State v. Garrett

466 S.E.2d 481, 195 W. Va. 630, 1995 W. Va. LEXIS 238
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 11, 1995
Docket22832
StatusPublished
Cited by55 cases

This text of 466 S.E.2d 481 (State v. Garrett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Garrett, 466 S.E.2d 481, 195 W. Va. 630, 1995 W. Va. LEXIS 238 (W. Va. 1995).

Opinion

McHUGH, Chief Justice:

This case is before the Court upon the appeal of Russell E. “Rusty” Garrett (hereinafter “appellant”) from a final order denying post-trial motions and imposing a sentence of life imprisonment without the possibility of parole. On October 13, 1993, a jury found the appellant guilty of first degree murder for the death of Linda Lou Carpenter. This Court has before it the petition for appeal, all matters of record and the briefs and arguments of counsel. For the reasons discussed below, appellant’s conviction in the Circuit Court of Roane County is affirmed.

I.

On or about May 21, 1990, Linda Lou Carpenter (hereinafter “victim”) and her 1986 red and silver Chevrolet pick-up truck were reported missing by her husband, Ronald Carpenter. On or about August 13,1990, four days after the victim’s truck was recovered in Elliott County, Kentucky, 1 two hunters discovered the victim’s skeletal remains scattered on a remote hillside, several miles from her home in Roane County, West Virginia.

A police investigation of the victim’s death resulted in the issuance of an arrest warrant 2 for the appellant who, for more than two years, had been having an affair with the victim. The appellant was finally arrested in North Carolina on April 17, 1992, apparently after he was featured on a television program entitled “America’s Most Wanted.” 3

At trial, the victim’s husband, Ronald Carpenter, testified that he last saw his wife before he left for work on the morning of May 15, 1990. It was also on that morning that the victim last spoke with her friend, Jewell Strickland. Mrs. Strickland testified that when she spoke with the victim on the telephone between 10:30 a.m. and noon, the victim told her that the appellant had threatened to kill her. Mrs. Strickland further testified that at approximately noon on that day, the appellant telephoned her and told her that he had just shot the victim. On *635 direct examination, Mrs. Strickland testified, in relevant part, as follows:

Q. [by the State] Did anybody else call you?
A. Rusty Garrett.
Q. What did Rusty have to say?
A. He called me and he said, ‘Jewell?’ And I said, *Yes.’ I said, ‘Where you at?’
A He told me, he said, ‘I’m at Linda’s.’ He said, T shot Linda.’
Q. Did he say anything else? Did you say anything?
A I said, ‘Oh, my God, you didn’t.’ And he said, ‘Yes, I did.’ I said, ‘Where is she at?’ He said, ‘I picked her up and took her around back and laid her.’
Q. Did he say what he shot her with?
A A .6 mm.
Q. Did you take that to be a kind of gun or what?
A I don’t know anything about guns, sir, I don’t know what kind it is. He said—
Q. Just .6 mm.
A Yes.
Q. Was that the end of the phone call?
A No. He said that she was getting her breath hard now. And then he talked and he said, ‘Her breath is getting shorter and shorter.’ And he said, ‘She’s soon going to be gone.’. He said she asked him to take her to the hospital and he said, ‘There’s no use.’
Q. This man just told you he shot probably your best friend. Did you ask him why?
A I got to crying and upset and he said he was jealous, is why.

According to Mrs. Strickland, at approximately 5:00 the following morning, the appellant, with what appeared to be blood stains on his pants, drove to her home, alone, in the victim’s truck:

[Mrs. Strickland] Well, he came on in and I said, ‘Rusty, did you really kill Linda?’ He said, Tes, Jewell, I did.’
Q. [by the State] Did he tell you how he went about shooting her?
A He said he knew we always talked, Linda and, I about that time of a morning and he said he thought he would let us talk our last talk. So he — when we got done talking, the way everything looks, she walked out and then’s when he shot her.
Q. Where did he shoot her?
A In the stomach, he said.
Q. After he said he shot her, did he say he said anything to her or talk to her or anything like that?
A Yes, he said that he talked to her and he told her, he said, ‘What you’ve done, your courting around didn’t pay, did it?’ He said she said, ‘Rusty, I’ve never been with nary other man but you.’ And said that she told him said, ‘Take me to the hospital.’ And he said, ‘There’s no use.’ She said, T love you.’ And—
Q. Well, if he told you he killed her, did you ask him what he did with her body?
A He wouldn’t tell me. He said, T won’t tell you.’ And I said, ‘Will they ever find her?’ And he said,' ‘It will be a while, but they finally will find her.’
Q. What was he going to do?
A. He said he was going to Kentucky, and then he was going on somewhere else, but he wasn’t going to tell me where.
A He said he had Linda’s purse with him and he asked me for some money.

Other evidence presented at trial also revealed that on the night before the appellant shot the victim, Charles Greathouse gave him a ride to a location not far from the victim’s home. According to Mr. Greathouse, the appellant was carrying a rifle, a handgun and a trash bag of beer.

Connie Nichols, the victim’s neighbor, testified that at approximately 9:00 am on May 15, 1990, the day the victim disappeared, she *636 had seen the victim and an unidentified man walking across the victim’s front yard towards the victim’s house. Mrs. Nichols further testified that at approximately 11:15 am, she heard “the crack of a high-powered rifle” from the direction of the victim’s house. About forty-five minutes later, Mrs. Nichols, who had gone down the road to collect her mail, observed the victim’s truck as it came out of the hollow where her home and the victim’s home were located. Mrs. Nichols noticed that the truck was being driven by an unidentified man, that she could see no one else in the truck and that the truck, which usually turned right towards town, instead turned left.

Thomas Jackson Leslie of Olive Hill, Kentucky, testified that in early June of 1990, Larry Wayne Porter, Mr. Leslie’s friend and with whom the appellant was also acquainted, 4 had driven to his home a red and gray Chevrolet pick-up truck with no license plate. According to Mr. Leslie, the two men rode around in the truck all night and again the next day.

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Bluebook (online)
466 S.E.2d 481, 195 W. Va. 630, 1995 W. Va. LEXIS 238, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-garrett-wva-1995.