GEORGE GRIBBONS V COMMONWEALTH OF KENTUCKY
Annotate this Case
Download PDF
IMPORTANT NOTICE
NOT TOME PUBLISHED OPINION
THIS OPINIONIS DESIGNA TED "NOT TO BE
PUBLISHED." PURSUANT TO THE RULES OF
CIVIL PROCED URE PR OMUL GA TED B Y THE
SUPREME COURT, CR 76.28 (4) (c), THIS OPINION
IS NOT TO BE PUBLISHED AND SHALL NOT BE
CITED OR USED AS A UTHORITY INANY OTHER
CASE INANY CO URT OF THIS STA TE.
RENDERED : FEBRUARY 20
NOT TO BE P
,*ixyct (gaurf of
2001-SC-0506-TG
GEORGE GRIBBONS
V
ON TRANSFER FROM COURT OF APPEALS
2001-CA-0929-MR
CASEY CIRCUIT COURT
HONORABLE JAMES WEDDLE, JUDGE
2000-CR-0058
APPELLEE
COMMONWEALTH OF KENTUCKY
MEMORANDUM OPINION OF THE COURT
AFFIRMING
George Gribbons was convicted by a Casey County jury of wanton murder, for
which he received a sentence of forty years' imprisonment .
He appeals to this Court
as a matter of right . We affirm his conviction .
On the evening of September 3, 2000, Jerry Lee Evans was shot and killed while
in his home . Appellant was arrested that very night . Although Appellant pleaded
innocent to the charge of murder, the evidence inculpating him was substantial . At
Appellant's trial, the testimony of several key witnesses reconstructed the events that
led to Evans' murder. According to the testimony, Appellant was distraught because his
estranged wife, Arlene Gribbons, was living with her ex-husband, the victim. Arlene
testified that in the past, while intoxicated, Appellant had threatened to kill both her and
Evans . On the evening of the murder, Appellant became drunk, drove to Evans' trailer
home, and, while still in his truck, fired two shots from his shotgun . One shot fatally
struck Evans in the head . Arlene was present when the murder occurred but escaped
unharmed . A police officer who happened to be at the house next door to Evans' heard
the shotgun reports and saw a truck, later identified as Gribbons', leave the scene.
Appellant's daughter, Lena Gayle Hughes, found Appellant about an hour after
the murder . He was passed out in his truck, which was parked in a ditch on his own
property . Hughes removed the shotgun, which she testified contained two empty deer
slug casings and two unfired shells. Hughes drove Appellant to her brother's house
and en route Appellant stated, "I got me one or two of 'em." While at his son's house,
Appellant admitted to him that he shot Evans. Appellant testified on his own behalf and
admitted being drunk that day. He also admitted driving to Evans' home and firing two
shots in the direction of the trailer, but Appellant could not recall shooting at any
particular target.
The jury was instructed on all degrees of homicide : intentional murder, firstdegree manslaughter, wanton murder, second-degree manslaughter, and reckless
homicide . The jury ultimately convicted Appellant of wanton murder . He appeals that
conviction, alleging four prejudicial errors at trial : (1) the trial court erred by permitting
the Commonwealth to amend the indictment on the morning of the trial to include
wanton murder; (2) the trial court erred by denying him a continuance after permitting
the indictment to be amended ; (3) the trial court should have declared a mistrial after a
detective testified concerning Appellant's silence during police interrogation ; and (4) the
trial court denied Appellant due process and equal protection by refusing to grant his
motion to set a twenty-year minimum parole eligibility for his sentence.
AMENDED INDICTMENT
On September 14, 2000, Appellant was charged by the Casey County Grand
Jury with the intentional murder of Jerry Evans . The trial was scheduled for March 19,
2001, a Monday. On Friday, three days before trial, the Commonwealth moved to
amend the indictment to include a charge of wanton murder. On the morning of trial,
defense counsel objected to the amendment . Over defense counsel's objections, the
trial judge granted the motion to amend . Defense counsel then argued for a one-day
continuance to revise her trial strategy ; the trial court denied this request. On appeal,
Gribbons claims the amendment was improper because it amounted to a "completely
different theory of liability" and there was no new evidence to support that theory .
