State v. Hand

305 S.W.3d 476, 2010 Mo. App. LEXIS 236, 2010 WL 685803
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 1, 2010
DocketSD 29672
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 305 S.W.3d 476 (State v. Hand) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Hand, 305 S.W.3d 476, 2010 Mo. App. LEXIS 236, 2010 WL 685803 (Mo. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

*478 NANCY STEFFEN RAHMEYER, Judge.

William S. Hand (“Appellant”) was convicted of the class A felony of first-degree pharmacy robbery, a violation of section 569.025. 1 After he was sentenced to life in prison, Appellant timely filed this appeal claiming there was insufficient evidence to establish beyond a reasonable doubt that he threatened the immediate use of physical force for the purpose of forcing the delivery of the controlled substance and insufficient evidence that he displayed what appeared to be a deadly weapon. Appellant also claims the jury should have been instructed on the lesser-included offense of second-degree pharmacy robbery because there was a basis in evidence to acquit Appellant of first-degree robbery and convict him of second-degree robbery.

Facts

Appellant was sixty-two years old on the date of the robbery; he entered Walgreen’s Pharmacy at approximately 10:00 p.m. After he bought a hypodermic needle, the pharmacy technician asked him if he needed anything else. Appellant responded, “yes, morphine.” The technician asked if he had a prescription, to which Appellant responded, “no, he had this and kind of turned and lifted up his shirt” where she could see the handle of a gun. The technician never saw more of the gun than the handle. Appellant made no verbal threats and never pulled the gun out in front of the technician. He apologized for the inconvenience and the technician did not think he wanted to hurt anyone. Appellant said he was tired of life.

The technician put up her hands and walked slowly away from the counter; Appellant did not stop her. She yelled for the pharmacy manager, who was in the back, to come to the counter. She told the pharmacy manager that she “thought he needed to help the gentleman” and told him that Appellant had a gun. She then went to the back of the pharmacy and observed the pharmacy manager talk to Appellant. The pharmacy manager got into the controlled substance cabinet, but then she could not see him anymore. She heard Appellant yelling that he wanted morphine and that he was not “playing around.” She heard Appellant ask the pharmacy manager to “tie him off.” 2

The pharmacy manager testified that he was told by the technician that she felt he needed to approach Appellant. The pharmacy manager had noticed Appellant earlier, waiting in line but doing nothing unusual. When the pharmacy manager went to see what was going on, Appellant told him to back off, that the technician was helping him. The pharmacy manager thought Appellant heard the technician say that Appellant had a gun. Appellant demanded morphine; the pharmacy manager could see just the “top” of the gun. The pharmacy manager got morphine from a locked cabinet and gave it to Appellant. It was a 500-milliliter bottle of liquid morphine. 3 Appellant tried to draw the drug into the syringe and needle he had just purchased to inject himself; he asked the pharmacy manager to tie him off but the manager told Appellant he was on his own as the pharmacy manager had nothing to tie him with.

*479 After Appellant tried to inject himself a couple of times, he started to bleed and went to a chair in the corner of the pharmacy area; he took off his shoe and sock and tried to inject himself in the foot or leg. He left the bottle of morphine on the counter; after a few tries at injecting himself, he came back for the bottle and returned to the chairs to drink from it. Appellant asked for more and the pharmacy manager gave him a second bottle that had only about an ounce of liquid remaining. Appellant consumed a total of 1060 milligrams of liquid morphine from the two bottles and asked for more, but the pharmacy manager said that was all. Appellant demanded Dilaudid, another controlled substance, but the pharmacy manager did not give him any.

The pharmacy manager conducted a transaction with another customer while all this was going on. He also pressed two silent alarms in the pharmacy and picked up the phone when the police called while Appellant was “busy doing his thing.” He felt threatened by the gun and testified that he only gave Appellant the morphine because he had the gun.

All of the technicians waited in the back of the pharmacy until the police arrived. The police motioned for the technicians to leave and all left through a back door along with the overnight pharmacist. Appellant asked where the technicians were going and stated that he did not have all the drugs that he needed. The pharmacy manager also left after he spoke to the police, yet Appellant made no threats. After he left, Appellant took the gun out and laid it on the counter.

The assistant store manager on duty that night approached Appellant when he was standing at the pharmacy counter. Appellant had a syringe in his hand and threatened to stab the assistant store manager with the syringe if he did not step back. The assistant store manager exited through the stockroom and went to his office to call 9-1-1.

The police arrived, set up a perimeter, and told Appellant to get on the ground. Appellant was cooperative and handcuffed, though his movements were slow and lethargic. Appellant led the police to the gun, which was left in two pieces on a shelf in one of the aisles. Although Appellant called it a toy, an officer testified that it was “an airsoft type of gun,” designed to shoot plastic pellets. At a distance of several feet, the gun would look like a semiautomatic designed to fire bullets. Appellant was taken to the hospital and admitted in critical condition; his stomach was pumped. He had consumed 5,210 milligrams of morphine, well above the lethal amount. At the penalty phase, there was testimony that Appellant had stabbed himself in the wrist with a screwdriver or other similar instrument a couple of months before the robbery. Appellant had been sick and was in the hospital; he left the hospital against medical advice the morning of the robbery.

Appellant testified that he had been convicted of several prior offenses and that he has had drug and alcohol problems since he was nineteen years old. His mother abused him and he had been sexually abused. He suffered from emphysema and acute pancreatitis as well as a deteriorating mental state. He did not remember going to the hospital on the day before the Walgreen’s incident, but remembered getting out on the morning of the robbery. He had no recollection of the events for which he was on trial, but he thought he went there to end his life.

Point One: Sufficiency of the Evidence

Appellant argues in his first point that there was insufficient evidence to convict him of robbery in the first degree because the evidence was insufficient to establish *480 beyond a reasonable doubt that Appellant threatened the Immediate use of physical force on or against anyone for the purpose of forcing the pharmacy manager to deliver up the controlled substance, in that Appellant did not display what appeared to be a deadly weapon to the pharmacy manager and the manager did not know that Appellant had displayed what appeared to be a deadly weapon to the technician. There is no merit to Appellant’s contention.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
305 S.W.3d 476, 2010 Mo. App. LEXIS 236, 2010 WL 685803, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-hand-moctapp-2010.