State v. Gilman

702 S.E.2d 276, 226 W. Va. 453, 2010 W. Va. LEXIS 107
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 18, 2010
Docket35297
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 702 S.E.2d 276 (State v. Gilman) 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. Gilman, 702 S.E.2d 276, 226 W. Va. 453, 2010 W. Va. LEXIS 107 (W. Va. 2010).

Opinion

PER CURIAM:

This case is before the Court upon the appeal of Mark Gilman from the September 14, 2009, final sentencing Order entered by the Circuit Court of Logan County, West Virginia. The Appellant was sentenced to a term of forty years in the West Virginia State Penitentiary after being convicted by a jury of second degree murder, 1 arising from the death of Mary Pelfry. On appeal, the Appellant argues that: 1) the circuit court erred in not suppressing the Appellant’s statement given to the police; 2) the evidence presented at trial did not support his conviction of second degree murder; 2 3) the circuit court erred in the jury selection; and 4) the Appellant was denied due process of law by the prosecuting attorney’s misleading comments to the jury. Upon review of the parties’ briefs and arguments, the record, and all other matters submitted before the Court, the decision of the circuit court is hereby affirmed.

I. Procedural and Factual Background

On January 5,2006, the charred remains of Mary Pelfry were discovered by Barney Lee Shepard and his brother, Bill Lucas, in an area of Logan County, West Virginia, called Pine Creek. The victim’s body was covered with straw and tin. Other than the victim’s legs, her body was unrecognizable. Upon finding the body, the two men drove to a gas station in Omar, West Virginia, and called the West Virginia State Police. State troopers were dispatched to the location where they met Mr. Shepard and accompanied him to the crime scene. Upon returning to the location of the body, Mr. Shepard noted that someone had re-covered the body with more straw and placed an old grill and a piece of tin on top of the body.

An autopsy revealed that the victim had been struck three times on the left side of the head with a blunt object. According to *456 the medical examiner, the first blow to the head was sufficient to kill Ms. Pelfry. The medical examiner further testified that the body was completely burned. Ms. Pelfry was identified by the fingerprint of the fourth digit of her right hand.

As part of the investigation, Troopers C.R. Holbert, J.J. Lester, and Boone County Sheriff Chad Barker were sent to canvas the area near the crime scene. The Appellant resided on the property closest to the crime scene. The officers saw the Appellant standing in his driveway. Trooper Holbert testified that he approached the Appellant and asked him if he had seen anything unusual coming up or down the road in the last couple of days. The Appellant responded by saying, “Well, you guys are here for the burnt girl.” None of the officers had told the Appellant why they were there. Additionally, Trooper Holbert and Deputy Barker noticed two large five or six gallon gas cans sitting in the middle of the driveway. The Appellant also told the officers that he had not been off the property that day. The officers asked him about tire tracks going off the property and up the road towards the crime scene and the Appellant admitted that he had left the property. Deputy Barker further testified that he saw straw at the Appellant’s home. The officers did not take a statement from the Appellant at that time.

Later that night, the Appellant voluntarily accompanied state police officers to the Logan detachment of the West Virginia State Police. Trooper A.S. Perdue read the Appellant his Miranda 3 rights. Trooper Perdue testified that he told the Appellant that he was not under arrest and was free to leave at any time. Trooper Perdue’s interview of the Appellant lasted approximately twenty minutes. The Appellant gave inconsistent answers to the questions posed by Trooper Perdue. For instance, the trooper testified that first the Appellant denied that he had been to Pine Creek where the victim’s body was located. Then the Appellant stated that he had been there. Additionally, Trooper Perdue testified that the Appellant stated that he had never taken straw to the crime scene. 4 According to Trooper Perdue, the Appellant also put his head down and stated “I did it, I did it,” two times. When Trooper Perdue asked the Appellant what he had done, the Appellant raised his head and said “I didn’t do anything.” When asked again, the Appellant said “I’m half and half.” Trooper Perdue testified that the only way he could interpret that statement was that the Appellant was saying he was half guilty and half not guilty of the victim’s murder. The Appellant then told the officer that he needed “some time to think about this,” and left the detachment.

On January 10, 2006, the Appellant returned to the Logan detachment of the West Virginia State Police on his own volition to recover two knives that had been confiscated by the police when he had been transported and interviewed previously on January 5, 2010. While the Appellant was there, he was interviewed by West Virginia State Police Sergeant Christopher Casto. 5 Before this interview occurred, the Appellant again was Mirandized. Because the Appellant could not read, the officer went through each of the Appellant’s rights orally line-by-line, then had the Appellant initial each line. The form provided that the officer wanted to question the Appellant about a homicide, that the Appellant was not under arrest, and that the Appellant was free to leave at any time. After going over the Appellant’s rights with him, the Appellant voluntarily executed a waiver.

During the questioning of the Appellant, he denied knowing anything about the crime scene. Sgt. Casto testified that the Appellant then stated that he could not recall if he saw the victim’s body. Upon further questioning, he told the officer that he saw the victim’s body covered with a piece of tin and *457 straw. The Appellant then told the officer that he had been invited to a party with three unknown men and the victim, Ms. Pelfry, at Pine Creek. The Appellant stated that he had been drinking beer with them and he thought that they had put something in his beer that made him pass out. He stated that when he came to, Ms. Pelfry was lying there. The Appellant then asked the officer if he was going to be arrested and Sgt. Casto told him that he was not going to arrest him, as that decision was made by the investigating officer and he had no control over it. At this time, the Appellant asked Sgt. Casto to get him a lawyer. The officer told the Appellant that he could not get him a lawyer, because he had not been charged with a crime, was not under arrest, and was not entitled to court-appointed counsel. Sgt. Casto further testified that he told the Appellant that he could use the phone to call an attorney. The officer told the Appellant that the interview was over and then got up to leave the room. Before the officer got to the door of the room, the Appellant stated that he still wanted to talk, but that he wanted to talk to Trooper Vance. 6 Sgt. Casto testified that the time that elapsed between the Appellant asking for a lawyer, then stating that he wanted to talk to Trooper Vance was less than a minute.

Trooper Vance then interviewed the Appellant. The officer testified that he did not Mirandize

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
702 S.E.2d 276, 226 W. Va. 453, 2010 W. Va. LEXIS 107, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-gilman-wva-2010.