State of Missouri v. John M. Hamm

CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedAugust 8, 2023
DocketED110472
StatusPublished

This text of State of Missouri v. John M. Hamm (State of Missouri v. John M. Hamm) 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. John M. Hamm, (Mo. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

In the Missouri Court of Appeals Eastern District DIVISION FIVE

STATE OF MISSOURI, ) No. ED110472 ) Respondent, ) Appeal from the Circuit Court ) of St. Louis County v. ) Cause No. 16SL-CR05375-01 ) JOHN M. HAMM, ) Honorable Richard M. Stewart ) Appellant. ) Filed: August 8, 2023

I. Introduction John Hamm appeals the judgment entered after a jury verdict convicting him of two counts

of murder in the first degree and associated armed criminal action counts. Hamm does not deny

that he caused the victims’ deaths, but claims on appeal that the circuit court erred in failing to

instruct the jury that Hamm could be found guilty of the lesser offense of voluntary manslaughter

if it found he acted out of sudden passion. Hamm also claims that the circuit court made an

erroneous evidentiary ruling and a sentencing error. We affirm.

II. Background

Hamm and his fiancée, Susan Brockman, lived with Robert Hall and his girlfriend Shannon

LaRock at a house in St. Louis County. In July of 2016, LaRock lost her job and could not make

the rent payment. She asked Brockman if she would put in a little more money for rent, and

Brockman agreed. At that time, Brockman was eight and half months pregnant with Hamm’s child. Hamm was working side jobs with a neighbor. He had saved about $250 in cash so that he and

Brockman could attend a family reunion.

When Hamm returned home from work on July 12, 2016, LaRock and Hall were starting

to eat their dinner in the living room. 1 Hamm saw his wallet, which had been missing for two

weeks, sitting on the coffee table. LaRock and Hall told Hamm that they were “hanging onto” his

wallet to make sure they could cover the rent and that they were also going to need the cash he

earned at work that day or they were going to ask Brockman and him to move out. That “kind of

pissed” Hamm off. Hamm claimed that LaRock said “that’s just the way it is, and got up and

walked into the kitchen” and then Hall “got up and walked in the kitchen” and “said, ‘Well, I guess

that makes me man of the house now.’” At that point, Hamm said, he let the dogs out the back

door—which would have required him to walk past LaRock and Hall in the kitchen—and then

“snapped.” He does not remember what happened, but the next thing he knew there was blood

everywhere.

According to the autopsy and police investigation, Hamm stabbed Hall thirty-two times

with a knife from a block on the kitchen counter and fractured Hall’s skull repeatedly with a

hammer from a nearby toolbox. Hall would have been alive while being stabbed numerous times

in the back and chest; it was the hammer blows to his head that killed him. Hamm also attacked

LaRock with a knife and hit her in the head. She tried to defend herself, but the six stabs to her

neck and chest killed her. It would have taken several minutes to inflict this number of wounds.

Hamm then locked the dogs in a bedroom, stole Hall’s car, and fled.

Cell phone records indicate the murder occurred between approximately 6:00 and 8:00

p.m. According to those records, by 8:30 p.m., Hamm had left the house; he made a stop and then

1 The facts in this paragraph come from statements that Hamm made in two recorded jail calls with his sister in the days following his arrest. He did not testify at trial.

2 began traveling southwest on Interstate 44 at a little before 10 p.m. At midnight, Brockman called

Hamm to tell him she was leaving work, and Hamm told her not to go home. When she asked why,

Hamm said he “f***ed up” and LaRock and Hall “are dead.” In that phone call, Brockman said

Hamm mentioned finding LaRock with his wallet and that LaRock asked for the money he had

been paid that day and threatened to kick them out. Brockman went to her mother’s house, and

they contacted the police. Hamm was arrested two days later at a motel in Branson, Missouri, with

Hall’s car. Inside the car, police found rags and a 25-gallon bucket of cleaning agent.

After the close of evidence, the circuit court instructed the jury on first-degree murder,

second-degree murder, and involuntary manslaughter. Hamm requested instructions for second-

degree murder without sudden passion and voluntary manslaughter, but the circuit court rejected

these instructions.

The closing arguments focused heavily on whether the State had proven the deliberation

element of first-degree murder beyond a reasonable doubt. The prosecutor pointed to the evidence

that Hamm had time to coolly reflect on these killings when he walked past the victims in the

kitchen to let the dogs out, when he decided to take a knife out of the butcher block and the hammer

out of the toolbox, between each stab with the knife and each blow of the hammer, and when he

switched between the weapons. The prosecutor also relied on evidence that Hamm fled the scene

and that he attempted to clean up and cover his involvement, claiming this conduct was consistent

with a deliberate killing.

Defense counsel argued that the State had not proven deliberation because the evidence

showed that this was a crime of “passion and rage.” Hamm was “provoked” when he learned that

LaRock and Hall had stolen his wallet, then threatened to kick him out, “belittled” and “mocked”

him, and then walked away. Defense counsel argued that Hamm “got hot and never cooled down.”

3 Rather than cool and deliberate, Hamm’s actions were “impulsive, hotheaded, and completely

irrational” and, defense counsel argued, he could not be found guilty of murder in the first degree.

The jury disagreed. After less than two hours of deliberation, the jury found Hamm guilty

on both counts of murder in the first degree and the two associated armed criminal action counts.

The circuit court sentenced Hamm to life in prison without the possibility of parole for the murders

and life imprisonment for the armed criminal action counts, all to be served consecutively to each

other. 2

III. Discussion

Hamm raises nine points on appeal. In the first four, he contends that the circuit court erred

by refusing to instruct the jury regarding sudden passion. In the fifth, sixth, and seventh points,

Hamm argues the circuit court abused its discretion by admitting Hamm’s cell phone records into

evidence, as well as evidence regarding the geographic location of the phone derived from those

records. In the remaining points, Hamm seeks plain error review of the life sentences he received

on the armed criminal action counts.

Sudden Passion Instructions

Hamm contends the circuit court erred by rejecting his proposed version of the second-

degree murder instruction and the corresponding voluntary manslaughter instruction because,

construed favorably to him, the evidence supported a conclusion that he acted out of sudden

passion arising from adequate cause.

As submitted to the jury, none of the instructions addressed sudden passion. The first-

degree murder instruction, based on MAI-CR 314.02, instructed the jury that, to find Hamm guilty,

2 Hamm was also convicted and sentenced to fifteen years in prison for stealing Hall’s car, but there are no issues on appeal relating to that offense.

4 they needed to determine that he knowingly caused the deaths of the victims after deliberation,

which required “a cool reflection upon the matter for any length of time no matter how brief.” 3

The second-degree murder instruction, based on MAI-CR 314.04, instructed the jury that, to find

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State of Missouri v. John M. Hamm, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-missouri-v-john-m-hamm-moctapp-2023.