State v. Bernhardt

372 P.3d 1161, 304 Kan. 460, 2016 WL 3039120, 2016 Kan. LEXIS 299
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedMay 27, 2016
Docket111639
StatusPublished
Cited by55 cases

This text of 372 P.3d 1161 (State v. Bernhardt) 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. Bernhardt, 372 P.3d 1161, 304 Kan. 460, 2016 WL 3039120, 2016 Kan. LEXIS 299 (kan 2016).

Opinions

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Beier, J.:

Defendant Anson R. Bernhardt appeals his conviction for premeditated first-degree murder.

Bernhardt raises three instructional issues, arguing the district judge erred by (1) adding language to a pattern jury instruction defining premeditation; (2) giving two separate jury instructions on intentional second-degree murder and reckless second-degree murder instead of a single instruction covering both theories; and (3) failing to instruct on voluntary manslaughter. He also claims the cumulative effect of these errors deprived him a fair trial. Bernhardt further contends the district judge erred by applying the 2013 amendments to Kansas’ hard 50 sentencing scheme retroactively, and he challenges the aggravating circumstances ultimately relied upon to support imposition of his hard 50 sentence.

We hold that there was no error and affirm Bernhardts conviction and sentence.

Factual and Procedural Background

We review the evidence in the record before us at greater length than we otherwise might because of the nature of the challenges Bernhardt advances on appeal.

On the afternoon of September 29, 2012, Bernhardt picked up his live-in girlfriend Amber Kostner from work. About 7 that evening, the two went to a party, picking up their friend Josie Breeden on the way. Bernhardt left the party about 10:30 to take Breeden home, then returned to the party for a short time. When he and Kostner left, she was not ready to go home; so they went to a bar and stayed there for 15 to 20 minutes.

The next morning, Officer Keith Luongo responded to a report that there was a body in a ditch across the road from Campus High School in Haysville. The body would later be identified as Kost-ner s.

The Sedgwick County Sheriffs Department took Bernhardt into custody for questioning, and he spoke to a detective in a taped in[462]*462terview that would later be introduced at trial. In the interview, Bernhardt initially said that he had not seen Kostner since she left the bar they had gone to after the party. He claimed that Kostner walked out of the bar during an argument. But, as Bernhardt explained the events in more detail, he contradicted his earlier statement. He then said that he and Kostner had gone home together from tire bar and that she had later left.

While he and Kostner were en route home, Bernhardt said Kost-ner was saying things like: “For God sake Anson I’m a grown ass woman” and “I wanna have another drink, I’ll have another drink.” Bernhardt said that, once the couple arrived home, he told Kostner they could not keep arguing because his mother would lack them out of the house. It was at that point that Kostner told Bernhardt to “fuck off’ and left. Bernhardt said it was not unusual for Kostner to leave after they had a fight.

Bernhardt then told the detective that he became worried the next morning when he woke up and Kostner had not returned. Bernhardt called several of Kostner s friends and relatives, as well as hospitals and the jail, but no one had seen or heard from her. Bernhardt also recounted what he had done the rest of the day, which included spending time on the Internet playing games, helping a friend work on a car, and then spending the afternoon at Breeden’s house. That evening, Bernhardt went to a couple of bars: He was at the second bar when officers asked him to come in for questioning.

Investigators then had Bernhardt repeat his stoiy, asking for additional details at various points. One of the investigators asked Bernhardt why Kostner’s car might have been by Campus High School. Bernhardt initially denied knowing why the car would have been there, but the investigators’ repeated requests that he explain led eventually to his confession:

“Investigator: What happened?
“Bernhardt: I beat the crap out of her and dumped her body.
[[Image here]]
“Investigator: Well you say you beat the crap out of her. How?
“Bernhardt: I — was kicking her.
“Investigator: Where at?
“Bernhardt: Eveiywhere. ... I pretty much lacked her everywhere. And I threw her in the backseat and I drove her to 55th and Meridian and dumped her off/’

[463]*463Bernhardt then elaborated, beginning with events in the car after he and Kostner left the bar: “She was yelling at me, she reached over and smacked me and I was driving and — I pulled over and pulled her over to — out of tire drivers side by her hair and then she hit the ground and I started lacking her.” He also told the officers that Kostner “screamed for a second when I pulled her hair. Pulled her out of the car. And then she — she wasn’t really saying anything after that.”

Bernhardt said that after he finished lacking Kostner he put her in the backseat and started driving; but, before he reached his ultimate destination, he stopped and put her in the trunk because of “[t]he sound of her breathing.” He said that “[i]t was — it wasn’t like smooth breathing. It was ldnda garbled, like — probably blood or something.” He “didn’t wanna hear her.”

When Bernhardt reached 55th and Meridian, “[he] pulled over . .. [a]nd [he] pulled her out of the trunk and [he] ldnda threw her but she kinda rolled a little bit.” Then he left. Bernhardt told the officers that Kostner “was still breathing when [he] threw her on the side of the road,” and he did not know she had died until the interview. When asked why he would leave Kostner on the side of the road if she was still breathing, Bernhardt said he “was probably scared or something.” When asked if he left Kostner by the side of the road because he thought she was going to die, Bernhardt answered: “Maybe. I don’t know.”

Bernhardt said initially that he did not know how many times he kicked Kostner. But, when pressed, he said: “20? 30? I don’t know.” He also said that he “probably” lacked Kostner in the head, “[p]retty much from her waist up.”

When asked if he had considered calling an ambulance for Kost-ner or otherwise getting her help, Bernhardt said: “I thought about it later and I thought about going and getting her and taking her to the hospital, taking her to the emergency room.” When asked why he had not done so, Bernhardt said he did not know.

Bernhardt’s statements led to the charge of first-degree premeditated murder.

At trial, tire State’s primary evidence against Bernhardt was the video of his interview. The State also put on several witnesses who [464]*464corroborated many of the details Bernhardt had given about what he and Kostner had been doing the night of her murder and what he did the next morning. Dr. Scott Kipper, Sedgwick County’s deputy coroner and medical examiner, testified about the results of Kostner s autopsy. In his opinion, Kostner had suffered at least six distinct blows to the front of her head, and “[t]he cause of death was multiple blunt force injuries, and the manner was homicide.” Kipper also opined that it was possible that Kostner would have survived, had she received “immediate medical attention.”

After both the State and defense rested, the district court judge and counsel discussed jury instructions.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
372 P.3d 1161, 304 Kan. 460, 2016 WL 3039120, 2016 Kan. LEXIS 299, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-bernhardt-kan-2016.