State v. Nelson

632 N.W.2d 193, 2001 Minn. LEXIS 540, 2001 WL 923354
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedAugust 16, 2001
DocketC9-00-1412
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 632 N.W.2d 193 (State v. Nelson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Nelson, 632 N.W.2d 193, 2001 Minn. LEXIS 540, 2001 WL 923354 (Mich. 2001).

Opinions

OPINION

STRINGER, Justice.

Gregory Johnson was last seen on November- 11, 1996. His dismembered body was found the following April. Appellant Christopher David Nelson and Scott Carter were the last persons to see him alive. On November 20, 1997, appellant and Carter were indicted on charges of first- and second-degree murder in Johnson’s death. Carter pled guilty to second-degree murder and testified against appellant at trial. Following a jury verdict of guilty, appellant was convicted of aiding and abetting [196]*196murder in the first and second degree1 and sentenced to life in prison. Appellant challenges the sufficiency of the evidence supporting his conviction and argues that the trial court erroneously allowed the prosecution to present Spreigl evidence of his participation in two armed robberies. We affirm.

At the time of his death Gregory Johnson was 39 years old and lived alone. Appellant lived with Scott Carter and Carter’s girlfriend, Pamela Rossbach in a trailer home in rural Hubbard County outside of Park Rapids, Minnesota, about 20 minutes from Johnson’s home by car. Johnson worked as a bartender at Art’s Place in Park Rapids and Carter was a regular patron of the bar. In the summer of 1996 appellant was employed at Art’s Place for a brief period. Appellant, Carter, and Rossbach were evicted from their trailer home in October of 1996. Because a rental unit would not be ready until November, Johnson let them stay in his home. Johnson asked them to leave before the rental unit was ready however, and when they moved out, appellant, Carter, and Rossbach had to live in an unheated tent camper until a rental unit was available at the beginning of November.

On November 10 and 11, 1996, Ross-bach’s sister Paula came to the Park Rapids area to look for Rossbach. November 11 was Veteran’s Day and Johnson had the day off work, so he helped Paula find her sister. Johnson told Paula of rumors that her sister was involved in a sexual threesome with appellant and Carter and further, that he planned to have Carter’s inoperable pickup truck towed from his property unless it was removed by the next day. Carter did not own a working vehicle at that time, and often borrowed appellant’s van. Appellant testified that he and Carter often borrowed one another’s guns and tools and that he considered Carter to be a “companion and Mend.”

Paula spoke with her sister in the early afternoon of November 11, 1996 and communicated Johnson’s sexual threesome comment and his threat to have Carter’s truck towed. Paula testified that appellant and Carter became angry and made threatening comments about wanting to “take care” of Johnson. Rossbach attempted to calm them down, but when Paula left at about 2:15 p.m., both were still “smoldering .” Rossbach testified that appellant said something about beating Johnson. At trial, appellant and Carter both denied making threats.

Appellant, Carter, and Rossbach testified that after Paula left, they drove to Johnson’s home to tow Carter’s pickup truck. When they arrived, Johnson was drinking whiskey and they went into his home and drank beer. Johnson joined them in towing the pickup truck back to their trailer where they drank more beer. Appellant, Carter and Johnson then left in appellant’s van to drive Johnson home.

Jennifer Hensel Dumont and Charlotte Wilson, friends of Johnson, became alarmed that evening and the next day because Johnson’s telephone line was busy. They went to his home and found the curtains open and the lights on, but Johnson’s horse had not been fed. They called Johnson’s boss, who went in and found the telephone off the hook but the premises otherwise undisturbed. Dumont and Wilson then went to the home of appellant [197]*197and Carter to ask whether they had seen Johnson. They testified that Carter and appellant did not ask them inside, appellant did most of the talking, and Carter looked at him for approval to speak. A police investigator also testified that appellant and Carter appeared to look at one another for confirmation when interviewed shortly after the disappearance.

In an interview at the police station on November 15, 1996, appellant related that Johnson had told him he had a crush on him and it was “seriously gross.” Appellant told police there were no problems after he told Johnson he was straight, but appellant stated he had been angry about being asked to leave Johnson’s home in October. Rossbach later testified that she and appellant were not angry about having to stay in the uncomfortable tent camper when Johnson told them to leave his home, but that Carter was upset about it.

Nothing suspicious was found in the police search of the trailer where appellant, Carter, and Rossbach were living, but a search of appellant’s van approximately two weeks after Johnson’s disappearance revealed that the rear of the van had been cleaned in contrast to the dirty condition of the rest of the van. A chemical test revealed traces of blood on the side moldings of the van, the back walls, and the carpet towards the rear hatch, but investigators were unable to obtain a sample for further analysis.

Months later, in April of 1997, a torso identified through genetic testing as Johnson’s was found on a bank of the Crow Wing River south of Park Rapids. The head, hands and feet of the body had been amputated. At trial, the medical examiner testified that the only wounds to the torso were at the points of amputation, and the amputations appeared to have been done with a knife and an instrument similar to a splitting maul or axe after the victim’s death. Test results showed that Johnson had been drinking prior to the time of his death.

Evidence of two other crimes was admitted as Spreigi evidence2 in appellant’s trial. In the early morning hours of June 22, 1997, appellant and Carter robbed a liquor store/bar in Hackensack, Minnesota. Two liquor store employees testified that they were getting ready to close for the night when a man matching appellant’s description carrying a 9 mm. handgun came in the front door and a man matching Carter’s description carrying a sawed-off shotgun came in the back door. The men ordered them into the bathroom and bound their hands with duct tape. Appellant watched the employees while Carter took money that was sitting in a bag next to the cash register. Appellant testified that Ross-bach was in the van with a walkie-talkie watching the police scanner and that he and Carter both carried walkie-talkies to coordinate their entry into the building.

About two weeks later, on July 6, 1997, appellant and Carter robbed a Snappy Mart convenience store in Deming, New Mexico. A customer and a store clerk testified that a man matching appellant’s description entered the Snappy Mart carrying a handgun. He ordered them to the storeroom and forced them to kneel. A man matching Carter’s description came in with something silver in his hand that the witness thought could have been duct tape, taped the customers’ hands together and ordered the clerk to open the cash register. Carter testified that Rossbach drove the van away from the Snappy Mart after [198]*198the robbery. When police began following them, appellant began shooting. Rossbach and Carter surrendered, but appellant fled to their hotel room and barricaded himself for twelve hours.

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State v. Nelson
632 N.W.2d 193 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 2001)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
632 N.W.2d 193, 2001 Minn. LEXIS 540, 2001 WL 923354, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-nelson-minn-2001.