State v. Clemons

45 P.3d 384, 273 Kan. 328, 2002 Kan. LEXIS 136
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedApril 19, 2002
Docket86,258
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 45 P.3d 384 (State v. Clemons) 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. Clemons, 45 P.3d 384, 273 Kan. 328, 2002 Kan. LEXIS 136 (kan 2002).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Allegrucci, J.:

Marcus Clemons was convicted after a bench trial of premeditated first-degree murder, attempted first-degree murder, and criminal possession of a firearm. He was sentenced to life imprisonment with the possibility of parole in 25 years pursuant to K.S.A. 1998 Supp. 22-3717 on the premeditated first-degree murder conviction; 732 months on the attempted murder conviction, to run consecutively; and 8 months on the firearm conviction, to run concurrent with the 732-month sentence. He appeals his convictions and the 732-month sentence.

On appeal, Clemons challenges the sufficiency of the evidence of premeditation, the effectiveness of his waiver of a jury trial, the trial court’s refusal to continue the trial, the trial court’s failure to make a record of closing arguments, and the trial court’s imposition of the 732-month sentence. He also claims the trial court violated his right to counsel.

During the morning of June 29, 1999, Marcus Clemons and Tony Davis set out to walk the short distance to a smoke shop, which is located in a small strip mall at the intersection of 9th and Grove streets in Wichita. As he and Davis were walking on the east side of Grove, defendant saw Satin Huffman and Arthur McPherson come out of a house on the west side of the street and begin *330 walking in the same direction as Clemons and Davis. Huffman and McPherson were also going to the smoke shop. Defendant testified that Huffman and McPherson were talking about him and Davis, gesturing toward them and laughing. Huffman testified that they were shouting back and forth across the street.

Defendant and Huffman had known each other since second or third grade, and they had a history of friction. Defendant said that he had been a skinny kid and that Huffman had always been a big guy. Huffman had bullied defendant. Sometimes Huffman and McPherson acted together in bullying defendant, and one time McPherson spit on defendant.

Defendant testified that Huffman and McPherson crossed the street and walked behind defendant and Davis. As they reached the parking lot, Huffman said he would beat defendant and defendant said he would not.

Accounts of what happened after all four young men reached the parking lot vaiy. In general outline but not necessarily in this order, some or all of the men went into the smoke shop, McPherson took off his shirt, defendant pulled his gun from his back pocket, and defendant fired four shots, hitting Huffman twice and McPherson twice. Huffman fell injured in the parking lot. McPherson fell across the street. McPherson died as a result of injuries caused by a bullet that entered his back slightly above the level of his elbow and just left of the midline.

Eddie Mills testified that he was walking by a parking lot near 9th and Grove when he saw three young men there arguing. He heard some shots and saw one of the men fall to the ground. He ran to the liquor store to notify police. He looked back and saw two men running across the street. One man was in front of the other, and Mills thought the one in front was being chased by the other man. Mills heard what sounded like two gunshots, and one of the running men fell. When Mills came out of the liquor store, there was a skinny fellow standing by the fallen man across the street. He thought that a couple of minutes elapsed between the first and second sets of gunshots.

When police officers arrived, Mills told one of them that he had seen four men standing in the parking lot yelling at each other. He *331 also told police that after he first heard shots and one man fell in the parking lot, he saw two men running across Grove. One fired a handgun and the other fell down on the sidewalk on the west side of the street. The shooter continued running.

Police found one man on the ground in the parking lot in front of the liquor store and another man on the ground on the other side of the street. The man on the other side of the street was Arthur McPherson, who was pronounced dead at the hospital. He was wearing pants but no shirt.

Valincia Jones, who owned the liquor store next door to the smoke shop, testified that she knew Satin Huffman. She looked out from the liquor store and saw Huffman and a man she did not know going to the smoke shop. She saw the stranger wave his hands, take off his shirt, and place it on her car. When she heard gunfire, she dropped to the floor. A man came into the store and said to call police. She called the police. When she went outside, she saw Huffman lying in front of the barber shop. The shirtless man was across the street and to the south. Jones testified that she was uncertain about the number of shots, but thought there may have been five. She thought they were all together rather than in two sets.

Felicia Ballance was driving by the parking lot and pulled in to talk to Tony Davis. There were four people in the parking lot. She heard gunshots, and saw Huffman fall. Ballance testified that Huffman and the gunman were close enough to touch each other when Huffman was shot. The gunman got a silver gun with a brown handle from his belt, in the front. He chased McPherson across the street. Ballance testified that she saw no weapons on Huffman or McPherson and that Davis was holding a soda. She heard four gunshots that were all together, and then she heard another gunshot “around the comer.”

Tony Davis did not remember seeing Felicia Ballance at the scene of the shooting. Davis testified that he and defendant walked to the smoke shop, and they saw Huffman and McPherson. Words were exchanged, mostly between Huffman and Clemons. McPherson said he wanted to fight, and he took off his shirt. Davis, Huffman, and McPherson went into the smoke shop without the *332 defendant. After they came out, McPherson asked Huffman to pass him a gun. Huffman said no. Davis did not see either Huffman or McPherson with a weapon. Then defendant shot Huffman with a gun that Davis thought defendant pulled from his back pocket. Davis testified that he was standing between Huffman and McPherson when Clemons shot Huffman. McPherson ran, and defendant shot him. Davis did not think that defendant ran after McPherson. Davis ran away.

Davis had a gun, but he did not fire it. A gun later retrieved by police from Davis’ bedroom in his grandmother’s house was not the gun that fired the bullets retrieved from McPherson’s body.

Huffman testified that he and Clemons had known each other since second or third grade and that they had a history of “[arguments and stuff like that.” Huffman said that the men had been yelling back and forth across the street as they walked to the smoke shop and that, before going into the smoke shop, they were talking about a fistfight. Huffman testified that he and McPherson went into the smoke shop, but Davis and Clemons stayed outside. While in the shop, he noticed that McPherson had gone back outside. As Huffman stepped out of the smoke shop, he saw McPherson taking off his shirt. After he got outside, approximately 3 to 4 feet outside the smoke shop, he felt dizzy and numb. He fell down. He saw some people walking toward McPherson.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
45 P.3d 384, 273 Kan. 328, 2002 Kan. LEXIS 136, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-clemons-kan-2002.