People of Michigan v. Shaun Moore

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 15, 2018
Docket335619
StatusUnpublished

This text of People of Michigan v. Shaun Moore (People of Michigan v. Shaun Moore) 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. Shaun Moore, (Mich. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF MICHIGAN, UNPUBLISHED February 15, 2018 Plaintiff-Appellant,

v No. 335619 Wayne Circuit Court SHAUN MOORE, LC No. 16-006139-01-FC

Defendant-Appellee.

Before: TALBOT, C.J., and METER and TUKEL, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

The prosecution appeals as of right the circuit court’s order granting defendant’s motion to quash his bindover for trial on the charge of felony murder, MCL 750.316(1)(b). We reverse and remand for reinstatement of the charge.

The felony-murder charge against defendant arose after his child died in January 2016, more than 12 years after she was taken to the hospital in September 2003, when she was only six months old, having suffered serious brain injuries after being in defendant’s sole care and custody overnight. As a result of the serious injuries she sustained as an infant, the child never resumed a normal life, requiring 24-hour care for more than 12 years until her death in 2016. Defendant was charged and convicted of first-degree child abuse in 2003 stemming from the incident, for which he was sentenced to a term of imprisonment. After the child, then 12 years old, died in 2016, the prosecution charged defendant with felony murder, with the underlying predicate felony being first-degree child abuse, MCL 750.136b(2).

Following the preliminary examination, the district court bound defendant over for trial on the felony-murder charge, finding that he intentionally inflicted the injuries on the child in 2003 and that the child ultimately succumbed to those injuries when she died in 2016. The circuit court, upon defendant’s motion, quashed the bindover, concluding that the evidence was not sufficient to establish probable cause that the child’s death was a murder.

I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND

During the afternoon or evening of September 25, 2003, defendant picked up the child and her twin, who were six months old, from their mother’s home and took them to his apartment overnight to babysit while the mother went job hunting the next day. This was the first and only time that defendant had the child in his care by himself, but the mother felt

-1- comfortable allowing him to watch the child because she had observed his past interactions with the child, which she agreed had been “good.” By all accounts, the child was normal and without injury when defendant picked her up from the mother’s home.

The next afternoon or evening, the child was taken to the hospital unconscious, having sustained serious brain injuries, including subdural hemorrhaging (bleeding between the skull and the covering of the brain), subarachnoid hemorrhaging (bleeding over the surface of the brain), contusions (bruising from bleeding within the brain tissue itself), and retinal hemorrhaging (bleeding in the eyes). Blood of differing ages was present on the child’s brain and in her eyes. As a result of her injuries, the child required 24-hour care for the remainder of her life.

Defendant told the mother that that he was giving the child a bath and he tripped over a cord and dropped her on the floor. The next day, after speaking with doctors, the mother asked defendant about the incident again, and defendant again told her that he gave the child a bath, tripped over a cord, and accidently dropped her, but added that he “shook her . . . to revive her” because she went “limp.” Defendant also gave a police statement in 2003, and it was read at the preliminary examination. In the statement, he admitted that he repeatedly shook and “wiggled” the child in an attempt to revive her after she fell when he tripped over a cord and she appeared “dazed[.]” He stated that he shook the child for approximately 15 seconds before he called 911, for approximately 10 seconds after, and about two or three times before the ambulance arrived. He stated that the child went “limp” after he shook her and admitted that his shake was “more than a playful shake” and that he may have caused the child’s injuries by shaking her “too hard or too long.”

On January 10, 2016, over 12 years after the child sustained her brain injuries in 2003, the mother, who provided 24-hour care for the child, noticed that the child had a fever. The child’s fever broke and the mother remained with the child, checking on her throughout the evening. The next morning, the child made a breathing sound and the mother noticed that her “eyes had popped open and they were looking gloomy.” The mother felt the child and observed that she did not have a fever, but it looked like she was not breathing. The mother could not hear a heartbeat with a stethoscope and began administering CPR and called 911. The child could not be revived at the hospital and was declared dead.

As indicated by the autopsy report, which was admitted into evidence at the preliminary examination over defendant’s objection, the medical examiner, who did not testify at the examination, concluded that the child’s final diagnosis and cause of death was “[r]emote cerebral trauma” and the manner of death was “homicide.” The examiner further noted in his report that there were “multiple cerebral peritoneal drains present,” her abdomen contained a feeding tube, there was an endotracheal tube in place, and there was an intravenous line present. Further, her brain displayed “cystic loss of the left frontoparietal portion of the brain” and there was “a similar area covering the area aspect of both frontal poles and a similar aspect is identified on the right temporal pole.” Additionally, the report noted that the child’s lungs were “somewhat collapsed and [felt] consolidated in their interior lobes,” and microscopic examination indicated “lung-pneumonia.”

-2- Dr. Holly Gilmer, the pediatric neurosurgeon who treated the child in the hospital in 2003, testified at the preliminary examination regarding the extent and nature of the injuries the child sustained.1 She opined that the child’s injuries were “definitely inflicted injuries” caused by trauma, meaning that someone injured the child, and that the injuries were not accidental and probably involved “a mechanism of shaking and impact.” Specifically, Dr. Gilmer opined:

The pattern of injuries was complete with shaken impact syndrome or nonaccidental injury. Usually there’s a mechanism of shaking of the baby. Usually there’s an impact, too, in which the baby is slammed against a surface or thrown. The surface does not have to be hard for the baby to have significant injury to the brain.

Dr. Gilmer further testified that a six-month-old baby could not have accidentally inflicted these types of injuries on both sides of the brain and in the eyes. According to Dr. Gilmer, there was no possibility that an accident could have caused the injuries because an accidental fall of a baby would result in a local injury or “more focal injury,” i.e., an injury in one spot, at the point where the baby hits his or her head, and is not generally associated with the retinal hemorrhaging on both sides and the “diffused injuries with bleeding on both sides of her brain” present in this case. Additionally, Dr. Gilmer explained that an accidental fall would result in a “one-time injury” and blood of differing ages would not be present, yet blood of different ages was present in the child’s eyes and her brain, indicating that she sustained multiple injuries that did not all occur at the same time.

Dr. Gilmer could not specifically recall “which blood was which age” in regards to the child’s injuries, but testified that the injuries occurred “[g]enerally days” apart, as opposed to seconds, minutes, or hours apart.2 Regarding the subdural hemorrhaging, Dr.

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People of Michigan v. Shaun Moore, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-of-michigan-v-shaun-moore-michctapp-2018.