State of Missouri v. Patricia Prewitt

575 S.W.3d 701
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 21, 2019
DocketWD81759
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 575 S.W.3d 701 (State of Missouri v. Patricia Prewitt) 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. Patricia Prewitt, 575 S.W.3d 701 (Mo. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

In the Missouri Court of Appeals Western District

 STATE OF MISSOURI,   WD81759 Respondent,  OPINION FILED: v.   MAY 21, 2019 PATRICIA PREWITT,   Appellant.   

Appeal from the Circuit Court of Pettis County, Missouri The Honorable Robert Lawrence Koffman, Judge

Before Division Three: Thomas H. Newton, Presiding Judge, Anthony Rex Gabbert, Judge, Edward R. Ardini, Jr., Judge

Patricia Prewitt appeals the circuit court’s denial of her Motion for Post-Conviction DNA

Testing which requested the testing of evidence related to Prewitt’s 1985 conviction for capital

murder.1 In Prewitt’s sole point on appeal she contends the circuit court clearly erred in denying

her motion on the grounds that the court, 1) did not properly assess whether a reasonable

probability exists that Prewitt would not have been convicted if exculpatory results were obtained

through the requested DNA testing, 2) erroneously applied the standard for release under Section

1 Section 565.001, RSMo 1978 (repealed effective October 1, 1984). All other statutory references are to the Revised Statutes of Missouri as updated through 2017, unless otherwise noted. 547.037, not the standard for testing under Section 547.035, and 3) relied on factual errors and

extrajudicial information in reaching its decision.2 We affirm.

Trial Evidence

Patricia Prewitt and William Prewitt (Bill)3 were married August 8, 1968. In 1976, the

couple purchased a lumber yard in Holden, Missouri and jointly ran the business. By 1984, the

couple had five school-aged children. In the early morning hours of February 18, 1984, Prewitt

and Bill returned to their home after an evening of socializing with friends. Prewitt testified that,

sometime after both she and Bill fell asleep, she was awakened by a sound like thunder. She was

grabbed by the hair and pulled from bed by an unknown assailant. She could feel something sharp

at her throat. The intruder pulled her pajama bottoms and underwear off and was fumbling with

his belt. Prewitt could tell the assailant was getting very nervous and very angry. He told Prewitt

to stop crying. He abandoned his attempt to rape Prewitt, left, and Prewitt never saw him again.

After the intruder left, Prewitt checked on Bill who was making gurgling noises. She went

into the children’s rooms and found them all asleep. She went back to check on Bill but was unable

to see in the bedroom because the lights were not working. She retrieved a flashlight from the

truck outside and, after seeing blood on her husband, woke the children. She told the children

there was a small fire and got them dressed. Prewitt took the children outside to the car and told

them to lock the doors. She went back inside the home and again checked on Bill. She touched

2 Prewitt’s three stand-alone allegations of error should have been set forth in three separate points on appeal. “Multifarious points relied on are noncompliant with Rule 84.04(d) and preserve nothing for review.” Griffitts v. Old Republic Insurance Company, 550 S.W.3d 474, 478 n.6 (Mo. banc 2018). Nevertheless, as we prefer to decide cases on the merits where an appellant’s argument is readily understandable, we exercise our discretion to review the merits of Prewitt’s claims. 3 As Patricia Prewitt and William Prewitt share the same last name, William Prewitt will be referenced as “Bill,” the name he was called by friends and family. No familiarity or disrespect is intended.

2 him and he felt cold. She ran back outside and drove to a neighbor’s home for help. She saw a

light on at Cliff and Patricia Gustin’s home. Prewitt had blood on her hand from touching Bill,

and washed it off at the Gustin’s as she did not want the children to see the blood.

Bill was shot with a .22 caliber repeater rifle which was normally kept unloaded in the

Prewitts’ bedroom closet behind a chest of drawers. Bullets were stored in a bedroom drawer and

in Prewitt’s jewelry box. The rifle was found three days later in the Prewitts’ pond; it was fifteen

feet from the bank in eleven inches of water. A footprint from Prewitt’s boot was observed nearby

on the bank and, after the pond was drained, another footprint was found on the pond bottom near

the rifle. The phone line in the Prewitt bedroom had been cut, and power to the home had been

turned off at the basement breaker box.

Dr. James Bridgens, a forensic pathologist, testified at Prewitt’s trial that in his expert

opinion Bill was asleep immediately before he was shot twice in the head. Bill was breathing after

the first shot, but the second shot would have ended all bodily functions including any ability to

breathe; the second shot severed the brain stem and caused instant death. The angle of the second

shot indicated the gun would have been held “almost on top” of anyone else sleeping in bed with

the victim.

Bridgens testified that the cut marks found on Prewitt’s neck after the alleged attack

appeared to be “hesitation marks,” described as superficial marks in the skin with a very uniform

parallel pattern, seldom going deeper than through the skin, and found in a location accessible to

the individual. Bridgens described Prewitt’s neck wounds as “superficial lacerations, actually little

more than scratches,” with “a unique parallel pattern to them.” Bridgens found the marks

characteristic of self-inflicted hesitation marks. He found the marks inconsistent with wounds that

might be expected from an attempted rapist wielding a knife in total darkness.

3 Prewitt initially denied any extramarital affairs, but ultimately admitted four affairs after

confronted with proof by law enforcement. She testified to those at trial. She attributed the affairs,

in part, to having been raped by three unknown assailants in May of 1974 in Sedalia, Missouri.

She testified that her husband dropped her off to shop and the two agreed to meet at a nearby park

at a given hour. Prewitt was walking through a residential neighborhood admiring the architecture

of old homes when three men pulled her into the bushes and raped her. Prewitt testified, “And an

older woman came out of her house and she was so cute, she scared them away. She brought me

inside made me a cup of tea and helped me clean up.” Prewitt’s husband came to pick her up and

they decided to never tell anyone of the rape. The first time Prewitt revealed the rape was to

defense counsel in explanation of her extramarital affairs. Prewitt testified that, after the rape,

although Bill was sympathetic, he became distant and no longer desired sexual intimacy. Prewitt

sought comfort from other men and, at trial, admitted to having sexual relations with J.H., R.H.,

R.M., and D.B.4

Prewitt admitted to telling her paramours that she wanted a divorce from Bill, and leading

them to believe Bill physically beat her. She never told the men about the rape which prompted

the extramarital affairs because, it “hurt too much to tell.” Prewitt testified that, contrary to what

she told her extramarital partners, Bill had never beaten her and “was a kind and gentle person.”

She lied to the men because she did not want them to think badly of her.

J.H. testified that he first met Prewitt at her place of business and they engaged in a sexual

affair that lasted several months, meeting at different places including Prewitt’s residence in

Holden and a motel in the city. J.H.

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