State v. Lanpher, Jr.

2024 S.D. 26
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedMay 8, 2024
Docket30404
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2024 S.D. 26 (State v. Lanpher, Jr.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota 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. Lanpher, Jr., 2024 S.D. 26 (S.D. 2024).

Opinion

#30404-a-JMK 2024 S.D. 26

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF SOUTH DAKOTA

****

STATE OF SOUTH DAKOTA, Plaintiff and Appellee,

v.

JAMES JOSEPH LANPHER, JR., Defendant and Appellant.

APPEAL FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE THIRD JUDICIAL CIRCUIT LAKE COUNTY, SOUTH DAKOTA

THE HONORABLE PATRICK T. PARDY Judge

CODY J. MILLER of Lammers, Kleibacker, Dawson & Miller, LLP Madison, South Dakota Attorneys for defendant and appellant.

MARTY J. JACKLEY Attorney General

ERIN E. HANDKE Assistant Attorney General Pierre, South Dakota Attorneys for plaintiff and appellee.

ARGUED FEBRUARY 14, 2024 OPINION FILED 05/08/24 #30404

KERN, Justice

[¶1.] James Joseph Lanpher, Jr. pled guilty to two counts of aggravated

assault against a law enforcement officer and admitted to a part II habitual

offender information. The charges arose out of an extremely dangerous high-speed

chase during which Lanpher repeatedly fired weapons at pursuing officers. The

circuit court sentenced Lanpher to serve two concurrent life sentences to run

consecutively to sentences he was already serving for other offenses. Lanpher

appeals, claiming his sentence was cruel and unusual in violation of the Eighth

Amendment and was an abuse of the circuit court’s discretion. We affirm.

Factual and Procedural Background

[¶2.] The facts set forth herein are taken from the settled record, police

reports, and the contents of the presentence investigation report (PSI). At

approximately 2:00 p.m. on July 14, 2022, a South Dakota Highway Patrol (SDHP)

trooper attempted to make a “precision interdiction stop” to pull over Lanpher’s

vehicle which was traveling westbound on South Dakota Highway 34 (Hwy 34) near

the Minnesota border. Law enforcement suspected Lanpher of transporting drugs

from Pipestone, Minnesota, to South Dakota. He was driving a 2014 Chrysler

bearing license plate JIM JON. The Sioux Falls Area Drug Task Force (Task Force)

previously identified Lanpher as a source of supply for methamphetamine coming

into the Sioux Falls metropolitan area. As such, an electronic tracking surveillance

device was installed on Lanpher’s vehicle, which tracked his location to Pipestone

on July 14. The Task Force believed that Lanpher would be picking up a fourteen-

pound package of methamphetamine from his source in Pipestone.

-1- #30404

[¶3.] On the morning of July 14, Lanpher, a lifelong Sioux Falls resident,

visited a friend’s house in Sioux Falls prior to leaving for Pipestone where he

encountered an old acquaintance, Bonner Juel. Lanpher and Juel soon left the

friend’s residence in Lanpher’s vehicle with Lanpher driving. Juel later claimed he

joined Lanpher to get high while riding in his car, but he did not know what

Lanpher’s plans were and was initially unaware that there were firearms in the

vehicle. Lanpher and Juel began traveling north towards Pipestone after driving

around Sioux Falls smoking marijuana. Before arriving in Pipestone, Lanpher and

Juel pulled over to smoke methamphetamine, as well.

[¶4.] After leaving Pipestone, Lanpher and Juel began traveling west back

into South Dakota. 1 The Task Force requested assistance from the SDHP in

stopping Lanpher. Trooper T.H. 2 was the first to encounter Lanpher around Egan,

South Dakota, and began following the vehicle, which was then traveling west on

Hwy 34. 3 Less than a mile before the Hwy 34 and Interstate 29 (I-29) exit, Trooper

T.H. turned on his emergency lights and sirens and attempted to initiate a traffic

stop of the vehicle. Lanpher did not comply and instead increased his speed,

1. No packages of illegal drugs were found in Lanpher’s vehicle. Juel later claimed that Lanpher never met with anyone while in Pipestone. Although Lanpher spoke to someone on his cell phone and they waited in a parking lot outside of an apartment complex, the rendezvous did not occur.

2. At the victims’ and State’s request, the court ordered that the names of the victims remain nonpublic to the extent possible in the PSI and at the sentencing hearing. This Court has elected to designate the names of the victims referenced herein by their initials only.

3. SDHP confirmed that Lanpher’s driver’s license was revoked at this time, providing additional grounds for the traffic stop. -2- #30404

continuing west on Hwy 34 past the I-29 exit. As the pursuit was moving at high

speeds through towns and counties, additional officers were called to assist from

multiple agencies and eventually dozens of officers were involved. Lanpher

continued on Hwy 34 into Colman, South Dakota. Trying to evade pursuing

officers, Lanpher turned south on 470th Avenue in Moody County, west onto 237th

Street, south again onto 469th Avenue, and then back eastward on 240th Street to

I-29 near mile-marker 104. During this portion of the pursuit, Lanpher drove

erratically at dangerously high speeds on both paved and gravel roads, passing

through intersections without stopping, and began leaning out his driver’s window,

firing his rifle back at the pursuing officers and their vehicles. 4

[¶5.] Upon returning to I-29, Lanpher entered the southbound lane and

began traveling north at speeds varying between 80 to 100 miles per hour (mph)

into oncoming traffic. 5 Lanpher traveled the wrong way on I-29 for roughly five

miles before exiting west onto Hwy 34. From there, Lanpher returned to Colman,

driving through several city streets and rural avenues, eventually returning to Hwy

34 where he traveled west, reaching speeds in excess of 100 mph. Hoping to

distract the officers, while on 234th Street, Lanpher instructed Juel to throw

4. Initially, Lanpher fired his rifle into the adjacent fields, but, after law enforcement continued the pursuit, he soon turned and aimed the rifle directly backwards towards the officers. This gunfire broke Lanpher’s rear driver’s side window.

5. At Lanpher’s speed, this put him and unsuspecting motorists at closing speeds of 160 to 180 mph. -3- #30404

Lanpher’s shorter rifle, a .223 caliber Colt Model AR-15, and a blue box out the

window, which Juel did. 6

[¶6.] At approximately 2:30 p.m., Lanpher neared the outskirts of Madison,

South Dakota, in Lake County. Continuing at high speeds in the oncoming traffic

and center lanes and almost hitting multiple vehicles, Lanpher turned north on

South Washington Avenue and then west onto Southeast 1st Street. While driving

west on Southeast 1st Street in downtown Madison, between South Washington and

South Egan Avenues, Lanpher again leaned out of his window while driving and

fired back at the tailing officers. 7 Officers saw nearby pedestrians walking along

the street drop to the ground trying to take cover. Others in a nearby park also took

cover. 8

[¶7.] Lanpher turned north onto Ramm Heights Drive, a residential

neighborhood, from Southwest 1st Street after his vehicle had nearly run out of

fuel. Out of gas, Lanpher came to a stop about 150 feet north of the intersection

6. Lanpher also ordered Juel to shoot at the officers and yelled “it’s do or die,” numerous times during the pursuit. Juel refused to shoot. After Lanpher requested Juel hand him his longer rifle, Juel positioned the rifle in the vehicle so that Lanpher could reach it. The blue box and shorter rifle were later recovered by law enforcement. The blue box contained LED lights.

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Related

State v. Martin
2025 S.D. 15 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 2025)

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Bluebook (online)
2024 S.D. 26, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-lanpher-jr-sd-2024.