State v. Humphrey

715 A.2d 1265, 1998 R.I. LEXIS 236, 1998 WL 414492
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJuly 15, 1998
Docket96-150-C.A.
StatusPublished
Cited by47 cases

This text of 715 A.2d 1265 (State v. Humphrey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Humphrey, 715 A.2d 1265, 1998 R.I. LEXIS 236, 1998 WL 414492 (R.I. 1998).

Opinion

OPINION

BOURCIER, Justice.

This case comes before us on the defendant’s appeal from judgments of conviction following a jury trial in the Washington County Superior Court on eight separate criminal offenses in connection with the near fatal shooting of John D. Lemont, a Rhode Island State Police Trooper, on October 15, 1994.

I

Facts and Travel

Late in the afternoon of October 15, 1994, Trooper John D. Lemont (Trooper Lemont) of the Rhode Island State Police was on routine patrol near a highway construction site on Route 1-95 in the town of Richmond. Due to the highway road construction in the area, traffic was confined to a single low speed lane and moving at a stop-and-go pace. As Trooper Lemont stood in the breakdown lane, speaking with State Police Trooper Richard C. Ryan (Trooper Ryan), he noted the approach of an oncoming dilapidated orange and red painted pickup truck missing the required front license plate. Trooper Lemont then left in his marked State Police *1268 vehicle to pursue the pickup truck and to determine from its driver if the truck was properly registered. Trooper Lemont overtook the pickup truck and activated his police vehicle’s overhead lights. The driver of the pickup truck responded by turning into the highway breakdown lane and stopping. Trooper Lemont parked his police vehicle some fifteen to twenty feet behind the stopped pickup truck and alighted from the police vehicle. As he approached the driver’s side window, the driver, later identified as Edward David Humphrey (defendant), a bearded white male with bushy hair wearing a bandanna and a black leather jacket, suddenly reached out, holding a semiautomatic Colt .45 handgun and fired one shot directly into Trooper Lemont’s stomach. The bullet passed through Trooper Lemont’s stomach, sliced the duodenum, passed through his renal arteries, and exited through the muscles of his back. Trooper Lemont fell, bleeding profusely, to the ground. The defendant then sped away in the pickup truck. As he did, Trooper Lemont was able to draw his police revolver and fire several shots at the fleeing pickup truck, none of which struck the defendant driver.

The defendant, in an attempt to flee and to avoid detection, proceeded south on Route I-95 and exited at the first exit onto Route 138, where he drove into the parking lot of a nearby shopping mall. He then quickly began to wipe down the truck shift, its windows, and its steering wheel in order to remove his fingerprints. Then, with the Colt .45 handgun concealed in his pants, he ran from the pickup truck into a nearby store located in the mall complex where he attempted to avoid detection. After a short time in the store he left and sprinted toward a wooded area behind the mall to conceal himself.

Unfortunately for the defendant, Rhode Island State Police Trooper David J. Hayden (Trooper Hayden) had observed the parked pickup truck and was approaching the mall area where it was parked when the defendant made his dash for the woods behind the mall. Trooper Hayden exited his police cruiser and gave chase, and when about twenty-five feet behind the fleeing defendant, Trooper Hayden ordered the defendant to halt and lay down the Colt .45 weapon that the defendant had by now taken from his pants. The defendant, instead of obeying the trooper’s command, began firing - at the trooper. An exchange of gunfire followed, and the defendant ran around the corner of a building and disappeared from Trooper Hayden’s view. The defendant then threw his Colt .45 weapon up onto the roof of a nearby Cost Plus store building and attempted without success to procure a ride from the scene from a departing shopper. At that time, Trooper Ryan, responding to the shooting, arrived on the scene. He exited his cruiser and with gun drawn ordered the defendant to stop and to raise his hands. Because the defendant had earlier disposed of his Colt .45, he was unarmed and obeyed Trooper Ryan’s command. As he did, Trooper Hayden, unaware that the defendant had thrown the Colt .45 onto the nearby Cost Plus store roof and believing him to be still armed, tackled the defendant to the ground and handcuffed him. The defendant was then taken by Troopers Hayden and Ryan in Trooper Hayden’s police vehicle to the Hope Valley State Police Barracks. 1

The defendant upon his arrival at the Hope Valley Barracks was placed by Troopers Hayden and Ryan in the barrack’s conference and detention room. That room was used to detain and question crime suspects. It was serviced by a wall-ceiling video camera so that suspects, while alone in the room, could be monitored, and it had several eye-bolts set into the wall, about waist high, to which suspects, while handcuffed, could be secured for security purposes.

The defendant, upon his arrival at the barracks shortly after 5 p .m., was left in the conference room alone for about thirty minutes while the State Police were preparing to question him and learn his identity. At about 5:30 p.m. Lieutenant Robert Powers, *1269 the acting division commander, Lieutenant George A. Cuddy (Lieutenant Cuddy), the barrack’s patrol commander and Sergeant Richard F. Quinn entered the conference room for the purpose of reading and advising the defendant of his rights under Miranda v. Arizona, 384 U.S. 436, 86 S.Ct. 1602, 16 L.Ed.2d 694 (1966), and also to strip search him in order to ascertain if he was concealing any weapons or contraband. Trooper Hayden, one of the arresting troopers, was also present in the room and positioned at the conference room door. In accordance with State Police policy all four State Police personnel were unarmed. Lieutenant Cuddy advised the defendant of his Miranda rights, and the defendant affirmed that he was aware of and understood those rights. 2 He was then asked by Lieutenant Cuddy to identify himself and to tell whether he had used more than one gun during the shopping mall shootout with Trooper Hayden. The defendant replied that he had used only the single .46 caliber handgun. The defendant identified himself, gave his date of birth, his Social Security number, and his place of residence. His clothes, except for boxer shorts, were removed in order to secure them as evidence and to allow for a complete search for any weapons. It was observed and noted that he had a small cut over one eye, a small cut on his lip, and scrapes on both knees, all resulting from his forcible arrest by Trooper Hayden at the shopping mall. The defendant was then again left alone in the conference room. He was left placed in leg restraints to restrict his movement in the room, and his handcuff securing one arm was attached to a nearby wall eyebolt next to the chair on which the defendant was seated beside the conference room table.

At approximately 6 p.m. Detective Corporals Michael P. Iarossi (Detective Iarossi) and Steven Pare (Detective Pare) of the Rhode Island State Police were assigned to interview the defendant. Upon entering the conference room, Detectives Iarossi and Pare noted that the defendant was seated at the conference room table while his legs remained confined within leg restraints and that the handcuff securing only one of his arms remained attached to an eyebolt in the wall.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
715 A.2d 1265, 1998 R.I. LEXIS 236, 1998 WL 414492, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-humphrey-ri-1998.