State v. Richard

333 P.3d 179, 300 Kan. 715, 2014 Kan. LEXIS 498
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedSeptember 5, 2014
Docket107962
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 333 P.3d 179 (State v. Richard) 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. Richard, 333 P.3d 179, 300 Kan. 715, 2014 Kan. LEXIS 498 (kan 2014).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Johnson, J.:

A juiy convicted Derrick Richard of felony murder based upon the underlying felony of criminal discharge of a firearm at an occupied building. Richard allegedly fired his handgun at a neighbor s house, and a bullet fatally wounded a man sitting inside the house. On direct appeal, Richard raises three evidentiary issues. We have jurisdiction under K.S.A. 22-3601(b)(l) (direct appeal for conviction of off-grid crime; life sentence). Finding no error, we affirm.

Facts and Procedural Overview

During the evening of July 16, 2010, Grady Lane and his wife, Erin Gonzalez-Lane, were watching television in the second-story family room of their home at 532 North Wabash in Wichita, Kansas. Gonzalez-Lane went downstairs to bed around 10 p.m., while Lane stayed in the family room to play video games. At around 11 p.m., Gonzalez-Lane heard what she described as “[p]ow, pow, pow, pow.” Gonzalez-Lane assumed the noise was fireworks; therefore, after checking on her children, she decided all was well and went to sleep.

That same evening, at approximately 11 p.m., Officer Jason Waite responded to a call reporting gunshots fired in the nearby area of 500 North Ohio. Officer Waite encountered Derrick Richard in the street between two houses at 529 and 532 Wabash, but Richard said he had not heard gunshots or fireworks.

The next morning, Gonzalez-Lane discovered Lane still in the upstairs family room, but he was not breathing and there was “a lot of blood.” Officers Chad Richardson and Channara Seang responded to Gonzalez-Lane’s 911 call. They observed Lane, dead from a gunshot wound to the head, slumped over on his side as if he had been sitting upright on the couch and had fallen over. The officers discovered a single bullet hole in the family room window glass and three bullet holes in an interior wall, all of which appeared *717 to have come from outside. Crime Scene Investigator Natalie Rowe collected three bullet fragments from inside the room.

The family room window faced the Lane’s backyard, and an officer noted that if Lane had been sitting up on the couch, he would have been visible through the window for a shooter located in the backyard. A search of Lane’s backyard yielded four spent cartridge casings (fired rounds) and one unfired cartridge, all designed to be used in a .45 caliber handgun and all manufactured by Speer. The cartridges were found approximately 20 to 25 yards from the family room window.

Gonzalez-Lane told police she “had a notion” that Richard, their neighbor directly to the south at 524 North Wabash, killed Lane because the two men had been in a dispute over a dog. Gonzalez-Lane also told police that Richard had previously fired shots in the neighborhood, after which he called Lane to tell him Richard was “just blowing off some steam and . . . everything was okay.”

Richard lived with his daughter, Jasmine Huff, and his father, Irving Richard. After obtaining Huff s permission to search the family’s backyard, officers found seven .45 caliber spent casings and one live .45 caliber cartridge. Four of the spent casings were manufactured by Winchester, while the other three, as well as the live cartridge, were manufactured by Speer.

Detective Robert Chisholm interviewed Richard three times. The first interview began at 9 a.m. on July 17, 2010, with the detective advising Richard of his Miranda rights. Richard told the detective that he and Lane had been friends until they got into a dispute over a dog. He denied having any guns and said that he had not heard any shots fired the previous evening. Richard also denied that he had previously discharged a firearm in his yard or that he had called Lane to apologize for doing so, albeit he had no explanation for the shell casings found in his yard. Five and a half hours into the interview, Richard told Detective Chisholm that he was ill and needed to go to the hospital, whereupon the detective stopped the interview and called Emergency Medical Services.

During that first interview, Richard had given consent for tire police to search his home for guns, drugs, and evidence related to this crime. But Richard told the detective that only Irving had *718 access to a storage area in the back of tire house, and the detective relayed that information to the officers at the scene. In Richard’s bedroom, the police found a box of ammunition containing twenty-nine .45 caliber semiautomatic cartridges manufactured by Speer and a gun case. Irving gave die officers permission to search a padlocked storage area on die enclosed back porch and provided the officers with a key for the padlock. Officers searched the storage area and located a .45 caliber gun manufactured by Haskell and a magazine. The magazine contained seven .45 caliber cartridges manufactured by Speer.

Upon Richard’s release from the hospital and after reminding him of his Miranda rights, Detective Chisholm interviewed Richard for anodier 30 to 45 minutes. Richard admitted owning the gun that the detective said they had found at his house. Richard explained tiiat he normally stored the loaded gun underneath his mattress. In response to the detective’s query about the 14 rounds . of ammunition missing from the box found in his house, Richard related that on a prior occasion he had fired the handgun into the air, after which he called Lane to explain what he had done. He also admitted shooting his gun on the Fourth of July and firing at a dog causing trouble in the neighborhood. Richard continued to deny hearing shots or shooting at Lane’s house on the night of Lane’s death. Richard eventually concluded the interview.

The next morning, at Richard’s request, Detective Chisholm conducted another interview; After the detective had Richard read his Miranda rights aloud, Richard admitted shooting his gun from Lane’s backyard six times tire night of Lane’s death to send Lane a message to leave him alone.

The State charged Richard with one count of felony murder, based on the underlying felony of criminal discharge of a firearm at an occupied building, and one count of criminal possession of a firearm.

Sedgwick County Regional Forensic Science Center firearm and tool mark examiner Gary Miller opined that three of the spent casings from Richard’s yard and all of the spent casings from Lane’s yard came from Richard’s gun. The other casings and live cartridges lacked sufficient identification markings to pair them with *719 a particular firearm. Miller noted that the three bullet fragments found in Lane’s home had the same class characteristics as ammunition that would be used in Richard’s gun but could not definitively say if they were fired from Richard’s handgun.

Richard testified in his own defense. He explained that on the day of Lane’s death, he went over to a friend’s house at around 7:30 p.m. to play cards. He stayed about 2½ to 3 hours before returning home. When he got home, he went for a walk. Hoping to resolve his dispute with Lane, Richard stopped by Lane’s residence to see if Lane was on his back porch where he usually sat.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
333 P.3d 179, 300 Kan. 715, 2014 Kan. LEXIS 498, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-richard-kan-2014.