Shayna Hubers v. Commonwealth of Kentucky

CourtKentucky Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 17, 2021
Docket2018 SC 0667
StatusUnknown

This text of Shayna Hubers v. Commonwealth of Kentucky (Shayna Hubers v. Commonwealth of Kentucky) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Kentucky Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shayna Hubers v. Commonwealth of Kentucky, (Ky. 2021).

Opinion

Supreme Court of Kentucky 2018-SC-0667-MR

SHAYNA HUBERS APPELLANT

ON APPEAL FROM CAMPBELL CIRCUIT COURT V. HONORABLE DANIEL J. ZALLA, JUDGE NO. 12-CR-00954

COMMONWEALTH OF KENTUCKY APPELLEE

ORDER

The Court hereby orders that the Opinion of the Court rendered on

September 24, 2020, be MODIFIED, and the attached opinion is hereby

ORDERED SUBSTITUTED for the opinion originally rendered. Additionally,

Appellant’s Petition for Rehearing is denied.

All sitting. All concur.

ENTERED: FEBRUARY 18, 2021

_______________________________________ CHIEF JUSTICE

1 MODIFIED: FEBRUARY 18, 2021 RENDERED: SEPTEMBER 24, 2020 TO BE PUBLISHED

ON APPEAL FROM CAMPBELL CIRCUIT COURT V. HONORABLE DANIEL J. ZALLA, JUDGE NO. 12-CR-00954

OPINION OF THE COURT BY JUSTICE HUGHES

AFFIRMING

On April 15, 2015, a Campbell County jury convicted Shayna Hubers of

the murder of her boyfriend, Ryan Poston. After discovering that a convicted

felon served on the jury, Hubers moved for a new trial and the Campbell

Circuit Court granted her motion. Her sixteen-day retrial in August 2018 once

again ended with Hubers’s conviction. The trial court sentenced her to life

imprisonment in accordance with the jury’s recommendation. Hubers now

appeals as a matter of right, raising issues concerning jury selection, her

motion to change venue due to pretrial publicity, and the admissibility of

various items of evidence. After careful review, we affirm the trial court.

2 FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

On October 12, 2012, Shayna Hubers called Emergency Medical Services

(EMS) and told the dispatcher that she shot her boyfriend, Ryan Poston, in self-

defense. According to Hubers, Poston had beaten her and was reaching for a

gun. During the call she stated that she “shot him a couple more times just to

kill him . . . because he was twitching and [she] knew he was going to die

anyway and he was making funny noises.” Hubers also told the dispatcher

that she waited approximately fifteen minutes before calling EMS. The

evidence subsequently revealed that she shot Poston a total of six times in his

Highland Heights condominium.

As noted, Hubers was originally convicted in April 2015 and sentenced to

forty years in prison but the trial court granted her a new trial when it was

discovered that a convicted felon had served on the jury. The sixteen-day

retrial began on August 8, 2018. After several days of both general and

individual voir dire, the jury was seated on August 13, 2018. Specific facts

regarding individual jurors that Hubers challenged for cause and the pretrial

publicity surrounding the case are discussed infra in the context of her

arguments.

The Commonwealth’s proof at trial included a video recording of Hubers’s

interview with police shortly after the shooting. Initially, Hubers requested an

attorney, but, unprompted by police, she subsequently spoke at length about

the incident in an interview that lasted approximately three hours. In the

video, Hubers can be seen dancing around the room and singing at times. She

3 claimed that Poston was “whacked on drugs” and abusive towards her. Prior to

the shooting, according to Hubers, he was “throwing [her] around the room like

a ragdoll,” including against the furniture, onto the floor and into the

television. After he threw her around, he sat at the dining table and screamed

at her, yelling insults and saying he hated her. Several times she mentioned

that she shot Poston in self-defense. She also described Poston as “evil” and

said he “deserved it.”

According to Hubers, after she shot Poston he fell to the floor and was

twitching and making strange noises, so she shot him a few more times to kill

him because she “knew he was going to die or have a completely deformed

face.” She told officers that Poston was very vain and wanted rhinoplasty so by

shooting him in the face, she “gave him the nose job he always wanted.”

Despite her claims of abuse, an officer who examined her at the police station

did not find any injuries, other than a bit of discoloration on her shin.

The Commonwealth’s theory of the case was that Hubers, a graduate

student living in Lexington, shot Poston, a twenty-nine-year old lawyer who

practiced in Cincinnati, because he was ending their eighteen-month

relationship. Learning that Poston planned to go on a date with another

woman that very night contributed to her decision to shoot him.

Chief Bill Birkenhauer1 of the City of Highland Heights Police

Department investigated the case and later testified that the crime scene

1 During the initial stages of the investigation, Birkenhauer was a Detective

Lieutenant but at some point before the retrial he became Chief of the department.

4 contradicted Hubers’s version of events. Although she alleged Poston threw

her into the television, Birkenhauer found the television was in place and very

dusty, suggesting no one had come in contact with it. Items on Poston’s dining

table were undisturbed, contradicting her statement that he had been reaching

across the table for the gun. While Poston’s condominium was somewhat in

disarray, his father, who visited the condominium frequently, testified that

Poston was a “bit of a slob.” According to Chief Birkenhauer, the scene did not

reflect any type of a struggle.

At the time of the shooting, Vernon and Doris West lived in the

condominium directly below Poston’s residence. The Wests testified at

Hubers’s first trial in 2015. Over Hubers’s objection, in 2018 the trial court

declared Doris West unavailable by reason of mental infirmity pursuant to

Kentucky Rule of Evidence (KRE) 804(a)(4) and allowed the Commonwealth to

play the video of Doris’s testimony from the first trial. Doris said on the night

of the murder she heard two shots, then approximately six seconds later she

heard four more shots. She did not hear anyone screaming or yelling prior to

hearing the shots. Vernon West testified live at the 2018 trial and stated that

he heard two shots, the sound of a person falling, then four more shots. He

also did not hear any yelling, thumping or moving around upstairs prior to

hearing the shots.

Much of the trial testimony revolved around Hubers and Poston’s

tumultuous relationship. Their relationship began in March 2011 when Poston

requested to connect with Hubers on Facebook. They met in person for the

5 first time in April 2011. Until November 2011, the pair saw each other

occasionally and texted frequently, although Hubers sent substantially more

text messages to Poston than he sent to her. After November 2011, the couple

had multiple break-ups which often lasted for a short period of time. In April

2012, Hubers confronted him about degrading things he apparently said about

her to other people. According to Hubers, they had an altercation and Poston

picked her up and threw her on the doorstep of his condominium. She also

testified that he beat her body repeatedly with the door as she tried to collect

her belongings and leave.

There was a break in the parties’ relationship between April and July

2012. When they resumed seeing each other in July, Hubers claimed that

Poston placed “conditions” on their relationship, such as requiring her to speak

less, to have a hobby while at his condominium, and to participate in sexual

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