State v. Lanigan

528 A.2d 310, 1987 R.I. LEXIS 520
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJune 26, 1987
Docket85-116-M.P., 85-363-C.A.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 528 A.2d 310 (State v. Lanigan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Lanigan, 528 A.2d 310, 1987 R.I. LEXIS 520 (R.I. 1987).

Opinion

OPINION

FAY, Chief Justice.

This is a consolidated appeal. 1 In action No. 85-363 C.A., the defendant appeals from a Superior Court jury conviction for first-degree murder and assault with intent to murder. The defendant’s motion for new trial was denied and he was sentenced to mandatory life imprisonment for the murder and twenty years for the assault, the sentences to run consecutively.

In action No. 84-116 M.P., we granted defendant’s petition for certiorari from a Superior Court revocation-of-probation determination. At the time the murder and assault charges were lodged against him, defendant was also on probationary status. Because of the murder and assault charges, a probation-violation hearing was conducted and defendant was subsequently adjudged a violator of his probation and *312 ordered to serve the remaining seven years of his suspended sentence. 2 We affirm both the conviction and the probation-revocation judgment.

We shall discuss the appeal of each action separately, beginning with the conviction. The underlying facts supporting both the conviction and the revocation judgment are these.

The murder and assault incidents took place on May 20, 1988, at an establishment known as the Comer Pub on Chalkstone Avenue in Providence. On the afternoon of May 19, 1983, defendant, Kevin C. Lani-gan (Lanigan), was picked up at his girlfriend’s home by codefendant turned state’s witness, David Libutti. 3 The two drove around the city of Providence for a few hours in an orange car belonging to Libutti’s mother before stopping at a liquor store to purchase beer and brandy. They spent the next couple of hours drinking.

Lanigan and Libutti then drove to see a friend of Lanigan’s named Daley. Daley and his wife lived on Chalkstone Avenue across from the Comer Pub (the Pub). The conversation at the Daleys’ home included a discussion of the fact that a friend of the Daleys had been thrown out of the Pub the night before by the Pub’s owner, Peter Carroll (referred to in the indictment as Edwin P. Carroll, but commonly known as Peter Carroll), after spending $30 there on alcoholic beverages. Lanigan himself had been barred from drinking at the Pub by Carroll after an incident the previous summer that left Lanigan harboring resentment toward Carroll.

Leaving the Daleys’ residence at about 8 p.m., Lanigan and Libutti traveled to the home of Robert Brennan on North Main Street in Providence. Lanigan asked for and obtained a small black .38-caliber handgun and a nylon stocking from Brennan and his girlfriend. He checked the gun chamber to make sure it was loaded, secured the gun in the waistband of his pants, and left Brennan’s house with Libut-ti.

Returning to the car, Lanigan informed Libutti of his intention to rob Peter Carroll’s bar. He ordered Libutti to drive to the Pub and threatened to shoot Libutti in the head if he refused. Libutti drove to the Pub, and they parked in the street next to the bar; but after about a half hour of sitting in the car, Lanigan fell asleep. Li-butti drove back to Robert Brennan’s house, removed the gun and stocking from the sleeping Lanigan and returned them to Brennan. Then he drove Lanigan back to Lanigan’s girlfriend’s house and woke him.

Upon waking, Lanigan became upset. He ordered Libutti to return to Brennan’s house so that he could retrieve the gun and stocking. Having regained the gun from Brennan, Lanigan returned to the car, pointed the gun at Libutti, and told him to drive back to the Pub or he would kill him. Libutti complied. Once back at the Pub, Lanigan stated that he was going to fire over Carroll’s head. He instructed Libutti to drive around the block and pick him up in a few minutes. Lanigan, wearing Libut-ti’s plaid shirt and tan scarf, then left the car and headed toward the Pub.

Libutti, following instructions, drove slowly around the block. Moments later, as he came up the street toward Chalk-stone Avenue, he heard gunshots ring out. Lanigan soon emerged about twenty feet away, running toward the car with the gun in his hands. He jumped into the car and directed Libutti to drive down a side street off Chalkstone Avenue. He then told Li-butti to head back to the Pub, stating that he had just killed Peter Carroll and wounded Manuel Correia and that he had to return to the bar to finish off Correia. Libut-ti again obliged Lanigan.

*313 At trial Manuel Correia and his girlfriend, Donna Clarke, testified that they were the last ones to leave the bar that night. Peter Carroll remained behind to close up. Correia and Clarke walked out of the bar at about 12:20 a.m. on May 20 and went up to their second-floor apartment above the bar. Five to ten minutes later they heard a gunshot originating from the bar below. Correia went down to investigate.

When he entered the bar, Correia observed Lanigan standing on the ledge in the middle of the bar near the cash register. He asked Lanigan where Carroll was, to which Lanigan replied that Carroll was in the back room. Correia became uneasy when he failed to locate Carroll in the back so he decided to leave the premises. As he passed Lanigan on his way out, Lanigan told Correia that he could join his friend. Correia turned to see a black object coming toward his face, put his hands up to protect himself, felt a burning, stinging sensation through the side of his head, and fell to the floor. Looking up, Correia saw Lanigan standing over him, pointing a gun at his face. Correia reached for the gun and a struggle ensued. Correia was able to get to his feet and knock Lanigan sufficiently off balance to enable him to run away. Lanigan fired a second shot at Correia as he ran from the bar.

Once outside, Correia hid behind a car. Only after he observed Lanigan run down Chalkstone Avenue did Correia return to the bar. There he discovered Carroll bleeding on the floor behind the bar and called the police.

Meanwhile, Lanigan returned to the bar but was unable to get past the door. Donna Clarke testified that from the front parlor windows of the second-floor apartment, she saw a man emerge from an orange car carrying a handgun and running toward the bar. She heard the driver of the car tell the armed man to hurry because someone was watching from the second-floor window. Clarke did not wait to see if the orange car and the two men left; she went to the bedroom to call the police.

Libutti was arrested by the Providence police later that morning; Lanigan turned himself in to the police four days later.

Lanigan raises a host of issues in the appeal of his murder-and-assault conviction, few of which merit discussion. Additional facts will be supplied where necessary.

I

The first issue raised by Lanigan concerns the testimony of Colleen Brennan. On Friday, April 19, 1985, the case against Lanigan got under way; the state’s first witnesses were called the following Monday, April 22, 1985. On Wednesday morning, April 24, 1985, the state supplied defense counsel with the statement of Colleen Brennan 4 together with notice of the state’s intention to call Ms. Brennan as a witness.

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Bluebook (online)
528 A.2d 310, 1987 R.I. LEXIS 520, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-lanigan-ri-1987.