State of Missouri vs. Maggie P Ybarra

CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedAugust 26, 2025
DocketWD86611
StatusPublished

This text of State of Missouri vs. Maggie P Ybarra (State of Missouri vs. Maggie P Ybarra) 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 vs. Maggie P Ybarra, (Mo. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

In the Missouri Court of Appeals Western District STATE OF MISSOURI, ) ) Respondent, ) ) WD86611 v. ) OPINION FILED: ) AUGUST 26, 2025 MAGGIE P YBARRA, ) ) Appellant. )

Appeal from the Circuit Court of Jackson County, Missouri The Honorable Joel P. Fahnestock, Judge

Before Division Four: Anthony Rex Gabbert, Chief Judge, Presiding, Mark D. Pfeiffer, Judge, Thomas N. Chapman, Judge

Maggie Ybarra appeals her conviction following jury trial of murder in the second

degree, harassment in the first degree, attempted child enticement, first-degree sexual

misconduct, tampering with physical evidence in a felony prosecution, and three counts

of attempted tampering with a victim in a felony prosecution. Ybarra was tried jointly

with a co-defendant. In her sole point on appeal, Ybarra argues the trial court abused its

discretion in failing to sever the trial of her case from that of her co-defendant. The

judgment is affirmed. Facts

In June 2021, the State of Missouri (“the State”) charged Ybarra and a co-

defendant (“Co-Defendant”1) via indictment either singly or jointly with nine counts. In

July 2021, the State charged Ybarra and Co-Defendant via superseding indictment either

singly or jointly with ten counts. In August 2021, Ybarra filed a motion to sever her joint

trial with Co-Defendant. The trial court denied that motion in August 2021.

In November 2022, the State charged Ybarra and Co-Defendant via superseding

indictment with the following:

I. First-degree murder, section 565.020, “in that on or between October 10 and October 12, 2020, in the County of Jackson, State of Missouri, the defendants, Maggie Ybarra and [Co-Defendant], acting alone or purposefully in concert, after deliberation, knowingly caused the death of [K.A. (“Victim”)] by strangling her.”

II. First-degree harassment, section 565.090, in that “Maggie Ybarra and [Co-Defendant], acting alone or purposefully in concert, without good cause, engage in an act with the purpose to cause emotional distress to [K.M. (“Child”)] by showing her pictures of a dismembered female body and such act did cause [Child] to suffer emotional distress.”

III. Attempted child enticement, section 566.151, in that [Co-Defendant], “who was twenty-one years of age or older, acting alone or purposefully in concert with others, penetrated the vagina of Maggie Ybarra while Maggie Ybarra asked [Child], a child less than fifteen years of age, if [Child] wanted to know how it would feel for a finger to be placed in [Child’s] vagina[.]”

1 Pursuant to Missouri Supreme Court Operating Rule 2.02(c)(3), we do not include names of witnesses other than parties. Co-Defendant is not a party to this appeal. Co-Defendant was also convicted, and has filed his own appeal which is pending in this Court in case number WD86570.

2 IV. Attempted child enticement, section 566.151, in that Maggie, “acting alone or purposefully in concert with others, asked [Child], a child less than fifteen years of age, if [Child] wanted to know how it would feel for a finger to be placed in [Child’s] vagina[.]”

V. Third-degree child molestation, section 566.069, in that [Co-Defendant] “knowingly subjected [Child] who was less than 14 years old to sexual contact by touching the vagina of [Child] over clothing.”

VI. First-degree sexual misconduct, section 566.093, in that Maggie and [Co-Defendant], “acting alone or purposefully in concert with others, knowingly had sexual contact with [Co-Defendant] in the presence of [Child] under circumstances in which Maggie Ybarra and [Co-Defendant] knew that such conduct was likely to cause affront or alarm.”

VII. Attempted tampering with physical evidence in a felony prosecution, section 575.100, in that Maggie “asked [Co-Defendant] to discard evidence located in her residence[.]”

VIII. Attempted tampering with a victim in a felony prosecution, section 575.270, in that Maggie “instructed a woman to tell [Child] to say that [Child] lied[.]”

IX. Attempted victim tampering in a felony prosecution, section 575.270, in that Maggie “instructed a woman to buy gifts for [Child]”

X. Attempted victim tampering in a felony prosecution, section 575.270, in that Maggie “instructed a man to pressure [Child] to recant[.]”

XI. Possession of child pornography, section 573.037, in that Maggie “knowingly possessed child pornography that was a visual depiction of a person less than eighteen years of age engaged in sexually explicit conduct, consisting of a still image of the genitals of a female child under the age of fourteen.”

XII. Possession of child pornography, section 573.037, in that Maggie “knowingly possessed child pornography that was a visual depiction of a person less than eighteen years of age engaged in sexually explicit conduct,

3 consisting of a still image of the genitals of [Child], a child under the age of fourteen.”

XIII. Sexual exploitation of a minor, section 573.023, in that Maggie “knowingly created child pornography of a person less than fourteen years of age by creating a still image depicting [Child’s] genitals.”

The superseding indictment listed 59 witnesses.

In February 2023, Ybarra filed a second motion to sever. The trial court denied

that motion in April 2023. It found that Ybarra would not be prejudiced by a joint trial

with Co-Defendant.

The case proceeded to jury trial. In the light most favorable to the verdict,2 the

following evidence was presented:

Co-Defendant lived in Grain Valley with his wife and two children. He met

Ybarra through an escort service and began a relationship with her. When their

relationship began, Ybarra lived in Claycomo next door to Victim. Ybarra often engaged

in three-way sexual activity with Co-Defendant and Victim. Ybarra moved from

Claycomo to Grandview but the sexual activity with Victim continued.

Ybarra has a biological daughter, Child, who had been given up for adoption. She

reunited with Child in August 2020 when the child was thirteen years old. In late 2020,

while Co-Defendant was at Ybarra’s Grandview home, Ybarra asked Child to put on

2 When reviewing a jury-tried case, “we view the facts in the light most favorable to the jury’s verdict.” State v. Warren, 702 S.W.3d 48, 50 n.2 (Mo. App. W.D. 2024) (internal quotation marks omitted).

4 lingerie. Child reluctantly did so. Co-Defendant told Child she looked beautiful and told

her to get in bed with him and Ybarra.

Ybarra, Co-Defendant, and Child were in bed together watching a scary movie

when Co-Defendant said that people dying turned him on. Ybarra and Co-Defendant

began having sex with each other. They began touching Child. The sexual activity

stopped when Child said she did not want to join Ybarra and Co-Defendant in having sex.

Ybarra told Child that she and Co-Defendant wanted to show Child something.

Co-Defendant got a camera, and Ybarra told Child that she and Co-Defendant had killed

someone. Ybarra showed Child pictures of a dead woman. Child’s later description of

the dead woman matched Victim’s description. The pictures on the camera included

Victim with a bruised face, naked in a box with her arms tied up to her chest by a rope

and her knees up. Several other pictures depicted Victim after her body had been

dismembered. Ybarra told Child that she, Co-Defendant, and Victim had sex and Co-

Defendant choked and killed Victim while they were in bed. Victim’s body was placed in

a box. It was later dismembered and put in a freezer at Co-Defendant’s house. Co-

Defendant’s wife at the time of the murder testified that a freezer showed up one day in a

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Related

United States v. Robert Spinelli
352 F.3d 48 (Second Circuit, 2003)
State v. Chambers
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990 S.W.2d 166 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1999)

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