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Ming Sen Shiue was born on October 15, 1950 in
Taiwan. When he was eight years old, he moved to Minnesota with
his mother and two siblings. His father, who died three years
later, was a professor at the University of Minnesota at the time.
Shiue was described as violent towards his
younger siblings, often beating them both during adolescence and
adulthood. In his teen years, Shiue was reportedly engaged in
criminal activity as a juvenile such as starting fires in
apartments of three strangers and throwing rocks at vehicles. For
his role in the arsons, he was ordered to participate in
psychotherapy at the age of fourteen.
According to his mother's testimony, Shiue
often lied but was persistent about being right, was
uncontrollable as a child, and took no responsibility for his
physical behavior thus causing her to be fearful. She described
him as someone having no "feelings, like a dog".
From 1965–1966, Shiue attended Alexander Ramsey
High School in Roseville, Minnesota where he came to have a
"crush" on his ninth-grade algebra teacher Mary Stauffer. He later
admitted during proceedings that due to his "infatuation", he
began sexually fantasizing about the teacher.
Shiue later wrote stories about his sexual
fantasies with fictional characters from the movies and eventually
about Stauffer, which included consensual sex, rape and gang rape.
In later years, after he realized that he did not find complete
satisfaction from his fantasies, Shiue decided to kidnap Stauffer.
Kidnapping and murder
In 1975, Shiue located what he erroneously
believed to be Mary Stauffer's residence in Duluth, Minnesota. He
broke into the house with a firearm intending to kidnap the
victim, who happened to not live in the residence. Her in-laws who
owned the house were forced to the ground, tied up and threatened
to be killed if they reported the crime. Therefore, the break-in
was not reported until the actual kidnapping of Stauffer took
place five years later.
Shiue's search for the woman continued for the
next five years. During this time, Stauffer lived with family in
Philippines, where she and her husband was a Christian missionary.
They returned to Minnesota in 1979.
A year later, Shiue learned that Mary Stauffer
lived at the Bethel University campus and began to stalk her. His
stalking continued until May 16, 1980, when Shiue tracked Stauffer
down at a beauty salon in Roseville. When Stauffer left the salon,
Shiue kidnapped her and her eight-year-old daughter, Elizabeth, at
gunpoint. He tied them up and threw them into the trunk of
Stauffer's vehicle. During the trip to his house where he intended
to keep his victims hostage, Shiue stopped the vehicle two times
because Mary and Elizabeth were making noises. When he stopped for
the second time, a six-year-old boy, Jason Wilkman, approached the
vehicle to see what was happening. Shuie grabbed the boy and
forced him into the trunk. He then drove to the isolated Carlos
Avery Wildlife Refuge in Anoka County, removed the boy from the
trunk and murdered him with a metal rod.
Rapes
Shiue drove Mary Stauffer and her daughter
Elizabeth to his house and locked them in a narrow closet. He then
proceeded to take Mary Stauffer out of the closet and tied her to
the furniture.
Shiue talked to her for hours on the night of
kidnapping disclosing who he was before he repeatedly raped her,
filming the conversations and rapes on the video camera. When
Shiue told Stauffer he was her student 15 years ago, he indicated
she had given him a grade B in Algebra which caused his not being
able to get enrolled at a college and being sent to Vietnam War
where he became a POW. While kept at his house, the victims were
often separated by Shiue.
He placed Elizabeth in a box in his van for 8
hours when he was at work, while her mother was left locked in a
closet at his residence. Furthermore, Shiue told Stauffer he would
kill her husband and son if they ever tried to escape.
Arrest and imprisonment
On July 7, 1980, after Shiue left for work,
Mary Stauffer managed to remove the hinge pin from the locked
closet door. Despite being chained to each other, Mary and
Elizabeth were able to reach the phone in the kitchen and call the
law enforcement. After making the call, they hid behind the car at
Shiue's residence until police arrived. Both were immediately
freed after seven weeks of imprisonment. Shiue was arrested at his
business on the same day.
He was taken to Ramsey County Adult Detention
Center. While in jail, he offered $50,000 to another inmate
Richard Green to kill Stauffer and her daughter to prevent them
from testifying against him in the court, and to help him escape
from jail. Green communicated the information to the FBI.
Trial and sentencing
Shiue's trial began in 1981. During the trial
Shiue smuggled a knife into the court room and when his victim
testified in court, he jumped over the table and attacked her,
managing to cut her face. It took 62 stitches to close her facial
wound. At the same time, Shiue promised to kill Stauffer and her
daughter when he would be released from prison.
