Rutan v. State

2009 OK CR 3, 202 P.3d 839, 2009 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 3, 2009 WL 349730
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma
DecidedFebruary 13, 2009
DocketF-2007-1022
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 2009 OK CR 3 (Rutan 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
Rutan v. State, 2009 OK CR 3, 202 P.3d 839, 2009 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 3, 2009 WL 349730 (Okla. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

OPINION

LUMPKIN, Judge.

1 Appellant Katherine Rutan Pollard was tried by jury and convicted of First Degree Murder (21 0.$.2001, $ 701.7), Case No. CH-2006-31, in the District Court of Woods County. 1 The jury recommended as punishment life imprisonment without the possibility of parole and the trial court sentenced accordingly. It is from this judgment and sentence that Appellant appeals.

T2 Appellant and her two young sons, 6 year old Logan Tucker and 4 year old J.D., shared a home with Melody Lennington in Woodward, Oklahoma. - At approximately 8:00 a.m., Sunday, June 28, 2002, Ms. Len-nington was awakened by a scream. She recognized the voice as that of Logan. Thinking he was having another nightmare, she want back to sleep. A short time later, she got out of bed to find Appellant in the front room at the computer. Lennington asked if Logan was okay. Appellant said he was sick so she had put him in a back bedroom. Lennington returned to bed and woke up again at 6:00 a.m. to get ready for work. Appellant was still sitting at the computer. Lennington again asked if Logan was okay. She told Appellant she needed to get her work clothes from the back bedroom and didn't want to disturb Logan. Appellant told her, "[dlon't worry about it. He's in the basement." The basement was solid cement with cinder blocks and contained the hot water heater, an old cabinet, and an old soiled twin mattress on a set of springs. No place for a sick child, thought Lennington. Although upset that Logan was in the basement, Lennington got ready and left for work.

*842 8 The seream was the last anyone heard from Logan Tucker. Appellant had long seen Logan as an obstacle that stood between her and the life she wanted to live. Paul Mullins, a former boyfriend who lived with Appellant in 1999, frequently observed Appellant hit Logan with enough foree to knock him to the ground. Appellant told Mullins she felt trapped and asked him several times when she would be able to start enjoying her life. Arriving home from work one night, he observed that Logan "had been beaten and beaten severely."

T4 Brady Gougler, Appellant's third husband to whom she was married from 1999 to 2001, observed Appellant yell at the children frequently and spend time at the computer instead of with them. In August 2001, Appellant told her neighbors in Nowata, Oklahoma, the Randells, that she could not stand Logan and that she felt he was a mistake that stood in the way of what she could accomplish, that he was the reason her relationships failed and she did not know what she might do to him. The Randells noticed that Appellant's relationship with Logan was different from that with J.D. While J.D. received her attention and compassion, Logan was pushed aside and ignored. , The Randell's fifteen year old daughter, Ashlee, observed Appellant discipline the boys and felt her discipline of Logan was excessive. She said Appellant repeatedly spanked Logan with a belt and plastic coat hangers.

5 Having separated from Gougler, Appellant moved in with Richard Cody later that year. They had met at their children's day care center. One evening, Appellant and her sons, and Cody and his daughter went for a drive. Appellant and Logan screamed at each other most of the ride. At one point, Appellant told Cody to stop the truck. She took Logan out of the truck, left him on the side of the road, and told Cody to drive off and leave him there. Cody drove a few feet before stopping and putting Logan back in the truck.

T 6 During the relationship, Appellant told Cody that her brother had offered her a job out of state, but that she would not be able to bring her children because her brother did not like children. One night Cody and Appellant were in bed talking. Appellant told Cody she wished there was some way she could kill her kids and get away with it. Not believing what he heard, Cody replied, "excuse me." Appellant repeated what she had said, but then said she was only kidding. Cody was so disturbed by what he heard that he left his bed and slept the night in his daughter's bed. With the help of a crisis center, Cody got Appellant out of his house within three to four days.

T7 Kevin Caudill met Appellant in March 2002 and though they dated only a couple of months, they remained friends. One night, Appellant phoned Caudill, upset. She said that most people look forward to the weekend to spend time with their children, but her children were the very reason she dreaded the weekend.

T8 On April 27, 2002, Tulsa police officers responded to a call to check the well-being of a child. Appellant told the officers she was afraid she was going to hurt her children, did not want to be around them, and that Logan "made her so angry that she just wanted to hit him as hard as she could." The officers took both boys into protective custody and transported them to a shelter.

9 Michelle Christy interviewed Appellant regarding the April 27 incident for the Department of Human Services (DHS). Appellant told her she felt "very overwhelmed" by Logan and she was often angry at him and yelled at him frequently. Appellant wanted her parents, the Cathcarts, to take Logan. However, despite helping Appellant with the children in the past, Mr. and Mrs. Cathcart, who lived in Florida, were unable to take Logan at that time.

{10 After a hearing, the children were returned to Appellant on May 2, 2002. About this time Appellant met Michael Pet-tey through personal ads she had posted on the internet. On the day her children were returned to her, she told Pettey in an e-mail that Logan would not be coming home.

11 By the middle of May, Appellant and Pettey were discussing the idea of Appellant moving from her home in Tulsa to Fort Supply, where Pettey lived. While Pettey wanted Appellant to move to the area, he *843 expressed reservations about actually living with her. Appellant had other ideas. On May 23, she informed Pettey that she had been fired from her job and she and the boys were moving to Fort Supply. Appellant and the children lived with Pettey for two weeks. Not ready for that type of relationship, Pet-tey looked for another place for Appellant to live.

T 12 Pettey made arrangements for Appellant and her children to move in with his coworker, Melody Lennington. Appellant and her children moved into Lennington's home on June 10, 2002. Appellant spoke poorly of Logan in Lennington's presence as well as Logan's. She blamed him for trying to burn down their home in Tulsa. On June 19, 2002, Lennington smelled sulphur in her house and found Logan with cigarettes and J.D. with a lighter. Lennington called the police. When they arrived, Appellant told them Logan was trying to burn down Lennington's house and she wanted him arrested. The officer did not take Logan into custody, but called Jimmie Fraley, a mental health worker, to the scene.

13 Appellant later told Pettey she found Logan with matches trying to burn down Lennington's house. Feeling responsible for Appellant living with Lennington, and having previously been told by Appellant that Logan had tried to burn down their Tulsa home, Pettey told her he wanted her out of Len-nington's home. He told her he did not want her at his house, his mother's house, or at the house of anyone else he knew, because he did not want Logan to burn anything down.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2009 OK CR 3, 202 P.3d 839, 2009 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 3, 2009 WL 349730, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rutan-v-state-oklacrimapp-2009.