People of Michigan v. Kenneth Wayne Peters

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 24, 2015
Docket316332
StatusUnpublished

This text of People of Michigan v. Kenneth Wayne Peters (People of Michigan v. Kenneth Wayne Peters) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People of Michigan v. Kenneth Wayne Peters, (Mich. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF MICHIGAN, UNPUBLISHED March 24, 2015 Plaintiff-Appellee,

v No. 316332 Gogebic Circuit Court KENNETH WAYNE PETERS, LC No. 2012-000215-FC

Defendant-Appellant.

Before: RONAYNE KRAUSE, P.J., and K. F. KELLY and STEPHENS, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

Defendant, Kenneth Wayne Peters, appeals by right his convictions by a jury of one count each of first-degree premeditated murder, MCL 750.316(1)(a), first-degree felony murder, MCL 750.316(1)(b), second-degree murder, MCL 750.317, and second-degree abuse of a vulnerable adult, MCL 750.145n(2). The trial court sentenced defendant to mandatory life imprisonment for first-degree murder1 and to a concurrent term of 58 months to 15 years as a habitual offender for second-degree abuse of a vulnerable adult. This matter arises out of the death of the victim, EGP, defendant’s wife who was 78 years old, 27 years his senior. EGP was suffering from early dementia. We affirm.

The victim’s decomposed body was found in a wooded area in Watersmeet, Michigan, 48 miles from her home with potentially-debilitating drugs in her body for which she had no prescription but defendant was known to possess and use to control her. No direct evidence established that he murdered the victim, but considerable circumstantial evidence showed that he drove her to the woods and left her there with the reasonable expectation that she would not survive. Defendant asserts that the evidence was insufficient and that the trial court erred by admitting evidence of prior acts of domestic violence he perpetrated against the victim and against two of his former relationship partners. Due to the nature of the proofs in this matter and defendant’s contention that the evidence was insufficient, we must necessarily recite the facts at some length.

1 By agreement, his first-degree murder convictions were merged and his second-degree murder conviction set aside to avoid a double jeopardy violation.

-1- The victim’s first husband died in 2006, and shortly thereafter, the victim deeded her home, which was her only real asset, to herself and her daughter Milia jointly. Defendant met the victim in late 2010 through the snow plowing service he ran, and the two of them bonded over a love of NASCAR. Defendant moved in with her in mid-2011. According to defendant, they were always just friends, although others described the victim as resembling “a teenager in love.” According to defendant, the victim was concerned about the possibility of her children putting her in a nursing home, although the victim’s children testified that they never considered, or even discussed, any such possibility. Defendant testified that at the time he moved in, he was aware that Milia’s name was on the deed to the house. However, he also testified, and numerous other witnesses confirmed that defendant had previously told them, that he and the victim had entered into a deal under which he would keep her from being put in a home and she would leave the house to him. Witnesses confirmed that defendant had indicated to them that he expected to receive the house from the victim.

Defendant testified that the victim had always been “a little forgetful,” but he initially believed it to be “no big deal,” and she could take care of herself other than some cooking tasks that defendant performed. It appears from the testimony that defendant and the victim were fairly social and had frequent visitors; otherwise, defendant lived in the basement of the victim’s house and each of them did their “own thing.” Shortly after the marriage, defendant travelled to Iowa for work, although he contended that he kept in daily contact with the victim. He emailed the victim a will that he drafted for her to sign, but she never signed it. In late 2011, the victim ran short of money because she sent defendant several hundred dollars to enable him to return to Michigan; a police officer and a social worker visited the victim and found her utilities cut off and a person who was apparently defendant’s half-brother living there under an obligation to pay rent.

The victim indicated at the time that defendant was still in Iowa, but it later turned out that he had been in the basement. Defendant eventually turned himself in to the police for unpaid fines due to a prior DUI, and he spent thirty days in jail until mid-December of 2011, when he was released because he needed hernia surgery. While in jail, defendant discussed with a witness who was incarcerated with him his deal to acquire the victim’s house, and also that “if you wanted to get rid of somebody that he could bring them out to the woods, bury (sic) a deep enough hole, and they’d never be found.” Another witness lived with defendant and the victim in early 2012, while defendant was recovering from his hernia surgery, and testified that at some point in February, spoke about a Discovery Channel show which indicated how long it would take for a body in a hole to decompose in the woods.

Defendant testified that he believed the victim’s memory problems got worse while he was in Iowa, and in January of 2012, he took her to a doctor, who diagnosed the victim with some mild cognitive impairment. Defendant testified that he learned that the victim had been diagnosed with dementia approximately five years previously, contrary to the doctor, who testified that he had only seen the victim once previously for blood pressure and to wean herself off of pain medicine. Defendant contacted the Upper Peninsula Commission for Area Progress (UPCAP), which assessed the victim and found her eligible for care assistance on the basis of moderate cognitive impairment, although the registered nurse who participated in the assessment noted that most of the information UPCAP received came from defendant. Numerous care workers from UPCAP visited the victim between the February 2012 assessment and the day she

-2- went missing. For the most part, they consistently reported that the victim appeared reasonably happy and well-treated by defendant, although as time went on, she occasionally reported that defendant may have raised his voice at her or crossed his arms and treated her “like a baby.” Some of them were uncomfortable around defendant, and one indicated that the victim reported frustration and irritation with defendant acting controlling and drinking too much.

One of the care workers, with whom defendant developed a personal friendship, testified that defendant repeatedly complained to her that the victim’s condition was growing worse and more frustrating. This care worker also testified that defendant stated that he “‘could just drop her off in the woods and leave her there’” and that no matter how tough she was, she would not survive “‘if [he] dig[s] the hole deep enough and she meets the end of my shovel.’” She also testified that at one point, defendant explicitly told her that he was giving Ativan pills to the victim to make her sleep.2 Another of defendant’s social acquaintances also testified that defendant told her that he gave the victim six or seven Ativan pills to make her sleep. A visitor of defendant’s shortly before the victim’s disappearance discovered a large number of Ativan pills in defendant’s bathroom. The victim’s doctor testified that on April 16, 2012, defendant left him a telephone message saying that he felt he could no longer care for the victim due to her mental changes.

The next day, one of the other care workers observed that the victim had a scrape and bruising to her head and a black eye; the victim initially stated that she tripped and fell but provided two versions of how and stated that no one had done it to her. Defendant appeared agitated and stated that he had documentation showing that he was taking good care of her.

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People of Michigan v. Kenneth Wayne Peters, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-of-michigan-v-kenneth-wayne-peters-michctapp-2015.