Cleary v. State

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Defendant was intoxicated when he crashed his vehicle into a service vehicle, killing the service truck driver. After a trial, Defendant was found guilty of operating a motor vehicle while intoxicated in a manner endangering a person and operating a motor vehicle while intoxicated, but the jury deadlocked on the most serious of Defendant’s charges. Defendant moved for judgment on the verdicts. The trial court denied Defendant’s motion to compel an entry of judgment on the verdicts and permitted the State to retry Defendant on all counts. After a second trial, the jury once again found Defendant guilty of the lesser offenses and also found Defendant guilty of the more serious offenses of causing death when operating a motor vehicle while intoxicated as class B and C felonies. The Supreme Court affirmed the convictions and sentence, holding (1) Defendant’s first deadlock on the most serious of his charges, paired with its finding of guilt as to the lesser offenses, did not equate to an implied acquittal of those more serious offenses; and (2) the prohibition against double jeopardy was not violated when Defendant was retried on the greater offenses upon which the jury was deadlocked. View "Cleary v. State" on Justia Law