State v. DeWeese ( 2017 )


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  •               IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF KANSAS
    No. 112,372
    STATE OF KANSAS,
    Appellee,
    v.
    DANE C. DEWEESE,
    Appellant.
    SYLLABUS BY THE COURT
    1.
    Under Brady v. Maryland, 
    373 U.S. 83
    , 
    83 S. Ct. 1194
    , 
    10 L. Ed. 2d 215
    (1963),
    prosecutors have a positive duty to disclose evidence favorable to the accused when the
    evidence is material either to guilt or to punishment, irrespective of the good faith or bad
    faith of the prosecution.
    2.
    A trial court's determination regarding the existence of a Brady violation is
    reviewed de novo with deference to the trial court's findings of fact. The trial court's
    denial of a defendant's motion for new trial is reviewed under an abuse of discretion
    standard.
    3.
    A court requires three essential elements to establish a Brady violation: (1) The
    evidence at issue must be favorable to the accused, either because it is exculpatory or
    because it is impeaching; (2) that evidence must have been suppressed by the State, either
    1
    willfully or inadvertently; and (3) that the evidence must be material so as to establish
    prejudice.
    4.
    Under the Brady test for materiality, evidence is material only if there is a
    reasonable probability that, had the evidence been disclosed to the defense, the result of
    the proceeding would have been different. A "reasonable probability" is a probability
    sufficient to undermine confidence in the outcome.
    5.
    When the evidence undisclosed by the prosecution merely reinforces evidence
    already presented to the jury, the new evidence is considered cumulative and the
    prosecution's withholding it does not qualify as a Brady violation.
    Appeal from Saline District Court; JARED B. JOHNSON, judge. Opinion filed January 20, 2017.
    Affirmed.
    Kurt P. Kerns, of Ariagno, Kerns, Mank & White, LLC, of Wichita, argued the cause and was on
    the brief for appellant.
    Ellen H. Mitchell, county attorney, argued the cause, and Christina Trocheck, assistant county
    attorney, and Derek Schmidt, attorney general, were with her on the brief for appellee.
    The opinion of the court was delivered by
    NUSS, C.J.: A jury convicted Dane DeWeese of first-degree murder and
    conspiracy to commit first-degree murder. He appeals the district court's denial of his
    motion for new trial in which he argued the State failed to disclose a police report to the
    2
    defense before trial in violation of its obligation under Brady v. Maryland, 
    373 U.S. 83
    ,
    
    83 S. Ct. 1194
    , 
    10 L. Ed. 2d 215
    (1963).
    We affirm the district court because we cannot conclude a reasonable probability
    exists that the trial result would have been different had the State timely disclosed the
    report for the defense's possible use at trial.
    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    The State prosecuted DeWeese under the theory he and Joel Heil caused Kristen
    Tyler's death. The State essentially contended DeWeese initiated the events because he
    believed Tyler stole his money and drugs whereas Heil physically performed the lethal
    acts in DeWeese's presence. Heil extensively testified against DeWeese as part of a plea
    bargain with the State.
    Tyler's murder
    The State's witnesses and physical evidence showed that one night Tyler visited
    her friend Fancy Barboza at Barboza's house in Salina. Tyler brought along Chuck
    Rowson, Barboza's step-father. Tyler asked if either Rowson or Barboza wanted
    methamphetamine, and Barboza answered yes. Tyler then allowed Barboza to come with
    her to get the drugs so long as Barboza promised to stay down in the back seat of the car.
    Barboza agreed, and the two left her house around 10:30 p.m.
    En route, Barboza climbed into the back seat per Tyler's instructions. A short time
    later, Barboza felt Tyler stop the car. Tyler got out while Barboza remained hidden. Tyler
    returned 10 to 15 minutes later, put the keys in the ignition, and left again with her cell
    phone.
    3
    Barboza waited almost 2 hours, but Tyler never came back. When Barboza finally
    got out of the car, she saw it was parked by a bank close to DeWeese's house. The bank's
    video surveillance shows Barboza walking by around 1 a.m.
    At around 11 that same night, DeWeese had driven to Heil's house. He was upset
    and told Heil that money and drugs were missing from his garage and that he believed
    Tyler was responsible. DeWeese also told Heil that Tyler was currently at DeWeese's
    house to buy drugs. He wanted Heil's help in retrieving his money and drugs from Tyler,
    and Heil agreed.
