State v. MacNeill

2017 UT App 48, 397 P.3d 626, 835 Utah Adv. Rep. 66, 2017 WL 1033836, 2017 Utah App. LEXIS 47
CourtCourt of Appeals of Utah
DecidedMarch 16, 2017
Docket20140873-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 2017 UT App 48 (State v. MacNeill) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Utah primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. MacNeill, 2017 UT App 48, 397 P.3d 626, 835 Utah Adv. Rep. 66, 2017 WL 1033836, 2017 Utah App. LEXIS 47 (Utah Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

Opinion

VOROS, Judge:

¶1 Martin J. MacNeill was convicted of murdering his wife by overmedieating her then drowning her in a bathtub. At trial the prosecution presented testimony from five jailhouse informants, all of whom reported hearing MacNeill admit or imply that he had killed his wife. MacNeill’s principal claim on appeal is that the prosecution team withheld information about promises of assistance the State’s lead investigator, Jeff Robinson, had made to one of the jailhouse.informants. After meticulous analysis, the trial court agreed with MacNeill that the prosecution had wrongly suppressed relevant impeachment evidence, but concluded that the evidence would not have altered the trial outcome. We affirm.

BACKGROUND 1

The Crime

¶2 MacNeill lived with his wife, Michele, and their four minor, daughters in Pleasant Grove, Utah. The MacNeills also had three adult children; two lived in Utah and one attended graduate school out of state. MacN-eill practiced psychiatry, and'Michele fended to- their home and children.

¶3 MacNeill met Gypsy Gillian Willis online, and the two began an affair.in November 2005. In March 2007 Michele expressed concern to her adult daughter, Alexis, who attended graduate school, that MacNeill might be .having an affair. After reading through his telephone records, Michele discovered the identity of MacNeill’s girlfriend. *630 When she confronted MacNeill, he claimed she was being “ridiculous.” Shortly after this confrontation, MacNeill surprised Michele with a facelift as a “present,” He also indicated that he wanted to take her on a two-week cruise after her surgery.

¶4 Around the same time, during a “heartfelt, tearful lesson” at church, MacNeill announced that he had cancer and had “less than a year” to live. His health appeared to deteriorate — he began limping, walking with a cane, and wearing a surgical boot. Despite his claim to neighbors that he “had some procedures done [and] was having some complications,” MacNeill painted a somewhat different picture of his condition at work. He told one colleague that he had a “peripheral neuropathy’ in his toe that “wouldn’t get better,” another colleague that he had “cancer in his big toe,” and yet another colleague that he had a “neurological ... problem similar to MS.” But despite his scattered claims of various illnesses during that spring, MacNeill remodeled his basement on his own and appeared to have no difficulty carrying “giant [slabs] of sheet rock” down the stairs.

¶5 MacNeill scheduled a consultation with a plastic surgeon in March 2007 and attended the consultation with Michele. MacNeill was the “dominant personality” at the appointment and did “more of the talking” than Michele. Although Michele was nervous about having surgery and concerned about the associated risks, the recovery, and the downtime, she agreed to schedule comprehensive facial surgery for the following month.

¶6 MacNeill next scheduled an examination for Michele with a primary care physician to determine if it was safe for her to proceed with surgery. MacNeill was anxious to complete the evaluation so Michele could proceed with the surgery without delay. At the appointment, the three discussed Michele’s high blood pressure. The primary care physician said that it would be ideal to control Michele’s blood pressure before surgery and suggested that she postpone the operation. MacNeill expressed disappointment with this suggestion. Other than Michele’s elevated blood pressure, the primary care physician determined that she was in “excellent health.” An EKG revealed that Michele’s heart was normal without any arrhythmias or evidence of heart disease.

¶7 Although the primary care physician recommended that Michele delay the procedure, Michele and MacNeill kept the appointment for the preoperative evaluation with the surgeon. Alexis came home from graduate school to attend the appointment with them. Before the appointment, Alexis saw MacNeill in his room writing down medications that he wanted the doctor to prescribe, using a “dusty” reference book that she hadn’t seen him use in perhaps ten or fifteen years. On the way to the appointment, Michele said that she wanted to push the appointment back until summer so she could make sure her blood pressure would be under control. MacNeill became angry, raised his voice, told Michele she could not do that, and said, “If you don’t have the surgery now, you’re not getting it.”

¶8 At the appointment, neither Michele nor MacNeill disclosed the primary care physician’s recommendations, although MacNeill did mention that she had “some high blood pressure” and “had been prescribed some medication” for it. MacNeill directed the discussion about Michele’s postoperative medication regimen. After performing a facelift, the surgeon typically prescribed a pain reliever (Lortab), an antibiotic (cephalexin), a sleeping medication (Ambien), an anti-inflammatory (Medral Dose Pack), and an eye ointment (erythromycin). Occasionally, he prescribed an anti-nausea medication (Phenergan) to patients that complained of nausea associated with anesthesia.

¶9 Consulting the list he brought with him, MacNeill requested four deviations from the surgeon’s usual protocol. First, he requested an additional, stronger pain reliever, oxyco-done, also known as Percocet. Second, he requested Lortab in liquid form. Third, he requested more than the typical amount of Phenergan, and he requested it in suppository form. Finally, he requested the anti-anxiety drug, Valium. MacNeill said that “he was just concerned that [Michele] wouldn’t do well without having these other options available,” and that he wanted to have “all of the options available to [him],” even though Mi *631 chele had told him that she didn’t like to take a lot of medicine. The surgeon complied with MacNeill’s requests and gave Michele instructions to take one pill at a time and “certainly” to avoid taking all of them together. Michele assured the surgeon she “was going to try and minimize the amount of medication that she took.”

¶10 Two days later, MacNeill drove Michele and Alexis to the surgical facility for the operation. The surgery lasted all day, but the surgeon told Alexis that he was happy with the results. Michele was “in a little bit of pain and groggy” and “wanted to stay the night at the hospital.” MacNeill returned to drive Michele and Alexis home. When Michele said she wanted to stay the night, he became angry and told Michele that they needed to go home. But he acquiesced when the surgeon explained that he prefers to keep his patients overnight. The surgeon released Michele the next morning.

¶11 On the day Michele returned home, Alexis acted as her caregiver, giving her medications, dressing her wounds, and helping her to the bathroom, because Michele was “effectively blind.” Alexis kept a log of Michele’s medications on a pad of paper and included the time she took each pill and the dose. Alexis also kept a log of Michele’s vital signs and food intake ih what she called her “little black book.” She later combined the two logs and placed the pad of paper in a drawer next to Michele’s bed. That evening MacNeill insisted that Alexis leave the room because he would be taking over Michele’s care. Alexis left and slept in her youngest sister’s room.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2017 UT App 48, 397 P.3d 626, 835 Utah Adv. Rep. 66, 2017 WL 1033836, 2017 Utah App. LEXIS 47, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-macneill-utahctapp-2017.