State v. Whitby

365 S.W.3d 609, 2012 WL 1409275, 2012 Mo. App. LEXIS 538
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 24, 2012
DocketED 96771
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 365 S.W.3d 609 (State v. Whitby) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Whitby, 365 S.W.3d 609, 2012 WL 1409275, 2012 Mo. App. LEXIS 538 (Mo. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

GARY M. GAERTNER, JR., Judge.

Introduction

Brandon Whitby (Appellant) appeals the trial court’s judgment of murder in the second degree and felony abuse of a child. Appellant challenges the propriety of the State’s closing argument and the sufficiency of the evidence for conviction. We affirm.

Background

As of 31 July 2009, Appellant had been living for about a month in an apartment with his girlfriend, Shamecca Brown, and her three children, three-year-old L.R., two-year-old M.D. (Victim), and ten-month-old L.S. The night of 31 July 2009, L.R. was staying at a relative’s house, and the two other children, along with Ms. Brown and Appellant, went to sleep in the living room.

The following morning, Ms. Brown woke with considerable pain in her kidneys, and she was experiencing some bleeding. She called her mother, Cora Spaulding, who told her to call an ambulance. Ms. Brown asked her mother to come watch the children, and Ms. Spaulding said she would do so but to have Appellant watch them until she could get there. Ms. Spaulding left her house shortly thereafter. Ms. Brown woke Appellant and asked him to watch the children while she went to the hospital. He agreed, and Ms. Brown called for an ambulance.

Paramedics arrived at 10:55 a.m. Two paramedics entered the apartment to examine Ms. Brown. Both testified that L.S. and Victim were present in the living room and that the paramedics were able to see the children and their faces. Neither paramedic observed anything unusual about the children or saw any visible injuries on them, and both paramedics observed the children to be acting appropriately for their ages. One paramedic recalled that Victim was particularly friendly, and the other paramedic recalled waving to Victim and Victim waving back. The paramedics decided to take Ms. Brown to the hospital, and as they left at 11:10 a.m., one of the paramedics locked the door behind her and checked to ensure it was locked.

While on her way to the apartment, Ms. Spaulding received a call from Appellant, who told her that Victim had a seizure. Ms. Spaulding told him that Victim did not have seizures, and Appellant did not respond. Shortly thereafter, Appellant called Ms. Spaulding again and told her he was going to take Victim to the hospital.

An officer responding to a call “for a sudden death” arrived at the apartment at around 11:30 a.m. to find Victim laying on the floor and paramedics treating him. *611 The officer, Matthew Burle, observed that Appellant was the only adult present in the apartment other than the paramedics. Officer Burle also observed L.S., noting he was not moving, just staring, and that there were bruises on his face and around his eye. Officer Burle contacted his supervisor, who came to the apartment and who then contacted the child abuse division. An officer from the child abuse division came to the scene, observed the bruises on L.S. and that he was atypically lethargic, and took L.S. to the hospital.

At the hospital, doctors were unable to resuscitate Victim when he arrived with paramedics. After his death, officials brought Ms. Brown to identify Victim, and she testified that Victim had a long scar across his face that had not been there when she last saw him at the apartment.

Both Victim’s treating doctor and the pathologist who performed Victim’s autopsy testified. These doctors observed various bruises all over Victim’s body, including a pattern of rounded, loop-like bruises. 1 There was testimony that these bruises were inflicted within 24 hours of Victim’s death. Additionally, Victim had internal injuries including a skull fracture, bleeding in the front of his head, brain swelling, hemorrhaging in his retina and thymus, and ruptured blood vessels on the surface of his heart and where his lungs connected to his windpipe. The pathologist concluded Victim’s injuries were the result of blunt force trauma, and were not the result of an accidental fall but were inflicted at the hands of another. The pathologist determined these injuries were inflicted within four hours of his death, and that Victim would have experienced an altered consciousness or a lack of consciousness almost immediately upon the infliction of his brain injuries. She stated he would not have been able to interact with other people, smile or wave after his injuries were inflicted.

Police searched the apartment later that day, and they found a gun inside a toy car, ammunition and heroin under the mattress of the bed Appellant was laying in when paramedics first arrived, and a duffel bag full of drug paraphernalia. Police also found a cord from a video game system on top of some trash bags outside the back door of the apartment. The pathologist who testified had compared the cord in evidence to Victim’s contusions and stated they were consistent with the shape of the cord.

The jury found Appellant guilty of murder in the second degree and of felony child abuse of Victim. 2 The court sentenced Appellant to consecutive prison terms of life and seven years, respectively. This appeal follows.

Discussion

Point I

Appellant argues that the trial court abused its discretion in overruling his counsel’s objection to the State’s closing argument, after the prosecutor said “[Victim] ... ran, tried to flee for his life.” Appellant also argues the prosecutor made impermissible ad hominem attacks on Appellant by saying, “that man hunted him like an animal, chasing him and striking *612 him as he ran,” and by characterizing the man who inflicted Victim’s injuries as a “monster.” The State argues this latter argument by Appellant is unpreserved. The State further argues that the trial court neither abused its discretion nor plainly erred in allowing all of these statements by the prosecutor during closing argument. We agree.

Preservation

On appeal, a defendant will be “held to the specific objections presented to the trial court.” State v. Baker, 23 S.W.3d 702, 713 (Mo.App. E.D.2000). We review any additions or broadening of those specific objections only for plain error. Id.

Here, the prosecutor’s closing argument included the following:

He just kept beating him. Look at that, look at those photos. Relentlessly, strike after strike. And then he also beat [L.S.]. Again showing no mercy, no mercy for [L.S.j’s tender age of nine-months-old. That’s how [Victim] spent the last few moments of his life, alone at the hands of a monster. [L.S.], in less than one year on our Earth, we couldn’t protect him from that monster who showed no mercy for one of our kids.... How do we know it was the defendant that was the monster in the apartment that night? Because Dr. Sandomirsky testified and told us it was and science doesn’t lie.
DEFENSE: Objection. That was not the evidence. Testimony that [Appellant] caused those injuries was not testified to by the doctors.
THE COURT: You can rephrase that.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
365 S.W.3d 609, 2012 WL 1409275, 2012 Mo. App. LEXIS 538, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-whitby-moctapp-2012.