Nash v. Folsom

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Missouri
DecidedAugust 22, 2022
Docket4:21-cv-00495
StatusUnknown

This text of Nash v. Folsom (Nash v. Folsom) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nash v. Folsom, (E.D. Mo. 2022).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT EASTERN DISTRICT OF MISSOURI EASTERN DIVISION

DONALD NASH, et al., ) ) Plaintiffs, ) ) vs. ) Case No. 4:21CV495 JCH ) HENRY JAMES FOLSOM, et al., ) ) Defendants. )

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER

This matter is before the Court on Defendant Henry James Folsom’s Motion for Summary Judgment, and Defendants Scott Mertens, Ruth Montgomery, and Dorothy Taylor’s Motion for Summary Judgment, filed May 24, and May 31, 2022, respectively. (ECF Nos. 49, 52). The motions are fully briefed and ready for disposition. BACKGROUND In March, 1982, Plaintiff Donald Nash’s live-in girlfriend, Judy Spencer, was murdered outside Salem, Missouri. (Defendant Folsom’s Amended Statement of Uncontroverted Material Facts in Support of Motion for Summary Judgment1 (“Defendants’ Facts”), ¶¶ 1, 2). The evening of the murder, the couple had a brief, non-violent argument outside a friend of Spencer’s apartment about Spencer’s drinking and driving.2 (Id., ¶ 3 and Plaintiffs’ response thereto; Plaintiffs’ Additional Facts in Response to Defendants’ Statement of Uncontroverted Material Facts (“Plaintiffs’ Additional Facts”), ¶ 2). After the argument Nash left Spencer at Jones’

1 Defendants Mertens, Montgomery and Taylor adopted by reference Defendant Folsom’s statement of material facts and exhibits. (See ECF No. 54). 2 Spencer’s friend was Janet Jones. (Plaintiffs’ Response to Defendants’ Facts, ¶ 4). apartment, and returned to the home he shared with Spencer. (Amended Compl., ¶ 15). Spencer eventually returned home as well, to change clothes, and then drove back to Jones’ apartment. (Defendants’ Facts, ¶¶ 6, 7). At some point during these events, Spencer washed her hair in Jones’ kitchen sink. While Plaintiffs assert she did so before returning to the home she shared with Nash, Defendants maintain it was after Spencer returned to Jones’ apartment. (Id., and

Plaintiffs’ responses thereto).3 Spencer continued drinking upon her return to Jones’ apartment, and ultimately departed alone to drive to bars in Houston, Missouri, a nearby town. (Id., ¶ 8; Plaintiffs’ Additional Facts, ¶ 5). Nash telephoned Jones multiple times, and expressed concern that Spencer would get into a car accident or be arrested as a result of her drinking and driving. (Defendants’ Facts, ¶ 10; Plaintiffs’ Additional Facts, ¶ 4). Both Nash and Jones went looking for Spencer separately, but neither found her. (Defendants’ Facts, ¶ 11; Plaintiffs’ Additional Facts, ¶¶ 6, 7). Spencer’s body was found the following day by two farmers at an abandoned schoolhouse outside Salem. (Defendants’ Facts, ¶ 12; Amended Compl., ¶ 19). The killer had

strangled Spencer with a shoelace taken from her left shoe, and then shot her in the neck with a shotgun. (Id.; Amended Compl., ¶ 20). Spencer was partially nude, indicating the murder was sexually motivated, and she had a blood alcohol content of 0.18 percent. (Amended Compl., ¶ 19). An original investigator measured fresh tire tracks at the scene as 7 ½ inches wide, and 70 inches from the inside of the tires from left to right. (Amended Compl., ¶ 22; Plaintiffs’

