State v. Rhodes

657 N.W.2d 823, 2003 Minn. LEXIS 125, 2003 WL 1342975
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedMarch 20, 2003
DocketC3-98-1839
StatusPublished
Cited by113 cases

This text of 657 N.W.2d 823 (State v. Rhodes) 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. Rhodes, 657 N.W.2d 823, 2003 Minn. LEXIS 125, 2003 WL 1342975 (Mich. 2003).

Opinion

OPINION

RUSSELL A. ANDERSON, Justice.

This case returns to us from our remand for postconviction proceedings following appellant Thomas Rhodes’ appeal from a judgment of conviction for first-degree murder. Rhodes argues that he is entitled to a reversal of his conviction because his conviction rests on insufficient evidence, or alternatively, that he is entitled to a new trial on the basis of ineffective assistance of trial counsel or newly discovered evidence. We affirm Rhodes’ conviction for first-degree murder and the postconviction court’s denial of a new trial.

We begin by restating the factual portion of Rhodes’ first appeal, State v. Rhodes, 627 N.W.2d 74, 77-84 (Minn.2001), and by supplementing those facts as necessary. Because the evidence in this ease is wholly circumstantial, we set forth the facts in some detail.

*828 On the night of August 2, 1996, Rhodes and his family were vacationing on the southwest side of Green Lake, near Spicer, Minnesota. About 11:30 p.m., Rhodes and his wife, Jane, left their two sons in their room at the Northern Inn and drove their 1995 Baja Blast, a 14-foot water-jet-type-boat, onto the lake. At some point, as Rhodes was driving, Jane went over the edge of the boat. She was not wearing a life jacket and was not a good swimmer.

Rhodes claimed that he looked for his wife from the boat and in the water and called her name, and then, not finding her, he drove south to shore. He tied the boat to the dock outside of Little Melvin’s, a bar located in a building close to the beach, and went to the Northern Inn, behind Little Melvin’s and across the street, for help. At the inn, a desk clerk called 911. The desk clerk described Rhodes as “emotionally distressed,” incoherent, and “wet from head to toe.” He noted Rhodes was wearing a white T-shirt. When Kandiyohi County Deputy Randall Kveene arrived, Rhodes told him that he had been about 1,000 yards north of Little Melvin’s dock when Jane went overboard, but Rhodes directed Kveene to search in an area only 400-500 yards northeast of Little Melvin’s. When Kveene asked if the location was correct, Rhodes responded that the search should move a little farther north. About 20 to 25 minutes later, when others joined the search, Rhodes indicated to another deputy that the area they were searching, about 100 yards from the area first searched, was the right spot, and the deputy marked the spot.

The search resumed the next morning, August 8, and Rhodes again told one of the law enforcement officers that the search party should move north. The search moved approximately 2,000-3,000 feet north. At about 1 p.m. that day, a fisherman found Jane’s body about nine-tenths of a mile northwest of the last-seen point Rhodes had identified.

Rhodes explained what happened on the night of August 2 in two statements, made to law enforcement officers and insurance personnel, which were admitted into evidence at trial. In a police interview conducted on August 15, 1996, Rhodes narrated that he and his wife were “necking” in their boat which was about a thousand yards out from Little Melvin’s when a boat without lights on passed between their boat and the shore. Rhodes moved the boat farther north. Then they decided “to go for a spin,” and Rhodes accelerated, heading north, to about 40 miles per hour. He looked to the right to navigate by the light of the moon. He saw Jane start to get up and move forward as if she was looking for something. He then looked back to the right. When he next glanced to the left, he saw “her leg or her tennis shoes go over.” He did not hear Jane make any noise. He looked for Jane in the water after going back to where he thought she had fallen in, but he could not see well and the waves were getting bigger. He zigzagged east and west from the north toward the south three times looking for Jane. There were no other boats on the lake. He drove to Little Melvin’s, tied the boat up to the dock, grabbed a sweatshirt from the boat, noticed that it looked as though Little Melvin’s was shutting down, and crossed the street to the Northern Inn.

In an October 10,1996 interview with an insurance claim representative, Rhodes related that he and Jane had gone out in the boat to be intimate. They drove on the lake in a northeasterly direction from Little Melvin’s and sat for a while. When a *829 boat that did not have lights on approached, Rhodes drove farther north. As they were sitting watching the stars, they heard the boat again and decided to go for a spin. Rhodes took off in a northerly direction and was looking to the right when Jane said something. Rhodes also sensed she was reaching for something. He looked back and saw her in a standing position, taking a step back as if to sit down. Rhodes looked to the right again, and when he glanced back again, he caught a glimpse of her shoes going over the side of the boat and heard what sounded like a muffled scream. Rhodes panicked and missed his first grab at the throttle, then grabbed it and slowed down, turning left and accelerating to return to where he thought Jane had fallen out. After looking for her in the water and calling her name from the boat, Rhodes zigzagged east and west back north and then south as he made his way toward the shore near the Northern Inn.

At trial, the state’s theory of the case was that Rhodes accelerated intentionally to cause Jane to fall out of the boat or pushed her out of the boat, zigzagged the area to create wake and possibly hit her, and then misdirected the authorities so that they would not discover her body. The state offered the testimony of Patrol Captain William Chandler of the Hennepin County Sheriffs Office to support the theory that Rhodes intentionally misdirected the authorities. Chandler found it improbable that a body could sink in Green Lake, resurface, and then float nine-tenths of a mile in 13 hours, given the lake temperature and the wind speed. He also thought it unlikely that the body could have remained afloat without a life jacket or, even it if did, that trained observers would overlook a body floating on the water. Therefore, Chandler identified a point near the location where several shore witnesses watched a boat being driven erratically as the likely place Jane went overboard.

The state introduced expert medical testimony to support the state’s theory that Jane’s death was not accidental. Dr. Lyle Munneke, a Kandiyohi County medical examiner, noted bruising on Jane Rhodes’ forehead and nose, on both sides of her face, and from her hairline to the top of her head and observed a cut on the right side of her mouth. Dr. Michael McGee, the forensic pathologist who performed the autopsy, found hemorrhaging beneath the surface bruises. Dr. McGee believed that the hemorrhaging occurred while Jane was alive and used a life-sized clay model of Jane’s head to demonstrate that “a single blow” probably did not cause the damage to both sides of Jane’s face. Dr. McGee opined that multiple strikes from a boat hull could have caused the injuries.

Dr. McGee also testified about Jane’s other injuries. He stated that the laceration on the side of her mouth was premor-tem and could have occurred when a boat hit her mouth, stretching it to the point of tearing. He explained that the abrasions on the backs of her hands and forehead were likely postmortem and caused by her body sinking and scraping the bottom of the lake while floating face down. Dr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
657 N.W.2d 823, 2003 Minn. LEXIS 125, 2003 WL 1342975, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-rhodes-minn-2003.