Webster v. State

2011 OK CR 14, 252 P.3d 259, 2011 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 15, 2011 WL 1379819
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma
DecidedApril 12, 2011
DocketF-2009-834
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 2011 OK CR 14 (Webster v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Webster v. State, 2011 OK CR 14, 252 P.3d 259, 2011 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 15, 2011 WL 1379819 (Okla. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinions

OPINION

SMITH, Judge.

1 Roderick Earsel Webster was tried by jury and convicted of First-Degree Murder, under 21 0.8.8upp.1988, § 701.7(A), in Oklahoma County, Case No. CF-2007-7826. In accord with the jury's recommendation, the Honorable Virgil Black, District Judge, sentenced Webster to life imprisonment without the possibility of parole. Webster appeals his conviction and is properly before this Court.

[263]*263FACTS

{ 2 Shortly before midnight on the night of March 22, 1989, police were called to an apartment building at 2804 North Robinson, just north of downtown Oklahoma City. When Officer Brian Blosmo, the first officer to the scene, arrived around midnight, he found Lloyd Ballentine in Apartment 2, just inside the front door of the building, already being cared for by AmCare ambulance personnel. The apartment was totally black with darkness, with the only light coming from the flashlights of the emergency personnel and Blosmo himself.

13 Ballentine was sitting in a chair in the front room of the tiny apartment. He had an obvious head wound, and there was blood all over his head and face. He also appeared to have blood on his hands, forearms, and clothing, particularly his jeans. When Blosmo looked to his left, he saw the victim, Audrey M. Harris, lying crumpled up-and obviously dead-on the floor of a makeshift bedroom area, just past the main front room.1 Blosmo testified that Ballentine seemed groggy and did not appear to have "his wits about him," which Blosmo attributed to the gash and lump on the right side of his forehead.2 When Blosmo asked what happened, Ballen-tine indicated that he really didn't know, but that he and Harris had gone to bed around 11:00 p.m., and then he was awakened around 11:30 p.m., feeling like he had been hit on the head. By then other officers had begun arriving at the scene, and they quickly realized that the shadowy darkness of that tiny apartment was shrouding evidence of a homicide that was unlike any they had ever seen ... or would see again in the next twenty years.3

T4 The evidence presented at trial revealed that Audrey Harris, age 75 years, and Lloyd Ballentine, age 49 years, had been living together for approximately nine years and considered themselves to be common-law married. Harris weighed 95 pounds, was 4 feet and 9 inches tall, was weak and in very poor health, and walked with a walker. Her body was found on the floor next to the only bed in the apartment, on her left side, with her dentures on the floor nearby. Harris was naked from the waist down. She was wearing only a multi-colored blouse and a ratty brown sweater, which had been pulled on over the blouse upside down (with the neck part at her waist) and backwards (with the back of the sweater on her front). The evidence indicated that Harris had been hit in the face, gagged, held down, cut open from vagina to rectum, penetrated by a broom, and completely disemboweled. She had bloody finger marks on her thighs, suggesting that her legs were pried apart during the assault; and the blood evidence in different areas of the apartment suggested that she was either moving or being moved during the attack.

T5 The apartment shared by Ballentine and Harris did not have working electricity, and an extension cord running in the front door revealed that they were pirating power (apparently so Harris could watch television). The apartment was so dark that officers and investigators had to bring in external light sources in order to fully examine it and collect evidence. They could hardly believe what they found.

T 6 The largest concentration of blood was found in a small hallway just beyond the bedroom area, between a closet and the bathroom. Investigators testified that they believed this was the area where most of the attack occurred, where Harris was cut open, and where most of the disembowelment took place. A pile of bloody clothing was left on [264]*264the floor, along with large pieces of human organs and tissue. There was obvious blood all over the hall carpeting, in front of and on the open closet door, into the next room where the body was found, and on the back hallway wall. Some of the organs and tissue appeared to have been thrown against the hallway wall and the closet door and were left along the hallway baseboard. The bed and the area next to it, where Harris' body was discovered, were also very bloody, as were the sheets, blankets, and clothing found in disheveled piles on the bed. A three-foot section of intestine was left hanging over the edge of the exposed, top-right corner of the blood-stained mattress.

T7 Investigators recognized what appeared to be a series of bloody palm prints on the open closet door in the hallway, approximately 5 % feet up from the floor. A bloody fingerprint was also found on the closet door frame, approximately 14 inches up from the floor. All of these prints were photographed, and the entire closet door was removed and preserved.4

18 In the small bathroom off the hallway, investigators discovered a bathtub containing a pair of pink pants and two sets of footprints, which appeared to have been made by a single pair of athletic shoes. The tub was located below a window that opened out onto a small alley on the side of the apartment building. One of the sets of footprints was in mud, apparently coming into the apartment; the other was in blood, apparently going back out. In the alley outside, officers found corresponding footprints in the mud, mud on the wall below the window, and additional footprints that appeared to have blood mixed in them. Officers also discovered a container of baby powder, a disposable razor, and a buck knife on the ground below the bathroom window.

T 9 Chai Choi, the medical examiner, testified that the injuries to Harris' face indicated that she had been struck near her right eye and again on her right ear and that bruises and scratches around her mouth, along with petechiae on her face and neck, suggested that someone had gagged her or forcefully covered her mourn. Harris' false teeth were missing, and she had bruising on both arms, consistent with being held down, and bruising on the top-side of both hands, consistent with someone who was trying to ward off blows or protect herself from an attack.

1 10 Choi testified that Harris' entire perineum had been cut open, from front to back, and that her whole pelvic cavity was open. Choi testified that Harris' entire urinary tract had been removed, along with her vagina, uterus, and most of her intestinal tract. Choi noted that a large portion of Harris' uterus, her bladder, a portion of her stomach, eleven separate segments of intestine, and nine pieces of fibril fatty tissue were recovered by officers at the seene and delivered to the medical examiner's office, along with the body. Choi testified that although some of Harris' organs and tissue appeared to have been cut, because of the "clean margins" at the point of detachment, other organs and tissue appeared to have been simply pulled from her body, as indicated by stretch marks and "irregular margins," and still others showed evidence of both cutting and pulling.

T 11 Choi noted that Harris had an internal puncture or "stab" wound to the left hemisphere of her diaphragm and to her left lung. Behind the front door of the apartment, investigating officers found a broom with a nail extending from the top of the broom handle, which was covered in Harris' blood to a distance of two feet and tested positive for fecal material.

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

Related

HOLTZCLAW v. STATE
2019 OK CR 17 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma, 2019)
MASON v. STATE
2018 OK CR 37 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma, 2018)
RUNNELS v. STATE
2018 OK CR 27 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma, 2018)
Webster v. State
2011 OK CR 14 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma, 2011)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2011 OK CR 14, 252 P.3d 259, 2011 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 15, 2011 WL 1379819, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/webster-v-state-oklacrimapp-2011.