    Heil changed clothes while DeWeese called Tyler. DeWeese told Tyler to give her
    phone to his fiancée, Megan Wells, who was also there. According to Heil, Tyler was not
    supposed to have a phone in DeWeese's house because "funny stuff" was going on there.
    Before Heil left his house, he grabbed a log chain he kept in his kitchen and put it
    in a drawstring bag. While DeWeese drove them to his house, he told Heil his plan was to
    pick up Tyler and take her to the country.
    Once the two men arrived at DeWeese's house, they asked Tyler if she still wanted
    drugs. When Tyler said yes, they told her that she would have to go with them to another
    location to purchase the methamphetamine. Heil's intent was not to go buy drugs but to
    go beat up Tyler and retrieve DeWeese's money and drugs.
    DeWeese, Heil, and Tyler then left DeWeese's house. Heil noted Tyler's car across
    the street but was not aware Barboza was inside. As DeWeese drove, he slipped Tyler's
    cell phone—which he had retrieved from Wells—to Heil and told him that Tyler would
    not be coming back.
    4
    DeWeese stopped at a gas station—not for gas but for the purpose of getting Tyler
    on surveillance cameras away from his house. The station's video surveillance showed
    Tyler entered the store at 11:39 p.m. and left a couple of minutes later.
    After they left the station, DeWeese drove into the country. When Tyler asked
    where they were headed, DeWeese explained they were making the deal in the country so
    if someone informed the police, they would know that one of the three of them was the
    informant.
    DeWeese stopped the car in a tunnel of an interstate overpass outside of Salina and
    popped the trunk. He walked to the back of the car, moved to the passenger side, and
    asked Heil if he was getting out. Heil exited the car, grabbing his chain from the trunk.
    DeWeese told Tyler to get out, and, when she complied, he asked about his drugs and
    money. Tyler replied she did not know what he was talking about.
    In response to Tyler's repeated denials, Heil swung his log chain and struck her in
    the head, causing her to fall down and start shaking. DeWeese then kicked Tyler, and
    Heil attempted to strangle her with the string of his hooded sweatshirt. They continued to
    beat and drag Tyler around the tunnel for 15 or 20 minutes. When she still made sounds,
    they dragged her near a fence and pushed her face into the muddy ground with their feet.
    Heil attempted to cover Tyler with grass while DeWeese picked up several dropped items
    and drove back and forth to cover any tracks.
    Afterward, DeWeese drove Heil back to Heil's house. During the drive, they
    discussed cleaning DeWeese's car and moving Tyler's car away from DeWeese's house.
    At this time Heil still had Tyler's cell phone but when it continued to receive calls,
    DeWeese took it from him. Records showed the phone was last powered on at 1:42 a.m.
    5
    After arriving at Heil's house, Heil entered without DeWeese. Two neighbors were
    in the house along with Kimberly French, a juvenile runaway who was his housemate and
    the girlfriend of his cousin. Heil told the neighbors to leave and walked into his bedroom.
    After the neighbors left, French followed Heil into his bedroom where he told French that
    "they had went and killed Kristin" and he was sorry for any involvement he had gotten
    her in.
    Ten minutes after Heil returned, DeWeese entered the house wearing different
    clothes than he had worn during Tyler's murder. DeWeese carried wet and muddy
    clothes, and he ordered French to get bags. French complied and grabbed a trash bag
    from the kitchen.
    DeWeese told French to put his wet and muddy clothes, Tyler's sweatshirt, and a
    tennis shoe in a trash bag. He mentioned checking the clothing for money. When Heil
    searched the sweatshirt he found money, which DeWeese pocketed. French then received
    their approval to pour bleach and cleaner in the trash bag. Heil and DeWeese later spent
    10 to 15 minutes cleaning DeWeese's car.
    Heil and DeWeese then went back into Heil's bedroom and talked about whether
    French knew too much and if they should move Tyler's car. DeWeese told Heil that
    French needed to be taken care of, and Heil said that wasn't going to happen. After this
    discussion, Heil pulled French into the room and told her that he and DeWeese had talked
    about "tak[ing] care" of her. French testified that DeWeese told her not to say anything,
    which made her feel scared for her life.
    6
    After the men decided to move Tyler's car, DeWeese gave the keys to Heil. Heil
    eventually drove it to an area across town with DeWeese following. While driving back
    from leaving Tyler's car, Heil threw the keys individually out of the window.
