STATE OF MICHIGAN
COURT OF APPEALS
PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF MICHIGAN, UNPUBLISHED
March 24, 2015
Plaintiff-Appellee,
v No. 316332
Gogebic Circuit Court
KENNETH WAYNE PETERS, LC No. 2012-000215-FC
Defendant-Appellant.
Before: RONAYNE KRAUSE, P.J., and K. F. KELLY and STEPHENS, JJ.
PER CURIAM.
Defendant, Kenneth Wayne Peters, appeals by right his convictions by a jury of one
count each of first-degree premeditated murder, MCL 750.316(1)(a), first-degree felony murder,
MCL 750.316(1)(b), second-degree murder, MCL 750.317, and second-degree abuse of a
vulnerable adult, MCL 750.145n(2). The trial court sentenced defendant to mandatory life
imprisonment for first-degree murder1 and to a concurrent term of 58 months to 15 years as a
habitual offender for second-degree abuse of a vulnerable adult. This matter arises out of the
death of the victim, EGP, defendant’s wife who was 78 years old, 27 years his senior. EGP was
suffering from early dementia. We affirm.
The victim’s decomposed body was found in a wooded area in Watersmeet, Michigan, 48
miles from her home with potentially-debilitating drugs in her body for which she had no
prescription but defendant was known to possess and use to control her. No direct evidence
established that he murdered the victim, but considerable circumstantial evidence showed that he
drove her to the woods and left her there with the reasonable expectation that she would not
survive. Defendant asserts that the evidence was insufficient and that the trial court erred by
admitting evidence of prior acts of domestic violence he perpetrated against the victim and
against two of his former relationship partners. Due to the nature of the proofs in this matter and
defendant’s contention that the evidence was insufficient, we must necessarily recite the facts at
some length.
1
By agreement, his first-degree murder convictions were merged and his second-degree murder
conviction set aside to avoid a double jeopardy violation.
-1-
The victim’s first husband died in 2006, and shortly thereafter, the victim deeded her
home, which was her only real asset, to herself and her daughter Milia jointly. Defendant met
the victim in late 2010 through the snow plowing service he ran, and the two of them bonded
over a love of NASCAR. Defendant moved in with her in mid-2011. According to defendant,
they were always just friends, although others described the victim as resembling “a teenager in
love.” According to defendant, the victim was concerned about the possibility of her children
putting her in a nursing home, although the victim’s children testified that they never considered,
or even discussed, any such possibility. Defendant testified that at the time he moved in, he was
aware that Milia’s name was on the deed to the house. However, he also testified, and numerous
other witnesses confirmed that defendant had previously told them, that he and the victim had
entered into a deal under which he would keep her from being put in a home and she would leave
the house to him. Witnesses confirmed that defendant had indicated to them that he expected to
receive the house from the victim.
Defendant testified that the victim had always been “a little forgetful,” but he initially
believed it to be “no big deal,” and she could take care of herself other than some cooking tasks
that defendant performed. It appears from the testimony that defendant and the victim were
fairly social and had frequent visitors; otherwise, defendant lived in the basement of the victim’s
house and each of them did their “own thing.” Shortly after the marriage, defendant travelled to
Iowa for work, although he contended that he kept in daily contact with the victim. He emailed
the victim a will that he drafted for her to sign, but she never signed it. In late 2011, the victim
ran short of money because she sent defendant several hundred dollars to enable him to return to
Michigan; a police officer and a social worker visited the victim and found her utilities cut off
and a person who was apparently defendant’s half-brother living there under an obligation to pay
rent.
The victim indicated at the time that defendant was still in Iowa, but it later turned out
that he had been in the basement. Defendant eventually turned himself in to the police for
unpaid fines due to a prior DUI, and he spent thirty days in jail until mid-December of 2011,
when he was released because he needed hernia surgery. While in jail, defendant discussed with
a witness who was incarcerated with him his deal to acquire the victim’s house, and also that “if
you wanted to get rid of somebody that he could bring them out to the woods, bury (sic) a deep
enough hole, and they’d never be found.” Another witness lived with defendant and the victim
in early 2012, while defendant was recovering from his hernia surgery, and testified that at some
point in February, spoke about a Discovery Channel show which indicated how long it would
take for a body in a hole to decompose in the woods.
