State of Missouri v. Christopher Eugene Pike

CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 12, 2021
DocketWD83180
StatusPublished

This text of State of Missouri v. Christopher Eugene Pike (State of Missouri v. Christopher Eugene Pike) 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. Christopher Eugene Pike, (Mo. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

IN THE MISSOURI COURT OF APPEALS WESTERN DISTRICT STATE OF MISSOURI, ) Respondent, ) ) v. ) WD83180 ) CHRISTOPHER EUGENE PIKE, ) FILED: January 12, 2021 Appellant. ) Appeal from the Circuit Court of Platte County The Honorable James W. Van Amburg, Judge Before Division Three: Edward R. Ardini, Jr., P.J., and Alok Ahuja and Gary D. Witt, JJ. Following a jury trial, Christopher Pike was convicted in the Circuit Court of

Platte County of domestic assault in the second degree. Pike appeals. He argues

that the circuit court plainly erred in failing to strike two venire members for cause

on the court’s own motion, because the venire members did not unequivocally

indicate that they could be fair and impartial. We reject Pike’s jury-selection

argument and affirm his conviction. We vacate the judgment and remand to the

circuit court, however, so that the court can enter a judgment nunc pro tunc

accurately reflecting the offense of which Pike was convicted.

Factual Background Pike was dating his female Victim in April 2018. On April 11, 2018, the

Victim went to Pike’s home. After some drinking, a verbal argument ensued. The

argument escalated and became physical when the Victim stated that she wanted to

go to bed at approximately 10:00 p.m. Pike threatened the Victim’s life. He punched her in the cheek, then choked her and hit her multiple times in the head as well as in the stomach. The Victim eventually made her way to the kitchen, where

she grabbed a knife and told Pike, “if you want me dead that bad, you can just kill

me.” Pike grabbed the knife from the Victim, and the assault ended.

Later that night, Pike restrained the Victim on the bed after she had taken

her clothes off. Pike punched the Victim multiple times in the vaginal area, and

whipped her with a belt across the upper thighs. Pike inserted his fist and a

baseball bat inside the Victim’s vagina; at the Victim’s request, Pike placed a

condom on the baseball bat. The Victim testified that she believed it was in her

best interest not to resist the sexual acts Pike was performing, but she did not

consent. Pike let the Victim out of her restraints to perform oral sex on him, which

she did. Pike then fell asleep, and the Victim fled the house.

The Victim suffered extensive injuries as a result of the incident, and was

still in considerable pain at the time of trial in July 2019. The Victim suffered

substantial bruising all over her body. She had lacerations on her lips, neck, arms,

thighs, and labia, as well as on her liver, which caused internal bleeding. Her left

eardrum was damaged, and her cervix was injured and bleeding. The forensic

nurse who treated the Victim testified that she does not frequently see the type of

injuries the Victim suffered, because “most women don’t survive those types of injuries.” A physician testified that he would typically associate the type of

laceration which the Victim suffered on her liver with a significant abdominal

trauma like that occurring in a high-speed motor vehicle accident.

Pike messaged the Victim following the abuse, begging her not to go to the

police. Pike offered the Victim “a couple thousand dollars” if she would not report

him.

Police obtained a search warrant for Pike’s home. They observed multiple

broken objects in the master bedroom. Police recovered a baseball bat with a

2 condom over the barrel from the corner of the bedroom, and photographed black

straps attached to three corners of the bed.

Pike was charged in an amended information with first-degree sodomy in

violation of § 566.0601 (Count I), and with first-degree domestic assault in violation

of § 565.072 (Count II).

During jury selection at Pike’s trial, multiple members of the jury venire

indicated that they had been victims of sexual abuse, or had close friends or family

members who had been victimized. Near the end of the State’s voir dire

examination, Venireperson 28 stated that his niece had been sexually assaulted and

murdered a few years previously. Venireperson 28 stated that law enforcement had

responded to his niece’s case, that the case had been resolved, and that he was

satisfied with how the case had been handled. When he was asked if there was

“[a]nything about that case and your connection to it that would make you unable to

be fair and impartial in this case,” Venireperson 28 responded, “[p]ossibly.” No

further questions were asked of Venireperson 28, and he made no further

statements during voir dire.

Defense counsel asked the venire members additional questions concerning

their experience with sexual assault. During that questioning, defense counsel had the following exchange with Venireperson 40.

[Venireperson] 40: And I have a cousin that was sexually assaulted growing up. She did report it years later and he did serve time but he has since been released. [Defense Counsel]: Would that affect your ability to serve on this jury, do you think? [Venireperson] 40: Possibly. [Defense Counsel]: Okay. Can we do a little beyond “possibly”?

1 Statutory citations refer to the 2016 edition of the Revised Statutes of Missouri, updated by the 2017 Supplement.

3 [Venireperson] 40: I think I feel the same way [as another venire member] that I would like to think I could be impartial but if it did make me think of the stories that I heard or memories, then it could make me unfair. [Defense Counsel]: And nobody wants any of you to have memories dredged that are unpleasant, so if you can’t do it, you need to let us know. [Venireperson] 40: I do think that it would be hard. [Defense Counsel]: Okay. Thanks. No further questions were asked of Venireperson 40.

As the parties and the court discussed striking venire members for cause, the

State requested that Venireperson 28 be stricken. Although using the incorrect

gender pronoun, the prosecutor accurately described Venireperson 28 as the

individual who “claimed [his] niece had been raped.” Another prosecutor interjected

– mistakenly – that the relevant venire member was Venireperson 29. Defense

counsel stated that she had “[n]o objection,” and Venireperson 29 was stricken for

cause (based on the circumstances to which Venireperson 28 had testified during

voir dire).

Later, the court raised the prospect of striking Venireperson 29 based on

hardship. The court accurately described Venireperson 29 as a psychotherapist who

was concerned that jury service would disrupt her treatment of her patients. Counsel for the State responded that “I thought we already struck her for cause,”

and the court then repeated that “29 is struck already.” During this exchange, the

court also stated – unprompted and inaccurately – that “40 is struck. 40 is struck

already.” Neither the prosecution nor the defense corrected the court’s

misstatement that Venireperson 40 had been stricken.

At the close of the discussion of strikes for cause and for hardship, the court

listed on the record those venire members who remained, including Venirepersons

4 28 and 40. Neither party raised any objection. Neither side used peremptory

strikes against Venirepersons 28 or 40, and both served on Pike’s jury.

The jury deadlocked on Count I, first-degree sodomy. On Count II, the jury

convicted Pike of the lesser-included offense of domestic assault in the second

degree in violation of § 565.073.2 The circuit court accepted the jury’s verdict on

Count II, and declared a mistrial on Count I.

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State of Missouri v. Christopher Eugene Pike, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-missouri-v-christopher-eugene-pike-moctapp-2021.