United States v. Ellery Zephier, Sr.

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedJuly 7, 2026
Docket25-1899
StatusPublished

This text of United States v. Ellery Zephier, Sr. (United States v. Ellery Zephier, Sr.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Ellery Zephier, Sr., (8th Cir. 2026).

Opinion

United States Court of Appeals For the Eighth Circuit ___________________________

No. 25-1899 ___________________________

United States of America

Plaintiff - Appellee

v.

Ellery Zephier, Sr.

Defendant - Appellant ____________

Appeal from United States District Court for the District of South Dakota - Southern ____________

Submitted: February 12, 2026 Filed: July 7, 2026 ____________

Before LOKEN, LAVENSKI R. SMITH, and STRAS, Circuit Judges. ____________

LAVENSKI R. SMITH, Circuit Judge.

Ellery Zephier, Sr., was convicted of kidnapping and assault resulting in serious bodily injury. On appeal, he argues that (1) the district court 1 abused its discretion in admitting evidence of his kidnapping and assault of a former girlfriend under Federal Rule of Evidence 404(b) based on his claim that the former girlfriend

1 The Honorable Roberto A. Lange, Chief Judge, United States District Court for the District of South Dakota. had a motive to fabricate the incident; (2) the district court violated his Sixth Amendment right to confrontation by limiting his cross-examination of his former girlfriend; (3) insufficient evidence exists to support his kidnapping conviction; and (4) insufficient evidence exists to support his conviction for assault resulting in serious bodily injury. We affirm.

I. Background Zephier was charged with two counts of assault with a dangerous weapon, assault resulting in serious bodily injury, and kidnapping. The charges arose from Zephier’s treatment of Kristy Selwyn, Zephier’s ex-girlfriend, “[b]etween on or about July 20, 2024, and July 25, 2024.” R. Doc. 28, at 1–2.

Prior to trial, the government filed a notice of intent to offer evidence pursuant to Federal Rule of Evidence 404(b). Specifically, it noticed, among other things, Zephier’s 2022 arrest for simple assault domestic abuse of former romantic partner A.K. and his 2023 kidnapping and assault of former girlfriend Angelique Drapeau. The prior conduct involving A.K. concerned a report received by law enforcement that Zephier allegedly struck A.K. with a closed fist while he was driving. Regarding Drapeau, the notice summarized the evidence based on a January 2024 interview with Drapeau. She reported that during their relationship, Zephier held her against her will for approximately six hours in his camper. He scarred her face with a knife while she was there. Zephier also hit her when she attempted to leave the camper. The encounter ended when police arrived. The government argued Zephier’s prior conduct involving Drapeau was admissible to show that he had the requisite intent to commit the assaults and kidnapping charged in the present case.

The government attached a summary of Drapeau’s January 2024 interview to the notice. The summary states that Drapeau previously dated Zephier around the same time as A.K. Drapeau also told the FBI that she thought Zephier might have killed A.K. because he almost killed her when he restrained her in the camper. Drapeau had not spoken to Zephier since that incident because she was scared of him. Drapeau denied having anything to do with A.K.’s death. -2- Zephier filed a motion in limine, objecting to admission of the alleged 2023 assault of Drapeau. He argued that the evidence was highly prejudicial, he was never indicted, and Drapeau was not interviewed until about a year later. He also objected to the 2022 incident involving A.K.

At the pretrial hearing, the district court granted Zephier’s motion to prohibit evidence of the 2022 incident involving A.K. But it “reserve[d] ruling on whether the [g]overnment ha[d] sufficient evidence to introduce the alleged [2023] assault on [Drapeau] under Rule 404(b).” R. Doc. 75, at 9. When Zephier’s counsel indicated that he might have to file a supplemental motion in limine to prohibit Drapeau, who was not a witness to A.K.’s death, from testifying about her death, the court replied doing so was unnecessary because such testimony “would be plainly much more prejudicial than probative of anything, and it is speculative.” R. Doc. 99, at 23. The court ruled that it would not permit Drapeau to speculate about A.K.’s death. The government then advised the court that it had not yet located Drapeau for purposes of testifying. Its plan was to establish Zephier’s “conduct toward [Drapeau] through testimony of just Officer Edwin Young.” R. Doc. 75, at 9. Officer Young was not the initial responding officer and never observed any assault. In light of the government’s representations, the court held the issue of admission in abeyance.

At the end of the first day of trial, the government informed the court and counsel that it had located Drapeau and Officer John Sully, the initial responding officer from the 2023 incident. The court confirmed that it had left open the question of the admissibility of such evidence. The court noted that if Drapeau were available “to testify, bolstered by a responding officer who, at minimum, heard [what occurred] . . . then that certainly enhances the chances that that comes in.” R. Doc. 101, at 136. In response, Zephier again objected to the evidence’s admissibility. He argued that the initial call to law enforcement “wasn’t a domestic violence call” but instead a call by Zephier’s mother to remove Drapeau and Zephier from her property. Id. at 137. Zephier also pointed out that “the report taken by the FBI from [Drapeau] was a year after this event.” Id. at 138. Despite Zephier’s objections, the court

-3- concluded that evidence concerning the 2023 incident was likely admissible. The court indicated that it would provide a limiting instruction concerning the evidence.

On the morning of the second day of trial, Zephier filed a supplemental motion in limine to prohibit Drapeau from testifying about the 2023 incident. Out of the jury’s presence, the district court noted that Zephier’s motion concerned “Drapeau’s expression to law enforcement of a belief that . . . Zephier . . . had something to do with the death of [A.K.],” a “matter the [c]ourt ha[d] already ruled on.” R. Doc. 101- 2, at 5. Specifically, “[t]he court ha[d] ruled that any mention of A.K. or a belief that Mr. Zephier had anything to do with A.K.’s death or the incident where Mr. Zephier allegedly assaulted A.K. does not come in.” Id. at 6. But the court pointed out that Zephier’s supplemental motion took “a different tack and, somewhat curiously, concede[d] a similarity of the behavior of [Zephier] towards Angel[ique] Drapeau that’s alleged to the behavior at issue here” with Selwyn. Id.

In response, Zephier argued that to properly cross-examine Drapeau, he would need to question her concerning Drapeau’s rumored involvement in A.K.’s death influencing her motive to talk to law enforcement in 2024. The district court did not “quite buy the argument.” Id. Zephier attempted to clarify his position. According to Zephier, in 2023, Drapeau told the responding officers, “I don’t have anything to say, other than he wouldn’t let me out of the trailer.” Id. at 7. But after “being approached by people on the street who . . . accuse[d] her of [A.K.’s] murder,” Drapeau spoke to the FBI in 2024 and asked for help relocating her out of the community. Id. at 8. Zephier reasoned that Drapeau had a strong motive to accuse Zephier of assault in 2024 given that she was “being confronted as the murderer” of A.K. Id. at 9. Zephier’s concern was that Drapeau would “blurt[] out that Mr. Zephier was actually” A.K.’s murderer while he was “cross-examin[ing] [Drapeau] on a very valid bias that she m[ight] have.” Id. at 10.

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