State v. Nunn

561 N.W.2d 902, 1997 Minn. LEXIS 246, 1997 WL 166155
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedApril 10, 1997
DocketCX-96-781
StatusPublished
Cited by69 cases

This text of 561 N.W.2d 902 (State v. Nunn) 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. Nunn, 561 N.W.2d 902, 1997 Minn. LEXIS 246, 1997 WL 166155 (Mich. 1997).

Opinion

OPINION

PAGE, Justice.

Jerome Deon Nunn (Nunn) was convicted of first-degree murder under Minn.Stat. *904 §§ 609.185(1), 609.05 and 609.11 (1996), and attempted first-degree murder under Minn. Stat. §§ 609.185(1), 609.05, 609.11, and 609.17, by a Hennepin County jury as a result of the shooting death of Abdul Poe (Poe) and gunshot wounds to John Holmes (Holmes) in the parking lot of the Jug Liquor Store in Minneapolis, Minnesota, on July 22, 1995. Nunn allegedly shot Poe and Holmes because he believed that the two men had stolen money and drugs from his apartment. At trial, Nunn pled not guilty and presented an alibi defense. He now appeals his conviction on two grounds: (1) the trial court committed reversible error by admitting evidence that Nunn was involved in kidnapping and threatening to kill his cousin, Kendra Nunn (K. Nunn); and (2) the trial court committed reversible error by admitting under Minnesota Rules of Evidence 801(d)(1)(B) out-of-court statements of two prosecution witnesses, K. Nunn and Holmes. We affirm Nunn’s convictions.

The state’s theory of the case was that Nunn shot Poe and Holmes because he believed’that they had stolen $20,000 and a pound of marijuana from his apartment. At trial, K. Nunn testified that she, her cousin Nunn, and her three-year-old daughter shared an apartment during early June 1995. On June 2, 1995, Nunn called her at work and asked her if anybody had been at their apartment the previous night and informed her that $20,000 in cash and a pound of marijuana was missing from his room. She told him that she did not know anything about the missing money and marijuana and that no one had been at their apartment the night before, except their cousin “Misty.” Later that same day, Nunn again called K. Nunn at work and asked the same question. Again, she told Nunn that she did not know anything about his missing money and marijuana. When K. Nunn got home from work that day, Nunn and four of his friends, Neil-yn Wright, “Little Sell,” “Henry,” and “Oozy” were there loading handguns. Nunn told K. Nunn that he knew that she knew who had his money. K. Nunn responded that she did not know anything. K. Nunn testified that she was not being threatened at the time, but the atmosphere in the apartment was tense.

According to K. Nunn, she left the apartment, went to the bank, and, upon finishing her business at the bank, stopped to see Poe at an apartment building on Broadway. While K. Nunn was standing outside the building, Nunn drove by in a white Lumina, made a U-turn in the street, and stopped near where she was standing. Wright and Little Sell were in the car with Nunn. Poe and his friend Holmes came out of the apartment building and talked to Nunn, who asked them about the missing money and marijuana. Nunn thought Poe and Holmes had stolen the money and marijuana from the apartment because Poe had dated K. Nunn a few times. Both Poe and Holmes denied taking either the money or the marijuana.

K. Nunn saw Nunn again, later that day, at an apartment located a few blocks away from the apartment they shared. Nunn asked K. Nunn to go outside so they could talk about the missing money and marijuana. K. Nunn went out and got into Nunn’s car. Wright, Little Sell, and another of Nunn’s friends, “Juan,” were already in the car. K. Nunn thought Nunn was going to take her back to their apartment; however, Nunn drove to a store, where he bought some duct tape, and then drove to a house, where Little Sell retrieved a gun. Nunn then took K. Nunn for a ride through Theodore Wirth Park. K. Nunn was sitting in the backseat, between Little Sell, who had a gun on his lap, and Wright; Juan sat in the front with Nunn. K. Nunn testified that Wright told her “they were going to tie me up; shoot me with a .45; tie rocks to the bottom of my legs; throw me in the lake or the river, whichever one; that I was going to see heaven and I wasn’t going to see my daughter no more.” According to K. Nunn, she was not told why they were going to do this, but, during the ride, Nunn asked her about his missing money and marijuana. On cross-examination, K. Nunn admitted that she was not duct-taped, that Nunn never threatened her, and that neither Nunn nor anyone else pointed a gun at her during the ride in the park.

During the ride in the park, K. Nunn told Nunn that Poe had told her that he and *905 Holmes had broken into a crack head’s house earlier that year, “cooked up” some drugs, stole a rug, cleaned up their mess, wiped down their fingerprints, and left the house without detection. She testified that she told Nunn this story because, to her, it seemed similar to the method .used by whomever took Nunn’s money and marijuana. The names of Poe and Holmes were the only ones K. Nunn gave to Nunn as people who might have taken the money and marijuana. Nunn eventually dropped K. Nunn off at her sister’s house. Three days later, on June 5, Nunn told K. Nunn: “You all need to stop playing around or you are all going to get your heads pit.” 1 After this incident, K. Nunn moved out of the apartment she shared with Nunn and into her grandmother’s house.

In late November 1995, the police sought to interview K. Nunn, who had moved out of state. The police located her in Georgia, traveled there unannounced, conducted an interview, and obtained a subpoena ordering her to appear at Nunn’s trial. The interview was tape-recorded and, as transcribed, was 10 pages long. During Nunn’s trial, K. Nunn testified with respect to statements she made during that interview. In addition, the interviewing officer, Sergeant Donald Smulski, testified regarding the interview.

Holmes testified that two days after he and Poe talked to Nunn on Broadway, he talked- to Nunn on the telephone, and Nunn asked him for his money. Holmes told Nunn that he did not have his money, but Nunn said he did not believe him and told him that if they, Poe and Holmes, did not give him back his money, he was going to be looking for them. After that telephone conversation, neither Poe nor Holmes spoke to Nunn again and tried to avoid him.

According to Holmes, on the evening of July 22, 1995, he, Poe, and a friend, Jay Revels (Revels), drove to a liquor store at 226 West Broadway in Minneapolis to pick up some alcoholic beverages. Poe was driving, Holmes was in the front passenger seat, and Revels was in the back. Poe parked the car in the liquor store parking lot, and they sat in the car, talking about what they were going to buy. They decided that Revels was going to pay for the beverages, and, as Holmes reached to get money from Revels, he heard gunshots. The shots he heard consisted of both “shooting” and “rapidly firing.”

Holmes thought that the gunfire lasted one to two minutes. Glass and debris fell into the car, and Holmes felt something hit his back and realized that he had been shot. After the shots stopped, Holmes looked over the car’s dashboard and saw two men running away from the car with their backs to him. Holmes testified that one of the men turned around while running and “looked me dead in my eyes,” then got into the passenger side of a deep maroon or reddish-colored ear parked about 15-20 feet away. Holmes testified that he was absolutely sure that the man who looked him in the eyes was Nunn. The other man entered the driver’s side, and the car fled the parking lot, turning right onto Broadway.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
561 N.W.2d 902, 1997 Minn. LEXIS 246, 1997 WL 166155, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-nunn-minn-1997.