State v. Brinkley

888 P.2d 819, 256 Kan. 808, 1995 Kan. LEXIS 8
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJanuary 27, 1995
Docket69,723
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 888 P.2d 819 (State v. Brinkley) 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. Brinkley, 888 P.2d 819, 256 Kan. 808, 1995 Kan. LEXIS 8 (kan 1995).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Six, J.:

Sherrell Gary Brinldey appeals his first-degree murder conviction, K.S.A. 1989 Supp. 21-3401, resulting from the May 1990 shooting death of Everett “Skeet” Bishop. Brinkley alleges numerous errors in his conviction and sentence.

*809 Focusing on the five issues raised by the appellate defender, we consider whether the trial court erred in: (1) refusing to give a cautionary instruction on informant testimony; (2) refusing to allow Brinkley access to files concerning the investigations of two other homicides; and (3) giving an aiding and abetting instruction when the charging document did not allege aiding and abetting. We also review whether: (4) comments on Brinkley s post-arrest silence require reversal under Doyle v. Ohio, 426 U.S. 610, 49 L. Ed. 2d 91, 96 S.Ct. 2240 (1976); and (5) a previous conviction for attempted bank robbery may serve as a predicate offense under the Habitual Criminal Act, K.S.A. 1989 Supp. 21-4504(a) (the HCA).

The trial court sentenced Brinkley to two consecutive life terms under the HCA, based on Brinkley’s prior conviction for attempted bank robbery. Our jurisdiction is under K.S.A. 1993 Supp. 22-3601(b)(1) (a direct appeal from a class A felony conviction).

Brinkley’s trial lasted six days. Twenty witnesses testified, and over 40 exhibits were introduced. The fundamental question of who killed Skeet Bishop turned on a credibility contest between Brinkley and the State’s primary witness, Eric Montgomery. Both men: (1) admitted to being present when Bishop was murdered outside Bishop’s home; (2) told different stories about the circumstances leading up to the shooting; (3) implicated one another for the shooting; (4) admitted they would lie, and had lied, to avoid returning to prison; and (5) testified they helped conceal the body out of fear of being implicated in the crime or being physically harmed by the other. We affirm the conviction. The case is remanded for resentencing because of an erroneous application of the HCA.

Facts

The facts may be summarized in three parts: (1) how Brinkley, Montgomery, and Bishop came to know one another; (2) Montgomery’s story, which formed the basis for the State’s theory that Brinkley committed the murder; and (3) Brinkley’s story, which anchored his defense that Montgomery committed the murder *810 but pointed the finger at Brinkley when promised favorable treatment by the State.

Connections between Brinkley, Montgomery, and Bishop

Montgomery and Brinkley met in the Leavenworth Federal Penitentiary. After their releases from prison they kept in touch. Montgomery lived in Kansas City, Missouri, while Brinkley moved around from North Dakota to Colorado, and eventually to Florida.

At the time of the events leading to Bishop’s murder, Montgomery and Brinkley were engaged in various illegal activities, individually and together. The illegal scheme that brought Bishop into the picture involved stolen automobiles.

Montgomery and Bishop first became acquainted in 1987 or 1988 when Montgomery, as a favor to another friend in prison, helped scare away some “young individuals” who had been “terrorizing” Bishop by shooting at his house. Montgomery found Bishop to be a convenient friend because Bishop could purchase firearms and ammunition, whereas Montgomery, with a prior felony conviction, could not. Montgomery carried a key to Bishop’s house, which contained a well-supplied arsenal of handguns, rifles, and shotguns.

One day, Bishop was standing nearby while Montgomery was on the telephone with Brinkley. Brinkley wanted Montgomery to come to Florida and pick up a car and drive it back to Kansas City. Bishop heard Montgomery talking about a trip to Florida and asked if he could go. Montgomery cleared Bishop’s participation with Brinkley. In February 1990, Montgomery and Bishop flew together on one-way tickets to Tampa. Brinkley met them at the airport and drove them to Jacksonville, where they met Henry Dyer Wiggins, a friend of Brinkley’s. Montgomery and Bishop picked up a car and drove it back to Kansas City.

In early May 1990, Montgomery and Bishop again traveled south, this time to North Carolina, to pick up another car from Brinkley. They stayed one night and started back the next morning.

A few weeks later, Brinkley came to Kansas City, and during his visit the Bishop murder took place. Brinkley’s reason for trav *811 eling to Kansas City was a source of dispute at trial, as were most of the facts from that point forward. However, the stories regarding Brinkley s visit were consistent at least on the following facts: Brinkley and Montgomery went out to Bishop’s house twice, once on a Friday and again on Saturday. During the second visit, the three men took some guns out behind Bishop’s house, supposedly for target practice. Once outside, Bishop was shot and killed. Brinkley and Montgomery placed Bishop’s body in a 55-gallon steel barrel, welded the lid shut, chopped holes in the barrel, and rolled it into the Missouri River, the body was never found. Brinkley left town the next day.

The State’s Theory: Montgomery’s Story

According to Montgomery, Bishop’s downfall began on their North Carolina trip to pick up a stolen Datsun 280Z from Brinkley. On the morning of their return departure, Brinkley escorted the two men to the highway because the streets in his neighborhood were hard to navigate. Brinkley drove his own car, Bishop drove the 280Z, and Montgomery drove the AMC Eagle in which he and Bishop had driven to North Carolina. Suddenly, Bishop “became very frightened” and started driving erratically. “[H]e would either go too slow or too fast . . . either go ninety miles an hour or twenty-five miles an hour on the freeway,” and “he ran stop signs,” and “came out of a side street and pulled on to the main highway.” Bishop’s general state of panic resumed, Montgomery related, when the 280Z broke down in St. Louis. Montgomery and Bishop abandoned the 280Z in St. Louis and drove on to Kansas City together in Montgomery’s car.

When Montgomery called Brinkley from Kansas City, Brinkley was upset about the 280Z being abandoned in St. Louis. Brinkley was concerned that Bishop would become scared and tell the police what he knew about Brinkley’s illegal activities. Montgomery said he tried to alleviate Brinkley’s fears and tried to explain he had confidence in Bishop.

Brinkley called Montgomeiy in late May and said he was coming through Kansas City on his way to Colorado, and that he was going to “do something about Mr. Bishop.” They went out to *812 Bishop’s house, where Brinkley argued with Bishop while Montgomery tried to “smooth things over.” After two or three hours, Brinkley and Montgomery left. Montgomery had the impression that the problems were worked out.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
888 P.2d 819, 256 Kan. 808, 1995 Kan. LEXIS 8, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-brinkley-kan-1995.