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RENDERED: JUNE 16, 2016
NOT TO BE PUBLISHED
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2014-SC-000406-MR
JEFFREY KINGDON APPELLANT
ON APPEAL FROM JEFFERSON CIRCUIT COURT
V. HONORABLE AUDRA JEAN ECKERLE, JUDGE
NO. 12-CR-002268
COMMONWEALTH OF KENTUCKY APPELLEE
MEMORANDUM OPINION OF THE COURT
AFFIRMING IN PART, REVERSING IN PART AND REMANDING
A jury in the Jefferson Circuit Court convicted Jeffrey Kingdon of
murder, first-degree wanton endangerment, and tampering with physical
evidence. Consistent with the jury's sentencing recommendations, the trial
court fixed his sentence at twenty-five years' imprisonment for murder, to be
served consecutively to a one-year sentence for wanton endangerment, for a
total of twenty-six years. The trial court fixed his sentence for tampering with
physical evidence at one-year imprisonment, to be served concurrently with the
twenty-six year sentence.
Kingdon now appeals as a matter of right, arguing that the trial court
erred by: (1) allowing testimony about his prior arrests; (2) denying a directed
verdict dismissing the wanton endangerment charge; (3) denying a directed
verdict dismissing the tampering with physical evidence charge; and (4) giving
initial aggressor and provocation qualification jury instructions. For the
reasons set forth below, we affirm the convictions for murder and wanton
endangerment, but we reverse the conviction for tampering with physical
evidence.
I. BACKGROUND
In the summer of 2012, Kingdon and his roommate, Martin Keehn, Jr.,
suspected that Rico Robinson had burglarized their apartment and stolen
money from them. Together with a friend named Carla Dowell, they decided to
confront Robinson as he rode on a Louisville TARC bus.' At the culmination of
a heated argument, Kingdon pulled a handgun from his waist and shot
Robinson in the head. Robinson died instantly, and Kingdon fled the bus with
the gun in hand. Alyssa Luckett, a passenger on the bus, was sitting within
feet of the altercation.
Kingdon was arrested two weeks later, but his gun was never recovered.
Two video cameras mounted inside the bus recorded the incident. At trial, the
Commonwealth played the video from those cameras for the jury. As part of
his defense, Kingdon testified that he saw Robinson reach into his own pants
and pull out what Kingdon believed was a gun. 2 Kingdon argued that he shot
Robinson first because he believed Robinson was about to shoot him. We set
forth additional facts as necessary below.
1 Transit Authority of River City (TARC) operates the public bus system in
Louisville.
2 Investigating police officers later confirmed Robinson's possession of a gun.
2
II. ANALYSIS
A. Testimony about Kingdon's prior police involvement was harmless
error.
Kingdon first contends that his murder conviction should be overturned
because the trial court allowed the Commonwealth to elicit testimony about his
prior arrests and encounters with law enforcement. The following exchange
occurred as the prosecutor cross-examined Kingdon at trial.
Prosecutor: You knew that all this time people were looking for you?
Kingdon: Yes, I did.
Prosecutor: That the police wanted to talk to you?
Kingdon: I did, but we didn't want to talk to any police by
ourselves, we'd never been in any situation like this
before, so we .. .
Prosecutor: What do you mean situation like this? You've never
talked to police before?
Kingdon: Not like an interrogation situation.
Prosecutor: You've never been questioned by police before?
Kingdon's counsel immediately objected and complained that the
Commonwealth was baiting Kingdon into disclosing evidence of his prior bad
acts in violation of Kentucky Rules of Evidence (KRE) 404(b). The trial court
ruled that Kingdon had "opened the door" to further questioning relating to his
prior involvement with law enforcement, and so Kingdon was forced to admit
his prior arrests.
The Commonwealth does not contend that Kingdon's testimony opened
the door for a general inquiry into his history of prior police encounters or
3
arrests. Instead, the Commonwealth asserts the error was harmless.
Kentucky Rule of Criminal Procedure (RCr) 9.24 provides in part: "The court at
every stage of the proceeding must disregard any error or defect in the
proceeding that does not affect the substantial rights of the parties."
We agree the evidence was improperly admitted, but we also agree that
the error was harmless. An error in the admission of evidence is harmless
under RCr 9.24 if we "can say with fair assurance that the judgment was not
substantially swayed by the error." Winstead v. Commonwealth, 283 S.W.3d
678, 689 (Ky. 2009) (citation omitted).
