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State v. Craig - Suppression of Evidence

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Filed March 20th, 2026
Detected March 20th, 2026
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Summary

The Kansas Supreme Court clarified the definition of "suppressing evidence" for interlocutory appeals, holding that an order denying a late witness endorsement can qualify if it substantially impairs the State's ability to prosecute. The Court reversed a lower appellate court's decision, affirming the district court's discretion in denying the State's belated motion to endorse witnesses.

What changed

The Kansas Supreme Court, in State v. Craig, has clarified the scope of "suppressing evidence" as it pertains to interlocutory appeals under K.S.A. 22-3603. The Court ruled that an order denying a late motion to endorse witnesses can be considered an order suppressing evidence if it substantially impairs the prosecution's ability to present its case. This broadens the interpretation beyond just illegally obtained evidence, encompassing rulings that effectively exclude critical prosecution evidence.

This decision affirms the district court's discretion in managing its docket and witness endorsements. The ruling reverses a Court of Appeals decision that had applied a "prejudicial surprise" test to the State's motion. Compliance officers and legal professionals involved in criminal proceedings should note that a district court's decision on late witness endorsements is largely discretionary and will be upheld unless it constitutes an abuse of discretion based on an error of law or fact, or is unreasonable. The case is remanded, affirming the district court's judgment.

What to do next

  1. Review K.S.A. 22-3603 and related case law regarding interlocutory appeals and witness endorsements.
  2. Ensure timely witness endorsement processes to avoid potential exclusion of evidence.
  3. Consult with legal counsel on the implications of this ruling for ongoing and future criminal cases.

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March 20, 2026 Get Citation Alerts Download PDF Add Note

State v. Craig

Supreme Court of Kansas

Combined Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF KANSAS

No. 127,070

STATE OF KANSAS,
Appellant,

v.

JOSHUA XAVIER CRAIG,
Appellee.

SYLLABUS BY THE COURT

1.
As used in K.S.A. 22-3603, the term "suppressing evidence" has a broader
meaning than the suppression of evidence illegally obtained; it includes not only
constitutional suppression but also rulings of a trial court that exclude the prosecution's
evidence so as to substantially impair its ability to prosecute the case.

2.
An order denying a late motion to endorse witnesses can constitute an order
suppressing evidence for purposes of interlocutory appeal under K.S.A. 22-3603 if the
State establishes that the order effectively excludes evidence in a manner that
substantially impairs its ability to prosecute the case.

3.
A district court abuses its discretion only when its decision is based on an error of
law or fact, or when no reasonable person would have taken the view adopted by the
district court.

1
4.
In denying a late motion to endorse witnesses, there is no "prejudice by surprise"
finding required; it is wholly within the district court's discretion to deny such a motion.

Review of the judgment of the Court of Appeals in an unpublished opinion filed May 23, 2025.
Appeal from Leavenworth District Court; GERALD R. KUCKELMAN, judge. Oral argument held January
29, 2026. Opinion filed March 20, 2026. Judgment of the Court of Appeals reversing the district court is
reversed. Judgment of the district court is affirmed, and the case is remanded.

Ethan C. Zipf-Sigler, assistant solicitor general, argued the cause, and Kris W. Kobach, attorney
general, was with him on the briefs for appellant.

Kristen B. Patty, of Wichita, argued the cause and was on the brief for appellee.

The opinion of the court was delivered by

WALSH, J.: This case, presented on the State's interlocutory appeal, requires us to
define the contours of a district court's discretion to deny a belated motion to endorse
witnesses. A panel of our Court of Appeals, concluding it had jurisdiction, reversed the
district court's denial of the State's third motion to endorse, which sought to endorse 10
witnesses less than two weeks before trial. Relying on caselaw concerning whether a
district court abuses its discretion in granting a late motion, the panel concluded that the
district court applied the incorrect test in denying the motion. It remanded with directions
to consider whether late-endorsed witnesses would frustrate the defendant's ability to
defend against the charges, as measured by prejudicial surprise to defendant. On the
defendant's expedited petition for review, we affirm the exercise of appellate jurisdiction.
But we conclude that the district court did not abuse its discretion in denying the State's
motion when its ultimate conclusion was that the defendant would suffer actual prejudice
from the late endorsement of the State's witnesses—two of whom would require the
withdrawal of defendant's trial counsel, creating delay and implicating defendant's

