Defendant Larry Salyers was convicted of felony murder in connection with the death of Joe Smith.
1
He appeals, asserting, inter
Viewing the evidence in a light to uphold the verdict, we find the following: Salyers was visiting Smith’s girlfriend, Theresa Hagen, when Smith came home. Smith аnd Hagen started arguing and, when Salyers intervened, Smith and Salyers started to scuffle. Salyers pulled a knife and stabbed Smith in the back and chest. Smith ran to thе home of a neighbor for help; he said that Salyers stabbed him; then he fell to the floor. Salyers appeared in the neighbor’s doorway and asked, “Where is he at?” In the meantime, the sheriff appeared on the scene. He asked Salyers to wait outside while he looked after Smith. Salyers did not wait; he ran to a wooded lot and the sheriff followed him.
The sheriff caught Salyers and placed him under arrest. He was carrying а blood-stained knife in his right front pants pocket. The blood on the knife matched that of the victim.
Smith died at the hospital a little more than an hour after he was stabbed. The wound to Smith’s back was not fatal; however, the wound to Smith’s chest pierced the pericardial sac and cаused his death. Smith did not have a weapon on his person; he did have a cigarette lighter.
One or two days before the stabbing, Salyers told one of his sisters that Smith and others owed him money and that, if they did not pay up, they would be “dead men by dark.” Salyers told another sis ter that he was going to kill Smith, bury him, and run off with Hagen.
Salyers made several statements to the police. In each statement, Salyers gave a different version of events: At first, Salyers denied that he stabbed anyone. Then, he said that Smith and Hagen argued, and he gave Hagen a knife; that she gave the knife back to him; and that Smith ran outside and he followed to see if Smith was hurt. Next, he admitted stabbing the victim — in the back — and chasing him to a neighbor’s house. Finally, Salyers acknowledgеd that he struggled with Smith and pulled out a knife, but claimed the knife was knocked out of his hand and he did not remember stabbing Smith.
At trial, Salyers told another story. He said that Smith hit and slapped Hagen and he tried to restrain Smith; that Smith splashed fuel on him, said he would send him to hell, and tried to set him on fire with a cigarette lightеr; that he pulled a knife to threaten Smith, but Smith disarmed him and ran outside; that he followed Smith and asked him to “talk this over”; and that he did not remember stabbing Smith, althоugh there is a “possibility” that he did so, albeit unintentionally.
1. The evidence is sufficient to enable any rational trier of fact to find Smith guilty beyond a reаsonable doubt of felony murder.
Jackson v. Virginia,
2. The trial court did not err in refusing to charge the jury on reckless conduct. “Reckless conduct is an act of сriminal negligence, rather than an intentional act, that causes bodily harm or endangers the bodily safety of another.
Bowers v. State,
3. In connection with its charge on voluntary manslaughter, the triаl court instructed the jury that the killing may be attributed to murder if there were “an interval between the provocation and the killing sufficient for the voice of reason and humanity to be heard.” See
Moore v. State,
4. The trial court’s charge on justification and excessive force, taken from the Suggested Pattern Jury Instructions, was a correct statement of the law.
Clark v. State,
5. Salyers asserts his trial counsel was ineffective because he (1) met with Salyers оnly three times prior to trial; (2) investigated the case himself and did not seek the help of an investigator; (3) failed to subpoena witnesses who would have testified on Salyers’ behalf; (4) neglected to inform the court that Salyers had conflicts with two prospective jurors; and (5) failed to have Salyers testify at a JacksonDenno hearing. At the motion for new trial, counsel testified that he practiced law for more than nine years and was the Public Defender for the Northern Judicial Circuit for over three years; that he met with Salyers numerous times; that he investigated the case himself; that he сontacted all of the witnesses that Salyers told him about and none of them were helpful; and that he went to the crime scene to seеk out additional witnesses. Counsel also averred that he did not recall being told that Salyers had had conflicts with potential jurors; that, in fact, he told Salyers that he had worked on another project with one of the panelists and thought he would be a good juror; and that he did not want Salyers to testify at the Jackson-Denno hearing because he wanted to avoid giving the prosecution more ammunition. 2 The trial court denied the motion for new trial, finding that trial counsel’s performance was not deficient.
In reviewing the trial court’s findings and conclusions on a claim of ineffective assistance of trial counsel,
“we
accept the trial court’s factual findings and credibility determinations unless clearly erroneous, but we indeрendently apply the legal principles to the facts.”
Suggs v. State,
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
Smith was killed on October 1, 1997. Thе grand jury indicted Salyers on January 13, 1998, and charged him with malice murder, felony murder (predicated on the underlying felony of aggravated assault), and аggravated assault. Trial commenced on March 8,1998, and the jury rendered its verdict on March 11, finding Salyers not guilty of malice murder, and guilty of felony murder and aggravated assault. The trial court merged the aggravated assault and felony murder convictions and sentenced Salyers to life in prisоn for felony murder. Salyers’ timely filed motion for a new trial was denied on December 4, 2002, and Salyers filed a notice of appeal on December 30, 2002. The case was docketed on January 22, 2003, and submitted for a decision on briefs on March 17, 2003.
We note that at trial Salyers testified that all of his statements were made freely, voluntarily, and knowingly. Thus, Salyers’ testimony at the
Jackson-Denno
hearing would not have aided his cause. See
Byrd v. State,
