Roy v. State

2006 OK CR 47, 152 P.3d 217, 2006 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 50, 2006 WL 3422928
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma
DecidedNovember 22, 2006
DocketF-2005-611
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 2006 OK CR 47 (Roy v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Roy v. State, 2006 OK CR 47, 152 P.3d 217, 2006 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 50, 2006 WL 3422928 (Okla. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinions

OPINION

CHAPEL, Presiding Judge.

T1 Christopher Cornell Roy was tried by jury and convicted of First-Degree Murder, under 21 00.98.2001, § 701.7, in Tulsa County, Case No. CF-2004-1680. In accordance with the jury's recommendation, the Honorable Caroline E. Wall sentenced Roy to life imprisonment without the possibility of parole. Roy appeals his conviction and his sentence.

12 Around 7:15 a.m., on Wednesday, April 7, 2004, Sharon Mason went to the Tulsa apartment of her nineteen-year-old daughter, Monique Mason, to check on her. Although Sharon normally communicated with her daughter regularly, she had not heard from or seen Monique since March 830, 2004. When Monique did not answer the door, Sharon used her own key to unlock it. When she tried to push open the door, however, something was blocking it. When Sharon peered into the small erack in the door, she was horrified to discover that it was the body of her dead daughter that was blocking the door.

13 Monique Mason's body was wedged at the bottom of the staircase leading up into her apartment, with her head and upper [220]*220body toward the front door and her feet pointed up the stairs. She had been shot twice in the left side of the head. Her body was wrapped in a sleeping bag, with a clear plastic bag over her head and upper torso. Dr. Ronald Distefano, a medical examiner and forensic pathologist, testified that her death was caused by the bullet that penetrated her skull and lodged in her brain.1 He estimated that she had been dead at least a day at the time her body was discovered, and possibly as much as two-and-a-half days. James Turner, who lived in the same complex, testified that he heard the sound of two gunshots around 10:15 p.m., on Monday, April 5, 2004.2

T4 Christopher Cornell Roy had been dating Monique Mason for approximately two years prior to her death. Monique had recently resumed contact with Willie Hardman, her "first true love,3 however, and had informed Roy that their relationship was over. Sharon Mason testified that Monique had become "weary" of the relationship with Roy and wanted to move on from it.4 She testified that Roy called her at home in late March of that year and told her that he didn't want Monique to break up with him and that he wanted to marry her.5 Jayneice Oates, Monique's best friend, testified that Monique and Roy argued a lot and that in January of 2004, she witnessed Roy telling Monique that he would kill her if she tried to leave him, "because he would be damned if he spent two years of his life with her and she just leave." Oates testified that she heard Roy threaten to kill Monique on other oceasgions as well, and that Roy said he had a gun, though Oates never saw it.6

T5 Claudia Plascencia, one of Monique Mason's neighbors, testified that she saw Roy leaving Monique's apartment on Thursday, April 1, and Sunday, April 4, 2004. On April ist, she saw Roy coming out of Monique's apartment around 5:30 p.m., slamming the door and yelling angrily that he was going home. On April 4th, Plascencia arrived at the complex between 1:00 and 1:30 p.m. and walked past Roy as he walked away from Monique's apartment. Plascencia testified that Roy did not look at her and seemed "preoccupied." Another neighbor, Megin Secrist, testified that she heard a man and a woman arguing in Monique's apartment on Saturday, April 3. Sharon Mason testified that she saw Roy at church on Sunday, April [221]*2214, at 1:45 p.m., but that Monique was not with him. She testified that she asked about Monique, and Roy indicated that he had not seen her for about two weeks, but that he thought she was in Oklahoma City. Sharon asked Roy to have Monique to call her if he talked to her, because she was very concerned about her daughter.

T6 Brenda Roy, Christopher Roy's mother, testified that on April 7, 2004, as she was taking a friend's children to school, she saw the police, the local news, the coroner, etc., all gathered around Monique's apartment. When she arrived back home, she woke her son, who lived with her, and told him that they needed to go see what had happened at Monique's apartment. Soon after Christopher Roy arrived at the scene, around 8:30 a.m., officers observed him sobbing and acting very upset, and learned that he was the victim's boyfriend. Sergeant Shawn King approached him and invited him to sit in his patrol car, attempted to calm him down, and asked Roy about his basic personal information (name, address, date of birth, etc.). King also asked Roy if he was willing to go down to the police department and make a statement, and Roy agreed to go.

7 Roy was brought to the police department and left sitting in the "bull pen," a work area shared by various officers, around 10:00 am. He was not handcuffed or otherwise restrained. Officer Stephen Colburn, a homicide detective whose desk was in this area, eventually spoke to Roy, got his basic information, and asked if he knew Monique Mason. Roy stated that they had been boyfriend/girlfriend, but that they were breaking up and that he had not seen Monique or been in her apartment for a couple of weeks. Roy also stated that Monique had started seeing her old boyfriend, whose name was "Willie."

18 Officer Roger Smith, the lead investigator in the case, arrived at the police department around noon that day and took Roy to an interview room, where he questioned Roy. Smith confronted Roy with some of the information being gleaned at the crime seene, such as the fact that he had been seen leaving Monique's apartment on multiple occasions within the previous week. During this conversation, Roy asked the question, "Would it be manslaughter if she came at me with a knife?". At that point Smith halted the interview, went and got Officer Jeffrey Felton to sit in on the questioning, began recording and videotaping the interview, and read Roy his rights under Miranda, using a Tulsa Police Department Notification of Rights form.7

19 After reading the fourth numbered right, that he had a right to have counsel appointed if he couldn't afford one, Roy asked, "Do I need a lawyer?". Rather than answering the question, Smith stated, "Hold on a minute," and continued reading the fifth and last right, about Roy's right to answer questions without a lawyer present and his right to stop answering at any time. Roy verbally acknowledged that he understood this right, as well as all of the rights that Smith had read, initialed each numbered right to indicate this understanding, and signed the waiver on the bottom of the form. He never inquired about or mentioned a lawyer again.

1 10 During the interview Roy stated that he and Monique had been arguing about money, bills, and their relationship. He stated that Monique was telling him to leave and that their relationship was over and that he was mad because he had just given her money. Roy also stated that Monique had given him a sexually transmitted disease, which she got from Willis Roy indicated that he learned about the disease through pamphlets Monique had in her apartment, which said that you could not get rid of it. Later in the interview Roy stated that he knew he had the disease, though he had not yet been to a doctor, because he had had the rashes. He also indicated that he believed this sexually transmitted disease would prevent him from having children.

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Roy v. State
2006 OK CR 47 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma, 2006)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2006 OK CR 47, 152 P.3d 217, 2006 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 50, 2006 WL 3422928, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roy-v-state-oklacrimapp-2006.