People v. Cress

645 N.W.2d 669, 250 Mich. App. 110
CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 31, 2002
DocketDocket 225855
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 645 N.W.2d 669 (People v. Cress) 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 v. Cress, 645 N.W.2d 669, 250 Mich. App. 110 (Mich. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinions

Gage, J.

Defendant, who in 1985 was convicted of first-degree felony murder, MCL 750.316, appeals by leave granted from the trial court’s order denying his motion for a new trial. We reverse and remand.

i

The victim in this case is Patricia Rosansky, a seventeen-year-old girl who was murdered in early 1983. To summarize the voluminous record generated during defendant’s twenty-six-day jury trial, we reprint the following portion of this Court’s 1988 opinion affirming defendant’s conviction for Rosansky’s murder:

The body of the victim ... was found in a wooded ravine, covered with brush on April 6, 1983, in Bedford Township near Battle Creek. She was identified by dental records. Two pieces of tree limb were found located in her throat, which testimony indicated would have been forcibly put there to obstruct her voice. An autopsy and post-mortem examination revealed that the cause of death was a brain injury due to a blow or blows to the head with a club-like object. There were also defensive injuries on the back of her hands. Several bruises also existed on the back of her [113]*113legs, buttocks and neck. The body was discovered naked from the waist down with panties located at the ankles. There was evidence of forced anal intercourse.
[The victim] had been missing since February 3, 1983. She had left for school that morning at 7:30 a.m. and was last seen by a school friend. Defendant presented one witness who testified that she had seen [the victim] a few days after she was missing when [the victim] and another person drove past her house in a pickup truck. Another witness testified that she had seen [the victim] get into a pickup truck the morning of February 3. The witness also stated that she saw a man other than defendant get out of the same truck at a prior time.
Several witnesses testified that defendant had made statements to them concerning the sexual assault and death of a girl. Defendant lived near [the victim] and had spoken to her. John Moore testified that he lived with defendant and heard defendant state in February 1983 after coming home in the evening, that “he felt a little better because he went and knocked off a piece.” He also heard defendant say that he had killed [the victim].
Terry Moore testified that he lived with defendant and that in July 1983 defendant took Terry, his brother Walter and Cindy Lesley to a wooded area and pointed out where Patty’s body lay (and was later found).
Candy Moore testified that defendant came to her house almost every day in the spring of 1983 and told her on two different occasions that he had killed a girl named Patty and put her in a ditch.
Emery DeBruine testified that in May 1983 defendant saw him in a bar and told DeBruine that defendant had raped and killed a girl because she refused to have sex with him. Defendant also said that it was a perfect crime and that no one would know about it.
Walter Moore testified that defendant had told him that defendant had picked [the victim] up and that they had smoked marijuana. Defendant wanted to have sex and when [the victim] refused, he raped her, killed her and dumped the body in a wooded area. Moore was a convicted [114]*114felon and at the time of confessing his own crimes, he told the police about defendant’s statements.
Defendant allegedly asked several people whether they had ever had sex with a corpse.
Cindy Lesley testified that defendant had taken her out to the ravine where [the victim] was found and told her that he had killed [the victim] and left her body in the ravine after he covered her. Lesley called the police and eventually received a $5,000 reward.
Officers Nick Pestum and Marion Bagent were allowed to testify as to prior consistent statements of Walter Moore, Candy Moore, and Cindy Lesley, for the limited purpose of refuting defendant’s charges that the witnesses were influenced.
Shirley House testified that she was the Moore family’s landlady, and when she was at the house repairing the steps, had heard defendant say, “I cannot believe that I got so hard up I had to kill the bitch for a piece of ass.”
Defendant took the stand in his own defense and denied that he killed [the victim] or that he had told anyone that he did so. He stated that he was delivering papers on February 3, 1983. He presented an alibi witness, Doug Moore, who testified that on February 3, 1983, he and defendant were delivering papers. Defendant did admit to dumping trash illegally at the site where the body was found.
After closing arguments by both counsel, the court instructed the jury on first-degree felony murder, with the predicate felony being first-degree criminal sexual conduct, second-degree murder and voluntary manslaughter. The jury returned a verdict of guilty of first-degree felony murder. [People v Cress, unpublished opinion per curiam of the Court of Appeals, issued February 4, 1988 (Docket No. 86748).]

This Court rejected defendant’s claims on appeal that the prosecutor improperly introduced prior consistent witness statements, that the trial court erred in failing to order a corporeal lineup before one witness’ in-court identification of him, and that the court improp[115]*115erly admitted photographs of the victim’s body. The Supreme Court subsequently denied defendant’s application for leave to appeal this Court’s decision. People v Cress, 431 Mich 856 (1988).

In 1997, defendant filed a motion for a new trial on the basis of newly discovered evidence. Defendant argued that the following three grounds entitled him to a new trial: (1) his trial counsel rendered ineffective assistance by failing to introduce at trial and losing an audiotape recording of a telephone conversation in which prosecution witness Walter Moore allegedly admitted that he and other prosecution witnesses set up defendant by testifying that he acknowledged committing the victim’s murder, (2) prosecution witnesses Walter Moore, Candy Moore,1 and Cindy Leslie had recanted their trial testimony, and (3) Michael Ronning recently admitted murdering the victim.

Battle Creek Police Detective Dennis Mullen ascertained Ronning’s potential involvement in the victim’s murder while investigating the August 1982 murder of twenty-year-old Margaret Hume. Hume had been killed inside her Battle Creek apartment. In 1986, the Arkansas State Police apprised Mullen that Ronning, whom they had arrested for an Arkansas murder, had lived in the same Battle Creek apartment complex in which Hume resided at the time of her murder. Mullen’s investigation of Ronning and his travels led Mullen to form the opinion that Ronning likely had committed murders of numerous young women in Arkansas, California, Michigan, and Texas. Mullen re[116]*116counted that by 1991 he had concluded with certainty that Ronning murdered Hume, and believed that a high degree of probability existed that Ronning also murdered several other young women, including the victim, in and around Calhoun County during the early 1980s.

Mullen initially visited Ronning in an Arkansas prison in 1987 to seek information regarding Hume’s murder, but Ronning refused to cooperate.

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Bluebook (online)
645 N.W.2d 669, 250 Mich. App. 110, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-cress-michctapp-2002.