2
constitutional speedy trial rights. Accordingly, we reverse the Court of Appeals and
affirm the district court.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

District Court Proceedings

Joshua Xavier Craig's charges arose from the shooting death of Matthew Smith in
mid-August, 2020, in Lansing. As set out by the panel, the general allegations are as
follows:

"On the evening of August 15 and into the morning of August 16, 2020, Stephen
Perrin was at a local Lansing bar called The Groggery with his friends Josh Harden and
Matt Smith. While there, Perrin had an encounter with Benny Bush, a man Perrin's cousin
had beat up about 15 years earlier. Bush's friends jumped Perrin at a party about five or
six years after that. The two men had not seen each other since. That night at The
Groggery, they 'had some words.' Perrin was a little angry, and Bush was cold and
standoffish. Around closing time, Perrin left with Smith in Smith's white Chevrolet
pickup. Soon after leaving the bar, as they were driving, Perrin heard 'what sounded like
a whistling,' and he 'saw a muzzle flash coming from the car behind' them. Perrin told
Smith to pull over, but 'at that same time, the back window broke and . . . [Smith]
slumped over.' Smith had been shot in the head." State v. Craig, No. 127,070, 2025 WL
1482667, at *1 (Kan. App. 2025) (unpublished opinion).

In a Complaint/Information filed April 7, 2023, the State charged Craig with
felony murder based on an underlying count of criminal discharge of a firearm at an
occupied vehicle. The complaint endorsed 24 witnesses. The State filed its first motion to
endorse witnesses on July 17, 2023 (adding two witnesses). It then filed a second motion
to endorse witnesses on August 8, 2023 (adding one witness). Both motions were
granted. The district court held a preliminary hearing on August 11, 2023, at which the

3
State presented 9 witnesses—including 5 of the 10 presently at issue. The State also
called Dameon Lewis, but during a bench conference, defense counsel explained that he
currently represented Lewis in a CINC case. When the district court asked whether Lewis
had been "endorsed and listed," defense counsel said "yeah, he's listed." Lewis had not, in
fact, been endorsed. The following exchange then occurred:

"[Defense counsel]: Mr. Melton [the prosecutor], do you need him? I mean, just to get
through today (inaudible).

"[The State]: If I don't call him—if I don't ask him questions here, are you proposing that
you would finish the hearing and then withdraw?

"[Defense counsel]: Yeah.

"[The State]: I guess we can do that.

"The Court: Well, I mean, that's up to you. I don't know what your case is, so if he—

"[The State]: I don't—I don't need him for today.

"The Court: All right. I was gonna say because if you need him, we're just gonna have to
start all over and with new counsel because—

"[The State]: Yeah.

"The Court: —there's clearly a conflict. So if you don't call him, then, I mean, we could
finish this, and you could evaluate whether you have a conflict or not.

"[Defense counsel]: Yeah.

"[The State]: Okay. Let's do that.

4
....

"The Court: All right. The State is not gonna call this witness."

The district court ultimately found probable cause and bound Craig over for trial,
setting the trial date for December 18, 2023.

The State filed its witness and exhibit list on November 20, 2023. Among the 35
names on the list, the State included 7 of the 10 witnesses who would later come up in its
third motion to endorse witnesses.

On December 7, 2023, the State filed a third motion to endorse witnesses, naming
10 witnesses, some of whom were identified in the April 7, 2023 probable cause
affidavit, some of whom testified at the preliminary hearing, some who were mentioned
at the preliminary hearing but did not testify, and some of whom were named in the
State's pretrial witness list, but none of whom had been previously endorsed.

