Young v. State

2008 OK CR 25, 191 P.3d 601, 2008 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 23, 2008 WL 3310380
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma
DecidedAugust 12, 2008
DocketF-2007-322
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 2008 OK CR 25 (Young 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
Young v. State, 2008 OK CR 25, 191 P.3d 601, 2008 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 23, 2008 WL 3310380 (Okla. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

OPINION

LEWIS, Judge.

¶ 1 Louis R. Young, Appellant, was tried by jury in the District Court of Osage County, Case Number CF-2005-266A, and convicted of murder in the first degree, in violation of 21 O.S.Supp.2004, § 701.7(A). The jury sentenced Appellant to life imprisonment without parole. The Honorable M. John Kane IV, District Judge, imposed judgment and sentence accordingly. Mr. Young appeals.

FACTS

¶ 2 Jerry Doyle was addicted to cocaine. His wife knew of his prior problems with drugs, but believed he was clean at the time he disappeared. Doyle was trying to start a pet business in his hometown of Neosho, Missouri. He left home on June 27, 2005, telling his wife he was headed to Coffeyville, Kansas, to meet a kennel owner and look at some dogs. Doyle sent a text message to his wife two days later on June 29, telling her he would be home in two or three days.

¶ 3 Doyle was actually in Tulsa, buying and using cocaine. He had made these trips before, staying with fellow drug users or renting a room while bingeing on cocaine. Doyle’s acquaintances in the Tulsa drug world included Sharon Daniels, a fellow drug user, and Appellant, a drug dealer from whom Doyle bought cocaine. Doyle would sometimes loan Appellant his silver Toyota Camry, and had purchased auto parts for a car Appellant was repairing. Their acquaintance took a tragic turn when Appellant began to suspect Doyle was an undercover informant or police officer. The State theorized that Appellant and an accomplice, Reggie Lester Phillips, hatched and executed a plan to kill Jerry Doyle.

¶ 4 Sharon Daniels testified that in those last days of June, 2005, she and Jerry Doyle passed a twenty-four hour period at her Tulsa residence, talking and using cocaine. Daniels went to bed at some point. She thought Doyle was leaving for Missouri, but he was still sitting at her table when the door bell woke her in the early morning hours. Rhea Goe, Appellant’s girlfriend, came in and asked Jerry Doyle to come with her. Before leaving with Goe, Doyle gave Daniels two bags of crack cocaine to keep for him, and told her he would be back in fifteen or twenty minutes. Jerry Doyle never returned.

*605 ¶ 5 Rhea Goe, Appellant’s girlfriend, testified that after midnight on June 30, 2005, Appellant called and told her to go to Sharon Daniels’ apartment and pick up Doyle. Appellant told Goe that Doyle’s car had broken down in west Tulsa. Around 2 a.m., Goe went to Sharon Daniels’ apartment and asked Doyle to come with her, repeating Appellant’s story that Doyle’s car had broken down. She followed Appellant’s instructions and drove with Doyle to a location on West 33rd Street, where metropolitan Tulsa crosses into Osage County. Doyle’s silver Camry was parked on the side of the road with the hood up and the hazard lights flashing.

¶ 6 Goe testified that when Doyle approached the car to look under the hood, Reggie Phillips grabbed him from behind and put a knife to his throat. Appellant stood in front of Doyle and pointed a gun at him. Doyle emptied his pockets on Appellant’s command. Goe then saw Phillips, Appellant and Doyle disappear into the wooded area just a few feet from the roadside. Goe could hear Jerry Doyle pleading for his life. Within seconds, she heard seven or eight gun shots. She then drove away from the scene and returned to the apartment she shared with Appellant.

¶ 7 Appellant and Phillips soon arrived at the apartment driving Doyle’s Camry. Phillips left, while Appellant came inside. The following morning, Appellant, Rhea Goe, and another drug addict, Alice Nelson, began presenting fraudulent checks using the checkbook stolen from Jerry Doyle. They forged and passed two $500 cheeks drawn on Doyle’s account, for which Appellant paid Nelson about $80 and some cocaine. Another drug addict, Ricky Evans, cashed a third $500 check drawn on Jerry Doyle’s account. At some point, Appellant told Rhea Goe that Jerry Doyle was killed because he was a snitch.

¶ 8 Barbara Doyle became concerned when Jerry did not return home as expected. Bank records told her that three of his checks had been cashed in Tulsa. The signatures were forged. Barbara traveled to Tulsa and filed a police report. Jerry Doyle officially became a missing person on July 7, 2005. That same week, Appellant and Rhea Goe moved from 1415 N. Cheyenne to Silver Creek Apartments. Appellant paid the lease with money stolen from Jerry Doyle’s account.

¶ 9 On September 6,2005, workers mowing in west Tulsa discovered a human skeleton. Dental records identified the body as the remains of Jerry Doyle. Forensic pathologist Andrew Sibley recovered four bullets settled in clothing found with the bones, and found bullet defects to the bones of the left ribs and the pelvic area. Dr. Sibley concluded the death was a homicide by multiple gunshot wounds.

¶ 10 Tulsa police served a search warrant on Appellant’s Silver Creek apartment early on the morning of September 23, 2005. Appellant and Rhea Goe were in the apartment when police arrived. Police arrested Appellant and Goe after they recovered a trafficking quantity of crack cocaine in a purse at the head of the bed. During interrogation at the Detective Division of the Tulsa Police Department, Rhea Goe implicated Appellant in Doyle’s murder.

¶ 11 Appellant waived his Miranda rights and ultimately admitted that he and Reggie Phillips killed Jerry Doyle. Appellant accused Reggie Phillips of shooting Doyle while Appellant held the knife. He also told police the knife he used in the murder was located at the home of Mattie Johnson. He eventually pointed investigators to a drainage ditch near the Silver Creek Apartments where police recovered a pistol. Ballistics comparison matched two 9mm shell casings recovered near Jerry Doyle’s remains to the pistol identified by Appellant.

¶ 12 Mattie Johnson testified she had seen Reggie Phillips carrying a knife into her house. She saw the same knife again some days later on her porch, when Appellant and Rhea Goe were there. She asked Appellant whose knife it was. Appellant picked the knife up and looked at it, wiped it off, and threw it back down. Mattie Johnson called Reggie Phillips to come and get the knife, but ultimately gave the knife to another man, Reggie Robinson. Robinson’s sister, Diane, testified he brought the knife home and intended to sell it. She spoke with Detective *606 Chris Stout about the knife in October, 2005, and turned the knife over to police.

¶ 13 Appellant did not testify in his defense. He presented testimony from an aunt tending to show that he was “scared of guns” and did not regularly use firearms in his business as a crack dealer. The witness also testified that Rhea Goe continued to deliver cocaine to Sharon Daniels after Appellant’s arrest, disputing Goe’s testimony during the State’s case denying she was a cocaine dealer. On cross-examination, the State showed the witness was unaware Appellant had been arrested for firearms possession on a prior occasion.

ANALYSIS

¶ 14 In Proposition One, Appellant claims the District Court denied him compulsory process to obtain witnesses for his defense, in violation of Article II, § 20 of the Oklahoma Constitution. In Noel v. State, 1920 OK CR 55, 17 Okla.Crim. 308, 188 P.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2008 OK CR 25, 191 P.3d 601, 2008 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 23, 2008 WL 3310380, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/young-v-state-oklacrimapp-2008.