United States v. Teeter

12 M.J. 716, 1981 CMR LEXIS 593
CourtU.S. Army Court of Military Review
DecidedNovember 25, 1981
DocketCM 439290
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 12 M.J. 716 (United States v. Teeter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Army Court of Military Review primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Teeter, 12 M.J. 716, 1981 CMR LEXIS 593 (usarmymilrev 1981).

Opinion

[719]*719OPINION OF THE COURT

LEWIS, Judge:

The appellant was found guilty of premeditated murder, felony murder, and rape in violation of Articles 118 and 120, Uniform Code of Military Justice, 10 U.S.C. §§ 918 and 920 (1976), and was sentenced to a dishonorable discharge, confinement at hard labor for life, and forfeiture of all pay and allowances. He contends that the evidence was insufficient to convict him, that the military judge erred in not suppressing certain statements made to an Army Criminal Investigation Division (CID) agent, that error was committed in the admission and rejection of evidence at trial and that the military judge erred in instructing the members. We affirm.

On 8 November 1979, Eva Ransom was raped and brutally murdered. She was found by her husband at approximately 1140 hours lying on the bedroom floor of their on-post quarters located one floor above the quarters occupied by appellant and his wife. Mrs. Ransom was wearing only a sweater, a bra, and a pair of socks. Her hands were bound behind her back by two brassieres and she was lying between the foot of the bed and a wooden chest of drawers.

Specialist Four Ransom tried to telephone the military police from the bedroom but was unable because of the shock of what he had seen. He ran downstairs to appellant’s quarters, knocked, and ran into the kitchen. He saw Mrs. Teeter, appellant’s wife, and Maxon Painter, a utilities repairman. He told them what had happened and Mrs. Teeter went to get appellant, who came from the bedroom-bathroom area of their apartment. The Teeters and Ransom went upstairs but, according to Ransom, at no time while they were in his apartment did appellant approach the bedroom where the body was located.

Ransom went into an adjoining room to check on his year old daughter and when he exited he found appellant fumbling with the telephone in the kitchen. Mrs. Teeter took the phone from her husband and called the military police. Ransom then called his wife’s parents and noted that the time was 1145 hours.

Leaving his wife and Ransom upstairs, appellant ran downstairs and outside where he again encountered Mr. Painter. Appellant appeared excited and said, “I just raped a woman and she’s bleeding like hell.” Stunned, Painter asked, “You what?” Appellant replied, “She’s been raped and she’s bleeding like hell.”

Appellant went back upstairs and Painter told' his daughter, who had accompanied him, to summon the military police who arrived about five minutes later.

The military police checked the murder scene. A blood-soaked towel and a pool of blood was found under the body. A pillowcase bearing slash marks lay between the bed and the telephone table. Panties and blue jeans were found in a corner of the bedroom. Bits of broken brown plastic were scattered about on the floor and under the victim’s head. The mattress was pulled down two to three feet from the headboard. There were a few bloodstains on the wall but most of the blood was concentrated under the body and in the middle of the mattress. In the wooden chest, the lingerie drawer had been opened approximately three inches. In the bathroom, a bar of soap was wet and the sink contained the diluted remnants of blood.

A physician, arrived on the scene and a little after 1200 hours pronounced Eva Ransom dead. His examination revealed her skin to be warm and pliable. The corneas of her eyes were still clear. He believed she probably died after 1100 hours.

The autopsy revealed thirty-two stab wounds on the body. Fifteen were in the front of the chest, the deepest being 3V2 inches in depth and the width of the wounds was one inch. Seventeen stab wounds were found in the upper back, one inch in width with the deepest being almost four inches in depth. The head was almost severed. The front of the neck was slit, the wound being five inches long and separating the wind pipe. There was a similar wound on the back of the neck. Concealed [720]*720under the hair and not discovered until the autopsy were lacerations and contusions on both temples. No defensive wounds were found on the hands or arms.

It was the opinion of the pathologist, Major Goodhue, that the wounds were inflicted by a sharp instrument. He believed that the head injuries occurred while Mrs. Ransom’s circulation was still active. They were sufficient to cause unconsciousness but not death. An absence of blood from the heart and of bleeding from the torso wounds indicated that these stab wounds had been inflicted when circulation was either minimal or halted. A massive quantity of blood was found in the lungs indicating aspiration of circulating blood from the severed windpipe and infliction of the neck wounds prior to those on the torso.

It was about an hour after the military police had arrived at the murder scene before appellant was asked to accompany Special Agent Cutler to the CID office. In the interim, CID agents had been talking to various persons at the scene, including Painter and appellant. Appellant was seen roaming around the area during this period.

When appellant arrived at the CID office, he was warned of his rights under Article 31, UCMJ, 10 U.S.C. § 831 (1976). He executed a waiver of these rights and spoke to Special Agent Cutler. Appellant was subsequently taken to a hospital where he provided fingernail clippings and hair samples. He was returned to the CID office where he later rendered a written exculpatory statement.

At about 2200 hours, appellant’s wife brought him a change of clothing and his uniform was seized as evidence. He was soon informed that he was under apprehension for the murder and rape of Mrs. Ransom and transported to a detention cell in the military police station.

The next day, appellant made incriminating statements to Special Agent Robinson during interrogation. They first talked about how appellant came to Fort Campbell. Then appellant spoke about his interest in witchcraft and how he utilized it in Germany to overcome peer pressure to use drugs. He also explained that he could put himself into a trance-like state and that on one occasion his companions had to singe his eyebrows to bring him out of a trance. Then Robinson asked him if he could give him any details of what occurred the day before. Appellant became nervous and his hands started shaking. His eyeballs rolled back in their sockets, his eyelids fluttered and his voice got deeper and a little less audible. Asked if there was any real doubt in his mind that he killed Mrs. Ransom, appellant pointed to his head and said, “Something up here is telling me I may have done it.” When asked if he remembered anything that occurred after he arrived at home and parked his car, he said he didn’t remember anything afterwards until he woke up on the couch in his living room listening to country and western music. When asked where the knife was hidden, he closed his eyes and said he had a vision of the knife in some tires.

After hearing this possible location of the knife, Robinson told appellant to relax. Robinson left the interrogation room to tell another investigator about the knife and then returned. At appellant’s request, Robinson brought him a soft drink. About five minutes later, Robinson asked about the tattoo of Jesus Christ on his chest.

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Bluebook (online)
12 M.J. 716, 1981 CMR LEXIS 593, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-teeter-usarmymilrev-1981.