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State of Minnesota v. Mark William Latimer
A15-1923
Minn. Ct. App.
Oct 11, 2016
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Background

  • On June 8, 2012, inmate Mark William Latimer struck fellow inmate J.V. six times in the back of the head with a large wooden board at Rush City Correctional Facility; J.V. suffered a depressed skull fracture and life-threatening brain injury and required emergency surgery.
  • Security footage showed Latimer pick up and set down the board, leave, then return, retrieve the same board, approach J.V. from behind, and deliver six blows to a vital area before walking away without rendering aid.
  • Latimer gave a recorded statement saying J.V. had threatened him after learning Latimer’s sex-offender convictions and that Latimer ‘‘ain’t got nothing to lose so I bust him in his head,’’ but also saying he ‘‘wasn’t gonna hurt him bad.’n
  • Charged initially with first-degree assault, the complaint was later amended to add attempted first-degree and attempted second-degree murder; Latimer raised self-defense at trial.
  • After a bench trial the district court convicted Latimer of attempted first-degree murder, attempted second-degree murder, and first-degree assault and imposed a 240-month sentence on the attempted first-degree murder count.
  • Latimer appealed, arguing primarily that the state failed to prove intent/premeditation beyond a reasonable doubt; he also filed a pro se supplemental brief raising claims including ineffective assistance, overcharging, credit for MSOP custody, and Miranda issues.

Issues

Issue Latimer's Argument State's Argument Held
Sufficiency of evidence as to intent/premeditation for attempted 1st/2d-degree murder Evidence did not prove he intended to kill; at most intended to incapacitate to thwart a threat Video, conduct, targeting of head, number of blows, and severity of injuries support intent and premeditation Affirmed: circumstantial evidence supports intent and premeditation; only rational hypothesis is guilt
Self-defense Latimer claimed J.V. threatened him and he acted to defend himself Video and circumstances (approach from behind, multiple blows to head, no aid) rebut self-defense claim District court correctly rejected self-defense; conviction stands
Ineffective assistance of counsel (pro se) Counsel failed to inform him of charges, failed investigation, poor trial performance, and conspiracy with state agencies Record shows receipt of amended complaint, adequate investigation and strategy, and no evidence of conspiracy; many points implicate trial strategy Denied: Latimer did not show deficient performance or prejudice; claims lack merit
Overcharging/vindictive prosecution after plea refusal Adding attempted-murder charges after refusing plea was vindictive and violated due process Prosecutor may negotiate and seek charges; no evidence of vindictiveness presented Denied: no showing of vindictive prosecution; plea-bargaining conduct constitutional
Credit for time in MSOP custody Latimer sought credit for time spent in Minnesota Sex Offender Program between attack and sentencing MSOP placement stemmed from prior civil commitment unrelated to this criminal case Denied: MSOP time not creditable because unrelated civil commitment
Miranda/statement admissibility Recorded statement should be suppressed on Miranda grounds Latimer made no contemporaneous objection at trial to use of the taped statement Issue forfeited on appeal; not reviewed

Key Cases Cited

  • State v. Holliday, 745 N.W.2d 556 (Minn. 2008) (premeditation requires an appreciable time for consideration, planning, or determination)
  • State v. Cox, 884 N.W.2d 400 (Minn. 2016) (premeditation may be inferred from planning, motive, nature of killing, and defendant’s post-act conduct)
  • State v. Silvernail, 831 N.W.2d 594 (Minn. 2013) (two-step circumstantial-evidence review: identify proved circumstances, then test consistency with guilt)
  • State v. Geshick, 168 N.W.2d 331 (Minn. 1969) (upholding attempted 1st-degree murder where attack from behind caused serious injury)
  • Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668 (1984) (standard for ineffective-assistance claims: deficient performance and resulting prejudice)
  • Bordenkircher v. Hayes, 434 U.S. 357 (1978) (prosecutorial plea negotiations and charging decisions are constitutionally permissible absent clear vindictiveness)
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Case Details

Case Name: State of Minnesota v. Mark William Latimer
Court Name: Court of Appeals of Minnesota
Date Published: Oct 11, 2016
Docket Number: A15-1923
Court Abbreviation: Minn. Ct. App.