STATE OF MISSOURI v. KEARSTAIN N. SLEETH

575 S.W.3d 291
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 4, 2019
DocketSD35474
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 575 S.W.3d 291 (STATE OF MISSOURI v. KEARSTAIN N. SLEETH) 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. KEARSTAIN N. SLEETH, 575 S.W.3d 291 (Mo. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

STATE OF MISSOURI, ) ) Respondent, ) ) vs. ) No. SD35474 ) KEARSTAIN N. SLEETH, ) FILED: April 4, 2019 ) Appellant. )

APPEAL FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF GREENE COUNTY Honorable Calvin R. Holden, Judge AFFIRMED AND REMANDED WITH DIRECTIONS A jury found Kearstain Sleeth guilty of burglary and felony murder. Sufficiency of the evidence is not in dispute. Sleeth was mad at the victim and told three male friends a story to make them mad too. She gave one young man a handgun, drove the others to get guns of their own, then drove them all to the victim’s home and pointed out his bedroom. She waited as the young men went to the front door, kicked it in, forced entry into the victim’s room, shot him to death, and returned to the car. Sleeth drove everyone to a remote area to dispose of the murder weapons. Sleeth later gave police a video-recorded interview, after which she was charged and ultimately convicted as stated above. On appeal, Sleeth’s three points challenge evidentiary rulings regarding her interview. We review such claims for abuse of discretion. State v. Blurton, 484 S.W.3d 758, 769 (Mo. banc 2016). A trial court abuses its broad discretion to admit or exclude evidence only if its ruling is so clearly illogical, unreasonable, arbitrary, and ill-considered that it shocks the sense of justice. See id. None of Sleeth’s points make this showing, so we affirm and remand to correct an error in the written judgment. Point 1 Sleeth moved to suppress her interview on two grounds relevant to this appeal: 1. that “cognitive deficiencies due to not being allowed to take her medication … clearly establish an inability on her part to either understand questions made to her or to be able to verbalize reliable responses,” and 2. at one point, she “was told by one of the interrogators that it was a crime for her not to tell him what happened.” After a motion hearing at which Sleeth and her mother testified, the state agreed to suppression of everything from and after Sleeth was told it was a crime not to inform. The court took the rest under advisement, viewed the video twice, found Sleeth “was coherent and mentally stable throughout the interview,” and overruled the motion “up to the point when [Sleeth] was told it was a crime not to talk to the police.” 1 After editing to remove the suppressed portion, the video was admitted at trial and shown to the jury. Point 1 charges error in not suppressing the whole interview, alleging that Sleeth’s cognitive functioning was so impaired by a lack of medication that her statements were involuntary, unreliable, and should not have been admitted. As relevant here, we review a suppression ruling only for whether substantial evidence supports it, viewing all facts and reasonable inferences most favorably to the ruling. State v. Little, 473 S.W.3d 662, 666 (Mo.App. 2015). We disregard contrary evidence and inferences. State v. Selvy, 462 S.W.3d 756, 764 (Mo.App. 2015). Unless the trial court indicates otherwise, we presume it found all facts and made all credibility determinations consistent with its ruling (Little, 473 S.W.3d at 666-67), and “deem that the trial court implicitly found not credible,

1 Prior to trial, the court confirmed that this ruling suppressed Sleeth’s question whether it was a

crime not to inform, the affirmative reply, and all subsequent conversation.

2 or entitled to little to no weight, any testimony or other evidence that does not support its ruling.” Selvy, 462 S.W.3d at 764. At bottom, “the weight of the evidence and the credibility of the witnesses are for the trial court’s determination.” Id. “If the trial court’s ruling is plausible, in light of the record viewed in its entirety, we will not reverse.” Id. These principles doom Point 1, which leans heavily on hearing testimony by Sleeth and her mother that we must disregard as contrary to the court’s ruling. Little, 473 S.W.3d at 666-67; Selvy, 462 S.W.3d at 764. Although Sleeth also cites the interview video, it offers substantial evidence supporting the trial-court finding that Sleeth “was coherent and mentally stable.” 2

2The record indicates that Detective Shipley sought to contact Sleeth at her mother’s house five months after the slaying. Sleeth was not there, but voluntarily came to the police station later that day. We have viewed the video, which unquestionably supports the trial court’s finding that Sleeth “was coherent and mentally stable” in the portions shown to the jury. The trial court also could have deduced from the video: • That Det. Shipley took Sleeth to an interview room about 6 p.m., informed her that she was “not under arrest, not in custody,” but read Miranda warnings anyway; that Sleeth followed along with the oral and written warnings, signed a waiver form, and said she “definitely” wanted to talk and understood why Det. Shipley informed her of her rights. • That Sleeth spoke with Det. Shipley for about 21 minutes, exhibited no difficulty conversing, directly and promptly answered questions, and recalled events, dates, conversations, and names; that she seemed alert, sitting upright, gesticulating with her hands while speaking; that she denied that she knew the victim or what had happened. • That Det. Shipley left the room for 15 minutes and returned to find Sleeth sitting upright, reading a magazine; that Det. Shipley had obtained Sleeth’s phone from her roommate and gave it to Sleeth; that Det. Shipley and Sleeth conversed for nine minutes while Sleeth tried to retrieve information stored in her phone; that Sleeth again seemed alert, tracking the conversation and answering questions promptly and directly; that Sleeth continued her attempts to retrieve information from her phone while Det. Shipley left and was absent from the interview room for some 90 minutes, apparently conferring with other detectives interviewing the male subjects. • That Det. Shipley returned to find Sleeth still in the interview room, sitting upright, looking at her phone; that Det. Shipley became confrontational, telling Sleeth it was time to stop lying because her friends had come clean; that Sleeth admitted she knew the victim from her work and a bad drug deal, she wanted him beaten, she knew her male friends would “whoop his ass,” she drove them to the victim’s house and watched them go in and come out, but she denied any murder occurred; that Sleeth again seemed alert, tracking the conversation, promptly and directly answering questions, and sometimes refusing to answer or replying “I don’t know”; that this part of the interview lasted about an hour. • That after a 15-minute break, Det. Shipley returned with a photo of the victim and Sleeth agreed he was the one; that Sleeth again sat upright, seemed alert, tracked the conversation, and directly and promptly answered questions; that Sleeth eventually asked, “Is it a crime for me to not tell you?” and Det. Shipley replied, “Yeah.”

3 These effectively end our inquiry. Little, 473 S.W.3d at 666-67. The trial court’s ruling is plausible, given the record viewed in its entirety, so we will not reverse. Selvy, 462 S.W.3d at 764. We need not address other grounds for affirmance argued by the state. We deny Point 1. Point 2 Point 2 urges that the trial court abused its discretion in refusing – despite suppression – to still let the jury hear that Sleeth asked, “Is it a crime for me to not tell you?” and that Det. Shipley replied, “Yeah.” Sleeth’s reasoning, to quote her brief, is the state’s case “turned on casting [Sleeth] as a liar during her video statement.

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Bluebook (online)
575 S.W.3d 291, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-missouri-v-kearstain-n-sleeth-moctapp-2019.