State v. Doppler

590 N.W.2d 627, 1999 Minn. LEXIS 135, 1999 WL 126700
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedMarch 11, 1999
DocketC4-96-1831
StatusPublished
Cited by53 cases

This text of 590 N.W.2d 627 (State v. Doppler) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Doppler, 590 N.W.2d 627, 1999 Minn. LEXIS 135, 1999 WL 126700 (Mich. 1999).

Opinion

OPINION

PAUL H. ANDERSON, Justice.

A jury convicted David James Doppler of the premeditated first-degree murder of Michael Sargent. Doppler now challenges a *629 postconvietion court’s denial of his motion for a new trial based on his claim of ineffective assistance of trial counsel. Doppler contends that the attorney who represented him at trial acted ineffectively when the attorney: (1) failed to object to an indictment issued by a grand jury impaneled more than 14 days after Doppler’s first court appearance, (2) failed to present evidence at trial of Doppler’s intoxication, and (3) failed to request that an intoxication instruction be given to the jury. The postconvietion court concluded that Doppler failed to establish that trial counsel was ineffective in his representation of Doppler. Doppler also directly appeals his conviction for first-degree premeditated murder, contending that the state presented insufficient evidence to sustain the jury’s guilty verdict. We affirm.

On April 14, 1995, the body of Michael L. Sargent was found in rural Crow Wing County near a public access road to Little Black-hoof Lake. Sargent’s body had sustained four gunshot wounds — one to the right leg, one to the chin, and two to the head. The body bore no defensive wounds and the crime scene revealed no signs of a struggle. Sargent’s jeans were unbuttoned and pulled down partway, as if he had been preparing to urinate.

After an extensive investigation of Sargent’s killing, investigators began to focus on an acquaintance of Sargent — appellant David James Doppler. Authorities with the Bureau of Criminal Apprehension (BCA) asked Doppler to submit to a polygraph test at BCA headquarters in Saint Paul. When the results of Doppler’s polygraph test indicated deception, he agreed to be interviewed by two BCA agents. During that interview, Doppler confessed to killing Sargent. The details of Doppler’s confession are as follows.

A. Doppler’s Confession

Doppler stated that he had known Sargent, a friend of his brother, Keith Doppler (hereinafter referred to as Keith), since Doppler was approximately 9 years old. Doppler was angry with Sargent for getting Keith involved with drugs and for threatening, in front of Doppler’s nieces, to “put a bullet through [Keith’s] head.” This anger peaked on April 9-10, 1995. According to Doppler, on April 9, 1995, he and Sargent decided to go out together in Doppler’s car. As Doppler and Sargent drove around, Sargent convinced Doppler to try some methamphetamine. Doppler stated that, in addition to ingesting the methamphetamine, he had been smoking marijuana all day on April 9 and had been drinking gin and grapefruit juice for two days in order to get rid of a sinus infection.

Doppler stated that after he and Sargent had been driving for a while, the two men pulled off the road to go to the bathroom. Doppler stated that he was “just feeling like [he] could take on the whole world,” purportedly from the methamphetamine he had taken. When the BCA agents asked Doppler what happened next, he answered, “[w]e had both gone outside, out of the ear, to go to the bathroom * * *. I had went back into the car * * *. I had grabbed a gun that was underneath the seat * * *. I shot Mike.” When questioned about when he formed the intent to kill Sargent, Doppler replied, “[w]hen we got out to go to the bathroom.”

Authorities subsequently confirmed that two other people, specifically Richard Berry, who is Doppler’s uncle, and Doppler’s brother Keith, were present when Sargent was killed. Both Berry and Keith testified before the grand jury that investigated Sargent’s death and at Doppler’s trial. Their accounts of what happened the night Sargent was killed differed in several respects from Doppler’s confession.

B. Berry’s Testimony

Berry testified that, on the night of April 9, 1995, Keith and Sargent stopped by ACME Industries, Berry’s and Doppler’s place of work. ACME, a contract garment manufacturer, is located on the east side of Saint Paul. At the time, Berry and Doppler were playing a Nintendo video game. The four men then decided to go out together in Doppler’s car. Berry testified that he was driving, Doppler was in the front seat, and Keith and Sargent were in the back seat. After they had been driving for a while, the four men stopped for “munehies” and “pop.” When they got back in the ear, Berry still *630 drove, but Keith sat in the front seat, and Doppler and Sargent sat in the back seat. Berry testified that, during the drive, he could not hear much of what was going on in the back seat because music was being played very loudly inside the car. Berry did remember that Sargent voiced his displeasure with Doppler’s choice of music. Berry did not seem to think that either man was violent toward the other.

After driving for a while, the four men decided to stop so they could urinate. Berry pulled off the highway onto a public access road to Little Blackhoof Lake. Little Black-hoof Lake is west of the city of Crosby and is approximately 130 miles from Saint Paul. When the four men exited the car, Berry turned off the headlights, but left the engine running. The music was still being played loudly. Although not positive about the timing, Berry testified that a couple of minutes later, just as he was starting to urinate, he heard a gunshot and then “hit the ground.” Next, he got up, turned around, and saw one flash going down toward the ground followed by a volley of three or more shots going forward. When the shots stopped, Berry ran back toward the car. Along the way, he heard Keith “crashing through the woods up near the front of the car.”

When Berry reached the car, he saw Doppler standing in front of the car holding a gun in his hand. Berry testified that Doppler said Sargent “had come at him with a knife, and that he had to shoot him.” Berry testified that at that point he panicked and “wanted out of there.” The three men got into the car. Berry drove, Keith sat in the front seat, and Doppler sat in the back seat. Berry started to back down the access road toward the highway, but stopped when Keith asked him to stop the car so that Keith could check on Sargent. Berry stopped the car and Keith got out and returned to the car approximately 45 seconds later. Berry testified that he did not notice anything in Keith’s hands when Keith returned and also testified that he did not see a knife at any time that night, either before or after the killing. Berry testified that the three men then drove back to the Twin Cities.

C. Keith’s Testimony

Keith testified that, on the night of April 9, 1995, he and Sargent had originally planned to go out together in Doppler’s ear. The two men left Sargent’s hotel in Woodbury sometime after midnight with the intent to go to a bar in Saint Paul. When driving to the bar, Keith received a page from Doppler, so he and Sargent stopped at ACME, which is located next door to the bar they were headed for. When the two men arrived at ACME, they found Doppler and Berry playing a Nintendo video game. Doppler said he wanted his car back, but Keith, who had already put gas in the car, wanted to go out to do something. After discussing the use of the car, Keith and Sargent decided that it was too late for them to go out according to their original plans, so the four men decided to drive up north to a casino.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
590 N.W.2d 627, 1999 Minn. LEXIS 135, 1999 WL 126700, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-doppler-minn-1999.