Williams v. State

2006 WY 131, 143 P.3d 924, 2006 Wyo. LEXIS 143, 2006 WL 2945720
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 16, 2006
Docket05-185
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 2006 WY 131 (Williams v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Williams v. State, 2006 WY 131, 143 P.3d 924, 2006 Wyo. LEXIS 143, 2006 WL 2945720 (Wyo. 2006).

Opinion

HILL, Justice.

[¶ 1] Appellant, Julia Williams, contends that the district attorney’s misconduct at trial constitutes plain error and that such error requires reversal of her conviction for accessory after the fact to the unlawful killing of a human being. 1 She also contends that there was not sufficient evidence introduced during her trial so as to sustain her conviction for the crime of accessory after the fact to the unlawful killing. We will affirm the judgment and sentence of the district court.

ISSUES

[¶ 2] Williams raises these issues:

I. Whether plain error occurred when the prosecutor repeatedly referred to an inadmissible confession by Linda Greene and used information from that confession to bolster the State’s theory of the ease during trial and closing argument.
II. Whether there was sufficient evidence presented at trial to prove, beyond a reasonable doubt, that Linda Greene unlawfully killed Allen Ross, an essential element of the charged crime of accessory after the fact.

The State rephrases the issues more simply:

I. Did the prosecutor engage in misconduct?
*927 II. Was there sufficient evidence to prove, beyond a reasonable doubt, that Linda Greene killed Allen Ross?

FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

[¶3] It is somewhat difficult to keep track of the persons involved in this factual scenario, and so we will provide a dramatis personae to aid both this Court and our readers in following the events that led up to the crime at issue here. Before we embark on that endeavor, we note that this group of people moved to Cheyenne in 1995 from Guthrie, Oklahoma. In mid 1995, Julia Williams purchased a house near downtown Cheyenne. It is also of some assistance in sorting out this rather unusual story to note that many of the main participants used various nicknames/aliases from time to time. The record is not crystal clear why, but it suggests that this was done at Linda Greene’s urging because she believed various people were attempting to steal her business and because she was generally paranoid. It was the State’s theory of this case that Linda Greene murdered Allen Ross, and Julia Williams assisted her in concealing that crime. It was Julia Williams’s theory of the case that Denis Greene murdered Allen Ross and that she assisted Denis in concealing that crime, under threats of death made by him. However, ultimately Julia Williams decided not to testify in her own behalf. Rather, her theory of the case was presented to the jury in the form of the various statements, which were at once both exculpatory and inculpatory, that she made to the police.

[¶ 4] Julia Williams (hereinafter “Williams”): Williams was convicted of acting as an accessory after the fact after Linda Greene shot and killed Allen Ross on or about November 22, 1995. Williams helped Linda Greene drag Allen Ross’s body from the main floor of the house to the basement, where the two of them interred his body in a shallow grave. Although the investigation into this case began in early 1996 and included a cursory search of the house where Allen Ross was buried, his body was not found until July 17, 2000.

[¶ 5] Williams and Linda Greene decided to move to Cheyenne in early 1995, and to that end Williams purchased a home near downtown Cheyenne. Williams, Linda Greene, and Alien Ross lived in that house and they also operated a business at that location called Amber Press. The main purpose of Amber press was to publish Linda Green’s books on dowsing. 2 In addition, Williams bought an acreage near Love-land/Fort Collins, Colorado, where Williams intended to build a cabin. 3 She hired Denis Greene, Linda Greene’s former husband, to build the cabin. It was of interest later in the ease that Denis Greene, Williams, and Linda Greene were experienced at mixing and using cement and mortar. Williams’s nickname was Celeste. Denis Greene sometimes posed as Jay Williams (and as Julia’s brother). Linda Greene was also known as Genevieve. Allen Ross sometimes used the alias, Rex. In about October of 1995, Williams and Linda Greene began complaining that someone was trying to steal Amber Press’s business (had expropriated its 800 number business). Williams also expressed a belief that Allen Ross, Mary Kett, and Laura Humphries were the thieves. Both Williams and Linda Greene believed that someone was trying to poison them.

[¶ 6] Williams provided a lot of “information” to the police in Cheyenne but very little, if any, of it was ever corroborated.

*928 [¶ 7] Allen Ross (hereinafter “Ross”): He is the victim of the underlying crime. His body was found buried in a shallow grave in the crawl space of Williams’s downtown Cheyenne home. The grave was covered with a thin layer of concrete, although his body was found because his feet were sticking out of the ground just a bit. Ross was a documentary film maker by trade, but also was involved romantically with Linda Greene and was associated with the operation of the Amber Press business. The parties stipulated that Ross had been “unlawfully killed.” Eventually, the trial court also determined that a part of the State’s burden of proof was to prove as an element of the crime that Linda Greene had killed Ross. Ross died of a single gunshot wound to the head.

[¶ 8] Linda Greene Ross (hereinafter “Greene”): Greene was the central person in this group. She was an expert in dowsing and attracted people to this group with her lectures, teaching, and books. Her former husband, Denis Greene, is also involved in this case. Greene was divorced from him in 1993. In the autumn of 1993, Greene and Ross became an item, so to speak, and soon after became at least “spiritual” spouses, although the record does not reflect that they were actually married. Because things became difficult for her group in Oklahoma, Greene decided that they should move to Cheyenne. Greene was ill at the time, although the exact nature of her illness is not a matter of record. Greene was committed for mental health treatment in late 1995 or early 1996. The record suggests that she suffered from paranoid schizophrenia or bipolar disorder. Greene died on March 18, 2002.

[¶ 9] One of the complications of presenting this case to the jury was that Denis Greene told the police that on November 25, 1995, Greene told him that she had killed Ross. However, on March 18, 2002, Greene died and was not available as a witness at trial. For that reason the district court ruled that no mention could be made of that statement, nor could any of the statements Greene made that tended to incriminate Williams be admitted as evidence. The district court’s ruling was based in part on the United States Supreme Court’s decision in the case, Crawford v. Washington, 541 U.S. 36, 124 S.Ct.

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Bluebook (online)
2006 WY 131, 143 P.3d 924, 2006 Wyo. LEXIS 143, 2006 WL 2945720, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-state-wyo-2006.