OPINION OF THE COURT BY CHIEF JUSTICE MINTON.
A circuit court jury convicted Cole Douglas Ross of murder and first-degree arson for killing Keith Colston and burning down the trailer where he lived. The jury recommended a life sentence for each conviction to be served concurrently. The trial court accepted that recommendation and sentenced Ross accordingly. Ross appeals the resulting judgment as a matter of right.
Ross raises five arguments on appeal. He claims the trial court erred by: (1) allowing the Commonwealth to use its peremptory challenges to strike female jurors over a Batson challenge; (2) admitting gruesome photographs of the victim's body depicting injuries he did not cause; (3) allowing the Commonwealth to admit a television purported to belong to Ross without first laying a proper foundation; (4) denying him access to exculpatory evidence contained in the psychotherapy records of witness Tonya Simmons, thereby limiting his ability to cross-examine her on those topics; and (5) rendering the trial fundamentally unfair due to cumulative error.
We conclude that the trial court erred in its application of Batson and impermissibly allowed the Commonwealth to use its peremptory challenges to dismiss jurors on the basis of gender. Because such an error is of constitutional and structural magnitude, we reverse Ross's convictions and remand for further proceedings. We analyze the remaining issues only insofar as they are likely to recur in the event of retrial.
Ross moved in with his friends Keith and Lisa Colston when he could no longer
On the day of Keith Colston's death, Ross spent the morning running errands with his former girlfriend, Tonya Simmons, and her two grandchildren. They made multiple stops in Mayfield, Kentucky, and Paducah, Kentucky, with the latest receipt showing a purchase time of 11:15 a.m. Simmons then dropped off Ross at the Colstons' trailer.
According to Simmons, Ross then asked her to buy him beer. When she returned to the trailer with the beer, which was purchased at 12:54 p.m., she parked her vehicle and approached the separate entrance into Ross's room. On her way, she noticed the trunk to Ross's car was open and linens and other of Ross's belongings were packed inside. Upon reaching the backdoor, Simmons noticed a fire inside the trailer and heard Colston screaming for help. Ross pushed Simmons away from the door and assured her he would help Colston.
Allayed by Ross's reassurances, Simmons returned to the front of the trailer. She saw Ross reach out the front door, grab two full bottles of charcoal lighter fluid from the porch, and reenter the trailer. Colston's screams for help still echoed outside, and Simmons retreated to her car in a panic to call 911 and report the trailer fire. Simmons's report of the fire came in at 1:14 p.m. Ross then emerged from the trailer, got in his car, and left the scene before emergency responders arrived. Simmons followed suit and went to the hospital because she promised to pick up her niece and sister following an outpatient procedure.
Ross's version of events is different. According to the statement Ross gave to investigators at the scene, after running errands he left the trailer to buy beer, and he did so at 1:41 p.m. He claims he had not seen Colston since eight or nine that morning, and did not find out about the fire until Lisa Colston called him. He then went to Lisa's grandmother's home to console Lisa and other family members because they had been informed of Colston's body found in the burnt remains of her trailer. Ross and Lisa later returned to the trailer to meet with investigators.
Simmons intended to contact police to explain what she witnessed at the Colstons' trailer following her niece's discharge from the hospital. But she was prevented from doing so by Ross, who appeared at Simmons's sister's house when Simmons was dropping her off. Ross followed Simmons for the rest of the day to ensure she did not contact police. Two days after the incident, the weight of what she had witnessed became too much for Simmons to handle, and she went to the hospital because of anxiety. Once there, she informed the doctor she had witnessed a murder and later gave her version of the events to the police.
Colston's body was found severely burnt, lying face up in the hallway of the trailer. It was explained at trial that this body position was inconsistent with death by smoke inhalation because most such victims are found positioned face down. The medical examiner also testified that the carbon monoxide level in Colston's body at the time of his death-14.8 percent — was too low to be fatal absent contributing circumstances. Arson investigators were able to obtain samples of the carpet and subfloor that were preserved from fire damage underneath Colston's
Ross was indicted for murder and first-degree arson in the aftermath of the fire. His first trial in 2011 resulted in a mistrial because of a hung jury. At this, the second trial, the jury convicted Ross of all charges and recommended a life sentence for each crime, to be served concurrently. The trial court entered judgment consistent with this recommendation. This appeal involves only the second trial and the resulting judgment.
