State v. Buchanan

CourtCourt of Appeals of Kansas
DecidedAugust 26, 2022
Docket123100
StatusUnpublished

This text of State v. Buchanan (State v. Buchanan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals 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. Buchanan, (kanctapp 2022).

Opinion

NOT DESIGNATED FOR PUBLICATION

No. 123,100

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF KANSAS

STATE OF KANSAS, Appellee,

v.

RONALD LEVON BUCHANAN, Appellant.

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Appeal from Johnson District Court; JAMES CHARLES DROEGE, judge. Opinion filed August 26, 2022. Affirmed.

Jennifer C. Bates, of Kansas Appellate Defender Office, for appellant, and Ronald Buchanan, appellant pro se.

Jacob M. Gontesky, assistant district attorney, Stephen M. Howe, district attorney, and Derek Schmidt, attorney general, for appellee.

Before HILL, P.J., COBLE, J., and PATRICK D. MCANANY, S.J.

PER CURIAM: A jury convicted Ronald Levon Buchanan of multiple charges including three counts of attempted first-degree murder and six counts of aggravated arson after an early-morning fire in the apartment complex where his daughter lived. Buchanan appeals his convictions. He contends the aggravated arson convictions were multiplicitous, the State presented insufficient evidence to show he intended to kill three victims, and the district court violated his right to conflict-free counsel. And in a

1 supplemental pro se brief, Buchanan makes additional claims challenging the evidence and alleging prosecutorial error.

Although the ignition of the fire was a single act, we find Buchanan's aggravated arson convictions do not improperly charge him with multiple offenses for that sole action because the applicable statute permits prosecution for each occupied apartment within the complex. The State presented sufficient evidence to support the attempted first-degree murder convictions. The district court did not violate Buchanan's right to conflict-free counsel where his pro se motions for new trial were untimely and did not abuse its discretion in summarily denying relief. Buchanan's remaining supplemental issues are unpersuasive because they are either not preserved for appeal or are unsupported by the record. We affirm his convictions.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

On May 13, 2018, Buchanan's daughter, Maraya Buchanan, graduated from high school. Maraya and her father previously had an argument that led to her uninviting Buchanan to the graduation ceremony, although he attended against her wishes. Maraya did not speak to her father at the ceremony. After the contentious event, Buchanan posted to his social media account about his discontent with the graduation, his hurt feelings, and the disrespect he felt from his daughter and her mother, Dena Rendon.

Maraya, her mother, and Maraya's younger brother, K.J., lived together in an upper-floor unit of the Springhill Apartments complex in Overland Park, Kansas. After the graduation ceremony, Maraya returned to the apartment with her mother and brother. Later that night, Buchanan texted Maraya requesting she leave the key to his own apartment outside of her apartment so he could retrieve it. Maraya placed the key under the doormat outside her front door at the top of the apartment stairs. Mother moved her car to give Buchanan the appearance she was not at home to avoid any confrontation.

2 After seeing Buchanan's social media post on Facebook about Maraya's graduation, Theresa Griswold, one of Maraya's neighbors in the apartment complex, contacted him. Buchanan told Griswold that he was upset about how he had been treated and asked Griswold to retrieve some of his property from Maraya's apartment. She initially agreed, but when she could not reach Maraya's mother, and because it was so late (around midnight), Griswold feel asleep. Griswold woke a few hours later to find her apartment was on fire.

Around the same time, K.J. opened the front door to their apartment and saw a "doorway full of fire" that would not permit the family access to the stairs to escape the fire. Having no other options, the family tied blankets together and Mother lowered her children out the window to the ground before climbing out herself.

Just after 4 a.m. on May 14, 2018, the Overland Park Fire Department responded to the fire at the apartment complex. The severity of the fire, combined with the apartment complex's numerous occupants, required the help of 10 fire companies and multiple ancillary units. Multiple occupants were trapped inside the building when the fire companies arrived, but rescue was difficult because the fire caused some of the external walls to collapse. All occupants managed to evacuate, except for a dog belonging to Maraya and her family.

Once the fire was extinguished, fire investigators combed through the remains and determined the origin of the fire was the exterior doorway to Maraya's apartment. The lead fire investigator testified the southeast exterior stairway landing—the doorway to Maraya's apartment—was the origin of the fire based on the fire patterns and because the landing was "totally burned out and consumed by the fire."

Investigators determined the fire was intentionally set after ruling out other possible sources. The investigators considered and eliminated electrical sources, natural

3 causes, and equipment malfunction. Similarly, the investigators concluded a cigarette, or other carelessly discarding smoking materials, could not have caused the fire because the stairwell was "very well kept and clean" with no material to fuel such a fire.

While scanning for evidence, a canine trained in detecting accelerants alerted to a glass lemonade bottle lying in a grassy area next to the apartment building. The bottle contained a small amount of a clear liquid. After taking the bottle and its contents into evidence, a forensic scientist at the Kansas Bureau of Investigation (KBI) later confirmed the liquid was acetone.

Maraya told fire investigators at the scene that she believed her father, Buchanan, started the fire. Mother reiterated this claim. After escaping the apartment, Maraya texted Buchanan and conveyed she believed he was responsible. Buchanan responded saying he had "no clue" what she was talking about and that he had "been sitting here getting [his] thoughts together on how [he] was treated at the graduation." A couple of hours later, Buchanan messaged Maraya's friend, Kourtney Snype: "Maraya treated me like shit at her graduation refuse to take a pic with me and gave the 50 dollars in [r]oses away when I gave them to her, then I wake up this morning and [mother]'s house on [sic] fire and my dog is dead." Buchanan then denied responsibility for the fire and shared he did not care what losses Maraya and her mother had suffered as a result of the fire. Buchanan also posted to social media a picture of the fire alongside this statement:

"Wow Pray for Daughter and her mom, but Hot Damn Karma moves with the speed of lighting [sic], their house burned down last night. Lost everything they have my compassion but they have no support from me. I have 2extra rooms and I'll rather use them [sic] rooms as piss pads before they're welcome [ . . .] they Got What God sent to em. Damn I wish they [sic] house didn't burn down but I'll be a lie [sic] if I said I cared . . . ."

4 About one month later, police detectives interviewed Buchanan. He spoke with the detectives about his argument with Maraya and the alleged events at the graduation ceremony that caused him to become upset and feel disrespected. Buchanan told the detectives he became ill after the graduation, and he took himself to the hospital emergency room at Research Medical Center in Kansas City. Buchanan stated he went to the hospital at about 11:30 p.m. on May 13, but left a couple of hours later, around 2 a.m.

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State v. Buchanan, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-buchanan-kanctapp-2022.