Abeokuto v. State

893 A.2d 1018, 391 Md. 289, 2006 Md. LEXIS 73
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedFebruary 13, 2006
Docket129, September Term, 2004
StatusPublished
Cited by92 cases

This text of 893 A.2d 1018 (Abeokuto v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Abeokuto v. State, 893 A.2d 1018, 391 Md. 289, 2006 Md. LEXIS 73 (Md. 2006).

Opinions

HARRELL, J.

In this direct appeal by Jamaal Kenneth Abeokuto (Appellant) of his conviction by the Circuit Court for Baltimore County for first-degree murder (and other crimes) and the [299]*299resultant primary sentence of death, we are asked to consider the following questions:

1. Did the trial court err in determining that Appellant’s waiver of his constitutional right to a trial by jury at the guilt/innocence phase was knowing and voluntary?
2. Did the trial court err in admitting evidence of Appellant’s post-arrest and post-Miranda1 warning silence?
3. Did the trial court err when it denied Appellant’s requests for continuance to permit new counsel to prepare for trial and the sentencing hearing?
4. Did the suppression court err when it denied Appellant’s motion to suppress his statement, given without a Miranda warning, at the Homicide Unit?
5. Did the suppression court err when it denied Appellant’s motion to suppress his clothing taken by police while he was at the Homicide Unit?
6. Did the suppression court err when it determined that the issuance of the warrant to search Appellant’s car was supported by probable cause?
7. Did the trial court err in accepting Appellant’s sentencing jury waiver?
8. Did the trial court illegally increase Appellant’s sentence for extortion?
9. Did the trial court err in admitting into evidence at the sentencing hearing the testimony of a medical expert when he opined that Appellant had lied about symptoms of psychosis?
10. Did the trial court err in admitting victim’s impact testimony by the victim’s family members?
11. Should Appellant’s death sentence be reversed as a result of the prosecutor’s closing argument at the sentencing hearing when he stated that the trial court proceeding would not be the final proceeding?
[300]*30012. Did the trial court err in imposing separate sentences for kidnapping and child kidnapping?
13. Did the trial court err if it in fact found as separate aggravating circumstances that the victim was taken in the course of an abduction or kidnapping and that the victim was a child abducted in violation of § 3—503(a)(1) of the Criminal Law Article?
14. Did the trial court err in admitting into evidence at the sentencing hearing a handgun recovered from Appellant’s car?
15. Did the cumulative effect of the alleged errors deprive Appellant of a fair trial and/or a fair sentencing hearing?
16. Should the failure of the indictment to allege principal-ship and aggravating circumstances have precluded the imposition of a sentence of death?
17. Is the Maryland death penalty statute unconstitutional because it requires that aggravating circumstances outweigh mitigating circumstances only by a preponderance of the evidence?

I.

A.

Appellant, Jamaal Kenneth Abeokuto, was found guilty, following a bench trial in the Circuit Court for Baltimore County, of: first-degree murder, first-degree assault, kidnapping, and child kidnapping of his girlfriend’s eight-year old daughter, Marciana Monyai Ringo; extortion; and, wearing or carrying a dangerous weapon openly with the intent to injure. According to the State’s evidence at trial, Abeokuto abducted Marciana on 3 December 2002, took her to a wooded area in Harford County, and killed her by slitting her throat and kicking her head.

After charging in Harford County, the Circuit Court for Harford County granted Appellant’s request for a change of venue, citing pre-trial publicity in Harford County, and transferred the case to the Circuit Court for Baltimore County. [301]*301Appellant separately elected to waive both his right to trial by jury and sentencing by jury. Accordingly, he was tried and, after being found guilty, sentenced by the court. On 15 November 2004, the court sentenced him in open court as follows: death for the murder conviction; merged for sentencing purposes the first degree assault count with the murder count; ten years of incarceration, to be served from the initial date of Appellant’s arrest (24 December 2002), for the extortion conviction; thirty years of imprisonment for the kidnapping conviction, consecutive to the sentence for extortion; three years for the deadly weapon conviction, to be served consecutive to the extortion and kidnapping sentences; and twenty years to be served for child kidnapping, to run concurrently with the sentences for the extortion, kidnapping, and deadly weapon convictions. At the sentencing hearing, the court stated, as to the sentence for murder, that it found two statutory aggravating circumstances proved beyond a reasonable doubt, kidnapping and child kidnapping. The court found as a mitigator, by a preponderance of the evidence, that Appellant had not been found guilty previously of a crime of violence. Penultimately, the court determined that the State had proven beyond a preponderance of the evidence that the aggravating circumstances outweighed the mitigating circumstances. It therefore imposed the sentence of death for Marciana’s murder.

In the trial judge’s required Post-Sentencing Report, he stated that, although he found at the sentencing proceeding two aggravating circumstances, kidnapping and child kidnapping, he “wish[ed] to clarify that although the evidence names fsic] Kidnapping and Child Kidnapping, the Court considered one Kidnapping as the aggravating circumstance.” The sentence of ten years for the extortion conviction was later amended in the Commitment Report and the Trial Judge’s Post-Sentencing Report to reflect that it was to be served consecutive to the sentence for the murder conviction.

B.

The State’s evidence presented at the suppression hearings [302]*302on 12 and 13 November 20032 revealed the following facts:

At approximately 4:45 p.m. on 3 December 2002, Officer Joseph Petryszak of the Baltimore City Police Department responded to 5300 Leith Road, Apartment C, because he received a report that Marciana was missing. When he arrived at the apartment, he found Marciana’s parents, Milagro White and Marc Ringo, Sr., present.3 Officer Petryszak called Appellant, who, at the time was attending class at a commercial truck driving school, and requested that he come to the apartment. Appellant agreed to the request and drove himself there. When he arrived, Officer Petryszak and two other officers questioned Appellant for about five minutes in the stairwell in front of the apartment. In response to Officer Petryszak’s questions, Appellant told him that Marciana had walked to school around 7:30 a.m., came back around 7:35 a.m., and said that she needed her homework signed. While signing her homework he noticed a note about a field trip. Appellant then said that he drove her back to school, which, Officer Petryszak noted, was just across the street from the apartment.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
893 A.2d 1018, 391 Md. 289, 2006 Md. LEXIS 73, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/abeokuto-v-state-md-2006.