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State v. Anderson4/24/2003
Opinion Vote: REVERSED.
Montgomery, P.J. and Garrison, J., concur
Opinion: REVERSED
Kevin Anderson ("Appellant") appeals his conviction and sentence after a bench trial for felony driving while intoxicated, section 577.010; section 577.023.3. The Circuit Court of Greene County sentenced Appellant to three years' imprisonment, suspended execution of sentence and placed Appellant on five years' supervised probation. Appellant has raised two points of trial court error but we solely address Appellant's first point, because it is dispositive of this appeal. We reverse.
The record shows that on April 10, 2000, at approximately 9:15 p.m., Joretta Butler was stopped at a traffic light, waiting to make a left-hand turn. A vehicle driven by Bang Lam was stopped behind her. While both vehicles were waiting, a truck struck Lam's vehicle from behind, pushing it into Butler's vehicle. Lam testified at trial that his vehicle was totaled as a result of the accident. Although Lam could not identify the make of the vehicle nor the driver of the vehicle, he noted only one person in the truck that hit him. As to the color of the truck, Lam testified, at one point that "I think it was white." When asked the same question on cross-examination he acknowledged that he didn't remember what color the vehicle was. Lam stated the driver who struck Lam did not stop to see if anyone had been injured. Instead, Lam watched as the truck backed up and turned into a nearby parking lot of Bass Pro Shop.
The record shows that Frank Kukal was a security supervisor at the Battlefield Mall and a reserve police officer and that Lam stopped and informed Kukal that he had just been involved in an accident and that the person who hit his vehicle had left the scene and pulled his vehicle into the near-by parking lot at the Bass Pro Shop. After calling 911 to report the accident, Kukal proceeded to the parking lot. Once in the parking lot, Kukal immediately noticed a small white truck. Appellant was the only person in the truck when Kukal arrived. Kukal watched as Appellant exited the vehicle from the driver's side. It appeared to Kukal that Appellant was unable to maintain his balance. Kukal spotted dents in the front of Appellant's vehicle.
Kukal approached Appellant and asked him to return to his vehicle. Appellant replied that he had not been driving and denied that the white truck from which he had exited belonged to him. Appellant then claimed that he had parked his vehicle on the other side of the store from where the white truck was located.
When Officer Steve Lowe of the Springfield Police Department arrived at the parking lot, he observed Kukal and Appellant walking towards a white truck. Upon questioning Appellant, Officer Lowe discerned that Appellant's eyes were glassy, that Appellant's balance was awkward and that he had an odor of intoxicants to him. Appellant was belligerent with Officer Lowe and could not focus enough to answer questions.
Because Officer Lowe thought there was a good possibility that Appellant was the driver that had left the scene of the accident, and that Appellant might be intoxicated, the officer handcuffed Appellant. When the officer patted him down, he discovered keys in Appellant's pocket. Although at one point Appellant had denied owning the white truck, the keys found in Appellant's pocket fit the ignition to the truck.
Officer Richard Mansel of the Springfield Police Department had also been dispatched to the parking lot. When Officer Mansel arrived, he inspected Appellant's truck and noticed what appeared to be fresh damage to the right front bumper. Officer Mansel smelled intoxicants on Appe
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