State v. Bunnell

47 A.3d 220, 2012 WL 2366301, 2012 R.I. LEXIS 92
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJune 22, 2012
DocketNo. 2010-388-C.A
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 47 A.3d 220 (State v. Bunnell) 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. Bunnell, 47 A.3d 220, 2012 WL 2366301, 2012 R.I. LEXIS 92 (R.I. 2012).

Opinion

OPINION

Chief Justice SUTTELL,

for the Court.

On October 31, 2004, three-year-old Thomas J. Wright1 lost his life as a result of extensive injuries that tragically had been inflicted upon him by his aunt and [222]*222her boyfriend after they returned home from a night of drinking. The defendant, Katherine Bunnell, was convicted by a jury of second-degree murder and of conspiracy to commit the offense of murder. As a result, she was sentenced to consecutive terms of life imprisonment at the Adult Correctional Institutions (ACI) for the murder conviction and ten years to serve at the ACI for the conspiracy conviction. The defendant now appeals on two grounds. First, she contends that the trial justice erred by excluding from evidence certain portions of an interview given by her boyfriend, Gilbert Delestre, at the Woonsocket Police Department the day before TJ died. Second, she asserts error in the trial justice’s denial of her motion for a new trial. For the reasons set forth in this opinion, we affirm the judgment of the Superior Court.

I

Facts and Procedural History

The facts surrounding this appalling infanticide are recorded in some detail in our opinion concerning Bunnell’s boyfriend and coconspirator, Gilbert Delestre. See State v. Delestre, 35 A.3d 886, 888-90 (R.I.2012); see also In re Destiny D., 922 A.2d 168, 170-72, 175 (R.I.2007) (upholding the termination of the parental rights of defendant and Delestre with respect to their two children). For the purposes of this appeal, we relate only such facts as are germane to the issues raised by defendant.

On October 29, 2004, defendant and De-lestre left their two children and defendant’s three nephews in the care of a fifteen-year-old babysitter, Kayla, so that they could enjoy a night out.2 They left their Woonsocket apartment around 7 p.m. and returned at approximately 2:30 a.m. the following morning.3 At trial, Kayla testified that TJ, defendant’s three-year-old nephew, had been having difficulty going to sleep and that, around 12 or 12:30 a.m., she let him lie down on the couch in the living room. She then lay down on the floor next to the couch and eventually fell asleep. Kayla said that she was awakened by defendant walking in the front door, screaming multiple times, “What happened to my f* * *ing house? Why is there a mess all over my floor?” with Delestre following behind her. Kayla testified that she “saw milk and yogurt and [something else she could not identify] mixed together,” which had spilled out of a bowl and landed on the carpeted area of the floor. TJ was no longer on the couch where Kayla had left him, so she told defendant “that TJ might have done it.” Kayla testified that defendant “didn’t really say any-thingf,] but [Delestre went] upstairs,” after which she heard three or four “loud slaps” and then heard TJ crying.

Kayla testified that, thereafter, defendant went upstairs and, after loudly questioning TJ’s brother, she brought TJ [223]*223downstairs, grasping him by his arms and dangling him in front of her. Kayla further testified that every time defendant would “step down on a stair, her knee would hit him in the back.” When defendant reached the last step,4 according to Kayla, defendant “just dropped” TJ from approximately two to two-and-a-half feet off the ground. TJ “landed on his stomach, and the side of his face hit the floor,” which caused his head to “bounce up a little bit.” Although TJ attempted to get up, Kayla stated that defendant “grabbed him by his wrists and ripped him up off the floor,” causing TJ to whimper.5

Kayla further averred that defendant “pulled” TJ towards the table where the mess was, while continuing to rant about the disarray of her apartment. TJ said nothing, but merely stood before defendant, crying. Kayla testified that defendant hit TJ on his back and in his chest approximately three or four times “with a closed fist,” in a manner where “the palm and the knuckles of her hand were hitting him.” The defendant’s attack caused TJ to fall to the ground, onto his stomach, with the side of his face again hitting the floor. According to Kayla, defendant “picked him back up by his wrist again” and continued hitting him another three or four times in the chest, all the while continuing to scream at him.

Kayla further testified that when defendant attempted to pull TJ up off the floor after he had been knocked down a third time, the toddler “didn’t stand up, he just kind of fell” onto his back, causing “[t]he back of his head [to] hit the floor and * * * bounce[ ] a little bit[,] and then he just laid there.” According to Kayla, defendant “ha[d] one hand on [TJ’s] wrist, so [he was] maybe an inch and a half off the floor, and then she slap[ped] him” back and forth across his face four times, with an open hand. With each slap defendant administered to the three-year old’s cheek, Kayla said that TJ’s “face would turn that way and hit the floor,” and defendant would “calif ] him stupid,” yelling at him: ‘Why did you mess up my floor? Why would you do this to my living room? What’s the matter with you?” Kayla compared the force that defendant used on the child to two “teenage girls * * * fighting.”

Kayla testified that defendant then “yanked [TJ] off the floor” and “pulled him over towards the closet.” She further stated that TJ “fell backwards,” causing “his back and his head [to] hit the door, and [that] he just sat there leaning up against the closet door.” Then defendant slapped TJ in the face again, with a force that Kayla proclaimed was “[l]ike two teens fighting.” TJ remained sitting on the floor, crying, “just leaning up against the door.” - Kayla said that defendant then “took milk and poured it on [TJ’s] head” for “maybe ten seconds,” and she added that TJ, although still crying, made no attempt to move.

The defendant then asked Kayla if she wanted to go home. Kayla said that she did, and defendant began looking for her car keys. Kayla testified that she turned to look outside and that when she turned back around, she saw TJ “about two and a half to three and a half feet in the air[,] falling down” toward her and defendant, as if “he had been thrown.” She attested [224]*224that the child traveled approximately four to five feet through the air, away from where Delestre was standing. Kayla stated that Delestre’s “arms were falling back to his waist[,] and [that] he told [defendant] to ‘get [TJ] out of here before’ he ‘drops him.’ ” Kayla indicated that “[TJ] landed on his stomach, but his leg was twisted up underneath his stomach,” as “if he was sitting * * * Indian style.” Kayla further testified that she believed it was TJ’s left leg that landed in the twisted manner and that TJ’s face again hit the floor when he landed.

According to Kayla, defendant went over to TJ and “just picked him up” by his wrists “until he was on his feet[,] and then she reached under his arms * * * to pick him up and she carried him over to the stairs.” The defendant then continued to search for her keys. At that point, Kayla testified, Delestre also went over to TJ, “picked him up and brought him up * * * two steps and then just put him down.” Kayla further attested that TJ just “leaned against the wall”; “[h]e was breathing heavy and * * * letting his body weight fall on the floor.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
47 A.3d 220, 2012 WL 2366301, 2012 R.I. LEXIS 92, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-bunnell-ri-2012.