State of Missouri v. Rachel A. Kinsella

578 S.W.3d 802
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 5, 2019
DocketED105655
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 578 S.W.3d 802 (State of Missouri v. Rachel A. Kinsella) 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. Rachel A. Kinsella, 578 S.W.3d 802 (Mo. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

In the Missouri Court of Appeals astern District

DIVISION THREE STATE OF MISSOURI, ) No. ED105655 ) Respondent, ) Appeal from the Circuit Court ) of St. Louis County VS. ) ) Honorable Joseph 8S. Dueker RACHEL A. KINSELLA, ) ) Appellant. } Filed: March 5, 2019

We recount an assault that is difficult to comprehend. The defendant, Rachel A. Kinsella, is a knowledgeable, medically-savvy mother. The victim is het medically-challenged young son, P.K. Over a nine-month period, defendant took her son to two different teams of doctors - one in Kansas City, the other in St. Louis. But due to the defendant’s deceptions, the teams of doctors did not know of each other’s existence. Thus, cach team prescribed different anti-psychotic and anti-seizure medications fraught with severe, debilitating, even life-threatening consequences. Defendant’s conduct brought P.K. to the brink of death.

After a three-day trial, a jury found defendant guilty of first-degree assault and first- degree endangering the welfare of a child, for poisoning her son, P.K. Defendant now appeals, alleging insufficient evidence existed that she acted “knowingly” or “intentionally.” She contends the jury engaged in impermissible inference-stacking in convicting her. To the contrary, we find no attenuated logic. Sufficient evidence exists to reasonably infer that

defendant acted knowingly and intentionally. We therefore affirm defendant’s convictions.

Factual and Procedural Background P.K.’s Early Years

P.K. was born prematurely in August of 2005. Around the time of his birth, he suffered a bleed in his brain that required the placement of a shunt to drain fluid off his brain, in order to reduce the pressure on his brain. At other times in his young life, doctors also variously diagnosed P.K. with epilepsy, attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), cognitive disorder, autism spectrum disorder, Asperger’s syndrome,' bipolar disorder, and as having a cerebrovascular accident. P.K.’s parents divorced in 2010. Two years later, in August of 2012, P.K.’s father died. P.K. was seven years old.

Treatment Besins in Kansas City

A week and a half after the death of P.K.’s father, defendant took P.K. to see Dr. Shayla Sullivant, a child psychiatrist at Children’s Mercy Hospital in Kansas City. This was P.K.’s first visit with Dr. Sullivant. In addition to corroborating the ADHD and cognitive-disorder diagnoses, Dr. Sullivant also diagnosed P.K. as having “adjustment disorder with depressed mood.” Dr. Sullivant prescribed Risperdal, an anti-psychotic medication, and physicians in the neurology department at Children’s Mercy prescribed Trileptal, an anti-seizure medication. Risperdal and Trileptal are the drugs with which defendant was alleged to have poisoned P.K. Dr. Sullivant reviewed the benefits and risks of the medications with the defendant. Dr. Sullivant specifically told defendant that Risperdal could lower the seizure threshold for P.K.

Defendant brought P.K. to see Dr. Sullivant three additional times during 2012, the last time being in November. Despite Dr. Sullivant wanting to see P.K. every eight weeks, defendant

did not bring P.K. in for another visit until July 2013. During that eight-month time period,

| Asperger's syndrome is a developmental disorder; physicians often use the diagnosis when a child exhibits slightly “odd” behavior in their social interactions.

defendant repeatedly requested refills for the Risperdal. Dr. Sullivant initially approved those refills, but ultimately told defendant that she would only approve the Risperdal refill if defendant brought P.K. in for a visit, which finally occurred on July 26, 2013. Dr. Sullivant saw P.K. again in September, the last time she would see P.K. in 2013. Defendant canceled an appointment in November, and was a no-show at another appointment. When asked why, defendant told staff at Children’s Mercy that she intended to seek treatment from a psychiatrist in St. Louis.

Despite this stated intent, defendant in February of 2014 again asked Dr. Sullivant for a refill of P.K.’s medications. Dr. Sullivant denied the request because P.K. was not scheduled for another visit at Children’s Mercy. Dr. Sullivant was also concerned that defendant may have found another provider for P.K.’s care. Defendant denied that anyone else was prescribing medication for P.K. and stated that she was transferring all of P.K.’s care back to Children’s Mercy. Defendant scheduled an appointment with Dr. Sullivant, for March 4, 2014. Given this, Dr. Sullivant authorized a refill of P.K.’s medications. Defendant brought P.K. in for the March 4" visit, but did not schedule a follow-up visit with the doctor, as instructed. Defendant did not bring P.K. to see Dr. Sullivant until nine months later, in December of 2014. During that ninth- month time period, defendant repeatedly requested and received refills for Risperdal and Trileptal from the doctors in Kansas City. During this same nine-month period, P.K. also received extensive medical treatment from doctors at St. Louis Children’s Hospital.

St. Louis Hospitalization and Beginning of Ti reatment in St. Louis

On March 7, 2014, three days after his visit with Dr. Sullivant, P.K. was life-flighted to St. Louis Children’s Hospital after a reported prolonged seizure. When P.K. arrived at the hospital, he was extremely unresponsive. Medical staff could not awaken P.K., even by pinching

him or rubbing his sternum — measures used by medical personnel to awaken unresponsive

patients. If he did awaken, it was only briefly and then he would fall back asleep. These prolonged, sudden spells of extreme unresponsiveness continued, on and off, for the next two months while P.K. was in the hospital. P.K. also had hallucinations and nystagmus.’ He drooled and exhibited inappropriate emotional responses. He was also very unsteady, and often had trouble walking and with coordination. When asked to touch his nose or touch an object in front of him, P.K. would often miss. At other times, however, P.K. would appear normal, and was observed talking and playing video games. His periods of unresponsiveness were episodic, not continuous. His symptoms would wax and wane.

The St. Louis physicians ruled out an exacerbation of P.K.’s underlying illnesses. Tests also showed that P.K.’s shunt was functioning properly, and that the pressures inside his brain were within the normal range. And although defendant reported that P.K. had seizures, extensive monitoring showed no evidence of seizure activity, The doctors concluded that P.K.’s spells and periods of unresponsiveness were not seizures. They began considering other diagnoses, including that P.K, may have been experiencing an autoimmune disease affecting his brain. Tests came back weakly positive for such a disease, so the St. Louis physicians settled on a diagnosis of autoimmune encephalitis (AE) and began aggressively treating P.K. for that disease. Although monitoring did not show seizure activity, the St. Louis physicians could not completely rule out the possibility that P.K. was having undetected seizures. So they changed P.K.’s medications. The St. Louis physicians discontinued the use of Risperdal at the end of March 2014, and replaced it with a similar anti-psychotic medication called Seroquel, which they believed would be a better drug for P.K. They discontinued the use of Trileptal at the beginning

of April 2014, and replaced it with a broader-spectrum seizure medication called Clobazam.

2 Nystagmus is a condition of involuntary and uncontrollable eye movement where the eyes move back and forth, from side to side. The eyes can also move up and down, or in a circular motion.

The physicians in St. Louis had multiple discussions with defendant regarding the treatment plan for P.K.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
578 S.W.3d 802, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-missouri-v-rachel-a-kinsella-moctapp-2019.