    They returned to DeWeese's house to pick up Wells and the couple's 2-month-old
    son to take them to the hospital emergency room. After dropping off mother and son,
    DeWeese took Heil back to Heil's house. Heil testified DeWeese reiterated to him that
    leaving French alive was a mistake.
    Later that day, Heil and French picked up the trash bags containing Heil's and
    DeWeese's clothes, the log chain, Tyler's sweatshirt, and the tennis shoe, and put them in
    a dumpster at his grandmother's house. During the next few days, Heil told four other
    individuals—Angela Helko, Joshua Tucker, Liz Garcia, and his mother—either that Tyler
    was dead or that he or "we" had killed someone.
    Heil was arrested 2 weeks later. That same day Tyler's beaten body was found face
    down in 6-10 inches of water in a muddy ditch near a tunnel by the interstate.
    Impeachment evidence against Heil
    Heil testified extensively for the State. He admitted that per a plea bargain, he
    agreed to plead guilty to premeditated first-degree murder in exchange for the State
    agreeing to later drop murder conspiracy charges and to not seek a hard 50 sentence. Heil
    also agreed to plead guilty to conspiracy to commit robbery in a separate case—in
    exchange for dismissal of yet another case involving possession of methamphetamine.
    According to Heil, the sentences for conspiracy to commit robbery and for homicide
    would run concurrently. He also stated he would first serve a sentence for a probation
    violation.
    7
    The 25-year-old Heil admitted to starting to use methamphetamine when he was
    15 years old. He also admitted to selling drugs. He further testified that meth made him
    paranoid and violent—"a monster" when using—and that he was high on meth when
    Tyler was killed.
    Heil testified he first met DeWeese approximately 2 months before Tyler's death
    and admitted their association centered around drugs—primarily meth. He saved
    DeWeese's name as "Ol' Boy" in his phone contacts. He also testified he had known
    Tyler since 2010. He admitted that several days before her death he had cut her car tires
    in retaliation for a friend. When Tyler asked Heil if he had anything to do with that event,
    he denied it. He also admitted he once had used equipment to check Tyler's car for
    electronic bugs and expressed his suspicions to other individuals that she was a police
    informant. Heil also testified that he and DeWeese were paranoid about confidential
    informants.
    According to Heil, 2 days before Tyler's death, they had an altercation about a trip
    he took to Wichita. Tyler agreed to lend her car so he could pick up drugs and his cousin.
    In exchange, Heil agreed to give Tyler 1.7 grams of meth worth $170. Before leaving
    Salina, Heil asked Tyler if she had fixed her car's tag lights. He was worried faulty lights
    would lead to a police stop—a concern when he also had no driver's license and would be
    carrying drugs. Tyler confirmed the tag lights were working. After this assurance, Heil
    left for Wichita with French.
    Heil testified that while driving to Wichita, he got a call from Tyler advising him
    that her tag lights were probably not working. After Heil stopped and discovered this was
    true, he was "pissed." He suspected that by not having fixed the lights, Tyler might have
    been setting him up to get pulled over by law enforcement.
    8
    Heil further testified that when he got to Wichita, he eventually called his sister to
    pick him up because he refused to drive Tyler's car anymore. He was upset, and he and
    Tyler yelled at each other on the phone. He told her she would have to pick up her car in
    Wichita. Heil parked it between two buildings, left $20 in gas money in the front seat,
    and threw the keys on the floorboard. His sister then drove Heil, French, and a few other
    individuals back to Salina. They arrived early the morning of the murder.
    According to Heil, Tyler came to his house a few hours later—around 6 a.m.—
    cussing him and asking about the location of her car. He told her it was in Wichita but
    refused to give the exact location. Tyler left and returned 10 minutes later with Rowson.
    Heil and Tyler were both mad and cussed at each other. Tyler and Rowson repeatedly
    asked Heil about her car's location, and Heil repeatedly refused to give a specific Wichita
    location.
    Heil and Tyler continued to argue, and Rowson threatened to put Heil in a vehicle
    and take him to Wichita. Heil responded by grabbing the log chain from the kitchen and
    hitting it on his living room couch. Heil told Rowson if Rowson was big enough to put
    him in the car, he would go with them. Heil testified he would have used the chain at that
    moment if necessary. He eventually provided the location of Tyler's car.
