State v. Driscoll

711 S.W.2d 512, 1986 Mo. LEXIS 290
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 17, 1986
Docket66852
StatusPublished
Cited by103 cases

This text of 711 S.W.2d 512 (State v. Driscoll) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Driscoll, 711 S.W.2d 512, 1986 Mo. LEXIS 290 (Mo. 1986).

Opinions

BILLINGS, Judge.

Defendant Robert Driscoll1 was convicted by a jury of capital murder, § 565.001, RSMo 1978 (repealed effective October 1, 1984), for the stabbing death of Thomas Jackson, a correctional officer assigned to the Missouri Training Center for Men in Moberly, Missouri. We have exclusive appellate jurisdiction of this criminal case because defendant has been sentenced to death. See Mo.Const. art. V, § 3.

In fixing death as the appropriate punishment, the jury found as a basis for the imposition of capital punishment the following statutory aggravating circumstances: (1) defendant had a substantial history of [514]*514prior assaultive criminal convictions [§ 565.012.2(1) ] (repealed effective October 1. 1984); (2) the victim was a corrections employee engaged in the performance of his official duty [§ 565.012.2(8)]; and, (3) the defendant was in the lawful custody of a place of confinement [§ 565.012.2(9) ]. In connection with defendant’s criminal history, the State introduced evidence documenting that defendant had seven prior felony convictions and an established reputation for violence.

Along with defendant Driscoll, two other Moberly inmates, Rodney Carr and Roy Roberts, were charged and separately convicted of capital murder in connection with the stabbing death of Officer Jackson. This Court recently affirmed the capital murder conviction of Roy Roberts for his role in the murder of Officer Jackson. See State v. Roberts, 709 S.W.2d 857 (Mo. banc 1986). The fundamental facts and circumstances surrounding the murder of Officer Jackson are set forth in detail in Roberts. We direct the reader to Roberts for a complete explication of the factual history of Officer Jackson’s death. The additional facts we set forth are those which are uniquely relevant to the circumstances of defendant’s role in the murder of Officer Jackson — which occurred during a brief melee involving prisoners and correctional officers in the B Wing at the Moberly facility on July 3, 1983.

After Officer Jackson had been physically overcome and pinned against a partition by Roy Roberts, a 300 pound inmate, defendant, using a homemade knife that he had already assembled and had concealed in the back of his pants, thrust the instrument of death three times into Officer Jackson’s chest. Two of defendant’s fatal thrusts penetrated the victim’s heart and lungs. As defendant, Roberts, and Carr were murdering Officer Jackson, the victim’s co-workers desperately tried to bring Officer Jackson to safety, but other inmates stalled the rescuing guards’ efforts. In the course of the efforts of fellow guards to rescue Officer Jackson, defendant managed to stab Officer Harold Mau-pin in the shoulder.

While the disturbance continued and additional guards sought to restrain the prisoners and restore order, defendant returned to his cell and changed his clothes, which by that time had become stained with the blood of his victims.2 As order was being reestablished and inmates began to flee to their cells, defendant told his cell mate, Jimmy Jenkins, “I killed the freak.” And he also sought further recognition for his actions from another inmate, Joe Vogel-pohl, by inquiring of Vogelpohl, “[d]id I take him out JoJo or did I take him out?” Furthermore, the following day defendant made an inculpatory statement to Highway Patrol and prison investigators. The wounds that were inflicted upon the victim by defendant were determined to have caused Officer Jackson’s death.

At the outset, we initially note defendant does not question the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain his conviction.

Defendant’s first two assignments of trial error concern allegedly improper and prejudicial statements made by the prosecutor to the jury throughout the trial. First, defendant contends that the prosecutor improperly conveyed to the jury the notion that it is the trial judge and not the jury who bears the ultimate responsibility for the final imposition of sentence.3 Sec[515]*515ond, defendant maintains that certain remarks by the prosecutor served to dilute defendant’s right to be presumed innocent and actually caused the burden of proof to shift to the defendant.4

Before proceeding to an examination of defendant’s first two points it should be observed that defendant seeks review of them under the plain error doctrine because of his failure to object or preserve the points in his motion for new trial. Under this standard of review, the plain error complained of must impact so substantially upon the rights of the defendant that manifest injustice or a miscarriage of justice will result if left uncorrected. See State v. Miller, 604 S.W.2d 702 (Mo.App.1980).

We turn now to defendant’s first contention which focuses on the trial court’s failure to sua sponte admonish the prosecutor for making statements to the jury throughout the trial which suggested that the judge and not the jury was responsible for the final imposition of sentence.

In State v. Roberts, supra, we were confronted with a similar assignment of error involving prosecutorial comments that were made during the punishment phase of the trial. The defendant in Roberts argued that it was plain error for the trial court not to have declared a mistrial or admonish the jury when the prosecutor informed the jury that their verdict would serve only as a recommendation to the trial judge.

In rejecting this argument we began by pointing out that in Missouri, Rule 29.05 vests in the trial court the “power to reduce ... punishment ... for the offense if [the court] finds the punishment excessive.” Consequently, we concluded that the prosecutor’s statement that the trial judge could reduce the sentence was a correct statement of law. Roberts, at 869. Additionally, we noted that the defendant in Roberts had failed to enter an objection when the prosecutorial comments were made. Roberts, at 869. Furthermore, we found that Caldwell v. Mississippi, — U.S. —, 105 S.Ct. 2633, 86 L.Ed.2d 231 (1985), under the facts of Roberts, did not compel a finding of plain error because Caldwell involved a clearly inaccurate statement of law — which was not the ease in Roberts. In this same respect, Caldwell is distinguishable from the facts of the present case.

Here, defendant does not contend that the prosecutor made an incorrect statement of law but only that his remarks undermined the gravity of the jury’s decision. As noted, supra, the defendant failed to object to the prosecutorial comments which he now assigns prejudice. Next, the transcript reveals that defendant himself, reiterated the prosecutor’s comments to the panel during voir dire — in an apparent attempt to impress upon them that it was the jury, rather than the trial judge, who carries the primary responsibility for imposing sentence. This was done by defendant on two separate occasions.

Contrary to defendant’s contentions the record in this case fails to reveal plain [516]*516error of any degree which if left uncorrected would result in either manifest injustice or a miscarriage of justice. As we have already noted, defendant in the first instance failed to offer an objection of any kind.

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Bluebook (online)
711 S.W.2d 512, 1986 Mo. LEXIS 290, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-driscoll-mo-1986.