State v. Overstreet

200 P.3d 427, 288 Kan. 1, 2009 Kan. LEXIS 9
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJanuary 30, 2009
Docket95,682
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 200 P.3d 427 (State v. Overstreet) 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. Overstreet, 200 P.3d 427, 288 Kan. 1, 2009 Kan. LEXIS 9 (kan 2009).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Davis, J.:

Following a jury trial, Jason Overstreet was convicted of aggravated assault and attempted first-degree murder. Before the Court of Appeals, he claimed the following trial errors required reversal of his convictions: (1) instructional errors on aiding and abetting, (2) prosecutorial misconduct, (3) the granting of additional summation after jury deliberation had begun, (4) the giving of an additional instruction to resolve juiy indecision after deliberation had begun, (5) ineffective assistance of counsel, and (6) improper conviction of two charges that were charged in the alternative. The Court of Appeals affirmed in an unpublished opinion. State v. Overstreet, No. 95,682, unpublished opinion filed February 8,2008. We granted Overstreet’s petition for review and now reverse and remand for a new trial.

Facts

Late in the evening on December 7, 2004, Damian McCall was in the drive-thru of a fast-food restaurant in Wichita when he noticed a green Chevy Tahoe pull up behind him. According to McCall, the driver of the Tahoe leaned out the window and looked at McCall’s customized Ford Expedition. McCall thought the *4 driver looked like a rapper named Chingy and mentioned this fact to his friend with whom he was talking on his cell phone.

McCall picked up his food and started to drive home. The Tahoe pulled out immediately behind McCall without stopping to pick up any food at the drive-thru window. McCall eventually got on to the highway and drove several miles until he took the Pawnee exit. The Tahoe remained behind McCall during this entire drive.

Shortly thereafter, McCall approached his apartment complex and backed into a parking spot so he could watch the Tahoe. The Tahoe turned into the parking lot and drove past McCall’s Expedition; it then turned around and drove by McCall a second time. When the Tahoe reached the parking lot exit, it again turned around, blocking a truck that was nearby.

After turning around this second time, the Tahoe drove back toward McCall’s vehicle and stopped. McCall saw a man jump out of the passenger side and run toward his Expedition. When he observed the man “reach and pull something” from his person, McCall lay flat in his vehicle in case it was a gun. The man fired several shots into the front of the Expedition. McCall was not hurt.

Once the shooting ceased, McCall sat up and saw the man running away. McCall put his Expedition in drive and rammed the Tahoe. McCall’s vehicle flipped as a result of the collision, and the occupants of the Tahoe fled on foot.

When the police arrived at the scene, they found eight cartridge casings and two bullet fragments in the apartment complex parking lot. McCall’s expedition had been struck by bullets six times: five bullets hit the front of the SUV on the driver’s side, and one bullet struck the windshield on the passenger’s side.

The police also found three cell phones inside the Tahoe and one on the grass outside the driver’s door. One of the cell phones found inside the Tahoe on the front passenger-side floorboard belonged to Tracy Lafferty. Lafferty had loaned the cell phone to Jason Overstreet (the defendant in this case) the previous month, and it had never been returned.

Shortly after the incident, three men were apprehended at the nearby Wal-Mart: Kendrick Shears, James Walker, and Ishmel Agnew. Joshua Bauder and Tyler Mott — who had both been in the *5 truck near the parking lot exit and had witnessed the shooting— identified Shears as the shooter and Walker as the driver of the Tahoe.

Police obtained fingerprints from three areas on the Tahoe. One print was found on the exterior of the driver s door, and two prints were found outside the passenger door. Tests matched the passenger-side prints to Shears, but none of the prints matched Agnew or Walker.

Further investigation ensued. During Detective Randall Reynold’s interview of Ishmel Agnew, Agnew mentioned the name “Jason” in connection with his description of the events but did not provide a last name. Reynolds also interviewed Linda Dubois, who owned the Tahoe. Dubois informed Reynolds that she loaned the Tahoe to a man named “Jason” at her friend Jeff s house.

Reynolds later spoke with Jeffrey Fay, Dubois’ friend, who indicated that the “Jason” discussed was Jason Overstreet. Fay testified at trial that he remembered Dubois lending Overstreet the Tahoe. According to Fay, Overstreet left in the Tahoe and returned with three or four black men, then left a second time.

Reynolds subsequently showed McCall a photo array that included Overstreet’s picture and pictures of five other similar individuals, asking McCall whether any of these men were the driver of the Tahoe that had followed him home from the restaurant. McCall circled Overstreet’s picture and wrote that Overstreet “resemble[d] the driver” but that McCall was “not one hundred percent sure.”

Fingerprint analysis also matched Overstreet’s prints with the fingerprint found on the Tahoe’s driver’s side door.

The State charged Overstreet with attempted first-degree (premeditated) murder or — in the alternative — aggravated assault, both based on an aiding and abetting theory.

At trial, McCall again identified Overstreet as the driver of the Tahoe, testifying that although he could not be 100 percent certain because it was dark on the night of the incident, he was “about 85, 90 percent sure.” McCall based his identification of Overstreet on the fact that he had seen the driver lean out of the window in the drive-thru and on his observation of the Tahoe as it followed him *6 in the parking lot of his apartment complex, which had some lighting outside the apartment building.

Because Overstreet was not found on the night of the shooting, no witnesses were able to identify him at the crime scene except the victim, based on observations earlier in the evening.

The State did not call Bauder or Mott as witnesses. Overstreet’s defense counsel attempted to introduce Bauder’s and Mott’s identifications of Walker — not Overstreet — as the Tahoe’s driver during the cross-examination of Detective Reynolds, but these identifications were excluded on the basis of hearsay. Overstreet’s counsel subsequently moved the district court for a continuance, indicating that he intended to call Bauder and Mott as witnesses for the defense but had thus far been unable to locate them. The district court granted a continuance of the trial until the next morning to give defense counsel an opportunity to find the men.

Bauder testified for the defense the following morning. He explained that he “believe[d]” he identified Overstreet at the scene, but he was uncertain of that identification because he was focused primarily on the shooter, not the driver. After Bauder testified, defense counsel recalled Detective Reynolds, who testified that Bauder identified Walker — not Overstreet — as the driver on the night of the incident and that Overstreet had not been present at the time.

During deliberations, the jury submitted several questions for clarification to the district court and also requested the readback of trial testimony.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
200 P.3d 427, 288 Kan. 1, 2009 Kan. LEXIS 9, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-overstreet-kan-2009.