We begin with the rule in question, RCr 6 .16, which deals with amendment and
provides : "The court may permit an indictment . . . to be amended any time before
verdict or finding if no additional or different offense is charged and if substantial rights
of the defendant are not prejudiced . . . ." The rule is relatively straightforward and our
courts interpret it in like fashion. Esc . , Basham v Commonwealth , Ky. App., 703 S.W.2d
480 (1985) ; Brown v Commonwealth , Ky., 378 S .W .2d 608 (1964) (overruled on other
grounds) . These cases, like the rule itself, embrace amendment as long as the
defendant has notice of the evidence and charges against him . Schambon v.
Commonwealth, Ky. 821 S .W .2d 804, 810 (1991) (" . . . RCr 6.16 is a lenient rule . . .").
Appellant cites Wolbrecht v. Commonwealth , Ky., 955 S .W .2d 533 (1997), for
the proposition that a trial court cannot permit the Commonwealth to amend the
- 3-
indictment to encompass a new charge. But Appellant's reliance on Wolbrecht is
misplaced . In that case, three defendants were charged with killing, or conspiring with
one another to kill, the victim . Because the prosecution could not prove who pulled the
trigger, the original indictment charged that "one of the defendants shot and killed" the
victim . Id . at 534 (emphasis added) . Based on testimony at trial, the prosecution
realized that an unknown party may have been the murderer so it sought to amend the
indictment to charge that the defendants murdered or conspired to murder the victim as
a result of which the victim "was shot and killed . . . ." Id . at 537 (emphasis added) . The
trial judge permitted the amendment, but on appeal this Court reversed that decision
because the majority considered the amendment to be a substantive change resulting
in a new charge . We concluded that the defense was severely prejudiced because it
was "totally unprepared on the issue raised by the amended indictment ." Id.
In this case, Appellant was initially charged with intentional murder (KRS
507 .020(1)(a)) and the Commonwealth sought to amend the indictment to include
wanton murder (KRS 507.020(1)(b)) . As we have said before, intentional and wanton
murder constitute the same crime . See Evans v. Commonwealth , Ky., 45 S.W.3d 445,
447 (2001). In Schambon , we addressed amendment of an indictment to include a
different subsection of the originally charged offense and concluded the amendment
was proper:
The amendment allowed did not result in appellants being charged
with a different offense . To the contrary, the amendment merely altered
the designation of the subsection of the statute under which appellants
were charged . The offense was the same. No additional evidence was
required to prove the amended offense and appellants have not shown
that they were prejudiced by the amendment . There was no error.
821 S .W.2d at 810 . As in Schambon , the charged offense here was the same as the
amended offense and no new evidence was required or presented to support the new
charge. Further, Appellant has demonstrated no prejudice from the amendment . While
we do not condone late amendment by the Commonwealth as trial strategy, there is no
allegation that the Commonwealth engaged in such a practice, and we find no error.
CONTINUANCE
Appellant next argues that after the trial court permitted the Commonwealth to
amend the indictment, he should have been granted a continuance in order to revise
his trial strategy . Appellant requested a continuance, but his request was denied . RCr
6.16 explicitly permits the trial court to grant a continuance when the indictment is
amended : "If justice requires, . . . the court shall grant the defendant a continuance
when such an amendment is permitted ." The question in this case is reduced to
whether justice required the continuance ; we agree with the trial court that it did not.
First, it was readily foreseeable that the indictment would be amended . As
discussed, supra , intentional murder and wanton murder are the same offense . Also,
as the trial judge remarked at the pretrial hearing, the commentary to the penal code
cites shooting into an occupied building as a textbook example of wanton murder. See
KRS 507 .020, commentary . ("Typical of conduct contemplated for inclusion in 'wanton'
murder is: shooting into . . . an occupied building . . . .") But not only did the plain letter
of the law suggest the indictment could be amended, before trial, defense counsel's
own trial strategy would have resulted in amendment during trial . Defense counsel
planned an intoxication defense to intentional murder. This defense would have
negated the intentional murder charge, but would have supported a wanton murder
- 5-
charge. See etc . , Brown v. Commonwealth , Ky., 575 S .W .2d 451 (1978). (Intoxication
is a defense to crimes involving intentional mental state, but not to crimes involving
wanton mental state .) Because the possibility of amendment was imminently
foreseeable, defense counsel should have been prepared for it.
In defense of his position, Appellant again looks to Wolbrecht , 955 S.W .2d 533 .
