State v. Roper

136 S.W.3d 891, 2004 Mo. App. LEXIS 940, 2004 WL 1439995
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 29, 2004
DocketWD 62613
StatusPublished
Cited by87 cases

This text of 136 S.W.3d 891 (State v. Roper) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Roper, 136 S.W.3d 891, 2004 Mo. App. LEXIS 940, 2004 WL 1439995 (Mo. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

RONALD R. HOLLIGER, Judge.

Todd Roper appeals his convictions of numerous offenses, including forcible sodomy, kidnapping, first-degree burglary, and multiple charges of first-degree assault and armed criminal action. He argues that the trial court committed three errors. First, he contends that the trial court erred by denying his motion for a judgment of acquittal on one of the first-degree assault charges, based upon a claim of insufficiency of the evidence. Second, he argues that the trial court erred in refusing to permit him to introduce into evidence a greeting card sent to him by the victim. Third, he claims that the trial court erred in failing to take sua sponte action with regard to the State’s improper cross-examination of him, following his testimony on direct examination. We find that the prosecutor was guilty of serious misconduct but under the plain error standard there was no manifest injustice. We find no reversible error in the other points and, therefore, affirm the convictions.

Factual and Procedural Background

Todd Roper and Melinda Trenary 1 first met in January 2001, began a relationship roughly three months later, and subsequently moved in together in August 2001. Their relationship was not a placid one. Roper allegedly assaulted Trenary in November 2001, leading to the filing of criminal charges against him. He was ultimately released on bond with a condition that he avoid contact with Trenary. Despite that bond condition, he continued to live with her after his conditional release. In early 2002, though, Roper moved to a different residence.

On February 6, 2002, Roper called Tre-nary to determine whether she intended to testify against him regarding the November 2001 assault charge. She told him that she had not been contacted about the case, but would testify if she was. Roper became upset and verbally abusive on the phone, telling her that she would be ruining his life. When asked whether he was threatening her, Roper said that she could *894 “take it” as she wanted. Trenary hung up the phone at that point, and Roper tried calling back multiple times, until she turned off the ringer to the phone.

Shortly after Roper moved out of Tre-nary’s apartment, she had begun spending time before and after work with a coworker, Charles White. On the afternoon after Trenary had her phone conversation with Roper, she and White had their first “formal” date. After the date, they returned to Trenary’s apartment. The apartment had two entrances: one through the front entry of the house and the front stairs, the other through a rear stairwell and deck, which she used as her main entrance to the apartment.

After arriving at her apartment, Tre-nary changed into a nightgown, and the two sat on her bed, talking and playing cards. Trenary was sitting at the head of the bed, with her back against the wall, while White lay across the foot of the bed, facing her. White’s back was to the main doorway to the bedroom. After thirty minutes of cards, Trenary leaned over to kiss White, when she heard a creaking sound from the apartment floor.

At that point, Roper rushed into the bedroom, wielding a board over his shoulder like a baseball bat. Trenary cried out in warning, but Roper struck White in the head with the board, just as White was turning around toward Roper. The blow opened a broad laceration in White’s forehead that bled profusely.

Roper attempted to grab Trenary, yelling “I’ll kill you, Bitch.” White struggled with him, to prevent Roper from reaching her. While the two were grappling, Tre-nary attempted to call the police on the bedroom phone, but was unable to get a dial tone. She attempted to get out of the bedroom, but Roper cut her off each time she started to move toward one of the bedroom doors. Roper told White during the struggle that it had nothing to do with him, that “he had warned” her and “that he wasn’t going to jail over nothing, that he was going to kill [her].”

Trenary attempted to grab the board that Roper was still carrying. At that point, Roper managed to take hold of Tre-nary’s hair and used it to pull her down to her knees, while he continued to fight with White. In addition to his physical battle with White, Roper also started kicking Trenary. The two fought until they were tired. White unsuccessfully tried to convince Roper to let him go to the hospital. He reiterated his intention to kill Trenary. Becoming agitated again, Roper told White “I had a — I should have brought my gun in here with me, and I have a bullet for you. I’ll kill you, and if I have to, I’ll kill myself.” Roper started to drag Tre-nary out of the bedroom, at which point White resumed the fight with Roper. During this second stage of the confrontation, White felt “two sharp blows” to his back. He would later learn at the hospital that Roper had stabbed him.

The confrontation continued, with Roper dragging Trenary through the hallway toward the kitchen and the rear entry. As Trenary was pulled past the door, she unlocked it, hoping to escape. Roper noticed her action and began to beat her again. She managed to get the door open, and yelled at White “just go and get me some help,” at which point White escaped from the apartment.

Immediately after White fled, Roper shut and relocked the door. He grabbed a knife from the kitchen. Then, still holding Trenary by the hair and struggling with her, he pulled a nearby dresser across the door to block it from opening, preventing entry from the outside. He then similarly blocked the front entrance to Trenary’s apartment. Roper repeatedly told Tre- *895 nary that she was going to die. Meanwhile, White had paused, listening to the continuing battle inside the apartment, as Roper barricaded himself and Trenary in the apartment. White then went down the steps and saw a police car driven by Boon-ville Police Sergeant Jere Lang passing by on the street. White flagged the vehicle down. Lang put White in the car and called for assistance before taking him to the hospital.

When the police arrived at the apartment Roper slid down and sat against a wall, placing Trenary in front of him. He held her hair in one hand and the kitchen knife in the other, blade pressed against her throat. When the police officers shouted out, asking what was going on, Roper replied, “I’m going to kill this bitch.” The officers tried to persuade Roper to come out and talk about it, but he refused, telling them that he would kill her if they entered the apartment and would kill himself, if necessary.

The officers testified that Roper was angry and used extensive profanity in his exchanges with them. One of the officers, Corporal Abel, told Roper that he needed to see that Trenary was okay. Roper pushed her face against a window with her next to him. The officer could see blood on Trenary’s face, but could not make out the extent of her injuries. Some time later, additional officers arrived on the scene, including Lieutenant Welliver, who had known Roper since they were young, who continued to try to talk to Roper, to no avail.

The standoff continued into the following morning. The Highway Patrol Special Emergency Response Team (SERT) joined Lieutenant Welliver and the other local police officers in attempting to bring the situation to a close. During that time, Welliver heard Trenary scream numerous times as if in pain.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
136 S.W.3d 891, 2004 Mo. App. LEXIS 940, 2004 WL 1439995, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-roper-moctapp-2004.