Psychological evaluations of the defendant
showed no signs of mental illness. When the trial ended, Shiue was
sentenced to thirty years to life on the federal kidnapping charge
and 40 years on a separate state murder charge. He was declared
eligible for parole on July 6, 2010.
On September 28, 2010, the Anoka Country
District Judge Jenny Walker Jasper ruled Shiue would not be
released and would spend the rest of his life in prison, as he
still appeared a threat to society.
In popular culture
The Stauffers' kidnapping and Jason Wilkman
murder was described in Eileen Bridgeman Biernat's book Stalking
Mary.
Minnesota.publicradio.org
April 19, 2010
Anoka, Minn. (AP) — A judge is hearing
testimony this week on whether a man who's spent 30 years in
prison for kidnapping a missionary and her 8-year-old daughter and
killing a 6-year-old witness to the crime should remain locked up.
The case of Ming Sen Shiue horrified Minnesota
in 1980. He kidnaped Mary Stauffer and her daughter, Beth, from
outside a beauty salon and locked them in a closet in his
Roseville home. He also killed Jason Wilkman, who was playing in
an Anoka County park when caught a glimpse of the Stauffers when
Shiue stopped to check on them in the trunk of his car.
Shiue long had been obsessed with Stauffer, who
had been his ninth grade math teacher 15 years earlier, and
repeatedly raped her during the seven weeks he held her captive,
even videotaping some of his assaults. She eventually managed to
escape while Shiue as at work, removing the hinge pins on the
closet door, telephoning for help, then hiding with her daughter
until deputies arrived.
As Stauffer testified against him during his
1981 murder trial, Shiue jumped up and slashed her face with a
knife he had smuggled into the courtroom. It took 62 stitches to
close her wound. And he vowed that when he was released from
prison, he would find and kill her and her daughter.
Shiue was sentenced to 30 years to life on the
federal kidnapping charge in 1980 and concurrently to 40 years on
the separate state murder charge. He's due to become eligible for
parole July 6.
Now 59, prosecutors are seeking to commit Shiue
indefinitely to the state's sex offender treatment program,
arguing that he's still a dangerous sexual predator. He has not
received any sex offender treatment in prison. A three day
commitment hearing before Anoka County District Judge Jenny Walker
Jasper began Monday. If she commits Shiue, he could spend the rest
of his life in custody.
"What if the judge mistakenly concludes he is
not sufficiently dangerous and he goes out and hurts somebody?"
said Eric Janus, dean of William Mitchell College of Law in St.
Paul and an expert on the state's commitment laws.
On the other hand, Janus said, "If he is
committed, it's tantamount to a life sentence."
Shiue's court appointed attorney, Rick Mattox,
said he won't discuss the case outside the courtroom. But during a
pretrial hearing, he argued that Shiue could receive the help he
needs in a less-restrictive environment than the state's sex
offender program, from which nobody ever has been permanently
released.
A July 2008 evaluation of Shiue by psychologist
Paul Reitman from the El Reno prison in Oklahoma concluded that
Shiue was attempting to cast himself in a favorable light, the
county's commitment petition said. He demonstrated strong
attachment and dependency needs, yet lacked the social skills to
maintain a balanced intimate relationship. The results indicate a
person who tries to deny his sexual problems and avoids change,
Reitman wrote.
Tests indicated Shiue has a high risk of
recidivism and requires intensive secured treatment and
supervision, the petition said. Shiue told Reitman he never felt
he needed treatment.
"All this concludes he is extremely dangerous,"
the petition said. "Shiue exhibits utter lack of power to control
sexual impulses, refusal of treatment opportunities, lack of a
relapse prevention plan, violence demonstrated towards his
victims, obsession and compulsion, belief that no problem exists."
According to Reitman's evaluation, Shiue
expressed remorse about his crimes, saying "I devastated (Mary), I
ruined her life."
Stauffer and her husband, Irv Staffer, are now
retired. They had split most of their time since the kidnapping
between the U.S. and the Philippines, where they worked as Baptist
missionaries. While she's rarely granted media interviews, she has
shared her experiences with church groups, focusing on how her
faith helped them endure.
Stauffer has expressed some concern about what
Shiue might do if he's released.
"I don't know that any human institution can
ensure total safety," she told WCCO-TV.