Defendant testified that he believed the victim’s memory problems got worse while he
was in Iowa, and in January of 2012, he took her to a doctor, who diagnosed the victim with
some mild cognitive impairment. Defendant testified that he learned that the victim had been
diagnosed with dementia approximately five years previously, contrary to the doctor, who
testified that he had only seen the victim once previously for blood pressure and to wean herself
off of pain medicine. Defendant contacted the Upper Peninsula Commission for Area Progress
(UPCAP), which assessed the victim and found her eligible for care assistance on the basis of
moderate cognitive impairment, although the registered nurse who participated in the assessment
noted that most of the information UPCAP received came from defendant. Numerous care
workers from UPCAP visited the victim between the February 2012 assessment and the day she
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went missing. For the most part, they consistently reported that the victim appeared reasonably
happy and well-treated by defendant, although as time went on, she occasionally reported that
defendant may have raised his voice at her or crossed his arms and treated her “like a baby.”
Some of them were uncomfortable around defendant, and one indicated that the victim reported
frustration and irritation with defendant acting controlling and drinking too much.
One of the care workers, with whom defendant developed a personal friendship, testified
that defendant repeatedly complained to her that the victim’s condition was growing worse and
more frustrating. This care worker also testified that defendant stated that he “‘could just drop
her off in the woods and leave her there’” and that no matter how tough she was, she would not
survive “‘if [he] dig[s] the hole deep enough and she meets the end of my shovel.’” She also
testified that at one point, defendant explicitly told her that he was giving Ativan pills to the
victim to make her sleep.2 Another of defendant’s social acquaintances also testified that
defendant told her that he gave the victim six or seven Ativan pills to make her sleep. A visitor
of defendant’s shortly before the victim’s disappearance discovered a large number of Ativan
pills in defendant’s bathroom. The victim’s doctor testified that on April 16, 2012, defendant left
him a telephone message saying that he felt he could no longer care for the victim due to her
mental changes.
The next day, one of the other care workers observed that the victim had a scrape and
bruising to her head and a black eye; the victim initially stated that she tripped and fell but
provided two versions of how and stated that no one had done it to her. Defendant appeared
agitated and stated that he had documentation showing that he was taking good care of her. Yet
another care worker observed later that month that the victim had some bruising, and defendant
claimed that the victim had been wearing the wrong glasses and fell. It is seemingly undisputed
that she received the black eye during a camping excursion in Watersmeet on the wooded
property belonging to Rebecca Risley and her boyfriend Daniel Cartner,3 but although several
witnesses were present, none actually saw her fall other, apparently, than defendant. One
witness opined that defendant had shoved the victim and he observed that defendant “used to
shove [The victim] a lot.” He also testified that on one occasion, he saw defendant hit the victim
with a nonfunctional chainsaw. Another witness expressed confusion as to how the victim could
have fallen. Nonetheless, no witnesses testified that the victim had ever reported to them any
physical violence by defendant.
In July of 2012, the victim visited a local attorney and brought with her two incomplete
handwritten documents purporting to be a will naming defendant as her personal representative
and sole beneficiary, which the victim professed to be confused by. The attorney advised her
that it was important for her to make up her own mind and have the assistance of an attorney, and
he had no further contact with her. Another of defendant’s social acquaintances testified that
2
Ativan is a brand name for the drug Lorazepam, a benzodiazepine class drug; it can be used as
an anti-anxiety medicine, an anti-convulsive medicine, or as a sedative or tranquilizer. It is only
available by prescription, and the victim did not have a prescription for it.
3
The victim’s body would eventually be found near their property.
-3-
during a visit in August of 2012, defendant would show him “two pieces of paper that was [sic]
supposedly a last will and testament of The victim” that would give defendant “her benefits.”