Also on December 7, the State filed a pleading titled "State's Motion for Court to
Determine Whether a Conflict Exists for Defense Counsel" acknowledging the known
conflict should Lewis be called as a witness and essentially requesting defense counsel be
removed and a new attorney appointed for Craig. Defense counsel filed his own motion
to withdraw on December 12, 2023, citing the aforementioned conflict with Lewis and
another conflict with witness Lacy Richeson, who had not been previously endorsed and
who had not been called during the preliminary hearing.

The district court took up the motions at a pretrial conference. There, defense
counsel stated that there would be no conflict—and thus no need to withdraw—if the
State did not call either Richeson or Lewis. The court then reasoned that it should
consider the motion to endorse first, at which point the prosecutor argued that—because

5
all the witnesses were named in the reports and that both parties were "presumably"
aware of them since the case's inception—defense counsel could neither "claim surprise"
nor "prejudice on these witnesses." The prosecutor admitted that the failure to endorse
originally was "simply by virtue of a clerical error made on my part." Although defense
counsel conceded that there would be no surprise as to Lewis, he argued "that the
endorsement is late" and, thus, "if there's any prejudice, it would be that Mr. Craig would
have a delayed jury trial and he wouldn't have the representation that he's had since the
case started."

In an oral pronouncement that we will discuss in more detail in our analysis, the
district court denied the State's third motion to endorse. The State timely filed a notice of
interlocutory appeal pursuant to K.S.A. 22-3603.

Court of Appeals Proceedings

On appeal, a panel of the Court of Appeals reversed the district court's decision
and remanded with directions "to apply the proper standard." Craig, 2025 WL 1482667,
at *5. The panel first ruled that interlocutory appellate jurisdiction was proper because
the State had established that its case would be substantially impaired without the
witnesses. 2025 WL 1482667, at *3-4.

Then, relying on a line of cases holding that K.S.A. 22-3201(g) permits the State
"to endorse witnesses at any time unless 'it will result in actual prejudice in [the
defendant's] ability to defend against the charges,'" the panel concluded that the district
court had employed the wrong test in denying the State's motion, and that it should have
focused on whether Craig would be surprised by the new witnesses. Craig, 2025 WL
1482667, at *4. Thus, the panel held that the district court abused its discretion by
making a mistake of law because "the appropriate standard to be applied by the district

6
court was whether the late endorsement caused actual prejudice to the defense, not
whether the State acted with bad faith." 2025 WL 1482667, at *5.

We granted Craig's petition for review challenging the panel's jurisdictional
conclusion and its decision to reverse the district court's denial of the State's third motion
to endorse witnesses.

ANALYSIS

Is interlocutory appellate jurisdiction proper?

Craig first challenges the panel's conclusion that it had appellate jurisdiction. Craig
claims the State has failed to show that the district court's decision would substantially
impair its ability to successfully prosecute the case, as required by K.S.A. 22-3603 and
State v. Myers, 314 Kan. 360, 366, 499 P.3d 1111 (2021).

"The existence of appellate jurisdiction presents a question of law subject to
unlimited review." City of Wichita v. Trotter, 316 Kan. 310, 312, 514 P.3d 1050 (2022).

"Under article 3, section 3 of the Kansas Constitution, we have 'appellate
jurisdiction as may be provided by law.' The right of appeal is, thus, purely statutory."
Benchmark Property Remodeling v. Grandmothers, Inc., 319 Kan. 227, 233, 553 P.3d
974 (2024). As with jurisdictional questions, this court applies unlimited review to
questions of statutory interpretation. Grandmothers, Inc., 319 Kan. at 233.

K.S.A. 22-3603 governs the State's ability to file an interlocutory appeal from the
district court's evidentiary rulings in some contexts:

7
"When a judge of the district court, prior to the commencement of trial of a
criminal action, makes an order quashing a warrant or a search warrant, suppressing
evidence or suppressing a confession or admission an appeal may be taken by the
prosecution from such order if notice of appeal is filed within 14 days after entry of the
order. Further proceedings in the trial court shall be stayed pending determination of the
appeal." (Emphases added.)

