A criminal conspiracy is an agreement between two or more persons to do an unlawful act or do a lawful act in an unlawful
way or by unlawful means.
State v. LeDuc,
Clearly, there is no direct evidence of a conspiracy in this case, all of the State’s evidence being circumstantial. While it appears that a reasonable inference could be drawn from this evidence that defendant Massey burned the mobile home in which she was living, we cannot agree that the evidence supports a reasonable inference that either defendant conspired with each other or any other person to commit the crimes for which they stand convicted. There is no more than mere suspicion in this case, and suspicion, however strong, is simply not enough. See State v. LeDuc, supra, and cases cited and discussed therein. The fraudulent insurance claims charges are rooted in the conspiracy to burn charges; therefore, they must fall with the conspiracy.
Reversed and vacated.
