State v. Smith-Parker

340 P.3d 485, 301 Kan. 132, 2014 Kan. LEXIS 692
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedDecember 24, 2014
DocketNos. 105,918; 105,919
StatusPublished
Cited by95 cases

This text of 340 P.3d 485 (State v. Smith-Parker) 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. Smith-Parker, 340 P.3d 485, 301 Kan. 132, 2014 Kan. LEXIS 692 (kan 2014).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

BEIER, J.:

This is defendant Willie Smith-Parker s direct appeal from two prosecutions joined for a single jury trial. The first case arose from a burglary/homicide on the morning of June 13, 2009, and the second arose from a fatal shooting on the morning of June 19, 2009. Smith-Parker was convicted of first-degree premeditated murder in the death of Alfred Mack, second-degree intentional murder in the later death of Justin Letourneau, theft, and aggravated assault. The jury acquitted Smith-Parker of two aggravated burglary counts.

Smith-Parker raises 10 issues in this appeal: (1) whether the evidence of premeditation of Mack’s murder was sufficient; (2) whether aiding and abetting is an alternative means crime; (3) whether the two cases should have been consolidated for trial; (4) whether the district judge abused his discretion by excluding a statement made by Letourneau; (5) whether the mandatory wording of an instruction requires reversal for clear error; (6) whether the district judge erred by failing to tell jurors to begin their deliberations anew when an alternate juror was substituted; (7) cumulative error; (8) whether tire district judge abused his discretion by refusing to recall the jury; (9) whether the district judge violated Smith-Parker s rights under the Sixth and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution, as articulated in Apprendi v. New Jersey, 530 U.S. 466, 120 S. Ct. 2348, 147 L. Ed. 2d 435 (2000), by sentencing him to a harsher penalty based on his criminal history; and (10) whether the district judge violated Smith-Parker s Sixth and Fourteenth Amendment rights, as articulated in Apprendi, by sentencing Smith-Parker to the highest sentence in the range in the applicable Kansas Sentencing Guidelines Act presumptive grid box.

We conclude that four of Smith-Parker’s allegations of error have merit and that they cumulatively require reversal of all of his convictions, and we remand the case for further proceedings. [135]*135Given this result, we need not reach either of his two sentencing issues; but we observe in passing that each has been finally resolved against him in our Kansas courts. See State v. Ivory, 273 Kan. 44, Syl., 41 P.3d 781 (2002) (rebanee on criminal history permissible); State v. Johnson, 286 Kan. 824, Syl. ¶ ¶ 5-6, 190 P.3d 207 (2008) (highest sentence in grid box permissible).

Factual and Procedural Background

Smith-Parker’s numerous appellate issues, including sufficiency of evidence to support his conviction for premeditated first-degree murder, require a recitation of factual and procedural background more lengthy and comprehensive than the norm.

Mack Death

In June 2009, Benjamin Friedman and his roommate lived in Apartment B at 1012 Johnstown Avenue. On the morning of June 13, Friedman’s alarm woke him, and he heard someone running down the stairs outside of his apartment. He also heard a loud noise, which he would later describe as similar to a car backfiring. Two other residents of nearby apartments also reported having heard a loud noise at about the same time, describing it as a “great big bang” or a gunshot.

After Friedman got out of bed, he went into the living room of his apartment and noticed that his television was missing. A Sony PlayStation and various movies and video games also were missing.

Friedman went outside and observed that one of the screens to a lower apartment had been removed. Friedman went back into the building and checked the downstairs apartments. He noticed splintering on the door of Apartment C. Friedman could hear a television inside the apartment, but nobody answered the door when he knocked on it.

Friedman then called 911.

When Officer Glen Soldán arrived at the apartments, he observed that the door to Apartment C “had been lacked open and it wasn’t quite shut.” When he knocked on the door it swung open, and Soldán could see “a large black male lying on his back, feet [136]*136towards [the door], obviously not breathing.” The man was later identified as Mack.