    In addition to Heil's testimony, his neighbor, Jayme Cartlich, testified that she was
    at his house the day of Tyler's death and the following day. She stated that early on the
    second day, Heil came in wet and dirty—and went straight to his bedroom without
    acknowledging her. Several weeks later Heil came to her house looking for "Ol' boy or
    Ol' buddy"—which she said referred to her boyfriend and roommate, Max Hahn.
    9
    The State also presented testimony from Leha Vaught, a friend of Heil's, who
    testified that a week after Tyler's death, Heil told her about the tag light episode. Heil said
    Tyler had called him to say the tag lights were out, that she was calling the cops, and he
    needed to be careful otherwise he would get caught. Heil also told her that he and "Ol'
    Boy" had killed Tyler by taking her out to a dirt road on the premise of buying drugs, he
    had beaten her with a log chain and strangled her, and they both held her head under
    water until she quit moving. According to Vaught, Heil said "he had to stop her before
    . . . she had called the cops because he could not get caught."
    Vaught also testified that Heil had said he was upset with Tyler because on a
    couple of occasions she had "stolen things from his house, stolen drugs from him."
    The defense presented testimony from Stephanie Hewitt, an inmate in a temporary
    cellblock next to Heil after he was arrested. Hewitt testified that Heil admitted he had
    killed Tyler and someone else was with him. She also testified he told her that during his
    communications with Tyler about the tag light incident, Tyler threatened to call the cops
    because he didn't return her car and pay her like he had said. Per Hewitt, "[Heil] said,
    'Nobody fucks with me or my family,' and that's why he killed her."
    Also testifying for the defense was Heil's friend, Angela Helko. Heil told her that
    he and somebody else had killed someone. According to Helko, Heil identified that other
    person as Chuck or Charles—not Dane DeWeese.
    DeWeese testified in his own defense. He admitted that he resumed his meth use 2
    months before Tyler's death, and his usage got heavier the second month. According to
    DeWeese, around 11:30 on the night of Tyler's death, he got a call from Heil saying he
    needed a ride to get some dope. He then picked up Heil and Tyler. He admitted going to
    the gas station with them, traveling on the interstate, and obtaining drugs. But he testified
    10
    he later dropped off Tyler and Heil at Heil's house and went home where he changed
    clothes and smoked some drugs Heil had given him. DeWeese expressly denied being
    with Heil at the scene of Tyler's death.
    DeWeese also testified to taking Wells and their baby to the hospital. But after
    they returned home, he received an early morning call from Heil, who asked for a ride to
    Heil's car. He picked up Heil and drove him to a car—not belonging to Heil—which
    turned out to be in front of DeWeese's house. Heil drove off, and DeWeese turned home.
    After a 12-day trial, the jury convicted DeWeese of Tyler's premeditated first-
    degree murder and conspiracy to commit first-degree murder.
    Investigator Melissa Short's rejected report and DeWeese's motion for new trial
    Nine days after the jury's guilty verdict, DeWeese filed a motion for new trial. In
    it, he stated that on April 11, 2014—3 days after the verdict—the State provided the
    defense a copy of a report written by Investigator Melissa Short of the Salina Police
    Department, dated May 31, 2013. DeWeese argued the report contained "material facts
    and information directly relevant to the facts and issues presented to the jury." At the
    close of the eventual hearing on DeWeese's motion, the district court denied it.
    The court found that Investigator Short prepared her report on her last day of
    work, and it detailed her involvement with Tyler's murder case. Because it was Short's
    last day, she did not know her report was later rejected by the electronic reporting system.
    An administrator for the police department discovered Short's rejected report
    approximately a year later, and it was immediately turned over to the County Attorney's
    office. On April 11, 2014, that office turned the report over to defense counsel. The court
    11
    concluded the failure to turn over the report was not the result of intentional or negligent
    omission by the County Attorney's office.
    The court found that most of the report's information had been disclosed to
    defense counsel by other means. The only information not previously shared was a
    statement by Brandi Rader, Heil's roommate for 4 days earlier in the month of Tyler's
    death. Rader had told Short that (1) Heil was looking for an opportunity to rob Tyler and
    her mom of a large quantity of drugs, (2) Heil used a gun to threaten Rader and her
    husband, and (3) the Raders fled to Texas 1 week before the murder out of fear for their
    lives.