This court has "held that an order 'suppressing evidence' includes 'rulings of a trial
court which exclude state's evidence so as to substantially impair the state's ability to
prosecute the case.'" Myers, 314 Kan. at 365 (quoting State v. Newman, 235 Kan. 29, 34,
680 P.2d 257 [1984]). The statute is intended to permit appellate review of trial court
rulings on pretrial motions that may be determinative of the case. Newman, 235 Kan. at
35
. The denial of a motion to endorse witnesses can constitute an "order . . . suppressing
evidence" for purposes of K.S.A. 22-3603. As we have clarified:

"The State can demonstrate substantial impairment of the prosecution even when
the district court's evidentiary ruling does not technically foreclose the State from
prosecuting the defendant or prevent it from proving the elements of the charged crime.
Moreover, we have held that a district court's order to exclude aggravating circumstances
evidence at sentencing substantially impaired the State's ability to prosecute its
sentencing case, thereby authorizing the State's appeal pursuant to K.S.A. 2020 Supp. 22-
3603. Thus, an order excluding evidence need not completely prevent the State from
obtaining a conviction to substantially impair its ability to prosecute.

"While appellate courts 'should not take jurisdiction of the prosecution's
interlocutory appeal from every run-of-the-mill pretrial evidentiary ruling of a district
court,' jurisdiction is proper under K.S.A. 2020 Supp. 22-3603 where the prosecution
'make[s] a showing to the appellate court that the pretrial order of the district court
appealed from substantially impairs the state's ability to prosecute the case.' [Citations
omitted.]" Myers, 314 Kan. at 366.

8
The parties' dispute centers on whether the district court's order "substantially
impair[ed]" the State's ability to move forward.

Here, and as the panel's analysis concludes, the State has shown that the evidence
"excluded" sufficiently impaired its ability to prosecute Craig to enable the appellate
court to exercise interlocutory appellate jurisdiction. As set forth by the panel:

"The State alleged that Perrin's testimony was necessary to illustrate the animosity
between himself and Bush, the precursor to the shooting. And Perrin was in the car with
Smith when Smith was shot and killed.

"Anderson took a video on her phone at The Groggery the night of the shooting,
placing Craig with Bush. Dangerfield, who was at The Groggery on the night of the
shooting to buy drugs from Bush, saw Craig there. He also saw Craig sitting in the
passenger seat of a white Cadillac Escalade driven by Stephen Charlton—the vehicle
police saw in a QuikTrip video following Smith's vehicle just before the shooting. Police
later found gunpowder residue on the passenger side when police dusted the vehicle.
Richeson could identify the Escalade and link it to Charlton.

"Dr. Martinez performed the autopsy and would testify to the identification of the
victim and the cause of death. Lewis could testify that the firearm used in the shooting
was purchased by Craig and, afterward, Craig tried to sell it. Lewis could also testify that
Craig confessed to Lewis that he shot the driver of the truck by accident." Craig, 2025
WL 1482667, at *3.

Between the probable cause supporting affidavit and the preliminary hearing, the
record supports the panel's conclusion that, collectively, the absence of these witnesses
would have substantially impaired the State's case:

"Without these witnesses, the State would not be able to prove the victim's
identity and cause of death, the nature of the dispute that led to the shooting, that Craig
owned the gun used in the crime, that Craig was riding in the white Escalade driven by

9
Charlton and involved in the shooting, and that Craig confessed to the killing multiple
times to multiple people. Accordingly, we find we have jurisdiction over the State's
interlocutory appeal." 2025 WL 1482667, at *4.

We affirm the panel's exercise of interlocutory appellate jurisdiction under K.S.A.
22-3603 and will exercise our jurisdiction on review.

Did the district court abuse its discretion in denying the State's third motion to endorse
witnesses?

Craig next argues that the panel misinterpreted Kansas caselaw in reversing the
district court's denial of the State's third motion to endorse witnesses. Craig claims that
the district court correctly considered the surrounding facts and circumstances to
conclude that late endorsement would prevent a fair preparation of his defense.

