State v. White

538 N.W.2d 237, 1995 S.D. LEXIS 120, 1995 WL 568731
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 27, 1995
Docket18460
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 538 N.W.2d 237 (State v. White) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. White, 538 N.W.2d 237, 1995 S.D. LEXIS 120, 1995 WL 568731 (S.D. 1995).

Opinions

KONENKAMP, Justice.

Defendant appeals his convictions for felony murder, burglary, and rape. We affirm.

FACTS

Antionette “Toni” Deibert, age fifty-six, was found dead in her bedroom at her home in Aberdeen. The cause of death was an acute cerebral hemorrhage resulting from a ruptured “berry” aneurysm. Death occurred sometime after 9:00 p.m. on Friday, June 26, 1992, the last time her father spoke to her, and 8:00 a.m. the next morning. After police accumulated substantial inculpatory facts [240]*240against him, White eventually admitted to being with Deibert, but he denied causing her death. He challenges the trial court’s evidentiary rulings and the sufficiency of the evidence to convict him. We summarize the facts most favorable to the verdicts. State v. Hage, 532 N.W.2d 406, 408 (S.D.1995).

Toni Deibert’s father had been waiting to see her all day on Sunday, June 28 — it was his seventy-ninth birthday. At 9:15 p.m. he finally went to her home to check on her. He found the screen door unlocked, which was unusual, but the inner door was locked. After entering with his key, he noticed a family picture on the floor and dirty dishes in the kitchen sink. Her home had always been immaculate. A plaque that had been hanging on the wall, lay on the floor. In her upstairs bedroom, he found her body, partially nude, sprawled on the floor at the foot of her bed, her nightgown pushed up around her shoulders, a blouse covering her face. The bedroom was in disarray: the bedspread, sheet, fitted sheet, and pillows had been removed from the bed and were on the floor, some with blood stains. Part of the bedding covered the pillows. A yellow disposable lighter lay in the middle of her bare mattress. (The deceased was a non-smoker.) Clothes, including a white skirt with a blood stain and a dress still on a hanger, littered the floor. Items on a table and dresser had been knocked over. The telephone was disconnected and dismantled; the handset was under the bed. A damp blue skirt and flowered house coat were found rolled up under an end table at the foot of her bed. Curiously, a small stick was found wrapped in these clothes.

Deibert had been a devout Catholic. Following the loss of her son who was killed in a 1988 car accident, her religious faith only deepened. She attended Mass daily at Sacred Heart Church, belonged to a bible study group, and worked with the church evangelism team, going door to door to win souls. On the day her body was discovered investigators noticed a large amount of devotional materials in her home. Her pastor, Father Geditz, characterized her as a “good lady that would help others out. She was a holy lady.” Deibert was known for her willingness to give counsel to her fellow FMC employees and others in need.

Suspicion focused on Defendant, Gary White, a married FMC employee, after Father Rader, a priest at Deibert’s church, told authorities that an inebriated White had accosted him outside the church three weeks earlier, questioning him about Deibert, talking about how he was a friend of Deibert’s deceased son, and claiming to have killed people in Vietnam. Aberdeen police interviewed Deibert’s co-workers at the FMC plant. FMC employees reported how White over the past seven years routinely showed up uninvited at their homes at any hour of the day or night, usually intoxicated, sometimes ruminating about wartime experiences in Vietnam. (He never served there.) He usually succeeded in talking his way inside. On occasion, he would obtain entry even when no one was at home. For the most part these visits were harmless, but some women he visited found him intimidating. Deborah Breese, a recipient of several of White’s surprise visits, once offered him a ride to get him out of her house. She told the jury that while he rode in the backseat of her car, he was “calling me horrible names. He was slamming his fist into the roof of my car, into the doors, kicking the back of my seat. Yelling and screaming in my ear.” Six FMC employees testified at trial about his persistent unexpected visits and, in fact, a former plant manager testified he had reprimanded White on the matter and placed a memo about it in his file. Deibert was aware of White’s well-known habit of uninvited visits.

Investigators interviewed White several times; each time his version of events contained new discrepancies. At first, he stated the only thing he knew about Deibert was that she worked at FMC in the office and that he may have spoken to her on the phone at work but would not have recognized her. Yet less than twenty-four hours before her death, he had been seen speaking to her at a work-related meeting. He had also attended her son’s funeral and told others about how sad she looked. Furthermore, he worked with her at FMC from a time when the company had only a handful of employees. [241]*241Later White admitted knowing her, saying he lied because he was nervous about the “suspicious circumstances” surrounding Dei-bert’s death. He also admitted to a detective that he recently lost his cigarette lighter. Investigators later learned White was reputed to carry a small twig, a “medicine stick.”

Aberdeen police were able to piece together White’s movements on June 26. Most of the evening he drank at various places. Sometime that night while in a taxi, White was in Deibert’s neighborhood with a friend. He pointed in the general direction of Dei-bert’s house and told the cab driver, “I know a woman down there.” White drank at a bar until closing time at 2:00 a.m. He could not consistently account for his whereabouts after that time.

On July 28, 1992, an autopsy report revealed seminal fluid had been found in Dei-bert’s vagina. DNA evidence linked the fluid to White, prompting him to later stipulate at trial to his presence in Deibert’s home in the early hours of June 27 and to having had sexual intercourse with her that night. He claimed it was consensual. The experts agreed there was a “very high probability” that sexual intercourse, consensual or otherwise, caused her death. Though medical evidence established that sexual intercourse occurred while she was alive, Deibert’s body had postmortem abrasions on the left side of her face, shoulder, neck, right groin area, and left knee. Two pathologists believed these abrasions could be consistent with someone positioning her body in an attempt at rectal or vaginal intercourse from behind.

On May 3, 1993 White was indicted by a Brown County Grand Jury on four counts: Count I, First Degree Murder (Felony Murder) in violation of SDCL 22-16-4, alleging he effected Deibert’s death while perpetrating a rape; Count II, Second Degree Rape in violation of SDCL 22-22-1(2); Count III, First Degree Burglary in violation of SDCL 22-32-1; and alternatively, Count IV, Second Degree Burglary in violation of SDCL 22-32-3.

Prior to his trial for the Deibert homicide, White pleaded guilty to raping C.G., a sixty-three year-old woman. The State moved to admit evidence concerning this rape, as well as his uninvited visits to the homes of coworkers. By memorandum opinion incorporated into specific findings of fact and conclusions of law, the trial court found these prior acts admissible. Over White’s objection, C.G.

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State v. White
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
538 N.W.2d 237, 1995 S.D. LEXIS 120, 1995 WL 568731, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-white-sd-1995.