The Commonwealth used two of its nine peremptory challenges to strike African-American jurors, one male and one female. Ross invoked Batson and challenged those strikes as racially discriminatory. The Commonwealth justified the strike of the African-American male by explaining the Commonwealth had prosecuted his brother in the past and that there was another case then pending against the brother in which the juror was a victim and potential witness. As justification for striking the African-American female, in a moment of surprising candor and with his hand raised as if swearing an oath, the prosecutor stated: "In all honesty, I was striking women." The African-American female juror in question was immediately returned to the venire.
Ross then made another Batson motion, this time challenging the Commonwealth's use of peremptory challenges to strike female jurors. Seven of the Commonwealth's nine peremptory challenges were used to remove women from the venire. The Commonwealth's justification for these strikes ranged from a juror "waffling" to the prosecutor having previously represented the juror's ex-husband in their contentious divorce. After hearing the Commonwealth's justifications and Ross's responses, the trial court found the Commonwealth's proffered rationales to be gender neutral and nonpretextual. As a result, the trial court denied Ross's Batson motion. The struck females were dismissed from the panel, the jury was impaneled, and the trial began.
Ross challenges the denial of his gender-based Batson motion on appeal. He frames the issue as one of mixed justification where the Commonwealth has provided both permissible, gender-neutral rationales and impermissible, discriminatory justifications for the exercise of its peremptory challenges. This is an area rife with competing analyses for deciding Batson challenges when presented with both neutral and discriminatory justifications for the exercise of peremptory challenges. The competition between these alternative tests is underlined by a split between the federal circuit courts of appeal applying the mixed-motives analysis
We find a fatal flaw in the trial court's Batson analysis at a juncture that precludes framing of this issue as one of dual motives. We find that the second prong of Batson — where the Commonwealth is required to provide a nondiscriminatory basis for its use of peremptory strikes — was not satisfied. Because we conclude that the Commonwealth did not meet its burden of offering a gender-neutral justification for its strikes, we cannot rightfully treat this as a mixed justification case because there are not permissible and impermissible justifications to be weighed.
The use of peremptory challenges to remove jurors from the venire on the basis of race or gender violates the Equal Protection Clause of the Constitution.
A trial court's decision on a Batson challenge is given great deference on appellate review because the trial court's analysis will be based upon issues "peculiarly within the trial judge's province,"
The first step under the Batson analysis requires the party invoking Batson
Here, Ross's prima facie showing of gender discrimination was presented to him on a silver platter by the Commonwealth. The Commonwealth's candid admission that it was striking female jurors is sufficient to satisfy Batson's first step. This admission notwithstanding, the Commonwealth made statements during voir dire, which — when viewed in light of its disproportionate use of peremptory challenges against women — is sufficient to allow an inference of gender discrimination. During jury selection, the Commonwealth explained to the venire that its main witness was a woman and, ostensibly fearing a female juror's unfavorable view of her credibility, opined:
Seven of the Commonwealth's nine peremptory strikes were used to remove those prospective jurors the Commonwealth was most worried about being "hard on" its star witness: women.
The trial court could reasonably infer a discriminatory intent behind the Commonwealth's challenged strikes; a prima facie case of gender discrimination was shown.
Once the defendant has made a prima facie showing of discrimination the burden shifts to the Commonwealth to provide a neutral, nondiscriminatory rationale for its use of peremptory challenges. At this stage, the proffered justification need not be convincing, nor "persuasive, or even plausible."
"Unless a discriminatory intent is inherent in the prosecutor's explanation, the reason offered will be deemed race or gender neutral."
We need not delve into and analyze the sufficiency of the gender-neutral bases for all of the Commonwealth's challenged strikes because we find the reasoning given for two of the prospective female jurors to be insufficient to satisfy Batson's second step. This conclusion is dispositive of the issue; and, therefore, we do not engage in a moot analysis of the remaining strikes.