Soldán entered the apartment to make sure that no one else was in it, and he noticed an empty .22 casing lying on the floor.

When investigators arrived, they found and photographed a partial footprint on a split-rail fencepost just below the deck to Friedman’s apartment. Later enhancement of the image would show that the word “Servus” was imprinted on the sole.

Ron Styles, an investigator, would later testify that it appeared Mack had been sitting in a chair watching television and, based on the angle the bullet entered his body, was in the process of standing up when he was shot. The blood splatter pattern in the apartment indicated that Mack probably lived 1 to 2 minutes before collapsing into the kitchen. According to Styles, it was likely Mack was shot from the dooiway of the apartment.

Dr. Altai Hossain conducted Mack’s autopsy, which determined that the cause of death was bleeding from a penetrating gunshot wound to the chest. Based on tire location of the gunshot wound and information provided by law enforcement, Hossain would testify at trial that Mack had been shot from more than 2 feet away.

Investigators did not have any immediate leads or suspects.

Letourneau’s Death

A little after 6 on tire morning of June 19, 2009, Darci Davis was standing outside the Salina Regional Health Center when she noticed a white four-door car “coming down the street towards the hospital from the right and it squealed into the parking lot across the street . . . and tiren it squealed around and . . . stopped right beside” her. The driver of the car, later identified as Smith-Parker, asked Davis for directions to the emergency room. Davis noticed that the car’s passenger, later identified as Letourneau, was leaning on the driver and had blood on him and that “there was blood on the window, . . . blood on the door, [and] just... a lot of blood.” Davis provided directions, and Smith-Parker drove off in the direction of the emergency room.

The first nurse to respond found Letourneau in the passenger seat of the car. His airway was “pretty much closed”; he was not [137]*137responsive; he had vomit all over him; and appeared to have a head trauma. Another nurse would later testify that there was a “penetration wound to [the victim’s] right temple and there was blood and emesis on the patient and in the car and on us.” One of the nurses asked Smith-Parker who had shot the passenger. Smith-Parker replied: “I don’t know.”

A 911 call was placed from the emergency room of the hospital at 6:23 that morning to report a shooting victim.

Crystal Gile was the first law enforcement officer to arrive at the hospital. She found a white Chevy Cavalier parked under the awning of the emergency room. She pulled Smith-Parker aside, and she would testify at trial that Smith-Parker was veiy emotional during their conversation.

Smith-Parker identified Letourneau, and Gile asked, “What happened to Justin?” Smith-Parker responded, “I killed him.” Gile then asked Smith-Parker to explain what had happened.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

State v. Ross
Supreme Court of Kansas, 2025
State v. Kittle
Court of Appeals of Kansas, 2024
Alenco, Inc. v. Warrington
Court of Appeals of Kansas, 2024
State v. Phillips
Court of Appeals of Kansas, 2024
State v. Ross
Court of Appeals of Kansas, 2024
State v. Alexander
Court of Appeals of Kansas, 2024
Smith-Parker v. State
Court of Appeals of Kansas, 2024
State v. Goldstein
Court of Appeals of Kansas, 2024
State v. Waldschmidt
546 P.3d 716 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 2024)
Fraire v. State
Court of Appeals of Kansas, 2024
State v. Holmes
Court of Appeals of Kansas, 2024
State v. Anderson
Court of Appeals of Kansas, 2023
Robinson v. State
Court of Appeals of Kansas, 2022
State v. Shipley
510 P.3d 1194 (Court of Appeals of Kansas, 2022)
State v. G.J.
Court of Appeals of Kansas, 2022
State v. Martell
Court of Appeals of Kansas, 2022
State v. Myers
509 P.3d 563 (Court of Appeals of Kansas, 2022)
State v. Spackman
Court of Appeals of Kansas, 2021
State v. Wheeler
Court of Appeals of Kansas, 2021

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
340 P.3d 485, 301 Kan. 132, 2014 Kan. LEXIS 692, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-smith-parker-kan-2014.