United States v. Lindsey Brooks

379 F. App'x 465
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJune 1, 2010
Docket08-5875
StatusUnpublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 379 F. App'x 465 (United States v. Lindsey Brooks) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth 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. Lindsey Brooks, 379 F. App'x 465 (6th Cir. 2010).

Opinion

OPINION

ALAN E. NORRIS, Circuit Judge.

If nothing else, this appeal provides a cautionary tale about the dangers of misplaced loyalty. Defendants Michelle Lovelace and Lindsey Brooks misled agents from the federal Defense Criminal Investigative Service (“DCIS”) who were investigating two murders that they believed had been committed by Sergeant Brent Burke, a military police officer assigned to the base at Fort Campbell, Kentucky. In the course of their respective interviews, defendants initially told the agents that they were still in Burke’s company at 1 a.m. on the day of the murders even though he had left the base earlier. Although Lovelace recanted her initial statement during the interviews and Brooks, less explicitly, did the same, the two were indicted and charged with one count each of knowingly making false statements to agents of the DCIS. 18 U.S.C. § 1001. Lovelace was also charged with aiding and abetting Brooks. 18 U.S.C. § 2. A jury returned guilty verdicts on both counts of the indictment. On appeal, defendants contend that the evidence introduced at trial was insufficient to support the verdict and that the district court erred in allowing the introduction of evidence concerning the two murders. Brooks also maintains that her statements should have been suppressed because she had not been informed of her Miranda rights before the agents conducted what she characterizes as a “custodial” interrogation.

I.

This prosecution had its genesis in the murders of Tracy Burke and her former mother-in-law, Karen Comer, on September 11, 2007. The pair were shot to death at Ms. Comer’s home in Rineyville, Kentucky during the early morning hours. Ri-neyville is about 140 miles from Fort Campbell. Kentucky State Police (“KSP”) detective Larry Walker responded to the call later in the day and learned that Tracy and her husband, Sergeant Brent Burke, were in the process of getting divorced. Sergeant Burke became a suspect and Walker, accompanied by other KSP officers, traveled to Fort Campbell to conduct interviews. Burke told Walker that he had been with defendants, who worked in Fort Campbell’s Emergency Communications Center (“ECC”) as dispatchers, until 1 a.m. on the day of the murders.

Because of the military aspect of the investigation, KSP requested the assistance of the DCIS, and Walker spoke with Special Agents Bret Flinn, Mike Collins, and Jared Camper. He provided the DCIS agents with a “laundry list” of things to do, which included interviewing the defendants.

Agents Collins and Camper spoke to both defendants at the ECC on September 14, three days after the murders. They interviewed defendant Lovelace first and she initially told them that Burke brought her and defendant Brooks hot chocolate at 11:00 p.m. on September 10, and that the three of them remained in the parking lot until 1:00 a.m. During the interview, the agents took a thirty-minute break and *467 spoke with Lovelace’s supervisor, Barbara Guerrero. After the interview resumed, the agents noted minor inconsistencies. For instance, Lovelace told them she took a five-minute drive around the block of the ECC with Burke at 1 a.m., a fact she had neglected to mention earlier.

The next day, September 15, the agents asked Lovelace to provide a written statement, which she did. At trial Agent Camper summarized its contents during his testimony. Lovelace confirmed that Burke had indeed delivered hot chocolate around 11 p.m., but now conceded that she left after about 20 minutes to go home. Before she did so, she gave Burke a ride around the block. After she left Burke, she called him on his cell phone about ten minutes later. The next time they spoke was when he called her at 9 p.m. the next day (September 11). According to her statement, their conversation concerned the following:

He told me that Tracy and her ex-mother-in-law had been shot and killed.... He then told me that people would question me and to tell them that he was talking to me and Ms. Brooks ‘til about 0100 that morning. I interpreted it that he was referring to investigators and told him that we were not on the phone at that time. He told me to tell Ms. Brooks that Tracy and her ex-mother-in-law had been shot and killed and that we needed to say we were talking in the parking lot of Fort Campbell ECC until about 0100 that morning. I said, “okay” and he said he had to get off the phone.
I called Ms. Brooks and asked her to go get me some cigarettes and to please come to my house.... When she arrived at my house, I then asked Ms. Brooks if she wanted to go on the back deck of my house and smoke. When we sat down to smoke I told her that Sergeant Burke told me to tell her that we were talking in the parking lot of work ‘til around 0100 hours that morning; and she said, of course. I was thinking that it was odd that he said to tell her that we were talking ‘til 0100 hours.
[F]riday during my first interview, I told Special Agent Camper and Special Agent Collins that Sergeant Burke was inside visiting with Ms. Brooks and I[sic] from around 2215 ‘til 2244 10 September 07....
I then lied telling them that we talked in the parking lot ‘til around 0100 hours. I lied because Sergeant Burke told me to tell the investigators this time and I did so because I trusted him as a friend.
During the second interview Special Agent Collins advised me of the consequences [of] making false statements. It was then that I realized that I needed to tell them the truth, that there is no way that I would’ve stood in the parking lot talking with Ms. Brooks and Sergeant Burke for approximately two hours because I had earaches and wanted to go home.
It was at this moment I realized that I and possibly Ms. Brooks had been used as alibis. I told the special agents that I felt I had been used a pawn.

Agent Camper recalled that he told Lovelace during the second interview (after speaking with her supervisor), that “we thought she was lying with us, and that this was a double homicide investigation, and we were talking about the alibi of a prime suspect, so you need to tell the truth.” After stressing this and the fact that it “was a crime to lie to federal agents,” Lovelace “finally admitted that she was in the parking lot until 11:30.”

Defendant Brooks was interviewed after Lovelace. The interview lasted between two and three hours and took place at the ECC. According to the trial testimony of *468 Agent Collins, Brooks told them that “[s]he left Michelle and Sergeant Burke in the parking lot of the ECC at approximately one o’clock in the morning.” When challenged, however, she vacillated, saying that it “was between twelve o’clock midnight and 12:30.” The next day Brooks provided the agents with a written statement at their request. Agent Collins summarized it during his testimony and read the following portions of it to the jury:

I felt in [Burke’s] defense I could stretch the truth and allow my time with him on Monday night, 10 September 07, to expand to one o’clock ...

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

United States v. Michael Clark
24 F.4th 565 (Sixth Circuit, 2022)
United States v. Crumpton
88 F. Supp. 3d 796 (E.D. Michigan, 2015)
United States v. McCafferty
801 F. Supp. 2d 605 (N.D. Ohio, 2011)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
379 F. App'x 465, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-lindsey-brooks-ca6-2010.