State v. Profit

591 N.W.2d 451, 1999 Minn. LEXIS 147, 1999 WL 144529
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedMarch 18, 1999
DocketC4-97-1600
StatusPublished
Cited by73 cases

This text of 591 N.W.2d 451 (State v. Profit) 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. Profit, 591 N.W.2d 451, 1999 Minn. LEXIS 147, 1999 WL 144529 (Mich. 1999).

Opinions

OPINION

PAUL H. ANDERSON, Justice.

A jury found Mark Antonio Profit guilty of two counts of first-degree murder and one count of intentional second-degree murder for the May 1996 killing of Renee Bell. At the same jury trial, the jury also found Profit guilty of second-degree criminal sexual conduct and attempted first-degree criminal sexual conduct for an August 31,1996 assault on Phynnice Johnson. The court sentenced Profit to two consecutive life terms. On appeal, Profit claims that the district court committed reversible error by (1) joining the Bell and Johnson charges for trial; (2) excluding evidence of a third party’s possible involvement in allegedly similar crimes; and (3) permitting the state to amend the date of the offense on the Bell murder indictment after the close of testimony. Profit also asserts that there was insufficient evidence to support the jury’s verdict with respect to the murder charges. We affirm.

On May 23, 1996, the nude body of Renee Bell, a 30-year-old African-American woman, was found floating in Basset Creek in Theodore Wirth Park in Golden Valley, Minnesota. What appeared to be an elastic waistband from an article of clothing had been wrapped around Bell’s neck and was secured in a knot. One end of this ligature was also looped through Bell’s mouth and under her tongue in a gag-like manner. Dr. Mitchell Morey, an Assistant Hennepin County Medical Examiner, performed an autopsy on Bell and concluded that Bell had been strangled with the ligature and that her death was a homicide. Dr. Morey concluded that Bell had been dead from one day to one week.

According to police, Bell was a reputed prostitute who frequented the Broadway Avenue area of Minneapolis. The autopsy revealed that Bell had ingested cocaine within a few hours before her death. Police investigators also observed that Bell’s upper torso and vaginal areas were covered with mud. Police Sergeant Robert Krebs testified that the mud “appear[ed] to be packed, not jusf a matter of something [sic] had flowed over the body.” Dr. Morey discovered mud inside Bell’s vaginal vault as well, but found no other evidence of vaginal injury nor any indication of sperm or seminal fluid inside Bell’s vaginal vault. Dr. Morey declined to rule out the possibility of sexual assault, however, stating that the decomposition of Bell’s body and her submersion in water could have masked evidence of such an assault.

On July 13,1996, Officer David Born of the Golden Valley Police Department found a wallet laying on the bank of Basset Creek a few feet from where Bell’s body had been discovered. The water level of the creek had subsided since the discovery of Bell’s body in May, causing the waterline to recede approximately eight feet. The wallet was found about one foot from the creek’s edge and appeared to have been underwater. The wallet contained Profit’s driver’s license, as well as several papers subsequently linked to him.

Bell’s body was just the first of several bodies to be found in or near Theodore Wirth Park during the summer of 1996. On June 3, 1996, the body of Deborah Lavoie was found approximately one and one-half blocks from where Bell’s body had been discovered. On June 19, 1996, the body of Avis Warfield was found approximately one-half mile from Theodore Wirth Park. Both bodies had been burned with gasoline. On July 20, 1996, the body of Keooudorn Phothisane, a male transvestite, was discovered in Theodore Wirth Park within one and one-half blocks of where Bell’s body had been found. Although Pho-thisane’s body was also burned, police determined that he had been bludgeoned to death. Several juveniles claimed to have seen an African-American man running from the scene where Phothisane’s body was found. The juvenile witnesses provided a composite sketch of the man to police. Profit is an African-American.

[456]*456Each of these deaths, along with the Bell killing, was investigated by a multijurisdic-tional police task force under the premise that the deaths might be the work of a serial killer. Shortly after the discovery of Phothi-sane’s body, this task force learned that a man named Paul Kelly had spoken to his employer about a letter allegedly concerning Phothisane’s killing. The record does not indicate exactly what the employer told police or what Kelly had said to his employer, except to suggest that Kelly told his employer that someone else had written the letter.

Shortly after learning about the letter, the task force contacted and interrogated Kelly. Kelly told the police that Profit, his girlfriend’s brother, had asked to borrow a gas can from him on July 20, 1996. Kelly said that Profit returned to Kelly’s home one and one-half to two hours later and that Profit immediately proceeded to wash the clothes he had been wearing. According to Kelly, Profit then borrowed some clothes from Kelly and asked Kelly to help him wipe out the car Profit had been driving. Kelly also told investigators that he saw Profit write a letter confessing to the Phothisane murder. Kelly willingly provided handwriting and blood samples to the police. The police later learned that KARE 11 TV had received a letter similar to the one that Kelly described. This “KARE letter” was unsigned, but a handwriting analysis showed that Kelly was the most likely author. After being confronted with this information, Kelly admitted to writing the KARE letter, but said that he wrote the letter only after Profit showed him an original draft of the letter and ordered Kelly to rewrite the letter in his own handwriting in order to throw off authorities investigating the killing. The police continued to monitor both Kelly and Profit.

On August 2, 1996, while being monitored by the task force, Kelly contacted Profit by telephone and asked if Profit still had the clothes that he had borrowed on July 20, 1996. Profit told Kelly that he did, and he then returned clothes which matched the description of the clothes Kelly had told police Profit borrowed from him on the night of the Phothisane killing.

That same day, the police executed search warrants for Profit’s home and the various vehicles driven by Profit or his family. In a 1990 Pontiac Grand Am known to be driven by Profit, investigators found threads and fibers similar to threads and fibers found on the ligature used to strangle Bell. Tests performed by a micro-analyst from the Bureau of Criminal Apprehension and a private analytic forensic microscopist revealed that the threads and fibers from the trunk were chemically and physically indistinguishable from the threads and fibers from the ligature.

On August 31,1996, Phynnice Johnson was assaulted near Theodore Wirth Park. Johnson was an admitted crack cocaine user who, on August 31, had been working as a prostitute on Broadway Avenue in northeast Minneapolis. At about 11:00 p.m., a man in a car stopped to ask her where to get some crack cocaine. Johnson asked the man if he wanted her to ride with him to help him find some cocaine. The man agreed and Johnson then got into the ear. The man then asked Johnson if she wanted to “party.” She said yes, and the man then drove to an abandoned parking lot.

After smoking some crack cocaine with Johnson, the man unzipped his pants and asked her for oral sex. Johnson refused stating that she might do so later, but wanted to party first. The man then offered to take her to a park in south Minneapolis. When the man instead drove toward Theodore Wirth Park, Johnson became frightened and attempted to jump from the car. The man grabbed Johnson and, in the ensuing struggle, ripped off her T-shirt as she exited the car.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
591 N.W.2d 451, 1999 Minn. LEXIS 147, 1999 WL 144529, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-profit-minn-1999.