State v. Exon

CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedApril 17, 2026
Docket126757
StatusPublished

This text of State v. Exon (State v. Exon) 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. Exon, (kan 2026).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF KANSAS

No. 126,757

STATE OF KANSAS, Appellee,

v.

JEFFREY JAMES EXON, Appellant.

SYLLABUS BY THE COURT

1. Although defendants have a constitutional right to present evidence that is integral to their defense, the right to present evidence supporting such theories is subject to statutory rules and caselaw interpretation of rules of evidence and procedure.

2. Under K.S.A. 60-456(b), a trial court acts as an evidentiary gatekeeper by assessing the reliability and relevance of expert testimony.

3. Whether the trial court properly performed its evidentiary gatekeeper role is reviewed on appeal for abuse of discretion.

4. One key component of the trial court's gatekeeping role is to ensure that expert testimony is relevant.

1 Appeal from Shawnee District Court; JESSICA HEINEN, judge. Oral argument held December 17, 2025. Opinion filed April 17, 2026. Convictions affirmed, sentence vacated in part, and case remanded with directions.

Kristen B. Patty, of Wichita, argued the cause and was on the brief for appellant.

Carolyn A. Smith, assistant deputy district attorney, argued the cause, and Michael F. Kagay, district attorney, and Kris W. Kobach, attorney general, were with her on the brief for appellee.

The opinion of the court was delivered by

ROSEN, C.J.: Jeffrey James Exon appeals from his convictions and sentence for first-degree felony murder, failure to report the death of a child, and aggravated endangering a child, all stemming from the death of his two-year-old daughter.

Exon and S.N. had two children together, T.E., born in 2016, and A.E., born in 2018. S.N. broke up with Exon in February 2019 and took both children with her. Concerned about her own ability to provide a stable home, in the summer of 2019 she voluntarily gave Exon custody of both children. Although she had unlimited visitation rights, she did not visit the children often because she moved in with her father in St. Mary's, about 30 miles from Exon's house in Topeka, and she did not always have a car available. She did not visit her children in person at all during the height of the COVID pandemic in 2020, limiting her interaction with them to electronic communications. She thought Exon was sober during the time he had custody, and she had no concerns about his parenting practices.

G.S. began a romantic relationship with Exon in July 2019. She lived with him for a short time, from September until the middle of November 2019. After that, she moved into her own place but they remained in an on-again-off-again romantic relationship. In November 2020, Exon underwent neck surgery, and G.S. and her mother, S.S., moved

2 into his home around that time to take care of him and the children. He began using medication to control the pain he experienced after the surgery. G.S. testified she broke up with Exon because she did not want to be with an alcoholic any longer. The last time G.S. saw Exon was December 12, 2020, and the last time S.S. saw Exon was December 23, 2020.

During the course of her short life, A.E. had significant ups and downs in terms of gaining weight relative to predictions based on her birth size and weight. Both S.N. and Exon took her in for regular medical exams and treatment for a total of 18 visits during her life. At her nine-month visit on February 28, 2019, she had lost weight while she was in her mother's custody, although this was attributed to a flu infection. At her one-year visit, she was back to eating and was gaining weight. The pediatrician who saw her at her two-year wellness visit described her as "a happy, healthy child."

Exon called the medical office in August 2020 and again in late October 2020 because he was concerned about A.E. experiencing ongoing constipation. At a November 2, 2020, medical visit, Exon told the medical staff that A.E. was not wanting to eat and she was suffering from constipation. Although the nurse practitioner who saw them did not have concerns that A.E. was malnourished and she saw no need to report any concerns to the Department for Children and Families, she was concerned about how to increase A.E.'s calorie intake. She gave Exon 48 bottles of a protein supplement called PediaSure, which A.E. was to consume at the rate of two bottles a day. Exon called the office again after A.E. was seen by a cardiologist because she had lost 2 pounds. The pediatrician told Exon to monitor A.E.'s weight and to schedule a 30-month well-child checkup.

At the December 8, 2020 wellness visit, the nurse practitioner reported that A.E. was normal in appearance, alert, and pleasant. She did not appear ill and showed no signs

3 of distress. She was very happy, playful, and hugging on her father. Her weight had declined, however, to the 13th percentile relative to her expected weight.

In December 2020, T.E. began to miss school frequently. Back in October 2020, an incident occurred when Exon was scheduled to meet T.E. at the bus drop-off after his Head Start schooling. Exon showed up late and appeared to the bus driver to be intoxicated, exhibiting aggression and stumbling and wandering as he walked. A Head Start family service coordinator contacted Exon, and he explained to her he was on medicine for his neck and he had taken a drink of alcohol at lunch.

Exon's brother saw A.E. on Christmas day, when her behavior seemed normal and she was opening gifts and got excited about some dolls. She ate at the dinner table with Exon and his family. S.N. picked up the children in the early afternoon that day and returned them to Exon on the evening of December 26. According to S.N., A.E. looked okay and was feeding herself during that time.

On the morning of January 4, 2021, a Topeka police officer responded to a call for a welfare check at Exon's home. Exon's parents had called in the request after Exon had failed to respond to text messages or answer his phone for a while. The officer saw Exon's parents and then saw Exon outside the house and asked him if he was all right. He said everything was fine. Because there appeared to be no problem, the officer did not go in the house to investigate further.

The next morning, Exon called his father and told him A.E. was dead and CPR would not help because "she's been gone for a while." The same officer who had visited the house the day before was dispatched to Exon's house to respond to a report that a child had died in the house. She found a dead girl on the couch in the living room. Exon

4 told her that January 2 was the last time he interacted with her when "she was alert." He told her that he had changed her diaper on January 3 or 4.

An inspection of the house turned up drawers containing empty vodka bottles. Many of the PediaSure bottles were unopened. The investigation also confirmed Exon's statements that there were many locked childproofing gates set up around the house to keep the children out of the kitchen and in their respective rooms.

Pathologist Dr. Altaf Hossain performed an autopsy on January 6, 2021. He described the baby as "emaciated"; she had lost fatty tissue and was dehydrated. She had not received enough nutrients, her stomach was empty, and there was no food in her bowels. The pathologist found no sign of traumatic injury and listed the cause of death as marasmus, "starvation or deprivation of nutrition and hydration." The pathologist opined that the malnourishment had probably been going on for a couple of months, and A.E. was probably suffering from malnutrition as recently as December 8, 2020, when health care providers last saw her. He declared the cause of death was homicide.

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State v. Exon, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-exon-kan-2026.