"Appellate courts generally review the district court's decision to permit the late
endorsement of a State's witness for an abuse of discretion." State v. Brosseit, 308 Kan.
743, 747, 423 P.3d 1036 (2018). See also State v. Campbell, 207 Kan. 152, 153, 483
P.2d 495
(1971) ("The district court in its sound discretion may permit or deny the
endorsement of additional witnesses . . . at any time subsequent to the filing of the
information, including during the trial"; "its discretion will not be disturbed on appeal
unless it is clearly shown it abused its discretion, and the abuse resulted in material
prejudice to the defendant."). "'A district court abuses its discretion when (1) no
reasonable person would have taken the view adopted by the district court; (2) the
judicial action is based on an error of law; or (3) the judicial action is based on an error of
fact.'" State v. Hillard, 313 Kan. 830, 838, 491 P.3d 1223 (2021) (quoting State v.
Thomas, 307 Kan. 733, 739, 415 P.3d 430 [2018]).

10
Again, to the extent Craig's argument turns on interpretation of a statute, this
court's review is de novo. Grandmothers, Inc., 319 Kan. at 233.

In its entirety, K.S.A. 22-3201(g) provides:

"Except as otherwise provided, the prosecuting attorney shall endorse the names of all
witnesses known to the prosecuting attorney upon the complaint, information and
indictment at the time of filing it. Except as otherwise provided, the prosecuting attorney
may endorse on it the names of other witnesses that may afterward become known to the
prosecuting attorney, at times that the court may by rule or otherwise prescribe. If any
witness is to testify and the prosecuting attorney believes the witness who has provided
information is in danger of intimidation or retaliation, the prosecuting attorney may delay
identifying such informant witness until such informant witness actually testifies but in
no event shall identification of a witness be delayed beyond arraignment without further
order of the court after hearing and an opportunity of the defendant to be heard."
(Emphases added.)

As examined by this court in State v. Brosseit, and by the panel here, Kansas
courts have long interpreted K.S.A. 22-3201(g) (and its predecessors) as granting the
district court discretion to permit the State to endorse witnesses after the filing of a
complaint—regardless of whether the State knows about those witnesses at the time of
the complaint. Brosseit, 308 Kan. at 748-54 (discussing State v. Price, 55 Kan. 606, 608,
40 P. 1000 [1895], inter alia; analyzing legislative history and noting "the Legislature's
more than a century-long acquiescence" to this precedent). But see 308 Kan. at 754-55
(Rosen, J., concurring) ("I would hold that if the State wishes to endorse a witness after it
has filed its complaint, then the State has a duty to show that it was unaware of the
witness at the time of filing.").

Although K.S.A. 22-3201(g) imposes obligations on the State, it contains no
obvious restriction on the district court's power to authorize a late endorsement of

11
witnesses. We appeared to recognize this disconnect in State v. Foster. 202 Kan. 259,
260
, 447 P.2d 405 (1968) (acknowledging that, although the prosecution failed to endorse
witnesses when it filed the complaint, the defense did not notice the omission until after
the State had called its third witness at trial; affirming district court's decision to permit
late endorsement where "[s]everal of the witnesses had testified at the preliminary
examination," defendant and counsel were "well aware of the state's evidence," and
"despite the flagrant violation of the statute[,] no prejudice has been shown").

The test set forth by the panel for permitting the State to endorse witnesses after
the filing of the complaint accurately reflects Kansas law:

"The Kansas Supreme Court has consistently interpreted this statutory language
to allow the State to endorse witnesses at any time unless 'it will result in actual prejudice
in [the defendant's] ability to defend against the charges.' 'A defendant can show actual
prejudice when the late endorsement comes as a surprise and the testimony was critical
or, in other words, of "a climactic and highly damaging nature."' [Citations omitted.]"
Craig, 2025 WL 1482667, at *4.

