State v. Belone

285 P.3d 378, 295 Kan. 499, 2012 WL 4227635, 2012 Kan. LEXIS 468
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedSeptember 21, 2012
DocketNo. 99,176
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 285 P.3d 378 (State v. Belone) 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. Belone, 285 P.3d 378, 295 Kan. 499, 2012 WL 4227635, 2012 Kan. LEXIS 468 (kan 2012).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Johnson, J.:

Christopher A. Belone seeks review of the Court of Appeals’ decision affirming his convictions for second-degree murder, kidnapping, and other crimes related to the beating death of Linda Begay, his long time companion. Belone raises a number of issues, but our agreement with his claim that the trial court violated his right of confrontation by admitting testimonial statements into evidence and our determination that the error was not [500]*500harmless dispose of this appeal. Accordingly, we reverse and remand for a new trial.

Factual Statement

Begays unfortunate death on August 1, 2006, from peritonitis resulted from a tear in her small bowel which was, in turn, caused by blunt force trauma to her stomach, which the State alleges was inflicted by Belone with a board or table leg some 3 days earlier, on July 29. The Court of Appeals related the facts as follows:

“In the late afternoon on July 29, 2006, Officers Anthony Brixius and Micah Stegall of the Lawrence Police Department responded to a call at the Gaslight Trailer Park based on reports of criminal damage to property and a possible domestic abuse. Keith Bowers told Officer Brixius that he had taken Linda Begay to the hospital after she came to his window and said that her boyfriend, Belone, had beat her up at Frank Mallonee’s trailer.
“At tire hospital, tire officers found Begay to be extremely intoxicated. She had a large cut on the bridge of her nose, blood on her face, and bruises on her arms. Officer Brixius testified that in questioning Begay, she was loud and animated and stated drat ‘he fucking beat me up.’ She said that it was her boyfriend, Belone, who had beaten her. Officer Brixius testified Begay stated she woke up in Mal-lonee’s trailer to being dragged out of bed by Belone. Belone was hitting her witír his fists and yelling at her about cheating. Belone hit Begay in the stomach and face with a board (a table leg) and tíren he dragged her by her hair out of the trailer and into his truck. Begay told Officer Brixius that she was able to grab the board and jump out of the truck.
“Begay ran around the trailer park asking for help and eventually went back to tire trailer where she lived with Belone, their young son, and Belone’s mother. She banged on tire window telling her mother-in-law, ‘Get your fucking stupid ass out here. Get—your stupid ass son is doing something.’ When no one responded at the trailer, she threw the table leg through the window and then went to Bowers’ trailer for help.
“In a bedroom of Mallonee’s trailer, Officer Brixius discovered blood on the floor, a mattress, and two wrapped up t-shirts. He also found a large clump of hair on the pillow. In the bathroom, he found blood on the floor and streaks of blood around the sink. There was an over-turned table with one leg missing. Virginia Belone indicated that Begay threw a table leg through her trailer window. Officer Stegall confirmed that table leg was the missing leg from the table in Mallonee’s trailer.
“Officer Brixius returned to the hospital later in the evening when Begay was calmer and resting. He made an audio recording of his interview with her in which she confirmed that Belone was the person who beat her and forced her into his truck. The recording of the interview was played for the jury. Officer Brixius [501]*501testified the recorded interview was consistent with the main details of his initial interview without all the yelling and animation.
“At the hospital, medical personal documented Begay’s broken nose, sore neck, swollen throat, abdominal pain, right hip pain, and bruises on her arms, chest, buttocks and legs. Dr. Ryan Davis documented the stomach pain and indicated that CT scans showed fluid leakage in her bowel. Dr. Davis testified that Begay was doing better the second day, but her condition declined the third day and another CT scan revealed a worsening of her internal abdominal injuries. The coroner, Dr. Erik Mitchell, testified that Begay died on August 1, 2006, from peritonitis caused by blunt trauma to the abdomen causing a tear in the small bowel.
“Multiple witnesses confirmed that Belone and Begay were in the truck together. The witnesses heard screams, saw Begay jumping out of the truck with the table leg, and saw Begay’s broken nose. Mallonee, who had been drinking most of the night before, testified that on the morning in question, Begay woke him up and she then drank a large bourbon and Coke. Mallonee said that Begay laid down on the bed in his bedroom and pulled her shorts down. He said he tried to have sex with her but he was unable to do so.
“Belone took the stand in his own defense. He testified that he was at Mallo-nee’s trailer looking for Mallonee to help him build a porch. He said that he found Begay in the back bedroom naked from the waist down. He claimed he tried to get her dressed, but she attacked him. He said that he must have accidentally hit her in the nose as they struggled. Belone said he tried to clean her up in the bedroom and then they left in his truck to go home, but she jumped out of the truck.
“The State ultimately charged Belone with second-degree murder, kidnapping, obstructing legal process or official duty, and violating a protective order. After a lengthy trial, the jury convicted Belone as charged. The trial court sentenced Belone to a presumptive imprisonment term of 586 months for second-degree murder and concurrent incarceration terms of 59 months for kidnapping, 6 months for obstruction, and 12 months in the county jail for violating a protective order.
“Belone filed multiple motions for a new trial, alleging improper admission of prior bad acts, juror misconduct, violation of the sequestration order, perjury by a State’s witness, nondisclosure of exculpatory evidence against a State’s witness, and new case law regarding the Confrontation Clause of tire Sixth Amendment to the United States Constitution. The trial court denied the motions.” State v. Belone, No. 99,176, 2010 WL 173950, at “1-2 (Kan. App. 2010) (unpublished opinion).

Procedural History

Prior to trial, the State filed a motion requesting that the court find that the statements Begay made to Bowers, to the emergency [502]*502room staff, and to the investigating officers were all admissible at trial. The State based its argument on the exception to the right of confrontation known as the rule of forfeiture by wrongdoing. The district court initially ruled that the statements Begay made to her friend Bowers and to the medical professionals were nontestimon-ial and, therefore, not precluded by the Confrontation Clause. But the district court also concluded that the State had not met its burden to prove by a preponderance of the evidence that Belone was responsible for Begay’s unavailability by causing her death, and thus her testimonial statements to the officers, including the audio recording of the hospital interview, were not admissible because of Belone’s right of confrontation. At some point not disclosed by the record, the district court reversed itself and determined the statements to the officers fit within the forfeiture by wrongdoing exception.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
285 P.3d 378, 295 Kan. 499, 2012 WL 4227635, 2012 Kan. LEXIS 468, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-belone-kan-2012.