State v. Beuhler-May

110 P.3d 425, 279 Kan. 371, 2005 Kan. LEXIS 149
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedApril 22, 2005
Docket91,470
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 110 P.3d 425 (State v. Beuhler-May) 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. Beuhler-May, 110 P.3d 425, 279 Kan. 371, 2005 Kan. LEXIS 149 (kan 2005).

Opinion

The opinion was delivered by

Luckert, J.:

A jury convicted Robert Buehler-May of premeditated first-degree murder, conspiracy to commit first-degree murder, and aggravated kidnapping. The trial court imposed a hard 50 life sentence for the murder conviction, 155 months’ imprisonment for the aggravated kidnapping conviction, and 117 months’ imprisonment for the conspiracy conviction, all sentences to run concurrently.

Buehler-May timely appeals his convictions and sentence, arguing the trial court erred in: (1) denying a motion filed on the first day of trial in which Buehler-May sought to endorse a psychiatrist as an expert witness; (2) admitting photographs of the murder victim which Buehler-May argues are gruesome and cumulative; (3) failing to instruct the jury that it should consider with caution the testimony of an accomplice; (4) applying the Kansas hard 50 sentencing provisions, which Buehler-May argues are unconstitutional; and (5) imposing a hard 50 sentence based in part upon a factor which the same judge had determined insufficient when sentencing a codefendant, Kyle Cavaness, whose conviction and sentence we upheld in State v. Cavaness, 278 Kan. 469, 101 P.3d 717 (2004).

*374 We affirm.

Facts

Alisha Gray testified that in October 2002 she was living with her brother, Kyle Cavaness, and her boyfriend, Ryan Goldenburg, at a home in Wyandotte County. The victim, Deangelo Wheeler, was also staying at the home. Wheeler sold crack cocaine to Gray, Cavaness, and Goldenburg.

The defendant, Robert Buehler-May, was close friends with Gray and Cavaness but had never met the victim until the night of the murder. On October 9,2002, Buehler-May came over to Gray’s house. He stayed at the house while Gray went with Wheeler to purchase crack cocaine. Gray, Goldenburg, and Cavaness smoked the crack cocaine. Buehler-May was not smoking crack that night. In the early morning hours, Goldenburg and Wheeler left to purchase more crack cocaine while Gray, Cavaness, and Buehler-May waited at the house. When they returned, Wheeler accused the others of having stolen his marijuana joint while he was gone. Wheeler mainly accused Buehler-May, calling him a thief. Wheeler and Buehler-May got into a verbal argument. Eventually, after Buehler-May called Wheeler a “pussy,” Wheeler stood up. Gray did not see Wheeler with a weapon.

Gray believed the men were about to fight and went into her bedroom. The men went outside and Gray heard someone other than Wheeler say, “Hit him.” When the men carried Wheeler back into the house, he was badly hurt, not moving or saying anything, and he had a bleeding gash on his head. Whenever Wheeler woke up, the men, primarily Buehler-May, would continue to beat him. This happened about three times. Gray heard the men saying they could not let Wheeler go in that condition for fear of retaliation.

Gray’s next-door neighbor, Michael Dressier, testified that eitiier Cavaness or Goldenburg called him and asked him to bring over something with which to tie up Wheeler. When Dressier brought over some telephone wire, he saw Wheeler lying on the floor with his legs moving. When Dressier came back to the house about a half hour later, he saw that Wheeler’s legs were bound. He *375 also heard Wheeler calling out, and Buehler-May “went in and quieted him down.”

Gray testified that about a half hour after the men brought Wheeler into the house, Buehler-May came into Gray’s bedroom and said he had broken Wheeler’s neck, killing him. Buehler-May and Goldenburg then wrapped Wheeler’s body in a taip and put him on the back porch.

On October 10, 2002, Buehler-May told his close friend Ashley McCann that he had murdered someone. McCann noticed a pile of bloody clothes and bloody shoes in Buehler-May’s bedroom. Later the same day, McCann and Buehler-May drove to Cavaness’ house to buy some marijuana. Gray, Goldenburg, and Cavaness were at the home. Buehler-May, Goldenburg, and Cavaness began bragging and laughing about how they had beaten and eventually killed the victim the night before. Buehler-May said he had snapped the victim’s neck. He also pointed out to McCann where the victim’s body was outside. McCann heard the men discussing whether to bum the body or dump it in the river. The next day, McCann contacted police.

After Buehler-May was arrested, he was interviewed by Detective Lawson. Buehler-May waived his Miranda rights and made a videotaped statement which was played for the juiy and is included in the record on appeal. In that statement, Buehler-May admitted his involvement in the murder. Buehler-May stated that when the argument escalated and the men went outside, Buehler-May hit the victim with a wooden dowel, Cavaness hit him with a baseball bat, and Goldenburg hit him with bolt cutters. They then dragged the victim back inside the house to keep him out of sight. Inside the house, all three men continued to beat the victim whenever he regained consciousness. The men then placed bags over the victim’s head in an attempt to hasten his death. Buehler-May estimated that at least 2 and Vz hours elapsed from the time the beating began until the victim died.

Cavaness showed police where the men had thrown Wheeler’s body into the river and where they had burned the clothes they had been wearing on the night of the murder. An underwater search and rescue team located Wheeler’s body a few days after *376 the murder. The body was wrapped in a blue tarp with two large bricks attached. The victim’s head was covered by a white plastic bag; his arms were tied behind his back and his anides were tied together.

Forensic pathologist Dr. Erik Mitchell performed the autopsy. He testified that Wheeler had multiple injuries to his head consistent with being struck by a hard object like a baseball bat or bolt cutters. Wheeler’s brain was bruised and swollen as a result of his injuries. His neck was also bruised but not broken. Dr. Mitchell testified that Wheeler died as a result of all of the blows to his head. He stated, “I cannot isolate one injury and say this is the one that did it, the others are not important.” Dr. Mitchell stated that asphyxia due to the plastic bags placed over Wheeler’s head might also have contributed to his death.

Buehler-May’s defense was a combination of self-defense and compulsion. He testified that when the fight escalated and moved outside, he armed himself with a wooden pole because he thought Wheeler had a knife. According to Buehler-May, Cavaness and Goldenburg struck Wheeler first. Buehler-May also struck Wheeler, but then tried to stop Cavaness and Goldenburg from further attacking him. When Buehler-May struck Wheeler, he thought Wheeler was coming at him.

Buehler-May also testified that after the men brought Wheeler in the house, Cavaness and Goldenburg continued beating him. Buehler-May suggested taking Wheeler somewhere and dropping him off, or calling the police and telling them Wheeler had broken into the house so that he could get medical attention. At that point, Goldenburg and Cavaness began threatening Buehler-May, telling him it did not matter if there was one body or two and threatening to go after Buehler-May’s brother.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
110 P.3d 425, 279 Kan. 371, 2005 Kan. LEXIS 149, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-beuhler-may-kan-2005.