State v. Walker

372 P.3d 1147, 304 Kan. 441, 2016 WL 3036945, 2016 Kan. LEXIS 298
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedMay 27, 2016
Docket110712
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 372 P.3d 1147 (State v. Walker) 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. Walker, 372 P.3d 1147, 304 Kan. 441, 2016 WL 3036945, 2016 Kan. LEXIS 298 (kan 2016).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Stegall, J.:

A jury convicted Tyrone Walker of first-degree premeditated murder for the killing of Janis Sanders. We affirm Walker’s conviction and sentence and hold: (1) any error by the district court in failing to provide a lesser included instruction was harmless; (2) the State did not err during closing argument; (3) while the district court should have suppressed Walker’s statements from the interrogation after he invoked his right to remain silent, the error was harmless; (4) cumulative error did not deny Walker a fair trial; and (5) Walker’s hard 50 sentence is not unconstitutional.

Factual Background

On June 4,2011, Janis Sanders’ body was discovered in the overgrown grass behind a vacant home near the intersection of Washington and Lincoln streets in Wichita, Kansas. Sanders’ body was unclothed and had visible ligature wounds on the neck. Nearby, law enforcement officers found a string later identified as a shoelace and a kitchen knife stuck into the ground. Forensic analysis would later indicate that the shoelace was consistent with Sanders’ neck wounds. Sanders’ clothing — torn and stained with blood— along with her personal effects were then discovered in a nearby dumpster.

The investigation eventually led investigators to Charles Williams. Williams explained that he had been driving through the intersection of Washington and Lincoln the night before when a passenger in his car, Tyrone Walker, spotted Janis Sanders and de *443 manded that Williams stop the car. Walker got out of the car and approached Sanders as Williams drove away. Another passenger in the car, Suzana Hernandez, provided corroborating statements.

At trial, the jury also heard from a detective about an interview he and his partner conducted with Thomas Wilson, an inmate who had been at the Sedgwick County jail with Walker after Sanders’ killing. Wilson told detectives that Walker had shared with Wilson tire story of Sanders’ killing, detailing the events as follows. Walker was in possession of some crack cocaine while he was riding in Williams’ car. Walker spotted Sanders and decided to leave Williams and join Sanders because they had previously smoked crack cocaine together and Sanders owed him a favor. After Walker and Sanders met on the street, Sanders took them to a nearby empty house where they could smoke. During this time, Walker repeatedly propositioned Sanders for sex, but she rebuffed him. This angered Walker. He eventually pinned Sanders to the ground and told Wilson that he thought about using the kitchen knife he had with him, but because he did not want to “get blood all over himself’ or leave fingerprints, he decided to strangle Sanders with a shoelace instead. Walker told Wilson that he had been concerned that Sanders had scratched him during the fighting.

Additionally, the State presented DNA evidence from three different DNA samples: (1) scrapings under Sanders’ fingernails; (2) DNA traces on the shoelace; and (3) the handle of the kitchen knife. Walker could not be excluded from any of the three crime scene DNA samples. Other forensic experts testified that the autopsy revealed bruises on Sanders’ face, indicating she was beaten with “at least seven or eight distinctive, separate blows.” There were at least five ligature marks on Sanders’ neck consistent with repositioning, which can occur during strangulation when the victim attempts to loosen the ligature and causes the assailant to tighten the ligature in a new position. Visible scratch marks on Sanders’ neck were characteristic of a victim scratching at her own neck in an attempt to move or release the ligature. The States expert opined that Sanders could have remained conscious for 50 to 60 seconds of struggle or possibly longer depending on the time between.'.repositioning. The expert testified that once consciousness is lost it taires approxi *444 mately 2 more minutes of pressure for irreversible brain damage to begin and approximately 3 to 4 minutes of constant pressure before death.

The juiy also heard about a prior strangulation homicide committed by Walker. Walker stipulated that he was initially charged with murder in the first degree of Tamara Baker and eventually pled guilty to second-degree murder. Evidence was introduced to establish similarity between the crimes. Baker went missing on Halloween day in 1989, and her body was discovered in the spring of 1990 in a wooded area. The autopsy indicated Baker had been killed by manual strangulation. Baker’s body was discovered virtually unclothed. Walker eventually confessed to investigators that he strangled Baker with his hands and then left her body in the wooded area. Walker claimed he became angiy after the two had been kissing in his car and Baker told him that he needed to give her money or she would tell his wife what they were doing.

Walker now appeals his conviction and sentence.

Analysis

The district court’s failure to give the lesser included instruction was not clear error.

Walker’s first claim on appeal is that the district court committed clear error by failing to instruct the juiy on a lesser included crime of second-degree intentional murder. With Walker’s agreement, the district court instructed the juiy only on the charge of first-degree premeditated murder. The State initially argues Walker invited this error, preventing appellate review.

“The doctrine of invited error precludes a party from asking a district court to rule a given way and thereafter challenging the court’s ruling on appeal.” State v. Soto, 301 Kan. 969, 983, 349 P.3d 1256 (2015). If the defendant invites error in the juiy instructions, the court need not determine whether the juiy instruction is clearly erroneous. State v. Jones, 295 Kan. 804, 812, 286 P.3d 562 (2012). However, “[a] party must do more than simply fail to object to a district court’s proposed juiy instruction to risk application of the invited error doctrine as a bar to appellate review of that instruction.” State v. Dern, 303 Kan. 384, Syl. ¶ 4, 362 P.3d 566 (2015).

*445 At the instructions conference, the district court discussed with the parties its duty to instruct on lesser included crimes and opined that a second-degree murder instruction was inappropriate because the testimony on the length of time required to kill by strangulation showed premeditation. The district court then noted that Walkers counsel had not requested any lesser included instructions, and Walker’s counsel confirmed that was still the case.

Under similar facts, we have regularly declined to apply the invited error rule. For example, we did not hold there was invited error in Soto, where the State, defense, and district court agreed there was no evidence to support lesser included instructions for the first-degree murder charge. 301 Kan. at 983-84. We noted: “[Djefense counsel made no affirmative request to omit a second-degree murder instruction nor did defense counsel decline an offer by the court to give the instruction.” 301 Kan. at 984. The opinion concluded: “Defense counsel acquiesced to the trial judge s ruling rather than requested the instruction not be given. Under these facts, we decline to apply the invited error rule.” 301 Kan. at 984. As in

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
372 P.3d 1147, 304 Kan. 441, 2016 WL 3036945, 2016 Kan. LEXIS 298, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-walker-kan-2016.