State v. Brown

898 A.2d 69, 2006 R.I. LEXIS 78, 2006 WL 1223140
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedMay 9, 2006
Docket2001-539-C.A.
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 898 A.2d 69 (State v. Brown) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Brown, 898 A.2d 69, 2006 R.I. LEXIS 78, 2006 WL 1223140 (R.I. 2006).

Opinion

OPINION

Justice FLAHERTY, for the Court.

On March 8, 2001, a jury found the defendant, James Brown, guilty of first-degree murder, first-degree sexual assault, larceny under $500, and selling leased property over $500. After it deliberated further, as it is required to do under G.L. 1956 § 11-23-2(4) and G.L.1956 § 12-19.2 — 1, 1 the jury found that the murder of *72 the victim, Pamela Plante, involved torture and/or aggravated battery. After he denied Brown’s motion for a new trial, the trial justice sentenced him to life imprisonment without parole on the murder count. The trial justice also sentenced Brown to life imprisonment for sexual assault, one year’s imprisonment for larceny, and ten years for selling leased property. All sentences were to be served consecutively.

Brown filed a timely notice of appeal and he challenges the judgment of conviction on four grounds. First, Brown argues that the trial justice erred when he denied his motion to suppress certain statements Brown made to the Woonsocket police, as well as a DNA sample he provided. Brown also contends that the trial justice erred when he declined to instruct the jury that the defense did not have the burden of proving beyond a reasonable doubt its theory that someone else committed the murder. In addition, defendant argues that the trial justice made a reversible error when he denied his request to instruct the jury about the lesser-included offense of second-degree murder. Finally, Brown maintains that it was error for the trial justice to impose a life sentence without the possibility of parole in the face of substantial mitigating circumstances. For the reasons set forth herein, we deny the defendant’s appeal and affirm the judgment of conviction.

Facts

An unsettling story of addiction, crime, and violence serves as the backdrop of Pamela Plante’s terrifying ■ murder. A thirty-two-year-old mother of two young children, Pam lived in Woonsocket and worked at a nearby B.J.’s Warehouse store. She shared the upbringing of her youngest children with their father, Pam’s ex-boyfriend Peter Guerard. She was close to her family and spoke with her parents and siblings on a regular basis. Beneath the veneer of this seemingly ordinary life, however, Pam suffered from an addiction that stole her away from her family. She sometimes disappeared for days with other drug users to get high.

The evening of April 2, 1998, began innocently. On that evening, Pam and her children went out to dinner with Constance Fregeau, Pam’s mother. After dinner, Constance dropped Pam and the children at Pam’s apartment. Pam told her mother that the children would be spending the night with their father and that she planned to stay home and relax. However, Pam did not remain at home. Instead, she, defendant, and a man named Bernie Williams went to the home of Eddie Burke to drink and smoke cocaine. At some point that night, Pam and Brown left Burke’s house together. Brown returned alone about an hour later. At about 11 p.m., Brown and Williams left Burke’s home. At that time, Brown told Williams that he wanted to sleep with Pam, and he asked Williams if he wished to accompany him. Williams declined and went his own way, but Brown headed in the direction of Pam’s apartment.

A few days later, Constance began to worry because she had not heard from Pam. She drove by Pam’s apartment a few times and noticed that the lights in the house were on, even though her daughter was not answering her phone and her car *73 was not in the driveway. Growing more and more concerned, Constance borrowed a spare key from Peter Gnerard and entered the apartment on Sunday morning, April 5, 1998. In the living room, Constance discovered the brutalized and lifeless body of her slain daughter on the floor, crammed between the coffee table and sofa. There was a large stain on the floor as well as shards of broken glass. Pam’s shirt was bloody and there was a maroon place mat draped over her. Terrified, Constance ran to the kitchen to use the telephone to call for help. There was no dial tone, however, because someone had removed the cord.

Police later determined that Pam’s hands and neck were bound with the telephone cord and tie backs from the living room curtains. The sofa and surrounding area were bloodstained. Pam’s right breast was exposed and her bra pushed up. One leg of her black jeans had been cut from the ankle to the waist band and around the front to the crotch area. Her underwear appeared to have been partially cut or ripped off and her lower torso was nude. The sock on Pam’s left foot had a used tampon stuffed inside it. Forensic tests confirmed the existence of seminal fluid in Pam’s vagina, on the rug, and on the bottom of the inner right leg of the black jeans, which were cut and hanging from her.

A subsequent examination of Pam’s remains illuminated even more fully the grim circumstances of her death. Strands of her own hair entwined in her bloody fingers indicated that she had struggled to remove the cord and ties from her neck. She also had defensive cuts on her hands suggesting that she tried to resist her attacker. Burst blood vessels in her eyes established that she had been strangled before she died. Pam was also stabbed several times in the neck, and a serrated kitchen knife consistent with these wounds was found in the bathroom sink. The assailant had plunged the blade four and one half inches into her neck, piercing her trachea, or breathing tube, and causing blood to enter her airway.

The medical examiner determined that Pam died late Thursday evening (April 2) or early Friday morning (April 8) as the result of both asphyxiation caused by strangulation and the stab wound that pierced her trachea. It was patently clear that her killer had left her to die a slow and agonizing death. According to the medical examiner, neither the stab wound nor the ligature around her neck would have killed her instantly. Rather, because the telephone cord was wrapped tightly around her neck and also attached to her hands (which were bound behind her back), only by keeping her hands high in an unnatural and uncomfortable position could Pam prevent her strangulation. As she struggled to free her hands, and as her muscles fatigued from trying to keep them in this abnormal position, Pam would have inevitably tightened the cord around her neck and thereby cut off the flow of blood to her brain. In this condition, the medical examiner concluded that Pam could have fallen in and out of consciousness as the pressure from the cord around her neck loosened and tightened, until she finally expired.

A little over eleven months after Constance Fregeau discovered her daughter’s mangled body, the Woonsocket police received information that Brown was one of the last people who had been in Pam’s company before she died. Detective Luke Simard testified that he contacted Brown after receiving this information and he asked him to come to the police station so the police might learn what he knew of the circumstances surrounding Pam’s death. Brown expressed a desire to be helpful, *74 but he also told the detective that he could not come that evening because he was working in Worcester from 6 p.m. until 2 a.m. However, Det.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
898 A.2d 69, 2006 R.I. LEXIS 78, 2006 WL 1223140, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-brown-ri-2006.