State v. Hurd

763 N.W.2d 17, 2009 Minn. LEXIS 60, 2009 WL 775406
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedMarch 26, 2009
DocketA08-0539
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 763 N.W.2d 17 (State v. Hurd) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Hurd, 763 N.W.2d 17, 2009 Minn. LEXIS 60, 2009 WL 775406 (Mich. 2009).

Opinion

OPINION

GILDEA, Justice.

In 1993, a jury found appellant, Russell John Hurd, guilty of one count of first-degree murder and one count of second-degree murder for the 1981 homicide of Viola Linnerooth. Based on the first-degree murder conviction, the district court sentenced Hurd to life in prison. Hurd appealed his conviction to this court, but obtained a stay of the appeal in order to pursue postconviction relief. The postcon-viction court denied Hurd’s first petition for postconviction relief in 1996; Hurd did not appeal that ruling or otherwise seek to reinstate his direct appeal.

Hurd filed a second petition for postcon-viction relief in 2007, which the postconviction court denied. The 2007 postconviction court summarily denied most of Hurd’s claims. After an evidentiary hearing on Hurd’s remaining claim-a motion for a new trial based on new evidence — the postcon-viction court denied Hurd’s request for postconviction relief. Hurd appeals from the denial of his petition. We affirm.

This case arises from the July 1981 death of Viola Linnerooth. A 12-year-old boy discovered Linnerooth’s body sometime in the afternoon of July 18,1981, near the old prison in Stillwater, Minnesota. Linnerooth’s body was bloody and partially stripped. The State’s expert forensic scientist testified that Linnerooth’s death occurred at least 10 to 12 hours prior to discovery and resulted from hemorrhaging caused by blunt trauma and stab wounds applied during sexual assault.

The record reflects that the State arrested Hurd on July 20, 1981, and charged him with Linnerooth’s murder. But the charges were subsequently dropped for lack of sufficient evidence to proceed. Twelve years later, with new evidence obtained in a cold-case investigation, the State again arrested Hurd for the Linne-rooth murder. On March 8, 1993, a grand jury indicted Hurd on one count of first-degree murder, one count of second-degree murder, and one count of third-degree murder for Linnerooth’s homicide. The case proceeded to trial later in 1993. 1

The evidence at trial established that Hurd was seen in Stillwater, Minnesota on July 17, 1981, drinking beer with B.H., a “bar room friend.” Witnesses also said that they saw Hurd wearing a knife on his belt. 2 B.H. testified that he and Hurd met on July 17 around 2:30 p.m. and went to a bar. They subsequently left the bar and proceeded to Hurd’s residence, to another bar, to a liquor store, and then to Lowell Park. Around 8 p.m., Hurd and B.H. were seen leaving Lowell Park. B.H. testified that Hurd was not with him when he left Lowell Park. At about 9 p.m., B.H. was seen at Jim Beam’s Bar with a woman, J.M., but without Hurd. B.H. testified that he remained at the bar until closing at 1 a.m., and a witness corroborated that B.H. was there at least until midnight.

*21 Meanwhile, Hurd was observed entering John’s Bar, also in Stillwater, with Linne-rooth, at about 10:15 p.m. Hurd and Lin-nerooth left the bar together shortly after arriving. A Stillwater police officer testified that he saw Hurd and Linnerooth together — both of whom he knew from previous contacts — north of Lowell Park on the roadside between 10:30 p.m. and 11 p.m. Linnerooth appeared “extremely intoxicated,” according to the officer, and Hurd was pulling her to her feet from where she sat on the roadway. The officer stopped to observe Hurd and Linnerooth on the road, but continued on after he determined they could walk. The officer explained that he saw Hurd and Linne-rooth about a quarter of a mile from the site where Linnerooth’s body was later discovered.

The State also offered the testimony of Billie Ann, who described herself as Hurd’s friend. 3 Billie Ann testified that, between 10:30 p.m. and 11 p.m., she returned home, entered her kitchen and began making coffee. Sometime around 11 p.m., while she was still in the kitchen and before the coffee brewed completely, Hurd appeared at the door of her Stillwater home. Upon opening the door, she believed that Hurd looked “like he [had] seen the devil himself’ because “there was so much fear in his eyes.” She observed that Hurd had blood on his shirt, pants, and hand. Billie Ann said that she led Hurd inside and questioned what had happened, to which Hurd eventually responded, “I raped her,” and, “I killed her.” Billie Ann further questioned Hurd as to the identity of the person who had been raped and killed, and Hurd answered, “Vi.” 4

Billie Ann testified that she processed the information for a period, then set out to get Hurd cleaned up, not admitting to herself that the blood on the clothes could have been from someone other than Hurd. She took Hurd’s clothes and put them into the washing machine. The clothes included a pair of blue pants, which the State contended were the same pants that were later found at Hurd’s Stillwater residence. Billie Ann explained that, while the clothes were in the machine, she sat with Hurd and “tried to calm him down.” As she sat with Hurd, Billie Ann observed a knife on the nearby table.

According to Billie Ann, Hurd remained at her house for approximately one to two hours. Even though the clothes were not dry, Hurd requested his clothes from Billie Ann because he wanted to leave. After Hurd left, Billie Ann noticed that the knife was gone. Billie Ann testified that she felt scared after this incident and did not tell anybody about what had happened because, she said, “A friend came to me and I just-I didn’t dare say nothing.”

Billie Ann kept this secret for several years. But on February 17, 1993, Stillwa-ter police contacted her husband, B.H., for further information in the cold-case investigation of the Linnerooth murder. Billie Ann and B.H. married sometime after the murder. Although the police did not initially question Billie Ann, one officer did speak to her while the other officer continued to question to B.H. Billie Ann decided to tell both officers everything. Billie Ann testified that, after sharing her story, she became scared and wrote a note to one officer saying that she told an “untruth.” Billie Ann stated at trial, however, that the story she told to the jury was the same she told to the officers and that it was the truth.

*22 In addition to Billie Ann’s account, the State offered the testimony of Hurd’s friend, G.G., and G.G.’s babysitter. The babysitter, who was 10 years old in July of 1981, explained at trial that sometime after midnight, possibly close to 1 a.m. or 1:30 a.m., on July 18, a man knocked at the door of G.G.’s house. The babysitter answered the door, and the man identified himself as “Russ.” The babysitter testified that she recognized the man as G.G.’s friend. G.G. was home at the time, and she testified that when she was told that “Russ” was at the door she understood that to mean appellant, Russell Hurd. The babysitter told the man that G.G. was sleeping, so the man indicated he might come back later, and left.

The State also offered testimony from M.P., who testified that he ran into Hurd at Reed’s Drugstore in Stillwater during the early afternoon of July 18, 1981. According to M.P.’s testimony, he and Hurd spent the afternoon “bumming around” the town and searching for money for alcohol. At some point, Hurd gave M.P.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
763 N.W.2d 17, 2009 Minn. LEXIS 60, 2009 WL 775406, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-hurd-minn-2009.