Rippo v. State

146 P.3d 279, 122 Nev. 1086, 122 Nev. Adv. Rep. 93, 2006 Nev. LEXIS 123
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 16, 2006
DocketNo. 44094
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 146 P.3d 279 (Rippo 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
Rippo v. State, 146 P.3d 279, 122 Nev. 1086, 122 Nev. Adv. Rep. 93, 2006 Nev. LEXIS 123 (Neb. 2006).

Opinions

[1090]*1090OPINION

By the Court,

Hardesty, J.:

This is an appeal from an order of the district court denying a post-conviction petition for a writ of habeas corpus in a death penalty case. Appellant Michael Rippo invokes this court’s holding in McConnell v. State that “it [is] impermissible under the United States and Nevada Constitutions to base an aggravating circumstance in a capital prosecution on the felony upon which a felony murder is predicated.”1 This court has concluded in Bejarano v. State2 that McConnell’s holding is retroactive; we therefore apply it here. Three of the aggravating circumstances found by the jury in this case were invalid under McConnell, but three valid aggravated remain. We conclude that the jury’s consideration of the invalid aggravating circumstances was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt and therefore affirm.

FACTS

On February 18, 1992, Rippo and Diana Hunt robbed and killed Denise Lizzi and Lauri Jacobson. Rippo and Hunt went to Jacobson’s apartment where Hunt knocked Jacobson to the floor with a beer bottle and Rippo used a stun gun to subdue both Jacobson and Lizzi. Rippo then bound and gagged the women, dragged them to a closet, and strangled them. He took Lizzi’s car and credit cards and later used the credit cards to make several purchases. The medical examiner testified that both women died of asphyxiation and that their injuries were consistent with manual and ligature strangulation.3

Under a plea agreement with the State, Hunt pleaded guilty to robbery and testified against Rippo. The State presented two theories of first-degree murder: the murder was premeditated and deliberate, and the murder was committed during the commission of a felony. The jury found Rippo guilty of two counts of first-degree murder and one count each of robbery and unauthorized use of a credit card.

In the penalty phase, the State presented evidence that Rippo was convicted of committing a violent sexual assault in 1982 as well as juvenile burglaries. The State also presented testimony by five relatives of the two murder victims. The defense called three witnesses to testify on Rippo’s behalf: a prison vocational instruc[1091]*1091tor and minister, Rippo’s stepfather, and Rippo’s sister. Defense counsel also read a letter from Rippo’s mother to the jury. The jury found that six circumstances aggravated the murder: it was committed by a person under a sentence of imprisonment, it was committed by a person previously convicted of a felony involving the use or threat of violence, it was committed during a burglary, it was committed during a kidnapping, it was committed during a robbery, and it involved torture. The jury further found that the aggravators outweighed any mitigating circumstances and returned verdicts of death for the two murders.

This court affirmed Rippo’s judgment of conviction and sentence.4 Rippo filed a timely petition for a writ of habeas corpus in the district court. After conducting an evidentiary hearing, the district court denied Rippo’s petition in December 2004.

DISCUSSION

1. Invalid aggravating circumstances under McConnell

Citing McConnell,5 Rippo contends that the State impermissibly based three aggravating circumstances in the penalty phase on felonies used to support the felony-murder charge in the guilt phase. Because the district court had already denied Rippo’s habeas petition when this court issued its decision in McConnell, he first raised this issue in this appeal. However, after supplemental briefing on the matter, we conclude, and the State agrees, that the issue is appropriate for our resolution on appeal. First, Rippo has good cause for raising his McConnell claim now because its legal basis was not available at the time he pursued his habeas petition in the district court.6 Second, the McConnell issue presents questions of law that do not require factual determinations outside the record. The State concedes that no purpose would be served by requiring Rippo to file a successive petition invoking McConnell in order to decide his claim.

We held in McConnell that in any case where the State seeks a death sentence and “bases a first-degree murder conviction in whole or part on felony murder,” an aggravating circumstance cannot be based on the felony murder’s predicate felony.7 Absent a verdict form “showing that the jury did not rely on felony murder to find first-degree murder, the State cannot use aggrava-tors based on felonies which could support the felony murder.”8 [1092]*1092This court has concluded that the new rule set forth in McConnell is substantive and retroactive.9 We will therefore apply it here.

We address first the State’s argument that the theory of felony murder in this case can be disregarded under McConnell because there is “ample evidence” that Rippo committed premeditated murder. This approach has no basis in McConnell. The holding and rationale in McConnell do not involve determining the adequacy of the evidence of deliberation and premeditation; rather, they are concerned with whether any juror could have relied on a theory of felony murder in finding a defendant guilty of first-degree murder. We did conclude that McConnell’s own conviction for first-degree murder was “soundly based on a theory of deliberate, premeditated murder,” leaving the felony-murder theory without consequence.10 That conclusion, however, is effectively limited to the facts of McConnell. First, McConnell pleaded guilty, so a jury did not determine his guilt. Second, McConnell expressly testified that he had premeditated the murder. Third, “[hjis other testimony and the evidence as a whole overwhelmingly supported this admission.”11 Thus, in McConnell there was no chance that a finding of guilt, particularly a jury verdict, depended even partly on a theory of felony murder.

McConnell applies here because the district court instructed the jury that Rippo was accused of two counts of murder for killing the victims “willfully, feloniously, without authority of law, with malice aforethought and premeditation and/or during the course of committing Robbery and/or Kidnapping and/or Burglary.” (Emphasis added.) The verdict form did not indicate whether the jury found first-degree murder based on premeditated murder, felony murder, or both. In the penalty phase, the jury found three felony aggravators based on robbery, kidnapping, and burglary— the felonies that underlay the State’s felony-murder theory. These three aggravators therefore must be struck.

This court can still uphold Rippo’s death sentence by reweighing the aggravating and mitigating circumstances if we are convinced that the effect of the invalid aggravating circumstances was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt.12

[1093]*1093The State cites Brown v. Sanders,13 a recent Supreme Court decision, in support of its argument that the jury’s consideration of the invalidated felony aggravators was harmless error. In

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

THOMAS (MARLO) v. STATE (DEATH PENALTY-PC)
2022 NV 37 (Nevada Supreme Court, 2022)
BARLOW (KEITH) v. STATE (DEATH PENALTY-DIRECT)
2022 NV 25 (Nevada Supreme Court, 2022)
Jefferson v. Russell
D. Nevada, 2022
Ross v. Neven
D. Nevada, 2019
Cary Williams v. Timothy Filson
908 F.3d 546 (Ninth Circuit, 2018)
RIPPO (MICHAEL) VS. STATE (DEATH PENALTY-PC)
2018 NV 53 (Nevada Supreme Court, 2018)
Rippo v. State
423 P.3d 1084 (Nevada Supreme Court, 2018)
Jamaar Williams v. Jackie Crawford
669 F. App'x 846 (Ninth Circuit, 2016)
Cordoza (Leonardo) v. State
Nevada Supreme Court, 2016
Emerson (Kenneth) v. State
Nevada Supreme Court, 2013
Smith (Taniko) v. State
Nevada Supreme Court, 2013
Nika v. State
198 P.3d 839 (Nevada Supreme Court, 2008)
Bejarano v. State
146 P.3d 265 (Nevada Supreme Court, 2006)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
146 P.3d 279, 122 Nev. 1086, 122 Nev. Adv. Rep. 93, 2006 Nev. LEXIS 123, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rippo-v-state-nev-2006.