3 Defendants’ contention seemingly contradicts Folsom’s probable cause affidavit, in which he stated that Spencer washed and restyled her hair prior to leaving Jones’ residence and arriving at her and Nash’s home. (See Defendants’ Exh. 1, ECF No. 51-1). Additional Facts, ¶ 14).4 Spencer’s car was found in a ditch, many miles away from the schoolhouse and in the opposite direction from Salem. (Amended Compl., ¶ 23). Nash was told of Spencer’s death by investigators at the hospital on March 11, 1982. (Plaintiffs’ Additional Facts, ¶ 9). According to one of the investigators who interviewed Nash, he appeared to be very upset at the news and began to cry. (Id.). Jones also testified that the

next time she saw Nash, he appeared “broken-hearted.” (Id.). No eyewitness purported to connect Nash to the crime, and no physical evidence ever placed him at the abandoned schoolhouse or the ditch where Spencer’s car was found. (Amended Compl., ¶¶ 25, 32). Investigators administered a gunshot residue test on Nash, to see if he had recently handled a shotgun, but the test was negative. (Id., ¶ 27).5 Paul Mertens6 of the Missouri State Highway Patrol testified that during the test, he observed no scratches, scrapes, marks or bruises on Nash’s face or hands that would indicate he had been in a violent struggle. (Plaintiffs’ Additional Facts, ¶ 11). Investigators also found fingerprints on the front-side windows of Spencer’s abandoned car that belonged to two men: a violent sex offender (Lambert Anthony Feldman III), and another man who lived next to the ditch (Alfred John Heyer III).7

(Amended Compl., ¶ 24). After some investigation, the case went cold for over twenty-five years, and between 1982 and 2008, Nash was not charged with murder. (Id., ¶ 28).8

4 According to Plaintiffs, at the time of the murder Nash owned a 1979 K-10 pickup, and Spencer owned a 1976 Oldsmobile sedan. The tire tracks at the schoolhouse did not belong to Nash’s truck or Spencer’s car, and the vehicle that left the tire tracks remains unidentified. (Amended Compl., ¶ 22). 5 Nash voluntarily submitted to the gunshot residue test. (Plaintiffs’ Additional Facts, ¶ 10). He did not own or have access to a shotgun. (Id., ¶ 17; Amended Compl., ¶ 20). 6 Paul Mertens is the father of Defendant Scott Mertens. 7 Nash’s fingerprints were not found on Spencer’s car. (Amended Compl., ¶ 24). 8 Investigators conceded they did not have probable cause to file charges against Nash during that period. (Amended Compl., ¶ 28; Plaintiffs’ Additional Facts, ¶ 17). Defendants Folsom, Mertens and Taylor of the Missouri State Highway Patrol began investigating Spencer’s murder in 2007 after Spencer’s sister, Jeanne Paris, contacted Folsom and asked him to look into the death. (Plaintiffs’ Additional Facts, ¶ 15).9 Folsom retrieved the Missouri State Highway Patrol’s entire file on the case, which contained the negative gunshot residue test, and did not contain evidence that Nash or his truck was ever at the abandoned

schoolhouse. (Id., ¶ 16, 17). In November, 2007, items of evidence were submitted to the Missouri State Highway Patrol crime lab for forensic examination. (Defendants’ Facts, ¶ 19). A mixture of an unidentified male DNA and Spencer’s DNA10 were found under the left-hand fingernails of Spencer, one of which was broken.11 (Id. and Plaintiffs’ response thereto). On March 19, 2008, Defendant Montgomery concluded that the DNA comparison was consistent with Nash’s DNA profile at five loci. (Id., ¶ 20 and Plaintiffs’ response thereto). According to Defendants, when asked about the DNA evidence Nash offered no explanation, appeared visibly shaken, and was trembling and clenching his fists. (Id., ¶ 21). Defendants further assert that when asked if he killed Spencer, Nash looked at the ground, did not make eye contact, and said

“No.” (Id.). Plaintiffs counter that these statements rely on inadmissible hearsay contained in a police report prepared by Defendant Folsom. (Plaintiffs’ Response to Defendants’ Facts, ¶ 21).

9 Folsom testified that Paris and Darla Spencer, her sister-in-law, began calling every day and filling his voicemail, to the point where “it was becoming a hindrance.” (Plaintiffs’ Additional Facts, ¶ 22). He implied that they tested the DNA in an effort to appease Paris and Darla Spencer. (Id.). 10 The total amount of the mixture was 5 billionths of a gram, and in 2020 the State admitted the male DNA sample was not robust enough for an expert to testify reliably that it belonged to Nash. (Amended Compl., ¶¶ 29, 31). 11 Defendants maintain a broken, jagged fingernail is indicative of a physical struggle. (Defendants’ Facts, ¶ 19). Plaintiffs counter that there is no evidence Nash and Spencer engaged in a physical altercation or struggle.

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