Yet she and her family have reserved judgment
on whether he's changed, citing their faith. She told the St. Paul
Pioneer Press she didn't feel qualified to talk about whether he
should be civilly committed, but she always felt bad that he
didn't serve more time for killing Jason Wilkman.
"It would be a huge concern to the public if he
isn't ready," she said. "It will just end up happening again."
By Tim Nelson, Minnesota Public Radio
April 19, 2010
St. Paul,
Minn. — Thirty years after he kidnapped his former math teacher
and her daughter, Ming Sen Shiue faced his victims in court again
in Anoka today.
Shiue has spent the last 30
years in federal prison for abducting Mary Stauffer, then 36, and
her 8-year-old daughter at gunpoint. He kept the two imprisoned in
his Roseville home for seven weeks before they managed to escape.
Beth Stauffer said in court that the incident still haunts her.
She said Shiue threatened to hunt down her and her own children if
he was caught, imprisoned and ever released.
"I'm a mother today," said Stauffer, who is now married and has a
different last name, which she asked not be released. "Everything
he ever told us during the kidnapping, he did. I don't know that
I'd let my children go out to a park, to a mall, if he were
released."
Shiue testified today that he felt
rehabilitated by the decades in high security prison. He said he'd
also willingly undergo sexual offender treatment, and would have
before, but couldn't because it wasn't available in the prisons
where he'd been held.
Shiue did apologize for
his crimes, and recounted them in some detail in court. He said he
had what he called a "schoolboy crush" on Mary as a high school
student. He said the impulse grew to an obsession, prompting him
to stalk and abduct her 15 years later. He locked her and her
daughter in a closet and raped Mary Stauffer repeatedly while he
held the pair.
He also beat to death a
six-year-old boy, Jason Wilkman, who happened to spot the
kidnapping in progress. Shiue led authorities to Wilman's body in
the Carlos Avery Wildlife Management Area after the Stauffer's
escape and his arrest.
"The remorse and sorrow
remains heavy on me," he said, reading a written apology he
submitted to the court. "I regret acting in that matter. I chose
to do wrong. I had no concern for anybody."
The
legal legacy of the Wilkman slaying now has prosecutors in Anoka
seeking to have Shiue committed to the state's sex offender
program in Moose Lake. Assistant Anoka County Attorney Janice
Allen said that there was no overt sign that Shiue had changed
while in prison, although he is 29 years older.
He walked through the courthouse with a walker, but also shackles
around his ankles, testament to his violent past in court. Shiue
attacked Mary Stauffer during his murder trial in 1981, slashing
her face and neck with a knife he'd smuggled into the courtroom.
His attorney, Rick Mattox, argued that Shiue, 59, is old and
infirm. Shiue suffers from arthritis and kidney failure and is
unlikely to re-offend, Mattox said during the first day of Shiue's
commitment trial.
A series of psychological
experts will testifiy about Shiue's condition. A court appointed
pyschologist testified today that she had doubts about Shiue's
truthfulness and his "grandiose" sense of self-importance.
Anoka County District Court Judge Jenny Walker Jasper, rather than
a jury, is hearing the case. The trial is expected to last at
least through Wednesday, and it isn't clear when the judge will
rule on the matter.
Shiue has served 30 years of
a federal life term and is up for a parole consideration by the
U.S. Bureau of Prisons in July. He was turned down at a parole
hearing last year, and may have to undergo several years of sexual
offender treatment before he's let out of prison.
SUPREME COURT OF MINNESOTA
December 3, 1982
STATE OF MINNESOTA, APPELLANT
(81-491), RESPONDENT (81-530),
v.
MING SEN SHIUE, RESPONDENT (81-491), APPELLANT (81-530).
Appeal from District Court, Anoka County; Hon. Robert Bakke,
Anoka, Judge. Affirmed.
Heard, considered and
decided by the court en banc.
The opinion of the
court was delivered by: Todd
1. Under the facts
of this case the contact between the jury and the trial judge was
not prejudicial to the defendant.
2. The attack
in open court by the defendant in the presence of the jury upon a
Prosecution witness did not mandate the granting of a mistrial.
3. The trial court's departure from sentencing guidelines by
imposing a sentence of 3.4 times the presumptive sentence was
justified. The concealment of a victim's body by the defendant is
an appropriate aggravating circumstance to be considered by the
trial judge in justifying a departure from the presumptive
sentence.
TODD, Justice.
