State v. Trotter

127 P.3d 972, 280 Kan. 800, 2006 Kan. LEXIS 4
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedFebruary 3, 2006
Docket91,251
StatusPublished
Cited by41 cases

This text of 127 P.3d 972 (State v. Trotter) 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. Trotter, 127 P.3d 972, 280 Kan. 800, 2006 Kan. LEXIS 4 (kan 2006).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Lockett, J.:

Christopher M. Trotter appeals his convictions for first-degree premeditated murder, capital murder, aggravated robbery, and conspiracy to commit aggravated robbery. Trotter argues that (1) the trial court should have given an instruction regarding eyewitness identification; (£) the trial court erroneously admitted evidence that a victim was pregnant; (3) he was denied a fair trial because the State used nine peremptory strikes to eliminate 9 of the 10 African-Americans from the jury; and (4) the evidence was not sufficient to support his convictions.

FACTS

Just before daybreak on May 21, 2001, Christopher Trotter (Trotter), Virdal Nash, Kevin Eddington, and Michael Navarre were crouched in the woods behind the duplex of James Darnell Wallace and his wife Traylennea Huff in Kansas City, Kansas. Dressed in dark colors to avoid detection, the four were waiting for an opportunity to enter the duplex and rob the occupants of an expected $100,000. A fifth accomplice, James Trotter (James), was parked nearby in a gold Saturn owned by Trotter s girlfriend. James *801 was to be positioned down the road as a lookout, watching for police. James was in contact with Trotter via two-way radios.

Led by Trotter, the five had spent the previous day devising a plan for the robbery. According to the plan, Nash and Navarre were to enter into the half of the duplex that they believed to be occupied by Wallace’s mother and prevent her from calling the police. Trotter and Eddington were to enter Wallace and Huff s side of the duplex, yell, “ATF,” bind the victims with zip-ties, take the money, and leave.

Because Trotter and Nash knew Wallace and Huff, the four intruders planned to wear something that covered their faces. Trotter, Nash, and Eddington had t-shirts to tie around their heads. Navarre had a Scream mask to cover his face. Each wore gloves to avoid leaving fingerprints. As a show of force, Trotter was armed with Nash’s .38 caliber, semi-automatic pistol, and Navarre had Trotter’s nonfunctioning assault rifle.

When the four first arrived at the duplex, Trotter and Eddington checked the doors to see if they could bréale in. After they discovered that they could not break in through the doors, Trotter pulled out the phone line, and then the two returned to the woods to wait with Nash and Navarre. Before there was an opportunity for the four to enter the duplexes, Nash received a call from his wife asking him to bring her car home so she could go to work. While the others remained outside the duplex waiting for their opportunity to get in, Nash left to take the car to his wife.

Just as it was becoming daylight, but before Nash had returned, Wallace opened the garage door to take his dog out. Trotter ran toward the house followed by Eddington and Navarre. Trotter ordered Wallace to freeze. When Wallace began wrestling with Trotter over the gun, Eddington and Navarre ran past them into the garage and up the stairs into the house. At one point, Eddington looked back, observed Wallace remove the t-shirt from Trotter’s face, and heard Wallace say to Trotter, “[C]ome on, Chris, you ain’t got to do it.”

Eddington and Navarre encountered Huff on the stairs. Huff screamed, “I’m pregnant, don’t hurt me.” Eddington bound Huff s hands with a zip-tie, then Navarre asked her where the money was *802 hidden. Huff stated that the money was in her bedroom under the bed. Eddington and Navarre then proceeded into the bedroom. Navarre looked under the bed for the money. Huff returned to the bed and laid down next to her 2-year-old daughter Janae, who had been sleeping in the bed with her mother.

While Navarre was searching for the money, he heard a gunshot. Navarre quickly located the money under the bed and gave it to Eddington. When a second gunshot sounded, Eddington and Navarre ran from the room, down the stairs, out of the garage, and headed back through the woods to where Nash had previously parked the car. As he was going down the stairs, Navarre passed Trotter, who was headed up the stairs. After Navarre was in the woods, he heard another gunshot. Then Trotter came running up behind Navarre.

After returning the car to his wife, Nash had changed into his work uniform and driven his ADT company van back to the area where he had been parked for the robbery. Shortly after Nash arrived, he observed Eddington, Trotter, and Navarre running towards him. After the three jumped into Nash’s ADT van, Nash drove away.

Once inside the van, Trotter mumbled, “Look what you made me do. He should have just laid down. All he had to do was just lay down. I wouldn’t have had to kill him. He wouldn’t have to get killed.”

James followed them in the gold Saturn. When they arrived at Nash’s house, Eddington counted $4,000 as the spoils from the robbery. The five divided it equally, each taking $800. Nash then disposed of the clothes and the weapons.

Damante Huff, Wallace and Huff s 8-year-old son, informed the police that he awoke to noises in the house. He heard his mom say, “I’m pregnant. I swear to God it’s in there.” Damante got up from his bed and looked out of his bedroom door. A man in the hallway with his mother pushed him back into his room. Damante returned to his bed, but he could see another man who appeared to be fighting with his father on the stairs. Damante heard his father say, “Chris.” Then, Damante heard gunshots.

*803 Damante stayed in his bed until eveiything was quiet. Damante, followed by his 7-year-old sister, Ebony, went to his parents’ room. Damante asked his mother where his father was. Huff did not respond. Huff had been killed by a point-blank gunshot in the back of her head. Janae was awake and shaking next to her mother’s body. Damante picked Janae up and ran out of the house with his two sisters. As Damante ran out of the garage, Damante observed his father slumped over the neighbor’s car. Wallace was dead. He had been beaten, then shot twice, once in the face and once in the back of the head. Damante and his sisters ran to a nearby friend’s house. His friend’s mother called the police.

During the investigation, Damante told police that his father’s friend Chris did it. Police then asked Wallace’s mother, Marva Wallace, who her son knew named Chris. Marva informed the officers that her son knew a Chris Trotter. Wallace had gone to high school with a Trotter in Leavenworth. Officers soon connected Trotter with Nash, Eddington, Navarre, and James.

Nash, Eddington, and Navarre entered into plea agreements, with each of them agreeing to plead guilty to one count of aggravated robbeiy and one count of conspiracy to commit aggravated robbery. In addition, they each agreed that the sentences for those crimes would be run consecutively. Pursuant to the agreements, Nash was sentenced to a total of 95 months in prison, Eddington was sentenced to 111 months in prison, and Navarre was sentenced to 95 months in prison. As part of the plea agreements, Nash, Eddington, and Navarre agreed to testify against any and all co-defendants. In exchange for their pleas, the State agreed to drop the murder charges, preventing Nash, Eddington, and Navarre from facing the possibility of life in prison or the death penalty.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
127 P.3d 972, 280 Kan. 800, 2006 Kan. LEXIS 4, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-trotter-kan-2006.