    The court observed that the question to be answered was whether Rader's
    statement was "sufficiently material to undermine the confidence and the verdict of this
    jury." It then analyzed the Rader information under Brady v. Maryland, 
    373 U.S. 83
    , 
    83 S. Ct. 1194
    , 
    10 L. Ed. 2d 215
    (1963). At the outset it found that several Brady
    requirements had been met: The information was favorable to DeWeese and was not
    disclosed to the defense before trial.
    The court also found the State's case relied heavily on Heil's account of the events
    and his assertion that DeWeese initiated the events and conspired to kill Tyler because he
    believed she stole from him, "but that Joel Heil actually physically carried out those
    acts." It further found that the defense and the State's own witnesses established that Heil
    and Tyler had a contentious, drug-fueled relationship, that he suspected her of being an
    informant, and that he was angry with her regarding the trip to Wichita. The court also
    found that the evidence established Heil was in the midst of a confrontational, paranoid
    and downward spiral fueled by methamphetamine.
    12
    The court additionally found that the Rader information was impeachment
    evidence the defense would have used at trial to support the theory that Heil murdered
    Tyler as part of his plan to rob her. But it further found that the defense already had
    thoroughly impeached Heil regarding his prior inconsistent statements, his motivations
    for testifying—including the existence of a prior robbery case—and the benefits he
    received from his plea bargain with the State for testifying. The court also found the jury
    was well aware that Heil was a "gun-toting," violent drug dealer and meth user who had
    previously committed various nefarious deeds. And the issue with the Raders was remote
    in time, when compared to the more recent events surrounding Heil's trip to Wichita and
    his volatile relationship with Tyler—which defense counsel thoroughly covered at trial.
    Ultimately, the court ruled:
    "The jury was well aware of Mr. Heil's criminal propensities and his motive for
    testifying. Given the quality and quantity of impeaching cross-examination at trial, no
    reasonable jury would have reached a different result if this suppressed evidence was
    presented. . . . For the purposes of the third Brady factor, the information from Ms. Rader
    is not material, the defendant received a fair trial in its absence and it does not undermine
    the confidence of the trial's outcome. That motion is denied."
    The court later imposed a life sentence with a mandatory 25 years for
    premeditated first-degree murder and a consecutive sentence of 131 months for
    conspiracy to commit first-degree murder. DeWeese timely appeals.
    Jurisdiction is proper under K.S.A. 2015 Supp. 22-3601(b)(3), (4) (maximum
    sentence of life imprisonment imposed for an off-grid crime [first-degree murder]).
    More facts will be added as necessary to the analysis.
    13
    ANALYSIS
    Issue: The district court did not abuse its discretion when it denied DeWeese's motion for
    new trial based on a Brady violation.
    DeWeese argues the district court erred in denying his motion for new trial in
    which he asserted the State's failure to timely disclose the Short report violated its
    obligation under Brady, 
    373 U.S. 83
    . In contending the report contained valuable
    evidence he could have used for impeaching Heil at trial, he frames the specific issue as:
    "Whether the evidence of a desire to harm the victim [Tyler], which contradicted the
    actual killer's testimony [Heil] that he lacked motive and that the killing was done at the
    defendant's [DeWeese] behest, created a reasonable probability that had the evidence
    been disclosed to the defense, the result of the trial would have been different, thus
    requiring a new trial."
    The State essentially responds that the court did not err because the report does not
    put the whole case in such a different light as to undermine confidence in the jury's
    verdict. Among other things, it contends the evidence from the report is simply
    cumulative to evidence admitted at trial. See State v. Warrior, 
    294 Kan. 484
    , 511-12, 
    277 P.3d 1111
    (2012).
    Standard of review
    We review de novo a trial court's determination regarding the existence of a Brady
    violation but with deference to that court's findings of fact. 
    Warrior, 294 Kan. at 510
    .
    And the court's denial of the defendant's motion for new trial is reviewed under an abuse
    of discretion 
    standard. 294 Kan. at 510
    . This court's abuse of discretion standard is well
    known:
    14
    "'"Judicial discretion is abused if judicial action (1) is arbitrary, fanciful, or unreasonable,
    i.e., if no reasonable person would have taken the view adopted by the trial court; (2) is
    based on an error of law, i.e., if the discretion is guided by an erroneous legal conclusion;
    or (3) is based on an error of fact, i.e., if substantial competent evidence does not support
    a factual finding on which a prerequisite conclusion of law or the exercise of discretion is
    based. [Citation omitted.]" State v. Ward, 
    292 Kan. 541
    , 550, 
    256 P.3d 801
    (2011), cert.
    denied ____ U.S. ____, 
    132 S. Ct. 1594
    (2012).'" State v. Shank, 
    304 Kan. 89
    , 92, 
    369 P.3d 322
    (2016) (quoting State v. Wilson, 
    301 Kan. 403
    , 405, 
    343 P.3d 102
    (2015).
