State v. Worley

369 S.E.2d 706, 179 W. Va. 403, 1988 W. Va. LEXIS 41
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedApril 11, 1988
Docket17633
StatusPublished
Cited by49 cases

This text of 369 S.E.2d 706 (State v. Worley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia 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. Worley, 369 S.E.2d 706, 179 W. Va. 403, 1988 W. Va. LEXIS 41 (W. Va. 1988).

Opinion

MILLER, Justice:

The defendant, Danny Lee Worley, was convicted of first degree murder by a Raleigh County Circuit Court jury in October, 1982. He was sentenced to life imprisonment without mercy. His primary assignments of error are: (1) the admission of evidence seized pursuant to a defective search warrant; (2) the warrantless arrest of the defendant in a private home; (3) the admission of a confession rendered involuntary by improper police promises and deception; and (4) the violation of prompt presentment principles. We find no error and affirm the conviction.

I.

At 7:30 p.m. on October 8,1981, the West Virginia State Police received a report of an abandoned vehicle in southern Fayette County. Trooper C.E. Shelton of the Oak Hill detachment responded to the call. As he examined the interior of the vehicle, Trooper Shelton observed blood and debris on the passenger seat and door. His suspicions aroused, he opened the trunk and discovered the badly mutilated body of a woman, Teruco Carter.

Inspection of the body revealed that Ms. Carter had sustained four gunshot wounds to the head and shoulders. Her head and upper body bore areas of “blunt-force” injury which resulted in a depression fracture to the skull. There were approximately twenty puncture wounds to the chest, over half of which had perforated into heart and lung tissue. It was the opinion of the medical examiner that the impact wounds to the head were the immediate cause of death, and that the chest wounds were inflicted post mortem.

After the discovery of the body, Trooper Shelton contacted officers at the Beckley detachment and learned that an associate of the deceased was in custody there on unrelated charges. The associate readily volunteered to cooperate in the investigation. He provided the police with a detailed description of various items of jewelry the deceased wore and of a .25 caliber pistol she carried in her purse. He also stated that the deceased was a frequent patron of “Club 41,” a bar in Stanaford.

At 2:30 a.m. the next day, Trooper G.S. Whisman interviewed the bartender who had been on duty at Club 41 on October 7, 1981, the day of the deceased’s disappearance. He informed the officer that the deceased arrived at the bar at 10:00 p.m. and was seated with the defendant and another man, Bobby “Ungle.” The trio departed in the deceased’s car at 11:00 p.m. Mr. “Ungle” returned to the bar around midnight and left in the defendant’s car. The defendant did not return to the bar. A written statement was prepared and signed by the bartender within an hour.

After the statement was completed, Trooper Whisman appeared before a Raleigh County magistrate and applied for warrants to search the defendant’s car 1 and a trailer in Piney View, where the defendant and Mr. “Ungle” were believed to reside. The property sought by the warrants included blood-stained clothes and the pistol and jewelry described by the deceased’s associate. The sole ground for probable cause stated in the search warrant affidavit read: “Statement verifying that Danny Worley and Bobby Ungle were last scene [sic] with the victim[,] were also new [sic] leaving with victim in victims vehicle.”

After the warrant had been issued, Trooper J.O. Cole advised his superiors that he was acquainted with Lewis Worley, the defendant’s father and the owner of the trailer identified in the warrant. Trooper Cole telephoned the elder Worley and requested that he rendezvous with the officers at an intersection one-half mile from the trailer. The police arrived at 5:00 a.m. Trooper Cole explained to Mr. Worley that the defendant was a suspect in a murder investigation and that the officers wanted to search the trailer. He did not refer to the warrant or produce it for in *408 spection. Mr. Worley immediately responded: “Jerry, you know you’re welcome in my trailer anytime.” Trooper Cole then stated that he had a search warrant in his possession, but Mr. Worley assured him that a warrant was unnecessary. He then accompanied the officers to the trailer.

The defendant was asleep in a bedroom when the officers entered the trailer. He was awakened and escorted to a police car, where he was detained while the search progressed. Also present at the trailer was Bobby Hudnell, who had been identified by the bartender as Mr. “Ungle.” The police recovered clothes and more than $1,900 in Mr. Hudnell’s bedroom. A pistol matching the description in the warrant was seized in the defendant’s bedroom. After the recovery of these items, the defendant and Mr. Hudnell were advised of their Miranda rights and transported to the Beckley police detachment.

Two further searches were conducted at the trailer in the early hours of October 9. Mr. Worley telephoned Trooper Cole at the station at 7:00 a.m. and advised that he had discovered some of the stolen jewelry in his son’s bedroom. When the officer arrived at the trailer, he asked Mr. Worley to sign a written consent to search. After he did so, Mr. Worley led Trooper Cole to the defendant’s bedroom and pointed to a pair of boots on the floor. Jewelry was discovered inside one of the boots. At 10:30 a.m., Trooper Cole was again summoned to the trailer. On this visit, Mr. Worley showed the officer a pistol hidden inside a cinder-block. The pistol was identified by ballistics experts as the weapon which had fired the shots into the deceased’s head and shoulders. The jewelry and pistol were seized and admitted at trial.

Once at the station, the defendant was taken to the captain’s office for interrogation. The defendant’s father arrived shortly thereafter and was permitted in the room. Mr. Worley told the defendant that he “need[ed] to cooperate with [the police].” It was also represented that Mr. Hudnell had signed a statement implicating the defendant, though such a statement had not yet been obtained. 2 The defendant responded: “It wasn’t [my] idea to kill Ter-uco Carter.” After the oral statement, he expressed a willingness to take the officers to the scene of the murder.

The defendant directed a group of officers to a reclaimed strip mine in a rural area of Raleigh County. Various incriminating statements were made by the defendant while en route to the site. Through the defendant’s assistance, the police were able to recover a tire iron, screwdriver, and hammer which he said were used in the murder.

The defendant was promptly returned to the station, where he signed a Miranda waiver. At 9:30 a.m., he gave a detailed confession which was tape recorded and transcribed. He admitted robbing the deceased and admitted his presence at the time and place of the murder. He denied any direct involvement in the killing. At 3:30 p.m., after Mr. Hudnell had completed a second statement to the police, both the defendant and Mr. Hudnell were presented to a magistrate.

II.

The defendant initially challenges on Fourth Amendment grounds the validity of the trailer search. 3 By motion dated February 3, 1982, the defendant sought to suppress all fruits of the search due to a *409 lack of probable cause for the warrant. 4

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
369 S.E.2d 706, 179 W. Va. 403, 1988 W. Va. LEXIS 41, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-worley-wva-1988.