State v. Shoen

578 N.W.2d 708, 1998 Minn. LEXIS 238, 1998 WL 224565
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedMay 7, 1998
DocketC1-97-324
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 578 N.W.2d 708 (State v. Shoen) 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. Shoen, 578 N.W.2d 708, 1998 Minn. LEXIS 238, 1998 WL 224565 (Mich. 1998).

Opinions

OPINION

ANDERSON, Justice.

This ease embodies one of the most basic tensions in the criminal justice system — the conflict between a criminal defendant’s fundamental right to a fair trial and society’s need for justice after a heinous crime has been committed. On March 1, 1996, appellant Peter James Shoen killed his wife, Kimberly Shoen, by beating her over the head, with a metal pipe and strangling her. Beginning with jury selection and throughout the trial, the district court ordered Shoen to wear a leg restraint underneath his pants as a security device. The restraint made Shoen limp and may have been visible at the bottom of his pants leg. On the witness stand, Shoen admitted killing his wife, but claimed - the killing was not premeditated. The jury found Shoen guilty of premeditated first-degree murder, and the court sentenced him to life imprisonment. On appeal, Shoen contends that he was denied his constitutional right to a fair trial because he was forced to wear the leg restraint. Shoen also raises six additional claims in a pro se brief.

The district court erred when it failed to state on the record the reasons for requiring Shoen to wear a leg restraint. Further, if the jury knew that Shoen was restrained during his trial and this awareness had an impact on the jury’s decision, this would raise a serious question as to whether Shoen received a fair trial. We cannot tell from the record whether the jury was aware that Shoen was restrained, much less whether there was any prejudicial effect. We therefore remand his case to the district court for a Schwartz hearing to determine whether the jury was aware of Shoen’s restraint and, if so, for the district court to determine whether that awareness deprived Shoen of his right to a fair trial.

Peter and Kimberly Shoen were married for nine years and had two children, a nine-year-old daughter and a six-year-old son. Along with Peter Shoen’s parents, the couple owned and operated a 120-head, more than 500-acre dairy farm in rural Watonwan County that had been in the Shoen family for five generations. The Shoens had a troubled marriage. Two years before Kimberly Shoen’s death, Peter Shoen had an affair with his cousin’s wife, Dawn Shoen. After the affair ended, Peter Shoen remained friends with Dawn Shoen, talking to her on the phone almost daily. This continuing relationship with Dawn Shoen caused considerable tension in his marriage.

It is undisputed that Peter Shoen killed Kimberly Shoen on March 1, 1996. The police learned of Kimberly Shoen’s death when Peter Shoen called 911 at around 2:00 that afternoon to report that his wife had fallen down the stairs. When paramedics arrived at the farm, they found Peter Shoen sitting in the kitchen at the foot of the stairs next to his wife’s body. The first paramedic to arrive at the farm testified that she saw “a major amount of blood, more than I had been expecting.” Local police typically responded to all emergency calls, and several officers arrived at the farm soon after the paramedics.

Because local police believed from the outset that Kimberly Shoen’s death was suspicious, they asked the Bureau of Criminal Apprehension to assist in their investigation.

[711]*711A BCA officer, accompanied by a Watonwan County deputy, interviewed Peter Shoen twice. The first interview occurred the afternoon of the murder, at about 4:30. The interview took place in the BCA officer’s squad car and lasted for about an hour. The officers did not read Shoen his Miranda rights and told Shoen at the outset, “you’re not in custody.” Shoen told the officers that when he came back in the house at about 2:00 p.m., he found his wife lying there, “blood all over.” He denied that he had harmed his wife. That evening, a search warrant was executed, and deputies searched the house and farmstead all night.

Early the following morning, March 2, a sheriffs deputy found a length of metal pipe with blood on it in a grove of trees near a machine shed. Following discovery of the bloody pipe, the BCA officer and the Waton-wan County deputy questioned Shoen a second time for about 30 minutes. Before beginning this interrogation, the officers gave Shoen a Miranda warning, and he agreed to answer their questions.

Shoen then told the officers that he had killed his wife. He stated that Kimberly Shoen had found a receipt from the local feed store bearing Dawn Shoen’s name. The day of the murder, the couple argued about Peter' Shoen’s relationship with Dawn Shoen. Kimberly Shoen threatened to leave Shoen, take their two children and the farm, and leave him with nothing. Shoen stated that he and his wife were standing at the top of the stairs as they argued, and that while they argued she shoved him. He admitted that he shoved her back, and she fell down the stairs. Shoen stated that when he saw his wife lying at the bottom of the stairs, he thought for a little while and then went outside into the yard to get a metal pipe. He claimed that he then hit her in the back of the neck. He said that it was “[j]ust like taking care of a cow, putting it out of [its] misery,” and he acknowledged that he “had a pretty good idea” that hitting her with the pipe would kill her. He then went back outside to feed the cows. After he realized what he had done, Shoen came back inside the house and called 911. At the end of the interrogation, one of the officers asked Shoen whether he had made the statement of his own free will, and Shoen indicated that he

had. The officer also asked whether any promises or threats had induced Shoen to make a statement, and Shoen answered “no.”

Shoen was arrested that day for the murder of his wife. Several weeks later, the grand jury indicted him for first-degree premeditated murder, and the indictment was later amended to include a charge of intentional second-degree murder. At the Rasmussen hearing, the defense moved to suppress both of Shoen’s statements to the police, contending that his statement on March 1 was obtained in violation of his Miranda rights and his statement on March 2 was involuntary. The district court concluded that Shoen was not in custody on March 1 and therefore was not entitled to a Miranda warning. The court also held that Shoen’s March 2 statement was voluntary. Both statements were admitted at trial.

On November 5, 1996, jury selection for the trial began at the Watonwan County courthouse in St. James. Shoen was brought into the courthouse wearing a leg restraint underneath his pants as a security device. The defense made a motion to remove the restraint, arguing that Shoen had been a model prisoner and that the sheriff had stated that Shoen was not a flight risk. The state countered that anyone charged with first-degree murder presented a flight risk and, further, that the jury would not be able to see the restraint because it was underneath Shoen’s pants. The state also pointed out that the only courtroom guard available was a retired deputy because all of the active-duty deputies had participated in the murder investigation and thus were potential witnesses. The court ordered Shoen to wear the restraint, but only until an active-duty deputy was available to guard him. The defense moved for a mistrial and.change of venue based on juror misconduct, and the court granted the motion, ordering that the trial be moved to New Ulm, the county seat of adjoining Brown County.

Jury selection began again on November 13 at the Brown County courthouse. Again Shoen appeared at the courthouse wearing the leg restraint, and again the defense made a motion for the restraint to be removed.

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Bluebook (online)
578 N.W.2d 708, 1998 Minn. LEXIS 238, 1998 WL 224565, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-shoen-minn-1998.