State of Missouri v. Rodney Knox

CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedAugust 11, 2020
DocketSC98298
StatusPublished

This text of State of Missouri v. Rodney Knox (State of Missouri v. Rodney Knox) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri 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. Rodney Knox, (Mo. 2020).

Opinion

SUPREME COURT OF MISSOURI en banc STATE OF MISSOURI, ) Opinion issued August 11, 2020 ) Respondent, ) ) v. ) No. SC98298 ) RODNEY KNOX, ) ) Appellant. )

Appeal from the Circuit Court of the City of St. Louis The Honorable Clinton R. Wright, Judge

Rodney Knox alleges the circuit court erred in entering judgment against him for

two counts of class A misdemeanor stealing because the jury found only the elements

necessary to convict him of class D misdemeanors. This Court agrees. The jury

instructions merely required the jury to find Mr. Knox retained the two victims’ personal

items without their consent and with the purpose of withholding this property from them.

Absent proof of value, the offense submitted was a class D misdemeanor under section

570.030.7, 1 not a class A misdemeanor under section 570.030.8. Therefore, the circuit

1 Statutory references are to RSMo 2016; however, two versions of section 570.030 appear in RSMo 2016: (1) the version of section 570.030 that became effective January 1, 2017, along with the rest of the new criminal code; and (2) the version of section 570.030 in effect from August 28, 2016, through December 31, 2016. At the time Mr. Knox committed the offenses, the 2017 criminal code was (and remains) in effect. Accordingly, court erred in entering judgment for two class A misdemeanor stealing convictions.

Mr. Knox also appeals his judgment of conviction for one count of felony stealing.

Because his third victim failed to specifically state Mr. Knox or an accomplice stole the

$1,200 the intruders found while going through this victim’s pockets in the course of

stealing things of value from his apartment, he argues, the evidence was insufficient to

convict him of stealing more than $750. This Court disagrees. The jury was free to infer

Mr. Knox got the $1,200 from the victim based on the victim’s testimony in combination

with the evidence that Mr. Knox and another man were caught while leaving the victim’s

apartment complex immediately after the robbery with other stolen items, the victim’s

identification of Mr. Knox as one of the individuals who robbed him, and the fact Mr.

Knox had $1,570 in his pocket when arrested. This evidence provided the jury with a

sufficient basis to infer Mr. Knox stole the cash and to disbelieve his alternative

explanation for having so much cash in his pocket. But because violation of that section

is a class D felony under the version of that statute in effect when the crime was

committed, the circuit court erred in entering judgment against Mr. Knox for a class C

felony. This Court reverses the judgment and remands the case for entry of a corrected

judgment consistent with this opinion.

I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

The State charged Rodney Knox with three counts of first-degree robbery and

three counts of armed criminal action, 2 all stemming from a single event in January 2017.

for ease of reference, citations are to the 2017 criminal code unless otherwise indicated. 2 The State also charged Mr. Knox with resisting arrest but filed a memorandum of nolle

2 The evidence showed that several armed men with face coverings pushed their way into

the apartment of Jabari Turner. The men forced Mr. Turner and his friends to lay on the

floor while they searched the apartment. The State presented evidence the intruders took

a laptop computer, a PlayStation controller, cellular telephones, headphones, a Bluetooth

speaker, a watch, marijuana, and a Versace belt. Mr. Turner testified that he had $1,200

in rent money in his pockets and that the intruders went through his pockets and the

pockets of the other victims.

Mr. Turner called the police once the intruders left. The police arrived at the

apartment building within one minute and saw four men with face coverings and bags full

of items getting out of the elevator. Upon seeing police, the men began to run, dropping

some items as they went. Officers apprehended two of the suspects, later identified as

Rodney Knox and Donnoven Williams. Mr. Turner identified Mr. Knox at the scene,

telling police Mr. Knox had been the man with a black and silver pistol. Mr. Knox was

found with a handgun, $1,570 in cash, and several items Mr. Turner identified as stolen,

including the Versace belt, a watch, the Bluetooth speaker, and headphones.

At trial, the State did not present evidence of the value of the stolen items of

personal property. 3 Mr. Turner testified he had $1,200 in cash in his pockets, the

intruders searched his pockets and those of his friends, and he thought at least one of his

friends had cash. But Mr. Turner was not specifically asked whether the men had taken

prosequi regarding this charge on the day of trial. 3 The briefs suggest this was because the State believed it would obtain a conviction for

first-degree robbery, which does not require proof of the value of the items stolen, although certain stealing offenses do so require.

3 the cash they found when going through his or the other victims’ pockets.

Mr. Knox testified in his own defense. He said he went with two of his uncles and

another man to the apartment to purchase marijuana but did not know his three

companions intended to rob the people in the apartment. Mr. Knox testified he waited for

the three other men on a different floor of the apartment complex while he thought they

were buying drugs and then went up to Mr. Turner’s floor, where he saw his companions

leaving the apartment while wearing face coverings. The three men each held bags filled

with various items, and some items fell out of the bags in the elevator. Mr. Knox said he

picked up the dropped items at his uncle’s direction.

Mr. Knox testified that, when the police arrived, he did not run as the others did

because he was unaware of the robbery and did not know the items he held had been

stolen. He explained the $1,570 in cash in his pocket was his life savings, which he

carried with him because his mother was a drug addict and he did not want her to take the

money. Mr. Knox said the gun he was carrying was registered to him and he always

carried it because he had been robbed in the past.

The circuit court instructed the jury on three counts of first-degree robbery and

three counts of armed criminal action for use of a weapon in each robbery, one for each

of the three robbery victims. Without objection from the State, as to the two victims who

did not testify at trial, the court also instructed the jury that, if it did not find Mr. Knox

guilty of robbery as to them, it should consider whether he was guilty of misdemeanor

stealing for taking one victim’s watch and misdemeanor stealing for taking the other

victim’s Bluetooth speaker without consent and with the intent to keep them. These

4 misdemeanor instructions did not require the jury to make any finding as to the value of

the watch or speaker. The jury acquitted Mr. Knox of armed criminal action and, as to

these two victims, found him guilty only of the two misdemeanor stealing counts—the

jury did not find him guilty of these two first-degree robbery counts.

As to Mr. Turner, again without objection from the State, the circuit court gave the

jury two additional instructions that, if it did not find Mr. Knox guilty of the first-degree

robbery count, it should consider whether (1) he was guilty of felony stealing by taking

Mr.

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State of Missouri v. Rodney Knox, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-missouri-v-rodney-knox-mo-2020.