But, unlike Brosseit and the overwhelming majority of cases applying K.S.A. 22-
3201(g) and its predecessors, Craig does not ask this court to reverse the district court's
exercise of discretion in granting the State leave to endorse witnesses after the filing of
the complaint. See, e.g., Brosseit, 308 Kan. at 749-52; State v. Bell, 273 Kan. 49, 53-54,
41 P.3d 783 (2002); State v. Green, 252 Kan. 548, 553-54, 847 P.2d 1208 (1993); State v.
Thyer, 143 Kan. 238, 239, 53 P.2d 907 (1936); State v. Tassell, 87 Kan. 861, 864, 126 P.
1090
(1912); State v. Cook, 30 Kan. 82, 1 P. 32 (1883).

Instead, Craig asks this court to affirm the district court's decision denying the
State's motion. Only a few other cases have involved a similar procedural posture. See
Newman, 235 Kan. at 43-44 (holding district court erred in excluding State's proffered

12
evidence based on fruit of the poisonous tree doctrine where there was no unlawful
police conduct); State v. Clay, No. 84,317, 2000 WL 36746069 (Kan. App. 2000)
(unpublished opinion) (holding, inter alia, no jurisdiction to review district court's denial
of State's endorsement request and other suppression rulings because no substantial
impairment); State v. McAlpine, No. 78,571, 1997 WL 35436573, at *2-3 (Kan. App.
1997) (unpublished opinion) (reversing denial of motion for late endorsement where
record established there was no surprise). Of these, only McAlpine applied the same logic
employed by the panel here, which effectively suggests that the district court is required
to grant a State's motion to endorse witnesses unless the late endorsement would cause
the defendant prejudice in the form of unfair surprise. Cf. Cook, 30 Kan. at 85 (court may
refuse to endorse where convinced that failure to endorse known witnesses was done
purposefully to interfere with defendant's preparation of defense, but where request made
"in good faith" and "to promote justice," district court has authority to grant late
endorsement, keeping in view the rights of defendant).

The district court's discretion to permit a late endorsement—where doing so will
not prejudice defendant—is the subject of longstanding precedent. But that precedent
does not correlate to a duty to sign off on all late endorsements. Cf. State v. Ferguson,
228 Kan. 522, 526, 618 P.2d 1186 (1980) (noting the statute makes late endorsement
discretionary; permitting late endorsement may serve interests of justice "provided the
opposing party or parties are given time to interview said witnesses and provide for cross-
checking their testimony . . . [t]he test to be used in determining whether permission
should be granted is whether the defendant's rights will be prejudiced").

Further, even if precedent suggests that prejudice via "surprise" is the appropriate
focus of a district court's decision to grant a late witness endorsement, see Brosseit, 308
Kan. at 749, there is no corollary condition on a district court's discretion to deny such a
motion.

13
Consequently, we conclude that the panel's reference to "the appropriate test for
ruling on a late endorsement of witnesses" was mistaken here: the Brosseit test addresses
the limits on a district court's discretion to grant a late endorsement, not to deny one. See
Craig, 2025 WL 1482667, at *5.

Again, a district court abuses its discretion only when its decision is based on an
error of law or fact, or when no reasonable person would have taken the view adopted by
the district court. See State v. Hillard, 313 Kan. at 838. To determine whether the district
court abused its broad discretion in this case requires a closer read of the record. As
discussed below, we agree that the district court should not have raised considerations
completely outside the scope of Craig's case, i.e., its frustration with the County
Attorney's Office. But ultimately the district court grounded its rationale in concerns
about defendant's rights related to the present case, which was well within the discretion
provided by the statute and our caselaw.

The district court first noted the statutory requirement that the State "shall"
endorse all witnesses on the face of the complaint. It acknowledged Brosseit's holding
that "shall" is not mandatory, and witnesses can be endorsed as late as during trial so long
as endorsement is not prejudicial to the defendant. The court distinguished the facts of
Brosseit, where the late endorsement (a phlebotomist) was "not a witness that was going
to testify as to very damaging evidence such as what is being proposed here." Noting that
"we do not try cases by ambush," the district court expressed frustration with the State's
failure to endorse these witnesses on the original complaint, or in the first or second
motion, and with the State's move to offer what the State alleged to be "crucial" witnesses
"on the brink of a trial."

