Walker v. State

523 So. 2d 528
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Alabama
DecidedJanuary 26, 1988
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 523 So. 2d 528 (Walker v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal Appeals of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Walker v. State, 523 So. 2d 528 (Ala. Ct. App. 1988).

Opinion

The appellant, Gary Eugene Walker, was convicted of capital murder and was sentenced to life imprisonment without parole. Six issues are raised on appeal. Our review of these issues convinces us that Walker's conviction should be affirmed.

The evidence presented by the State tended to establish that on the morning of June 7, 1985, Deputy Frank Aplin of the Mobile County Sheriff's Department stopped a vehicle driven by the appellant in the vicinity of Creel Road and Old Pascagoula Road for running a red light. Deputy Aplin observed that appellant was driving a blue Toyota pickup truck with a white toolbox attached to the rear bed and that a *Page 530 logo of some kind appeared on the driver's door. Deputy Aplin asked appellant why he was in such a hurry. Appellant replied that he had been out all night and that he needed to go to his home nearby and take a shower and get ready for work because he was already late for work. Deputy Aplin did not arrest him, but just told him to be more careful and watch his driving habits. He observed appellant turn into a driveway on the lefthand side of Creel Road, further south from where he had been stopped.

Around 6:00 o'clock that same morning Kimberly Laird, who lived at 6405 Creel Road, was awakened by two gunshots coming from next door at the house of her in-laws, Felix Laird and Eleanor Whitley Moore Laird. She looked out the window toward her in-laws' house and saw a little blue truck with white letters on the door. A man ran to the truck, got in it, and left. She could not positively identify the man, but he resembled appellant, the stepson of Felix Laird. She made two phone calls, one to Madge Bishop, appellant's mother, and one to her own mother. Kimberly Laird then went next door and found that Felix and Eleanor Laird had been shot. Felix Laird was wearing street clothes. Eleanor Laird was nude. Kimberly Laird then called the sheriff's office to report the incident.

Deputy James Hunn of the Mobile County Sheriff's Department was the first officer to arrive at the victims' house, which was on Creel Road. He arrived around 6:00 a.m. When he approached the house, he saw a white male (Felix Laird) lying in the doorway and a white female (Eleanor Laird) inside the house, six to eight feet from the door. By that time, Deputy Alton Neidhardt had arrived. Deputy Neidhardt observed that Felix Laird appeared to have been shot in the stomach. Eleanor Laird was nude, and Deputy Neidhardt could see numerous holes in her extending from her knees to her breasts. Unlike Felix Laird, Eleanor Laird was still alive, but she appeared to be very weak and in a great deal of pain. She repeatedly asked Deputy Neidhardt if she was going to die. Deputy Neidhardt tried to reassure her as best he could. He also asked her if she knew who shot them, and she said, "yes, it was Felix's stepson, Gary Walker."

Ron Diegan, also with the Sheriff's Department, was called to the scene. When he arrived, Eleanor Laird was being treated by paramedics. He took photographs of the area and asked Eleanor Laird some questions about the incident. She told him her name was Eleanor Moore and that Gary Walker shot her and Felix. Mr. Diegan recorded these questions and answers on his tape recorder and later had the conversation transcribed. Eleanor Laird was then taken to the hospital, where she died in surgery as a result of her wounds.

Meanwhile Deputy Aplin was still patrolling the area. While he was stopped at a traffic light on Old Pascagoula Road, a blue Toyota pickup came up directly behind him. The driver of the truck appeared to be the same person he had stopped earlier. The truck caught his attention because of the short period of time since he had stopped appellant for running a red light. When the light turned green, Deputy Aplin went south on Theodore Dawes Road, while appellant proceeded east on Old Pascagoula Road. Some three to five minutes later, Deputy Aplin heard a radio message that an assault with a weapon had occurred on Creel Road, so he put out the description of the subject and vehicle he had just stopped that had been in a hurry to get to Creel Road. At some point later, Deputy Aplin went to a trailer park on Highway 90 at Tillman's Corner, where he saw a blue Toyota pickup with a white toolbox that appeared to be the same one he had seen that morning.

Between 6:00 and 6:15 that morning, Leamon Edward Baxley was leaving his house at Gibson and Wigfield Roads in Tillman's Corner when he saw a blue pickup truck with a sign on the door approaching. The driver of the truck slammed on the brakes, stopped the truck, then got out and threw a shotgun into the bushes across the street from his front yard. After Mr. Baxley saw the gun being thrown away, he called the sheriff's office to report the incident. He stood out in the street and directed traffic away from the area where the *Page 531 gun was, in order to preserve the tire tracks and any other evidence. Sergeant Charles Paquet of the Sheriff's Department responded to Mr. Baxley's call and recovered a Remington 1100 model 12-gauge shotgun from a little wooded area across from Baxley's house. The weapon was examined for any possible fingerprints. Mr. Baxley picked the appellant out of a photographic lineup that same day, but at trial said he could not positively recognize the person if he saw him in court.

Paul Spann, a friend of appellant's, saw appellant on the morning of the shooting. Sometimes when appellant had no place to stay, appellant would stay with him in his trailer at Plaza Mobile Home Park on Highway 90. On several occasions appellant would come in and sleep on the couch without Paul Spann ever knowing about it, since he rarely locked his doors. Sometime around 7:00 that morning, appellant woke him and said that "he had blown Felix and Eleanor away." Paul Spann rolled over and told appellant to get out because he thought it was just another one of appellant's wild stories and did not believe it. Shortly thereafter, Paul Spann got up and prepared to go to work. The keys to his company truck — a blue 1981 Toyota pickup with a white toolbox — were lying on the counter or coffee table, just as they usually were. He did notice later that morning, however, that the radio was turned off, which was unusual, because he never turned it off. Paul Spann learned of the Lairds' deaths later that day. Paul later talked with his brother Frank, who had stored a Remington 1100 12-gauge shotgun and some other items in the guest bedroom of Paul's trailer. Paul and Frank went to the trailer and looked in the bedroom for Frank's gun. The gun was missing. Paul Spann also kept a rifle and some ammunition in his trailer. He noticed that a lot of his ammunition was missing. Paul Spann thought the brand of the missing ammunition was Sears Ted Williams high velocity "fours." After Paul and Frank Spann discovered that the shotgun and ammunition were missing from the trailer, they contacted David Laird, Felix Laird's son and the appellant's half-brother, and they all went to the sheriff's office. All three men had heard appellant make remarks indicating ill will toward Felix Laird. All three men had also observed that appellant became loud and obnoxious when drinking and had often spoken of "getting even" with people — including Felix Laird — but that to their knowledge appellant had never followed through on such statements.

Detective Willie Edward Estes of the Sheriff's Department was the person in charge of investigating the Lairds' deaths. When he arrived at the Laird residence that morning, Eleanor Laird had already been taken to the hospital, but several officers had otherwise secured the crime scene. Felix Laird's body was still lying in the doorway.

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Bluebook (online)
523 So. 2d 528, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walker-v-state-alacrimapp-1988.