UPCAP re-assessed the victim on August 1, 2012, and found defendant to be “very
upset” and of the opinion that the “deal” he had with her to care for her in exchange for the house
was not being honored, and he was no longer able to deal with caring for her. Defendant “was
rather in a foul mood” and apparently had just found out that “the house wasn’t in his name or
whatever.” The victim appeared nervous. The UPCAP workers advised defendant that he could
get the marriage annulled, leave, or put the victim in a nursing home; defendant replied that he
would have no income and no place to live.
Later that day, defendant called the emergency line reporting that the victim was dizzy
and bumping into things and needed an ambulance. Police and paramedics responded and took
her to the hospital in an ambulance, along with a suitcase full of medications that defendant
pointed out to them. Responders also noted that defendant appeared concerned about the victim
but that he referred to himself as her caretaker rather than her husband. The emergency room
doctor ran a number of standard tests and assessed the victim as “a relatively well looking 79-
year-old lady” with no particular discomfort or specific issues other than “minimal” dementia,
and he ultimately discharged her as having no discernible issues that would warrant hospital
admission. He noted, however, that he found the suitcase full of medications surprising and
impressive, even for a doctor with a considerable amount of experience. He opined that nothing
about the victim suggested an overdose. The next day, two witnesses who were visiting
defendant independently heard defendant remark that he would not be surprised if the victim did
not fall down the stairs and break a hip.
On August 3, 2012, defendant called the local Citizens Bank claiming that his mother had
just gotten out of the hospital and he was seeking to cash his mother’s Social Security check.
Defendant had an overdrawn personal savings account at the bank. The bank ultimately
permitted him to cash $100 from the victim’s check, but it required him to deposit the rest. The
worker with whom defendant had a friendship drove him to the bank, and subsequently to a
convenience store and Walmart; she testified that he was drinking gin from a purple coffee mug
at the time. She testified that defendant “had stated many times that he was frustrated with the
victim’s condition” but on the drive to the bank, he “said that he was getting so frustrated with
the victim, um, with her being forgetful, that he had said to me, ‘I am just so frustrated. I could
just drop her off in the woods and leave her there.’” The worker did not take him seriously and
suggested that the victim was sufficiently tough to make it through something like that, to which
defendant replied, “not if I dig the hole deep enough and she meets the end of my shovel” and “if
you cover it with limestone then dogs can’t smell it.”
Meanwhile that day, the victim visited a credit union where she was a member and talked
to an employee there, who recalled that the victim had an outstanding loan and that she
complained that “everybody around [her]” told her she had dementia and that her husband had a
“man cave” in the basement into which she was not allowed; the employee opined that the victim
appeared somewhat bothered by defendant living in her house. That afternoon, the victim
walked into the law offices of McKenzie and Talaska, where she was greeted by their
receptionist, who talked with her for about half an hour. The receptionist testified that she
appeared nervous and confused, and she expressed concern that defendant wanted to take
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everything and put her in a nursing home, and he had already hidden her keys and all forms of
identification.
That evening, a neighbor observed the victim’s green truck, being driven by the victim
with a man the neighbor presumed to be defendant in the passenger seat, drive west on US 2
toward Ironwood, some time before it was fully dark out. A worker at the Bessemer British
Petroleum (BP) station observed the victim drive her truck into the lot between 7:30 p.m. and
8:00 p.m., where the victim and defendant switched seats, and drive away in the direction of
Watersmeet, which was about 45 miles away. The video surveillance system at the station
recorded the exchange and confirmed the time. That was the last time the victim was seen alive.
Defendant testified that he had proposed to the victim that they go for a ride to drive past
some retirement homes and that he and they usually switched seats in that manner because a
neighbor who knew he did not have a valid license would call the police on him if he was
driving. He estimated that they returned to the victim’s home at about 9:00 p.m. Defendant left
the victim in her chair, where he set out some coffee and goulash for her, to go camping. He
testified that he camped in the back of the truck on the Black River and got somewhat wet
because there was a thunderstorm that night and the tarp he put over the truck bed developed a
hole. He testified that when he returned home, the victim was not in her chair, so defendant
initially assumed she was in her bedroom, but she proved not to be when he later attempted to
ask her if she wanted breakfast. He then began looking for her.
