People v. Weeks

2015 COA 77, 369 P.3d 699, 2015 Colo. App. LEXIS 907, 2015 WL 3776917
CourtColorado Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 18, 2015
DocketCourt of Appeals No. 12CA0481
StatusPublished
Cited by686 cases

This text of 2015 COA 77 (People v. Weeks) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Colorado 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. Weeks, 2015 COA 77, 369 P.3d 699, 2015 Colo. App. LEXIS 907, 2015 WL 3776917 (Colo. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

Oplmon by

JUDGE DAILEY

T1 Defefidant, Mark Weeks, appeals the judgment of conviction entered on jury verdicts finding him guilty of first degree murder (causing the death of a child under the age of twelve by one in position of trust) and child abuse (knowing or reckless conduct, resulting in death), We affirm. |

T. Background

{2 Defendant's convictions arose 'out of the death of his three-year-old daughter, A.M. Defendant lived in a trailer hoine with his wife, GW., who was not A.M.'s mother but who had raised A.M. from birth.

T3 One morning, defendant and G.W. discovered that A.M., who was potty-trained but had been regressing for a few weeks, had urinated in her bed. Defendant took A.M. outside naked to wash her off under a cold-water spigot. He sat her. down -on the floor of the trailer, told her to He there, and went to a convenience store to buy some cigarettes.

T4 GW. spanked AM. while defendant was gone. Varying accounts exist of what happened when he returned. Initially, both CGW. and defendant said that A.M., angry about being put in a time out, had "flopped" backwards and hit her head on the stove. Later, however, G.W. said. that defendant had picked A.M. up by her biceps, yelled at her about where she was supposed to go to the bathroom, shook her, and "slammed"1 her head into the plywood wall of the trailer, It was only after defendant put her down on the floor that A.M. fell backward and hit her head on the stove. (G.W. testified similarly to this latter account at trial, saying then, however, that she did not think defendant pushed AM. against the wall very hard.)

T5 At some point, AM. became unresponsive, and defendant and G.W. dressed her and drove her to the hospital. Medical personnel determined that A.M. had suffered a skull fracture and a subdural hematoma. Additionally, her left eye had also been "blown out" of her skull, causing retinal hemorrhaging. Although she was airlifted to Denver for treatment, AM. was declared brain dead the next day and taken off life support. The autopsy revealed that she also had bruised fungs, a healing rib fracture, and extensive bruising all over her body. The pathologist who conducted the autopsy con-eluded that A.M.'s injuries were "not consistent with accidental traumas."

T6 A grand jury indicted defendant and G.W. on charges of first degree murder (causing the death of a child under the age of twelve by one in position of trust) and child abuse resulting in death (knowing or reckless conduct). 'In exchange for. her testimony against defendant, however, G.W. was given immunity from prosecution for the allegedly false statements she made before the grand Jury and allowed to plead guilty to a single, lesser charge of child abuse resulting in death (criminally 'negligent conduct), for which she was sentenced to a term of twelve years imprisonment in the custody of the Department of Corrections.

[703]*703T7 During opening statements, defense counsel said that the evidence would show that G.W. had caused A.M.'s head injuries or that they were possibly the result of a: accidental fall. . ®

T 8 On the question of who was responsible for injuring A.M., the prosecution presented, in addition to G.W.'s testimony, evidence that defendant had

® strictly disciplined A.M. and G.W.'s two daughters from a prior relationship, N.B. and K.B., who were eleven and eight years old, respectively, at the time of trial (N.B. and K.B. lived with their father but would visit defendant and C.W.);
® callously mistreated A.M., in the past;2
® previously become verbally and sometimes physically abusive. to N.B., K.B., the family cats, and a puppy, after they had urinated or vomited in defendant's . home;
eexchanged text messages with GW. about their frustration with A.M.'s potty training regression as well as about an injury to her eye. At one point, G.W. texted, "I told mom and dad that [A.M.] went to the bathroom and you got up to flush the toilet and we didn't see her and your knee got in her eye." Defendant responded, "Okay. I'm done with her though. She's on her own," which prompted G.W. to remind defendant that A.M. was only three years old;
® attempted to conceal his misconduct in connection with A.M.'s injuries;3 and,
e not displayed any emotion at the hospital,4 not wanted to kiss A.M. goodbye before she was airlifted to Denver, and only been concerned about getting his iPhone back from police while signing forms to donate A.M.'s organs.

19 On whether AM's head injury was caused by her "flopping" into the stove, the prosecution presented the testimony of several medical experts, all of whom agreed that A.M.'s head injury required great force and was caused by nonaceidental trauma. All but one of the experts. agreed her injury could not have been caused by A.M.'s "flopping" into the stove. One expert also said she would diagnose AM. with physical child abuse and said that AM.'s bruising was "some of the worst ... [she had] ever seen."

€10 Defendant did not testify. Defense counsel called only one witness, a defense investigator who testified that the trailer's plywood wall, which was only one-eighth of an inch thick, did not have any signs of damage or any of A.M.'s skin or hair 'on it.

[11 In closing argument, defense counsel largely abandoned his theory thit G.W, caused A.M.'s injuries. He asserted, instead, that although the evidence indicated that AM.'s injuries 'were not the result of an accident, it was unclear from that evidence who had inflicted the injuries, but it was not defendant. Do]

T12 The jury convicted defendant as charged, and the trial court sentenced him on the first degree murder count to a controlling term of life imprisonment without the possibility of parole in the custody of the Department of Corrections.

II Evidence of Other Acts

113 Defendant contends that reversal is required because the trial court erroneously admitted evidence of other acts involving N.B., K.B., and family pets. We disagree.

[14 The trial court allowed the prosecution to introduce evidence that defendant had

® forced N.B. to sit in the living room and angrily yelled for ten minutes at her for [704]*704vomiting in the middle of the night and waking him up to assist her;
eon multiple occasions put K.B. in time out when she would urinate in her pants, refused to help her change, and told her father that he was "too easy on her" when she had wet the bed or needed to urinate during the night;
e disciplined the family's pet cats when they had urinated in the house by grabbing them by their throats and holding them up against the wall; and '
e slammed a puppy's head against a wall to punish it for urinating on the floor, prompting his ex-wife to give the puppy away out of fear for its safety.

The trial court instructed the jury, on each occasion when the particular evidence was admitted and again at the end of trial, that

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2015 COA 77, 369 P.3d 699, 2015 Colo. App. LEXIS 907, 2015 WL 3776917, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-weeks-coloctapp-2015.