Steven Pettway v. Commonwealth of Kentucky

CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedDecember 9, 2021
Docket2019 CA 001041
StatusUnknown

This text of Steven Pettway v. Commonwealth of Kentucky (Steven Pettway v. Commonwealth of Kentucky) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Steven Pettway v. Commonwealth of Kentucky, (Ky. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

RENDERED: DECEMBER 10, 2021; 10:00 A.M. NOT TO BE PUBLISHED

Commonwealth of Kentucky Court of Appeals

NO. 2019-CA-1041-MR

STEVEN PETTWAY APPELLANT

APPEAL FROM JEFFERSON CIRCUIT COURT v. HONORABLE ANGELA MCCORMICK BISIG, JUDGE ACTION NO. 11-CR-003052-002

COMMONWEALTH OF KENTUCKY APPELLEE

OPINION AFFIRMING

** ** ** ** **

BEFORE: ACREE, DIXON, AND K. THOMPSON, JUDGES.

THOMPSON, K., JUDGE: Steven Pettway appeals from the Jefferson Circuit

Court’s summary denial of his motion for Kentucky Rules of Criminal Procedure

(RCr) 11.42 relief. We affirm as Pettway’s arguments are either foreclosed by the

decisions in his prior appeals, do not contain the required specificity, are refuted by

the record, and/or do not establish prejudice. The relevant facts in the underlying criminal case are as follows:

Troya Sheckles was shot and killed in Shelby Park in Louisville around 7:30 p.m. on March 23, 2009. Several people saw the shooting, and they all gave largely consistent descriptions of the shooter as being a male in dark clothing with a bandana tied around his face.

Steven Pettway and codefendant Dejuan Hammond were eventually charged with Sheckles’s murder, as well as intimidating a participant in the legal process under [Kentucky Revised Statutes (KRS)] 524.040 and retaliating against a participant in the legal process under KRS 524.055.

The Commonwealth’s theory of the case was that Pettway killed Sheckles at Dejuan Hammond’s direction to prevent her from testifying in the upcoming murder trial of his younger brother, Lloyd Hammond. Sheckles had witnessed the killing of William Sawyers in her home in 2006 and had identified Lloyd Hammond as the killer. Pettway was friends with the Hammonds, and the then-sixteen-year-old Pettway looked up to the much older Dejuan Hammond as a sort of mentor. The Commonwealth’s evidence showed, among other things, that Pettway and Dejuan Hammond knew Sheckles was the essential witness for the Commonwealth in Lloyd Hammond’s upcoming murder trial and had stashed a 9- mm pistol (the same kind used in Sheckles’s shooting) at a friend’s house about a month before the murder. There was also testimony about numerous statements made by Pettway following the murder admitting that he had shot Sheckles so that she could not testify against Lloyd Hammond.

The jury ultimately convicted Pettway of murder and intimidating a participant in the legal process (but found him not guilty of the retaliation charge) and recommended a 50-year prison sentence for murder and

-2- five-year sentence for the intimidation conviction to run consecutively. The trial court sentenced him to a total of 55 years’ imprisonment in accordance with the jury’s recommendations.

Pettway v. Commonwealth, 470 S.W.3d 706, 707-08 (Ky. 2015) (Pettway I)

(footnote omitted).

In his direct appeal, Pettway was partially successful. The Court

concluded, even though the issue was not preserved, that Pettway could not be

properly convicted of intimidating a participant in the legal process under KRS

524.040 for intentionally killing Sheckles. It reversed that conviction and five-year

sentence. Id. at 708-10.

However, the Kentucky Supreme Court declined to give Pettway any

relief from his murder conviction based upon his argument that “delayed

disclosures of discovery material by the Commonwealth constituted arbitrary state

action prohibited by Section 2 of the Kentucky Constitution warranting dismissal

of the charges against him.” Pettway I, 470 S.W.3d at 707. We discuss why the

Kentucky Supreme Court declined to grant him relief on this issue as it is relevant

to this RCr 11.42 appeal.

As Pettway’s argument at least implicitly concedes, he has no grounds on which to claim that the trial court’s actions regarding the discovery violations by the Commonwealth below were error. The court granted his motion for a mistrial as a result of the first violation. Similarly, the trial court acted well within its discretion in declining to dismiss with prejudice the charges against

-3- Pettway following the second delayed disclosure. And the trial court ordered appropriate relief by excluding the belatedly disclosed evidence (potentially subject to a missing evidence instruction) when Pettway, going against the advice of trial counsel to seek a continuance, chose to proceed to trial despite the delayed disclosure. He, therefore, received all the relief to which he was entitled under Criminal Rules 7.24 and 7.26 and has no cause to complain further. See RCr 7.24(9).

Nevertheless, Pettway claims this extraordinary remedy is justified to cure the prosecution’s allegedly arbitrary actions in inadvertently failing to timely turn over discovery materials (which, incidentally, have not been shown to contain any exculpatory evidence). Ironically, this would require the Court itself to act arbitrarily. Pettway has already received appropriate judicial remedies in the form of a mistrial and exclusion of evidence. To pile on [by granting him the relief to have this Court dismiss his indictment with prejudice to remedy the two discovery violations] would be nothing but arbitrary. And such action would raise significant separation-of-powers concerns. While we acknowledge the observation of Chief Justice Palmore that “[s]ometimes, as Holmes remarked, because the constable blundered the criminal must go free, that being the most effective method of helping the constable not to blunder the next time,” Reid v. Cowan, 502 S.W.2d 41, 42 (Ky. 1973), this is not one of those times. There was no blunder that could not be appropriately addressed, as the trial court did here, under our rules of procedure. This claim has no merit.

Pettway I, 470 S.W.3d at 711-12.

After Pettway learned of another discovery violation, which came to

light during the trial of his codefendant, Pettway filed a motion for a new trial.

The relevant facts as to that discovery violation are as follows:

-4- In a separate trial, Dejuan Hammond was also convicted of Sheckles’[s] murder. One of the witnesses who testified at [Pettway’s] trial was Dejuan Hammond’s girlfriend, Princess Bolin. Bolin had told police that she was at Shelby Park with a friend when Sheckles was killed and that she had seen [Pettway] commit the crime. When asked at [Pettway’s] trial to repeat what she had seen, Bolin balked. The incriminating assertion was then presented to the jury through the prior statement she had given to the police.

During the appeal of [Pettway’s] conviction to this Court, his attorney received notice from the prosecutors that Bolin had made a different, and previously undisclosed, pre-trial statement to police detective Roy Stalvey. The failure to make a more timely disclosure of Bolin’s other statement appears to have been inadvertent. It was uncovered during the subsequent trial of codefendant Dejuan Hammond.

In that statement, contrary to what was presented at [Pettway’s] trial, Bolin denied knowing anything about Sheckles’[s] murder. [Bolin] told Detective Stalvey that she was with Dejuan Hammond buying shoes at the Jefferson Mall when Sheckles was murdered. Although this belatedly-disclosed statement provides an alibi for Dejuan, it does not exonerate [Pettway]. Nevertheless, it would have been a useful impeachment tool for undermining the trial testimony that Bolin saw [Pettway] shoot Sheckles. The Commonwealth conceded that [Pettway] should have received the report of the statement prior to his trial.

Pettway v. Commonwealth, No. 2016-SC-000392-TG, 2017 WL 2591813, at *1-2

(Ky. Jun.

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Steven Pettway v. Commonwealth of Kentucky, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/steven-pettway-v-commonwealth-of-kentucky-kyctapp-2021.