State v. Fulton

256 P.3d 838, 292 Kan. 642, 2011 Kan. LEXIS 257
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedAugust 5, 2011
Docket101,336
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 256 P.3d 838 (State v. Fulton) 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. Fulton, 256 P.3d 838, 292 Kan. 642, 2011 Kan. LEXIS 257 (kan 2011).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Malone, J.:

Jamil Fulton was convicted of first-degree murder in violation of K.S.A. 21-3401(a) and criminal possession of a fire *643 arm in violation of K.S.A. 21-4304(a)(3). He received a hard 25 life sentence for the off-grid murder offense and a concurrent 8 months’ imprisonment for the criminal possession of a firearm conviction. We review the off-grid conviction on direct appeal pursuant to K.S.A. 22-3601(b)(l).

The issues on appeal, and our accompanying holdings, are as follows:

1. Was there sufficient evidence to convict Fulton? Yes.

2. Did the district court err in denying Fulton’s motion for a new trial? No.

3. Is Fulton entitled to a new trial because of his counsel’s failure to request that his trial be severed from his codefendant’s trial? No.

Facts

A jury convicted Jamil Fulton of the murder of Christopher Caraway. Caraway was a member of a subdivision of the Cripps gang. Fulton was a member of the Traveling Vice Lords gang.

On Saturday, July 16, 2005, Officer Charles Nadeau of the Topeka Police Department saw Caraway at a Mexican fiesta in the Oakland area of Topeka, Kansas. Several months earlier, Caraway had told Nadeau that he was leaving town because of a “bad deal that he had made.” At the fiesta, Nadeau asked Caraway why he was back in town. Caraway answered that he was just back in town over the weekend to visit family, that he had not resolved the earlier situation, and that some members of the Traveling Vice Lords gang were looking for him.

Later, at the fiesta, there was a run-in between Caraway’s friend, Antony Sullivan, and Antuan Harness. Sullivan told Harness that he wanted to fight him. A group of people gathered, including Fulton, Rashawn Anderson, and Caraway. Caraway also offered to fight; however, the police dispersed the group before a fight broke out.

On July 17, 2005, Caraway and his friend, Leonardo Martinez, were visiting Jasmine Phelps at the Highland Park Apartments in Topeka. Shortly before midnight, Caraway and Martinez left Phelps’ residence and were walking the short distance to Martinez’ *644 residence when a group of people approached and started shooting at them. Martinez and Caraway ran in different directions in an attempt to flee the shooters. Martinez returned to the Phelps apartment and told Phelps and her little brother some of the people that Caraway saw at the fiesta were shooting at Caraway and him. Martinez, however, was never able to identify the shooters..

On the morning of July 18, Caraway was found dead in a parking lot near where Martinez and he had separated when the shooting began. He died of a single bullet wound to his back that was approximately 9 mm in size. Police marked multiple bullet holes and recovered bullet fragments and casings from the crime scene. In processing the crime scene, it was concluded that at least three different weapons were used in the shooting.

Several neighbors testified to the events surrounding the shooting. One neighbor, Latonya Boyd, explained that she did not see the shooters, but she heard multiple gunshots. Shortly after hearing the gunshots, she saw two cars, a red-colored one and a champagne-colored one, quickly leaving the area in the same direction. Another neighbor, Gaiy Johnson, stated his wife, Koren Johnson, woke him up because she heard gunshots. He ran to the front window and looked out onto the parking lot. He saw three black men chasing another black man, and two of the men were also shooting at the man being chased. He then saw all three men return, and the two shooters got into a red Pontiac Grand Am, while the third man got into a silver or grayish Dodge Stratus. The cars then left in the same direction. Gary Johnson further explained that he never saw the man who got into the Dodge Stratus fire a weapon, although Johnson heard gunfire before he looked out the window.

Koren Johnson testified that early Monday, July 18, around 12:45 to 1 a.m., she heard 6 to 10 popping noises. She thought the noises were gunshots. She got out of bed to look out her front window. She noticed four black men running in front of her apartment. She recognized Robert Patterson as the second person running by. She did not recognize any of the other men.

Other witnesses provided additional details. Tranice Nance was at the Highland Park Apartments partying with Fulton and others. *645 She became drunk and high, and she then went to her car — a metallic gray Dodge Intrepid — to listen to music. While in the car, she heard gunfire. She scrunched down in the seat and then Fulton jumped into her car and said, “People are shooting, let’s go.” She then drove away.

Lindsay Wenniham was also in the neighborhood of the Highland Park Apartments at the time of the shooting. She owns a red Pontiac Grand Am. She was with her boyfriend, Lindsey Wallace, who was there to deal drugs to Fulton. Wenniham was sitting in the front passenger seat of her car when she heard gunshots. Soon after, Wallace jumped into the driver’s seat of her car and began backing out to leave, Anderson jumped into the car, and they drove away.

Wallace was the only individual who testified that he actually saw the shooting take place. Wallace testified that he was rolling a blunt with Fulton when he saw Caraway with another person. Someone yelled, “There’s Chris,” and people started shooting. According to Wallace, as Caraway ran off, Fulton, Harness, and Anderson chased after him. Fulton pulled out a gun and started shooting at Caraway. Wallace then jumped into Wenniham’s car, started it, and backed up to leave. As he was backing up, Anderson jumped into the car, and Wallace drove away. At the time that Wallace testified, he was facing drug charges. Wallace stated he was involved in on-going plea bargain negotiations for the drug charges and that he was testifying in hopes of receiving a plea bargain.

Two additional witnesses, Alonzo Lax and Ian Hudson, testified that they heard Fulton discussing the murder and taking credit for shooting Caraway. Lax testified that he was hanging out at a friend’s house when he overheard a conversation in which Fulton admitted to shooting Caraway. According to Lax, codefendant Robert Patterson, the other alleged shooter, was also there when Fulton said that he was one who shot Caraway. Lax was specifically asked on direct examination by the prosecutor if the codefendant “Robert Patterson agreed that Jamil Fulton was probably the one that did it?” Lax answered the question in the affirmative without any objection by either Patterson or Fulton.

*646 Hudson testified that in December 2005, Fulton, he, and several other individuals were shooting dice at Kajun Jackson s house in Topeka.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
256 P.3d 838, 292 Kan. 642, 2011 Kan. LEXIS 257, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-fulton-kan-2011.