State v. Haynes

597 P.2d 1297, 41 Or. App. 321, 1979 Ore. App. LEXIS 2697
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedJuly 30, 1979
DocketNo. 78-1763, CA 12018
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 597 P.2d 1297 (State v. Haynes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Haynes, 597 P.2d 1297, 41 Or. App. 321, 1979 Ore. App. LEXIS 2697 (Or. Ct. App. 1979).

Opinion

JOSEPH, J.

Defendant was charged with murder. She moved for a pre-trial omnibus hearing to determine "the voluntariness and admissibility of statements allegedly made by the defendant to police officers or other persons after the alleged act set out in the indictment.” The trial court ruled some statements admissible and others inadmissible. The state appeals, and defendant cross-appeals. There has not yet been a trial on the charge.

John Bruno and Charles Haynes, defendant’s husband, were arrested on March 10 and 11, respectively, for the murder of Pamela Bruno. After she learned of her husband’s arrest, defendant contacted Detective Davis of the Eugene Police Department — a family friend — and asked that he accompany her to the Springfield police station, where her husband was being held. Davis obliged. Defendant spent several hours discussing Charles Haynes’ arrest with Springfield officers. She claimed he could not have been involved in the homicide because she and he were together at the time it allegedly occurred. She returned to her home.

The next day (March 12) John Bruno and Charles Haynes were allowed to talk to each other for the first time since their arrests. They had both previously made confessions in which defendant was not mentioned. When they got together, however, they implicated defendant in the murder. At approximately 5 p.m. that day, Detective Davis was sent to bring defendant in for questioning. He found her at her mother’s residence and asked her to go the Springfield police station with him. On the way, as Davis drove and defendant sat in the back seat with another officer, Davis advised her of her Miranda rights. She acknowledged that she understood her rights, but asked why Davis felt it necessary to so advise her. As he recalled, he told her

[324]*324"[tjhere could possibly be some conversation [at the station] that could possibly implicate him [Charles Haynes] and her in the murder, and, if so, I wanted her aware of her rights.”

When defendant arrived at the station, Detectives Bond and Smith took her into an office for interrogation. Davis told them he had advised defendant of her rights. The questioning lasted no more than 10 minutes. Defendant denied that her husband committed the murder, and when the detectives suggested she might have been involved herself, she asked, "Do I have to talk to you anymore? Am I free to go?” The detectives told defendant she was under arrest, but they immediately ceased questioning her and left the room.

As Bond and Smith went out the door, defendant saw Davis sitting in the hall. She asked to speak with him. Defendant asked him, "What did they say I did?” Davis told her that Bruno and her husband said that she had been involved in the murder. She asked if either of them had taken a lie detector test. Davis told her Bruno had taken a test and had failed. She asked what would happen if she took a lie detector test herself. He told her that the results could not be used against her. She asked for the test. An Oregon State Police polygraph examiner administered it. Before beginning, he advised defendant again of her Miranda rights. Defendant was cooperative throughout the polygraph examination.

In the meantime, Detectives Bond and Smith went with John Bruno and Charles Haynes to the Haynes’ residence. There they videotaped a re-enactment of the murder and the subsequent dismemberment, with Bond portraying the victim and Haynes and Bruno portraying themselves and defendant.

When she finished the lie detector test, defendant asked to talk to Detective Davis again. They met at approximately 10:30 p.m. Defendant asked the results of the polygraph, and Davis told her she had failed. He [325]*325brought the examiner in to explain the results. Defendant then talked with Davis for approximately half an hour. When she saw Bond again, she asked to speak with him, too. The three were together about an hour, during which time defendant was told of the videotaped re-enactment. She asked to see the tape.

With Detectives Bond and Davis present, defendant viewed the tape for the first time, beginning about midnight. It lasted about a half hour. While watching, defendant remarked that she could not recall the incident. She also remarked how "morbid” and "brutal” it was.

After the first showing, defendant asked if she could watch the tape again with her husband. The second viewing began about 1 a.m., with Charles Haynes and Davis and Bond present. During and after the second showing, defendant and Charles Haynes talked to one another. Davis recounted their conversation and other statements of defendant as follows:

"There was a large amount of conversation between the Defendant and her husband and in that she would ask Charles, 'How could I do that?’ This was referring to when the videotape showed Charles taking her place, come in and stab Pam. And she would make statements, 'I must have been crazy. Charles, I couldn’t cut up a human being, could I?’ And this was referring to ***. This was referring to when Pam was carried into the bathroom and butchered. And Charles would answer, 'Honey, we were — it was all of us, not just you. We did it.’ And Anita would make statements, 'But how could we? That is crazy.’ And Charles would reply, 'We were all crazy at the time. We had to have been.’ Anita would respond, 'Yes, but you and John were drunk and I wasn’t. I must have engineered the whole thing.’ And Charles would reply to her, 'We all did it.’ And Anita would make a statement, 'But I stabbed her first.’ And Charles would answer, 'Honey, we all did it, all three of us.’ And Anita would say, 'But you seen it, Charles. You were both drunk. I was sober. What’s going to happen to us? We wouldn’t be safe around our kids. [326]*326We should never be let out. We could hurt our own kids next.’ And Charles attempted to get Anita to remember more of what happened, and he would tell her, 'Try to remember it. It will make you feel better after you get it out.’ And she would answer, T am trying, Charles. I know we did it. It’s in the back of my mind but it won’t come out. I just can’t face it.’ And then she would ask him, 'What’s going to happen to our kids? Who is going to take care of them? We can never be around them again. We might kill them next.’ And then after the video, Anita asked me, she said, 'Davis, I want my kids to stay with my brother Joe. He’s the only one that can bring them up right. Could you make sure my brother Joe gets our kids? I don’t want my folks to have them. They are too old. Charles’ parents are too old. I want them to stay with Joe. He’s the only one that can bring them up right.’ And she said her brother Richard, he drinks too much, T don’t want him to have the, to have the kids.’ And she asked her husband Charles, 'You want the kids to go to Joe, don’t you?’ And Charles would reply that he did. And Anita said, 'Charles, we must be crazy like Brudos and Marquette. How could we do something as morbid as that?’ And Charles would reply, T don’t know, honey. We did it. We were all drinking.’ And Anita would say, 'But she wasn’t,’ 'You and John were drunk, but I wasn’t. And why can’t I remember? I know I did it because you said I did and you wouldn’t lie.’ And Charles would tell her, 'It was so awful you are trying to put it in the back of your mind. It will make you feel better if you just come out and talk about it.’ She would tell him, Anita would say, T am trying, but I can’t say it.

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Related

Whipple v. Hill
120 P.3d 1251 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2005)
State v. Haynes
619 P.2d 889 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 1980)
Application of Haynes
619 P.2d 632 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1980)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
597 P.2d 1297, 41 Or. App. 321, 1979 Ore. App. LEXIS 2697, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-haynes-orctapp-1979.