Meanwhile, Risley and Cartner were staying at the Advance Motel in Ironwood; they
checked in on August 1 and would not check out until August 8. The neighbor who lived next
door to Cartner’s cottage in Watersmeet testified that a dark pickup truck pulled into Cartner’s
driveway at 8:30 to 9:00 p.m. on August 3. At around 11:00 p.m., he noticed a large bonfire
going on the Cartner property despite knowing that Cartner had not been there for several days.
He could not see anybody, just the fire and the truck, and by the morning, the truck was gone.
Cartner testified that when he later returned to his cottage, he noticed that the fire pit had been
used, a log he had been saving had been burned, and there was garbage on the lawn that included
a milk carton and a cup that they threw away. Risley further stated that the mug was a purple
coffee travel mug with a black top and a black bottom that had some kind of sweet drink left in
it, and she kept it for a few days before throwing it out because she intended to wash it. She
further testified that her and Cartner’s initial thought was that the only person of whom they were
aware who was familiar with the fire pit and area who had a vehicle was defendant, but they
believed he would not have come out without letting them know.
Various witnesses in various locations testified that defendant showed up looking for the
victim, although defendant expressed an opinion that she was “‘probably off on one of her
sprees.’” One witness noted that the victim “never went on her little sprees at night” and called
the police. The dispatcher who took the call checked with the hospital and found that the victim
was not there; on the basis of what she learned from that witness, “previous contacts we had with
both the victim and [defendant] over the last few months,” and defendant advising her that he did
not intend to make a missing person’s report, she entered the victim into the police computer
system as a missing senior at 2:59 am on August 5. Later that day, a witness heard defendant say
something about wanting to make a body disappear, but the witness dismissed it as bluster.
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An extensive, multi-jurisdictional search operation was commenced over several days,
including the use of two bloodhounds. Defendant was interviewed by the police; during the
interview, defendant opined that the victim was unlikely to have gone to the Watersmeet area,
and he got more unresponsive to questions that got closer to involving Watersmeet. Ultimately,
the victim’s body was discovered by accident by Risley when she drove a four-wheeler down a
path from their cottage after dark. When she got to a turnaround, on the path, she “saw
something . . . white and bloated and so I did not recognize that it was a person,” which “freaked
[her] out.” After determining that they had found a body, Risley and a friend went to the nearest
house and called 911. Subsequent bloodhound investigation of the scene determined that
defendant had been in the area and left by vehicle, although it was possible that the dog could
have picked up a scent from as much as six to ten weeks previously. The dog tracked the
victim’s path as well and determined that she had wandered around the area in circles, down a
ravine, and into underbrush.
Subsequent forensic investigation revealed that the victim’s body had been there for at
least a week, but no evidence of trauma or heart attack and no alcohol that could not be attributed
to the decomposition process. It also revealed detectible levels of several drugs, including
Ativan. The amount of Ativan in the victim’s body at the time of her death was well below a
therapeutic dose, but depending on how long she had been wandering between ingesting it and
her death, the initial dose could have been anywhere from 220 ng/ml to 750 ng/ml. A
therapeutic dose was 140 to 240 ng/ml and a likely-fatal dose would be in excess of 1000 ng/ml.
The victim was determined to have died of hypothermia some time between August 3 and
August 5, 2012.
On August 14, 2012, defendant was re-interviewed at the victim’s home, where he stated
that he had left between 6:00 and 7:00 pm, leaving the victim in her chair, possibly gotten gas,
but otherwise then drove directly to Black River, camped there overnight, and returned home
between 5:00 and 6:00 am to discover the victim missing. The police explained to defendant that
they had video evidence proving otherwise, which defendant denied. Defendant was then
informed that the victim had been found and was deceased. Defendant opined that he had no
idea how she could have gotten there, her only possible transportation being UPCAP workers,
himself, or possibly a neighbor; he did not suggest the possibility that she had driven herself.
