State v. Bradley

431 N.W.2d 317, 1988 S.D. LEXIS 158, 1988 WL 119196
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 9, 1988
Docket15813
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 431 N.W.2d 317 (State v. Bradley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Bradley, 431 N.W.2d 317, 1988 S.D. LEXIS 158, 1988 WL 119196 (S.D. 1988).

Opinions

HENDERSON, Justice.

PROCEDURAL HISTORY/ISSUES

Defendant David Ray Bradley was charged with first-degree murder under SDCL 22-16-4, and was found guilty by a Minnehaha County jury. Thereafter, he was sentenced to life imprisonment in the State Penitentiary. Bradley appeals his conviction alleging trial court error in four regards:

(1) The trial court erroneously ruled as a matter of law that a State witness was not an accomplice;
(2) Evidence concerning prior bad acts was inadmissible;
(3) Hearsay testimony that the victim was afraid of the defendant was improperly admitted; and
(4) The trial court’s refusal to admit testimony concerning a traffic count at the site where the victim was found was an abuse of discretion.

We hold the trial court was correct on Issues (1) and (2), correct for the wrong reason on Issue (3), and that its decision on Issue (4) was not an abuse of discretion. Finding no error, we affirm the conviction in this sordid, and gruesome, case of murder.

FACTS

On September 4, 1986, at approximately 6:00 p.m., two men gathering mushrooms in a roadside ditch near Renner, South Dakota, discovered a badly decomposed hu[319]*319man corpse. The head of the body had been severed and lay a few feet away. An identification card found in a pocket of a pair of discarded jeans, which lay nearby, indicated that the body might be that of a twenty-two-year-old Indian woman named Jamie Thunder Hawk. Dental records confirmed this fact. Thunder Hawk’s body was too badly decomposed for the coroner to determine a cause of death, but his autopsy report indicated that the decapitation, which apparently was carried out by sawing with a large knife, had been inflicted post-mortem. Nor could the coroner establish an exact time of death: He estimated that Thunder Hawk had probably been killed two or three weeks before her body was found.

Once Thunder Hawk had been identified, police interviewed many of her acquaintances in Sioux Falls, where she had lived. This led to the arrest of Bradley, who was Thunder Hawk’s boyfriend, and two men, Vernon Lillegaard and Darryl Davids, with whom Bradley had shared an apartment during early August 1986.

On September 5, 1986, Davids, while being booked on a charge of being an accessory to Thunder Hawk’s murder, asked to talk to a deputy, and subsequently told police that he had witnessed the murder, and that he, Lillegaard, and Bradley had driven to the place where Thunder Hawk was found. Bradley had cut off Thunder Hawk’s head, hit her head with a tire iron, and dumped her body in the ditch, he said. According to his story, the actual murder took place the previous night, after Bradley and Thunder Hawk had quarreled over an incident involving a pair of shoes, which Bradley had allegedly taken, by force, from Thunder Hawk. In reference to robbery charges against Bradley stemming from that incident, Davids told police that Bradley said to Thunder Hawk: “If you think I’m going to go to prison for ten to fifteen years over a seven dollar pair of shoes, you’re crazier than heck.” Lillegaard, after initially denying any knowledge of Thunder Hawk’s murder and the later decapitation, told a similar story to police.

Davids, at trial, testified that he had never seen the murder or the body, and that he told police only what they wanted to hear. Lillegaard, however, testified fully, stating that Bradley, angered over the robbery incident, had apparently pushed Thunder Hawk so that she had fallen backwards and been knocked unconscious against a stair step. There was evidence that Bradley stood over Thunder Hawk and kicked her in the ribs with his cowboy boots. Lillegaard, by his own words, held a door open while Bradley carried Thunder Hawk inside the apartment. Bradley then undressed Thunder Hawk and commenced having sexual intercourse with her. Thunder Hawk then revived and struggled, screaming “Get off me, you son-of-a-bitch.” Bradley stated, “I ought to punch your head off.” Thereupon, Bradley strangled her to death while Lillegaard passively watched. Davids, according to Lillegaard, had been outside, and did not become involved until Thunder Hawk was already dead. Bradley carried the corpse to Davids’ car, and placed it in the trunk. The body was decapitated and disposed of, by Bradley, during a trip the three took to Baltic, South Dakota, on August 16, 1986.

We now discourse on testimony of several witnesses. Detailing Bradley’s pre-homi-cide violence upon Thunder Hawk is vital to our consideration. Numerous witnesses testified that Bradley’s relationship with Thunder Hawk was a violent one. Mary Ramey, in May 1986, had seen a cigarette burn on Thunder Hawk’s neck, which Thunder Hawk said was inflicted by “David.” In July, Thunder Hawk had a black eye. When Ramey asked why Thunder Hawk stayed with Bradley, she replied that Bradley would just find her again anyway. Judy Ebright, who was Thunder Hawk’s roommate in May, June, and most of July 1986, testified that she saw Thunder Hawk in May with her hair partly cut off. Thunder Hawk told Ebright, in response to her questions, that Bradley had done it with a butcher knife, cutting her hands in the process (Ebright saw the scars). Ebright lent Thunder Hawk a pair of jeans on May 20, 1986. A few days later, Ebright noticed blood on them and [320]*320asked about it. Thunder Hawk replied that the blood was from an infected cigarette burn inflicted by Bradley. During the Fourth of July weekend, Ebright noticed bruises on Thunder Hawk’s legs and, in the presence of Bradley, asked about the bruises. Thunder Hawk said that Bradley did it. Bradley did not react to Thunder Hawk's statement. On July 13, 1986, Thunder Hawk seemed normal to Ebright. The next day, however, Thunder Hawk exhibited a black eye, a cigarette burn, and bruises on her arms; all of this was inflicted, according to Thunder Hawk, by Bradley, after he caught her with Vernon Lille-gaard. Later that month, Ebright noticed a scab on Thunder Hawk’s leg where she had an “Elvis” tattoo, in honor of her husband (who was then in jail). Thunder Hawk, when asked, indicated that Bradley had tried to burn off the tattoo with a cigarette. Bradley, who was present during this conversation, just smiled. On July 22, 1986, Thunder Hawk, in a white uniform, crawled into Ebright’s home, crying. She told Ebright that Bradley had “drug her around” and taken her shoes (Thunder Hawk had recently been hired as a nurse’s assistant and was required to wear white clothing and shoes). The missing shoes were anonymously returned three or four days later, according to Ebright. In late July, Thunder Hawk moved out of Ebright’s apartment, and Ebright did not see her again.

Barbara Gottsch, a bartender at the Frontier Bar, noticed Thunder Hawk’s rough haircut in May 1986, and inquired about it. Thunder Hawk, Gottsch testified, told her that Bradley had cut it off with a knife. In June or July 1986, Gottsch watched while somebody bought Thunder Hawk a drink. She heard Bradley tell Thunder Hawk that “if he caught her messing around, the next time it would be her head that came off instead of her hair.” Gottsch. also saw Bradley burn Thunder Hawk with a lit cigarette on three separate occasions in the bar that summer; once, while he was kissing Thunder Hawk, he stubbed out his cigarette on her shoulder. Bradley, at least a dozen times, yanked Thunder Hawk’s head around by the hair in Gottsch’s presence.

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State v. Bradley
431 N.W.2d 317 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 1988)

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Bluebook (online)
431 N.W.2d 317, 1988 S.D. LEXIS 158, 1988 WL 119196, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-bradley-sd-1988.