Staude v. State

908 P.2d 1373, 112 Nev. 1, 1996 Nev. LEXIS 1
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 4, 1996
Docket25416
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 908 P.2d 1373 (Staude v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Staude v. State, 908 P.2d 1373, 112 Nev. 1, 1996 Nev. LEXIS 1 (Neb. 1996).

Opinion

OPINION

Per Curiam:

The victim in this case, Joseph Beeson, was an inmate at Ely State Prison (ESP). On August 20, 1990, he was found dead in his cell with a ligature around his neck and multiple stab wounds in his upper body. ESP inmates Kevin Reynolds, Todd Evans, and appellant David E. Staude were charged with crimes related to the killing. Reynolds pled guilty to second degree murder. Evans testified for the State against Staude in return for a gross misdemeanor charge. Staude was charged with murder. His first trial ended in a mistrial due to attrition of jurors. After a second *3 trial, he was convicted of first degree murder and conspiracy to commit murder.

Staude asserts a number of errors on appeal, including the ruling that evidence of his prior conviction was admissible for impeachment purposes and the instruction given the jury when it appeared to be deadlocked. Staude also asserts, and the State agrees, that the court improperly gave him a separate sentence for being a habitual criminal.

FACTS

In August 1990, Joseph Beeson was housed in Unit 1-A, a “closed transition unit,” at ESP. Beeson shared a cell with Tuffy Hampton. Beeson was white, and Hampton was black. The evidence showed that such an arrangement was highly unusual in prison because most inmates strongly disapprove of cellmates of different races. Hampton was then moved out of Unit 1-A to general population. No one in the unit would agree to bunk with Beeson. Appellant Staude was housed in Unit 1-A at this time. Prior to Beeson’s death, Staude indicated to his caseworker at ESP that he was very upset and angry about black and white inmates being housed together in his unit.

On the afternoon of August 20, 1990, a correctional officer discovered Beeson lying facedown on his bunk, with blood on and around him. The staff doctor soon arrived and pronounced Beeson dead. Undersheriff Harry Collins investigated the crime scene that afternoon and found in Beeson’s cell a prison-made knife and a shirt with the name “Little Red,” inmate Kevin Reynolds’s nickname. A cell-to-cell search of the unit uncovered a pair of blue sweatpants with human blood on them in the cell occupied by Staude and Evans. The pants were damp and inside a laundry bag marked “Staude.” Collins noticed that Staude had several fresh scratches on his face, neck, chest, and arms, a puncture wound in his upper left thigh, and abrasions on the ulnar side (opposite the thumb) of both hands. The sweatpants had a hole in the upper left thigh area.

Evans testified as follows. He was housed with Staude in Unit 1-A when Beeson was killed. Around August 1, 1990, Staude and Reynolds told him they were going to attack Beeson. Evans suggested that they do it in Beeson’s cell to avoid getting shot up. He provided Reynolds with a knife. On the day of the murder, they told Evans, “We’re going to do it.” Evans was out of his cell sitting at a table when he saw Staude and Reynolds go up to Beeson’s cell; he later saw them come out of it around 2:30 p.m. Staude was wearing a blue shirt and sweatpants. When Evans returned to his and Staude’s cell, Staude was shredding clothes and flushing them down the toilet. Staude told Evans that he and *4 Reynolds had killed Beeson: Beeson fought with them, Reynolds stabbed him a few times, and Staude strangled him with a shoelace. Staude said Reynolds had missed Beeson and stabbed Staude in the leg during the struggle.

Evans further testified that when he was charged in this matter, he agreed to testify in return for the State’s reducing his charge to a gross misdemeanor, conspiracy to possess a dangerous weapon, and moving him to another prison. Evans had been a lieutenant in the Aryan Circle, a white supremacist prison gang, at the time of the murder. Staude wished to join the Aryan Circle, and killing Beeson was a means to do so.

The inmate in the cell above Beeson’s when the murder occurred heard a fight through the vent. He later saw Staude with red on the side of his face. This inmate testified that Staude told him, “I can’t believe we did it, or he did it. I can’t particularly say. It was either, they did it, he did it, or we did it.”

Dr. Ellen Clark, a pathologist, conducted the autopsy on Beeson and testified as follows. The ligature around Beeson’s neck had caused his death. Beeson received several stab wounds; one was serious, penetrating his left lung and the sack surrounding his heart. The wounds on his body indicated that there had been a struggle. The ligature had been applied with “substantial force,” and the abrasions on Staude’s hands, which were worse on the outer edges of his little fingers, were fresh and could have been caused by the ligature which killed Beeson. The wound on Staude’s left thigh was consistent with the puncture wounds on Beeson’s body.

Staude did not testify. He called ten witnesses; nine of them were inmates, including Reynolds. Reynolds testified that he killed Beeson. He denied that Staude helped him do so. When asked if Evans helped him, Reynolds said he could not say because he did not want to be a snitch. He said that Evans’s reputation was that he was “a dope fiend” and “a rat.” Testimony for Staude by other inmates was to the effect that Evans was a liar and a drug addict. One inmate testified that Evans had admitted that he had killed Beeson and “put it off on Staude.”

During deliberations, the district court received a note from the jury forewoman that the jurors were having trouble reaching a unanimous verdict. Staude objected to the instruction which the district court proposed to give the jury, which stated in part that a dissenting juror “should consider whether the doubt in his or her mind is a reasonable one, when it makes no impression on the minds of so many” of his or her fellow jurors. He requested a neutral instruction which applied to jurors voting for conviction as well as those having a reasonable doubt. The court did not change the instruction and gave it to the jury at about 4:40 p.m. *5 on November 10, 1993. The jury returned with a verdict almost five hours later at about 9:30 p.m. It found Staude guilty of first degree murder and of conspiracy to commit murder.

After the sentencing phase for the murder count, the jury sentenced Staude to life with the possibility of parole. The district court added a consecutive life sentence with the possibility of parole for being a habitual criminal and a consecutive six year sentence for conspiracy to commit murder.

DISCUSSION

The ruling that Staude’s prior conviction for voluntary manslaughter was admissible for impeachment purposes

Before his first trial, Staude moved in limine to exclude evidence of his 1987 convictions for voluntary manslaughter, burglary, and grand larceny. The district court denied the motion. At the second trial, Staude did not renew the motion to exclude the evidence, nor did he express a desire to testify. Staude now asserts that his prior conviction for manslaughter should have been excluded because it was an assaultive crime which had only slight probative value in regard to veracity and was highly prejudicial because it paralleled the crime for which he was being tried. See Givens v. State, 99 Nev.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
908 P.2d 1373, 112 Nev. 1, 1996 Nev. LEXIS 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/staude-v-state-nev-1996.