State of Missouri v. Marcus Simms

CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 27, 2021
DocketWD83422
StatusPublished

This text of State of Missouri v. Marcus Simms (State of Missouri v. Marcus Simms) 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. Marcus Simms, (Mo. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

IN THE MISSOURI COURT OF APPEALS WESTERN DISTRICT STATE OF MISSOURI, ) ) Respondent, ) ) v. ) WD83422 ) MARCUS SIMMS, ) Opinion filed: July 27, 2021 ) Appellant. )

APPEAL FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF CLAY COUNTY, MISSOURI THE HONORABLE JANET L. SUTTON, JUDGE

Division Three: Edward R. Ardini, Jr., Presiding Judge, Mark D. Pfeiffer, Judge and W. Douglas Thomson, Judge

Marcus Simms appeals the convictions entered against him by the Circuit Court of Clay

County, Missouri, after a jury trial, for one count of first-degree murder, one count of armed

criminal action, and one count of first-degree tampering with a motor vehicle. Simms argues that

the trial court abused its discretion in overruling his requests for a trial continuance and mistrial,

asserting that he was incompetent to stand trial. He additionally argues that the trial court abused

its discretion by allowing the State to repeatedly question him on cross-examination about his

attempts—or lack thereof—to help the murder victim, his girlfriend Michelle Boldridge. For the

reasons described below, we affirm. Factual and Procedural Background1

On the morning of April 30, 2014, Simms, who worked the overnight shift at a grocery

store, was driven home by a co-worker. Simms arrived at the apartment he shared with his

girlfriend, Michelle Boldridge, at approximately 6:10 a.m. Soon after, Simms stabbed Boldridge

repeatedly as she lay prone in a closet. Simms stabbed her in the breast, shoulder, leg, arms, hands,

neck, forehead, head, face, and ear, and he removed her right eyeball. The medical examiner

determined Boldridge died of a combination of “atlanto-occipital dislocation”—internal

decapitation or severing of the spine from the skull—and “multiple sharp-force injuries.”

Police were dispatched to the apartment complex at approximately 6:56 a.m. in response

to calls that a naked male, “covered in blood,” was “running through the parking lots.” Officers

found Simms’s North Kansas City Community Center membership ID card in the parking lot. An

officer “ran [Simms’s] name” and the computer search “located a report that associated him to a

Michelle Boldridge” and revealed their apartment address. Police went to their apartment and

observed blood on the door knob. The door was locked, but the officers were able to obtain a key

from a maintenance worker and let themselves in.

The officers found Boldridge dead in the closet. The closet door had been closed, and

someone had placed a shoebox over her face. Officers also found a bloody, bent knife in the

bedroom. Similar knives—although not in the same condition—were found in a kitchen drawer.

Officers did not observe signs of a struggle elsewhere in the apartment, nor did they find signs of

a home invasion or forced entry. The front door to the apartment, which was locked when officers

arrived, could only be locked from the outside with a key.

1 All facts and reasonable inferences derived therefrom are stated in the light most favorable to the verdicts. See State v. Allred, 338 S.W.3d 375, 377 (Mo. App. S.D. 2011).

2 In the kitchen, on a magnetic white board on the refrigerator, there was a note written by

Boldridge. The note read: “Not Happy. A relationship is 50/50. Not 90/10. Everyone has dilemmas

in life. One person cannot give/pair by themselves. It takes two in my feelings. As usual, tired of

being ignored, tired of being stressed/upset. Therapy session for myself. Time to end the many

faces of time for honesty.”

Tony Howard lived in the same apartment complex as Simms and Boldridge, and usually

did not keep his car locked. He went to his car “midday” on April 30, 2014, and found inside

Simms’s clothes and shoes, blood, and Boldridge’s eyeball. The inside of the car had been

damaged: “the steering column looked like it was busted open, like someone attempted to start it.”

After Simms was unable to start Tony Howard’s car, he used Boldridge’s keys and drove

away in her green Ford Focus.2 At approximately 7:15 that morning, Scott Hunter—who did not

know Simms—opened his garage door to take out the trash and encountered Simms, naked in his

driveway. Simms said: “Help me. Help me. They’re coming for me. They killed my girlfriend.

Can I come in?” Hunter refused to let him in, but advised he would call for help. Hunter backed

inside of his garage while Simms lay down in the driveway. Hunter called the police, and went to

the front door to observe Simms. Hunter saw him “driving down the street in a small light-green-

colored vehicle.”

Simms abandoned the Ford Focus near the Liberty Schools bus barn—where school buses

were housed—and ran through the bus lot. A bus driver saw Simms and contacted her supervisor,

who called 911. Simms found an unlocked Chrysler Town and Country minivan in the bus barn.

2 The car belonged to Boldridge’s mother, who had loaned the car to Boldridge the day before.

3 The keys to the vehicle were “down in the floor board.”3 Simms drove the minivan out of the bus

barn.

At approximately 8:05 a.m., police were dispatched to a one-vehicle accident in Parkville,

Missouri. Simms had failed to navigate a turn and had driven off the highway and into a field.

Officers placed Simms under arrest at the scene and he was taken to the hospital. There, an

investigator collected swabs of blood found on Simms. Simms also provided a buccal swab, which

was used by investigators to conduct DNA analysis.

Simms’s DNA was found in blood on the wall of the closet where Boldridge was killed

and in Tony Howard’s car. Both Simms’s and Boldridge’s DNA were present on the bloody, bent

knife found in the bedroom. Boldridge’s DNA was found in the blood on Simms’s left knee.

The State charged Simms with one count of first-degree murder and one count of armed

criminal action related to the death of Boldridge, and one count of first-degree tampering for

operating the minivan without the owner’s consent.

Trial Continuances and Simms’s Competency

Simms’s trial date was originally set for April 18, 2016. At the request of defense counsel,

the trial was continued multiple times. In a motion for continuance filed on October 24, 2016,

defense counsel advised that she had been “recently diagnosed with Stage III, grade 1 uterine

cancer and [was] undergoing chemotherapy and radiation treatment for the same.” In a motion

filed April 12, 2017, defense counsel advised that she was “three weeks out of treatment and [was]

not prepared to start trying cases.” In a motion filed July 19, 2017, defense counsel sought a trial

continuance “[d]ue to [Simm’s] medical and mental condition.” In a motion filed February 5, 2018,

defense counsel advised that Simms “was indicted on January 30, 2018 for another Murder in the

3 The minivan belonged to Tamara Lee, an employee of the Liberty Public Schools Transportation Department. Lee had left the keys in the vehicle because her daughter intended to use the vehicle that day while Lee was working.

4 First degree charge, allegedly occurring in the Clay County jail,” that she had “been trying to get

medical records from the Clay County Detention Center since June of 2017, in order to have a

mental health evaluation completed,” and that she “ha[d] been told for six months that due to an

ongoing investigation, they could not release them to defense counsel.”

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142 S.W.3d 702 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 2004)
State v. McGinnis
441 S.W.2d 715 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1969)
State v. Nunley
341 S.W.3d 611 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 2011)
State v. Allred
338 S.W.3d 375 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 2011)
State of Missouri v. Lonny Leroy Mays
501 S.W.3d 484 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 2016)
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517 S.W.3d 617 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 2017)
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State v. Williams
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State v. Sneed
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State of Missouri v. Marcus Simms, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-missouri-v-marcus-simms-moctapp-2021.