Sometimes opinions are fascinating simply because they give insight into other people's personalities; insights that we wouldn't ordinarily see (and/or people with whom we wouldn't otherwise ordinarily interact).
I just can't fathom reacting the way he did. I mean, I get it. I've read lots of criminal opinions. I get that people have impulse control issues.
Still.
"Defendant and the victim, Megan Carling-Smith (Megan) met and began dating in 2014 or 2015. They moved into an apartment together in July 2015. In 2018, they made plans to get married. That same year, Megan began looking to buy a home where they could live together. In October 2018, Megan’s offer on a home was accepted, with the closing date set for late November.
In the early afternoon of November 20, 2018, Megan left the apartment to sign escrow closing papers. Megan asked defendant to accompany her, but he chose to stay home. When Megan returned to the apartment, around 4:00 p.m., defendant was intoxicated. Defendant testified that he had started drinking a little after noon. He drank two pints of liquor, smoked four or five marijuana joints, and consumed prescription pills (Xanax and Percocet) that he had gotten from a friend.
That evening, defendant and Megan argued about defendant’s infidelity. Defendant testified that during the argument, Megan “kept pushing the issue” of his infidelity and “wouldn’t let it go.” They “just kept arguing and arguing about the same thing over and over.” Eventually, he “kind of just snapped.” In a “rage,” he violently beat Megan, repeatedly hitting her in the face and body and strangling her, until she was unconscious.
Defendant admitted that Megan did not have any weapons, did not threaten him, and did not use any force against him. He did not remember any particular words that Megan said to trigger him: “We were just arguing.” When asked why he reacted as he did, defendant responded, “I don’t know. I wasn’t thinking clearly at all.” “I think it was just the pushing of the issue.” He recalled that Megan did not say anything to him during the attack and that she did not fight back.
After Megan stopped moving, defendant moved her to the bedroom. She was not responsive, and defendant was scared. At some point, he tried to perform CPR, but “[i]t didn’t really work well.” At 3:48 a.m., defendant searched on the Internet for “how to tell if somebody is actually dead.” Around 7:10 a.m., he searched for “how to check for a pulse.” Around 8:05 a.m., defendant called 911. Defendant lied to the dispatcher and said that Megan had been injured in a car accident the night before and that he had found her unresponsive upon waking that morning.
When paramedic firefighters arrived, they found Megan’s body on the floor of the apartment. She had bruising, swelling, and trauma to her face. She had no pulse, her skin was cold, and rigor mortis had set in. She was pronounced dead at 8:11 a.m."
As the jury found, that's second degree murder. Affirmed.