State v. Burke

220 A.2d 508, 101 R.I. 103, 1966 R.I. LEXIS 360
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJune 23, 1966
DocketEx. No. 10790
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 220 A.2d 508 (State v. Burke) 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. Burke, 220 A.2d 508, 101 R.I. 103, 1966 R.I. LEXIS 360 (R.I. 1966).

Opinion

*104 Powers, J.

This indictment for kidnapping was tried to a superior court justice sitting with a jury who returned a verdict of guilty. The case is before us on the defendant’s bill of exceptions to certain rulings made during the course of the trial.

The ultimate facts not in dispute establish that at or .about 9:44 on the evening of October 9, 1964, officer Francis R. Labrie of the Smithfield police department received a radio call directing him to investigate an apparent breaking and entering of a First National store located on Putnam avenue in the village of Greenville. Arriving at the store officer Laibrie observed defendant run from the rear of a parked car, enter it and drive off at high speed. The officer chased the car until, attempting to turn off Putnam avenue onto Greenville avenue, it struck a guy wire and stalled.

The defendant was out of the car when officer Labrie caught up with it. After threatening Labrie, defendant attempted to escape by running down an embankment into a body of water known as Hopkins Pond. After the officer had fired several shots and ordered defendant to surrender, the latter came out of the pond and was handcuffed by officer Labrie and officer Charles E. Gorman, Jr., who had joined in the pursuit.

Returning defendant to the car he had been driving, where a crowd had gathered, the police officers learned that there was someone in the trunk. Upon unlocking it they found Lionel C. Lamonde, grocery manager of the First National Store, bound hand and foot by two belts, head bleeding and in a dazed condition. He was treated by the rescue squad and later hospitalized. It was on his version of the events of the evening that the instant indictment was returned.

*105 According to said manager, he transferred some $5,000 in bills, $3,500 in checks and $1,900 in change from the cash registers to- the safe before closing the store on the evening of October 9, 1964. About ten minutes past nine that evening he and the meat manager secured the store for the night in keeping with company policy and then went to their respective cars which were the only ones remaining in the parking lot. The two men drove out of the parking lot together, Lamonde driving easterly along Putnam Pike while the meat manager drove in the opposite direction. Lamonde turned right on Greenville avenue, headed for hia home in Warwick and proceeded along said avenue some two miles to route 5. He slowed up for the traffic signal and was turning to- his right on route 5 when his car was bumped from the rear.

It is his testimony that before he could get out of his car to investigate the damage, defendant appeared at the driver’s window, pointed a gun and ordered him to open the rear door, all doors being looked and windows up. There then follows a recital of how defendant got in the rear seat of Lamonde’s car, hit him across the right side of the head with the gun 'and ordered him to turn around and drive in the direction of the store. Further, Lamonde recounted how he was made to stop -in a dark spot in the highway, had his hands bound behind his head with his own belt, and with defendant driving returned to Putnam Pike where they turned east, .thence to some dark road not known to' Lamonde.

Continuing, Lamonde testified that he then, under threat of death, gave defendant the combinations of the safe after being struck on the right ear with the gun, and with his hands still bound by the belt was ordered out of the car. The defendant then unbound his hands only to rebind them again with Lamonde’s' belt, but this time with his arms behind and down rather than up' behind the head. He was *106 then pushed to the rear and ordered into the trunk of the car after which defendant, as Lamonde says, “pulled out a ■belt from his possession that he had on 'him, and bound my feet, my legs, rather.” The trunk was then closed and locked.

Lamonde described how the car was driven off, suddenly stopped, and the next thing of which he was aware was the breaking of glass. After some seven or ten minutes the car started up again 'and traveled at a fast rate of speed until it collided with something and stopped. He concluded by describing the commotion attendant upon defendant’s apprehension up to Lamonde’s release, as heard by him from the trunk of the car.

The defendant readily admitted breaking into the First National Store and driving Lamonde’s car with the manager in the trunk away from the scene, but advanced a totally different version of the manager’s role in the evening’s events. Rather than being a coerced victim in defendant’s single-handed efforts to rob the First National Store, Lamonde, according to defendant, was a fellow conspirator and locking him in the trunk with his arms and legs bound was part of an agreed plan designed to* conceal the manager’s participation.

It is defendant’s testimony that on a Friday night in February 1964, he received an anonymous telephone call at a social club in Providence and the caller asked if he were “William or Billy Burke” who had spent time in prison. Receiving an affirmative answer the caller then asked if he would like to make some money. The defendant thought that someone was playing a practical joke and apparently closed the conversation.

Later, according to defendant, he received another such call at the same club in the last week of March or the first week of April and still another on a Friday night the first week in May. This latter call resulted in defendant meeting *107 the caller at about half past nine that evening. This meeting allegedly took place at the junction of routes 5 and 6 in the town of Johnston and the caller, so defendant says, proved to be manager Lamonde whom defendant consistently referred to as “Louie.”

Continuing, defendant related how Lamonde told him of his position as manager, that he was ready to retire, and that “he wanted to take something with him.” Out of this alleged conversation plans were made for defendant to rob the store after the closing hour on the night of Friday, October 9, 1964. This night was chosen because it coincided with heavy shopping for the long holiday weekend. The defendant’s testimony on the details of the conspiracy attributed the bumping of cars at the intersection of Green-ville avenue and route 5 and getting together at that spot as an arrangement insisted upon by Lamonde.

The defendant’s version includes another meeting with Lamonde on a Friday night in August. It also took place at the junction of routes 5 and 6 and was the result of a telephone call from defendant to the manager. He made this call, defendant narrates, because he had been told by his brother of a telephone call by someone named “Louie” who was looking for defendant. References as to what supposedly transpired at this August meeting are vague and contradictory, but a fellow truck driver and member of the union local to which defendant belonged corroborated defendant’s testimony of such a meeting. This witness stated that he heard none of the conversation but identified Lamonde as the person with whom defendant met.

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Related

State v. Driscoll
360 A.2d 857 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 1978)
Burke v. Langlois
244 A.2d 593 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 1968)

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Bluebook (online)
220 A.2d 508, 101 R.I. 103, 1966 R.I. LEXIS 360, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-burke-ri-1966.