Wimbley v. State

257 P.3d 328, 275 P.3d 35, 292 Kan. 796, 2011 WL 3524288
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedAugust 12, 2011
DocketMODIFIED OPINION 101,595
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 257 P.3d 328 (Wimbley v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wimbley v. State, 257 P.3d 328, 275 P.3d 35, 292 Kan. 796, 2011 WL 3524288 (kan 2011).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Johnson, J.:

The State of Kansas seeks review of the Court of Appeals’ decision which reversed the district court’s summary denial of Will A. Wimbley’s second K.S.A. 60-1507 motion. In addition to reversing the summary denial, the Court of Appeals reversed Wimbley’s underlying convictions for first-degree murder and criminal possession of a firearm and remanded the case to the district court for a new trial with directions to conduct a pretrial hearing on the questions surrounding DNA evidence on the murder weapon. Finding the district court’s rulings to be appropriate, we reverse the Court of Appeals.

Factual and Procedural Overview

On Februaiy 10, 1999, Tina Cooper, a/k/a Leola Christina Has-kins, Wimbley’s ex-girlfriend, was found shot to death. She had *798 been shot seven times from very close range, as indicated by the presence of stippling and soot in the gunshot wounds. Wimbley was charged and tried for the crime. He defended on the basis that he had not seen or had any contact with the victim on the day of the crime. However, tire jury convicted Wimbley of premeditated first-degree murder and criminal possession of a firearm.

Wimbley pursued a direct appeal with appointed counsel, albeit Wimbley was permitted to submit pro se supplemental briefs. State v. Wimbley, 271 Kan. 843, 26 P.3d 657 (2001) ('Wimbley I). One of the issues raised on direct appeal was whether the prosecutor had committed misconduct during closing argument. Wimbley s specific claim was that the prosecutor had improperly commented on Wimbley s post-Miranda silence during closing, which claim was rejected. 271 Kan. at 854-55.

Wimbley also challenged the sufficiency of the evidence to support premeditation. He argued that the Supreme Court’s definition of premeditation had blurred the line between first- and second-degree murder and that the prosecutor’s closing argument had exacerbated the confusion. 271 Kan. at 849. Specifically, Wimbley complained of the following statement:

“ ‘Premeditation requires no specific time period. That’s what the law is. It doesn’t require any. It doesn’t say well, you have to think about it for 30 seconds, or five, or five hours or anything else. Premeditation can occur in an instant. It can be a thought. Just like that (indicating). I can decide to kill anybody in this room and that would be premeditation. That’s what the law is. And you swore — you all swore drat you would follow tire law, and tire law says premeditation can happen just like that.’ ” 271 Kan. at 849-50.

Wimbley I pointed out that Wimbley’s argument was identical to the one made by the defendant in State v. Jamison, 269 Kan. 564, 7 P.3d 1204 (2000). As in Jamison, Wimbley I found that the trial court’s jury instruction on premeditation had been a correct statement of Kansas law and “that there was ‘a very real distinction between the argument of a prosecutor and the instruction of a trial court.’ ” 271 Kan. at 850 (quoting Jamison, 269 Kan. at 573). Wimbley I affirmed the convictions.

In February 2002, some 6 months following the decision in Wimbley I, Wimbley filed his first K.S.A. 60-1507 motion. He supplemented his motion in July 2002. The district court appointed *799 counsel to represent Wimbley, conducted a preliminaiy hearing, and ultimately denied the motion without an evidentiaiy hearing. Wimbley appealed, raising a number of issues, including ineffective assistance of his trial counsel. Wimbley v. State, No. 90,025, 2004 WL 1191449, at *3 (Kan. App. 2004) (unpublished opinion) ('Wimbley II). Specifically, Wimbley complained that his trial counsel had failed to adequately investigate, that trial counsel had improperly conceded in opening statement that Wimbley’s DNA was on the murder weapon, and that trial counsel had failed to object to tire prosecutor’s misconduct during closing argument.

The Wimbley II panel affirmed the district court’s denial of the 1507 motion. With respect to the prosecutorial misconduct issue, the Court of Appeals found that Wimbley had not raised the issue in his 1507 motion and noted that the issue of prosecutorial misconduct had been raised and decided in the direct appeal. Wimbley II, 2004 WL 1191449, at *9.

Four years later, in July 2008, Wimbley filed a second 1507 motion, again claiming ineffective assistance of his trial counsel for fading to object to prosecutorial misconduct during closing argument. This time, Wimbley’s complaint singled out the prosecutor’s statement that premeditation can occur in an instant. The motion also faulted Wimbley’s direct appeal counsel for failing to claim prosecutorial misconduct for the closing argument misstatement of the law on premeditation, instead of using the prosecutor’s misstatement of law to bolster an insufficiency of the evidence issue. Wimbley argued that the district court should address the merits of his claim because of an intervening change in the law effected by the Supreme Court’s decision in State v. Holmes, 272 Kan. 491, 33 P.3d 856 (2001), which was filed November 9, 2001, approximately 4 months after Wimbley I. The second 1507 motion also requested DNA retesting on the murder weapon.

With respect to the prosecutorial misconduct question, the district court found Wimbley’s second motion to be successive and untimely. It denied the motion without reaching the merits. In denying Wimbley’s request for DNA retesting, the district court noted that DNA evidence on the firearm had not been used to convict Wimbley because the State had not presented such evidence at trial, and that Wimbley’s own expert had informed the jury at trial that all of the *800 State’s DNA evidence was unreliable because of cross-contamination between different items of evidence.

Wimbley appealed and filed a pro se brief.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
257 P.3d 328, 275 P.3d 35, 292 Kan. 796, 2011 WL 3524288, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wimbley-v-state-kan-2011.