United States v. Littlewind

595 F.3d 876, 2010 U.S. App. LEXIS 4024, 2010 WL 668784
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 26, 2010
Docket08-4000
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 595 F.3d 876 (United States v. Littlewind) 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. Littlewind, 595 F.3d 876, 2010 U.S. App. LEXIS 4024, 2010 WL 668784 (8th Cir. 2010).

Opinion

HANSEN, Circuit Judge.

Sylvester Littlewind appeals a judgment entered on a jury verdict finding him guilty of assault with a dangerous weapon in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 118(a)(3) and 1153, assault resulting in serious bodily injury in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 113(a)(6) and 1153, and discharge of a firearm during a crime of violence in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 924(c)(1)(a) and (iii). Littlewind challenges: (1) the district court’s 1 decision to admit evidence of prior bad acts, and (2) the sufficiency of the evidence adduced at trial to convict him. We affirm.

I.

The evidence at trial, taken in the light most favorable to the verdict, showed the following facts. During the two years preceding the incident precipitating this case, Sylvester Littlewind and Budene Eback shared a residence and carried on a romantic relationship. The relationship was characterized by the prodigious consumption of alcohol, frequent verbal altercations, and repeated physical violence. On one occasion, Littlewind even threatened to kill Eback.

After a characteristically intense argument on October 31, 2007, Eback gathered her personal belongings and vacated the residence. A few days later, on November 3, Littlewind awoke at about 5 a.m. and began drinking alcohol. At approximately 7:30 a.m., Eback called Littlewind and asked him to drive her and some friends to buy alcohol. Littlewind picked up Eback and some other friends, and ultimately he drove them to a nearby town to purchase alcohol. Littlewind purchased numerous 40 ounce bottles of high-alcohol-content beer and a pint of whiskey. Littlewind drove the group around on back roads and stopped at other friends’ houses. Eback became so intoxicated that she could not later remember parts of the morning.

Eventually, three members of the group went to Littlewind’s residence. Eback remembers waking up on a mattress in the living room. As she walked to the bathroom to wash her face, she observed Ruben Williams, one of that morning’s drinking cohorts, with his head resting on the kitchen table and Littlewind seated across from him. While in the bathroom, she did not see blood or bruising on her head or face. When she returned from the bathroom, she observed a rifle leaning against a recliner in the living room. She set the rifle on the floor and sat in the recliner. Eback then went into the kitchen to get some ice water. In the kitchen, Eback and Littlewind began to argue.

Because of the argument, Eback decided to leave. She went for the front door, but Littlewind got there first and physically prevented her from leaving. Eback managed to get the door open but, in the struggle, her foot got slammed in the door. Eback pulled her foot from the door, and the argument continued with Littlewind pushing her in the chest and away from the door. Neither Eback nor Littlewind could recall what happened next.

That same morning, Littlewind’s neighbor was outside repairing an automobile. *879 The neighbor, Napoleon Longie, observed Littlewind pass by in his car numerous times; sometimes he was alone, and sometimes he was accompanied. At some point that morning, Napoleon heard a popping noise that he thought to be a gunshot. He was not concerned by the sound, however, because he lives near fields where people hunt and he hears gunshots regularly.

Sometime after the popping noise, Littlewind approached Napoleon and told him to call the police and an ambulance because someone had shot Eback. According to Napoleon, Littlewind was “full of blood.” (Trial Tr. at 215.)

Henrietta Longie, who is Napoleon’s mother and lives with Napoleon, also saw Littlewind driving numerous times that morning. The final time Henrietta saw Littlewind driving, he was alone and driving away from his house. That trip was fifteen to twenty minutes before Napoleon came into the house and told Henrietta that Eback had been shot.

Henrietta called emergency dispatch on her cell phone as she ran to Littlewind’s residence. She saw Eback near the back door, on the floor and covered with blood. Henrietta went to Eback to ascertain whether she was alive. Eback reached for Henrietta and told Henrietta to get her out of there. When Henrietta tried to get Eback up and out of the house, Littlewind grabbed Eback and put her in a chair in the kitchen. Littlewind then told Eback, “Babe, tell [Henrietta] I didn’t do that. Tell her I didn’t do that.” (Trial Tr. at 357, 359). Henrietta noticed blood on the living room floor, next to the mattress. She also saw Littlewind in a blood-spattered gray sweater. At some point before the paramedics and police arrived, however, he changed into a blue shirt.

When paramedics arrived, Eback was sitting at the kitchen table with some type of cloth pressed to her head. Eback was bleeding from the back of her head and covered in blood. She told one of the paramedics that she was cleaning a gun at the kitchen table and it accidentally discharged.

Eback was transported via ambulance to a nearby emergency room. There, Eback told a physician’s assistant that she was cleaning her gun and was shot in the back of the head. The emergency room did not have the resources to care for a gunshot wound to the head, so Eback was transported via helicopter to MeritCare Hospital in Fargo, North Dakota.

At MeritCare, Dr. David Stover headed the trauma team that treated Eback. Dr. Stover has extensive experience with trauma victims, including gunshot victims. Dr. Stover observed two wounds to Eback’s head; one smaller than the other. In Dr. Stover’s experience, gunshot injuries often consist of an entrance wound and a relatively larger exit wound. To Dr. Stover, Eback’s injury was consistent with a gunshot injury. Dr. Jeffery Lystad was also part of the trauma team that treated Eback. He believed the wounds were consistent with a gunshot injury, but could not identify — due to blood-matted hair — which wound was the entrance wound and which was the exit wound.

Despite a blood alcohol content over 0.4 percent — fives time the legal limit to drive — and the loss of approximately half her blood volume, Eback survived.

Littlewind gave numerous explanations for Eback’s injury. When he first reported the injury to Napoleon, he said someone had shot Eback. Then, while waiting for the police and ambulance, Littlewind told Napoleon someone had hit Eback in the head. When law enforcement Special Agent Donovan Wind responded to the injury scene, Littlewind told Special Agent Wind that Littlewind returned home and *880 found Eback had been shot. After being arrested for public intoxication and while in jail, Littlewind told a correctional officer that he thought Eback’s injury was somehow related to his son’s drug dealing. He told the same correctional officer that he woke up and Eback was standing by his bed with that injury.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
595 F.3d 876, 2010 U.S. App. LEXIS 4024, 2010 WL 668784, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-littlewind-ca8-2010.