State v. McIntosh

595 S.E.2d 484, 358 S.C. 432, 2004 S.C. LEXIS 96
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedApril 19, 2004
Docket25808
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 595 S.E.2d 484 (State v. McIntosh) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. McIntosh, 595 S.E.2d 484, 358 S.C. 432, 2004 S.C. LEXIS 96 (S.C. 2004).

Opinion

Justice BURNETT:

Martin McIntosh (Petitioner) was convicted of murder, kidnapping, first degree criminal sexual conduct, and criminal conspiracy in a joint trial with five co-defendants. 1 The Court of Appeals’ unpublished opinion affirmed Petitioner’s convictions for murder, kidnapping, and criminal conspiracy and reversed the criminal sexual conduct conviction because there was no evidence Petitioner sexually assaulted Darlene Patterson (Victim), or acted in concert with others to sexually assault her. State v. McIntosh, Op. No.2001-UP-479 (S.C. Ct.App. filed November 8, 2001).

We granted the petition for a writ of certiorari to review the Court of Appeals’ conclusion the prosecutor did not commit a Doyle 2 violation by questioning Petitioner about the fact he did not present his alibi defense to police after he was arrested and read his Miranda 3 rights. We reverse and remand for a new trial.

FACTS

The body of Victim, 36, was found on November 24, 1994, partially submerged in a pond near Burnt Factory Road in *436 rural Marlboro County. Victim had been missing since November 12, 1994. Her ankles and hands had been bound with gray duct tape; the tape also had been wrapped tightly around her face and head.

The medical examiner testified Victim likely died of asphyxiation due to the tape around her face and head. Victim probably was dead before her body was placed in the pond, although the examiner could not rule out death by drowning. Further, the death likely occurred between November 12 and 20, 1994, and probably closer to November 12. The autopsy revealed no physical evidence that Victim had been sexually assaulted before her death, although the fact Victim was a mature woman and the body had partially decomposed made it more difficult to obtain such evidence if any existed.

Investigators examined items recovered from an abandoned house, where Victim had been held, and from the pond, including Victim’s pocketbook, eyeglasses, an earring, and duct tape samples. However, investigators were unable to identify any physical or trace evidence (fingerprints, samples of hair, blood, semen, or the like) linking Petitioner or any other person to Victim’s kidnapping and death. The State’s case against Petitioner and other co-defendants consisted primarily of the testimony from co-defendants, Danny Davis and Bobby Ransom.

Davis and Ransom testified they observed Victim tied up and lying on a couch or bed during a cookout and party at two co-defendants’ mobile home. Both accompanied several co-defendants on a trip to move Victim from the mobile home to an abandoned house. Ransom testified he was smoking marijuana and drinking creek liquor (a type of “white lightning” or moonshine) when several co-defendants arrived at his house the next night and asked him to join them on a trip back to the abandoned house. When he saw his visitors approaching, Ransom drank the remaining half of a pint of creek liquor he had been drinking so they would not ask him for any.

Davis and Ransom testified Petitioner and another co-defendant were waiting when they arrived at an abandoned house where Victim had been left the previous night. Sevei-al unidentified co-defendants carried Victim, still bound by tape, to the car and put her in the back seat beside Ransom. *437 Ransom testified he began “freaking out” when the “liquor hit [him]” and he begged them to stop Victim from “crying all over [him],” although she really was not. The eight co-defendants — including Davis, Ransom, and Petitioner — rode in a single car to a bridge, where unidentified co-defendants placed Victim’s body in the pond.

Davis and Ransom were cross-examined at length about their extensive history of alcohol and substance abuse. Davis testified he suffered brain damage from a traumatic head injury 10 years earlier, as well as anxiety, sleeplessness, and depression. He was a victim of child abuse and had extensively abused alcohol and illegal drugs for years. He testified he drank heavily every day during November 1994. His alcohol use caused him to forget events and confuse things. During his two-year incarceration preceding the trial, Davis testified he saw nonexistent shadows, heard “a lot of [nonexistent] voices,” and talked with imaginary friends. He was taking anti-psychotic and anti-depressant medications during his incarceration and the trial.

Ransom testified he had been paralyzed from the chest down since 1983. In November 1994, he had been on a drinking binge for some three years and eight or nine months. He often blacked out and suffered from memory loss. He had been hospitalized at psychiatric facilities three times before 1996 for abuse of alcohol and numerous drugs, including Valium, Xanax, sleeping pills, amphetamines, powder cocaine, crack cocaine, acid, marijuana, and “huffing” gasoline. He drank two quarts to a gallon of alcohol each week, including creek liquor.

Davis and Ransom testified on cross-examination they were good friends who grew up together. Davis often visited the reclusive Ransom at his house in 1994, and they saw one another frequently during a four-month period after the crime until their arrest. Police in March 1995 brought Ransom from another jail to see Davis in jail so Ransom could “confront” Davis about the crimes. The two confessed to police the same afternoon at the same location, and, for the first time, Ransom implicated Petitioner.

At his guilty plea prior to Petitioner’s trial, Davis stated, “a lot of this stuff I can’t quite remember, but my co-defendant *438 [Ransom] has — he’s told me everything.” While insisting he was trying to tell the truth at petitioner’s trial, Davis testified he had changed his story “a lot of times,” although not every time he talked to police during fifteen to twenty interviews. He “told [police] what they wanted to hear.” In fact, he testified he no longer had an independent recollection of even being at the bridge that night, but based his trial testimony on some other source.

Petitioner, then 29, denied any involvement in the crimes, testifying he was in New York when they occurred. Petitioner testified that in 1994 he lived in Brooklyn, New York, where he was raised. Since his childhood, he often traveled to Marlboro County, where his father was raised, to visit family and friends.

Petitioner testified he stayed in Marlboro County, in September 1994, for a week or two with a friend, Butch Moore and then returned to New York. On November 2, 1994, he left New York with two friends and traveled to Marlboro County, again staying with Butch Moore. He returned to New York on November 7, 1994. To establish these dates, Petitioner entered into evidence a rental car receipt. 4 He also testified he attended his godfather’s birthday party in New York on November 9, 1994. Petitioner tried to subpoena Moore to the trial, but the sheriffs office was unable to locate him.

Petitioner testified he again returned to Marlboro County by bus on the morning of November 23, 1994.

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Bluebook (online)
595 S.E.2d 484, 358 S.C. 432, 2004 S.C. LEXIS 96, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-mcintosh-sc-2004.