State v. Gibson

113 P.3d 423, 338 Or. 560, 2005 Ore. LEXIS 274
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJune 3, 2005
DocketCC 200005422; SC S48323
StatusPublished
Cited by64 cases

This text of 113 P.3d 423 (State v. Gibson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon 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. Gibson, 113 P.3d 423, 338 Or. 560, 2005 Ore. LEXIS 274 (Or. 2005).

Opinion

*562 BALMER, J.

This case is before us on automatic and direct review of defendant’s judgment of conviction and sentences of death. Defendant seeks reversal of his convictions for two counts of aggravated murder and his convictions for felony murder, attempted murder, first-degree assault, first-degree robbery, first-degree burglary, and felon in possession of a firearm. Defendant challenges trial court rulings in the pretrial, guilt, and penalty phases of his trial, seeking reversal of bis convictions or, in the alternative, vacation of his sentences and remand for resentencing. For the reasons set out below, we affirm the convictions and the sentences, except that we remand to the trial court for the limited purpose of merging defendant’s two convictions for aggravated murder and resentencing defendant to only one sentence of death.

I. FACTS

Because the jury found defendant guilty, we review the evidence in the light most favorable to the state. State v. Thompson, 328 Or 248, 250, 971 P2d 879, cert den, 527 US 1042 (1999).

Defendant attended a party at his cousin’s house in Eugene at about 1:00 a.m. on March 12, 2000. There, defendant encountered Wendy Gates, James Herlong, and Deon Givens. Gates indicated that she knew a man named Joshua Copp who might have money because he sold marijuana. Defendant, Gates, Herlong, and Givens formulated a plan to rob Copp, and defendant agreed to drive them all to Copp’s house. Defendant had a .45-caliber pistol with him, and Givens had two handguns, one of which he gave to Herlong.

When they arrived at Copp’s house at about 5:00 a.m., defendant and Gates knocked on the door. Copp let them in because he knew Gates and then shut and locked the door. Thirty seconds later, defendant unlocked the door and flashed the porch light as a signal. Givens and Herlong then entered the house, and Gates went outside to the car. Givens, Herlong, and defendant confronted Copp in the hallway and told him to go back to his room, which he did. They then asked Copp where his gun and money were, and Copp told *563 them that his gun was under the mattress. Defendant took Copp’s gun and wallet, and someone taped Copp’s hands and his eyes. Copp said that his roommate, Steve Johnson, was in the next bedroom. Herlong and Givens kicked in Johnson’s door and asked him where his money was. They taped his hands and searched his room but failed to find anything. Johnson broke loose and tried to escape through the window, but defendant and Givens caught and pistol-whipped him .

After retaping Johnson, defendant, together with Givens and Herlong, took Johnson and Copp into the living room, laid them down on the floor, and kicked and hit them. Someone said, “Let’s just smoke them.” Defendant said, “Fuck it. Get a pillow. I’m going to shoot them both in the head.” When Johnson broke loose again and ran to the door, defendant and Givens shot him five or .six times at close range. Johnson fell through the front door of the house and onto the lawn. Givens and Herlong ran outside to the car. Another shot was fired inside the house, after which defendant emerged from the house and returned to the car. Defendant told the others in the car that he thought that he had shot one of the victims in the neck or the shoulder.

From Copp’s house, defendant, Givens, and Herlong had taken some scales, a knife, some marijuana, a gun they found underneath Johnson’s bed, and $200. Along with Gates, they went back to defendant’s house, where they split up the money. When they got there, defendant told his wife, “we just killed two people.” Later that day, they learned that only Copp had died. Defendant, Gates, and Herlong decided to go to Reno, and they left Eugene by bus the next morning. In Reno, defendant pawned the weapon that he had used during the robbery and shootings. He subsequently returned to Eugene, where he was arrested.

The state charged defendant with the crimes enumerated above, and a jury convicted defendant of all counts. At a separate penalty-phase proceeding on the two counts of aggravated murder, the jury affirmatively answered the four questions set out under ORS 163.150(l)(b). Pursuant to ORS 163.150(l)(f), the trial court entered a sentence of death on each of the aggravated murder counts.

*564 Defendant raises 34 assignments of error. We have examined each of those assignments of error, and we discuss five of them below. We reject all but the assignment challenging the trial court’s decision to enter two separate convictions for aggravated murder and two separate sentences of death.

II. EVIDENCE OF DEFENDANT’S “OTHER BAD ACTS”

In four assignments of error, defendant challenges the trial court’s rulings that allowed evidence of what defendant describes as his “other bad acts.” Those acts included defendant’s earlier firing of the murder weapon when defendant and Herlong had considered robbing a sandwich shop and a conversation on the bus to Reno in which defendant suggested to Gates that she prostitute herself to make money for the group. We discuss in detail the context in which the trial court made the disputed rulings and the evidence at issue, because that context helps to explain defendant’s arguments and our analysis. We then consider defendant’s legal arguments.

A. Context at Trial

1. State’s Direct Case

The key issue at trial was whether defendant or Herlong shot Copp. The state sought to prove that defendant was the shooter by introducing evidence that defendant had been the only person in the house with Copp when Copp was shot, that defendant had been armed with the murder weapon during the crime, that defendant had owned the murder weapon, and that defendant had been the leader of the group and therefore the one most likely to have shot Copp. Although no witness testified to seeing defendant shoot Copp, several witnesses testified that defendant had been the only person inside the house with Copp when they had heard a shot. No witnesses testified to seeing Copp alive after they heard the shot. The state’s witnesses also testified that ballistics tests showed that Copp had been shot with the .45-caliber pistol that defendant owned, that defendant had carried that pistol when he and the others had entered Copp’s house, and that defendant had pawned the pistol in Reno following the murder.

*565 Herlong testified that he had seen defendant fire the gun at least once before. On one such occasion, in the week preceding the murder, Herlong saw defendant fire the gun through an open car window and say, “I feel like killing somebody.” Defendant did not object to that testimony.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
113 P.3d 423, 338 Or. 560, 2005 Ore. LEXIS 274, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-gibson-or-2005.