Thompson v. State

1973 OK CR 138, 507 P.2d 1271, 1973 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 762
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma
DecidedMarch 13, 1973
DocketA-17321
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 1973 OK CR 138 (Thompson v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thompson v. State, 1973 OK CR 138, 507 P.2d 1271, 1973 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 762 (Okla. Ct. App. 1973).

Opinion

OPINION

BLISS, Presiding Judge:

Appellant, Ethel I. (Blank) Thompson, hereinafter referred to as defendant, was charged and tried in the District Court of Seminole County, Case No. CR-70-146, for the offense of Murder and found guilty of First Degree Manslaughter. Her punishment was fixed at eighteen (18) years imprisonment, and from said judgment and sentence, a timely appeal has been perfected to this Court.

Defendant had married Morales Franklin (Pete) Thompson, the deceased, in 1965. Jerry Blank, a witness for the State, testified at the trial that he was the nineteen year old adopted son of the defendant.

At the trial, Max Dykes, desk sergeant at the police station in Seminole, Oklahoma, testified that he was on duty at 12:50 a.m. on the 11th day of October, 1970, and that the defendant came into the station and told Officer Dykes that Pete Thompson was shooting up the house and to please get some help because her son was still in the house and she feared that he would be hurt.

Bob Lovelady, a deputy sheriff of Seminole County, was dispatched to the Thompson residence. Upon arriving at the residence, he did not get any response when he knocked on the door. After shining a flashlight in a window and seeing Jerry Blank lying in a bed and seeing a man lying on the floor of the kitchen, the deputy, along with other officers, entered the house and observed the deceased lying on the kitchen floor with a bullet hole in his upper right arm and his right side. The deputy then went into the bedroom where Jerry Blank was and found Blank lying there with his arms outstretched. The deputy said to another officer, “Well, I believe *1273 he’s playin’ possum,” and the officers handcuffed Jerry Blank and read the Miranda warnings to him. Upon further observation of the deceased, the officers found a gun lying beside him.

The medical examiner was called and the doctor pronounced Pete Thompson dead, and his body was removed by ambulance. The medical examiner testified that the bullet wound in Pete Thompson’s chest was the cause of death. At the scene, the medical examiner took a blood sample from Jerry Blank and this sample was later testified to as containing .06 per cent by weight of ethyl alcohol and that that amount would show that Jerry Blank was not intoxicated.

The State’s proof further showed the location of certain bullets and shell casings that were found around the house. Mr. Ray Lambert, a firearms examiner for the Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigation, testified as to said hulls and bullets and identified State’s Exhibit No. 2 as a .22-caliber semi-automatic Mossberg rifle and State’s Exhibit No. 12 as a .22-caliber semi-automatic Remington rifle.

The undersheriff of Seminole County, Mr. Douglas Arnold, testified that he found evidence of some fifteen shots being fired in the house. Five bullet holes were found in the kitchen floor and there were bullet holes around a deep freezer located in the kitchen. Around the lock on the door of the freezer, there were powder burns.

Sheriff Arnold further testified that between 4:00 a.m. and 5:00 a.m. of the 11th day of October, 1970, the defendant was taken to the county courthouse and advised to call her lawyer. Defendant called her attorney and talked with him. After the defendant completed her conversation with her attorney, she advised Arnold that she did not need an attorney. Thereupon, Arnold read to the defendant, and had her read along with him,- the'waiver of her constitutional rights. Defendant then signed the waiver, State’s Exhibit No. 9, and signed a written statement to the effect that she did not shoot the deceased, State’s Exhibit No. 10. Defendant’s attorney was not present when she signed the waiver and written statement. According to Arnold, defendant was not induced to make any statement through coercion or threats with reference to the crime.

Mr. Bill Holt, an agent with the Oklahoma Bureau of Investigation, testified that around noon, October 12, 1970, the defendant was brought to the District Attorney’s Office for further questioning. Defendant was again adequately warned of her constitutional rights, but she responded that she did not need an attorney. Defendant further stated that she did not know anything about the death of Pete Thompson, that she had nothing to do with it, and that she did not shoot him. Defendant consented to take a polygraph test. Later on that afternoon, defendant was taken into an adjoining courtroom and was again adequately advised about her Fifth Amendment Constitutional rights. She signed a “Request for Polygraph Examination”, State’s Exhibit No. 11, but before the test could be administered, the defendant stated that there was no use in taking the examination, that she shot “him” twice. According to Holt, the defendant stated that she got a .22-caliber, rifle out from under the bed where Jerry Blank was lying, walked to the door between his bedroom and the kitchen, where the deceased’s body was found, and that this is where she was standing at the time she fired. Defendant’s attorney was not present at either of these interrogations. According to Holt, defendant was not induced to make any statement through compulsion, prolonged interrogation, or promises or threats with reference to the crime.

Jerry Blank testified that he went to the home of the defendant and the deceased in Seminole, Oklahoma, during the late afternoon of the 10th of October, 1970. He stated that after arriving at the residence, there was target shooting and other handling of the two .22-caliber rifles in the house by the defendant, the deceased, and himself. Blank further testified that he, as well as the defendant and the deceased, drank whiskey from the time of his arrival at the house and that he got dizzy and sick *1274 and went to bed somewhere around 11:00 p.m. He told the investigating officers that he had been asleep and did not know what had happened. According to Jerry Blank, the deceased was a heavy drinker, and liquor caused difficulties between the defendant and the deceased. Blank testified that he had been present when the deceased had abused the defendant because she wouldn’t let the deceased have any more liquor. On one occasion he called the police when the deceased was beating on the defendant.

The defendant testified that the deceased committed numerous assaults upon her in the past including breaking her arms, pulling her dress off, beating and bruising her, and crushing her jaw. According to the defendant, the deceased threatened to kill her when he was drinking, and on one occasion snapped a rifle at her, but it was not loaded. On another occasion, the deceased attacked her with a hatchet because she would not give him whiskey.

Testimony of the defendant further showed that she and the deceased had been in Oklahoma City on the 10th of October, 1970, and that the deceased drank quite a bit while in the city; that on the return trip to Seminole, on the same day, the deceased drank more whiskey; and that the deceased bought even more whiskey in Seminole before arriving home. Defendant further testified that she hid the whiskey before she went to bed, that the deceased missed the whiskey, knocked the defendant across the bed, got the Mossberg .22-caliber rifle and tried to shoot the lock off the deep freeze, thinking the whiskey was hidden in it.

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Related

Cipriano v. State
2001 OK CR 25 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma, 2001)
Camron v. State
1992 OK CR 17 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma, 1992)
Ussery v. State
1988 OK CR 122 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma, 1988)
Commonwealth v. Thomas
393 A.2d 1122 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1978)
Holloway v. State
1976 OK CR 130 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma, 1976)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1973 OK CR 138, 507 P.2d 1271, 1973 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 762, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thompson-v-state-oklacrimapp-1973.