Furthermore, he suggested that perhaps she had walked off into the woods, at which time it was
pointed out that woods had not been mentioned. Defendant initially protested that they had told
him that she was found in the woods, however then stated that the officers had stated she was
found on Beaver Station Road and he knew there was “nothing but woods out there.” The
officers also presented evidence of the purple mug. Defendant was arrested.
Defendant’s cellmate in early December of 2012 became “intrigued” by defendant’s case.
The cellmate testified that defendant ultimately confessed that he had made a “couple mistakes”
and there was “some evidence that’s real damning to the case that [he wanted] [the cellmate] to
help [him] out with.” Defendant specifically identified the BP video and his purple mug, and he
wanted help fabricating an alibi in the form of an anonymous letter claiming to be from someone
who picked the victim up at the Citgo station in Bessemer and took her to Watersmeet at her
request. Defendant typed up a couple of letters for the cellmate to send, but instead of
memorizing and disposing of the letters, he kept them and carried them out of jail. Defendant
admitted that he wrote the letters, and he testified that he did so because he was scared and
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believed that the police were fabricating evidence against him. The cellmate also testified that
defendant directly admitted to him that he drove the victim to Watersmeet and left her, although
insisting that he did so out of frustration and being drunk rather than wanting the victim to die.
Defendant testified that he never confessed anything.
Over defendant’s objection, testimony of three prior incidents of domestic violence he
perpetrated were introduced into evidence. The first incident involved the victim’s black eye,
discussed supra. The second incident involved a former relationship partner who also used to
work with defendant and lived with him in early January of 2010. She described defendant as
abusive and controlling to the point of forbidding her from having a phone, talking to anyone, or
even seeing her son. She testified that he would smash any phone she had and yell at or hit her if
she had anything to do with her child. He took all of the checks she earned from her full-time
job at Bessemer Plywood, and he did not pay her for the work she did for him. She explained
that she “was young and dumb at the time” but “grew up and [knew] better than to get in those
kinds of relationships; eventually she headbutted him, causing him some considerable injury
despite the fact that she was only 102 pounds and 21 at the time, and she subsequently threatened
to shoot him if he attempted to contact her. However, she noted that he had previously
threatened “that if [she] didn’t do what he wanted that he’d kill [her] and get rid of [her]
somehow or another,” which she took to be a serious threat.
Third, Risley testified that she and defendant had been in a relationship and resided
together between 2007 and 2009. She stated that at the beginning, their relationship “seemed all
great and wonderful” and defendant “just seemed like just the sweetest person and just, gosh,
pretty much everything that anybody would want in an individual, a really good talker” but
degenerated into a jealous and extremely controlling person. She noted that he was extremely
verbally abusive, that she “lost two jobs because of him stalking [her] and hounding [her] at
work and not leaving [her] alone and leaving [her] alone on the phones even when [she] was
with him”. She testified that it also got “extremely physical,” including slapping her across the
face, throwing her to the ground, and choking her. Eventually on one occasion she succeeded in
“grabb[ing] him by his private parts” and biting him on the arm and running away; on that
occasion she called the police, which ultimately resulted in defendant pleading guilty to a charge
and spending six months in jail. She testified that even into 2012, he continued pursuing her and
“would get mean” when she ignored his calls, something that “never stopped since the day that I
met him.” A mutual acquaintance testified that defendant “was always wanting to call [Risley],
talk to her, see her. I guess you could call it stalking. I’m not sure, but he was always trying to
keep in contact with her.”
Among other arguments, defendant asserted that he had no motive to kill the victim,
knowing he would be immediately evicted from the house and having no other source of income.
The jury found defendant guilty as described supra. This appeal followed.
