People of Michigan v. Steven Scott Zintman

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 24, 2018
Docket334574
StatusUnpublished

This text of People of Michigan v. Steven Scott Zintman (People of Michigan v. Steven Scott Zintman) 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. Steven Scott Zintman, (Mich. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF MICHIGAN, UNPUBLISHED July 24, 2018 Plaintiff-Appellee,

v No. 334574 Marquette Circuit Court STEVEN SCOTT ZINTMAN, LC No. 2014-053112-FC

Defendant-Appellant.

Before: STEPHENS, P.J., and SHAPIRO and GADOLA, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

Defendant appeals as of right his conviction of first-degree felony murder, MCL 750.316(1)(b), and first-degree arson, MCL 750.72. Defendant was sentenced to life without possibility of parole for the first-degree felony murder conviction and 30 to 70 years’ imprisonment for the arson conviction. We affirm.

I. FACTS

This case arises from the death of defendant’s girlfriend, Sally Plume, during a fire at defendant’s residence in the early morning hours of May 4, 2014. The residence is a two-unit duplex owned by defendant and defendant’s son and daughter-in-law, Daniel and Heather Zintman. At the time of the fire, defendant and Plume lived in one unit of the duplex, while Daniel and Heather lived in the other unit with their two minor children. The fire occurred in defendant’s unit in the master bedroom shared by defendant and Plume.

Very early that morning, Heather woke Daniel when she noticed smoke in their unit of the duplex. Daniel investigated the source of the smoke and determined that it was coming from defendant’s unit. Daniel told Heather to call 911, then went outside and banged on the door of defendant’s unit. When he heard defendant’s voice, he opened the door and realized that defendant’s unit was filled with smoke. Defendant was standing in the kitchen and holding onto the kitchen counter; defendant’s face appeared purple in color and he was taking deep breaths. Daniel testified that defendant is an alcoholic and is almost always intoxicated. He urged defendant to leave the unit, but because he smelled alcohol on defendant he determined that defendant would probably be uncooperative. Daniel therefore knocked defendant down and dragged him from the unit. Daniel testified that defendant did, in fact, resist his efforts to drag him from the unit. During this struggle, Daniel asked defendant if he was trying to kill himself, and defendant replied that it was “a good day to die.” -1- Daniel succeeded in dragging defendant from the unit, then asked him whether Plume was in the unit. At first, defendant did not respond, but eventually he told Daniel that Plume was not home and had gone somewhere with a friend. Daniel then went back to his unit and verified that Heather, their two children, and their pets were out of the duplex.

The first emergency personnel to arrive was Steven Tighe, a paramedic with Forsyth Township EMS. Tighe testified that when he arrived at the home, he spoke with defendant to ascertain if he was hurt and observed that defendant appeared to be intoxicated. When he asked defendant if anyone else was in the house, defendant did not respond. After further questioning by Tighe and Daniel, defendant said that Plume was in the back bedroom, passed out on the bed. Tighe testified that from the time he first asked defendant if anyone was in the unit until the time defendant stated that Plume was in the house was “a few minutes.” Daniel and Tighe got a ladder and looked in the bedroom window where they observed both smoke and fire in the room. By this time, additional rescue personnel had arrived and they located Plume’s body in the bedroom. Plume was dead, and was partially on the bed and partially on the floor, in a kneeling position.

The medical examiner, George Krzymowski, testified that the cause of Plume’s death was asphyxia by smoke inhalation, and that Plume had been alive when the fire started. He further testified that Plume’s blood alcohol level was 0.272; Krzymowski testified that 0.3 could be considered a medical emergency and described Plume as having been “very intoxicated.” He further testified that there was citalopram in Plume’s system, which Krzymowski testified is an antidepressant.

Sergeant William Smith, fire investigator with the Michigan State Police, testified that the origin of the fire was the mattress, and that there was no evidence of an accelerant. Smith testified that the fire did not originate with either the electrical or gas service, as both were shut off. Smith concluded that the fire was of human origin, but it was not possible to determine whether it had been started accidentally or intentionally. Smith testified that the fire could have been started by a lighter or a cigarette, but there was no evidence that either item was used to start the fire. Smith also testified that at the scene of the fire, on the floor of the bedroom on the side of the bed where defendant indicated he had been sleeping, investigators found an item that later testimony revealed to be a wooden dowel rod that defendant had labeled with the words “b**ch beater.” An ashtray was also found near the bed.

Sergeant Adam Lafave with the Forsyth Township Police Department testified that at the scene of the fire, he spoke with defendant twice. The first time, Lafave asked defendant what had happened and defendant responded that he had blanked out and did not remember. Defendant then told Lafave that he had been in the bedroom with Plume when the fire started. Lafave testified that defendant appeared to be intoxicated, had difficulty standing, and was mumbling.

Later that morning, while still at the scene of the fire, Lafave questioned defendant again. This time, defendant told Lafave that he had been in the kitchen when the fire started. In response to questioning, defendant told Lafave that he and Plume had spent the day “monkeying around” the house, “putting up foam,” and drinking alcohol. Defendant stated that Plume had become so intoxicated that he had had to drag her to bed. Defendant also stated that someone

-2- named “Jim” had been at the unit that day, but defendant could give no further information about that person. Lafave questioned defendant about why initially he had refused to leave the house when Daniel tried to help him. At first, defendant stated that he didn’t know why, but later defendant stated that it was because his house was his sanctuary and also that he does stupid things when he is drunk.

Lafave testified that while talking with defendant at the time of the fire, defendant’s clothes had a black, charred substance on them that defendant claimed had been dripping from the ceiling fan, which Lafave understood to mean the bedroom ceiling fan. Lafave asked defendant how that came to be on his clothing if he had not left the kitchen, and defendant responded that he didn’t know. Lafave testified that when searching the kitchen after the fire, the officers discovered a smoke detector on the kitchen counter with a hat over it; the battery of the smoke detector had been partially removed so that the leads did not connect with the smoke detector, making the smoke detector inoperative.

Officer Kristi Uren with the Forsyth Township Police Department testified that defendant was taken to the hospital, where she informed him that Plume had died. Defendant became very upset and began to cry. Uren testified that defendant then asked her if it was possible that an accelerant had been placed on the window, and also asked her whether Plume’s ex-boyfriend had started the fire.

Three weeks after the fire, Lafave interviewed defendant a third time, this time at the police station. During this interview, defendant told Lafave that on the day leading up to the fire, someone named Paul had been at the unit with a “half gallon” of alcohol and that the three of them had been drinking. When Lafave questioned him about Paul, defendant changed the name of the person to Bob, but could not provide any other information about Bob.

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People of Michigan v. Steven Scott Zintman, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-of-michigan-v-steven-scott-zintman-michctapp-2018.