State v. Jobe

486 N.W.2d 407, 1992 Minn. LEXIS 175, 1992 WL 142207
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedJune 26, 1992
DocketC1-91-469
StatusPublished
Cited by52 cases

This text of 486 N.W.2d 407 (State v. Jobe) 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. Jobe, 486 N.W.2d 407, 1992 Minn. LEXIS 175, 1992 WL 142207 (Mich. 1992).

Opinion

GARDEBRING, Justice.

Larry Lee Jobe was convicted of two counts of murder in the first degree in the stabbing deaths of Debora Ritacco (“Ritac-co”) and her two-and-one-half year old daughter Andria Ritacco. Appellant was sentenced to two consecutive life terms for the murders. Appealing the judgment of conviction, appellant challenges the admission into evidence of portions of his statements to police, asserting a violation of Miranda v. Arizona, 384 U.S. 436, 86 S.Ct. 1602, 16 L.Ed.2d 694 (1966). He also challenges the admission of autopsy photos of Debora and Andria Ritacco, descriptions of his reaction to being told of the crimes, and two references to his being in jail. Appellant asserts that the prosecution attempted on two occasions to shift the burden of proof to the defendant. Appellant also challenges the admission of deoxyribonu-cleic acid (“DNA”) evidence, asserting that the reliability requirements of State v. Schwartz, 447 N.W.2d 422 (Minn.1989) were not satisfied. Finally, appellant challenges his sentence of two consecutive life terms, arguing that he was entitled to a sentencing hearing and that the sentence was a departure from the Minnesota Sentencing Guidelines.

Appellant and Ritacco, who worked for the same company, dated for approximately six months in the spring and summer of 1988. Ritacco broke off the relationship in August; after the breakup, appellant continued to try to revive the relationship.

On Tuesday morning, November 29, appellant tried to call Ritacco at her desk. One of Ritacco’s co-workers answered the phone, spoke with him about his relationship with Ritacco, and untruthfully told him that Ritacco was seeing someone else. Appellant called another co-worker to talk about Ritacco, told her that Ritacco was seeing someone else, and “sounded very upset.” The co-worker suggested appellant call Ritacco. Immediately after the coworker hung up, Ritacco’s phone rang, and the co-worker answered it because Ritacco was not at her desk. It was appellant.

At lunchtime, appellant purchased a hand gun at a gun shop close to his home. He paid for the gun with a credit card, but did not receive it because of the seven day cooling-off period. At the time of the purchase, the gun store clerk reported that appellant seemed upset.

After lunch, appellant talked to yet another co-worker about his relationship with Ritacco. They talked for approximately an hour, during which time appellant asked if he should go to Ritacco’s house if she would not see him at work. According to the co-worker, appellant confided that he had thoughts of suicide and that fights with Ritacco “brought out the worst in him.”

Later that afternoon, appellant at last reached Ritacco on the telephone. They talked for about twenty minutes, and appellant persuaded Ritacco to have lunch with him the next Monday. After the call, Ri-tacco told two co-workers that she was going to call appellant that night and cancel the lunch date.

The next morning, one of Ritacco’s coworkers was worried when Ritacco did not arrive for work. She called Ritacco’s apartment. Receiving no answer, she then called the home of Ritacco’s ex-in-laws. Debora Ritacco’s ex-brother-in-law answered the phone. He also tried calling Ritac-co, and when he could not reach her he went to Ritacco’s apartment. When he got to the apartment he found the door locked. He unlocked the door with a key Ritacco had given his mother. When he entered he saw Ritacco’s body in the living room, slumped over her bed. She had been *412 stabbed many times. He went into And-ria’s bedroom and found that she too was dead, also the victim of many stab wounds. He ran to a neighbor’s and called the police.

The Bloomington Police arrived at the apartment complex at approximately 1:00 p.m. and began investigating the double homicide. In addition to the blood on and around the two victims, the police found blood in the bathroom sink, on the light switches in the bathroom and Andria’s room, on a bathroom rug, on the sliding glass door to the balcony, and on the balcony itself. A disturbance in the snow under the balcony suggested that someone had jumped off and walked or ran away. The police followed the trail of blood to the parking lot, where it ended. Because of the great quantities of blood apparently left by the killer, the police believed that the killer had probably injured him or herself during the attack. The police did not find any evidence of a forced entry to the apartment, or of any missing property.

As the police were gathering evidence at the apartment they learned that Ritacco had recently been dating appellant. The police called appellant and Ritacco’s employer and learned that appellant had not come to work that day, reporting by telephone that he had cut his hand. After calling area hospitals, the police learned that appellant had called an ambulance during the night and been treated for a cut hand at North Memorial Hospital. The police immediately began surveillance of appellant’s apartment building and began preparing a search warrant for appellant’s apartment and car.

Soon after the police arrived at the apartment building, they saw three people enter the building and the lights went on in appellant’s apartment. A short while later, an older man, later identified as appellant’s father, carried two garbage sacks to the dumpster. The police became concerned that appellant might be destroying evidence and decided to enter the apartment and “freeze” the situation until the search warrant arrived. They entered the apartment, quickly searched the apartment for other people, and sat down with the Jobes to wait for the warrant. As the police waited they heard appellant’s mother ask him several times about where his jacket was.

Before the search warrant arrived, appellant talked . with the police. Appellant’s hand was extensively bandaged, and he told police that he had been injured in downtown Minneapolis about 1:00 a.m. the night before, when two men approached him, asked him to buy drugs, and slashed at him with a knife when he refused. After the search warrant arrived the police told appellant he was under arrest for the murder of Ritacco. One police officer testified that appellant cried briefly at this news. Another officer testified that appellant had no reaction.

The police read appellant a Miranda warning and asked him if he was willing to cooperate with them. He said he was willing to talk. The police asked him whether he had any knives and he told them he had two and took them to a dresser drawer. There was only one knife in the drawer. Appellant said the other knife must have been stolen while he was at the hospital the night before. The police did not find any evidence that the apartment had been burglarized or ransacked.

The police asked appellant to give them the clothes he had been wearing the night before and he gave them a sweatshirt with blood on the cuff, a pair of sweatpants, and a pair of tennis shoes. The police also found a pair of bloody undershorts which appellant admitted he was wearing the night before. With the exception of the sweatshirt and the undershorts, none of the clothes had any blood on them, which seemed unusual to the police, given the amount of blood on the shorts.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
486 N.W.2d 407, 1992 Minn. LEXIS 175, 1992 WL 142207, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-jobe-minn-1992.