Ming
Sen Shiue has been convicted of the kidnapping of Mary Stauffer
and her 8-year-old daughter. *fn1 During the commission of that
crime, Shiue encountered a 6-year-old child, Jason Wilkman. Shiue
kidnapped Wilkman and took him to the Carlos Avery Wildlife Farm.
Later, police discovered Wilkman's body and Shiue was charged with
murder in the second degree. Shiue pled not guilty, and not guilty
by reason of mental defect. At a bifurcated trial, the jury found
Shiue guilty rejecting his defense of mental illness. The trial
court sentenced Shiue to a term of 40 years to be served
concurrent with his federal sentence. Shiue appeals, alleging
numerous errors requiring a new trial. The state appeals, claiming
that the trial court abused its discretion in not imposing a
sentence consecutive to Shiue's federal term. We affirm.
On May 16, 1980, Ming Sen Shiue abducted Mary Stauffer and her
eight-year-old daughter Elizabeth from the parking lot of a beauty
salon in Roseville, Minnesota. Shiue forced Mary Stauffer to drive
her car according to his directions. After nearly an hour of
driving, Mrs. Stauffer was told to stop the car in a deserted area
of Anoka County. Shiue tied and gagged the Stauffers, using rope
and tape he brought with him. He placed them in the trunk of the
car and drove off.
During the ride, defendant
stopped to check on the Stauffers several times. The first time,
Mrs. Stauffer had untied Elizabeth. Defendant was angry and tied
them more tightly. The last time defendant stopped, the Stauffers
had again loosened their bonds. Shiue unscrewed a metal plate
which secured the spare tire and discarded it, then dropped the
spare tire on the Stauffers. At that point, defendant heard
someone say "Hi."
Jason Wilkman had been playing
with his friend Mark Branes when they came upon the Stauffers'
car. Mark stayed at the front of the car while Jason walked up to
the trunk. When Shiue heard Jason's voice, he turned and grabbed
him, placing his hand over his mouth, and threw him into the
trunk. Shiue drove off with the Stauffers and Jason Wilkman.
The Stauffers were in the trunk with Jason for approximately an
hour. Both Mrs. Stauffer and Elizabeth tried to comfort Jason, who
was crying. They asked him his name and he replied, "Jason." He
said he was six years old and that now he wouldn't be able to go
to his grandma's the next day.
Shiue drove to a
deserted area where the Stauffers could hear gravel and brush
striking the wheel wells and sides of the car. The car stopped.
Shiue opened the trunk and took Jason out. Elizabeth saw Shiue
take a "long bent bar" made of metal out of the trunk. Shiue
closed the trunk and was gone from ten to fifteen minutes. When he
returned, the drive resumed. After another hour, the car stopped
and the Stauffers were left for a time. Finally Shiue returned and
transferred them to another vehicle, drove them to defendant's
home and placed them in a closet.
The Stauffers
were confined in Shiue's house at 1960 N. Hamline Avenue for the
next seven weeks. During that time, the Stauffers were primarily
confined to the closet, tied at the elbows, with the closet door
shut and the door knob removed. Mrs. Stauffer was frequently
sexually assaulted by Shiue. Several of these conversation-assault
sessions were recorded by Shiue on video tape.
During the first week of captivity, Shiue talked about Jason on
four separate occasions. On the night of the kidnapping, May 16,
Shiue told Mrs. Stauffer that he had taken Jason into the woods
and threatened him by saying if he ever told anyone what had
happened he would return and hurt him. Shiue said, "I just scared
him and, then, I fired a shot over his head and, then, let him
go." Mrs. Stauffer never heard any shots.
On
Saturday evening, May 17, Shiue said that the only thing that had
gone wrong with his plan was "that kid showing up." Shiue went on
to say:
ven if they find him, he didn't get a
very good look at me. I had the dark glasses on, and I scared him
good enough so that I know he's not going to do anything * * *,
and even if he does, there's no way * * * a six-year-old is going
to pick me out of a lineup. I never seen him in my life, and he
never seen me in my life. And all he saw was your car. So there's
no way he will ever get back to me. So I'm not worried about him,
see, he's, he represents no threat to me * * *.
The next Thursday, May 22, while washing their clothes, Mrs.
Stauffer noticed a blood stain on her pants. When she asked Shiue
about it, he said that Jason had gotten a bloody nose when he was
thrown into the trunk. Finally, on the following Saturday, May 24,
there was a news broadcast that indicated authorities were
searching for Jason and the Stauffers, east into Wisconsin and
northeast of the Twin Cities. Mrs. Stauffer asked why Jason had
not been found and Shiue said, "They're looking in the wrong
direction."
