State v. LaPena

968 P.2d 750, 114 Nev. 1159, 1998 Nev. LEXIS 138
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 7, 1998
Docket29429
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 968 P.2d 750 (State v. LaPena) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada 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. LaPena, 968 P.2d 750, 114 Nev. 1159, 1998 Nev. LEXIS 138 (Neb. 1998).

Opinions

[1160]*1160OPINION

By the Court,

Rose, J.:

In 1977, respondent/cross-appellant Frank LaPena was convicted of first degree murder and robbery with the use of a deadly [1161]*1161weapon. This court reversed the conviction and remanded for a new trial. In 1989, LaPena was again convicted of first degree murder and robbery, and sentenced to life imprisonment without the possibility of parole. This court affirmed the conviction. In 1992, LaPena filed a petition for post-conviction relief (the “PCR petition”), which the district court denied; this court remanded the case for an evidentiary hearing. In December 1993, LaPena filed a motion to dismiss all of the charges against him. In 1995, the district court conducted an evidentiary hearing and, based on the evidence adduced therein, granted LaPena’s PCR petition on the ground that LaPena had been denied effective assistance of trial counsel. The district court denied LaPena’s motion to dismiss and ordered a new trial.

The State appeals from the district court’s grant of post-conviction relief vacating LaPena’s conviction and sentence. LaPena cross-appeals from the district court’s denial of his motion to dismiss all charges against him. We conclude that the district court erred in granting LaPena’s PCR petition. Consequently we reverse the district court’s order and dismiss LaPena’s cross-appeal.

FACTS

At approximately 5:00 a.m. on January 14, 1974, the elderly couple of Hilda and Marvin Krause were robbed at their Las Vegas home located inside a walled country club community. During the course of the robbery, the perpetrators beat Mr. Krause and murdered Mrs. Krause. When police arrived at the Krause home, they found the deceased Mrs. Krause gagged with a scarf tied loosely around her neck, and a butcher knife imbedded in her back; her throat had been slit. An autopsy revealed that Mrs. Krause had been strangled with a cord or rope prior to having her throat slit and that she had sustained several stab wounds to her neck after her throat had been slit.

Mr. Krause told police that he had been attacked by two Caucasian men after he opened his garage door and as he was getting into his car to go to work. The men forced him into the house where they beat him and tied him up, murdered Mrs. Krause, and stole a television, gold coins, and jewelry, including a diamond ring and a watch. Mr. Krause reported that after the assailants left his home, he untied himself and went upstairs in an attempt to aid Mrs. Krause. Physical evidence indicated that at least two perpetrators had been present at the Krause home. The perpetrators left the scene in Mr. Krause’s car but abandoned it at the gates of the country club. Mr. Krause suffered a head injury in the attack; he died the following year from unrelated causes.

Several days after the crime had been committed, a confidential informant (later identified as Joey Costanza) contacted Las [1162]*1162Vegas Metropolitan Police Department (LVMPD) Detective Mike Whitney. Costanza told Det. Whitney that approximately six weeks before the Krause robbery/murder, Gerald Weakland had approached him about assisting in a robbery/murder to take place in the early morning hours of a Monday or Friday before one of the victims went to work and would involve scaling a wall of some sort. Costanza allegedly knew the exact location of the crime scene (i.e., the Krauses’ address). Costanza also mentioned two other individuals who might have been solicited or involved in the crime — Tom Boutwell and Bobby Webb.

Det. Whitney gave this information to several police officers, including Lieutenant Beecher Avants and Detective Chuck Lee, who subsequently questioned Boutwell, Webb, and Weakland. In a February 1974 telephone conversation between Lt. Avants and Costanza, Costanza allegedly stated that he had never heard the names of LaPena or Rosalie Maxwell, LaPena’s girlfriend, associated with Weakland or the Krause crimes. Police arrested Weakland for the Krause murder/robbery in March 1974.

During a preliminary hearing, Weakland admitted to the crimes and struck a deal with the State wherein he agreed to testify that Maxwell and LaPena had hired him to murder Mrs. Krause. In exchange for this testimony, Weakland was allowed to plead guilty to second degree murder, with a sentence of five years to life, and all other charges against him (some of which were unrelated to the Krause crimes) were dropped. In his March 29, 1974 confession, Weakland told authorities that while Boutwell, his accomplice, was robbing the Krause home, he slipped upstairs and murdered Mrs. Krause by slitting her throat with a single cut. Weakland maintained that he had not strangled Mrs. Krause or stabbed her in the neck. Weakland maintained that LaPena, an acquaintance to whom he owed money, had approached him at the end of December 1973, and asked him to kill Mrs. Krause. LaPena allegedly explained to Weakland that Mr. Krause was a wealthy slot manager at Caesar’s Palace who was dating LaPena’s girlfriend, Maxwell, who also worked at Caesar’s. LaPena and Maxwell wanted Weakland to kill Mrs. Krause so that Maxwell could marry Mr. Krause and inherit the Krause fortune for the benefit of herself and her boyfriend, LaPena.

Weakland claimed that LaPena had offered to forgive his debts and pay him a large sum of money in exchange for Mrs. Krause’s murder. On January 4, 1974, Weakland went to Maxwell’s apartment where she and LaPena gave him $1000 as a down payment for the murder, told him that he would receive another $10,000 after Maxwell married Mr. Krause, and explained the “plan” for robbing the Krauses and murdering Mrs. Krause. Maxwell allegedly gave Weakland a map of the Krauses’ residence during [1163]*1163this meeting. Weakland stated that he asked Webb to help him commit the crime but, ultimately, Boutwell accompanied him. Weakland told police that he had never spoken to or had any contact with Mr. Krause prior to the January 1974 robbery/murder.

Based upon Weakland’s statements to the police, on April 23, 1974, LaPena and Maxwell were arrested for the Krause robbery/murder. Both were charged with first degree murder and robbery with the use of a deadly weapon. The criminal complaint alleged that LaPena and Maxwell had entered into a contract with Gerald Weakland “whereby . . . Weakland was to kill [Mrs. Krause].”

Weakland testified to LaPena’s guilt at LaPena’s preliminary hearing; however, at both Maxwell’s and LaPena’s separate trials, Weakland testified that his prior testimony and statements implicating LaPena and Maxwell in the murder were false. LaPena v. State, 98 Nev. 135, 136, 643 P.2d 244, 244 (1982). Maxwell was acquitted at trial, but LaPena was convicted by a jury of one count of first degree murder and one count of robbery with the use of a deadly weapon.

On direct appeal, this court reversed LaPena’s conviction and remanded for a new trial on the ground that admission of Weakland’s statements incriminating LaPena constituted reversible error. This court concluded that the State had improperly withheld “the benefits of a plea bargain or promise of leniency until after a purported accomplice [(i.e., Weakland)] had testified in a particular manner.” Id. at 136-37, 643 P.2d at 244-45. Weakland was eventually charged with two counts of perjury, to which he entered an Alford plea and received probation. Gary Gowen, Esq., assumed LaPena’s representation.

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Related

Lapena (Frank) v. State
Nevada Supreme Court, 2018
Garcia v. State
113 P.3d 836 (Nevada Supreme Court, 2005)
State v. LaPena
968 P.2d 750 (Nevada Supreme Court, 1998)

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Bluebook (online)
968 P.2d 750, 114 Nev. 1159, 1998 Nev. LEXIS 138, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-lapena-nev-1998.