State v. Ordway

934 P.2d 94, 261 Kan. 776, 1997 Kan. LEXIS 36
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedMarch 7, 1997
Docket75,219
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 934 P.2d 94 (State v. Ordway) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Ordway, 934 P.2d 94, 261 Kan. 776, 1997 Kan. LEXIS 36 (kan 1997).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Allegrucci, J.:

Kim Ordway asserted an insanity defense to charges of first-degree murder and theft in the deaths of his parents and the theft of their automobile. The jury found him guilty of two counts of second-degree murder and one count of felony theft. Ordway appeals his convictions.

Betty and Clarence Ordway lived approximately a mile west of Stockton, Kansas. On Saturday evening, November 20, 1993, in response to a call from the Ordways’ nieces, a sheriff’s officer went to the Ordway house. Investigation disclosed drag marks leading to the garage where the officer found Clarence Ordway’s body wrapped in bedding and partially concealed behind some garbage cans. After other officers arrived, they forced their way into the locked house to check on Betty Ordway. The house appeared to be very clean and neat. There was a dog in one of the bedrooms, but Mrs. Ordway was not found. Some items seized from the house — a book of daily devotions and a pill container with a compartment for each day of the week — indicated that the household routine had been interrupted on Thursday, November 18.

Clarence Ordway died as a result of being shot in the back with a shotgun. The entry wound was about 6 inches below the base of the neck and 2 inches to the left of the spine. There was no exit wound. Clarence Ordway’s left lung and heart were extensively damaged. There was no evidence of defensive injuries to his hands or feet. The date of death was estimated to be November 18,1993.

A thorough search of the house revealed blood spatters, sometimes combined with what appeared to be tissue or fat, in a number of different locations. One area of the carpet in the television room was “roughed up” as if it had been cleaned, and one of the officers reported a smell in the house that he associated with “cleaning fluid and decomposition.” A broken lamp was found in the basement. There did not appear to have been an effort made to clean *778 a blood smear on the front porch steps and across the floor of the garage. •

Law enforcement officials in Kenmore, New York, where Kim Ordway s ex-wife, Suzanne, lived, were advised that Ordway was wanted for questioning in connection with, the homicide in Kansas. On November 22, a New York police officer saw a man sitting in a white Chevrolet with a Kansas license plate, which was parked in front of Ordway s wife’s house. Ordway gave the officer his correct name and stated in response to a question about weapons that there was a shotgun on the front passenger seat. He complied fully with instructions on getting out of the car and being frisked and handcuffed, and stated that he understood his rights as a suspect. “He was very calm,' very passive.” When an officer told him they had been looking-for his mother, Ordway said, “[M]y mom is in the trunk.” A loaded shotgun with the safety, off was found under a blanket on the front passenger seat, and a serrated kitchen knife was found under the driver’s seat of the car. The back seat was filled with clothes; household items, including some utensils; and toys, some in boxes as if new. Clarence Ordway’s wallet and two rings were found in a backpack in the back seat. Betty Ordway’s body, wrapped in a tarp and a rug or blanket, was found in the trunk of the Chevrolet.

Betty Ordway also died as a result of shotgun wounds. The pathologist estimated that Betty Ordway died approximately 3 to -4 days before the autopsy was performed on November 23, 1993. She had two shotgun wounds in her right chest arid one entry wound in her back, which caused damage to her lungs, heart, liver, ribs, vertebrae, and aorta. In addition to the shotgun wounds, the pathologist found' bruises, lacerations, abrasions, and fractures caused by impact with a blunt object. There were bruising and swelling around the left eyebrow; five lacerations on her head; bruising, swelling, and abrasion of the left forearm; and broken bones in both forearms. The pathologist’s opinion was that the injuries to her forearms were defensive wounds and that the other trauma injuries also were inflicted prior to her death.

One of the officers who arrested Ordway testified that Ordway’s passivity was unusual. Ordway made various statements to the of *779 ficer, including the following: “This is a crazy world, especially about mom and dad. . . . This whole thing with mom and dad is crazy.” When the officer asked Ordway what was crazy, he responded, “Life.” He told the officer that the car belonged to one or both of his parents and that he had been taking Xanax, which was his mother’s. Xanax is usually prescribed as an anti-anxiety medication. In response to the officer’s questions, Ordway said that he killed his mother and put her in the trunk, and that he left Kansas on Saturday and had been living with her in the car since then. When asked if he wanted to telephone his father in Kansas, Ordway declined, saying, “No, he won’t answer.” Ordway remained passive until he was being taken from his cell for arraignment, when he rushed at and struggled with four officers.

Ordway was admitted to Lamed State Security Hospital on December 8, 1994, when he was 33 years old. The Lamed forensic staff’s report describes how relatives of the deceased asked a sheriff’s officer to accompany them to the Ordways’ house, where Clarence Ordway’s body was found. The report continues:

“The relatives informed the officer that the Ordway’s son, Kim, had been living with his parents for approximately three to four weeks. They noted that he had been ‘extremely depressed and would spend a whole week in his room alone.’ They also advised that Mr. Ordway had battered his ex-wife who still lived in New York. In addition, they reported that Mr. Ordway had hit his father in the past and ‘had been arrested for it.’ ”

At the forensic staff conference on Ordway, the social worker reported that the defendant had given inconsistent information at various times and was not rehable. According to a report prepared in 1988, when Ordway was 27, his “occupational functioning had been ‘disrupted by heavy alcohol abuse for a number of years.’ ” He had four DUI convictions. He reportedly had abused PCP, LSD, peyote, psilocybin mushrooms, cocaine, and amphetamines. The report contains the following psychiatric history:

“Mr. Ordway has had contact with mental health professionals throughout much of his adolescent and adult life. Because of his involvement in burglaries while in his adolescence, Mr. Ordway was placed in a facility called Berkshire Farms. Although the patient’s adjustment had only been marginal for several years, his functioning deteriorated even further after the death of his brother in 1984. It *780 was at this point in his life that the patient’s involvement with drugs and alcohol increased. In apparent association with his drug and alcohol involvement, the patient physically assaulted his wife on several occasions. Apparently, it was during this time period that Mr. Ordway developed the delusional and paranoid beliefs that his wife was having affairs with other men and that she had been sexually molested by police officers. In 1985 he was reportedly receiving outpatient counseling at the Mid-Area Mental’ Health Center in Buffalo, New York, apparently in connection with his second arrest for driving while intoxicated.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
934 P.2d 94, 261 Kan. 776, 1997 Kan. LEXIS 36, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-ordway-kan-1997.