State of Missouri vs. Robert Beck
This text of State of Missouri vs. Robert Beck (State of Missouri vs. Robert Beck) 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.
Opinion
MISSOURI COURT OF APPEALS WESTERN DISTRICT STATE OF MISSOURI, ) ) Respondent, ) ) v. ) WD87256 ) ROBERT BECK, ) Filed: July 15, 2025 ) Appellant. )
APPEAL FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF BENTON COUNTY THE HONORABLE JERRY J. RELLIHAN, JUDGE
BEFORE DIVISION ONE: KAREN KING MITCHELL, PRESIDING JUDGE, LISA WHITE HARDWICK, JUDGE, AND MARK D. PFEIFFER, JUDGE
Robert Beck appeals his conviction and sentence for misdemeanor witness
tampering. He contends the circuit court erred in overruling his motions for judgment of
acquittal because the evidence was insufficient to establish he had the purpose to
influence the witness to withhold information about his pending criminal case. For
reasons explained herein, we affirm.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
Beck and S.C. are neighbors. On February 21, 2023, Beck and S.C. were in court
for a hearing in a case in which Beck was charged with failure to comply with Halloween
restrictions for a sex offender. S.C. was going to be a witness in that case, and Beck knew that S.C. was going to be a witness. As Beck walked by S.C. to exit the courtroom,
Beck told S.C., “I’ll take care of you when you get home.” The prosecutor asked S.C.
what Beck said. After S.C. told him, the prosecutor told S.C. to go to the sheriff’s
department and make a statement.
S.C. drove to the sheriff’s department to report the incident. Beck followed S.C.
and confronted him in the lobby. Surveillance cameras from the sheriff’s department
recorded videos1 of the confrontation. Beck “started being very boisterous, very loud,
calling [S.C.] names, calling [S.C.] a liar,” and using profanity. Specifically, Beck called
S.C. “a motherfucker and a fucking liar.” S.C. assumed Beck called him those names in
response to S.C.’s being a witness in the failure to comply with sex offender restrictions
case against Beck. A sheriff’s lieutenant near the lobby heard the verbal altercation and
noticed that Beck was being “quite loud and overpowering . . . in his statements” and
“profane and challenging.” The lieutenant separated them and asked S.C. what
happened. S.C. explained he was just in a hearing with Beck at the courthouse and, as
they were leaving, Beck made a threatening statement to him.
Beck was charged with the class A misdemeanor of witness tampering in violation
of Section 575.270.2 A jury trial was held. Beck did not testify and did not present any
evidence. The jury found him guilty. The court sentenced Beck to 180 days in jail,
suspended execution of 150 of those days, and placed him on two years of unsupervised
1 The videos did not have sound. 2 All statutory references are to the Revised Statutes of Missouri 2016, as updated by the 2024 Cumulative Supplement.
2 probation. The court ordered him to serve 30 days in jail but gave him credit for eight
days he had already served. Beck appeals.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
Our review of the sufficiency of the evidence to support a conviction is limited to
determining whether there is sufficient evidence from which a reasonable juror could
have found the defendant guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. State v. Nash, 339 S.W.3d
500, 508-09 (Mo. banc 2011). In reviewing the evidence, we accept as true all evidence
and inferences favorable to the verdict and disregard all contrary evidence and inferences.
Id. at 509. We do not reweigh the evidence and recognize the jury may believe all, some,
or none of the testimony of any witness. Id.
ANALYSIS
In his sole point on appeal, Beck argues the court erred in denying his motions for
judgment of acquittal because the evidence was insufficient to support all of the elements
of witness tampering. The State charged Beck with violating Section 575.270, which
provides, in pertinent part:
1. A person commits the offense of tampering with a witness or victim if:
(1) With the purpose to induce a witness or a prospective witness to disobey a subpoena or other legal process, absent himself or herself, avoid subpoena or other legal process, withhold evidence, information, or documents, or testify falsely, he or she:
(a) Threatens or causes harm to any person or property; or
(b) Uses force, threats or deception[.]
3 The State’s amended information alleged Beck purposely tampered with S.C., a
witness to Beck’s crime of failure to comply with Halloween restrictions of a sex
offender, by following S.C. to the sheriff’s department, confronting S.C. in the lobby in a
challenging manner while using profane language and verbally threatening potential
future harm against S.C., in order to induce S.C. to withhold information or avoid any
further actions as a witness in that criminal case.
Beck argues the evidence failed to establish he acted with a purpose to influence
S.C. to withhold information about his pending misdemeanor offense of failure to comply
with sex offender restrictions. “A person ‘acts purposely’, or with purpose, with respect
to his or her conduct or to a result thereof when it is his or her conscious object to engage
in that conduct or to cause that result.” § 562.016.2. In determining a defendant’s
purpose for his conduct, it is appropriate to consider events leading up to that conduct.
See State v. Ware, 447 S.W.3d 224, 228 (Mo. App. 2014). Here, S.C. testified that,
before Beck made threats against S.C. at the sheriff’s department, Beck and S.C. had
been at the courthouse for an initial hearing in Beck’s failure to comply with sex offender
restrictions case. As Beck was walking out of the courtroom after the hearing, he told
S.C., “I’ll take care of you when you get home.” When S.C. went to the sheriff’s
department to report this threat, Beck followed S.C. and, once inside, called him a liar
and threatened him using profane language. S.C. further testified that Beck knew S.C.
was going to be a witness in Beck’s failure to comply with sex offender restrictions case,
and S.C. assumed Beck’s threats at the sheriff’s department were in response to that. We
defer to the jury’s decision to accept S.C.’s testimony. Nash, 339 S.W.3d at 509. A
4 reasonable juror could infer from this evidence that Beck’s purpose for following S.C.
into the sheriff’s department and threatening him was to induce S.C. to withhold
information that could be used against Beck in that pending criminal case; in other words,
to induce S.C. not to testify concerning Beck’s compliance with the Halloween
restrictions placed on convicted sex offenders. We defer to the jury’s decision to draw
this reasonable inference from the evidence. See Ware, 447 S.W.3d at 228. See also
State v. Jindra, 504 S.W.3d 187, 190 (Mo. App. 2016). Because the evidence was
sufficient to support Beck’s conviction for witness tampering, the court did not err in
denying his motions for judgment of acquittal. Point denied.
CONCLUSION
The judgment is affirmed.
_____________________________ LISA WHITE HARDWICK, JUDGE All Concur.
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