State v. Baker

197 P.3d 421, 287 Kan. 345, 2008 Kan. LEXIS 694
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedDecember 5, 2008
Docket98,498
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 197 P.3d 421 (State v. Baker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Baker, 197 P.3d 421, 287 Kan. 345, 2008 Kan. LEXIS 694 (kan 2008).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Nuss, J.:

Carl Lee Baker was convicted of felony murder and kidnapping and received consecutive sentences of life without the possibility of parole for 20 years (hard 20) for the murder and 233 months in prison for the kidnapping. He now appeals his convictions and sentences. Our jurisdiction is under K.S.A. 22-3601(b) (conviction of an off-grid crime).

The issues on appeal, and our accompanying holdings, are as follows:

1. Did the trial court err in refusing Baker s request to instruct on compulsion? No.

2. Did the trial court abuse its discretion in admitting three postmortem photographs of the victim’s body? No.

*347 3. Did the prosecutor commit reversible misconduct when using a sports team analogy to explain the concept of aiding and abetting to the jury? No.

4. Did the trial court erroneously impose an enhanced sentence based upon prior criminal history without requiring those crimes be proved beyond a reasonable doubt? No.

Accordingly, we affirm Baker s convictions and sentences.

FACTS

In July 2006, defendant Baker and three others were arrested and charged with the kidnapping and felony murder of David Owen. Baker gave a videotaped oral statement and a written statement to police. He also participated in a videotaped reenactment of the events leading to Owen’s death. Information from those communications, as well as the trial testimony and written statement of accomplice John Cornell, provided virtually all of the following facts to the jury. The facts are best understood when presented by stages.

Stage One

Baker had been hving in a “hobo camp” in the woods near the Topeka Rescue Mission. Other homeless people living in the camp included Cornell, Charles Hollingsworth, and Hollingsworth’s girlfriend, Kim Sharp. The others would leave the camp to eat at the Rescue Mission several times a day, to panhandle, and to do other things. Baker never left the camp, however, because according to him, contact with the police would mean they would “put me right back in the penitentiary” due to an outstanding arrest warrant. As the interviewing officer confirmed with Baker, “[Everybody was looking for you” — “you’re warranted.” Cornell confirmed that Baker “was running from the police.”

Late one afternoon in mid-June 2006, after Baker had been hving in the camp for 4-6 days, he and the others were conversing when Owen interrupted. Owen was a self-appointed homeless advocate who, in efforts to break their homelessness cycle, disrupted or damaged such camps and insisted that the inhabitants call their *348 families. He offered the inhabitants the use of his cell phone and phone cards.

All the camp inhabitants that day rejected Owen s offers and became irritated because he would not leave. Baker told him to “just get the hell out of the camp” and “get the fuck out of here.” An argument soon erupted between Owen, Baker, and Hollingsworth in which they got within 6 inches of each other s faces. Owen threatened to call the police and reached into the briefcase he was carrying. According to Baker, he did not want the police called because of his outstanding warrant. Hollingsworth grabbed Owen’s arm and knocked a cell phone out of his hand. Hollingsworth then grabbed the briefcase from Owen and tossed it on the ground.

After grabbing the briefcase, Hollingsworth slammed Owen to the ground and hit him. Hollingsworth then picked Owen up and forced him onto a bench. Sharp picked up Owen’s phone and briefcase and began going through its contents. She found photographs taken by him which showed the damage he had inflicted in other homeless camps. Enraged by the photographs, Sharp began throwing the contents of the briefcase, including Owen’s cell phones, papers, and photographs, and eventually the briefcase itself, into an incinerator in the camp. Owen protested while she destroyed his belongings.

Ron Greene, another homeless person, entered the camp at this time, looking for another inhabitant, Mark Brown. Hollingsworth did not know Greene and asked the others who Greene was. Cornell replied that he was “an all right guy,” and Sharp vouched for him as well.

Stage Two

Hollingsworth grabbed Owen by the arm and lifted him from the bench. Hollingsworth then led Owen out of the camp, grabbing an axe out of a tree as he left. Sharp later followed Hollingsworth and Owen to a spot in the woods 30-40 yards away that was not visible from the camp. Baker, Cornell, and Greene remained in the camp.

*349 Hollingsworth eventually yelled back in the direction of the camp for a rope. Baker retrieved a rope and a machete from his tent and, with machete in hand, gave the rope to Cornell. Baker instructed him to take it to Hollingsworth.

Cornell took the rope to Hollingsworth where he saw Owen on his knees with Hollingsworth standing over him, axe in hand. Sharp told Cornell not to worry. They were not going to kill Owen, she said, but were “just going to tie him up and make him sleep out with the mosquitos and snakes” so he would know what it was like for homeless people when he had damaged one of their camps. Cornell returned to the camp, rejoining Baker and Greene. In die meantime, Baker had thrust the machete through his belt.

Stage Three

According to Bakers brief, 10 minutes later Hollingsworth led Owen back to the camp, accompanied by Sharp. Owen s hands were tied behind his back; the rope was tied around one wrist, then wrapped up around the front of his neck and down to the other wrist. A rag had been stuffed in his mouth.

After sitting Owen back on the bench, Hollingsworth placed the axe on the table. Immediately upon seeing this, Greene said, ”[W]ell, tell Mark [Brown] I’ll be back later,” and left the camp. Hollingsworth and Baker then took several minutes to roll themselves cigarettes. According to Baker’s statement, when the rolling was completed Hollingsworth said that they needed to “take him over and get rid of this bastard ’cause he had to die.’ ” Also according to Baker’s statement, Hollingsworth told him that he had to “help him drag him [Owen] down to the river.” Hollingsworth lifted Owen from the bench and began to lead him out of the camp. Hollingsworth did not pick up the axe. Baker’s machete remained thrust through his belt, and Sharp and Cornell remained in the camp.

Stage Four

According to Baker’s statement, Owen was able to walk but dragged his feet and did not fully cooperate. Baker and Hollingsworth each held an arm and, half-cariying and half-leading, took *350 him, bound and gagged, over the dike and toward the river. While they descended the dike, Owen sat down and refused to walk. Hollingsworth then struck Owen and dragged him by his feet down the rocks. After reaching the bottom, Hollingsworth forced Owen up, and the three men continued across the open area to the railroad bridge.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
197 P.3d 421, 287 Kan. 345, 2008 Kan. LEXIS 694, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-baker-kan-2008.