State v. Hooper

552 S.W.3d 123
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 9, 2018
DocketNo. SD 35025
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 552 S.W.3d 123 (State v. Hooper) 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. Hooper, 552 S.W.3d 123 (Mo. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

WILLIAM W. FRANCIS, JR., J.

Lisa D. Hooper ("Hooper") appeals her conviction, following a jury trial, of first-degree murder and armed criminal action. The trial court sentenced Hooper to life imprisonment without parole for the first-degree murder conviction, and seven years' imprisonment for the armed criminal action conviction, with the sentences to run concurrently. Hooper challenges her convictions in seven points on appeal. Finding no merit to any of Hooper's points, we affirm the judgment and sentences of the trial court.

Factual and Procedural History

We recite the facts of this matter in accord with the principle that we view the evidence (and the reasonable inferences therefrom) in the light most favorable to the verdict. State v. Lammers , 479 S.W.3d 624, 630 (Mo. banc 2016).

Victim and Hooper were dating, though their relationship was rocky. Around a month before the shooting at issue in this appeal, Hooper had "run off [Victim and] a couple of other people from her house[,] and ... she had taken her gun and shot at [Victim]'s tailgate as they were leaving."

Around noon on May 9, 2016, Victim was driving Hooper, Brandon Hamm ("Hamm"), and K.H., to a restaurant in a nearby town. En route, Victim and Hooper got into an argument. When the four arrived, Hamm and K.H. got out of the truck to go into the restaurant. Hooper remained in the truck, "throwing a fit." Victim got out, directed Hamm and K.H. to get back in the truck, and the four departed without eating. They drove to Hooper's house. Hamm and K.H. stayed there, while Hooper and Victim left in Victim's truck.

*127K.H. went home. A short time later, Victim and Hooper returned and picked up Hamm.

Victim was driving, Hooper was in the front passenger seat, and Hamm was in the rear passenger seat. Hooper and Victim began arguing about Hooper sending naked pictures of herself to another man. Victim broke up with Hooper, and the conversation went silent. Victim pulled up to a stop sign, paused, and then proceeded. At that time, Hooper shot Victim in the head with her pistol.

Hamm heard a loud "boom," and saw an "orange flash" near the truck's rearview mirror, around eye level for Hamm. Hamm was "certain" he had seen and heard a gunshot. Realizing that Hooper had shot Victim, Hamm jumped out of the truck and ran to his mother's house, which was a short distance down the street. He told his parents that Hooper had shot Victim, and his mother called authorities.

Hooper called 911 on her cell phone. She exited the vehicle, pistol in hand, and paced in front of the truck. Hooper insisted at least six times that the shooting was "an accident." Hooper turned and saw Hamm's mother, who was standing outside her home down the street. While still on the phone with 911 dispatch, Hooper went back in the truck, wedged her gun between the console and the front passenger seat, and came back out again.

When authorities arrived, Hooper made numerous self-serving statements. She insisted that: she did not mean to shoot Victim; the gun fell out of her "pocket" "when it went and misfired"; the gun "evidently" fell out of her "pouch" without her realizing; she did not know it would "misfire"; she did not know the gun fell out when she was reaching for her cigarettes in the console; the gun was on her side; and she did not know the safety was off.

Jennifer Hedgepath ("Hedgepath"), the 911 dispatcher, took Hooper's call. Hedgepath had been a dispatcher for 12 years and had taken thousands of 911 calls. Hedgepath would later testify that when Hooper first called, "it was as calm as me sitting here talking to you now. It was like oh, nonchalant." Then as more people arrived, Hooper's "voice escalated into I need to be panicked or I should change for this. It wasn't a natural response as far as any other 911 call I've ever taken."

Officer Michael Sanders ("Officer Sanders") was the first officer to arrive. He observed Hooper standing outside the driver's side door of Victim's truck applying pressure to Victim's neck with a T-shirt (Hooper shot Victim in the head ). Officer Sanders later testified that Hooper was speaking "louder and louder. The more people got there the louder she got." From Hooper, he observed "no tears, no emotions whatsoever."

Officer Sanders found a "38 bodyguard" gun in the front of the truck, between the passenger seat and the center console. There were three rounds left in the six-round magazine, and there was one round in the chamber. The safety was off. No other firearms were found at the scene. Officer Sanders located a bullet wound to the back of Victim's head. The slug in Victim's head would later be determined to match the shell casing found in Victim's truck, as well as the bullets found in the magazine of Hooper's gun.

Sergeant David Maclin arrived at the scene, and performed an initial investigation. Hamm then approached him and said that Hooper shot Victim.

Victim was transported to the hospital by ambulance. His family made the decision to remove life-support shortly thereafter, and Victim died. Dr. Russell Deidiker, a pathologist, performed Victim's autopsy. He determined that Victim's death was *128caused by a single gunshot wound to the head, and classified the death as a homicide. Dr. Deidiker found the entrance wound to be in the back of Victim's head just to the left of the mid-line, about the level of the ears. The path of the bullet was from Victim's back to front-from Victim's right to left, and slightly downward. The bullet path indicated that the fatal shot had not been fired from a position lower than the entry point.

Hooper was charged by amended information with the class A felony of first-degree murder (Count I), pursuant to section 565.020;2 and armed criminal action (Count II), pursuant to section 571.015.3

While awaiting trial on those charges, Hooper was held at the Pemiscot County Jail. The jail had a policy to record all incoming and outgoing calls, and utilized a third-party contractor-IC Solutions-to implement and maintain the recording system. A voice at the beginning of these calls warned that the call was being recorded. If an attorney called the jail, or IC solutions, and provided phone numbers the attorney did not want recorded for purposes of attorney-client privilege, those phone numbers would then be entered into the system, and the calls to or from those phone numbers were not recorded.

There were three phone calls Hooper either made or received, wherein a voice stated "this is an attorney-client privilege call" at the beginning of the call. These calls were recorded, as no one had requested that such phone numbers be excluded from the recording system.

These recordings (along with the other recordings of Hooper's prison communications) subsequently came into the possession of both defense counsel and the prosecutor. An investigator at the prosecutor's office, upon noticing the initial recitation at the beginnings of the calls that they were attorney-client communications, stopped listening, and segregated those calls such that their substance would not be reviewed or revealed.

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Bluebook (online)
552 S.W.3d 123, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-hooper-moctapp-2018.