State v. Kent

584 S.E.2d 169, 213 W. Va. 535
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 3, 2003
Docket30649
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 584 S.E.2d 169 (State v. Kent) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia 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. Kent, 584 S.E.2d 169, 213 W. Va. 535 (W. Va. 2003).

Opinions

PER CURIAM.

The appellant Gary Wayne Kent appeals his first degree murder conviction and subsequent life-without-mercy sentence. Following his conviction, the appellant filed a motion for a new trial asserting, inter alia, that he lacked the competency to stand trial. We find that the circuit court erred in not granting the appellant’s motion. Therefore, we overturn the appellant’s conviction.1

I.

On July 26, 1998, Gary Wayne Kent allegedly shot and killed Thomas Lee Allen. On July 27, 1998, a Marion County • magistrate issued a warrant for the appellant’s arrest; local law enforcement officials arrested the appellant without incident and placed him in the Marion County Correctional Center.

On July 29,1998, appellant’s counsel filed a motion to have the appellant psychologically and psychiatrically examined. The circuit court granted the motion and the appellant was taken from the Marion County Correctional Center to William R. Sharpe, Jr. Hospital (hereinafter “Sharpe Hospital” or “Sharpe”).

When the appellant first arrived at Sharpe Hospital, he was diagnosed as suffering from “serious depression, suicidal ideation, severe mood swings, anhedonia,” and “an inappropriate desire to be punished secondary to depression.”

On September 29, 1998, forensic psychiatrist Dr. John D. Justice and a team of mental health care providers evaluated the appellant for his competency to stand trial. During the evaluation, Dr. Justice observed that the appellant had racing thoughts with an inability to focus and that the appellant reported hearing voices. Dr. Justice also [537]*537found that the appellant had “persecutory paranoid beliefs,” difficulty concentrating, and memory difficulties; he also found that the appellant lacked the “motivation presently to help himself in the legal process.” The appellant was also evaluated for malingering and by all indications was found not to be faking the symptoms of his mental illness, although the appellant does not consider himself mentally ill.2

The appellant has a well-documented history of mental illness. The appellant was well-known in his community for his incendiary letters to the local papers, pontificating on the “problems of black employment in the Fairmont community.” The appellant also had a grandiose scheme of owning property that left him $15,000.00 in debt to local rental agencies. The appellant’s bipolar disorder further led him to feel entitled to these real estate properties without having to pay for them.

In 1993, the appellant took employees of a local hotel hostage because he believed the hotel persecuted African-Americans in particular and the appellant specifically. The appellant believed that the employees of the hotel were conspiring to force him out of his job and into bankruptcy.

After being taken into police custody in 1993, a psychiatrist, who examined the appellant, diagnosed him as having a “very severe bipolar illness with symptoms of manic grandiosity isolating with depression.” In 1993, a psychologist also diagnosed the appellant as having a bipolar disorder with delusional and paranoid symptoms; the psychologist stated that the appellant had previously suffered from periods of “manic grandiosity” alternating with “a history of major depression.” The appellant also has “a history of persecu-tory paranoid beliefs.”

According to the psychiatrist who evaluated the appellant in 1993, the appellant suffered from a disorder that was “manifested by unstable pathological states.” The same psychiatrist also stated that “[ejuphoria, grandiosity, [and] impulsive generosity can change into hopelessness, anergia, and black suicidality.”

In his October 5, 1998 report to the circuit court, Dr. Justice diagnosed the appellant as having a history of “bipolar affective disorder, mixed state as well as a delusion disorder, paranoid type.” Dr. Justice stated that the appellant was not currently competent to stand trial in his untreated medical condition. Dr. Justice recommended that the appellant needed two to six months of in-house treatment in Sharpe’s forensic program for competency restoration. In the competency program, the appellant would receive counseling, psychotropic medications, including mood stabilizers and possibly anti-psychotics, and education about the legal process.

On October 16, 1998, the circuit court found the appellant was not competent to stand trial at the time and ordered that the appellant remain at Sharpe Hospital to receive the treatments recommended by Dr. Justice. The appellant remained at Sharpe and began to receive the recommended treatments.

On February 19, 1999, the appellant’s treatment team at Sharpe reported to the circuit court that the appellant was competent to stand trial. In their report, the competency team recommended that the appellant continue on his current medication regime and that local mental health care providers continue to monitor and counsel the appellant after he returned to the Marion County Correctional Center.

On March 30, 1999, the Marion County Prosecutor’s Office moved to have the appellant evaluated by Dr. Thomas Adamski, a forensic psychiatrist, and by Dr. William Fremouw, a forensic psychologist. The circuit court granted the prosecutor’s motion.

On April 4, 1999, Dr. Adamski interviewed the appellant for two hours. Dr. Adamski found that the appellant was competent to stand trial. Further, Dr. Adamski opined that the appellant did not suffer from any “symptoms suggestive of psychosis or manic depressive illness.” Dr. William Fremouw, a [538]*538forensic psychologist, also evaluated the appellant and found him competent to stand trial. Dr. Fremouw, however, could not make a conclusive diagnosis of whether the appellant had a mental illness because, in his opinion, the medications prescribed for the appellant mostly likely controlled the symptoms of any disorder that the appellant might have.

On June 23, 1999, the appellant was released from Sharpe Hospital and returned to the Marion County Correctional Center.

On September 27, 1999, the appellant’s jury trial began in circuit court. During the trial, the appellant rarely spoke with his counsel.3 According to appellant’s counsel, the appellant refused to take an active role in his own defense. His counsel advised him to look at the jury; the appellant refused. When his counsel asked the appellant questions related to his defense, the appellant did not answer or would answer questions in a seemingly nonsensical manner.

On October 1, 1999, the jury found the appellant guilty of murder. Because of the appellant’s depressed manner and withdrawn state, appellant’s counsel requested that Dr. Justice meet with the appellant. Dr. Justice visited the appellant in jail and found that the appellant was depressed, had suicidal thoughts, was subject to crying spells, and suffered from insomnia. On October 3, 1999, Dr. Justice saw the appellant again and found the appellant to be “very talkative” and “very angry” with an expansive affect. Suspecting that the appellant’s bipolar symptoms were “breaking through,” Dr. Justice prescribed a sedative to calm the appellant’s racing thoughts and other “break through” symptoms.

On October 4, 1999, appellant’s counsel filed a motion to have the appellant reexamined for his competency to stand trial. On October 4, 1999, the circuit court ordered the appellant taken back to Sharpe Hospital.

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Related

State of West Virginia v. Silvan Jobe
West Virginia Supreme Court, 2017
Joshua Stevens v. Evelyn Seifert, Warden
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State v. Kent
678 S.E.2d 26 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 2009)
State Ex Rel. McLaurin v. McBride
640 S.E.2d 204 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 2006)

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Bluebook (online)
584 S.E.2d 169, 213 W. Va. 535, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-kent-wva-2003.