State v. Bornholdt

932 P.2d 964, 261 Kan. 644, 1997 Kan. LEXIS 26
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJanuary 31, 1997
Docket75,185
StatusPublished
Cited by46 cases

This text of 932 P.2d 964 (State v. Bornholdt) 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. Bornholdt, 932 P.2d 964, 261 Kan. 644, 1997 Kan. LEXIS 26 (kan 1997).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

LARSON; J.:

Michael Bomholdt appeals his jury convictions of criminal possession of a firearm and first-degree murder with the imposition of a hard 40 sentence for the shooting death of Jon Dreiling.

Factual Background

In the spring of 1993, Jon Dreiling and Eric Day were arrested for drug-related offenses. Dreiling made a deal with the State and *647 agreed to testify against Day in a trial scheduled in September 1993.

In July and August 1993, Bomholdt told his friend Tracy Wheeler that Dreiling was a snitch and did not deserve to live. In July, Bomholdt approached Marian Cunningham and told her that a person involved in a drug case was willing to pay him to kill a State witness in that case. Cunningham claimed Bomholdt asked for her help because he knew the victim and did not want the victim to see his face. Bomholdt wanted Cunningham to distract this person while he shot him, in return for $2,000. Cunningham refused but did not contact the police.

About 4 p.m. on Saturday, August 21, 1993, Dreiling was in his vehicle waiting for a light at the intersection of Harry and Market Streets in Wichita. A man approached Dreiling from the rear and shot him in the back of the head. The man tossed the gun at Kirk Eck, who was stopped one lane over and behind Dreiling’s vehicle, saying, “Here, [expletive], hold the gun.” The man ran east on Harry, then turned north down an alley in between Market and Broadway Streets, throwing down his T-shirt and a rubber glove as he ran.

Eck described the man as having dirty blond shoulder-length hair, with a white shirt, and wearing shorts with lavender/purple biking shorts underneath. He thought the man had a mustache. Eck saw the man’s face from about 3 feet away through an open window for a few moments before being hit in the left cheek by the gun. Police, suspecting Day was the gunman, showed Eck a photo array which contained pictures of six men, including Day, but not Bomholdt. Eck did not identify anyone in the array.

Around the time of the shooting, Lloyd Robinson was routing a stump north of Harry Street in the alley between Main and Market Streets. He saw a jogger running north toward him, whom he described as a white male, 5T0” to 6’, slight to medium build, about 160 to 175 pounds, with collar-length sandy or dishwater blond hair, and an unshaven face. That evening Robinson discovered a murder had taken place and called the police, telling them the runner he saw had worn shorts and tennis shoes and had hair pulled up behind, but he did not think the man had worn a shirt.

*648 Other witnesses at the scene included James Krueger, who was Dreiling’s boss, and Twila Miller. Krueger was in a vehicle facing the parking lot on the south side of Harry and was preparing to turn north on Market when he heard the gunshot. As he was turning, he saw a man run toward a blue Geo Tracker, toss something inside, and run northward while peeling off a T-shirt. Krueger saw only the back of the man, but described him as Caucasian, around 6’, with a wiry build and shoulder-length hair. Krueger told police at the scene that the man wore a T-shirt and purple biking shorts with shorts over them of an unknown color.

Miller was waiting at the intersection of Harry and Market in a Chevrolet Blazer just in front of Dreiling’s vehicle. The windows of her vehicle were tinted, and she wore tinted lenses. She saw a man approach the vehicle through her side mirror. She described him as a white male, 5’7” to 5’8”, early 20’s, about 130 to 135 pounds, with dark brown to black hair and a full beard.

The police found a styrofoam cup, with a lid and straw, on top of Dreiling’s vehicle, recovered a gun from the passenger floorboard of Eck’s Tracker, and found a white T-shirt with an MCI logo in a yard adjacent to the alley between Market and Broadway. Bomholdt and his former girlfriend had worked at MCI; his girlfriend’s MCI T-shirt was missing. A plastic glove and a dark brown to black hair were entangled in the shirt. No fingerprints were recovered from any of these items, and the hair did not match Bomholdt’s.

Between 6 and 8 p.m. the evening of the shooting, Bomholdt drove up to Marian Cunningham’s home and, while still in his car, told Cunningham: “I did it, I did it.” Bomholdt was wearing pink spandex shorts, with faded blue or green shorts over them, and tennis shoes. He was not wearing a shirt and was unshaven. Bomholdt went inside and explained that he had actually shot and killed Dreiling. Cunningham claimed that Bomholdt then reenacted the murder scene in her kitchen. Cunningham testified that Bomholdt told her he had walked up to the driver’s window of Dreiling’s car, put the gun behind Dreiling’s ear, shot him, and then took off running through the alleys, ditching his disguise and gun along the *649 way. Bomholdt said he ran to his car and then drove by the murder scene a few times before driving to Cunningham’s home.

Near the end of the following week, Cunningham discovered that a shooting had occurred in the area described by Bomholdt and decided to talk to the police. She identified Bomholdt from a picture. Certain details of Cunningham’s story differed from what she initially told the police, from her testimony at the preliminary hearing, and from her trial testimony, but in all three she related substantially the same story previously stated.

After Cunningham had spoken to the police, they showed a photo array to Eck, who picked out Bomholdt as the possible suspect, but asked to see an individual lineup. Eck was not told he had selected correctly. The same lineup was shown to Miller, who was unable to identify anyone, and to Robinson, who said Bomholdt was his choice, but also was not told he had correctly selected the suspect.

On August 30, 1993, while trying to find Bomholdt, the police passed him driving in his car on the street and stopped him. He was transported to police headquarters for questioning, and his car was impounded. The police obtained permission to search his storage unit but were refused permission to search his car. After a short time, Bomholdt terminated the interview, and the police placed him under arrest.

The officers did an inventory search of his car. When they discovered a calculator-type pouch containing drag paraphernalia, the officers placed the pouch back inside, resealed the car, and obtained a warrant to search. They found drags, drag paraphernalia, clothes similar to those worn by the killer, and a wallet with the name and phone number of Eric Day on papers inside. A search of the storage compartment procured a photograph of Bomholdt wearing a blue T-shirt and a pair of grey shorts over pink spandex shorts.

After Bomholdt’s arrest, a live lineup of six people, including Bomholdt, was shown to Eck and Robinson. Eck identified Bomholdt and said he was 50 percent sure of the identification. Robinson chose the person next to Bomholdt, who was an undercover police officer.

*650 Subsequent to the arrest, the police contacted Tracy Wheeler and later spoke to him at his attorney s office.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
932 P.2d 964, 261 Kan. 644, 1997 Kan. LEXIS 26, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-bornholdt-kan-1997.