State v. Jackson

430 P.3d 1067, 364 Or. 1
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 6, 2018
DocketCC 15CR46257 (SC S065372 (Control), S065425)
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 430 P.3d 1067 (State v. Jackson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Jackson, 430 P.3d 1067, 364 Or. 1 (Or. 2018).

Opinion

C. Interrogation During the Second Cigarette Break on October 15

During the second cigarette break,7 the detectives talked with defendant about having *1073lunch, after which all three engaged in casual conversation about the transit police, defendant's health problems, fishing, and smoking and drinking. Defendant then talked quite a bit about his various relatives, then asked, "So I am going to jail today?" Lawrence replied that he would at some point, but that it would not necessarily be that day, stating that they could "put you up tonight if we need to if it's taking us time to get to the point where we can get all this stuff worked out." Lawrence explained that defendant would be kept overnight at the police station. Then the following exchange occurred:

"[DEFENDANT]: Okay, so is there a possibility like, after a little while, can I make a couple of phone calls?
"LAWRENCE: We need to get through this first before we allow you to make some phone calls.
"HOPPER: At some point though.
**11"LAWRENCE: At some point you will-
"HOPPER: When we're all done-
"LAWRENCE: At some point, you'll be able to.
"HOPPER: Yes.
"LAWRENCE: When we get to the point-
"[DEFENDANT]: Yeah, 'cause my-
"LAWRENCE: -where we're working together on this, yes, we can allow you to-
"[DEFENDANT]: Okay.
"LAWRENCE: -use the phone.
"[DEFENDANT]: Cause my sister, this is her second time calling.
"HOPPER: Oh, yeah?
"[DEFENDANT]: So Dejaunay must've called her.[8 ]
"HOPPER: Well, sure.
"[DEFENDANT]: Yeah, right after I left out.
"HOPPER: Of course.
"LAWRENCE: Um-hm. And that's the thing is we want you to be able to make that phone call. But we need to start making some progress with this in order to do that because we don't want to have to explain to your family what's going on.[9 ] It's better that you s-, put it in your words.
"[DEFENDANT]: Yeah.
"LAWRENCE: Do you know what I mean?
"[DEFENDANT]: Yeah.
"LAWRENCE: Because that-that's just an awkward place for all of us to be. It's better that you do it, than we do **12it. Then, once we've worked through some of these things, then it's, it's easier for everybody.
"HOPPER: We're gonna give you the opportunity to talk to your family.
"LAWRENCE: Ample-
"HOPPER: That's for sure.
"LAWRENCE: -opportunity.
"[DEFENDANT]: Uh-huh.
"HOPPER: We will give you an opportunity to (undiscernible).[10 ]
"[DEFENDANT]: Who I-all I need to do is call my sister. Like I said, she worries.
"HOPPER: Yeah.
"[DEFENDANT]: You know, especially with my health and stuff like that. Dejaunay probably made it sound a lot worse than-
"HOPPER: More dramatic?
"[DEFENDANT]: Yeah.
*1074"LAWRENCE: Yeah.
"[DEFENDANT]: You know, oh they came and they took him away.
"HOPPER: Yeah.
"[DEFENDANT]: Then [my sister Kawana's] like, 'what? Oh hell no. Okay, let me call this person, let me call that person, let me ...'
"HOPPER: Oh, I'm sure.
"[DEFENDANT]: And before I know it, it's all over town. Well, I'm about ready to go.
"LAWRENCE: Okay.
**13"[DEFENDANT]: I don't feel good, I and some of it, I don't remember all of them. I-I really don't.
"LAWRENCE: Okay.
"[DEFENDANT]: You know, but the girl in the house, I do remember that."

D. Interrogation After the Second Cigarette Break on October 15

After the second cigarette break, defendant and the detectives returned to the interrogation room. Defendant was shown more pictures and maintained that he did not remember two of the victims, but he acknowledged that he did recognize AA. Defendant said:

"I met her at Irvington Park. It was during the middle of the day um, I was sitting over by the playground and uh, it was me and a couple of friends and I think uh, two of [my] nephews 'cause I was watching them play. She came over and we started talking and everything was going pretty good so I, I told her I'd meet her again later on in the park, you know after I got, took the kids back home and, you know, got all that stuff situated. Uh, we met at the park and she was the one that recommended the house."

Defendant said that the victim knew which door was open at the house, and that he did not know what set him off, "But I know I did kill her. I think I strangled her. I think that's what I did." Lawrence asked him how, and defendant thought maybe it was with his hands. Lawrence offered to show defendant a different picture, "because there's a piece of her clothing that's kind of involved," and asked if that helped him remember. Defendant guessed "her shirt," then "her belt," and Lawrence offered that defendant could be "mixing the details up" and confusing that murder with a different one. He then asked if defendant remembered her shirt, and defendant offered that he thought it was dark colored. Lawrence then asked if there had been an incident where he had used a shirt and not just his hands to strangle someone. Lawrence asked if defendant remembered a weapon like a knife, and defendant offered that "I killed her with it, I, I believe." Lawrence then told defendant that AA had been strangled but had other injuries as well. He added that they would go through the other victims' injuries with **14defendant, showing him "harder photographs" to help them understand "how things happened with them and why you left them in the state you did." The detectives then took a lunch break, providing defendant with a sandwich, leaving him in the interrogation room, but taking his phone with them.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
430 P.3d 1067, 364 Or. 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-jackson-or-2018.