State v. McEachern

431 A.2d 39, 1981 Me. LEXIS 841
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedJune 25, 1981
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 431 A.2d 39 (State v. McEachern) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. McEachern, 431 A.2d 39, 1981 Me. LEXIS 841 (Me. 1981).

Opinion

PER CURIAM * .

Following a jury trial in the Superior Court, Penobscot County, Richard McEac-hern was convicted of murder pursuant to 17-A M.R.S.A. § 201(1)(A). On this appeal, defendant contends that numerous errors occurred during the course of his trial including errors in evidentiary rulings, in jury instructions, in denial of a mistrial for allegedly improper argument by the prosecutor, and in denial of a motion for judgment of acquittal. We affirm the judgment.

From the evidence at trial, the jury would have been warranted in finding the following facts. The victim of the homicide, George Fredericks, was shot at about 7:00 p. m. on November 2, 1978, while sitting in an armchair in the living room of his Brewer motel apartment. His girl friend, who at the time was in the apartment kitchen, heard a volley of shots and the sound of breaking glass but did not see the assailant. Never regaining consciousness, Fredericks died the same evening from a bullet wound in his skull. Trial evidence established that Frederick’s death was caused by a .22 semiautomatic rifle owned *41 by defendant. The rifle had been fired through the living room window from the darkness outside, the bullets having pierced translucent drapes. Nearly two weeks later, the authorities found the rifle buried in green plastic garbage bags by a snowmobile trail near the victim’s home.

Fredericks and defendant McEachern were acquaintances of long standing whose relationship had been mutually hostile for a couple of years before the homicide. Fred-ericks had at one point lived with defendant’s wife or then ex-wife. Defendant also owed $300 to Fredericks, who made unsuccessful but repeated attempts to collect the debt. In the course of their hostility, defendant made at least two threats against the victim’s life. One occurred about a year and a half before the killing and a second somewhat closer to a year before.

On the morning of November 2, 1978, according to his girl friend, defendant left to go hunting with David Ward. Ward testified that defendant McEachern came to his home that morning around 10:00 a. m. carrying a rifle and some green garbage bags. Instead of hunting, however, the two got into one of Ward’s family cars, did an errand for Ward’s mother, exchanged cars, visited a friend and spent the remainder of the afternoon driving around drinking and talking. The rifle remained in the back seat of the automobile. Between 1:30 and 6:30 p. m., the pair consumed up to a fifth of brandy and a pint of vodka and smoked as many as eight marijuana joints. While driving, the two of them twice passed the Wee Holme Motel where Fredericks lived. On both occasions defendant told Ward that he wanted to “confront [Fredericks], to settle their differences.” On each occasion Ward refused to stop, concluding that it was not “very wise at the time.” At the day’s end, the pair drove back to the friend’s house where they had earlier visited. Staying there only 20 minutes, they left around 6:30 p. m. For a third time defendant asked to be dropped off by the Wee Holme Motel. This time Ward acceded to the request, and defendant left the car with his rifle in hand. Ward drove on, parked, and shortly thereafter passed out from intoxication.

Ward further testified that the day after the shooting defendant McEachern called him to ask that he tell the police that McEachern had been dropped off not in front of the Wee Holme Motel but at the end of the Bangor-Brewer bridge. Ward did give that false story to the police. Two days after the shooting, in response to Ward’s direct question, defendant told him

that after I’d dropped him off he had crossed across the road and gone behind the Wee Holme Motel and looked in one window, it was the wrong window; gone to another window, looked in. He said he backed off, took five or six shots, heard a scream, then he said he ran ....
[He] said when he went around the Ken Taylor’s Antiques he’d almost run into the back of a police car. He said he proceeded up and he had crossed — as I remember he said he crossed up by the road — came up by the road and crossed around the stream and then gone by the snowmobile trail up to my house and he buried the gun in the garbage bags on the snowmobile trail.

Subsequently, Ward recanted his first, story to the police and told them substantially what is quoted above. The police thereafter discovered the buried rifle. There was other inculpatory evidence in the record: First, the State showed, in confirmation of Ward’s testimony, that there was in fact a police car parked near Ken Taylor’s Antiques at about the time that defendant told Ward he had almost run into one. Second, when defendant returned home at about 9:00 or 9:30 p. m. on November 2, he immediately told his girl friend, Laurie Hathaway, that he had sold his rifle. Third, when his girl friend soon after heard from a newscast that Fredericks had been shot, her immediate reaction was to ask defendant whether he had shot Fredericks. McEac-hern, who did not seem drunk, responded that he had not, but added that he felt “a thousand pounds lighter on each shoulder.” Fourth, after his arrest, defendant asked *42 his girl friend to try to get David Ward to leave the state, and from jail he wrote Ward a letter threatening his life.

Defendant did not take the witness stand. In his defense, Christopher McCann testified that between 7:30 and about 8:15 on the evening of the killing he and defendant were sitting in the Gaslight Bar several miles from the Wee Holme Motel. During cross-examination, it appeared that McCann was uncertain whether he was with defendant on the evening of the killing or on some other evening during the same week. Furthermore, McCann confirmed that defendant had called him several weeks after the crime to ask him to testify that their encounter at the Gaslight Bar did, in fact, take place on November 2 and not on some other date.

I. Sufficiency of the Evidence

Having adequately preserved the issue for appellate review, defendant now asserts that the evidence was insufficient to support his conviction of the offense of murder. “In reviewing the sufficiency of the evidence, we apply the standard that the conviction must be set aside if ‘no rational trier of fact could [find] proof of guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.’ ” State v. Lagasse, Me., 410 A.2d 537, 542 (1980), quoting Jackson v. Virginia, 443 U.S. 307, 324, 99 S.Ct. 2781, 2792, 61 L.Ed.2d 560 (1979).

Defendant does not contend that the evidence is insufficient to permit a finding that he was the individual who fired the shots that caused the victim’s death. Rather, he contends that the evidence is insufficient to establish that he acted intentionally, i. e., with a “conscious object to cause” Fredericks’ death, or knowingly, i. e., with an “aware[ness] that it is practically certain that his conduct will cause such a result.”

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Bluebook (online)
431 A.2d 39, 1981 Me. LEXIS 841, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-mceachern-me-1981.