Travis Jeter v. Commonwealth of Kentucky

531 S.W.3d 488
CourtKentucky Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 2, 2017
Docket2015-SC-000616-MR
StatusUnknown
Cited by6 cases

This text of 531 S.W.3d 488 (Travis Jeter v. Commonwealth of Kentucky) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Kentucky Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Travis Jeter v. Commonwealth of Kentucky, 531 S.W.3d 488 (Ky. 2017).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT BY

JUSTICE HUGHES

Travis Jeter appeals as a matter of right from a judgment of the Hardin Circuit Court convicting him of robbery in the first degree, first-degree possession of a controlled substance (cocaine), and use of drug paraphernalia. ⅛ accord with jury recommendations, the trial court sentenced Jeter as a first-degree persistent felon to respective prison terms of life, three years, and twelve months, with these sentences to be served concurrently as a matter of law. Jeter contends that he is entitled to a new trial for any of three reasons: (1) the trial court erred by- denying Jeter’s motion in-limine to exclude eyewitness identification testimony; (2) the trial court abused its discretion by denying Jeter’s last-minute motion for a continuance; and (3) the trial court abused its discretion by denying Jeter’s motion to sever the robbery charge from the drug and paraphernalia charges. Convinced that Jeter has failed to identify anything warranting the relief he seeks, we affirm the Hardin Circuit Court’s judgment.

RELEVANT FACTS

The Commonwealth’s proof at trial included testimony by the robbery victim, Joyce Perry, a sixty-or-so-year-old Eliza-bethtown resident who, in January 2015, had recently retired from her job at the Towne Mall in Elizabethtown. Perry related that during the evening of January 5 she had gone to the mall to visit with some of her former co-workers. As she was getting into her car in the mall parking lot around 7:30, a man she did not know approached her and asked what time the mall closed. For various reasons the man’s question arid comments seemed odd to Perry, but she answered his question.

As Perry was climbirig into the driver’s seat of her car, the man suddenly pushed her toward the passenger seat and squeezed into the car along with her. Eventually, after two or three attempts, he managed to close the door. He told her, “This is a holdup!” and demanded her money and her car keys. He also demanded that Perry climb out of the driver’s seat and onto the passenger’s side floorboard. When Perry replied that- she had no money, the man told her, “I can shoot you! I’ll kill you!” and continued to try to force Perry into the passenger seat. Perry testified that the gear lever and the central console made it impossible for her to climb into the passenger side of the car, and so she resisted. She pulled at the fnan’s toboggan-type hat; grabbed his hair, which was styled into loose braids; and also tried to honk the horn. Her resistance prompted the man to start hitting her in the face.

A struggle ensued, with Perry continuing to try to honk the horn and then trying to activate the car’s alarm with her key fob. The man struck Perry, several more times and eventually succeeded in grabbing her purse. During the struggle Perry managed at one point to open the front, passenger side door, which the man then reclosed, and by pressing the buttons on her key fob she may inadvertently have locked the front, driver’s side door, which prompted more blows. She apparently also caused the trunk to open. Finally, the man climbed into the back seat and exited through'the rear, driver’s side'door. Perry waited briefly to be sure that he was gone and then went back into the mall for help.

Near the end of Perry’s ordeal, another mall patron, Jean Albrecht, arrived and parked a row behind Perry’s car. Albrecht testified that she had exited her vehicle and started walking toward the mall when she saw the trunk of Perry’s car swing open and at about the same time saw a man emerge from Perry’s- ear and begin to walk away, toward the Sears end of the mall. She called to the man to let him know about the trunk.. He stopped and turned toward her, but before she could say anything the trunk closed, and so she just waved, and the man went on. Albrecht continued into the mall, she testified, where she had been for just a minute or two when Perry came in calling for help.

Someone summoned police and emergency medical services, and Perry was taken to Hardin Memorial Hospital, where she was found to have suffered a broken nose, a broken eye socket, and a chipped tooth. The eye-socket injury was still being treated at the time of trial, more -than eight months after the attack. Before she was taken to the hospital, Perry told investigators that she did not get a good look, at her attacker but -that she remembered an African-American man with long braids under a toboggan hat. She also remembered that he was wearing a plaid, hooded shirt; blue jeans; and white shoes.

Albrecht told investigators at the scene that the man she saw walking away from (what turned out to be) Perry’s ear, was a tall, young African-American who was wearing a dark toboggan hat and a dark jacket. The investigators did not subsequently ask either Perry or Albrecht to attempt to identify Jeter in person or in a photo array.

Police investigators obtained the mail’s security video. The video recording of the incident, portions of which the' Commonwealth played several times for the jury, captured a man exiting a dark-colored pickup truck and approaching Perry’s vehicle as she is just getting into it.. It shows the man forcing his way inside the car and, with some difficulty, closing the door. Over seven minutes, the video shows Perry’s passenger door opening, but quickly rec-losing; Albrecht’s arrival; and eventually a man climbing out the back door of Perry’s car. The video depicts the man’s brief encounter with Albrecht and then Perry leaving her car to enter the mall.

From the mall video,' investigators isolated photos of the perpetrator’s pickup truck and had them shown during-local news broadcasts. The former owner of the pickup truck—-which had been customized—saw it on television and notified the investigators that he had recently sold it to a woman named Karen. “Karen” turned out to be Karen Frazier, the mother of Travis Jeter, with whom Jeter lived at the time. An investigator saw'the pickup truck parked at Frazier’s home a couple of days after the robbery. An' earlier search ■ of Perry’s vehicle after, the incident had turned up a pair of eyeglasses that did not belong to Perry. Having used the security video to connect the pickup truck to Jeter, the investigators located a recent photo of him, and in the pho.to he is wearing glasses like those found in Perry’s car. These facts led. to a search warrant for the pickup truck and for Frazier’s house. During the searches, investigators found a man’s dark jacket that appeared to be spotted with’ blood as well as a spoon with cocaine residue and the “crack” pipe that gave rise to Jeter’s drug charges.

Investigators submitted ' the 'glasses found in Perry’s car ’ and the potential blood samples from the jacket found in Jeter’s room to the state forensic laboratory for. DNA analysis. At trial, analysts testified that DNA from the glasses matched Jeter’s DNA at all the sites that could be tested, enough sites to yield an astronomically small chance of choosing an individual with that profile at random, from the relevant population. The DNA from Jeter’s jacket matched Perry’s DNA at ah. sites, again with an infinitesimal chance of a random match.

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Bluebook (online)
531 S.W.3d 488, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/travis-jeter-v-commonwealth-of-kentucky-ky-2017.