We review a challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence de novo. People v Meissner,
294 Mich App 438, 452; 812 NW2d 37 (2011). In reviewing a challenge to the sufficiency of
the evidence supporting a criminal conviction, we consider the evidence presented to the jury in
the light most favorable to the prosecution, including any circumstantial evidence or reasonable
inferences, to determine whether the trier of fact could find therefrom that all of the essential
elements of the charged offense were proven beyond a reasonable doubt. People v Williams, 294
-7-
Mich App 461, 471; 811 NW2d 88 (2011). In making that review, we may not independently
weigh the evidence or attempt to evaluate the credibility of witnesses or otherwise purport to
determine whether the trier of fact should find the evidence sufficient, but rather only whether
the trier of fact could so find. See People v Palmer, 392 Mich 370, 375-377; 220 NW2d 393
(1974). “All conflicts in the evidence must be resolved in favor of the prosecution.” People v
Kanaan, 278 Mich App 594, 619; 751 NW2d 57 (2008). “Circumstantial evidence and
reasonable inferences arising from the evidence may be sufficient to prove the elements of a
crime.” People v Lugo, 214 Mich App 699, 710; 542 NW2d 921 (1995).
“In order to convict a defendant of first-degree murder, the prosecution must prove that
the defendant intentionally killed the victim and that the act of killing was premeditated and
deliberate.” People v Kelly, 231 Mich App 627, 642; 588 NW2d 480 (1998). “The elements of
felony murder are (1) the killing of a human being, (2) with the intent to kill, to do great bodily
harm, or to create a very high risk of death or great bodily harm with knowledge that death or
great bodily harm was the probable result, (3) while committing, attempting to commit, or
assisting in the commission of any of the felonies specifically enumerated in [MCL §750.316].”
Id., 642-643. A defendant’s actions must be more than just the “but for” cause of the victim’s
death, but also the reasonably foreseeable natural result of the defendant’s actions. People v
Schaefer, 473 Mich 418, 435-439; 703 NW2d 774 (2005). The requisite specific intent to kill
may be inferred from circumstantial evidence or from a defendant’s conduct or words. People v
Mack, 112 Mich App 605, 611; 317 NW2d 190 (1981); People v Eggleston, 149 Mich App 665,
668; 386 NW2d 637 (1986).
Defendant, while asserting that he is in fact innocent, explicitly concedes that when the
evidence is viewed in the light most favorable to the prosecution, the evidence supports the jury
finding that he drove the victim to Watersmeet, contrary to his original narrative in which he
went camping and left her at home only to return to her missing. We agree with that concession
and would have so found had he not made it. Defendant does not explicitly concede, but by
necessary inference must, that the evidence therefore also supports a finding that he left the
victim in Watersmeet, as we also would have independently found. He argues that what is
lacking is sufficient evidence that he acted with the specific intent that the victim would die as a
result of his conduct. We disagree.
The victim had a non-negligible level of Ativan in her body, likely from ingesting a
significant dose thereof before she died. Notably, defendant had a significant quantity of Ativan
and an admitted propensity for giving it to the victim to control her behavior, and she had no
prescription for Ativan. The evidence strongly supports an inference that defendant gave Ativan
to the victim before abandoning her, at night in the woods. Defendant asserts that the time of
year and her warm clothing suggested that hypothermia was not a highly predictable manner of
death, but the exact manner of death need not be intended. An elderly person with early
dementia and disorienting drugs in her body, alone in unfamiliar deep woods in northern
Michigan at night can reasonably be predicted to have poor prospects for survival, particularly in
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light of the rainy weather at the time.4 Furthermore, defendant’s actions after abandoning the
victim, in which he put on a seemingly over-the-top dramatic performance of searching for her in
Bessemer and other places he knew she was not present and discouraging searches where he
knew she would be located, is strong evidence that defendant did, in fact, not only anticipate but
intend that the victim would not survive.
The evidence presented in this case may have spanned seventeen days of trial, but this is
at heart not a complicated case. The evidence of defendant’s involvement in and engineering of
the victim’s death need not all be direct, and murder need not be achieved with direct physical
violence. The evidence presented amply supports a finding beyond a reasonable doubt that
defendant drove the victim to the woods in Watersmeet, drugged her with possibly a near-fatal
dose of Ativan, and abandoned her with the intent and reasonable expectation that she would die
in there, irrespective of whether that death might occur due to hypothermia, the drugs or other
causes. Consequently, defendant’s first-degree murder conviction must be upheld.