On July 7, Mrs. Stauffer found that
she could remove the hinge pins of the closet door. She and
Elizabeth freed themselves, called the authorities, and escaped.
Shiue was arrested the same day at his electronics business.
In September of 1980, after a ten-day federal trial, the jury
found Shiue guilty of kidnapping. Prior to this trial, Shiue told
one of the psychiatrists that he knew the location of Jason
Wilkman's body but would not reveal it. In late October, the week
before Shiue was to be sentenced by Judge Devitt, he entered into
an agreement with the Ramsey County Attorney's office. If Shiue
would locate Wilkman's body, the Ramsey County Attorney's Office
agreed that the charge would not be first degree murder.
At Shiue's direction, police conducted a a large-scale search in
the Carlos Avery Wildlife Reserve. Shiue walked to the treeline at
the edge of a cornfield and said, "This is the area where the body
should be." After a search party looked without success for a day,
Shiue insisted, "It's got to be there. I know it's there. You just
got to find it." Finally, one of the searchers found the skeleton
of a child in a dense brushy area on the edge of the cornfield
under a stand of birch trees. The remains, which were covered with
branches and cornstalks, were identified as those of Jason Wilkman.
An autopsy revealed fractures on the back and right side of the
skull. The examining pathologists testified that the cause of
death was severe cerebral trauma caused by at least two blows to
the head with a blunt instrument administered with a great deal of
force. The pathologists stated that the fractures were consistent
with having been produced by a rounded metal instrument with a
curve in it, such as a jack handle. In the opinion of the medical
examiner, either blow could have caused death.
Defendant's trial for the kidnapping and murder of Jason Wilkman
began on January 14, 1981, in Anoka County District Court. Jury
selection lasted for more than three weeks. 338 jurors were
questioned before a panel of fourteen was selected.
Defendant chose to bifurcate his trial. During Phase I, the jury
would determine defendant's guilt for kidnapping and murder in the
second degree. If the defendant was found guilty of either of the
offenses, phase II would begin, in which the jury would decide if
defendant was innocent by reason of a mental defect.
Mary Stauffer was one of the first state witnesses to testify
during Phase I of the trial. Just after defense counsel began his
cross-examination of her, and in the presence of the jury, Shiue
attacked Mrs. Stauffer, cutting her face with a knife. The cut
required 62 stitches to close. After the attack, psychiatrists for
the state and defense examined Shiue and found him competent to
stand trial. The court instructed the jury that they could
consider the attack in their later deliberations. It indicated
that more detailed instructions would be given at the conclusion
of the trial.
On February 13, 1981, at the
conclusion of the first stage of trial, the jury found the
elements of each crime had been proved beyond a reasonable doubt.
On February 14, 1981, the second phase of the trial began. Four
experts in psychology testified as to Shiue's mental state on May
16, 1982.
After the deliberation began in phase
II, the jury requested the video tapes of Shiue's sessions with
Mrs. Stauffer which had been shown at trial. The jury asked to
look at the first one, and then "possibly come out and see other
ones. We'd like to go one at a time."
At
approximately 2:40 p.m. the afternoon of Friday, February 20,
1981, the jury sent a note to the court stating "We are a hung
jury. What do we do now?" The trial court, without notifying
counsel, and without making a record, advised the jury through the
bailiff to look at the remaining tapes.
Later
that afternoon, at 6:08 p.m., a discussion of the incident was
placed in the record. The court indicated that it told the bailiff
to advise the jury "to continue viewing the other two tapes as
they had originally requested." The court continued:
It was my opinion at the time that we have spent almost five weeks
on this case and they had deliberated yesterday and today less
than ten hours and that that wasn't sufficient to constitute a
so-called hung jury. It is now 10 after 6:00 and we have received
another note. It reads, as follows:
"We are
still a hung jury. One Juror is closed-minded to others' views and
is becoming upset and distraught."
So,
inadvertently it appears that they have advised us that the vote
is eleven to one.
