State v. Turner

333 P.3d 155, 300 Kan. 662, 2014 Kan. LEXIS 499
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedSeptember 5, 2014
Docket102478
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 333 P.3d 155 (State v. Turner) 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. Turner, 333 P.3d 155, 300 Kan. 662, 2014 Kan. LEXIS 499 (kan 2014).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Johnson, J.:

Rodney Turner seeks review of the Court of Appeals decision that reversed the district court’s dismissal of a multiple-count indictment returned against him by a citizen-initiated *664 grand jury. The petition to convene the grand jury alleged wrongdoing by the officers and directors of the Board of Public Utilities (BPU) of the Unified Government of Wyandotte County/Kansas City, Kansas (Unified Government). Turner, an attorney who did consulting and legal work for BPU, was indicted by die grand jury on 2 counts of theft and 55 counts of presenting a false claim, based upon die tiieory that he had not performed die work for which he had submitted monthly invoices to the BPU.

The district court granted Turner’s motion to dismiss the indictment, finding that Turner had been prejudiced by grand jury abuses and violations of his constitutional rights. But the Court of Appeals reversed the dismissal, finding that Turner did not possess the full panoply of constitutional rights at the investigatory proceedings by the grand jury and that the constitutional violations that did occur during the grand juiy proceedings did not prejudice Turner because the record contained sufficient evidence to establish probable cause to support the indictments. State v. Turner, 45 Kan. App. 2d 744, 250 P.3d 286 (2011). Because the record before us establishes grave doubt that the grand jury’s decision to indict was free from the substantial influence of the abuses of process and constitutional violations caused by the State’s agents during the grand juiy proceedings, we reverse the Court of Appeals and affirm the district court’s dismissal of the indictment.

Factual and Procedural Overview

In January 2008, T.J. Reardon filed a petition to summon a grand juiy in the District Court of Wyandotte County for the purpose of investigating claims relating to the BPU and Unified Government. The petition set forth allegations that BPU executives and directors, as well as city and county officials, had violated the law and misappropriated public funds in various ways. The petition did not specifically refer to Turner or allude to the consulting and legal work that he performed for BPU, albeit one of the statements in the petition directed that “BPU no-bid contracts and fixing with possible bribery charges should be investigated.”

The grand jury was convened in March 2008. The Court of Appeals referred to the grand juiy proceedings as “a 6-month inves *665 tigation,” 44 Kan. App. 2d at 761-62, but the record indicates that the grand jmy actually convened 17 times between its first meeting on March 5, 2008, and its last session on August 27, 2008; i.e., the grand jury averaged approximately 3 days in session per month. Wyandotte County District Attorney Jerome Gorman (DA) and Assistant District Attorney Kristiane Gray (ADA) presented evidence, examined witnesses, and provided legal advice during the grand jury proceedings. Special Agent William Delaney of the Kansas Bureau of Investigation (KBI) was assigned to investigate matters for the grand jury and played an integral role in the proceedings, testifying before the grand jury on 10 of the 17 days it was in session. The agent often advocated for an indictment against Turner, at times intimating that such an indictment might lead to a resolution of an unrelated 20-year-old murder case.

During his appearance on the first day of the proceedings, Delaney directed the grand jury’s attention toward Turner by characterizing his consulting and legal work arrangement with BPU as an example of a “no-bid contract” to which the petition had referred. Subsequently, the grand juiy would be presented evidence that from 2003 through 2008, Turner had submitted monthly invoices to BPU that totaled in the neighborhood of $400,000. The invoices were routinely approved by both the general counsel and the general manager of BPU, notwithstanding that they contained only the number of hours worked and the hourly rate, without a detailed itemization of the nature of work performed. The general counsel, Marc Conklin, was also a target of the investigation.

The State called several witnesses, including two former executive assistants to BPU’s general manager, two Board members, and an attorney who was acquainted with Turner, to testify that they did not know the nature of the work that Turner had actually performed for BPU. But other Board members, including the Board’s secretary, testified about the nature of Turner’s work for BPU of which they were aware, as did the former general manager of BPU who served from 1995 to 2005. The current BPU general manager opined that the amount of money paid to Turner was not out of line in comparison with what BPU spent on attorney fees and that he had accepted the general counsel’s explanation that *666 Turner “was offering a lot of legal advice and counsel to [the general counsel] and that [the general counsel] valued [Turner’s] legal opinions.”

At that first grand jury session, in response to a juror’s question about when the agent had begun his BPU investigation, Delaney referred to a 20-year-old murder case that remained open. Delaney added that he remained interested in “BPU people because of some interest in another case that I probably can’t discuss or shouldn’t discuss on this Grand Juiy.”

Nevertheless, at the next session, Delaney told the grand jury that he had been “concerned and interested in BPU because some of the people that we were hearing were involved in the BPU we thought were involved in a murder case in Wyandotte County.” Delaney then told the grand jury about that murder case, namely that Chuck Thompson, a local politician and attorney, was murdered in December 1987, and the case remained unsolved. Delaney further related that he was again approached in 2005 to do an investigation of BPU and that Turner’s name continued to come up on both the BPU investigation and the Thompson murder. The agent spoke of doing interviews on the “Thompson case/BPU case” and tied Turner to both cases by telling the grand jury:

“[Y]ou guys know, that there is some kind of legal work or some kind of work being done by Rod Turner I think over a period of 2003 to 2005. I think I saw the figures over $400,000 worth of work. All we’ve seen is invoices. I would be interested to see what’s behind those invoices, what’s causing those invoices, 40 hours a week at $150 an hour. He’s got—I would think he would be able to justify why he’s submitting those bills to the BPU.
“I think that’s a very interesting area that you really ought to look at pretty closely. Again, we have an interest in Turner because supposedly he had information about this other case.”

The agent went on to intimate that Turner was a dangerous person by telling the grand jury he had warned Reardon, the instigator of the grand jury petition, that he was “dealing with people that you need to be concerned about, don’t put yourself in a position where you can become like a Chuck Thompson.”

When the grand jurors were provided an opportunity to ask their own questions of Delaney, the following exchange took place:

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In re Petition to Summon Grand Jury
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In Re the Care & Treatment of Sykes
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State of West Virginia v. Daniel L. Herbert
767 S.E.2d 471 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 2014)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
333 P.3d 155, 300 Kan. 662, 2014 Kan. LEXIS 499, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-turner-kan-2014.