State v. Bird

734 N.W.2d 664, 2007 Minn. LEXIS 387, 2007 WL 2003409
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedJuly 12, 2007
DocketA06-888
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 734 N.W.2d 664 (State v. Bird) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Bird, 734 N.W.2d 664, 2007 Minn. LEXIS 387, 2007 WL 2003409 (Mich. 2007).

Opinion

OPINION

ANDERSON, PAUL H., Justice.

A Hennepin County jury convicted Kurt Thomas Bird of one count of first-degree premeditated murder and one count of first-degree domestic abuse murder for the shooting death of his wife. The jury declined to find that Bird committed the lesser-included offense of heat-of-passion manslaughter. Before his trial began, Bird moved to introduce expert psychiatric testimony that he was experiencing psychotic symptoms before and immediately after the shooting and that he was “acutely psychotic” at the time of the shooting. Bird proffered the expert testimony in order to explain his mental state at the time he made inculpatory statements to the police and to help the jury understand “[his] circumstances” at the time of the shooting so the jury could determine whether he acted in the heat of passion or with extreme indifference to human life. The court allowed Bird’s expert to testify, but only on the topic of Bird’s psychosis at the time he spoke to the police. On appeal, Bird argues that the district court abused its discretion when it excluded expert psychiatric testimony on his psychosis at the time of the shooting. We affirm.

At approximately noon on Tuesday, August 2, 2005, the police responded to a 911 call concerning an apparent suicide at an apartment building in Champlin, Minnesota. Outside the building, Sergeant Chris Larrabee encountered appellant Kurt Thomas Bird, who later identified himself as the victim’s husband, and D.B., the brother of Bird’s ex-girlfriend. Larrabee asked Bird if he was the person who had found the victim’s body, and Bird responded that it was not “quite like that.” Bird then told Larrabee that he and his wife had argued at 7 a.m., that his wife had brought out a gun, and that in the course of an ensuing struggle, the gun discharged and she was shot. On entering the Birds’ apartment, Larrabee and two other officers found Laurie Bird’s body face-down on a bed with a gunshot wound to the back of the head. Her head was near the pillows, and she had a .45-caliber semiauto *667 matic gun in her hand above her head. The officers observed no signs of a struggle in the bedroom or elsewhere in the apartment.

Bird’s Interrogation, Arrest, and Pre-Trial Proceedings

The police took Bird to a Brooklyn Park detention facility, where two officers later interviewed him for approximately two hours. During the videotaped interview, Bird told the officers that on the evening of August 1, he and his wife were in their bedroom arguing about whether she had molested his two daughters from a previous relationship. He said that his wife made a remark that indicated that she had sexual relations with one of them. He said that this remark made him angry and caused him to go to the living room to get away from his wife.

In the first part of the interview, Bird told the officers that during the early morning hours on August 2, he and his wife were “bickering back and forth” again regarding Bird’s daughters. He said that when he walked from the living room into the bedroom, he saw his wife sitting on the bed, holding one of his guns. He stated that she “kept fooling at her head with [the gun]” and that he did not think the gun was loaded. Later in the interview, Bird said that when he walked from the living room to the bedroom he initially thought his wife was asleep, but he found her sitting on the bed with the gun. He said his wife told him she wished she were dead and that she was “dead already” because she was HIV-positive. He said that his wife told him she was in love with another man and that she was going to leave Bird. Bird told the officers that he thought his wife was involved in more than one extramarital affair and that he must be HIV-positive because of her.

Bird stated that after seeing his wife with the gun, he worked his way behind her in order to take the gun from her. He said that in his effort to get the gun, he “pushed her down and she had the gun and [he] had the gun and the next thing you know it went off.” At one point in the interview, Bird said that his wife’s hands might have been on the gun when it discharged, but he later told the officers that he was the only person holding the gun at the time of the shooting. He admitted shooting his wife, but said he did not pull the trigger. He said that after the shot was fired, he dropped the gun and it fell onto his wife’s hand. He denied pointing the gun at his wife, and he said he did not remember placing the gun in her hand after she was shot. Bird vehemently denied shooting his wife on purpose and denied shooting her out of anger. But he did acknowledge that he was angry at her, that he felt “a little” betrayed and disappointed by her, and that both he and his wife were mad at the time they struggled over the gun.

Following his interview with the police, Bird was charged with the murder of his wife. A Hennepin County grand jury subsequently indicted him on one count of first-degree premeditated murder in violation of Minn.Stat. § 609.185(a)(1) (2006), one count of first-degree domestic abuse murder in violation of Minn.Stat. § 609.185(a)(6) (2006), and one count of second-degree murder in violation of Minn. Stat. § 609.19, subd. 1(1) (2006).

Bird pleaded not guilty to all three counts and gave notice to the state that he intended to assert a mental illness defense. The court then ordered Bird to undergo a Rule 20 evaluation, 1 which resulted in an *668 opinion by Dr. Kristine Kienlen that Bird was competent to stand trial and that he did not qualify for a mental illness defense. Bird did not challenge Dr. Kienlen’s findings and did not interpose a plea of not guilty by reason of mental illness. But he moved the court to allow expert psychiatric testimony that he was experiencing psychotic symptoms from approximately July 27 through August 3 and that he was “acutely psychotic” at the time of the shooting. The court allowed Bird’s expert to testify, but only about Bird’s mental state at the time of his on-scene statements to the police and the subsequent custodial interview.

Trial Testimony

Forensic and Police Testimony

Bird’s jury trial began on February 2, 2006. One of the state’s first witnesses was Gary Gendron, a crime lab technician for the Hennepin County Sheriffs Department. Gendron testified that the bullet that killed Laurie Bird entered the mattress on which her body was found at approximately a 45-degree angle. He said that the bullet moved on a trajectory from the foot of the bed toward the head of the bed, ultimately lodging in the bottom layer of the mattress. He stated that Laurie Bird’s hand was “kind of folded around the weapon” when he removed the gun from the scene.

Dr. Daniel Davis, a forensic pathologist with the Hennepin County Medical Examiner’s Office, testified that the cause of Laurie Bird’s death was a contact wound to the head. As to the manner of Laurie Bird’s death, Davis testified that in his opinion, the shooting was a homicide. He said that Bird’s assertion that the gun fell into his wife’s hand after accidentally discharging in a struggle was “unbelievable.” 2

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
734 N.W.2d 664, 2007 Minn. LEXIS 387, 2007 WL 2003409, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-bird-minn-2007.