As stated, supra , Wolbrecht is distinguishable from this case because there the
prosecution introduced a new theory of the case, which the defense was unapprised of
and unable to defend against without additional time. In the present case, there was no
new theory and defense counsel should have been aware of the possibility of
amendment . Appellant also suggests that a continuance would have provided him an
opportunity to explore available plea bargain options or a different defense, extreme
emotional distress . We find these arguments equally unconvincing . After receiving the
prosecution's motion to amend the indictment, defense counsel had some time (a
weekend) to evaluate her strategy in the event her objection to the motion was
overruled . Also, she could have attempted to negotiate a plea bargain after the motion
was granted, but before trial began. It appears that no such attempt was made .
The granting of a continuance lies within the sound discretion of the trial judge .
Having reviewed the record in this case, we find no abuse of discretion .
POLICE TESTIMONY CONCERNING DEFENDANT'S SILENCE
Appellant next urges this Court to reverse his conviction because a witness for
the prosecution commented on his post-Miranda silence . Detective Antle attempted to
interview Appellant shortly after his arrest. At trial, the prosecutor questioned Detective
Antle about the meeting . The prosecutor was attempting to determine Appellant's state
-6-
of sobriety when he asked : "What was his condition, Detective Antle?" The detective
responded : "He was sober enough in my opinion, and of sound enough judgment, to
realize what his rights were, and that he wasn't gonna talk to me ." (Emphasis added .)
Defense counsel immediately objected and, at the ensuing bench conference, moved
for a mistrial . The trial court overruled the objection, but offered and gave an
admonition .
Appellant correctly suggests that evidence of a defendant's post- Miranda silence
is inadmissible . See Wainwright v. Greenfield , 474 U .S . 284, 106 S . Ct. 634, 88 L. Ed .
2d 623 (1986); Doyle v. Ohio, 426 U .S . 610, 96 S . Ct . 2240, 49 L. Ed . 2d 91 (1976);
Holland v. Commonwealth, Ky., 703 S .W .2d 876 (1985); Niemeyer v. Commonwealth ,
Ky., 533 S .W .2d 218 (1976) (overruled on other grounds) . Based on these cases, the
detective's comment was improper . But all of these cases involve deliberate
prosecutorial questioning intended to communicate the forbidden information . That is
not what occurred here . In this case, the prosecutor asked a proper question and the
detective answered by improperly appending the fact of Appellant's silence. We have
previously held that such testimony amounts to harmless error. See Wallen v.
Commonwealth , Ky., 657 S .W .2d 232, 233 (1983). It certainly does not present the
"manifest necessity" required to grant a mistrial . Bray v. Commonwealth , Ky., 68
S .W .3d 375 (2002) (quoting Skaggs v. Commonwealth , Ky., 694 S .W .2d 672 (1985)) .
MINIMUM PAROLE ELIGIBILITY
Appellant was sentenced to forty years' imprisonment for the crime he
committed . Under the violent offender statute, KRS 439.3401(3), Appellant would have
to serve 85% of his term (34 years) before he would be eligible for parole . Based on
- 7-
the fact that a person who receives a life sentence in Kentucky is eligible for parole
after twenty years (KRS 439 .3401(2)), Gribbons filed a motion at the final sentencing
hearing to have his parole eligibility reduced to twenty years. The trial judge agreed
with Appellant that a term of twenty years' imprisonment before parole eligibility seemed
appropriate under our laws and suggested that Appellant submit an order prescribing
the lesser term . There is no evidence in the record that Appellant ever submitted such
an order. On appeal, Appellant reiterates his contention that twenty years is the
appropriate minimum term. We agree that the minimum parole eligibility is 85% of
Appellant's sentence or twenty years, whichever is less . Hughes v. Commonwealth ,
Ky., 87 S.W .3d 850 (2002). However, it is inappropriate for a trial judge to set a
minimum parole eligibility date. That is a function of the parole board, which
presumably is aware of the law.
For the foregoing reasons we affirm the judgment of the Casey Circuit Court.
All concur.
COUNSEL FOR APPELLANT :
Shelly R. Fears
Assistant Public Advocate
Department of Public Advocacy
100 Fair Oaks Lane, Suite 302
Frankfort, KY 40601-1133
COUNSEL FOR APPELLEE:
A . B. Chandler, III
Attorney General of Kentucky
Matthew D. Nelson
Assistant Attorney General
Office of Attorney General
Criminal Appellate Division
1024 Capital Center Drive
Frankfort, KY 40601-8204
Some case metadata and case summaries were written with the help of AI, which can produce inaccuracies. You should read the full case before relying on it for legal research purposes.
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.