State v. Verser

326 P.3d 1046, 299 Kan. 776, 2014 WL 2557243, 2014 Kan. LEXIS 273
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJune 6, 2014
DocketNo. 107,906
StatusPublished
Cited by57 cases

This text of 326 P.3d 1046 (State v. Verser) 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. Verser, 326 P.3d 1046, 299 Kan. 776, 2014 WL 2557243, 2014 Kan. LEXIS 273 (kan 2014).

Opinion

[777]*777The opinion of the court was delivered by

BEIER, J.:

A juiy convicted Dominic Verser of first-degree murder and criminal possession of a firearm in the March 2009 shooting death of Olivia Anaekwe, the mother of his child. On this appeal, Verser raises four issues: (1) failure to grant a mistrial; (2) failure to apply K.S.A. 2013 Supp. 60-455 to evidence of a previous dispute between Verser and Anaekwe; (3) error in a jury instruction on reasonable doubt; and (4) error in responding to a jury question. None of these challenges requires reversal of Verser s convictions or sentences.

Factual and Procedural Background

Verser and Anaekwe began dating in late 2007 or early 2008. Anaekwe eventually became pregnant, and she and Verser began living together. In August 2008, Verser moved out. Verser moved in with his mother, Claudette Barker, who lived in one side of a conventional duplex, which shared a driveway with the duplex’ other unit. According to Anaekwe’s sister, Angel Sallis, Anaekwe would “constantly” visit Verser’s home and the two continued to have an “off and on” relationship. In February 2009, Anaekwe gave birth to their daughter.

The problems between Verser and Anaekwe continued after the baby’s birth. In the early morning hours of March 3, 2009, An-aekwe called 911 after Verser “lacked her out” of his home but kept their baby inside. When an officer arrived in response to the call, Anaekwe was waiting in her car. Anaekwe and the officer then went and knocked on the door of Verser’s home and asked for the baby. Claudette answered the door and gave the baby to Anaekwe and the officer. Verser had left the home before police arrived.

On the afternoon of March 26, 2009, Anaekwe drove her brother, Richard, to work. Richard would later testify that Anaekwe told him during the car trip that she intended to “move away from Kansas” to “get away from it all” and to get away from Verser. After dropping Richard off, Anaekwe went to Verser’s home to give Verser’s sister, Chrishawn Barker, a ride to a bank.

When Anaekwe and Chrishawn returned from the bank, Verser was at the duplex. Anaekwe had overheard Chrishawn and Verser [778]*778discussing whether he would go to Michigan with Chrishawn. But at about 4 p.m., on the front porch of the duplex, Verser told both women that, because of the baby, he would not be going to Michigan. Chrishawn then went inside and slept until approximately 9 p.m.

When Chrishawn woke up, she spent a short time at a house next door to the duplex, where her cousin, Anthony Barker, lived; Anthony was having a party. When she returned from the party, she saw Anaekwe, Verser, and the baby in the backseat of An-aekwe’s car, which was parked in the driveway of the duplex. Chr-ishawn went back into the duplex and again fell asleep.

Sometime between 10 p.m. and 10:30 p.m., Steven Ward, who lived in the second unit of the duplex where Verser lived, heard a commotion outside. He believed the commotion—caused by two people, one of whom was a woman'—lasted between 8 and 10 minutes and ended “[l]oud and fast” with “[a] loud thud, boom.” After about 10 minutes of quiet, the police and fire departments responded to the scene.

Ward’s wife, Joyce, was in another room of the Wards’ side of the duplex during the commotion. She heard what sounded like a car “quickly” leaving the shared driveway between 9 p.m. and 10 p.m. A few minutes later, she heard a woman scream. To Joyce, the scream sounded like the woman was “scared like something was wrong.”

A third neighbor reported that he heard what he believed to be a gunshot at approximately 10:45 p.m.

A 911 dispatcher received a call from Verser’s residence at 10:41 p.m. Although Claudette would initially say that she placed the call after hearing what sounded like “firecrackers,” she eventually conceded that she made the call after Verser came inside and said Anaekwe had been shot. During the 911 call, Claudette gave the phone to Chrishawn. Chrishawn had just awakened, and, when she took the phone, her mother told her to tell the 911 operator that they had “heard gunshots.”

Antonio Barker, Verser’s brother who lived with Verser, said Verser had come into the duplex and admitted shooting Anaekwe.

[779]*779Kevin Barker, a cousin who lived with Verser, also saw him after the shooting. Kevin was at Anthony’s house next door when he and Anthony heard what sounded like a woman yelling. A short time later, Verser’s mother arrived and handed Kevin a heavy object wrapped in a white t-shirt. According to Kevin, the object “felt like a firearm,” and he hid it under a mattress in Anthony’s bedroom.

When Verser arrived at Anthony’s house a short time later, Kevin said, Verser had blood on his bottom lip. Verser went into a downstairs bathroom for a moment, and while he was in there, he looked in the mirror “like ... he was looking to see what. . . was on his face.” He also made a telephone call to an unidentified person. Kevin did not see Verser again between the night of the murder and Verser’s trial.

After the 911 call, Chrishawn saw the baby lying on a couch in Verser’s home and took her across the street to wait at a relative’s house for the police. Chrishawn did not know how the baby had gotten inside the duplex and onto the couch. Although Chrishawn tried to get her mother to come across the street with her and the baby, her mother did not follow.

When firefighters arrived on the scene, they found Anaekwe’s car stopped in the street with its driver’s door open and a body lying partly in the street and partly in the car. There was no pulse detectible, and, based on that and the nature of the injuries, it was apparent that the person, later identified as Anaekwe, was dead.

According to an autopsy conducted the next day, Anaekwe had suffered a “perforating gunshot wound” to the right side of the top of her head. The coroner concluded that a high-powered round was fired from a gun at least 24 inches away. The State’s bloodstain-pattern analyst concluded that the front driver’s side and passenger doors were closed when the shot was fired, and a spent cartridge was found beneath Anaekwe’s body. The cartridge’s location, in addition to the pattern of the bloodstains, demonstrated that An-aekwe had been shot from the direction of the backseat and that the gun was inside the car when fired. The bloodstain-pattern analyst could not determine whether the person holding the gun also was inside the car when the shot was fired.

[780]*780The gun used in the murder was never found, but the casing showed that the gun fired a .223 cartridge. A search of Verser’s residence produced a live .223 REM cartridge in a dresser and a manual for a Kel-Tec PLR-16 pistol, which fires a .223 round. A firearms expert also was able to conclude from the casing that the murder weapon was likely to have been a Kel-Tec PLR-16 or a Kel-Tec SU-16 rifle, each of which employs a specific bolt mechanism; but the expeit could not definitively rule out other guns.

Verser was immediately a suspect in the shooting, but police did not locate him until approximately 6 months later. Operating on a tip, Kansas City, Missouri, police officers found Verser in a park. Although Verser ran when the officers attempted to speak to him, he was caught after a short chase. Upon arrest, Verser gave a false name.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
326 P.3d 1046, 299 Kan. 776, 2014 WL 2557243, 2014 Kan. LEXIS 273, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-verser-kan-2014.