Defense counsel made a motion
for a mistrial. He stated:
Because of the two
notes submitted to the Court, the Defendant moves for a mistrial,
since the Jury has now indicated on two separate occasions almost
four hours apart that they are a hung Jury. I wasn't informed of
the first note until after -- Some time after the Court made the
communication to the Jury through Loretta. I think that
communication, although well-intentioned by the Court, may have
misconstrued because the Court instructed them to view additional
evidence, even though they didn't request it, and I think that in
itself may be grounds for a mistrial, but regardless of that, the
second note now indicates that the Jury is still hung and that one
Juror is becoming upset and distraught and I think to force Jurors
to continue deliberations under those conditions could result in a
Verdict that might be considered coercive because the Juror who is
distraught and upset may not have the will to overcome the
persuasive powers of the other Jurors, even though it's contrary
to their beliefs. I think we have a real serious situation when
one of the Jurors is described in that condition. For all these
reasons, I would move for a mistrial.
The court
went on to deny the motion, stating for the record that:
Well, your recitation that I required them to see additional
evidence that they had not requested is in error. They requested
formally on the record that they be permitted to see all three
additional tapes, and as I instructed them, that Loretta would be
with them during the viewing to operate the machinery. They were
not a discuss it in the Courtroom and they requested before I even
suggested it that they see each tape individually, then, adjourn
to the Jury Room, discuss it, come back and see the next tape,
return to the Jury Room and discuss it, and see the third tape and
return to the Jury Room and discuss it, and when I sent a message
to them to complete the tapes, I was simply granting their request
to review the visual tapes. Apparently they were seeking to
resolve some issue through the use of the tapes and they requested
them in their entirety and the Court felt that they should view
them in their entirety.
This is the first
indication that we have got of what the vote is, that they
apparently are eleven to one. The Court intends to reread,
pursuant to the A.B.A. Standards, the Instruction regarding their
obligations as Jurors to discuss the case with one another. Having
reviewed the so-called Allen Instruction that has been ruled out
in Minnesota, the Court intends to follow the A.B.A Standards and
follow the ruling of our Supreme Court in State v. Martin. The
Court is of the opinion that in view of the length of time it took
to select a Jury in this case, I believe it was approximately
three weeks, and having gone through, I believe, 338 jurors and
obtained a Jury panel which was satisfactory to both parties, that
the deliberations of the Jurors in this case has not been lengthy
enough at this time to permit them to exhaust their deliberations.
So, the Court will reread to them the Instructions as indicated
and deny the motion for mistrial.
On February
21, 1981, at the conclusion of the second stage of trial, the jury
found the defendant guilty of kidnapping and murder in the second
degree. On February 27, 1981, a motion for judgment of acquittal
or new trial was filed with the court. In addition to these
motions, counsel sought summary hearings to impeach the jury
verdict pursuant to Minn. R. Crim. P. 26.03, subd. 19(6). In an
affidavit filed by defense counsel, jury misconduct was alleged on
the basis of articles in the local papers after interviews with
the jurors. Defense counsel argued that one juror had more
knowledge of Shiue's federal conviction than she revealed during
voir dire. The court denied the motion, indicating that counsel
had an opportunity to inquire of this juror but failed to do so.
On March 2, 1981, a hearing was conducted prior to imposition of
sentence. Richard Green testified that he met Shiue in the Ramsey
County jail on July 7, 1980. Green suggested that Shiue had
offered him money to either kill the Stauffers or to help him
escape. Shiue did pay Green one thousand dollars but claimed it to
be a gambling debt. Green's testimony was not persuasive to the
court. He had a prior felony conviction and didn't mention a
contract to kill until after the second F.B.I interview. The court
refused to consider this incident during sentencing.
Under the Sentencing Guidelines, the severity level for second
degree murder is ten. Defendant had a criminal history score of
one. The presumptive sentence is 140 months. The presentence
investigation report cited seven aggravating factors and
recommended a forty-year sentence which is the maximum deviation
under the guidelines. It also recommended the sentence to run
consecutively with Shiue's federal sentence. The Honorable Robert
Bakke (deceased) sentenced the defendant to serve forty years
concurrently with his federal sentence.
The
court deviated in duration. It justified its deviation on the
basis of the victim's youth and vulnerability, the lack of
provocation by the victim, the victim's terror, the breaking and
entry of the Stauffer's home on three previous occasions and the
fact a victim was injured in defendant's previous felony.
In light of the jury's findings, the court did not consider mental
illness to be a mitigating factor. The court refused to consider
Mr. Green's testimony in deciding whether to deviate, stating that
it followed the purposes of the sentencing guidelines and the
A.B.A. standards on sentencing, which oppose the pyramiding of
sentences. It concluded that "should the defendant be released
before 40 years, he will then be committed to the Commissioner of
Corrections to serve the remainder of the forty years' sentence."