    The party asserting an abuse of discretion bears the burden of establishing such
    abuse. State v. Schow, 
    287 Kan. 529
    , 541, 
    197 P.3d 825
    (2008). Here, that burden is
    DeWeese's, and he claims the court incorrectly determined the report was immaterial—
    i.e., that the court made an error of law.
    Discussion
    In Brady v. Maryland, the United States Supreme Court held: "[T]he suppression
    by the prosecution of evidence favorable to an accused upon request violates due process
    where the evidence is material either to guilt or to punishment, irrespective of the good
    faith or bad faith of the 
    prosecution." 373 U.S. at 87
    . So prosecutors have a positive duty
    to disclose evidence favorable to the accused—which encompasses both exculpatory and
    impeachment evidence. 
    Warrior, 294 Kan. at 505-06
    (citing Strickler v. Greene, 
    527 U.S. 263
    , 281-82, 
    119 S. Ct. 1936
    , 
    144 L. Ed. 2d 286
    [1999]).
    This court requires three essential elements to establish a Brady violation: "'(1)
    The evidence at issue must be favorable to the accused, either because it is exculpatory,
    or because it is impeaching; (2) that evidence must have been suppressed by the State,
    either willfully or inadvertently; and (3) the evidence must be material so as to establish
    15
    prejudice.'" State v. Moore, 
    302 Kan. 685
    , 700, 
    357 P.3d 275
    (2015); see also 
    Strickler, 527 U.S. at 290
    (prejudice encompasses the materiality requirement of Brady).
    Here, as in Warrior, the first two Brady elements are not at issue. The State
    concedes that Short's report contained impeachment evidence and that it was
    inadvertently suppressed by the State. Accordingly, we need only focus on the third
    element—i.e., whether the evidence is material. See 
    Warrior, 294 Kan. at 507
    .
    When we consider this Brady element of materiality, we employ a "reasonable
    probability" test:
    "'"The evidence is material only if there is a reasonable probability that, had the evidence
    been disclosed to the defense, the result of the proceeding would have been different. A
    'reasonable probability' is a probability sufficient to undermine confidence in the
    outcome."'" State v. Williams, 
    303 Kan. 585
    , 597, 
    363 P.3d 1101
    (2016) (quoting
    
    Warrior, 294 Kan. at 507
    ).
    In short, "'Does the [newly disclosed] evidence put the whole case in such a
    different light as to undermine confidence in the verdict?'" 
    Moore, 302 Kan. at 701
    (quoting 
    Warrior, 294 Kan. at 511
    ).
    Some of the evidence in Short's undisclosed report was previously disclosed to the
    defense via other means and is not at issue. See Wilkins v. State, 
    286 Kan. 971
    , 990, 
    190 P.3d 957
    (2008) (holding newly disclosed evidence did not support a Brady claim where
    the defense was aware of it prior to trial). So this court must determine if the remaining
    evidence from the report creates a reasonable probability that the result of the trial would
    have been different had the State timely disclosed that evidence.
    16
    DeWeese particularly argues the importance of the Short report's remaining
    information in his brief:
    "The obvious motivation for Joel [Heil] to kill Kristin [Tyler] was the trip to Wichita the
    day before. Playing down what had happened with Kristin in Wichita the day before she
    died, Joel claimed he was over that and held no grudge against Kristin. For it to be
    believable that someone else was involved and that he was only the henchman, Joel had
    to present an alternative theory. Indeed credibility was critical if Joel was to take
    advantage of the bargain the State was offering . . . . To accomplish that, Joel offered a
    motive for Dane [defendant] to have Kristin killed, while diffusing any suggestion that he
    might have wanted her dead." (Emphasis added.)
    While conceding Heil's "obvious motivation" to kill Tyler was the Wichita trip,
    DeWeese specifically argues that Rader's information provided yet another Heil motive
    which would have impeached his testimony that claimed DeWeese had the primary
    motive to kill Tyler. As DeWeese further contends in his brief, evidence
    "as to why Joel [Heil] really killed her would have cast doubt on Joel's claims that Dane
    [defendant] was the mastermind or that Dane even had a role in her death. The Raders
    would have provided that motive. . . .
