State of Missouri v. Jesse Driskill

459 S.W.3d 412, 2015 Mo. LEXIS 26
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 31, 2015
DocketSC93882
StatusPublished
Cited by55 cases

This text of 459 S.W.3d 412 (State of Missouri v. Jesse Driskill) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri 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. Jesse Driskill, 459 S.W.3d 412, 2015 Mo. LEXIS 26 (Mo. 2015).

Opinion

George W. Draper III, Judge.

Jesse Driskill (hereinafter, “Driskill”) was found guilty of two counts of first-degree murder, section 565.020, RSMo 2000, 1 one count of forcible rape, section 566.030, one count of forcible sodomy, section 566.060, and five counts of armed criminal action, section 571.015. Consis *417 tent with the jury’s recommendations, Driskill received two death sentences, a consecutive fifteen-year term of imprisonment on the burglary count, and seven consecutive life sentences on the remaining counts. This Court has exclusive jurisdiction. Mo. Const, art. V, sec. 3. The judgment is affirmed.

Factual Background

On July 25, 2010, Driskill and Jessica Wallace (hereinafter, “Wallace”) were at the Prosperine River Access on the Nian-gua River. Together, they did drugs and later “ended up having sex.” Driskill and Wallace were interrupted by a police officer. Driskill ran off into the woods with his clothes and a gun. Wallace spoke to the police officer and returned home.

Contemporaneously, J.W. and C.W. (collectively, hereinafter, “the victims”) were at their home, located approximately one and one-half miles from the Prosperine River Access. J.W.' was 82 years old; C.W. was 76. The victims were celebrating their fifty-ninth wedding anniversary. They were due to return to Highlandville, Missouri, 2 the next day.

When the victims never returned to Highlandville, family members became worried. Multiple attempts were made to reach the victims by telephone, but without success. Concerned family members also contacted hospitals to inquire about the victims, pondering whether they could have had an accident.

On the evening of July 26, the following day, family members arrived at the country house. When they arrived at the house, the doors were locked and the victims’ vehicle was not present. One relative entered the residence through a window. The interior was “smoky and smelly.” In the dining room, the relative saw C.W.’s feet sticking out from under a big pile of smoldering blankets.

The relative opened the front door and told the victims’ son to come inside. Together, they found J.W. underneath another pile of blankets with chairs piled on top of him. There were pools of blood near the victims’ heads. They called the police.

When the police officers arrived, they found no signs of forced entry. There was an odor of accelerant near the victims. C.W. had burn marks around the top part of her body. Paper towels had been wadded up and burned in her groin area. There was a clear fluid and blood draining from her vaginal and anal areas. C.W. had a blackened area beneath both eyes and a wound above her right eyebrow. J.W. was naked, except for his shoes, and there was a plastic bag over his head. A large amount of blood had drained out of the bag and soaked the carpet beneath his head. There was a wound on his face. C.W.’s purse was emptied on the floor. There was a can of gasoline in the hallway. While police officers were conducting their investigation in the victims’ home, they received reports of a burning vehicle near Conway, Missouri.

Meanwhile, Driskill called Wallace, telling her that he needed a ride. Driskill called her again, asking .to be picked up on Highway N in Conway. Wallace drove to meet Driskill but had difficulty locating him. She drove up and down the highway a couple of times and stopped at a gas station. She saw smoke in the distance and first responders heading toward the smoke. She eventually went home without locating Driskill.

' At approximately 10:45 p.m., Driskill went to Hannah’s General Store in Conway to charge his cell phone, but there was no charger. Driskill then went to a near *418 by Budget Inn, asking to use its telephone. Driskill reached Jessica Cummins (hereinafter, “Cummins”), and he asked her to come get him. Cummins agreed and met Driskill at the Budget Inn.

During the drive, Driskill kept mumbling to Cummins. He said he had “shot someone” and that he “messed up really bad.” Cummins also thought he said he had “shot up” some drugs.

About 11:38 p.m., a highway patrol sergeant went to the scene of the burned Vehicle, located near the county line of Laclede and Dallas counties. The sergeant recovered the license plate from the vehicle and discovered the vehicle belonged to the victims.

Cummins dropped Driskill off a little after midnight at Codi Vause’s (hereinafter, “Vause”) house in Lebanon, Missouri. Driskill appeared anxious and exhausted, saying he “needed some help,” indicating the authorities were after him. Driskill stated he needed new clothes and that he had killed a couple of people.

At some point, Driskill called Wallace and told her he committed a home invasion, robbery, and a double homicide. Wallace drove to Vause’s house. Driskill explained to the group that an elderly couple caught him going through their shed or garage and that he murdered them. Driskill further stated that he ordered them into their house while holding up his gun. Inside the victims gave Dris-kill money, but Driskill said it was not enough. Driskill then shot J.W., told C.W. to bend over, and raped her. He shot C.W. in the face, but she tried to get away, so Driskill shot her two more times and “put a plastic bag down her throat and a pillow over her head.” 3

Driskill detailed how he attempted to clean up the evidence. Driskill said he shaved C.W.’s “pussy” and “poured bleach inside of her.” Driskill put newspaper in her vaginal area, poured gasoline on her, and lit it. Driskill then used five gallons of gasoline to burn the house. He took the victims’ vehicle, which he later burned. Driskill said his shoes were filled with blood.

After listening to Driskill, Wallace left and went to a store where a friend worked. Wallace was upset and crying. A police officer at the store asked her what was wrong. Wallace recounted Driskill’s story to the police officer.

Cummins then returned to Vause’s home. Driskill was washing out his shoes in the kitchen sink. Driskill changed his clothes and directed Vause to get rid of the clothes he had been wearing. Vause put the clothes into a trash bag. Driskill fell asleep on the couch. The others told Cummins what Driskill told them; they decided to call the police, and they each provided a statement.

On July 27, at approximately 1:45 a.m., law enforcement officers arrested Driskill while he was sleeping on the couch at Vause’s home. Driskill awoke and resisted his arrest. During the arrest, Driskill’s head hit a coffee table, resulting in a laceration. Driskill continued to resist and was tasered. The officers finally handcuffed Driskill and took him to the hospital for treatment. The. officers also seized the trash bag containing Driskill’s clothes.

Several hours later, law enforcement officers executed a search warrant to collect “DNA, hair samples, anything that would have been involved with [ ] Driskill or the homicide.” They conducted a gunshot res *419 idue test. They collected blood stains from Driskill’s hands.

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Bluebook (online)
459 S.W.3d 412, 2015 Mo. LEXIS 26, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-missouri-v-jesse-driskill-mo-2015.