Randolph v. State

36 P.3d 424, 117 Nev. 970, 117 Nev. Adv. Rep. 80, 2001 Nev. LEXIS 84
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 14, 2001
Docket36080
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 36 P.3d 424 (Randolph v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Randolph v. State, 36 P.3d 424, 117 Nev. 970, 117 Nev. Adv. Rep. 80, 2001 Nev. LEXIS 84 (Neb. 2001).

Opinion

36 P.3d 424 (2001)

Charles Lee RANDOLPH, Appellant,
v.
The STATE of Nevada, Respondent.

No. 36080.

Supreme Court of Nevada.

December 14, 2001.

*426 Morgan D. Harris and Marcus D. Cooper, Public Defenders, Curtis S. Brown, Chief Deputy Public Defender, and Robert L. Miller, Deputy Public Defender, Clark County, for Appellant.

Frankie Sue Del Papa, Attorney General, Carson City; Stewart L. Bell, District Attorney, and James Tufteland and David T. Wall, Chief Deputy District Attorneys, Clark County, for Respondent.

Before the Court En Banc.

OPINION

PER CURIAM:

Appellant Charles Lee Randolph robbed and murdered a bartender in Las Vegas in the early morning on May 5, 1998. Randolph was convicted and received a death sentence. Randolph demonstrates error in one of his claims on appeal: the prosecutor mischaracterized the reasonable doubt standard in closing argument. However, we conclude that the error is not reversible and that Randolph's other claims lack merit.

*427 FACTS

On May 5, 1998, John Shivell was working the graveyard shift as a security guard at an apartment complex in Las Vegas. Shivell was in a guard shack at the gated entrance of the complex. Directly to the west was the parking lot of Doc Holliday's, a bar. Around 1:00 a.m. he heard a sound from the parking lot "like a, a short barking, laugh." Shivell saw two men enter a car and drive out of the parking lot. As the car passed by on the street, he identified it as an older model Cadillac with an opera window. Shivell telephoned Doc Holliday's, but no one answered. He then called the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department (LVMPD).

LVMPD officers arrived about ten minutes later and found the bar locked. After the manager of the bar arrived to open the bar, officers entered Doc Holliday's around 2:00 a.m. They discovered the body of Shelly Lokken, the bartender, in the cooler. Lokken's wrists were bound by handcuffs.

Dr. Giles Green performed the autopsy on Lokken's body. Red marks on her wrists indicated that she was still alive when she was handcuffed. She had been shot twice in the head. The first gunshot entered Lokken's right cheek below her eye and exited below her left ear. The shot broke off part of her epiglottis, and she inhaled blood into her lungs. The second gunshot entered the back of her head on the right side and exited above her left eyebrow. This shot was instantaneously fatal.

The blood pooled around Lokken's head and upper body at the crime scene was consistent with her having first been shot while she was upright on her knees. The blood flowed down toward the face from the wound at the back of her head, indicating that she had fallen to the floor by the time of the second shot. A bullet impact site in the concrete floor was consistent with this scenario. Police also found in the cooler a nine-millimeter bullet casing, the copper jacket and lead portion from a spent bullet, and a bullet impact site in the wall.

The bar's cash register was empty of money. The drawer below the register, which served as a gaming bank, was also empty. Inside the office a videocassette recorder (VCR) and multiplexer had been taken from the security surveillance system. The bottom part of a safe in the office was unlocked and open. Lokken had the keys to the safe when she began her shift. Missing from the safe was a green bank bag containing about $3,500.00. A total of $4,629.00 was taken from the bar.

The afternoon following the crimes, police responded to a 911 call from two women at a Las Vegas motel. The women told police that they had spent the night with two men who they thought were involved in the murder at Doc Holliday's. One of the men was still at the motel. Police went to the room occupied by the man, Tyrone Garner, and questioned him. Garner said that he had loaned his car to someone. Police found a set of keys to the car in the room, and Garner gave them permission to take the keys and search the car if they found it. The car was soon located a few blocks away; it matched the description of the car seen leaving Doc Holliday's early that morning. A VCR and multiplexer were found in its trunk. Police also found a nine-millimeter semiautomatic pistol in the trunk. Testing showed that the pistol had fired the bullet casing and fragments recovered from Doc Holliday's.

A multiplexer takes images from multiple cameras and simultaneously records them on one videotape. The recovered VCR contained a surveillance videotape with input from several cameras at Doc Holliday's. A tape showing the view from each camera in succession was made. The tape was shown to Adell Thompson, among others. Thompson was the general manager of Herman's Barbecue, which operated the kitchen at Doc Holliday's. The tape showed a man whom Thompson identified as appellant Randolph. Randolph had worked at the kitchen for two or three weeks just prior to the crimes.

The doors to the bar were always locked during the graveyard shift at Doc Holliday's. A customer had to press a button to seek entry at the front door, and the bartender could see the customer on a monitor linked to the video surveillance system. The bartender could then decide whether to "buzz" a customer in.

*428 The surveillance tape contained about nine minutes of footage relevant to the crimes at Doc Holliday's. Lokken let Randolph into the bar around 12:56 a.m. He entered alone, and the tape showed no one else in the bar except Lokken. Randolph sat down at the bar for a short time, then stood up, reached in his waistband, and pulled out a gun. He climbed over the bar and jumped down in front of Lokken. She raised her arms up, and Randolph moved her out of camera view. The tape did not show Lokken again, but Randolph came in and out of view several times. Around 1:00 a.m., he opened the cash register. A view of the bar also showed occasional flashes of light emanating from beyond the camera view. These flashes were attributable to the opening of the door to the kitchen/office area, which was better lit than the bar, as Randolph went in or out that door. The tape went black just before 1:05 a.m.

Acting on an anonymous tip, LVMPD officers apprehended Randolph on May 8, 1998. As detectives drove Randolph to their office, he asked why he was in custody. The detectives said they were investigating the shooting at Doc Holliday's, and Randolph denied knowing anything about that. When told that he appeared on the surveillance tape, he became quiet and said he would tell the detectives what he knew. At the office, Randolph gave a voluntary recorded statement.

Randolph admitted that he had been on a cocaine binge before the shooting, that he ran out of money and wanted more drugs, and that Garner drove him to Doc Holliday's so he could steal money to buy more drugs. He admitted that he took money from the safe and the cash register, but said he did not know about Lokken's murder. He claimed that he let Garner into the bar through the backdoor to the kitchen. According to Randolph, Garner wore a mask, had a gun and handcuffs, put the handcuffs on Lokken, and took her to the cooler. Randolph said that he left the building and heard a muffled gunshot and Garner then came out.

Randolph's account was not always coherent or consistent, e.g., he first admitted and later denied having a gun, and he first said he "didn't even hear" and later said he heard a muffled shot. No videotape or physical evidence supported Randolph's claim that Garner was ever inside the bar.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
36 P.3d 424, 117 Nev. 970, 117 Nev. Adv. Rep. 80, 2001 Nev. LEXIS 84, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/randolph-v-state-nev-2001.