Court Opinion

ID: 4569548
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2020-09-24 22:06:55.056574+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:27:57.148645
License: Public Domain

STATE OF MISSOURI,                                      )
                                                        )
           Plaintiff-Respondent,                        )
                                                        )
vs.                                                     )                 No. SD36481
                                                        )
DEBRA KAY BAUMGARTNER,                                  )                 Filed: September 24, 2020
                                                        )
           Defendant-Appellant.                         )

                APPEAL FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF PHELPS COUNTY

                                Honorable Colin P. Long, Special Judge

AFFIRMED

           Debra Kay Baumgartner (“Appellant”) appeals her convictions after a bench trial

for four counts of stealing, a violation of section 570.030. 1 Appellant contests the

sufficiency of the evidence to support her convictions. We reject her claims and affirm

the judgment.

           When reviewing the sufficiency of the evidence from a bench-tried case, we

accept as true all evidence tending to prove guilt together with all reasonable inferences

that support the verdict. State v. Shaw, 592 S.W.3d 354, 357 (Mo. banc 2019). All

1
    All references to statutes are to RSMo 2016, unless otherwise specified.

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contrary evidence and inferences are ignored. Id. “Evidence is sufficient to support a

conviction when there is sufficient evidence from which a reasonable fact-finder might

have found the defendant guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.” Id. (internal quotations and

citation omitted). With that standard of review in mind we look to the elements of

stealing.

         A person commits the offense of stealing if she, “[f]or the purpose of depriving

the owner of a lawful interest therein, . . . disposes of property of another knowing that it

has been stolen, or believing that it has been stolen.” Section 570.030.1(3). “Proof of the

offense may be based upon circumstantial evidence[,]” which is afforded the same weight

as direct evidence upon appellate review. State v. Middlemist, 319 S.W.3d 531, 534

(Mo.App. S.D.2010); State v. Williams, 455 S.W.3d 1, 8 (Mo.App. S.D. 2013).

         The substantive evidence supporting the convictions includes that, at the time of

the robbery, four guns, which belonged to Appellant’s brother-in-law, were stolen and

subsequently hidden in a shed. Additionally, jewelry, two-dollar bills, and coins were

stolen. The police found the guns, jewelry and other coins in that shed. Appellant was

found to have a two-dollar bill on her person when searched by a deputy; 2 she initially

denied any knowledge of a robbery and claimed that her son had given her the items in

her possession. Subsequently, after her son implicated her, Appellant admitted to the

police that she had accompanied her son to the property where the stolen guns had been

hidden in a shed. Appellant also admitted to pawning certain items of jewelry that had

been stolen. The circumstantial evidence of Appellant being in possession of some of the

property stolen in the robbery at issue and the admissions by Appellant that she pawned

2
 The deputy also testified that Appellant consented to a search of her vehicle wherein he located an
additional coin and some other $2 bills.

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some of the jewelry, as well as accompanying her son to the hidden property, provide

sufficient evidence that a reasonable fact-finder might have found Appellant guilty

beyond a reasonable doubt of disposing of the property of the owner knowing that it had

been stolen or believing that it had been stolen.

       The judgment is affirmed.

Nancy Steffen Rahmeyer, P.J. – Opinion Author

Daniel E. Scott, J. – Concurs

William W. Francis, Jr., J. – Concurs

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