    ". . . The ability of the defense to impeach Joel with the attempted robbery
    [claimed by Rader] was material to destroying not just his credibility but placing the
    motive for her death squarely on Joel's shoulders where it belonged. Because the
    evidence of Dane's involvement was by no means overwhelming, there was a reasonable
    probability that the result of the trial would have been different." (Emphasis added.)
    The State generally responds that both parties presented evidence that Heil had a
    contentious relationship with Tyler and that he was upset with her prior to her murder.
    The State also argues that the undisclosed evidence of Heil's plan to rob Tyler and her
    17
    mother was cumulative to the Wichita trip or merely reinforced other impeachment
    evidence. As for evidence that Heil threatened the Raders who later fled as a result, the
    State contends that this incident is remote in time and unconnected to Tyler's death. We
    basically agree with the State.
    We begin with the issue of cumulative evidence. The materiality calculus includes
    acknowledging that when the undisclosed evidence merely reinforces evidence already
    presented to the jury—or as the State argues here, if the witness was already significantly
    impeached with other evidence—the new evidence is considered cumulative and the
    prosecution's withholding it does not qualify as a Brady violation. See 
    Warrior, 294 Kan. at 511
    -12; Wilkins v. State, 
    286 Kan. 971
    , 991, 
    190 P.3d 957
    (2008). As a result, we need
    to specifically compare the impeachment evidence already presented to the jury to the
    impeachment evidence in the Short report not previously disclosed by other means.
    Accordingly, our focus is on yet another motive for Heil to kill Tyler that was in
    the evidence presented to the jury. Specifically, Leha Vaught testified that Heil had told
    her he was upset with Tyler because on a couple of occasions she had "stolen things from
    his house, stolen drugs from him." The State's allegation that DeWeese wanted Tyler
    dead because she stole money and drugs from his garage was a sufficient motive for
    DeWeese's murder charges. So any evidence indicating that Tyler stole things and drugs
    from Heil could impeach his testimony "that he lacked motive and that the killing was
    done at the defendant's behest." Accordingly, Rader's information about Heil's plan to rob
    Tyler of drugs as a motive to kill her—and thus impeach Heil—would clearly be
    cumulative to Vaught's testimony.
    The record also contains evidence of an additional motive for Heil to kill Tyler
    suggested by the district court yet overlooked by DeWeese's argument: his concern she
    would inform the police about his illegal activities. Heil admitted he once had checked
    18
    Tyler's car for electronic bugs, had expressed his suspicions to other individuals that she
    was a police informant, and that he was paranoid about confidential informants.
    Others testified Heil told them that Tyler had threatened to call the cops because
    he had not returned her car and paid her in meth for its use. "[H]e had to stop her before
    she . . . had called the cops because he could not get caught." And "'Nobody fucks with
    me [Heil] or my family,' and that's why he killed her." The latter comments may have
    been based on his anger and desire for revenge concerning the Wichita tag light
    incident—the incident which DeWeese claims is Heil's obvious motivation to kill her.
    But as DeWeese points out, Heil testified the incident had nothing to do with her
    homicide the next day. So in the absence of a grudge from that incident, the comments
    may simply have been based on Heil's cool instinct for survival once he got over his
    anger, i.e., yet another motive to kill.
    Rader's information about Heil's plan to rob Tyler of drugs as a motive to kill
    her—and thus impeach Heil—would clearly be cumulative to this other evidence of
    motive. Additionally, Rader's information would clearly be cumulative to evidence of
    still another Heil motive established in his testimony. Specifically, right after he testified
    the tag light incident had nothing to do with Tyler's homicide, he admitted he owed her
    money. Given their drug-based relationship, this was a debt likely extinguished upon her
    death. See State v. Boldridge, 
    274 Kan. 795
    , 809, 
    57 P.3d 8
    (2002) (holding evidence of
    financial gain motive for murder).
    We agree with the State that Heil's credibility also was impeached by other
    evidence at trial. Among these are his inconsistent statements about the identity of his
    coparticipant in the murder. Heil told Leha Vaught that "Ol' Boy" helped with the killing.
    While his cell phone directory identified this person as DeWeese, Jayme Cartlich said
    Heil was referring to her roommate Max Hahn when he was looking for "Ol' boy."
