State v. Wilkins

29 P.3d 1144, 175 Or. App. 569, 2001 Ore. App. LEXIS 1187
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedAugust 8, 2001
Docket941036875; A91831
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 29 P.3d 1144 (State v. Wilkins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Wilkins, 29 P.3d 1144, 175 Or. App. 569, 2001 Ore. App. LEXIS 1187 (Or. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

*571 HASELTON, P. J.

Defendant appeals his convictions on five counts of aggravated murder, one count of theft and one count of felon in possession of a firearm. ORS 163.095; ORS 164.055; ORS 166.270. He assigns error, inter alia, to the trial court’s denial of surrebuttal, to the court’s failure to merge several of his aggravated murder convictions, and to the trial court’s imposition of a $100,000 compensatory fine. For the reasons set forth below, we affirm defendant’s convictions, and remand for entry of a corrected judgment and for resentencing.

This case arises from the shooting deaths of Shango Wade and Deborah Payton in North Portland on September 30,1994. As amplified below, the state contended that defendant intentionally murdered Wade and Payton to prevent them from disclosing his participation in a residential burglary. Defendant raised a defense of self-defense, asserting that the shootings occurred as he attempted to wrest a gun away from Wade. A jury ultimately convicted defendant of aggravated murder, as well as other crimes, and determined that defendant should be sentenced to life imprisonment without the possibility of parole.

In its case-in-chief, the state presented the following evidence: On September 22, 1994, Wade’s apartment was burglarized, and various items were stolen, including a television and stereo equipment. Shortly thereafter, Wade’s neighbor, McComb, observed three men in a nearby alley, and then saw two of the men carry a television and stereo speakers from a nearby abandoned house and load them into an older-model light blue Mercedes-Benz with a diesel engine. The man in the Mercedes was wearing a jacket with a eight-ball on it. McComb informed Wade of the men in the alley, and Wade and his friend Nealy pursued the car and apprehended one of the men involved. That man, however, escaped from them before the police arrived on the scene. Wade and Nealy found some of Wade’s belongings in bushes near the alley.

According to defendant’s girlfriend, Dunn, defendant owned a jacket with an eight-ball on it. Also according to Dunn, on the evening that the burglary took place, two men *572 asked defendant if he wanted to buy a television and some stereo equipment. Defendant agreed, and later returned with the items, which he stored at a relative’s house. A witness at trial testified that the value of the equipment, used, was $900 to $1,000.

On September 30, 1994, Wade approached defendant while he was working at a hair salon in Portland. A customer at the salon, Anderson, overheard a confrontation between defendant and Wade, and stated that it concerned someone breaking into a house. According to Hicks, another customer at the salon who witnessed the confrontation, Wade said to defendant: “Man, I’m giving you fair warning.” Wade and defendant walked to where defendant’s light blue Mercedes was parked nearby, and defendant opened the trunk. Hicks heard Wade say to defendant: “Man, somebody had this car, either you or someone else was driving it.” Wade walked away, and defendant returned to the hair salon, then left again a few minutes later and drove away.

Defendant returned to the salon shortly thereafter, borrowed a cordless telephone that belonged to one of the workers at the salon and called his girlfriend Dunn. According to Dunn, defendant told her that a man and a woman had been “talking shit” about “the stuff he bought the other day.” Dunn stated that defendant told her that “he might have to drive them out somewhere secluded and take care of them because the nigger was threatening him.” He then told her that they had come back, and that he would call her back later.

Shortly thereafter, one of the hair stylists in the salon, Sayles, heard two gunshots two or three seconds apart, looked out the window, and saw defendant with a gun in his hand. Defendant put the gun into his pants, walked to his car, got in and drove away. Sayles yelled out, “Earl just shot somebody,” and ran outside. She saw that a red van had crashed into a telephone pole, looked in the van, and saw that there were people inside who had been shot. Brown, another stylist in the salon, also saw the bodies in the van, and tentatively identified the man in the van as the man who had been talking to defendant earlier. A few minutes later, defendant telephoned the salon and asked Brown if anyone had *573 mentioned his name. She told him no, and told him that the people in the van were dead. Defendant replied, “I know.”

At the time of the shootings, two women, Cook and Holmes, drove by the van. Cook heard two gunshots, one or two seconds apart. She saw a man to her left, on the driver’s side of the van, with his arm all the way in the driver’s window. He pulled his arm out of the van and there was a black pistol in his hand. He then put the pistol away, walked calmly and casually to a blue Mercedes, got in and drove away. Cook pulled into an adjoining street to have Holmes call the police. She looked back and saw that the van had traveled across the street and smashed into a telephone pole. Holmes also heard the shots and saw a man standing by the van. He had his right hand in the van, pulled it out, put what appeared to be a gun into his waistband, then turned and casually headed toward a blue car. He had a telephone in his left hand.

Police arrived on the scene and found Wade unconscious in the driver’s seat of the van with a gunshot wound in his head, and his passenger, Payton, dead of a gunshot wound to her head. Wade died in the hospital later that day from the gunshot wound to his head.

Shortly after the shootings, a driver going over the Fremont Bridge saw a person in a light blue Mercedes pull across traffic, throw a paper sack out of the window of the car into the river, then pull back through traffic and take the next exit. She took the car’s license number and reported the event to the police. The license number matched that of defendant’s car.

Defendant called Dunn back later that afternoon and told her that he “did it.” Later that evening, defendant told Dunn that he had “glock[ed] the motherfuckers” and that “he wasn’t leaving no witnesses.” Dunn explained that by “glock” defendant meant “shoot.”

In the defense case-in-chief, defendant testified as follows. On September 22,1994, two men approached him on the street and asked him if he would like to buy a stereo. Defendant drove the men to a house located near Wade’s *574 apartment. The men brought the equipment to the car and defendant gave them $180 or $200 for the equipment.

Defendant further testified that, on September 30, Wade came to the styling salon where defendant was working and asked who owned the blue Mercedes parked outside. Defendant told Wade that it was his car. Wade accused defendant of having the items taken in the burglary of his apartment. Defendant told Wade that he did not know him and did not have his property. Wade became upset, and defendant asked Wade to come outside.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
29 P.3d 1144, 175 Or. App. 569, 2001 Ore. App. LEXIS 1187, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-wilkins-orctapp-2001.