State v. Drew

919 A.2d 397, 2007 R.I. LEXIS 40, 2007 WL 1135639
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedApril 18, 2007
Docket2005-108-C.A.
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 919 A.2d 397 (State v. Drew) 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. Drew, 919 A.2d 397, 2007 R.I. LEXIS 40, 2007 WL 1135639 (R.I. 2007).

Opinion

*400 OPINION

Chief Justice WILLIAMS, for the Court.

On May 13, 2003, Harold Jackson Andrews (Jack) 1 was shot once in the back of his head, and his body was abandoned in a remote field in Exeter. His body was discovered more than two weeks later. On June 6, 2003, police arrested the defendant, Harold T. Drew (defendant), and his girlfriend, Bobbie-Jo Dumont, for the killing, and a grand jury subsequently indicted the defendant on seven separate counts, including murder.

At defendant’s trial, the state painted a tragic portrait of the victim: a married man whose unrequited love for Ms. Du-mont led him not only to tolerate her simultaneous romance with defendant, but also to facilitate a near two-year string of home invasions perpetrated by Ms. Du-mont and defendant to support their heroin addiction. The state posited that once Jack renounced his complicity in the burglaries, defendant feared that Jack might divulge their transgressions to police. Knowing that he would be separated from Ms. Dumont if they were incarcerated and angered by what he believed to be Jack’s abuse of Ms. Dumont, defendant plotted to kill Jack. A jury agreed, finding defendant guilty of murder, discharging a firearm while committing a crime of violence, and three counts of entering a dwelling with the intent to commit a larceny therein. He subsequently was sentenced to two consecutive life terms at the Adult Correctional Institutions (ACI). On appeal, defendant raises multiple arguments of error. For the reasons set forth herein, we affirm the judgment of the Superior Court.

I

Facts and Travel

Before 2001, Jack and Connie Andrews led a comfortable, normal life. Mrs. Andrews candidly recalled that she and her late husband enjoyed a “good marriage,” spanning three decades. This all changed, according to Mrs. Andrews, with the regrettable advent of Ms. Dumont, a stripper whose charms lured Jack away from his wife.

Ms. Dumont, the state’s key witness, testified that she first met Jack one night in 2000 while she was working at Cheaters, a Providence strip club. After this initial encounter, Jack visited the club every night and paid her “to sit with him and talk to him and dance for him.” However, the nature of their casual acquaintance soon changed.

Ms. Dumont testified that when she met Jack she was regularly abusing alcohol, cocaine, methadone, and heroin. Desperately in need of money to support her drug habit, she soon had to call Jack for help. On that particular night, Jack picked up Ms. Dumont at her Warwick apartment, brought her to purchase drugs, gave her some money, and then dropped her back off at her apartment. From that point on Ms. Dumont and Jack saw each other daily; he bought her drugs, clothes and food, and he gave her money to pay rent and bills. Ms. Dumont also recalled that Jack took her anywhere she wanted to go in his pickup truck.

Although she knew he wanted more, Ms. Dumont told Jack she could manage only a friendship. She knew her relationships with other men made Jack jealous, but she warned him that was the price of her companionship. Ms. Dumont stated that although their relationship was not sexual *401 at first, Jack eventually started demanding sex in exchange for money, and she obliged. She made it very clear, however, that she would leave Jack if he ever stopped giving her money.

Sometime in 2001, Ms. Dumont stopped working at Cheaters. As a result, she relied upon prostitution and Jack’s goodwill for income. Ms. Dumont testified that in early 2001, she lost custody of her four children and was evicted from her apartment. Jack then paid for Ms. Dumont to stay in various motels and, on occasion, would even sneak her into his Exeter home while his wife slept to allow his mistress to spend the night on the floor next to his bed. It was also in 2001 that Jack first told his wife he was caring for Ms. Dumont.

Mrs. Andrews testified that about this time her marriage began to deteriorate. According to Mrs. Andrews, Jack often did not return to their Exeter home for two, sometimes three, days at a time. He became moody and they stopped speaking with each other. He stopped caring for his ill mother and he was always arguing with his stepson. He started losing weight and stopped going to work. Mrs. Andrews testified that Jack “wasn’t even the same person.” In August 2002, Mrs. Andrews left Jack.

Although Jack continued to provide for Ms. Dumont, in the fall of 2002 Ms. Du-mont was admitted into SSTAR of Rhode Island (SSTAR), a detoxification service provider in North Kingstown; this is where Ms. Dumont first met defendant. According to Ms. Dumont, she and defendant “were just perfect for each other.” In fact, both Ms. Dumont and defendant were prematurely expelled from the week-long detoxification program when the two were caught having sexual relations on SSTAR property.

Ms. Dumont testified that after her expulsion from SSTAR, she stayed with defendant in abandoned buildings and cars, eventually ending up in a van parked in defendant’s father’s yard. Nevertheless, Jack continued to dutifully take Ms. Du-mont to get her methadone dose every morning. Ms. Dumont testified that Jack did not approve of her relationship with defendant and that relations between the two men were strained.

In October 2002, Jack lost his job, and Ms. Dumont and defendant were left without sufficient funds to support their $200-per-day drug habits. Ms. Dumont testified that as a result, she and defendant, with Jack voluntarily providing transportation, began perpetrating a string of break-ings and enterings throughout South County, 2 committing at least one burglary almost every day. Typically, Jack would drive Ms. Dumont and defendant to a predetermined target and wait a few minutes until they emerged with bed quilts full of stolen goods.

According to Ms. Dumont, the first and only time Jack entered a residence was to assist defendant in carrying a heavy gun locker from the basement of a Richmond home. Once they loaded the locker into Jack’s truck, they drove to a secluded field off a gated dirt path at the end of William Reynolds Road in Exeter, where they pried open the locker, collecting several rifles, a couple of shotguns, a handgun, and some ammunition. They then went to defendant’s father’s house, where they stored *402 the weapons in the closet of a vacant second-floor bedroom.

Throughout this time, Jack and his wife kept in touch. Mrs. Andrews testified that until his death in May 2003, Jack visited her daily at the Westerly motel where she worked, or at least would call if he could not make it. Occasionally he spent the night, but he always left by 6:30 a.m. to get Ms. Dumont to the methadone clinic. According to Mrs. Andrews, during one of these visits, shortly before his death, Jack told her he was beginning to fear Ms. Dumont. On May 11, 2003, Jack said goodbye to his wife for the last time.

On the morning of May 12, 2003, Jack left to pick up Ms. Dumont as usual. At some point, the two began fighting when Jack told Ms. Dumont that he no longer wanted a part in the burglaries and that she had to choose either him or defendant. Ms.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
919 A.2d 397, 2007 R.I. LEXIS 40, 2007 WL 1135639, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-drew-ri-2007.