State of Maine v. Jesse P. Marquis

2017 ME 104, 162 A.3d 818, 2017 WL 2291418, 2017 Me. LEXIS 105
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedMay 25, 2017
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2017 ME 104 (State of Maine v. Jesse P. Marquis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State of Maine v. Jesse P. Marquis, 2017 ME 104, 162 A.3d 818, 2017 WL 2291418, 2017 Me. LEXIS 105 (Me. 2017).

Opinion

MAINE SUPREME JUDICIAL COURT Reporter of Decisions Decision: 2017 ME 104 Docket: Aro-16-351 Argued: April 13, 2017 Decided: May 25, 2017

Panel: SAUFLEY, C.J., and ALEXANDER, MEAD, GORMAN, JABAR, HJELM, and HUMPHREY, JJ.

STATE OF MAINE

v.

JESSE P. MARQUIS

MEAD, J.

[¶1] Jesse P. Marquis appeals from a judgment of conviction of murder,

17-A M.R.S. § 201(1)(A) (2016), entered by the trial court

(Aroostook County, Hunter, J.) following a jury trial. Marquis contends that the

court erred by admitting in evidence text messages found in the victim’s cell

phone and three photographs of the crime scene in which the victim’s body was

visible, and by giving the jury an allegedly confusing and legally-flawed

self-defense instruction. We disagree and affirm the judgment.1

1 Marquis also contends that the court abused its discretion in allowing a law enforcement officer to testify briefly concerning the capabilities of the bloodhound that located him in the woods at the time he was arrested. We discern no error and do not discuss that issue further. 2

I. FACTS AND PROCEDURE

[¶2] “Viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the jury’s

verdict, the trial record supports the following facts.” State v. Weaver,

2016 ME 12, ¶ 2, 130 A.3d 972. On May 30, 2014, the victim had been in a

relationship with Jesse Marquis for nearly two years; Marquis was living with

her at her house. That evening, the victim went with her sister and two friends

to a camp in St. Francis where Marquis was present with his young son to

retrieve her car from Marquis and end the relationship. During a car ride with

the two friends earlier that afternoon, the victim told them that Marquis “was

being a baby,” and that she had “had enough of his childish acts,” as he sent her

text messages from 6:24 p.m. to 8:05 p.m. saying that he loved her and pleading

for her to come to the camp and spend time with him.

[¶3] Arriving at the camp as it was getting dark, the victim and her sister

got out of their vehicle and the victim talked to Marquis. Marquis was

“fidgeting” and “was obviously drinking.” The victim asked for her car keys and

Marquis gave them to her; Marquis then asked for money and the victim gave

him some. After Marquis retrieved clothing and beer from the car, the victim’s

sister told Marquis to “stay away from the house and stay away from my sister.”

The victim’s friend saw Marquis run up to the car and “almost jump[] . . . on the 3

side” as the victim prepared to leave. The victim, her sister, and her friends

returned to the victim’s house. Texts from Marquis found on the victim’s phone

sent at 8:50 p.m. and 8:51 p.m., forty-five minutes after the earlier texts, said “I

never hit you or never was aggressive to you,” and “I want my gun.” Although

they had planned to return to their residence in Fort Kent, the victim’s friends

decided to spend the night with her; one slept on the couch, and the other in a

recliner.

[¶4] Marquis’s ex-wife had dropped their son off with Marquis at

5:00 p.m. that day for his regular weekend visitation. Between 8:00 and

8:30 p.m., Marquis sent her a text message telling her to come get the boy.

When she responded that she was at work and would have to find a

replacement to take the remainder of her shift, Marquis sent another message,

twenty to thirty minutes after the first, telling her to “[c]ome get [the boy] now.”

Assuming that her son was at the victim’s house, she went there, only to find

that the victim and the victim’s two friends were there, but Marquis and her son

were not. Because she did not know where the camp was, the victim and her

friends accompanied her back to the camp in a separate vehicle in order to

retrieve her son. 4

[¶5] At close to 9:00 p.m., Marquis’s ex-wife knocked on the door of the

camp and Marquis answered; their son was there as well. When she said that

she was there to pick up the boy, Marquis “stumbl[ed] back in” to the camp

trying to find the boy’s belongings. Marquis was “intoxicated” and “upset”;

when the boy and his mother left, Marquis was on the floor of the camp crying.

Because she had been informed about the status of the victim’s relationship

with Marquis, Marquis’s ex-wife returned to the victim’s house to gather her

son’s things that were there. While she was on the way, Marquis texted her,

saying, “I want to be with you and [the boy], I’m tired of being out in the cold”;

she did not respond. She had a friendly conversation with the victim and never

saw her again. Between 9:00 and 9:30 p.m., Marquis texted his ex-wife to say

that he wanted his son back that night; she responded, “no.”

[¶6] At 9:32 p.m., Marquis resumed sending text messages to the victim,

asking what he had done wrong; saying “I fed you, made your life easy,” and

“you told me all week you loved me”; asking her to come get him; and saying,

“I had plans for us.” The last message, “Come get me,” was sent at 11:23 p.m.

[¶7] At daybreak on May 31, the victim’s friend who was sleeping in the

recliner woke to see the victim moving around in the house; he then dozed back

off. When he again awoke, he saw Marquis running into the living room with a 5

knife in his hand. As he tried to get out of the chair, he told Marquis to leave

and Marquis swung the knife at him. While he and the friend who had been

sleeping on the couch called 9-1-1, he heard yelling and the victim screaming,

and “something like a smash” coming from the bedroom; Marquis then emerged

from the bedroom carrying a rifle. As Marquis left the house, he was fumbling

with the rifle in an apparent attempt to reload it. When the friend went into the

bedroom with its adjoining bathroom, he saw the victim lying on the floor with

“blood everywhere.”

[¶8] The victim’s friend who had been sleeping on the couch woke to “a

big thud and a scream.” She went into the bedroom and saw the victim on the

floor, with Marquis “holding her but hitting her at the same time”; she also saw

a gun. At about 5:45 a.m., as she made the call to 9-1-1, she saw Marquis holding

the gun. Marquis followed her into the kitchen and pointed the gun at her, then

left the house. She went to the victim and performed CPR on her until a

paramedic arrived some twenty minutes later. The paramedic found the victim

dead in a large pool of blood with her friend still attempting to resuscitate her.

[¶9] The Deputy Chief Medical Examiner performed an autopsy. She

determined that the victim died from a contact gunshot wound to the chest

consistent with high-velocity hunting rifle ammunition, as well as stab wounds 6

to the chest. The victim had suffered numerous stab and cut wounds, including

a stab wound to the top of her head in which the medical examiner found

embedded in her skull a piece of metal consistent with a knifepoint. The victim

had cuts on her fingers that were typical of defensive wounds. During the

autopsy, the medical examiner recovered a deformed bullet fragment from the

victim’s clothing that had fallen out of the exit wound.

[¶10] On June 6, 2014, following an extensive manhunt, Marquis was

arrested in the woods near St. Francis after being tracked by a bloodhound

brought in from New Hampshire; he had cuts on his hand and a rifle was lying

on the ground next to him. A forensic specialist with the Maine State Police

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Related

Marquis v. State of Maine
Maine Superior, 2019

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2017 ME 104, 162 A.3d 818, 2017 WL 2291418, 2017 Me. LEXIS 105, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-maine-v-jesse-p-marquis-me-2017.