From this sentence and defendant's conviction for the crimes of
kidnapping and murder in the second degree, this appeal follows.
This appeal presents the following issues:
1.
Did the contact between the trial court and jury in the absence of
counsel and not on the record constitute reversible error?
2. Was the failure of the trial court to declare a mistrial or
allow voir dire of the jury after the defendant attacked the
state's chief witness in the presence of the jury a denial of
defendant's right to a fair trial by an impartial jury?
3. Was the trial court's decision to deviate from the presumptive
sentence and impose the statutory maximum justified?
4. Was the trial court's decision to run defendant's sentence
concurrently with his federal kidnapping sentence an abuse of
discretion?
1. As previously indicated, the jury
had been deliberating when it contacted the court at 1:08 p.m. on
February 20, 1981. It requested the court to review additional
evidence, specifically, the video tapes which had been shown at
trial. The trial judge granted the request after conducting the
jury to the courtroom and notifying counsel. Following this, the
jury viewed the first tape and then adjourned to discuss it. At
2:40 p.m. the first note was received regarding the possibility of
a hung jury. The judge advised the jury to view the other two
tapes as they had originally requested. This was done. At 6:08
p.m. on the same day, a second note was received, again indicating
a hung jury. Defense counsel objected on the record to the contact
between the judge and the jury and moved for a mistrial which was
denied.
In analyzing this problem, it is
necessary to keep in mind that the jury had a right to view the
video tapes since they had been received into evidence. Minn. R.
Crim. P. 26.03, subd. 19(2). It is within the discretion of the
trial court to grant such a request. State v. Spaulding, 296
N.W.2d 870, 878 (Minn. 1980). The trial court followed the
appropriate procedure under Minn. R. Crim. P. 26.03, subd. 19(2),
by conducting the jury to the courtroom after notifying counsel.
After viewing one tape, the trial judge regarded the jury's
message as a continuation of its original request for additional
evidence. This was not unreasonable in the context of the events
that had transpired. The jury had previously indicated it might
view all three video tapes, but would view them one at a time.
Under these circumstances, the trial judge was not required to
conduct the jury to the courtroom and notify counsel before the
showing of each tape. Viewed from this perspective, there was no
prejudice to the defendant.
The trial judge made
a record of the incident after its occurrence. The court's
recollection of the incident was uncontroverted. We conclude that
the contact between the judge and the jury was not of the type
that requires application of legal standards concerning
communication between a judge and jury outside the presence of
counsel and off the record. See Gersdorf v. R.D. Werner Co., Inc.,
316 N.W.2d 517 (Minn. 1982); Cronquist v. City of Minneapolis, 258
Minn. 30, 102 N.W.2d 512(1960); State v. Schifsky, 243 Minn. 533,
69 N.W.2d 89 (1955).
2. Shiue attacked Mrs.
Stauffer in open court and in the presence of the jury. Defense
counsel sought a mistrial which was denied by the trial court. The
majority view is that such disruptive conduct is not grounds for a
mistrial. See Blackwell v. Wolff,403 F. Supp. 759 (D. Neb. 1975),
aff'd. sub. nom. Blackwell v. Parratt, 526 F.2d 1142 (8th Cir.
1975) (no error where trial court did not declare mistrial nor
admonish jury after defendant's courtroom outbursts); State v.
Blackwell, 184 Neb. 121, 165 N.W.2d 730 (1969) (defendant's
outbursts completely his own doing did not justify mistrial);
State v. Paul, 83 N.M. 527, 494 P.2d 189 (App. 1972) (defendant's
outbursts during voir dire did not justify mistrial); Layman v.
State, 1 Tenn. Crim. 83, 429 S.W.2d 832 (1968) (misconduct of
co-defendant did not justify mistrial); Chamberlain v. State, 453
S.W.2d 490 (Tex. 1970) (scuffle between robbery defendant and
deputies did not justify mistrial). Cf. State v. Scott, 323 N.W.2d
790 (Minn. 1982) (physical restraint of defendant permissible
where reasonably and eminently necessary.) See Generally Annot.,
89 A.L.R. 3d 960 (1979). The rationale for these decisions is that
a criminal defendant should not be permitted to take advantage of
his own misconduct. We agree with the statement of Mr. Justice
Brennan in Illinois v. Allen, 397 U.S. 337, 349-50, 25 L. Ed. 2d
353, 90 S. Ct. 1057(1970) (concurring opinion):
Neither in criminal nor in civil cases will the law allow a person
to take advantage of his own wrong. To allow the disruptive
activities of a defendant like respondent to prevent his trial is
to allow him to profit from his own wrong. The Constitution would
protect none of us if it prevented the courts from acting to
preserve the very processes that the Constitution itself
prescribes.
