State v. Giles

395 S.E.2d 481, 183 W. Va. 237, 1990 W. Va. LEXIS 90
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 7, 1990
Docket19048
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 395 S.E.2d 481 (State v. Giles) 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. Giles, 395 S.E.2d 481, 183 W. Va. 237, 1990 W. Va. LEXIS 90 (W. Va. 1990).

Opinion

BROTHERTON, Justice:

On the morning of February 8, 1987, relatives discovered the body of seventy-three-year-old Ann Woods on the bedroom floor of her home in Fayette County, West Virginia. Her throat had been cut, and, as a result, she died within minutes. The seventeen-year-old appellant herein, Elbert Wayne Giles, Jr., who was a neighbor of the victim, was arrested later that evening after he apparently confessed to killing Mrs. Woods.

On April 11, 1987, the Fayette County Circuit Court transferred Giles’ case from juvenile to adult jurisdiction pursuant to W.Va.Code § 49-5-10(d). Giles’ indictment on two felony counts was returned on May 13,1987. Count 1 of the indictment alleged that, “On the_day of February, 1987, in the said County of Fayette [he] committed the offense of ‘sexual assault in the first degree’ by unlawfully and feloniously engaging in sexual intercourse with Ann Woods and in so doing inflicted serious bodily injury upon [her] against the peace and dignity of the State.” Count 2 charged that Giles had “on the_day of February, 1987, ... committed the offense of ‘Murder in the First Degree’ by unlawfully, felo-niously, willfully, maliciously, and deliberately slaying, killing, and murdering Ann Woods.”

Giles was convicted of first-degree sexual assault and first-degree murder on July 8, 1987. Upon the jury’s recommendation of mercy, he received consecutive sentences of fifteen-to-twenty-five years for sexual assault and life imprisonment for murder. His petition for appeal was granted by this Court on May 16, 1989, and the appellant now assigns several errors as grounds for the reversal of his convictions. Before addressing these issues, however, we will examine the circumstances which led to the defendant becoming a suspect in this case.

The chief investigating officer, Corporal Everette Steele, Jr., stated that on the day of the murder he interviewed many of the victim’s relatives in order to obtain a list of people she had known. The names of Elbert Wayne Giles and Danny Hall were among those given, and Steele stated that he intended to question both Giles and Hall at some point in his investigation. However, Hall came to the sheriff’s office of his own volition later that day and gave Steele a survival knife. Hall told Steele that he and Giles had been among the crowd of curious onlookers watching outside of Ann Woods’ home earlier that morning. At that time Giles had handed Hall the knife because, according to Hall, Giles said “that the law didn’t like to see a knife on a boy like [that].” Hall said that when he learned how the victim had been killed, he decided to bring the knife to the sheriff’s office because it appeared to him that the knife had either rust or blood stains on it. 1

Hall also related to Corporal Steele how he and Giles had spent the previous day on a drinking binge and that they both passed out at Hall’s house at about 6:30 p.m. that evening. When Hall awoke in the early morning hours of February 8, 1987, at approximately 2:30 a.m., Giles was asleep on his couch. However, Hall claimed that two people later told him that they had seen Giles near Mrs. Woods’ home sometime between 10:00 p.m. and 10:30 p.m. that night.

Corporal Steele took a statement from Danny Hall as well as Michael Allport, one of the two people who claimed they saw Giles near Mrs. Woods’ home that night. Steele then sent two members of the Sheriff’s Department out to locate Giles. Corporal Pete Lopez found Giles at a friend’s house and asked Giles to come with him, telling Giles, “... why don’t you step outside here with us a minute ... why don’t you get your shoes, on and stuff, we’re going to ride over to Fayetteville and talk to you a little bit.” Giles agreed, but Lopez indicated in hearing testimony taken on April 11, 1987, that, “He [Giles] wouldn’t have had any choice” and that if Giles had *241 refused to come along, Lopez “would have had to take appropriate actions to see that [he] did take him into custody.”

Giles was taken to a “road office,” and placed downstairs in the presence of a deputy sheriff at 3:31 p.m. on February 8, 1987. Before the interrogation of Giles was initiated at around 4:00 p.m., the prosecutor reminded Corporal Steele that the seventeen-year-old Giles was permitted to contact a relative. Although he was apparently able to talk with either a family member or friend on the telephone, Giles was not able to reach his mother before he was questioned. Corporal Steele indicated that a deputy was asked to keep trying to contact her.

Corporal Steele told Giles that he would be questioned about the death of Ann Woods, and he read Giles the Miranda warnings from a card. Giles indicated that he would be willing to answer questions. According to Steele, prior to his interrogation of Giles, he had not intended to arrest him and, at least for a while, if Giles had asked, Steele would have allowed him to leave. 2 Steele stated, “He was just another suspect like some of the others on the list that I had that we were going to bring in, but the knife made me really curious about questioning him.” However, twenty to thirty minutes into the interrogation, Steele said that he “felt like [Giles] definitely had something to hide, and at that point [he] was going to go ahead and arrest him.”

Giles confirmed the events of February 7, 1987, in much the same manner that Danny Hall had related them to Corporal Steele. However, Giles denied ever leaving Hall’s house that evening. Steele believed Giles was lying to him:

That’s when I confronted him with the evidence that I had, that he had, in fact, left Danny Hall’s residence, which he denied time and time again, and for a long time he denied everything.
Then it got to a point where he asked me — he said — , he said, “just say that I say I did it — but I didn’t. Say that I admit to it, I’m still going to jail?” And at that point I told him, “Junior, I’m going to arrest you tonight whether you admit to it or not. You’ve already lied to me. You have a reason for lying to me, and I'm going to arrest you before you leave here.” And just shortly after that, I notice he started shaking and crying. (Emphasis added.)

Giles continued to deny that he had killed Mrs. Woods, so Corporal Steele told Giles “that being seventeen years old, one of these days he would reach the point where he couldn’t, with this type of crime — he wouldn’t be able to handle it.” Steele stated that Giles “never really decided to tell the truth until I made him aware of the fact that I didn't think he could ever live with it” — “live with such a crime.” Steele concedes that Giles “never did come right out and say, T killed Mrs. Woods.’ I said, ‘Why did you kill her?’ And he said, ‘I don’t know.’ ” Steele maintains that Giles did not receive threats from him or anyone else in the office, “other than the fact that I was going to arrest him.”

At Giles’ March 12, 1987, transfer hearing, Steele stated that, although Giles insisted he didn’t know why he killed Mrs. Woods, Giles consented to having the rest of the interrogation recorded. The first inculpatory statements were not recorded, however, due to technical difficulties. Steele told Giles that they would have “to go through this again,” even though Giles maintained that he couldn’t.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
395 S.E.2d 481, 183 W. Va. 237, 1990 W. Va. LEXIS 90, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-giles-wva-1990.