State v. Tyler
Annotate this CaseDefendant was convicted of second-degree murder for delivering the first, nonlethal blow to the victim in a fatal beating. Defendant’s blow knocked the victim down, and then others kicked and stomped the victim to death. The Supreme Court affirmed in part and reversed in part, holding (1) substantial evidence supported the jury’s guilty verdict on theories of principal liability and accomplice liability; (2) there was not substantial evidence to support the theory of joint criminal conduct that was also submitted to the jury; and (3) because the jury returned a general verdict of guilty and there was the possibility that at least one juror found Defendant guilty only on the basis of the invalid theory of joint criminal conduct, Defendant’s conviction must be reversed. Remanded for a new trial.
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