State v. Walen

563 N.W.2d 742, 1997 Minn. LEXIS 369, 1997 WL 280265
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedMay 29, 1997
DocketC6-95-1786, C6-96-1281
StatusPublished
Cited by51 cases

This text of 563 N.W.2d 742 (State v. Walen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Walen, 563 N.W.2d 742, 1997 Minn. LEXIS 369, 1997 WL 280265 (Mich. 1997).

Opinion

OPINION

TOMLJANOVICH, Justice.

A jury on May 23,1995 convicted appellant Brett Randall Walen of the first-degree murder of Keith Eugene Wallace, Jr. Walen filed a notice of appeal on August 21,1995 arguing only that the evidence adduced at trial was insufficient as a matter of law to sustain his conviction. Walen subsequently requested posteonviction relief on two additional grounds — denial of his right to testify and ineffective assistance of counsel — and moved this court to stay the direct appeal. While awaiting this court’s decisions, Walen filed a supplemental brief on the direct appeal asserting that the trial court abused its discretion by admitting autopsy photographs and a crime-scene videotape, by allowing a handgun-firing demonstration, and by denying Walen’s motion for a change of venue. 1

We granted the motion to stay the direct appeal pending the posteonviction hearing. Following the one-day hearing, the district court denied Walen’s requests for posteonviction relief. Walen subsequently filed with this court an appeal of the order denying posteonviction relief, basing it on two independent grounds: 1) that the district court erred in refusing to find that defense counsel had denied Walen his right to testify; and 2) that the district court erred in finding that Walen had waived his attorney-client privilege by claiming ineffective assistance of counsel. We consolidated the two appeals and considered each of Walen’s claims. We now conclude that the district court did not abuse its discretion by denying Walen’s motion for a change of venue, by admitting autopsy photographs and a crime-scene videotape, or by allowing a handgun-firing demonstration. We also hold that there was sufficient evidence for a reasonable jury to conclude beyond a reasonable doubt that Walen shot and killed Wallace. Finally, we hold that the posteonviction court did not err in refusing to find that defense counsel had denied Walen’s right to testify or in finding that Walen had waived his attorney-client privilege by claiming ineffective assistance of counsel. Consequently, we affirm the conviction.

The only confirmed eyewitness of the shooting was the victim’s wife, Michelle Wallace, who gave the following account to police:

On Friday, August 27, 1993, Michelle and Keith Wallace left their infant daughter with Michelle’s parents in New Prague and went to Faribault for a movie. Following the movie, which ended at approximately 11:30 p.m., Michelle and Keith went to the Country Kitchen restaurant in Faribault. After the meal, Keith and Michelle climbed into Keith’s pickup truck at approximately midnight and began the trip back to New Prague. While traveling north on 1-35, a vehicle pulled behind Keith’s pickup and flashed its lights on and off several times. After traveling another mile or so, Keith drove his truck up the exit ramp to County Road 1, turned the truck right, or eastbound, on County Road 1, and pulled over to the shoulder of the road. The other vehicle followed and stopped behind Keith’s truck. Keith rolled down his window and shortly thereafter Michelle said she heard a voice tell the couple to lean forward and “give me your money.” Keith leaned forward and looked at Michelle to his right. Immediately thereafter, Michelle heard a “pop.” Although Michelle said she *746 did not think the sound was a shot, she opened the passenger door and rolled out of the truck and into a ditch. She then heard another pop as the glass in the window on the passenger door shattered. Michelle later told police she saw neither the perpetrator nor the perpetrator’s vehicle as the perpetrator drove away. Michelle then noticed Keith’s truck rolling forward. At first she thought he was leaving the scene, but then the truck rolled down into the ditch, stopping-only after going through a fence.

Moments later, Michelle saw a white Taurus traveling eastbound on County Road 1. She flagged down the car and informed the two female occupants that someone had shot her husband. Michelle asked the women to take her with them, but they refused and told Michelle they would stop and call for help, which they did at a farmhouse approximately a half mile farther east on County Road 1. Immediately after the Taurus left the scene, Michelle noticed a blue pickup truck approaching from the east on County Road 1. She once again flagged down the vehicle and told the lone male driver that someone had shot her husband and that she needed help. The driver stopped, phoned 911 from his cellular phone, left his truck and went down to check Keith’s pulse. The police arrived at the scene moments later.

Once at the scene, the police found Keith’s truck in the ditch with both doors closed, the driver’s side window open, the passenger side window shattered, the engine, flashers and headlights on, the radio off and the manual transmission in neutral. In addition, the police found Keith dead from a gunshot wound to the back of the head. He was sitting behind the steering wheel with his head slumped against the door, his seat belt off and his glasses on the dash. After local investigators arrived, they asked for assistance from the Bureau of Criminal Apprehension (“BCA”). The BCA mobile crime lab personnel arrived a few hours later, collected evidence and photographed, videotaped, and diagrammed the scene. The police failed to examine for fingerprints on the inside of the truck and a wallet that was later discovered at the scene.

In addition to speaking with Michelle and the witnesses who stopped at the scene shortly after the shooting, police also spoke with a female motorist who had been traveling northbound on 1-35 and had stopped just north of the County Road 1 exit at approximately 12:30 a.m. The witness said she heard what sounded like a truck or car backfiring shortly after she pulled off the road after striking a deer with her car. From where she had stopped she could see a vehicle’s headlights facing eastbound up on County Road 1. She said that shortly after hearing the sound, the headlights moved and then fell out of sight. Police later discovered another witness who was east of the crime scene shortly after the shooting. The witness said he observed a maroon colored mid-1980’s Oldsmobile-type car driving eastbound on County Road 1, however, a police officer who was driving westbound toward the scene over that same stretch of road reported seeing no such vehicle.

The police became suspicious of Walen when Michelle Wallace’s brother, Mark Scha-degg, called them on Sunday, August 29, 1993. At a meeting on Monday, August 30, 1993, Schadegg, along with his fiance Pam Brytenson, told the police that Michelle had been seeing Walen romantically and that Keith had become aware of the relationship. This information conflicted with the statement Michelle gave on the night of the shooting. The police obtained Michelle’s phone records and discovered hundreds of minutes of long distance phone charges between Michelle’s and Walen’s respective residences. These calls began in October 1992 and continued through the investigation. The police later obtained a wiretap warrant for Walen’s phones and began intercepting calls on November 29, 1993. The trial court suppressed the evidence adduced from those wiretaps because Walen was not notified of the wiretap within the statutorily specified period. In addition, the police had Brytenson tape record her telephone conversations with Michelle.

The police learned that Walen had applied for a gun permit on August 3, 1993.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
563 N.W.2d 742, 1997 Minn. LEXIS 369, 1997 WL 280265, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-walen-minn-1997.