State v. Bohn

950 S.W.2d 277, 1997 Mo. App. LEXIS 1415, 1997 WL 437172
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedAugust 5, 1997
DocketNo. 70444
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 950 S.W.2d 277 (State v. Bohn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Bohn, 950 S.W.2d 277, 1997 Mo. App. LEXIS 1415, 1997 WL 437172 (Mo. Ct. App. 1997).

Opinion

GRIMM, Judge.

A jury found defendant guilty of first degree murder and armed criminal action, both Class A felonies, sections 565.020 and 571.015, RSMo 1994. The trial court sentenced defendant to life imprisonment without eligibility for probation or parole for the murder and ten years for armed criminal action, consecutively.

Defendant raises three points; her first is controlling. In that point, she alleges the trial court erred in overruling her motion to suppress (a) statements she made during a custodial interrogation, (b) statements obtained from another witness, and (c) a gun as evidence. She contends her statement was obtained after she invoked her right to have an attorney present and the other statement and gun were “derived directly from the illegal questioning of defendant.” We agree that the statement obtained from defendant violated her rights and reverse and remand.

I. Background

On December 31, 1993, defendant shot her husband in the head, killing him. His body was found the next morning and later that day Highway Patrol officers questioned defendant about the death.

Over the next week, defendant and the officers had several conversations. On January 12, two of the officers, Sergeants Conway and Crump, interviewed defendant at her attorney’s office for approximately six hours. At the conclusion of the meeting, the attorney “told them that if they needed anything further they should go through” her.

The attorney contacted the officers the next day. At that time, the attorney informed the officers that defendant was not willing to take a polygraph test but would provide requested phone records. That was the last contact the attorney had with the officers regarding defendant.

On February 2, these officers went to defendant’s home to discuss harassing phone calls she had received. During this conversation, the officers initiated a discussion regarding a polygraph examination. They convinced her to take the test and agreed to pick her up at her home the next morning.

On February 3, Conway picked defendant up at her home in Ste. Genevieve a little after 9:00 a.m. He took her to a satellite patrol office at Park Hills for the polygraph examination. Before meeting with the examiner, one of the officers told the examiner that defendant had an attorney and they had met with the attorney. The examiner read her the Miranda warnings shortly after 10:00 a.m. The polygraph examination consists of three parts, a pre-test, an in-test, and a post-test. During the pre-test portion, defendant got upset, left the building, and went across the highway.

Conway and Crump went after her. They talked her into returning and resuming the examination. Upon her return, the examiner conducted the in-test part of the examination. Upon its completion, the examiner left the room and discussed the results with Conway [279]*279and Crump. Among other things, he told them that he believed the gun was in a river.

The examiner then returned to the examination room. He told defendant that he interpreted the results to show that she was being deceptive. At the suppression hearing he testified, “that’s when she requested that she didn’t want to say anything else unless she had an attorney.” Defense counsel asked the examiner, “It was clear to you she didn’t want to talk anymore until she had a lawyer; fair?” He responded, “Yes. sir.”

The examiner ceased the interrogation and left the room. He went down a hallway and talked to Cramp. At the hearing on the motion to reconsider the motion to suppress, the examiner recalled asking Cramp, “what are we going to do now?” He remembered someone saying, “it was too important of a case to let her walk out.” Further, “some inference was made to the predicament that I believed that she had requested legal counsel.”

Cramp did not testify at the hearing on the motion to reconsider. However, at the original hearing, on the motion to suppress, he acknowledged that the examiner talked to him. According to Crump, the examiner “said something to me to the effect, she asked for an attorney, or, we have an attorney problem, or something along those lines.”

The polygraph examination was video and audio taped. The tapes also picked up some of the conversation between the examiner and Cramp. They reflect that the examiner said to Cramp, “we’re kind of treading on thin ice now that she’s asked for an attorney.” Cramp responded, “Oh, f— her. I’ll burn these tapes. We ain’t got nothing anyhow ... I didn’t hear her ask for one.”

Cramp said that his statement “did not mean that [he] would destroy evidence.” He was then asked, “Did it mean that you intended to pursue the interview further, even though she asked for a lawyer?” He responded, “That would certainly indicate that that’s what that meant. I don’t have an independent recollection now of that statement.” “I would say I was probably emotionally charged at that time, and the conversation that transpired between myself and [the examiner] just simply didn’t register with me.”

As the examiner left the examination room to talk to Cramp, defendant got up and started to leave the room. Conway, who had been in the hall outside, asked her to go back in the room and started talking to her. He was afraid that defendant was going to discontinue the interview.

A few moments later, after talking with the examiner, Cramp entered the room. He did not tell Conway that the examiner had told him defendant asked for an attorney. Together they interviewed defendant for over an hour, concluding about 5:15 p.m. Neither of them advised defendant of her right to have an attorney, nor did they secure her waiver of that right during this interview.

During this time, defendant admitted shooting her husband. She also told them where she had thrown the gun and went with them to the bridge where she had thrown the gun. Previous to these statements, defendant had not told any law enforcement officer that she had shot her husband, nor had she said where the gun could be found.

That same evening, a Ste. Genevieve police officer picked up the alibi witness and took her to the patrol’s satellite office in Park Hills. En route, the officer told her that defendant had confessed. At the satellite office, the examiner interviewed her from around 7:15 p.m. until 10:30 p.m. During that time, she told the examiner that she and defendant had stopped on a bridge and that defendant tossed something off the bridge.

Also that evening, Cramp called the Ste. Genevieve County prosecuting attorney. Conway overheard Crump’s portion of the conversation. Crump told the prosecuting attorney that defendant had confessed “and that it was our belief, based on what [the examiner] had said, that she had asked for an attorney prior to her confession.” The prosecuting attorney’s record of that conversation contains the notation, “[defendant] asked for a lawyer before confessing.”

On February 5, the alibi witness went with law enforcement officers to a bridge. This [280]*280bridge was where defendant disposed of the gun. There, the alibi witness threw a rock into the river in the approximate location where defendant had thrown the gun. The officers then recovered the gun. Defendant was charged with murder and armed criminal action. Thereafter, she filed motions to suppress her confession and all evidence obtained because of the confession, which the trial court granted.

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Bluebook (online)
950 S.W.2d 277, 1997 Mo. App. LEXIS 1415, 1997 WL 437172, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-bohn-moctapp-1997.