The fleeting reference to Kingdon's prior involvement with police was of
minimal significance in the trial. In light of the fact that the jury saw an actual
video recording of the crime as it occurred, including the confrontation and
Kingdon's sudden act of raising his gun and shooting Robinson in the head, we
conclude without hesitation that this brief and vague reference to Kingdon's
prior encounters with police was harmless. Thus we affirm Kingdon's murder
conviction.
B. Kingdon was not entitled to a directed verdict on the wanton
endangerment charge.
Kingdon argues that the trial court erred by failing to grant a directed
verdict of acquittal on the charge of first-degree wanton endangerment. The
decision to grant a motion for a directed verdict is within the trial court's sound
discretion. Wombles v. Commonwealth, 831 S.W.2d 172, 174-175 (Ky. 1992).
"The evidence must be viewed in the light most favorable to the
Commonwealth, with the Commonwealth's proof assumed true and questions
4
of credibility and weight left to the jury." Allen v. Commonwealth, 395 S.W.3d
451, 456 (Ky. 2013) (citing Commonwealth v. Benham, 816 S.W.2d 186, 187
(Ky. 1991)). On review, the defendant must show "under the evidence as a
whole, it would be clearly unreasonable for a jury to find guilt." Allen, 395
S.W.3d at 456 (citing Benham, 816 S.W.2d at 187).
Kingdon couches the majority of his arguments in light of the first-degree
wanton endangerment jury instruction given at the close of evidence. That
instruction read:
You will find Defendant, Jeffery Kingdon, guilty of Wanton
Endangerment in the First Degree under this instruction if, and
only if, you believe from the evidence beyond a reasonable doubt
all of the following:
A. That in Jefferson County, Kentucky, on or about July 23, 2012,
Defendant, Jeffery Kingdon, brandished a loaded firearm near
Alyssa Luckett;
AND
B. That he thereby wantonly created a substantial danger of death
or serious physical injury to Alyssa Luckett;
AND
C. That under the circumstances, such conduct manifested
extreme indifference to the value of human life.
Kingdon argues that he did not brandish the gun prior to shooting Robinson.
However, Kingdon's focus on the jury instruction is not the correct approach
because it puts the cart before the horse. A directed verdict motion is made
before the jury is instructed; thus this Court has said: "A directed-verdict
motion is reviewed in light of the proof at trial and the statutory elements of the
alleged offense. The directed-verdict question is not controlled by the law as
5
described in the jury instructions, but by the statutes creating the offense."
Acosta v. Commonwealth, 391 S.W.3d 809, 816 (Ky. 2013) (citing Lawton v.
Commonwealth, 354 S.W.3d 565, 575 (Ky. 2011)). In other words, the only
relevant consideration is whether, under the evidence as a whole, it would be
clearly unreasonable for a jury to find Kingdon committed first-degree wanton
endangerment according to the statutory elements of that crime. 3
Kentucky Revised Statute (KRS) 508.060 provides: "A person is guilty of
wanton endangerment in the first degree when, under circumstances
manifesting extreme indifference to the value of human life, he wantonly
engages in conduct which creates a substantial danger of death or serious
physical injury to another person." As for the evidence put on by the
Commonwealth at trial, it is of note that the entire crime was captured on
video. Because this video is the best evidence of what transpired we describe
its contents in detail as they relate to the first-degree wanton endangerment
charge.
Four cameras were mounted inside the TARC bus. Two cameras
captured the shooting: one viewing the back of the bus from the front and the
second viewing the back of the bus from its mid-point. Because the shooting
occurred at the back of the bus, the mid-point video offers the more detailed
depiction; thus we focus our attention on it. In the description below, we set
forth directions from the point of view of the mid-point camera.
3 We note that Kingdon has not raised any argument with regard to the first-
degree wanton endangerment jury instruction. Therefore, we do not review its validity.
6
The back bench of the bus has five seats. The shooting victim, Robinson,
is seated on the left side of the back bench of the bus leaning against the
window. Luckett, who was approximately 13 years old at the time of the
shooting, is seated on the right side of the back bench. There are three vacant
seats on the bench between Luckett and Robinson. Benches with two seats
each are located on each side of the bus in front of Robinson and Luckett. The
aisle of the bus runs between those two benches and ends at the middle seat
on the back bench. Therefore, in order to reach the aisle, Robinson and
Luckett were required to move toward the middle seat on the back bench.