    19
    Additionally, Heil told Angela Helko that the coparticipant was named "Chuck or
    Charles"—not Dane DeWeese. Indeed, Heil later admitted during his testimony that he
    was referring to Chuck Rowson to implicate him because he did not like the man and
    wanted to draw attention from DeWeese. He thus not only gave yet another name for his
    coparticipant but also demonstrated his willingness to lie. And of course at trial Heil
    implicated DeWeese. See 
    Warrior, 294 Kan. at 511
    (impeachment included witness
    initially identifying person other than coparticipant as the shooter and "'making up
    stuff'").
    The defense further impeached Heil's credibility when it cross-examined him
    about his criminal behavior, including his drug use and dealing. Heil testified that his
    meth use caused sleeplessness and paranoia, i.e., leading him to use a bug detector on
    Tyler's car. Heil said he was a monster while using meth. He described this behavior as
    lacking self-respect and respect for others and that he would have no feelings for people
    while using.
    Heil admitted threatening Tyler and Rowson with his log chain the same day of
    her murder. He also admitted that he had taken meth just 1 or 2 hours before that incident
    in his house and that he was high on meth during Tyler's murder—where his efforts to
    kill her included beating her head with his log chain, strangling her with a cord from his
    hooded sweatshirt, and forcing her face into the mud with his feet. Moreover, he testified
    that part of his plea agreement—in exchange for his testimony against DeWeese—
    included pleading guilty to conspiracy to commit robbery in a separate case, as well as
    receiving less than a hard 50 sentencing recommendation for his part in Tyler's prolonged
    and brutal killing.
    Accordingly, Rader's statements that Heil threatened her and her husband with a
    gun and they later fled the state because of him only reinforces evidence already
    20
    presented to the jury on Heil's credibility—i.e., that he had criminal tendencies,
    sometimes violent.
    In short, the prosecution and defense presented evidence of several different Heil
    motives to kill Tyler, as well as ample evidence of other impeachment matters such as his
    inconsistent statements and violent tendencies. When compared with this evidence, the
    new evidence relied upon by DeWeese from Short's undisclosed report is cumulative and,
    therefore, not material under Brady. See 
    Warrior, 294 Kan. at 511
    -12 (citing cases for the
    principle that undisclosed impeachment evidence is not material, e.g., it is cumulative,
    where the witness already has been impeached through other means); 
    Wilkins, 286 Kan. at 991
    (reports' "principal value was mere reinforcement of evidence already before the
    jury"; thus, immaterial).
    The decision by the Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals cited in Warrior—and by the
    district court in the instant case—is instructive. In United States v. Trujillo, 
    136 F.3d 1388
    (10th Cir. 1998), the court held that the "failure to disclose impeachment evidence
    does not require automatic reversal, even where, as here, the prosecution's case depends
    largely on the credibility of a particular witness." (Emphasis 
    added.) 136 F.3d at 1393
    .
    There, the undisclosed evidence pertained to prior inconsistent statements the witness,
    Ladd, had made to the FBI. In those statements, Ladd claimed he had no involvement
    with any robberies in Oklahoma. But when Ladd realized he would not avoid charges, he
    implicated himself and the defendant.
    At trial, Ladd admitted that he had three prior felony convictions and that he was
    testifying as part of a plea agreement. The court determined that the undisclosed
    inconsistent statements were cumulative to Ladd's testimony on direct and cross-
    examination and would have provided only marginal additional support for the defense.
    Ultimately, the court concluded the information was unlikely to have changed the jury's
    21
    decision because the jury was well aware of Ladd's criminal propensities and motive for
    
    testifying. 136 F.3d at 1394
    ; see also State v. 
    Armstrong, 240 Kan. at 452
    (murder
    prosecution's "key witness" was impeached with his prior inconsistent statements and
    alleged concessions made by dismissal of criminal charges against son; "We do not
    believe a different result would have occurred by confronting [witness] with the alleged
    'concessions' made to his daughter Tammy" which had not been disclosed by State).
    Given the facts of this case, it cannot be concluded there was a reasonable
    probability that, had the Short report been timely disclosed to the defense, the result of
    the proceeding would have been different—i.e., this evidence does not put the whole case
    in such a different light as to undermine confidence in the verdict. See 
    Warrior, 294 Kan. at 511
    -12. The district court essentially concluded the same. Accordingly, it did not abuse
    its discretion in denying DeWeese's motion for new trial.
    Affirmed.
    22