back. Higgs, however, because he was a convicted felon and did not want to risk being charged with possession of the gun, insisted that McPherson leave it with Parker. The two friends, Higgs testified, went to Nashville to sell drugs, and McPherson made about three hundred dollars. They had not returned to Central City until late that evening, about seven or eight o’clock.

McPherson also presented testimony by two of Parker’s cellmates, Terra White and Brandy Edmonds. Parker admitted to them, they claimed, that she was “putting things off on” McPherson and that she and Keith Presley had been having an affair.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Leroy Love v. Commonwealth of Kentucky
Kentucky Supreme Court, 2024
Kelvin Roberson v. Commonwealth of Kentucky
Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 2022
Farand Skinner v. Commonwealth of Kentucky
Kentucky Supreme Court, 2021
Samuel Hunter v. Commonwealth of Kentucky
Kentucky Supreme Court, 2020
Curtis Snell v. Commonwealth of Kentucky
Kentucky Supreme Court, 2020
Jason A. Watts v. Commonwealth of Kentucky
Kentucky Supreme Court, 2019
Shawn Tigue v. Commonwealth of Kentucky
Kentucky Supreme Court, 2018
Paris Charles v. Commonwealth of Kentucky
Kentucky Supreme Court, 2018
Julius Tackett v. Commonwealth of Kentucky
Kentucky Supreme Court, 2016
St. Clair v. Commonwealth
455 S.W.3d 869 (Kentucky Supreme Court, 2015)
Garland v. Commonwealth
458 S.W.3d 781 (Kentucky Supreme Court, 2015)
Stephon Slone v. Commonwealth of Kentucky
Kentucky Supreme Court, 2014
Newcomb v. Commonwealth
410 S.W.3d 63 (Kentucky Supreme Court, 2013)
Allen v. Commonwealth
395 S.W.3d 451 (Kentucky Supreme Court, 2013)
Goncalves v. Commonwealth
404 S.W.3d 180 (Kentucky Supreme Court, 2013)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
360 S.W.3d 207, 2012 Ky. LEXIS 7, 2012 WL 593214, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcpherson-v-commonwealth-ky-2012.