State v. Timley

469 P.3d 54
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedAugust 7, 2020
Docket120414
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 469 P.3d 54 (State v. Timley) 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. Timley, 469 P.3d 54 (kan 2020).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF KANSAS

No. 120,414

STATE OF KANSAS, Appellee,

v.

CORTEZ TYRELL TIMLEY, Appellant.

SYLLABUS BY THE COURT

1. Prosecutors are given wide latitude in crafting both opening statements and closing arguments, but the inferences prosecutors draw from the evidence must be reasonable.

2. A prosecutor's allegedly erroneous statement must be evaluated in light of the context in which it was made.

3. A district court must exercise discretion in determining whether evidence submitted by a witness, lay or expert, is supported by sufficient foundation.

4. Under the facts of the case, sufficient foundation supported the admission of maps derived from previously admitted cellular phone data, along with accompanying testimony, without the need for an expert witness.

1 5. Under the facts of the case, the district court's failure to sua sponte instruct the jury on the lesser included offense of intentional second-degree murder was not clearly erroneous.

6. In a noncapital case, a district court's failure to sua sponte instruct on a lesser included offense does not violate a defendant's constitutional right to due process.

Appeal from Shawnee District Court; RICHARD D. ANDERSON, judge. Opinion filed August 7, 2020. Affirmed.

Peter Maharry, of Kansas Appellate Defender Office, was on the brief for appellant.

Jodi Litfin, assistant solicitor general, and Derek Schmidt, attorney general, were on the brief for appellee.

The opinion of the court was delivered by

WILSON, J.: Cortez Tyrell Timley appeals his conviction for first-degree premeditated murder in the killing of Jermel Robbins. Finding no reversible error, we affirm his conviction.

FACTS

On the afternoon of June 13, 2014, law enforcement responded to a 911 call and found a man—later identified as Robbins—lying in the front yard of a house. Robbins had suffered gunshot wounds to his leg and his back, from which he soon died.

2 Several witnesses saw a blue or gray Dodge Magnum driving down the street at the time of the shooting; one witness also saw the Magnum drive down the street 5 to 10 minutes before the shooting but noted that the Magnum "came back around" before the shooting. According to this witness, the Magnum's driver was a "light skinned dude" with "short hair," but the shots came from the passenger window. This witness noted that the shooter's arms were tattooed, but he could not recall the shooter's skin color. Another witness saw the shooter fire from the Magnum's front passenger window; this witness identified the shooter as being black. And a third witness—who did not see the shooting itself but who heard the shots—reported a partial license plate number to law enforcement.

Based on the partial license plate number and the identification of the vehicle involved in the shooting as a gray Dodge Magnum, law enforcement matched the vehicle to one owned by Jazmine Christopher, a resident of Independence, Missouri. Law enforcement suspected the shooter was Timley, who was Christopher's boyfriend at the time.

Timley was apprehended in a white Chevy Malibu in Kansas City later that day, along with Eric Price and D'Ante Boykins. Price, who was "more white," long-haired, and relatively thin, was Timley's best friend. Boykins was Timley's cousin, and had grown up with Price and Timley. Officers recovered a broken Kyocera flip phone from the seat in the Malibu where Timley had been sitting. The flip phone's "cables were completely severed."

According to Christopher, Timley left her residence at about 12:30 in the afternoon. When she called him around 1:09 p.m. to ask a favor, Timley told her he was "too far away from home." Christopher told officers that Timley had had the Magnum "all day." She also speculated that Timley had gone to Topeka to drop off his son with

3 Timley's mother, who lived near Lake Shawnee in Topeka, "[o]ff of 45th." According to Detective Justin Broxterman, Timley gave an address on Southeast 43rd Terrace in Topeka where "he spends a lot of time."

Broxterman acquired records relating to the location and call data of Timley's phone—the broken flip phone recovered from the Malibu—from Sprint. Various cellphone records were admitted into evidence without objection, alongside the testimony of Sprint records custodian Ricardo Leal. Leal could not guarantee "with all certainty" that the location information provided in cellphone records was accurate.

Over the objection of Timley's counsel, Broxterman testified about the relative position of Timley's phone throughout the day of the shooting. Broxterman had input the Sprint information—that included "which cell tower it was and which side of that cell tower it was accessing"—into a program to plot out the trajectory of Timley's phone. He then generated maps depicting the cell tower accessed by Timley's phone at different times of the day, although he noted that the maps did not depict the distance of the phone from each tower.

According to Broxterman, Timley's phone remained in the area of the Independence residence until about 12:40 p.m. on the day of the shooting. The phone then headed west along the same general trajectory of I-70 and, by 2:09 p.m., it began to access a cell tower in Topeka. At 2:37 p.m., which was shortly before the shooting, Timley's phone accessed a cell tower in Topeka. According to Per Call Measurement Data (PCMD) provided by Sprint, Timley's phone was estimated to be approximately 2.63 miles away from that tower. As the crow flies, the scene of the shooting was exactly 2.63 miles from the same tower. Later, Timley's phone eventually headed east, this time traveling north of I-70; by 5:03 p.m., it was back in the area of Kansas City.

4 Broxterman admitted that the PCMD provided by Sprint was merely an estimate used by engineers, rather than a definitive statement of fact. Broxterman read Sprint's PCMD disclaimer aloud for the jury—which emphasized the potential inaccuracy of the PCMD, depending on several variables—and that "Sprint will not guarantee the accuracy of the location information." When pressed about the accuracy of the PCMD information Broxterman said:

"Sprint told me their numbers can be inaccurate. They can't validate them or verify them. I can tell you, though, mapping the distance from the tower to the house, which is what I illustrated, I know he hit this side of this tower, and I know the house is 2.63 miles from the tower. I'm just making a point that Sprint's records show, whether it can be verified or not, the handset was estimated to be 2.63 miles."

Broxterman further emphasized that "I'm not saying that Sprint tells me the handset's there. So if you overlay your thing, he could be, like you said, anywhere in here. I'm just telling you, the records say the estimate is 2.63 miles, and in fact, the house is 2.63 miles."

Dreux Doty testified as an expert witness for Timley with respect to the cellphone location data, and his report was also admitted at trial. Doty emphasized that there was no exact GPS data for the flip phone once it left the Kansas City metro area and that any estimates of distance in Topeka were just that—estimates. However, Doty agreed that Sprint's figure of 2.63 miles was "a rational estimate."

The jury was instructed on the charged crime of first-degree murder. No lesser included offense instructions were given or requested, and Timley's counsel raised no objection to the jury instructions. Timley was ultimately convicted of one count of first- degree murder. He then appealed his conviction to this court.

5 ANALYSIS

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
469 P.3d 54, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-timley-kan-2020.