Ms. G and Ms. C were the last two of the six female veniremembers subject to Ross's Batson challenge
Similar to the "prosecutor's instinct" justification we very recently discussed in Johnson v. Commonwealth, we find that the Commonwealth's "proffered statements are really no reason or explanation at all."
Justifications as vague as the Commonwealth's "I picked the jurors I liked and struck the rest" rationale, without more, are equally conducive to discriminatory selection of male jurors as those the Commonwealth "likes" — effectively shrouding the impermissible use of strikes as a vague strawman — as it is to the non-discriminatory justification that the Commonwealth preferred jurors having blue-collar backgrounds or a grasp of the relevant geographic area.
For a rationale that is subjective and internal to the prosecutor, i.e., "I chose the jurors I liked and struck the rest," to satisfy the second prong of Batson, the rationale "must be clear and reasonably specific such that the opponent of the challenge has a full and fair opportunity to demonstrate pretext in the reason given
We conclude that the Commonwealth's provided gender-neutral rationale for striking Ms. G and Ms. C was neither specific enough nor clear enough to provide Ross and the trial court the opportunity to challenge and weigh the reason as pretext. So the Commonwealth's proffered justification fails to satisfy Batson's second prong. As a result, the trial court's acceptance of, and ultimate reliance on, the Commonwealth's provided explanation is unsupported by sound legal principles,
During the firefighters' evacuation of the remains of the Colstons' trailer, Colston's body was injured, ripping the abdomen and exposing the intestines. This unfortunate injury was reflected in pictures introduced into evidence by the Commonwealth to accompany the testimony of the medical examiner and the arson investigator. Ross contends that the pictures showing Colston's exposed intestines are inadmissible because the injury causing their exposure was unrelated to the crime and cannot be attributed to him.
The general "inclusionary thrust" of our rules of evidence renders all relevant evidence admissible unless excluded by evidentiary rule.
The task of weighing the probative value and undue prejudice of proffered evidence is inherently factual and, therefore, within the discretion of the trial court.
"The general rule is that a photograph, otherwise admissible, does not become inadmissible simply because it is gruesome and the crime is heinous."
The probative value of the admitted photographs is high because their introduction was aimed at showing more than identity of the victim and a depiction of the crime scene.
Turning to the undue prejudice caused by the introduction of the photographs, that they are grotesque is clear. They depict the dead body of Keith Colston, charred nearly beyond recognition as a human corpse with the intestines protruding from his abdomen, lying on the floor among the charred debris that once constituted his home. It is likewise beyond cavil
The present case is also distinguishable from the decomposition-mutilation cases Ross cites as authority in arguing that the photographs are inadmissible. In the cases cited by Ross, the level of mutilation or decomposition the corpse suffered was significantly more severe and, thus, more gruesome than the isolated injury afflicted upon Colston's corpse.
We conclude that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in holding that the probative value of the photographs was not substantially outweighed by the danger of undue prejudice in admitting a limited number of photographs depicting Colston's exposed organs. To be clear, we simply conclude that the admission of the photographs was not an abuse of discretion given the circumstances of Ross's trial. On remand, the trial court is free to exercise its discretion regarding the admissibility of the photographs at future proceedings, especially if a change in circumstance mandates such.
Ross had his own flat-screen television in his bedroom while living in the Colstons'
Ross asserts the Commonwealth did not lay a proper evidentiary foundation to prove that the television introduced at trial was actually his and, if it were his, that it had not been altered or repaired as to vitiate any fire-related damage the television may have suffered. We review issues of evidentiary foundation for abuse of discretion.
The foundational requirement for admission of real, tangible evidence is governed by KRE 901(a): "The requirement of authentication or identification as a condition precedent to admissibility is satisfied by evidence sufficient to support a finding that the matter in question is what its proponent claims."
Ross first claims that the Commonwealth provided an insufficient foundation to establish that the television entered into evidence was the same television Ross had in the Colstons' trailer. Evidence need not be collected by a testifying eyewitness to satisfy KRE 901(a).