Secondarily, defendant argues that the trial court should not have admitted the evidence
of his other acts of domestic violence. We disagree. The trial court’s decision whether to admit
evidence is reviewed for an abuse of discretion, but preliminary legal determinations of
admissibility are reviewed de novo. People v Gursky, 486 Mich 596, 606; 786 NW2d 579
(2010).
“Domestic violence” is defined, in relevant part, as causing physical or mental harm to a
spouse under circumstances not involving self-defense. See MCL 768.27b(5)(a)(i) and (b)(i).
Obviously, murdering one’s spouse would constitute an act of domestic violence. See People v
Wilson, 265 Mich App 386, 393; 695 NW2d 351 (2005) (“Domestic violence is not a specific
crime, but a description of circumstances surrounding a violent crime in which the perpetrator
and the victim have a preexisting relationship that may be categorized as a ‘domestic’
relationship”). Because defendant was charged with a crime “involving domestic violence,
evidence of the defendant's commission of other acts of domestic violence5 is admissible for any
purpose for which it is relevant, if it is not otherwise excluded under Michigan rule of evidence
403.” MCL 768.27b(1). Defendant properly does not attempt to argue that the evidence of his
prior acts of domestic violence were inadmissible under the statute, but rather that they should
have been inadmissible pursuant to MRE 403.
Pursuant to MRE 403, evidence that is otherwise admissible may be excluded if, in
relevant part, “its probative value is substantially outweighed by the danger of unfair prejudice.”
Defendant argues that the evidence here should not have been admitted because the acts of
4
It is a matter of common experience that clothing that is warm and insulative when dry will not
necessarily retain those qualities when wet, and the evidence did not suggest that the victim was
wearing any clothing appropriate for inclement weather.
5
Pursuant to MCL 768.27b(4), any such acts that occurred more than 10 years previously would
only be admissible if the trial court determines that doing so is in the interest of justice, but no
such older acts were at issue in this matter.
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domestic violence involving his prior relationship partners were very different from the alleged
acts of domestic violence against the victim and because the highly circumstantial nature of the
case against him made such inflammatory testimony unfairly damaging. Defendant also argues
that the trial court failed to apply People v Watkins, 491 Mich 450; 818 NW2d 296 (2012).
However, Watkins largely involved inquiring into whether MRE 403 applied to MCL 768.27a,
which, unlike MCL 768.27b, contained no explicit statutory requirement to that effect. See
Watkins, 491 Mich at 481-486. The trial court here considered MRE 403, so Watkins is
irrelevant except insofar as it provides a list of factors to consider when applying the rule of
evidence.
We anticipate little disagreement with the general principle that murdering someone is an
act of greater magnitude than beating someone. Both, however, are acts of serious physical
violence. Furthermore, even we presume they are dissimilar in some importantly relevant way,
dissimilarity is only a consideration, Watkins, 491 Mich at 487, however it is not preclusive.
People v Meissner, 294 Mich App 438, 451-452; 812 NW2d 37 (2011). Importantly, the
evidence of defendant’s prior domestic violence was not introduced in a particularly
inflammatory manner, but it was highly relevant to showing a pattern of behavior on defendant’s
part. In particular, it showed that defendant had a habit of presenting himself as a wonderful
human being to individuals who were not psychologically completely self-sufficient, becoming
parasitic and controlling, and becoming violent when frustrated. Although evidence that
defendant beat the victim was not overwhelming, there was ample evidence that he was
controlling, and his resort to violence to resolve his frustration was precisely what his charges in
the present case involved. Finally, the trial court emphasized to the jury that defendant was not
on trial for any other acts of domestic violence and must not be convicted on the basis of a
finding that he had perpetrated any such prior acts. The trial court did not abuse its discretion by
admitting the evidence.
Affirmed.
/s/ Amy Ronayne Krause
/s/ Kirsten Frank Kelly
/s/ Cynthia Diane Stephens
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