The relevant portion of the video begins with Keehn walking down the
aisle of the bus to the back bench. Keehn stops directly in front of the back
bench's middle seat and begins arguing with Robinson. Kingdon immediately
follows Keehn to the back of the bus and stands in the aisle to the right of and
behind Keehn. Kingdon, who is standing between Luckett and the aisle, also
begins to argue with Robinson. Approximately 10 seconds later, Dowell walks
down the aisle and joins Keehn and. Kingdon. Dowell stops to the left and front
of Keehn. The argument rapidly escalates, with all of the participants angrily
gesturing. Kingdon then reaches into his pocket and pulls out a handgun. He
holds the gun at his side in his right hand, which is within approximately two
feet of Luckett's head. Luckett, who testified that she saw the gun and feared
for her life, gets up from her seat and begins to push her way through Kingdon,
Keehn, and Dowell, who are blocking her only path to the aisle. Because she is
short, Luckett gets lost in the picture for a second or two as she tries to push
7
her way between Kingdon's right side and the back bench. Kingdon appears to
use his left hand to push Dowell toward the front of the bus, and as Dowell
moves away, Luckett follows her toward the front of the bus. Keehn then turns
and follows Dowell and Luckett. Approximately one second later, and with
Luckett no more than three feet from him, Kingdon raises the gun with his
right hand and shoots Robinson in the head. Kingdon then turns and, still
holding the gun, runs behind Keehn down the aisle and leaves the bus through
the side door. This entire episode, from when Keehn enters the scene until
Kingdon leaves that bus, lasts exactly 30 seconds.
Viewing this evidence as a whole and in the light most favorable to the
Commonwealth and comparing it to the statutory elements above, it would not
be clearly unreasonable for a jury to find Kingdon wantonly endangered
Luckett. Kingdon brought a loaded gun on a public bus and engaged in a
heated argument with Robinson. He then pulled out the gun within arm's
length of where Luckett, a teenager, was sitting and held it in hiss right hand
while he continued to shout and angrily gesture with his left hand. While
engaged in this argument, Kingdon blocked Luckett's only means of escape,
forcing her to physically push against him and between him and Robinson, his
intended target. While being jostled by Luckett, as well as by Keehn and
Dowell, in a space of approximately one square foot, Kingdon continued to hold
a loaded gun within inches of Luckett and pointed at her feet. Kingdon then
fired that gun approximately one second after Luckett passed between him and
8
Robinson, when she was within three feet of him. Finally, Kingdon, gun in
hand, ran down the aisle with only a few feet separating him and Luckett.
Viewing Kingdon's conduct in its entirety and in the light most favorable
to the Commonwealth, there is sufficient evidence that Kingdon wantonly
created a substantial risk of death or serious physical injury to Luckett.
Therefore, the trial court did not abuse its discretion when it denied Kingdon's
motion for directed verdict. Consequently, we affirm Kingdon's first-degree
wanton endangerment conviction.
C. Kingdon was entitled to a directed verdict on the charge of tampering
with physical evidence.
Kingdon contends that he was entitled to a directed verdict on the charge
of tampering with physical evidence. The charge was premised on the theory
that Kingdon disposed of the weapon used in the shooting of Robinson. To be
guilty of tampering with physical evidence under KRS 524.100, the
Commonwealth must prove that Kingdon "destroy[ed], mutilate[d], conceal[ed],
remove[d] or alter[ed] physical evidence which he believes is about to be
produced or used in the official proceeding with intent to impair its verity or
availability in the official proceeding."
Kingdon argues the trial court should have directed a verdict of acquittal
on that charge because no evidence was presented to show he disposed of,
concealed, or destroyed the murder weapon. As noted in the previous section
of this opinion, a directed verdict is necessary when, under the evidence as a
whole, it would be clearly unreasonable for a jury to find guilt. Allen, 395
S.W.3d at 456.
9
The evidence at trial indicated that immediately after the shooting
Kingdon fled from the bus with the gun in his hand. Although police officers
looked for the gun in Kingdon's apartment and in his automobile, they failed to
locate it. The Commonwealth surmised that because police were unable to
locate the gun, Kingdon must have destroyed, concealed, or disposed of it so
that it could not be used as evidence against him in a subsequent prosecution.
Such an inference, without more evidence, does not support a reasonable
finding of guilt.
In Mullins v. Commonwealth, the defendant shot the victim and
immediately left the scene with the weapon in his possession, but law
enforcement officers failed to locate the gun. 350 S.W.3d 434, 436-37 (Ky.
2011). We explained that "walking away from the scene with the gun is not
enough to support a tampering charge without evidence of some additional act
demonstrating an intent to conceal." Id. at 442. We reiterated the same point
in McAtee v. Commonwealth: "merely leaving the scene with the murder weapon
was insufficient evidence from which a reasonable jury could fairly find
Appellant guilty of tampering with physical evidence." 413 S.W.3d 608, 617
(Ky. 2013).
The Commonwealth's theory leads to the paradoxical situation in which
the complete lack of evidence concerning the gun becomes sufficient "evidence"
to prove that Kingdon destroyed it, concealed it, or otherwise disposed of it.