The Commonwealth presented evidence that Detective Jones collected the television from a pawn shop after having been informed that Ross pawned it. The presence of Ross's television at the pawn shop was corroborated by Tonya Simmons's testimony that she had accompanied Ross to the pawn shop to borrow money against his television after the fire. Lisa Colston also testified that, although she could not remember the brand of the television Ross had in her home, she thought the television presented by the Commonwealth was Ross's because of its size and shape and the distinctive DVD player built into the side of the television. In light of this evidence, we conclude the Commonwealth has sufficiently linked the television it offered
While Ross is correct that testimony from the owner of the pawn shop further linking the television to Ross would strengthen the Commonwealth's foundation and chain of custody, it is not necessary for admission of the television. KRE 901(a) does not require an impenetrable and unbroken chain of custody to allow admission of real evidence. "Any gaps [in the chain of custody] go to the weight, rather than the admissibility of the evidence."
Ross next challenges the Commonwealth's evidence that the television was not materially altered between the trailer fire and its introduction at trial. He claims the Commonwealth put the television's condition into issue by arguing that because the television was not damaged or destroyed in the trailer fire, it tends to show Ross's intent to set the fire because he removed his belongings, including his television, from the trailer before it burned. Without persuasive proof that the television had not undergone repairs for fire-related damage, i.e., material alteration, Ross argues, the Commonwealth has failed to assure the integrity of the television, thus, rendering it inadmissible.
Real evidence is only admissible if there is a "reasonable probability that the evidence has not been altered in any material respect since the time of the crime."
The Commonwealth produced persuasive evidence that Ross removed his television from the trailer before it burned. The Commonwealth produced evidence showing that Ross's television was not in the trailer when the investigators arrived on the scene. And, according to Simmons, she noticed Ross had packed some of his belongings into his car before the fire started. Although Simmons's testimony did not specifically mention the television packed in Ross's vehicle, she testified that Ross had the television in his possession following the fire.
Most importantly, however, is that Ross makes no affirmative allegations that the television had been subjected to damage, repair, or subject to tampering. "[S]peculation is not enough to destroy integrity."
This is not a case where no attempt is made to prove a chain of custody,
Lastly, Ross argues that the trial court improperly limited his access to Simmons's medical records, specifically those relevant to her use of Valium and treatment of any psychosis. Because of this limitation, Ross further argues he was denied his constitutional rights to cross-examination and to present a defense.
Before trial, Ross moved the court for discovery of Simmons's medical and mental health records pertaining to her psychological treatment and a KASPER
In challenging the trial court's limitation on discovery and claiming that the trial court erred by impermissibly providing him with less discovery than he was entitled to, Ross stresses the importance of Simmons's credibility at trial. Both parties agree that Simmons was the Commonwealth's "star witness" and the only one whose testimony definitively places Ross at the crime scene with lighter fluid in his hands. Accordingly, Ross takes the position that information pertaining to Simmons's mental health and therapeutic use of prescription medication has a significant impact on Simmons's credibility at trial. He further notes that a witness's capacity to "observe, recollect, and narrate an occurrence is a proper subject of inquiry on cross-examination,"
Criminal defendants are entitled to compulsory process to obtain psychotherapy records of a crucial prosecution witness if those records contain exculpatory evidence, including evidence impacting
After review of the psychotherapy records included in the record under seal, we hold that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in concluding that the undiscovered portion of Simmons's records were not exculpatory.
Having concluded that the trial court did not err in its limitation of Ross's ability to discover Simmons's psychotherapy records, we must likewise conclude that Ross was not impermissibly denied his ability to cross-examine her or his ability to present a defense. The Constitution "guarantees only `an opportunity for effective cross-examination, not cross-examination that is effective in whatever way, and to whatever extent the defense may wish.'"
On remand, the trial court need not disclose further portions of Simmons's psychotherapy records that are currently under seal in the record and is not required to allow more expansive cross-examination in the event of retrial.
For the foregoing reasons, we conclude that the trial court abused its discretion in denying Ross's Batson challenge, thereby violating his right to due process and equal protection of the law. So we are constrained to reverse his convictions and remand the case to the trial court for a disposition consistent with this opinion.
Minton, C.J.; Abramson, Cunningham, Keller, Noble, and Venters, JJ., sitting. All concur.