STATE OF MISSOURI, Plaintiff-Respondent v. ROY BLACKSURE

CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 7, 2024
DocketSD38010
StatusPublished

This text of STATE OF MISSOURI, Plaintiff-Respondent v. ROY BLACKSURE (STATE OF MISSOURI, Plaintiff-Respondent v. ROY BLACKSURE) 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. ROY BLACKSURE, (Mo. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

Missouri Court of Appeals Southern District

In Division

STATE OF MISSOURI, ) ) Plaintiff-Respondent, ) ) vs. ) No. SD38010 ) ROY BLACKSURE, ) Filed: June 7, 2024 ) Defendant-Appellant. )

APPEAL FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF GREENE COUNTY

The Honorable Jerry A. Harmison, Judge

AFFIRMED

Roy Blacksure (“Blacksure”) appeals the judgment of the Circuit Court of Greene

County, Missouri, convicting him of robbery in the first degree under section 570.023, armed

criminal action under section 571.015, burglary in the first degree under section 569.160,

unlawful possession of a firearm under section 571.070, and assault in the fourth degree under

section 565.056.1 In his only point on appeal, Blacksure claims the trial court erred in overruling

his motion for judgment of acquittal, and entering judgment and sentencing Blacksure on all his

1 References to sections 570.023, 569.160, and 565.056 are to RSMo 2016, including, as applicable, statutory changes effective January 1, 2017. References to sections 571.015 and 571.070 are to RSMo Cum. Supp. 2020, including, as applicable, statutory changes effective August 28, 2020. convictions, because there was insufficient evidence to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that

Blacksure was one of the men involved in the home invasion from which all charges arose.

Finding no merit to Blacksure’s argument, the trial court’s judgment is affirmed.

Factual Background and Procedural History

C.E. (“Victim”) lived with her fiancé, N.W. (“Fiancé”), in a second-floor apartment in

Springfield. On the night of the incident, the couple was expecting two friends to come over.

Around 6:30 p.m., Fiancé went to the nearest Walmart two blocks away for hot chocolate and

whipped cream, leaving Victim alone in the apartment. While at Walmart, Fiancé called Victim

to ask what he was supposed to purchase. During the phone call, Victim heard a knock on the

front door of the apartment. Believing it to be her two friends, Victim opened the door without

checking the peephole. Three masked black men with guns, none of whom Victim knew,

entered the apartment without Victim’s permission. Each man was wearing a different colored

hoodie: one black, one red, and one green. Each man was holding a handgun. One of the men

used a bandana as a mask, and the other two men were wearing medical masks. Fiancé heard a

man’s voice and Victim’s scream over the telephone. Upon hearing this, Fiancé ran out of

Walmart, called 9-1-1, and drove home.

Back at the apartment, the men asked Victim where “[her] weed was and where [her]

money was.” Victim told them she had a small amount of “weed” on the nightstand but did not

have any money. The men ransacked the couple’s apartment, entering the bedroom and pulling

out the dresser drawers. The man wearing the black hoodie dragged Victim by the hair into the

bedroom and asked her to “show them where [her] money was.” Victim told them there was a

shoebox in the closet, but there was no money in the shoebox. The men continued searching the

apartment, including the dresser drawers, where they found and took a $5 roll of dimes. They

2 dragged Victim out of the bedroom and again asked for drugs and money, stating they would not

hurt her if she told them where the drugs and money were. A gun was pointed at Victim the

majority of the time the men were in the apartment. Victim identified the man in the red hoodie

as the one “in charge” of the situation, as “[h]e was the one directing, telling them to drag me to

the room and to drag me out, called the other two into the living room and looked for the stuff in

the living room.”

When Fiancé arrived at the apartment, he opened the front door and saw the three men

standing near Victim, who was lying on the floor. One of the men pointed a gun at Fiancé, after

which Fiancé immediately shut the door. One of the men beat Victim’s head against the pantry

door and told her to tell Fiancé to open the door because the man “was going to pop.” Fiancé

then grabbed the doorknob to prevent the men from opening the door. All three men then exited

the apartment through the sliding door onto the balcony, taking the roll of dimes and Victim’s

cell phone with them.

Once the men jumped off the balcony, Victim ran to the door screaming for Fiancé to

open it. Fiancé opened the door and pulled Victim out. A neighbor took Victim into her

apartment, where the neighbor was on the phone with a 9-1-1 operator, and Victim reported the

incident.

While Victim was on the phone with the 9-1-1 operator, Fiancé ran around the apartment

building in an attempt to catch the men. Hearing the commotion, a neighbor in an adjacent

building exited his apartment and saw an individual “tangled up in cables on their way down to

the ground” below the second story balcony of the couple’s apartment building. The neighbor

went to investigate and could hear someone moving on the other side of a fence between the two

apartment buildings. He walked down the fence, but by the time he got to where he could see

3 the road, the person had begun to make his way down the street. The neighbor told Fiancé the

direction he saw the individual going, and Fiancé followed his direction.

Other neighbors were shouting “[t]he guy in red” and pointing to a man wearing red.

Fiancé followed the man and shouted at him, but the man in red, later identified as Blacksure, did

not respond. Blacksure started walking and sprinting away from Fiancé toward the Burrell

Behavioral Health – Transitions building (“Transitions building”). Initially, Blacksure did not

respond to Fiancé, but as the pursuit continued and they circled the Transitions building,

Blacksure told Fiancé to get away from him. During this chase, Fiancé called the police.

Blacksure ran across the street and continued down a sidewalk near a cemetery.

The police responding to Fiancé’s call arrived and Fiancé identified Blacksure, stating,

“That’s the guy right there.” The police then stopped Blacksure, who was wearing a red shirt,

gray pants, and black shoes. Fiancé and Blacksure were the only two people on the street.

Fiancé claimed Blacksure was wearing a red hoodie at the beginning of the chase that was taken

off at some point during the chase, but no red hoodie was found. Law enforcement used a police

service dog to track over the path Blacksure had taken to look for discarded evidence and found

a firearm underneath a bush on the west side of the Transitions building. The handgun “was a

pistol with a blue slide and a black lower end, silver barrel end.”

Minutes after Victim reported the incident to the 9-1-1 operator using the neighbor’s

phone, police arrived to the couple’s apartment complex. Victim told the responding officer that

one of the men was wearing a red hoodie. Victim also informed the responding officer that one

of the guns used in the home invasion was a black or silver handgun. The police drove Victim to

where they had detained Blacksure, and she identified Blacksure as the robber wearing the red

hoodie who had been acting as the leader of the men. Blacksure was arrested.

4 Blacksure was charged by amended information with robbery in the first degree, armed

criminal action, burglary in the first degree, unlawful possession of a firearm, and assault in the

fourth degree. A jury trial was held on January 30, 2023. Victim testified at trial that she

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STATE OF MISSOURI, Plaintiff-Respondent v. ROY BLACKSURE, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-missouri-plaintiff-respondent-v-roy-blacksure-moctapp-2024.