STATE OF MISSOURI, Plaintiff-Respondent v. DEION D. MARTIN

CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 10, 2020
DocketSD35889
StatusPublished

This text of STATE OF MISSOURI, Plaintiff-Respondent v. DEION D. MARTIN (STATE OF MISSOURI, Plaintiff-Respondent v. DEION D. MARTIN) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
STATE OF MISSOURI, Plaintiff-Respondent v. DEION D. MARTIN, (Mo. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

STATE OF MISSOURI, ) ) Plaintiff-Respondent, ) ) vs. ) No. SD35889 ) DEION D. MARTIN, ) Filed: September 10, 2020 ) Defendant-Appellant. )

APPEAL FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF NEW MADRID COUNTY

Honorable Fred W. Copeland, Circuit Judge

AFFIRMED

Following a bench trial, the trial court found Deion D. Martin (“Defendant”)

guilty of murder in the first degree, robbery in the first degree, and two counts of armed

criminal action, and sentenced Defendant to imprisonment for life without parole for the

murder and concurrent terms of imprisonment for the other offenses. Defendant appeals,

and raises two points – (1) the statute under which he was found guilty of murder and

sentenced to imprisonment for life without parole violated the Eighth Amendment and

Missouri Constitution’s prohibitions on cruel and unusual punishment as applied to him

in that he was only nineteen at the time of the murder and the law applicable to offenders

1 who are less than eighteen at the time of their offense should be extended to him; and (2)

the evidence was insufficient to permit a reasonable fact-finder to find that Defendant

caused the death of the murder victim “after deliberation” upon the matter. We reject

each of these points, and affirm the trial court’s judgment.

Facts and Procedural History 1

Defendant was charged with (1) murder in the first degree in that he “after

deliberation, knowingly caused the death of Brenda Smith by shooting her” on or about

May 15, 2015; (2) robbery in the first degree in that he “forcibly stole lottery tickets in

the possession of Helen Shephard, and in the course thereof [he] was armed with a deadly

weapon;” and (3) two counts of armed criminal action for committing the murder and

robbery “by, with and through, the knowing use, assistance and aid of a deadly weapon.”

In September 2018, Defendant waived his right to a jury trial “in exchange for”

the State “withdrawing” its notice of its intention to seek the death penalty. The

following month, Defendant filed a motion to dismiss the charge of murder in the first

degree on the ground that the only permitted sentence for that offense in this case was life

without parole, and a life without parole sentence would violate the Eighth Amendment’s

prohibition on cruel and unusual punishment because Defendant was nineteen at the time

of the offense. The trial court denied the motion one week later at a pre-trial conference

on the first morning of trial. 2

1 We view the evidence in the light most favorable to the trial court’s findings in accordance with our standard of review for Defendant’s second point; however, we occasionally include other evidence where necessary to provide context for Defendant’s points. 2 Defendant renewed the motion to dismiss at sentencing when it again was denied.

2 Trial Evidence Relevant to Defendant’s Deliberation

Shortly before six a.m. on Monday, May 18, 2015, Brenda Smith and Helen

Shepard opened the convenience store where they were employed for business. The

convenience store was located in New Madrid County. Both women “walked up to the

door, unlocked it, walked in,” and before they could close and lock the door, a male “with

[a] mask over his nose, and [a] gun in his hand” walked in behind them. The gun was a

revolver. Once inside, the male told the women “to hurry up and give him the money.”

Ms. Smith told the robber “we couldn’t, that we hadn’t even been in the store to get the

money out of the safe.” The robber was holding the gun “[u]p to [the] right side of [Ms.

Smith’s] head.” Ms. Shephard testified:

[The robber repeated] hurry up and give us [sic] some money and [Brenda] said I can’t, and [the robber] said hurry up and give me the money or I’m gonna shoot you. And Brenda said you might as well shoot me because I can’t [open the safe in a hurry], and that’s when he shot her.

A “[g]unshot wound to the head” caused Ms. Smith’s death. The entrance wound to Ms.

Smith’s head was from “near contact” between the muzzle and Ms. Smith’s head. At

some point before the robber shot Ms. Smith, the store’s “alarm system [went] off.”

The robber “started to walk out the door,” but then “turned towards [Ms. Shepard]

. . . and . . . c[a]me back and . . . said you get the money for me.” Ms. Shepard told the

robber “I can’t, because I couldn’t open the safe. I didn’t know how.” The robber told

Ms. Shepard “he would shoot [her] too,” and then began “pushing [her] back towards the

back where the safe was.” Ms. Shepard “guess[es]” she “finally convinced” the robber

that she could not open the safe because the robber said “then, get me some lottery

tickets.” Ms. Shepard “started ripping off the lottery tickets and handing them to” the

3 robber until the robber told her “[t]hat was enough.” 3 During this period, the robber was

“point[ing]” the gun at Ms. Shephard. The robber then left the store “out the front door,”

and Ms. Shephard called 911. 4

On May 24, 2015, Defendant attempted to redeem a lottery ticket at two separate

convenience stores in Stoddard County. An employee at the first convenience store

declined to redeem the ticket because the lottery terminal showed the ticket as rejected,

but returned the ticket to Defendant. An employee at the second convenience store also

declined to redeem the lottery ticket because the lottery terminal showed the ticket as

rejected, but tore the ticket in half before returning the ticket to Defendant. Another

employee at the second convenience store called the police. 5

After attempting to cash in the lottery ticket, Defendant’s girlfriend drove

Defendant to St. Louis where they met a female friend, and went to Grant’s Farm. 6

Defendant was arrested at Grant’s Farm. In a recorded, 7 post-Miranda8 interview,

3 The type and serial numbers of the lottery tickets taken in the robbery were reconstructed from the store’s records and the lottery tickets remaining at the store. Though the transcript contains what appear to be errors, it appears nineteen lottery tickets were taken in the robbery with law enforcement ultimately recovering seventeen of those tickets. 4 Surveillance video from the store captured Ms. Shepard calling 911, but did not capture the shooting. 5 A law enforcement officer who responded to the convenience store employee’s call identified the person who attempted to redeem the “rejected” lottery ticket as Defendant from the store’s surveillance video of the event. 6 On being approached by police officers at Grant’s Farm, Defendant’s girlfriend, who intentionally had separated herself physically from Defendant at the urging of her family in text messages and phone calls, consented to a search of her car. In the course of the search, officers found a lottery ticket “torn in half” “[i]n the front passenger side” of the car, and found eight additional lottery tickets in a bag that Defendant had placed in the trunk that morning. Though the transcript contains what appear to be errors, the serial number of each of the lottery tickets found in the car appears to have matched the serial number of a lottery ticket taken in the robbery during which Ms. Smith was shot and killed. 7 A portion of the recording was admitted into evidence and played for the trial court, but that portion was not transcribed. 8 Miranda v. Arizona, 384 U.S. 436 (1966).

4 Defendant told the interviewing law enforcement officers that (1) he shot Ms. Smith; (2)

he left his house about 5:15 a.m.

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STATE OF MISSOURI, Plaintiff-Respondent v. DEION D. MARTIN, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-missouri-plaintiff-respondent-v-deion-d-martin-moctapp-2020.