The theory is fundamentally flawed because it unconstitutionally shifts the
burden to the defendant to prove his innocence.
10 -
"The Commonwealth has the burden of proving every element of the case
beyond a reasonable doubt(.]" KRS 500.070. "Due process commands that no
man shall lose his liberty unless the Government has borne the burden of
producing the evidence and convincing the factfinder of his guilt." Speiser v.
Randall, 357 U.S. 513, 526 (1958) (citation omitted). If the Commonwealth's
inability to explain what happened to the weapon sufficiently established a
prima facie case of tampering with physical evidence, then the defendant could
be found guilty unless he provided evidence to prove he had not "destroyed,
concealed, or disposed of" it. Our system works on the opposite premise: the
state must present evidence of guilt; the defendant is not required to produce
evidence of his innocence.
The fact that the police failed to find the gun does not suffice to prove
that Kingdon illegally tampered with it. Since there was no evidence to show
that Kingdon tampered with the weapon by concealing, destroying, or disposing
of it, a directed verdict should have been entered on the charge of tampering
with physical evidence. We reverse Kingdon's conviction on that charge.
D. The initial-aggressor qualification of the self-protection instruction was
properly included in the jury instructions.
Finally, Kingdon argues that the trial court erred by instructing the jury
that Kingdon's right to act in self-defense was qualified if he was the initial-
aggressor in his confrontation with Robinson, or if he provoked Robinson's use
of force. 4 RCr 9.54(1) places a duty on the trial court "to instruct the jury in
4 The provocation instruction is grounded in KRS 503.060(2), while the initial-
aggressor instruction is grounded in KRS 503.060(3). Although Kingdon asserts error
11
writing on the law of the case." The trial court must "instruct the jury on every
theory of the case that is reasonably deducible from the evidence." Fredline v.
Commonwealth, 241 S.W.3d 793, 797 (Ky. 2007) (citing Manning v.
Commonwealth, 23 S.W.3d 610, 614 (Ky. 2000)). Kingdon contends that the
evidence at trial did not support the giving of the initial-aggressor instruction.
We review the trial court's decision to give or not give an instruction pursuant
to the abuse of discretion standard. Sargent v. Shaffer, 467 S.W.3d 198, 203
(Ky. 2015) (allegations of instructional error based upon the claim that the trial
court gave an instruction that was not sufficiently supported by the evidence).
The right to act in self-protection is not absolute. Pursuant to KRS
503.060(3), a defendant's use of physical force is not justifiable when he was
the initial aggressor, "except . . . when: (a) His initial force was nondeadly and
the force returned by the other is such that he believes himself to be in
imminent danger of death or serious physical injury." A person who initiates a
violent physical confrontation against another person and then injures that
person cannot avoid culpability by claiming self-defense, unless his initial
aggression was nondeadly and the other person elevated the conflict by
responding with deadly force. 5
A jury instruction on the initial-aggressor qualification is appropriate
when the evidence supports the belief that the defendant, who claims to have
in giving the provocation instruction, he does not provide a specific argument to
support it. In this case, the evidence that justified the initial-aggressor instruction
would also authorize the provocation instruction.
5 KRS 503.060 is structured to avoid the conundrum in which both parties to a
violent confrontation are justified to act in self-protection against each other.
12
acted in self-protection, is the one who initiated the confrontation. Kingdon
was clearly entitled to have the jury instructed on the right to act in self-
protection because the jury heard evidence that Kingdon did not raise his gun
until he believed that Robinson was reaching for a gun. But the jury also
heard testimony that Kingdon pursued Robinson by chasing and boarding the
bus so that he could confront Robinson with a loaded gun and recover money
Robinson stole. Even if Kingdon believed that Robinson was reaching for a
gun, the foregoing testimony and the surveillance videos of the shooting
provided sufficient evidence for the jury to reasonably find that Kingdon was
the initial aggressor. The Commonwealth was entitled to have that theory
presented in the jury instructions; thus, the trial court did not abuse its
discretion in giving the initial-aggressor instruction.
III. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the Jefferson Circuit Court in
this matter is affirmed in part and reversed in part. Kingdon's murder and
wanton endangerment convictions are affirmed. However, the conviction for
tampering with physical evidence is reversed, and this case is remanded to the
Jefferson Circuit Court for entry of a directed verdict of acquittal on that
charge.
All sitting. Minton, C.J., Cunningham, Hughes and Keller, JJ., concur.
Venters, J. concurs in part and dissents in part by separate opinion in which
Noble and Wright, JJ., join.