The record indicates that the trial
court took all reasonable steps to guarantee defendant's right to
a fair trial. It instructed the jury that the incident could not
be considered in determining whether defendant was guilty of the
substantive offenses. It also instructed that the state's burden
of proof remained exactly the same as if the incident had never
occurred. We conclude that the defendant was not denied a fair
trial by the failure of the trial court to declare a mistrial or
to allow additional voir dire of the jury.
We
have considered and analyzed the numerous remaining issues
presented by Shiue and conclude that they are without merit and
find no necessity to discuss them in detail.
3.
The trial court deviated from the Sentencing Guidelines in
imposing the statutory maximum of forty years' imprisonment. Minn.
Stat. § 609.19 (1980). Defendant had a criminal history score of
one for his federal conviction of kidnapping. The presumptive
sentence for second degree murder with such a score is 140 months.
Defendant's sentence of 480 months was 3.4 times greater than the
presumptive sentence.
The trial court cited as
grounds for departure the following: 1) vulnerability of the
victim; 2) victim did nothing to provoke his kidnapping and
murder; 3) victim was treated with particular cruelty by being
thrown into the trunk of a car and was in terror for one hour; 4)
there was a prior felony offense involving injury to the victim,
as was the case here; 5) defendant's conduct involved extensive
planning, guile, cunning and concealment; and 6) although
defendant had no prior felony record, his admitted break ins would
be considered to negate his lack of a felony record. *fn2 The
court specifically did not consider the plea bargain of the
defendant, *fn3 the courtroom attack on Mrs. Stauffer, nor the
evidence regarding the attempt to kill the witness Stauffer and to
assist Shiue in escaping from jail. The court considered the
mental impairment factor, but concluded that it would not give
much credence to this since Shiue's illusions and obsessions
involved Mrs. Stauffer and not the victim, Jason Wilkman.
We particularly note that the concealment was an aggravating
factor to be considered. For five months, Jason Wilkman's family
suffered a great deal of trauma, not knowing whether their son was
dead or alive. The victim's body was affirmatively concealed by
the defendant. It had been covered with "branches, twigs, leafy
matter, and brush." It was difficult to observe. The body was so
concealed that, even after the defendant brought authorities to
its approximate location, they still searched for an entire day.
The inclusion of concealment as an aggravating factor is justified
not only by the trauma to close relatives, but by independent
policy reasons. At the time of the initial concealment of the body
Shiue's only concern was to avoid discovery of the crime. However,
after his arrest he was able to use the concern of the parents and
the authorities as to the whereabouts of Jason. He negotiated an
agreement to disclose the whereabouts of the body in exchange for
an agreement to forego prosecution for first degree murder. Other
accused persons could view this as an appropriate tool in
negotiating a plea. However, by including concealment as an
aggravating factor, the authorities or counsel for an accused are
in a position to advise that such refusal may lead to an increased
sentence.
Concealment has never been considered
by this court as an aggravating factor. It has been found to be an
appropriate consideration in other jurisdictions. See Gardner v.
State, 270 Ind. 627, 388 N.E.2d 513, 518 (1979) (attempted
concealment of victim's body properly considered as aggravating
factor in sentencing); People v. Saiken, 49 Ill. 2d 504, 275
N.E.2d 381 (1971), cert. denied,405 U.S. 1066, 31 L. Ed. 2d 796,
92 S. Ct. 1499(1972). It is appropriate here.
Based on these considerations we conclude that the trial court was
justified in departing from the presumptive sentence beyond
doubling to the 3.4 times herein imposed. See State v. Herberg,
324 N.W.2d 346 (Minn. 1982).
4. The state
contends that the trial judge erred in not imposing a sentence
consecutive to Shiue's previous federal life sentence. The state
contends that by the nature of the sentence Shiue receives no real
punishment for the heinous crime involved and the public is not
adequately protected. Shiue theoretically could be released from
prison in 26 years, 8 months. However, the state concedes that the
decision to impose a consecutive sentence is discretionary with
the trial judge. In this case we find no abuse of such discretion.