State v. James

79 P.3d 169, 276 Kan. 737, 31 A.L.R. 6th 745, 2003 Kan. LEXIS 625
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedNovember 26, 2003
Docket87,974
StatusPublished
Cited by54 cases

This text of 79 P.3d 169 (State v. James) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. James, 79 P.3d 169, 276 Kan. 737, 31 A.L.R. 6th 745, 2003 Kan. LEXIS 625 (kan 2003).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Nuss, J.:

A Johnson County District Court convicted Cedric D. James of two counts of involuntary manslaughter on May 30, 2001, and sentenced him to two consecutive 34-month terms of imprisonment. He raises two issues in his direct appeal: (1) Did the district court have jurisdiction over the charged offenses, and (2) did the district court err in failing to suppress his statements to police?

Our jurisdiction is pursuant to K.S.A. 20-3018(c), transfer on our own motion, and we affirm.

FACTS

In the summer of 2000, Cedric James began working as a teacher for Community Living Opportunities (CLO), an organization which provides day and residential care services for developmentally disabled adults. CLO operates several residences in the Kansas City, Kansas, area, and each of these is home to three to eight adults.

As a CLO teacher, James was responsible for monitoring and assisting residents in their daily living tasks. When he arrived in the mornings, he assisted with the residents’ routine of showering, brushing their teeth, eating breakfast, and preparing for daily activities. For several Saturdays beginning in July 2000, he had taken some of the residents of CLO’s South Park facility in Merriam, Kansas, with him on afternoon outings. He explained to his coworker Kimberly Mayeo that he used this time to supplement his income by cutting people’s hair. Jennifer Thomas, his supervisor at the South Park facility, knew this information prior to September 2, 2000.

On September 2, 2000, James asked Thomas for permission to take two developmentally disabled adult residents, Michael O’Neal and Steven Warren, out for the afternoon. James mentioned that he would take the residents to a Wendy’s restaurant and then pos *739 sibly to another CLO facility that was located only a few blocks away. Thomas approved these travel plans.

According to the supervisor of the residential program at CLO, Michaela Ross-Ward, the individuals whom CLO serves, especially O’Neal and Warren, are dependent upon the caregivers, including James, for almost everything that they do. Though both O’Neal and Warren were nonverbal, they followed directions well. Ross-Ward testified that she was not aware of their ever going against someone’s instruction to stay put until that person returned.

The South Park facility had two vehicles, but the air conditioners in both worked poorly. The larger vehicle’s air conditioner did not work when it was running idle, and the smaller vehicle’s air conditioner would work for about an hour before failing. Thomas instructed James to use the smaller car, the red Mercury Tracer station wagon. At approximately 1 p.m., James drove the station wagon away from South Park with O’Neal and Warren as his backseat passengers. The rear passenger doors contained child safety locks, which meant they could not be opened from inside the car.

When James later spoke to police investigating the case, he provided the following version of events. He first went to his home on Hillcrest Road in Kansas City, Missouri, to cut a neighbor’s hair. When his appointment did not arrive, James went to his cousin’s apartment at Rrittany Pointe in Kansas City, Missouri, arriving between 1:15 and 1:30 p.m. Following a short visit, he drove O’Neal and Warren to a Wendy’s restaurant and bought them food. After eating in the restaurant parking lot, the three went to Swope Park in Kansas City, Missouri, arriving between 2:30 and 3 p.m. After driving around in the park and stopping once under covered parking, they arrived at the entrance to the park off 71st Street near the Swope Park Frisbee golf course. James left the car, smoked several cigarettes about 50 feet away, and talked to a man playing Frisbee golf. After spending as much as an hour outside the car, James noticed that Warren had fallen over O’Neal in the car’s back seat and ran to assist them. James told police that he attempted first aid on Warren, but Warren was not responsive. James then drove to the Shawnee Mission Medical Center in Merriam, Kansas, *740 to seek medical assistance at the only medical facility he knew of in the area.

James arrived at the center at approximately 5 p.m. and entered the emergency room to request assistance. Sandi Jo Hudson, the admitting nurse, followed James to his car and immediately noticed that the two passengers in the back seat appeared to be in very grave condition. Neither man was breathing, and both were extremely red and warm to the touch. The skin on the sides of their faces had begun to blister and peel. Hudson testified that in response to her questions, James claimed O’Neal and Warren had stopped breathing only 5 minutes prior to their arrival at the medical center, although James also told her that the men were unresponsive from the moment he returned to the car at Swope Park.

After Hudson completed her triage of the two patients, she returned to the triage waiting area. She noticed James was anxious and pacing and that other patients were being disturbed by his conduct. In an effort to calm him, Hanson escorted him to a quiet, private waiting room.

Hudson did not declare the men to be dead on arrival. The men were later declared dead at the medical center by two attending physicians. Subsequent autopsies concluded that O’Neal and Warren died of environmental hyperthermia. The temperature that day was over 100 degrees Fahrenheit. The record on appeal does not reveal that any physician determined the precise times of the deaths.

Corporal Darren McLaughlin of the Merriam police department arrived at the medical center around 5 p.m. According to McLaughlin’s testimony, a physician informed him of the deaths and that James was in a private waiting room. McLaughlin then posted an officer outside the waiting room to keep contact with James. Approximately 15 minutes after McLaughlin’s arrival, be approached James and for about 5 minutes asked for preliminary identifying information and questioned him to confirm the information the physicians had provided. After speaking further with medical staff members and his superiors, McLaughlin returned to the waiting room 30 to 45 minutes later and asked James if he would be willing to go to the Merriam police station to speak with *741 an investigator. According to McLaughlin, James agreed to cooperate and voluntarily went to the station.

At 7:30 p.m., an hour after James arrived at the police station, Detective Michael Daniels spoke with James to gain information about the incident and to determine whether his department had jurisdiction to continue the investigation. Daniels testified that when James arrived at the station, Daniels did not believe a crime had been committed and that James was not in custody. James was merely considered a witness. Daniels explained that the officers did not restrain James in any way and they allowed him to retain all of his personal possessions including a cellular phone and pager. According to Daniels, if James had been under arrest, this omission would have been a violation of the department’s security protocol.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
79 P.3d 169, 276 Kan. 737, 31 A.L.R. 6th 745, 2003 Kan. LEXIS 625, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-james-kan-2003.