13
VENTERS, J., CONCURS IN PART AND DISSENTS IN PART: Although I
fully concur with the Majority's decision to affirm Kingdon's murder conviction,
I respectfully disagree with its conclusion that he was properly convicted of
wanton endangerment. The Majority upholds Kingdon's conviction for wanton
endangerment based upon its own theory of guilt, a theory which was neither
charged by the Commonwealth nor presented to the jury in the jury
instructions and, therefore, cannot possibly support the jury's verdict.
Kingdon's one-year sentence for wanton endangerment is an almost negligible
addition to his twenty-five year murder sentence, but our distortion of what
constitutes the crime of wanton endangerment is far from negligible.
In the indictment brought by the Commonwealth and throughout the
Commonwealth's case, all the way through the trial court's instructions and
the closing arguments, the only theory of wanton endangerment proffered by
the Commonwealth was that Kingdon endangered Luckett by moving his gun
from his waistband to his right hand and holding it down by his side a few feet
away from Luckett. The video evidence proved that while Robinson and
Luckett sat on the rear seat of the bus, Kingdon stood in front of Robinson,
surreptitiously lifting his pistol from his waistband and held it motionless by
the side of his leg aimed at the floor. It was only after Luckett rose from her
seat, passed between Appellant and Robinson, and then walked away from
Appellant to the front of the bus, that Appellant abruptly raised the gun and
shot Robinson. By that time, Luckett was behind Appellant, toward the front
of the bus, in the opposite direction of the line of fire and well-removed from
14
the danger posed by the shooting of the gun. Consistent with the indictment
and the Commonwealth's theory of the case, the jury instructions plainly
limited the jury to considering only Kingdon's act of holding the gun near
Luckett, conduct that could not be reasonably construed as "creat[ing] a
substantial danger of death or serious physical injury to [Luckett]" under KRS
508.060(1).
The Majority, however, vaguely recasts the charge and expands the
temporal scope of the crime to encompass everything from Kingdon's conduct
of bringing a loaded gun onto a public bus to his final act of firing the gun and
running away. Most likely, the Commonwealth did not pursue that theory of
guilt, and the trial court did not instruct on that theory, because both
recognized that a wanton endangerment charge could not be based upon
Kingdon's act of getting on a bus with a loaded gun because carrying a loaded
gun, even in public, is not in and of itself wanton behavior. 6 Most likely, they
also recognized that Kingdon's act of firing the gun could not support the
wanton endangerment charge because they understood the fact that Luckett
was out of harm's way in the opposite direction when the gun was fired.
We have held that the crime of wanton endangerment can be established
by evidence of firing a gun "right beside," "point blank," and "within 15 feet" of
a victim. Combs v. Commonwealth, 652 S.W.2d 859, 860 (Ky. 1983). We have
6 Far from being a wanton act, carrying a loaded gun in public can qualify as a
constitutionally protected activity.
15
never until now held that holding a gun in close proximity to another person is
wanton endangerment.
We have said that shots fired blindly through a door of an occupied home
will support a first-degree wanton endangerment conviction. Paulley v.
Commonwealth, 323 S.W.3d 715, 724 (Ky. 2010). In contrast, we have held
first-degree wanton endangerment was not established by evidence that
gunshots were fired into the ceiling and fireplace of a room down the hall from
the alleged victim. Swan v. Commonwealth, 384 S.W.3d 77, 103-104 (Ky.
2012). We reached that conclusion because there was no evidence that a
bullet was fired in the direction of the alleged victim, nor was a gun pointed at
the alleged victim. Id. at 103. Even if shooting the gun were the gravamen of
the crime charged by the Commonwealth, we have never until now held that a
bystander could be wantonly endangered by a shot fired in the opposite
direction, 180-degrees away from her,
Unlike Combs, Paulley, or Swan, the factual issue of this case is not
whether Luckett was endangered by Appellant firing his gun. The crime as
charged by the state was limited to Appellant's handling of the gun near
Luckett. As the crime is defined in KRS 508.060(1) and clarified by precedent,
the act of holding a gun at one's side is not an act that "manifest[s] extreme
indifference to the value of human life" or wantonly "creates a substantial
danger of death or serious physical injury to another person." Appellant was
entitled to a directed verdict on the first-degree wanton endangerment charge.
Noble and Wright, JJ., join this opinion.
16
COUNSEL FOR APPELLANT:
Brandon Neil Jewell
Assistant Public Advocate
Department of Public Advocacy
COUNSEL FOR APPELLEE:
Andy Beshear
Attorney General of Kentucky
Jeffrey Allan Cross
Assistant Attorney General
Office of Criminal Appeals
17