14
The district court then expressed bitter frustration with what it noted as a pattern of
dilatory practice of late endorsements by the County Attorney's Office, despite the district
court's prior conversations with other attorneys in the office in unrelated cases.

Getting back to the motion in this case, the district court noted that, "[a]lthough
the Supreme Court has said that [the State] can endorse them late when they're witnesses
that are known to the defense, it's also fair to assume by a defense attorney that if the
State's not gonna endorse a witness, they probably don't plan to call them." The court
then reasoned that the failure in this case "is even worse than most because in this case
the problem came up at preliminary hearing." The court commented on the expense
involved in changing lawyers at this late point in the game and opined that "a five month
further delay in this case perhaps may violate the defendant's . . . [constitutional] right to
a speedy trial." The court concluded that the current problem in Craig's case was caused
by "the negligence, the carelessness, lack of diligence, however you wanna phrase it, of
the County Attorney's Office in endorsing these witnesses. The court does believe that
there is actual prejudice to the defendant caused by the late endorsement."

The district court further commented that it wanted to "get the County Attorney's
Office's attention concerning endorsement of witnesses, and the only way to do that is to
deny this motion."

Following this, the State clarified for the district court that (1) there was never a
statement or promise that Lewis would not be called as a witness; (2) Craig's counsel had
been on notice of the conflict since the preliminary hearing; (3) none of the 10 witnesses
were a "surprise"; (4) it was Craig's obligation to establish prejudice from the late
endorsement; and (5) "this case should not be used as a means of punishing the State by
the court." Readily acknowledging its failure, the State argued that the question "is not

15
why didn't the State do this? The question is, . . . has it caused surprise and prejudice to
the defendant," and the State again argued it did not.

Following this record by the prosecutor, the district court issued its ultimate
conclusion: "All right. Thank you. The Court believes it is prejudicial to the defendant to
allow the late endorsement 'cause it's gonna cause a delay in his trial and perhaps violate
his right to a speedy trial, so the Court is not going to grant the motion."

Notably, the district court did not comment on particular witnesses or make any
findings regarding the potential prejudice that would arise due to any individual witness'
likely testimony. Instead, it considered and ruled on the motion as a whole. We detect no
abuse of discretion in this holistic approach.

Further, we find no error of law or fact in the district court's ultimate conclusion.
Nor can we say that no reasonable judge would have reached the same result. Despite the
district court's earlier concerning comments about the failures of the County Attorney's
Office in other, unrelated cases—along with its desire to "get the County Attorney's
Office's attention"—the district court did not base its ruling on these extraneous
considerations. Instead, the district court ultimately justified its decision to deny the
State's motion based on its view of the prejudice Craig would suffer as a result of the late
endorsement. Although we have not previously articulated this distinction, we now hold
that it is wholly within the district court's discretion to deny a late motion to endorse;
there is no "prejudice by surprise" finding required. Thus, the district court did not abuse
its discretion by focusing on the prejudice to Craig in the form of "a delay in his trial" and
a possible violation of "his right to a speedy trial."

16
The judgment of the Court of Appeals reversing the district court is reversed. The
judgment of the district court is affirmed, and the case is remanded for further
proceedings.

LUCKERT, J., not participating.

17

Named provisions

SYLLABUS BY THE COURT

Source

Analysis generated by AI. Source diff and links are from the original.

Classification

Agency
KS Courts
Filed
March 20th, 2026
Instrument
Enforcement
Legal weight
Binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Substantive
Document ID
No. 127,070
Docket
127070

Who this affects

Applies to
Legal professionals Law enforcement
Activity scope
Evidence Exclusion Witness Endorsement
Geographic scope
US-KS US-KS

Taxonomy

Primary area
Judicial Administration
Operational domain
Legal
Topics
Criminal Procedure Evidence Law

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