United States v. Jackie Dale Lowrimore, Sr.

923 F.2d 590, 32 Fed. R. Serv. 169, 1991 U.S. App. LEXIS 324, 1991 WL 1298
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 11, 1991
Docket90-1952WA
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 923 F.2d 590 (United States v. Jackie Dale Lowrimore, 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. Jackie Dale Lowrimore, Sr., 923 F.2d 590, 32 Fed. R. Serv. 169, 1991 U.S. App. LEXIS 324, 1991 WL 1298 (8th Cir. 1991).

Opinion

ARNOLD, Circuit Judge.

Jackie Dale Lowrimore, Sr., appeals from a jury conviction for his part in a murder-for-hire scheme targeting his ex-wife. Shirley Lowrimore was murdered in Le-Flore County, Oklahoma, on September 29, 1989. 1 This case was brought in federal district court in Arkansas 2 as a result of events preceding the murder, including a non-fatal shooting of Shirley Lowrimore on July 22, 1989, in Fort Smith, Arkansas. The two-count indictment alleged that Low-rimore used interstate-commerce facilities in a conspiracy for the commission of mur *592 der for hire (count one), and that he aided and abetted in the use of interstate-commerce facilities in the commission of murder for hire (count two), in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 2, 371, and 1958(a). The jury returned guilty verdicts on both counts. Lowrimore was sentenced to 262 months of imprisonment, three years of supervised release, and to pay a fine of $20,000 and a special assessment of $100. We affirm.

The government’s version of the events surrounding the July 22, 1989, shooting, which the jury was entitled to believe, is as follows. In April 1989, Lowrimore offered Jimmy Thomas $1200, and the forgiveness of a debt Thomas owed Lowrimore of approximately $1100, to kill his ex-wife. At that time, Shirley Lowrimore was living in Arkansas. Lowrimore and Thomas lived in Oklahoma. Thomas gave the $1200 to Ronnie Woodson for Shirley Lowrimore’s murder, but Woodson failed to follow through on his obligation, and never returned the money to Thomas.

Thomas then hired Phillip Allen Potter, who also lived in Oklahoma, to kill Shirley Lowrimore. Potter agreed to the killing for $350 — $200 to purchase a used car for himself, and $150 for expenses in connection with an upcoming move. Thomas supplied Potter with three guns obtained from Lowrimore and lent Potter a vehicle to drive from Oklahoma to Arkansas. Potter and several friends 3 made numerous trips in May and June seeking an opportunity to kill Lowrimore’s ex-wife. On July 22, outside her apartment in Fort Smith, Shirley Lowrimore was shot several times with a .20 gauge shotgun. She survived this attack but required hospital treatment. Immediately after the shooting, Potter reported to Thomas (mistakenly, as it turned out) that his group had killed Shirley Low-rimore.

Potter and Thomas testified at Lowri-more’s trial. Thomas told the jury that Lowrimore provided him with weapons and keys to Shirley Lowrimore’s apartment and car, in addition to the $1200 in cash. Tr. 1-70-71. Thomas also stated that after the July 22 shooting, Lowrimore asked for the .20 gauge shotgun to be returned, so “he could get rid of it permanently.” Tr. 1-79. Lowrimore told Thomas that “the job was botched” — “[i]t wasn’t completed.” Tr. 1-80. Lowrimore “kept insisting that he wanted her killed.” Tr. 1-81. Potter testified that he had no direct conversations with Lowrimore, but he knew from Thomas that the killing was to be done at Lowrimore’s direction. Tr. 1-162-63.

On appeal, Lowrimore raises numerous issues relating to his trial and sentence. 4 The primary claim of trial error comes from Lowrimore’s efforts to keep from the jury the fact that he had been charged in another court with his ex-wife’s murder. The District Court ruled that the government could not mention the Oklahoma indictment during the trial. The defense requested that certain other evidence be excluded, including an autopsy report showing Shirley Lowrimore’s cause of death, but the Court allowed both the autopsy report and “any actions [Lowrimore] took up to the murder,” so long as the evidence was probative of Lowrimore’s intent to commit the crimes of conspiring, aiding, and abetting in the commission of a murder for hire. Tr. 1-8. Lowrimore claims the government violated these pretrial eviden-tiary rulings on two occasions, and because of the resulting degree of prejudice, he says he should have been granted a mistrial.

The first alleged violation concerns the Court’s order not to bring up the Oklahoma proceedings. On direct examination of Jimmy Thomas, the government attorney asked: “Did you have any other conversations with Mr. Lowrimore after her death?” Thomas replied: “Yes, sir. It was a little while after he.was bonded out *593 after being charged.” Tr. 1-82. From this point on, Lowrimore maintains, the jury knew about the Oklahoma murder charge, making it impossible for Lowrimore to receive a fair trial.

We do not agree that a mistrial was warranted. Although Thomas was apparently referring to the Oklahoma murder charge, it is not at all clear that the jury so concluded. The jury could have thought Thomas was referring to charges in this prosecution, or a prosecution in another court unrelated to Shirley Lowrimore’s death. Even if the jury understood that Lowrimore had been charged with his ex-wife’s murder (and assuming such knowledge was unduly prejudicial), his counsel did not request an instruction to the jury that any other charges or criminal proceedings were irrelevant to the case at hand. Rather, his counsel requested a mistrial — a remedy reserved for significant, highly prejudicial trial errors. While an instruction to the jury might have been appropriate here, had one been requested, the vagueness of Thomas’s answer, and the inadvertent character of the government’s conduct, are not sufficiently serious for us to conclude that the District Court abused its discretion in failing to declare a mistrial.

The second alleged violation occurred during the government’s cross-examination of Lowrimore. Lowrimore was asked: “What did you do to disguise your identity on the day of the murder?” Tr. 11-222. The District Court overruled defense objections to the question, stating that it did not implicate the Oklahoma murder charge, and was relevant to intent under Rule 404(b) of the Federal Rules of Evidence. Lowrimore then explained that he had been seen wearing a wig “within a couple of hundred yards” of where his wife’s body had been found, and that he had worn the wig to conceal his identity. Tr. 11-223.

No error occurred here. The jury already knew, and was entitled to know, that Shirley Lowrimore had been murdered. Any evidence linking Lowrimore to her murder is relevant to the crime he was tried for in the District Court — hiring someone to have Shirley Lowrimore killed. Wearing a disguise in close proximity to where his ex-wife’s body was found, and on the same day, tends to prove that Lowri-more murdered his wife. It also tends to prove that Lowrimore wanted his wife dead badly enough to do it himself, which, in turn, makes it more likely he would have hired someone else to do the job. Fed.R. Evid. 404(b) allows evidence of other crimes to prove motive and intent.

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923 F.2d 590, 32 Fed. R. Serv. 169, 1991 U.S. App. LEXIS 324, 1991 WL 1298, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-jackie-dale-lowrimore-sr-ca8-1991.