Murray v. State

930 P.2d 121, 113 Nev. 11, 1997 Nev. LEXIS 17
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 3, 1997
DocketNo. 26075; No. 26653; No. 26672
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 930 P.2d 121 (Murray 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
Murray v. State, 930 P.2d 121, 113 Nev. 11, 1997 Nev. LEXIS 17 (Neb. 1997).

Opinion

[13]*13OPINION

Per Curiam:

These appeals have been consolidated for the purpose of this opinion. We conclude that in each case the State violated the appellants’ Fifth Amendment rights. We therefore reverse and remand each case for a new trial.

FACTS

MURRAY v. STATE

On March 13, 1987, Paul Eugene Dudley was murdered in the parking lot of a North Las Vegas casino. His partly burned body was found several days later in the desert. Appellant Steven Murray and chief prosecution witness Melanie Chapman were present at the murder. At Murray’s trial, each accused the other of the act. Murray was originally charged with the murder in 1988. Insufficient evidence was presented at his preliminary hearing to bind him over for trial, and the charges were dismissed without prejudice. Chapman was tried for aiding and abetting in the murder in 1993, but she was acquitted. In 1993, Murray was indicted for the murder by a grand jury. He was tried before a jury and convicted in 1994.

On March 20, 1987, Dudley’s body was discovered at the bottom of a wash in a remote location several miles north of Las Vegas. The body had post-mortem burns on about thirty percent of its area. A stab wound to Dudley’s heart had killed him.

The main prosecution witness was Melanie Chapman, formerly Melanie Thomas, who testified as follows. She met appellant Murray and his brother Billy Murray (Billy) at a bar in New Mexico in early March 1987. They decided to drive to Las Vegas together in the brothers’ pickup truck and camper. Chapman went with Murray and Billy to the Silver Nugget Casino on March 13, 1987, a day or two after they arrived in Las Vegas. They went in the morning and started drinking and gambling. That evening Chapman began to talk with the victim, Dudley, who was at the casino bar, and he offered her a ride to her mother’s house in Las Vegas. Chapman and Dudley went to the camper to get her things from it. Murray approached and demanded to know what they thought they were doing. Chapman went inside the camper, and when she came out, Dudley was lying on the ground in back of the truck. Murray held a long knife, which he threw into the camper. Murray put Dudley into the camper and ordered [14]*14Chapman inside too. Murray closed the door and the tailgate and began to drive the truck. Chapman tried to open the door, but the tailgate was closed which prevented the door from opening. (Murray presented evidence that the tailgate could not close because the camper extended beyond the tailgate.) After driving onto a dirt road, Murray stopped and pulled Dudley from the camper and dragged him away. As Murray drove away with Chapman still in back in the camper, she saw a fire through the window.

Two days later, Chapman flew home to New Mexico. She was arrested the day after that on cocaine charges. Beginning in July 1987, Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department detectives spoke to Chapman several times about Dudley’s murder. Chapman told detectives several different stories before she ever stated that she was present when Murray killed Dudley. Two years later, Chapman was arrested for Dudley’s murder and extradited to Nevada. She was tried for the crime but acquitted. On cross-examination at Murray’s trial, Chapman admitted that she used methamphetamine regularly and other drugs occasionally. She had felony convictions for writing bad checks and for drug trafficking.

Creede White testified for the State. He knew Billy, and Billy, Murray, and Chapman visited his apartment in North Las Vegas in March 1987. Later that month, White went with Billy and Murray, who were driving to Kansas. During the trip, Murray told White that he and Chapman went to roll a guy, the guy got tough, and he (Murray) stabbed him. Murray further told White that they dumped the body in the desert and tried to burn it with gasoline.

Bernestine Love testified for the defense. She testified that she was in the Clark County Detention Center with Chapman in April 1990 when Chapman was being detained for her trial and that Chapman spoke with her three times about the murder. Chapman told Love that she had met a trick at a nightclub, whom she rolled because she lacked money. The trick ended up being killed by Murray. (The State had presented this evidence at Chapman’s trial.)

Murray testified that on the day in question, he and Chapman were at the Silver Nugget. At some point in the evening, Murray saw Chapman walk outside with an older gentleman. When she did not return after ten or fifteen minutes, he became concerned and went outside. He found her at the camper, and she drove them away from the casino. He asked where they were headed, and she told him she had killed somebody. She turned off on a dirt road, pulled a body from the camper, poured Coleman fuel on it, and lit it on fire. Murray did not report the murder because he [15]*15was afraid he would be blamed for it. Murray and Chapman drank the next day and argued; she ran off, and Murray did not see her again until the trial. Billy’s friend, White, went to Kansas with Murray and Billy, but Murray denied ever telling White that he killed anyone. Murray thought that White might have overhead Murray telling his brother that Chapman killed someone.

The record further shows that although Murray surrendered to the police in October 1988, he did not make a statement to authorities until he testified before a grand jury in September 1993. During direct examination of Detective Alfred Leavitt, who took Murray into custody in October 1988, the prosecutor asked:

Q Did Mr. Murray ever make any statement to yourself about anything of this crime?
A He did not.
Q At the time of [Chapman’s] trial, did you have any reason to believe that Mr. Murray, Mr. Steven Murray, the defendant, would testify at [Chapman’s] trial?
A No.

Defense counsel did not object. On redirect, the State established that Murray had never made any statement to the police since he was arrested in 1988 and that it would have been improper for the detective to seek any statement from Murray after he had asked for an attorney.

During cross-examination of Murray, the prosecutor questioned Murray regarding his post-arrest silence or referred to it indirectly several times. The prosecutor’s questions included “After you conferred with this attorney ... did you go tell Detective Leavitt your story?” and “Did you testify at your preliminary hearing in 1988?” During closing argument, the prosecutor referred to Murray’s silence as evidence of his lack of veracity and his guilt, making the following statements. “He’s had over six years to manufacture this.” “There’s another inescapable fact that you can conclude: What kind of person maintains silence for six and-a-half years about the horrible murder and burning of a húman being? The man that did it.” No objection was made to any of these questions or remarks.

The jury found Murray guilty of first degree murder with use of a deadly weapon and not guilty of robbery. The district court entered judgment accordingly and sentenced him to two consecutive sentences of life without the possibility of parole.

BYFORD v. STATE and WILLIAMS v. STATE

In March of 1991, Monica Wilkins was shot to death. Her body was burned and left in the desert. Todd Smith and appel[16]

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

Related

TALLEY (OMAR) v. STATE
141 Nev. Adv. Op. No. 61 (Nevada Supreme Court, 2025)
Miyayama v. Hosoda
D. Nevada, 2021
Fugate (Matthew) v. State
Nevada Supreme Court, 2017
Kravetz (Richard) v. State
Nevada Supreme Court, 2017
Houtz (Gregory) v. State
Nevada Supreme Court, 2013
Dettloff v. State
97 P.3d 586 (Nevada Supreme Court, 2004)
Byford v. State
994 P.2d 700 (Nevada Supreme Court, 2000)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
930 P.2d 121, 113 Nev. 11, 1997 Nev. LEXIS 17, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/murray-v-state-nev-1997.