State v. Delaney

973 S.W.2d 152, 1998 Mo. App. LEXIS 1388, 1998 WL 403341
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 21, 1998
DocketWD 54791
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 973 S.W.2d 152 (State v. Delaney) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Delaney, 973 S.W.2d 152, 1998 Mo. App. LEXIS 1388, 1998 WL 403341 (Mo. Ct. App. 1998).

Opinion

ULRICH, Chief Judge, Presiding Judge.

Aaron Delaney appeals his convictions following jury trial for voluntary manslaughter, section 565.023, RSMo 1994, and armed criminal action, section 571.015, RSMo 1994, and consecutive terms of fifteen years imprisonment. Mr. Delaney raises two issues on appeal. He argues that the trial court erred and abused its discretion by (1) allowing the state to misstate the evidence in closing argument; and (2) permitting the state to argue that the juror’s verdicts would be a “public and permanent record” in closing argument where the argument sought to intimidate the jurors to find Mr. Delaney guilty through fear of public exposure. The judgment of convictions is affirmed.

FACTS

Edward Moulder and Terry Smith decided to purchase crack cocaine on July 7, 1996. Between noon and approximately 3:00-4:00 p.m., they made two separate attempts to purchase crack cocaine, but, in each case, the substance they purchased was not actually crack cocaine. Mr. Moulder and Mr. Smith then attempted to purchase crack cocaine from a man in a purple tank top and black pants whom Mr. Smith later identified as Aaron Delaney. Mr. Delaney gave the men one rock of crack cocaine to try, and it also was not crack cocaine.

Mr. Moulder, after beginning to smoke the item given to him, threw his pipe to the floor of his truck and said, “This ain’t crack cocaine.” When Mr. Moulder began to drive away, Mr. Delaney jumped into the bed of the truck and stated, “Give me my fucking money, honkey, or I’ll bust your head.” As Mr. Moulder continued to drive the truck, Mr. Delaney leaned around the side of the truck and tried to hit Mr. Moulder. While Mr. Moulder was attempting to avoid Mr. Delaney’s blows, he sideswiped a number of other vehicles. Mr. Moulder then attempted to give Mr. Delaney $20.00 to persuade him to exit the truck bed. Mr. Delaney refused the money, however, and continued to hit Mr. Moulder.

Mr. Delaney then picked a crowbar from the truck bed and swung at Mr. Moulder through the driver’s side window. The crow *154 bar hit Mr. Moulder in the eye and side of the head, causing him to slump over on Mr. Smith. As Mr. Smith tried to maneuver the truck, he sideswiped another vehicle. Mr. Smith then noticed that two vehicles were following them. Mr. Moulder stopped the truck in the parking lot of a fire station. The persons in the two vehicles that were following the men climbed in the truck bed and started hitting Mr. Moulder and Mr. Smith. Mr. Delaney broke the back window of the truck with the crowbar and hit Mr. Moulder two more times.

Mr. Smith put the truck into reverse in a failed attempt to get the men out of the truck. Mr. Moulder continued driving, eventually stopping at a friend’s house. During this time, Mr. Smith was on the floor of the truck. When the truck stopped at their friend’s house, Mr. Smith got out of the truck to call 911. Mr. Smith saw the group of men trying to pull Mr. Moulder from the truck. When Mr. Smith returned after calling 911, he saw Mr. Moulder lying in the middle of the street with a group of men kicking him in the ribs and stomach. Mr. Smith saw Mr. Delaney pick up half a brick and slam it into Mr. Moulder’s head in the same area where Mr. Delaney had hit Mr. Moulder with the crowbar. Mr. Moulder crawled to the side of the street and curled up in a fetal position. Officer Jeff Atwood arrived three minutes after being dispatched and found Mr. Moulder lying in the street unconscious. Officer Atwood also saw Mr. Delaney at the scene. Mr. Moulder suffered five rib fractures, a skull fracture above his left ear, bleeding inside the skull and a herniation of the brain. Mr. Moulder died three days later of delayed effects of blunt injury to the head.

Four police officers were investigating the attack on Mr. Moulder on July 8, 1996. As the officers were at the intersection of 24th and Lawn, a vehicle drove up and the occupants exchanged words with the officers. The officers followed the car to 2327 Lawn where it stopped, and the driver exited the car and went into a house. Mr. Delaney then approached the officers. When one of the officers informed Mr. Delaney that they were investigating a hit and run that occurred the previous evening, Mr. Delaney responded, “Yeah, I the [sic] hit the motherfucker up side the head with a crowbar to keep him from leaving.”

Mr. Smith went to the police department on July 8,1996, to give his formal statement. While he was waiting in the lobby, Mr. Smith saw an officer bring Mr. Delaney in. When Mr. Smith got into his interview, he told the officer that the man who had beaten Mr. Moulder was in the lobby. The officer then showed Mr. Smith a picture of Mr. Delaney, and Mr. Smith again identified Mr. Delaney as the man who beat Mr. Moulder.

Mr. Delaney was charged with murder in the second degree and armed criminal action for the death of Mr. Moulder. At trial, Mr. Delaney introduced witnesses to rebut Mr. Smith’s testimony that he was the individual who sold drugs to Mr. Moulder and Mr. Smith and who fatally struck Mr. Moulder. Michelle Smith testified that she knew Mr. Delaney. She testified that she saw Mr. Moulder’s truck driving down her street with an unidentified black man in the truck bed. Ms. Smith further testified that when this was occurring, Mr. Delaney and other individuals were standing at the corner. Ms. Smith finally noted that Mr. Delaney was wearing a white tank top.

Mark Braley testified that he was at his home on July 7, 1996, when Mr. Moulder’s truck stopped in front of his home. Mr. Braley testified that he saw a black man wearing shorts and a white t-shirt in the bed of the truck. Two other men then came from a car; one of those men was wearing a maroon shirt. Those two men caught up with the truck and opened the driver’s side door. At this point, Mr. Braley went inside to tell his grandmother what was occurring. When he returned, the three men were standing around Mr. Moulder who was lying in the street. Mr. Braley did not know which of the men struck Mr. Moulder. When the police showed Mr. Braley a photograph of Mr. Delaney, Mr. Braley stated he resembled one of the men at the scene, but he could not remember if Mr. Delaney was the man in the maroon shirt.

After presentation of the evidence, the jury found Mr. Delaney guilty of voluntary manslaughter and armed criminal action. *155 The court sentenced Mr. Delaney as a prior offender to consecutive terms of fifteen years imprisonment. This appeal followed.

I. MR. DELANEY WAS NOT PREJUDICED BY THE PROSECUTION’S MISSTATEMENT OF THE EVIDENCE DURING CLOSING ARGUMENT AND, HENCE, IS NOT ENTITLED TO A NEW TRIAL

As his first point on appeal, Mr. Delaney argues that the trial court erred and abused its discretion by overruling his objection to the prosecution’s summation of the testimony of Mark Braley, a witness to the beating, where the summation misstated the evidence. Mr. Braley testified that while the photograph of Mr. Delaney looked like one of the men who was present when Mr. Moulder was beaten, he did not know whether Mr. Delaney was the man he had seen wearing the maroon shirt. Mr. Delaney argues the following comments during closing argument by the prosecution constitute reversible error because the prosecution misstated Mr. Bra-ley’s testimony:

[The prosecution] Mr. Braley, he came and said what he saw. You can understand his testimony completely.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
973 S.W.2d 152, 1998 Mo. App. LEXIS 1388, 1998 WL 403341, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-delaney-moctapp-1998.