State of Missouri v. Tyrone Benedict

495 S.W.3d 185, 2016 WL 1579123, 2016 Mo. App. LEXIS 370
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 19, 2016
DocketED102488
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 495 S.W.3d 185 (State of Missouri v. Tyrone Benedict) 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. Tyrone Benedict, 495 S.W.3d 185, 2016 WL 1579123, 2016 Mo. App. LEXIS 370 (Mo. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

ROBERT G. DOWD, JR., Judge

Tyrone Benedict (“Defendant”) appeals from the judgment entered after a jury trial on his convictions for murder in the first degree and arson in the first degree. We affirm.

The sufficiency of the evidence at trial is not challenged on appeal. Viewed favorably to the verdicts, the evidence established the following. The victim was forty-year old Mark Woods (“Victim”). He was paralyzed when he was twenty years old after a car accident. Victim had limited use of one arm, could not use either of his hands or legs and was confined to a wheelchair, which he operated with a joystick. He was able to sign his name by holding a pen in his mouth, and he could use his cell phone and computer. He worked in information technology both at home and at an office.

' Victim employed several caregivers to assist him with various basic functions of daily life. Defendant was one of Victim’s caregivers; he usually worked from about *189 4:30 a.m. until about 11 a.m. or noon. One of Defendant’s duties was to review all of the caregivers’ timesheets. By most accounts, Victim was very detail-oriented, frugal with his money .(though he made a very good salary) and was sometimes difficult to work for. Victim’s mother, testified that she observed Defendant and Victim arguing often and once overheard Defendant tell Victim “you’ll be sorry.”

Victim’s neighbor testified that at about 4:00 a.m. on February 23, 2011, he awoke to the sound of a slammed door. He looked out the window and saw a person “with flames” on his body or something he was holding come out of Victim’s apartment and run towards the parking lot. The neighbor went back to bed, thinking it was a cooking incident. He heard another door slam about five minutes later, but did not get up.

Defendant’s roommate testified that Defendant left, his apartment for work at the usual time that day. Phone records showed that Defendant placed a call to Victim from a location near Victim’s apartment at 4:14 a.m. and made another call from the same location about a minute later. Defendant was back at home by 4:59 a.m., when he made a call from his home to another one of Victim’s caregivers, David Brandenberger. Brandenber-ger testified that Defendant said he could not make it to work and asked Branden-berger to go in for him. Defendant also placed another call to Victim at 5:01 a.m. from Defendant’s home. Defendant’s roommate testified that when Defendant arrived home,, she heard him throw up. He told her he came home from work because he was sick. Defendant told her not to get near him because he was sick, but after he showered, he got back into bed with her.

Around this same time, 5:00 a.m., Victim’s neighbor awoke again and smelled smoke. He went outside, saw smoke coming from Victim’s door and went back to his apartment to get a fire extinguisher. While there, he also told his mother to call 91-1. The neighbor'then went back to Victim’s apartment and tried to go in to help, but the smoke was too thick.

By the time Brandenberger arrived at Victim’s apartment shortly before 6:00 a.m., emergency personnel were already there responding to the fire. Brandenber-ger called Defendant at home at 5:57 and told him about the fire. According to Defendant’s roommate, Defendant was “worried excited” when the phone rang and, after talking to Brandenberger, turned on the TV to see if there was a news story about it.

Emergency personnel testified that they found Victim dead' in his bedroom with four stab wounds on his face and one on his' neck, but his cause of death was determined to be carbon-monoxide toxicity from smoke inhalation. A bloodstained knife and a gas can were found in the living room. Victim’s apartment also smelled of gasoline, which was found on numerous items in the apartment, including Victim’s bed and bedding. It was determined the fire was intentionally set.

Defendant came to Victim’s apartment later that morning, at the request of police. He agreed to go to the police station to talk with the investigating officers further, though the officers testified Defendant was not a suspect at that time. Initially, Defendant claimed he had stopped at a convenience store near his home in Maryland Heights on the way to work, determined he was not feeling well and decided to go back home. He claimed he called the Victim twice from his home to tell him he was sick. The officers examined his phone records, which showed that those two calls to Victim were actually made from a location near Victim’s home in South St, Louis *190 County. At that point, the officers determined Defendant was a suspect. They began recording the interrogation, and the resulting video was played at trial. The officers read Defendant his Miranda rights, which he stated he understood. Defendant told the officers he had not been to Victim’s apartment that morning. When presented the phone records, Defendant changed his. story and said he had actually gotten close to Victim’s home before deciding to turn around and go home. About an hour later, Defendant asked for an attorney, and the officers ceased the interrogation. Defendant was not released, and later indicated he wanted to tell the officers what really happened. He denied killing Victim or starting the fire, but admitted that he had in fact gone to Victim’s apartment that morning.. He claimed it was already on fire and that he tried to rescue Victim. He claimed he did not call 911 because he was scared and wanted to separate himself from the incident.

During the interrogation, police observed burn marks on Defendant’s nose, which he claimed was herpes, and -on his hand, which he tried to conceal from the officers and then claimed was from cooking Ramen noodles. Later, he claimed he had been burnt trying to rescue Victim, and the officers observed other burn marks on his back and buttocks. They also found a melted lighter in Defendant’s pocket. Gasoline was later detected on clothing at Defendant’s home, and Defendant’s roommate’s nephew testified that the gas can found at Victim’s apartment was one that was missing from Defendant’s garage.

Defendant also told the officers that he had written himself checks from Victim’s checkbook in the week before the fire, two for approximately $960 .each and one the day before the fire for $2500. Defendant claimed he had permission to write the checks, but none of them appeared in Victim’s check register — which was otherwise up to date — and the checks were taken from the back of Victim’s checkbook. Defendant also signed Victim’s names to the checks himself, though, as Brandenberger and Victim’s mother testified, Victim was capable of signing his name himself. Defendant told his roommate that Victim had given him a large cash advance.

The jury convicted Defendant of murder in the first degree, for which he was sentenced to life imprisonment without probation or parole, and of arson in the first degree, for which he received a life sentence. The sentences were to be served consecutively. This appeal follows.

In his first point, Defendant challenges the exclusion of alternative perpetrator evidence. The State filed a motion in limine before trial to exclude evidence that Defendant’s co-worker, Brandenberger, had an opportunity or motive to commit this crime.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
495 S.W.3d 185, 2016 WL 1579123, 2016 Mo. App. LEXIS 370, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-missouri-v-tyrone-benedict-moctapp-2016.