State of Missouri v. Cecil Russell McBenge

507 S.W.3d 94, 2016 Mo. App. LEXIS 1157
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 15, 2016
DocketED102277
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 507 S.W.3d 94 (State of Missouri v. Cecil Russell McBenge) 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 v. Cecil Russell McBenge, 507 S.W.3d 94, 2016 Mo. App. LEXIS 1157 (Mo. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

ROBERT M. CLAYTON III, Presiding Judge

Cecil Russell McBenge (“Defendant”) appeals the judgment entered upon a jury verdict convicting him of first-degree murder for his alleged involvement in the 1984 killing of Eleonora Knoernschild (“Victim”). We reverse and remand for a new trial.

I. BACKGROUND

Over two decades after Victim’s murder, a DNA analysis linked Defendant and his *100 brother Brian McBenge 1 to evidence found on or near Victim’s property shortly after she was killed. In separate underlying cases, Defendant and Brian were each charged with and found guilty by a jury of first-degree murder based on accomplice liability. 2 The State’s third substitute information in lieu of indictment in Defendant’s case (“the information”) charging him with first-degree murder alleged he acted in concert with another, and after deliberation, knowingly caused the death of Victim on or between November 2nd and 4th of 1984 by beating her. The information also gave Defendant notice that the State may submit an instruction for second-degree felony murder to the jury based on the death of Victim as a result of Defendant’s perpetration of the class B felony of first-degree burglary. Defendant’s jury trial was held on September 22-October 3, 2014.

A. Evidence Presented at Defendant’s Trial

Viewed in the light most favorable to the verdict, the following evidence was presented at Defendant’s trial. 3

1. Evidence Relating to Circumstances and Events Occurring in the Years Pri- or to Victim’s Murder, including the 1980 Burglary of Victim’s Home

Defendant’s brother Brian met Victim’s granddaughter (“Granddaughter”) in 1977 when they were both teenagers and they eventually started dating. They dated for approximately eight months until sometime in 1979. During the timeframe Brian and Granddaughter were dating, they would frequently go to Victim’s home and spend time in her kitchen. It was not unusual for Brian and Granddaughter to eat while they were at Victim’s home. In addition, while Brian was dating Granddaughter, he became aware Victim kept extra cash in a Calumet baking powder can (“the Calumet can”) located in the lower kitchen cabinets next to her refrigerator, because Brian saw Granddaughter steal money from the Calumet can when Victim was not looking. Granddaughter testified she met Defendant sometime in 1979, when the two of them were attending the same children’s home.

In March of 1980, Victim’s house was broken into while she was in the hospital. Police classified the break-in of Victim’s home as a burglary (“the 1980 burglary”). 4 Around the time the crime occurred, police officers lifted a latent fingerprint from the refrigerator door handle; however, it went unidentified until 1986, when officers determined the fingerprint belonged to Defendant’s brother Brian. Nevertheless, Brian was not a suspect in the 1980 burglary near the time it occurred and he was never charged in connection with the crime. 5 In *101 addition, Defendant was not ever a suspect in or charged with the 1980 burglary.

Sometime after the 1980 burglary, Victim had bars installed on the basement windows of her home. Victim also moved the Calumet can to her bedroom.

2. Evidence Relating to Circumstances Surrounding Victim’s 1984 Murder and the Subsequent Police Investigation of the Crime

Victim’s murder occurred sometime between November 2nd and November 4th of 1984. Around that same timeframe, Defendant and his brother Brian lived in a home located about one mile away and within walking distance of Victim’s home.

On November 2, 1984, before Victim’s body was discovered, Victim’s longtime housekeeper cleaned Victim’s home, including the kitchen and kitchen floor. The housekeeper testified .Victim always kept her house tidy, with everything put in its proper place.

During the morning of- November 4, 1984, Victim’s daughter called the police after she went to Victim’s home to bring her the newspaper and noticed the glass window on the front door had been broken out and removed. Police responded to Victim’s home, searched the premises, and conducted an investigation which revealed the following.

Police discovered a person or persons had gained entry to Victim’s home. It appeared that whoever entered Victim’s home crawled through the space where the glass window on the front door had been, because the front door was still .locked. Victim’s bedroom, kitchen, basement, and hallway had been ransacked, and several drawers, cabinets, and items were opened throughout the house.

In the bedroom, Victim’s body was found lying on the floor underneath clothes and papers which had been thrown around. Victim, who was elderly and weighed less than one-hundred pounds, had blood and multiple bruises on her face, a split lip, and two broken ribs on each side of her body caused by blunt force. In addition, part of the bedspread was looped around Victim’s neck as if she might have been strangled. However, Dr. Clarke Harding, the pathologist who performed Victim’s autopsy, determined she did not die from strangulation. Instead, Dr. Harding determined Victim’s cause of death was repeated blunt trauma, from being, beaten multiple times. Dr. Harding testified he could not determine how many people had beaten Victim.

Two kitchen-type knives and lock boxes were found on the bedroom floor, and the Calumet can was found in Victim’s bedroom closet, which was open and appeared to be ransacked. There were two dressers in the bedroom, both of which had multiple drawers open and at least one drawer rummaged through extensively. In addition, the tops of both dressers were in disarray. A total of eight nylon stockings, which all appeared to be the same style and size, were found in the bedroom; some of them were hanging from one of the dresser drawers and the others were lying on the floor. In addition, some of the bed *102 ding was rolled up toward the head of the bed, while other bedding was on the floor.

In the kitchen, four lower cabinets and two drawers next to Victim’s refrigerator were open, but the top cabinets were closed. Various items were dumped out on the kitchen countertop; the bread box and multiple containers were open; and gloves were found on the kitchen floor. Finally, the refrigerator door and crisper drawer were open, and lying on the floor in front of the refrigerator were a large plastic bag containing some grapefruit, a frozen meal, a Tupperware container, a piece of cheese with a bite mark taken out of it, and an empty single-serve cheese wrapper.

In the basement, lock boxes had been dumped on the floor and personal papers were spread across the floor. In the hallway, doors on two cabinets were opened and items were dumped on the floor. In the dining room, one cabinet had a drawer which was open and another cabinet had a door which was open.

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Bluebook (online)
507 S.W.3d 94, 2016 Mo. App. LEXIS 1157, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-missouri-v-cecil-russell-mcbenge-moctapp-2016.