Osborne v. Commonwealth

43 S.W.3d 234, 2001 Ky. LEXIS 69, 2001 WL 431246
CourtKentucky Supreme Court
DecidedApril 26, 2001
Docket1999-SC-0124-MR
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 43 S.W.3d 234 (Osborne 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
Osborne v. Commonwealth, 43 S.W.3d 234, 2001 Ky. LEXIS 69, 2001 WL 431246 (Ky. 2001).

Opinions

COOPER, Justice.

I. FACTS.

Sometime after 12:30 a.m. on December 14, 1997, Sam and Lillian Davenport, ages 82 and 76 respectively, died in a fire that consumed their residence on highway 1804 in Whitley County, Kentucky. Forensic testing revealed the presence of an accel-erant in the room where the bodies were found and on a portion of Mrs. Davenport’s clothing, indicating the fire had been intentionally set. Autopsies revealed that each victim had sustained a cranial injury consistent with blunt force trauma, but that the cause of death in each instance was smoke inhalation.

[236]*236Earlier that same evening, Appellant Larry Osborne had borrowed a “DS80” motorcycle (described by some witnesses as a “dirt bike”) from Dustin Oyer, a visitor at the Osborne residence, and had driven it from his residence on Burke Hollow Road to highway 1804, then south on 1804 past the residence of Sam and Lillian Davenport to the residence of Scott Duncan on highway 25. Appellant, Duncan, Sarah Tissott and Joe Reid, age fifteen, then proceeded back north on 1804 past the Davenport residence to the residence of William Nix and Irene Ramsey. Appellant drove the motorcycle with Reid riding on the back as a passenger. Duncan and Tissott followed in a pickup truck. Appellant and Reid left the Nix/Ramsey residence sometime after midnight and drove south on 1804 past the Davenport residence to Jellico, where Reid lived with his grandmother, Mildred McLemore. Appellant and Reid arrived at the McLemore residence at approximately 12:55 a.m. To return to his home on Burke Hollow Road, Appellant was required to again drive north on 1804 past the Davenport residence. Mildred McLemore testified that Appellant telephoned his mother from her residence and that she overheard him say: “Mom, me and Joe heard glass breaking down here at a house on the road. Come and follow me home. I’m scared.” McLe-more then watched as Appellant drove the motorcycle to a nearby store referred to alternatively as “Ray’s market” and the “Red Ace.”

Dustin Oyer testified that he was asleep at the Osborne residence when Patricia Osborne awakened him and asked him to accompany her to meet Appellant.

Pat woke me up, said that we’re— well, could you ride to the Red Ace with me? Larry’s waiting on me on your motorcycle. We rode up there. Larry said I heard some glass shattering around the house, the Davenports’ house. The house wasn’t burning when we come through. We come back through. We got at her house. Then she dialed 911, the law, or something like that and said that her son heard glass breaking around the house, the Davenports’ house. And then somebody called her back. It could have been the law that called her back. I don’t know. But somebody called her back and her and Larry got in the car and went down to the Davenports’ house. She said it was the law that called them and told them to come to the house. They needed questions from them or something.

The Whitley County “911” dispatcher testified that at 1:18 a.m. a person identifying herself as “Pat Osborne” called to report that her son had heard glass breaking when he drove past the Davenport residence. The caller gave both her name and her telephone number to the dispatcher. At trial, the Commonwealth introduced an audiotape recording of the entire “911” telephone conversation. The dispatcher then contacted Kentucky State Police Trooper Sam Durham who arrived at the Davenport residence at 1:36 a.m. to find it engulfed in flames. Durham unsuccessfully attempted to enter the burning home, then directed the dispatcher to call the fire department. Also at Durham’s request, the dispatcher called the Osborne residence and asked Appellant and his mother to report to the scene. Upon arrival, Appellant told Durham that he and Reid had driven by the Davenport residence on a motorcycle and had heard “the crash of glass breaking.”

Appellant did not testify at trial. However, in addition to the oral statement made to Trooper Durham, he gave the following written statement to Kentucky State Police Detective Gary Lane on the morning after the murders:

[237]*237Me and Joe Reid were riding a motorcycle past Mr. Davenport’s when I heard a glass breaking. We then went to Joe Reid’s residence where I called my mom, Pat Osborne, to pick me up. I drove the motorcycle home while Mom followed. We seen nothing on the way back through. This happened on 12-14-97 approx 0130 hrs.

Joe Reid gave Detective Lane the following written statement:

On 12-14-97 approx 0100 hrs me and Larry Osborne were riding a trail bike past Davenport residence. I heard some glass breaking. I did not see anybody around the residence.

On December 31, 1997, Reid submitted to a polygraph examination. Upon being told that he had failed the examination, Reid “confessed” the following sequence of events to Detective Lane: After leaving the Nix/Ramsey residence, Appellant told Reid he was going to borrow some money from the Davenports to purchase a horse. Appellant drove the motorcycle to the Davenport residence with Reid riding on the back. Appellant got off the motorcycle and proceeded to the rear of the house, then returned with a wooden lawn chair and placed it under a window. When Reid realized that Appellant was going to break into the house, he urged Appellant not to do so. Reid then attempted to start the motorcycle, but the chain fell off. Appellant broke the window and entered the residence. Reid put the chain back on the motorcycle and drove down the road, but returned to find Appellant waiting for him outside the Davenport residence with a “pocketful” of money. Reid claimed he heard no screams or gunshots and that Appellant did not have a gun. Appellant drove Reid home on the motorcycle.

On January 21, 1998, Reid testified before a Whitley County grand jury substantially as follows: Appellant picked him up at Scotty Duncan’s residence and drove him to the Nix/Ramsey residence on a motorcycle that Appellant had borrowed from Dustin “Whittier” (presumably Oyer). At about 10:30 - 11:00 p.m., Appellant told Reid he was going to get some money for a horse and was absent from the Nix/Ramsey residence for thirty to thirty-five minutes. Reid speculated that Appellant went to his own home either to obtain a weapon or to enlist his mother’s assistance in robbing the Davenports. Reid and Appellant left the Nix/Ramsey residence at approximately 12:15 - 12:20 a.m. with Appellant driving the motorcycle and Reid riding on the back. Upon arrival at the Davenport residence, Appellant stopped, got off the motorcycle, and told Reid he was going to borrow some money from the Davenports. Appellant had a handgun. Appellant went to the rear of the Davenport house and Reid attempted to drive the motorcycle “down the road,” but the chain came off. Reid then heard glass breaking and two gunshots from the rear of the house. Appellant returned from the rear of the house and placed a lawn chair under a window, then broke out the window glass with his forearm and entered the residence. Reid heard more glass breaking, another gunshot, and a woman screaming inside the residence. Appellant came out of the house with money in his pockets and the gun up his sleeve, got back on the motorcycle, and drove Reid to his home. Appellant told Reid that his mother would help him burn the Davenports’ residence and threatened to beat Reid if he “ratted” on him.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
43 S.W.3d 234, 2001 Ky. LEXIS 69, 2001 WL 431246, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/osborne-v-commonwealth-ky-2001.