Bishop v. State

98 A.3d 317, 218 Md. App. 472, 2014 Md. App. LEXIS 85
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedAugust 26, 2014
Docket2106/11
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 98 A.3d 317 (Bishop v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Special Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bishop v. State, 98 A.3d 317, 218 Md. App. 472, 2014 Md. App. LEXIS 85 (Md. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

*476 NAZARIAN, J.

Walter Paul Bishop appeals his conviction by a jury, in the Circuit Court for Harford County, after he confessed to the contract murder of William “Ray” Porter on March 1, 2010. Mr. Bishop admitted to police that Mr. Porter’s wife, Karla Porter, had solicited him to kill her husband for $9,000. After the jury convicted him on the murder and other charges, it rejected the State’s request for the death penalty and sentenced him to life with the possibility of parole. The trial court then imposed additional sentences for conspiracy to commit murder and possession of a handgun in the course of commission of the murder.

Mr. Bishop challenges these decisions on three grounds. First, he argues that the trial judge should have recused himself because thirteen years before, the judge (then a prosecutor) had been the target of a murder-for-hire plot, which in Mr. Bishop’s view created an appearance of impropriety that prohibited the judge from presiding over this case. Mr. Bishop claims next that the judge should have recused himself because a legal intern who worked for the judge at the time of trial had previously assisted in Mr. Bishop’s defense. Finally, he contends that the trial judge erred when he declined to merge the sentences for murder and conspiracy to commit murder, and when he imposed consecutive sentences for conspiracy and possession of a handgun in commission of the murder. We agree with all three of the circuit court’s decisions and affirm the judgments.

I. BACKGROUND

We need not recount the specifics of the contract in any detail, because Mr. Bishop confessed at his videotaped interview with police on March 6, 2010 that he agreed to kill Mr. Porter and, regrettably, carried out the agreement. The murder took place at a Hess gas station in Baltimore County, and his case was specially assigned at first to the Honorable Thomas J. Bollinger. Because the State opted to seek the death penalty, and in light of Judge Bollinger’s imminent *477 retirement, the case was assigned specially to another judge, the Honorable Mickey J. Norman, on July 21, 2010.

1. Motions for Recusal

On August 30, 2010, Mr. Bishop filed two separate motions in which he sought Judge Norman’s recusal from the case first, based on personal bias or prejudice and second, based on a conflict of interest. 1 He argued in the Bias Motion that because Judge Norman had been the target of a murder-for-hire case in the past, see Denicolis v. State, 378 Md. 646, 837 A.2d 944 (2003), he could not preside over Mr. Bishop’s case without creating an “unacceptable appearance of impropriety”; as Mr. Bishop put it, Judge Norman “himself [had] fallen victim to a similar scheme.” In the Conflict Motion, Mr. Bishop argued that a legal intern (the “Intern”) working for Judge Norman at the time of his trial had been involved in Mr. Bishop’s case while previously working at the Public Defender’s Office, and that this prior knowledge created not just an appearance of impropriety but an “actual conflict of interest.”

Although the facts of the underlying offense in this case don’t matter for present purposes, the circumstances surrounding the Motions for Recusal matter a great deal. See Jefferson-El v. State, 330 Md. 99, 102, 622 A.2d 737 (1993) (noting that where, in a case such as this one, the “issue involves appearances, it is necessary that we set out in some detail the circumstances under which it arose”). Judge Norman denied the Motion for Recusal on both grounds, and we start with the more complex of the two.

a. The Bias Motion

Because Denicolis ultimately was reported, we have here (as did Judge Norman) the benefit of its history preserved in the Maryland Reports. In the fall of 2000, Mr. Denicolis pled guilty to several robbery counts in a case prosecuted by Judge *478 Norman, who was then an Assistant State’s Attorney for Baltimore County. Mr. Denicolis plotted to murder both Judge Norman and the trial judge before whom he had appeared, the Honorable Dana Levitz, but police stopped him before he could carry out his plan. 378 Md. at 650-51, 837 A.2d 944. The issue on appeal, which has no relevance here, involved the trial court’s treatment of a jury note, and ultimately formed the basis of a reversal. Id. at 658-59, 837 A.2d 944. As the Court of Appeals recounted, the prosecutor submitted a victim impact statement prepared by Judge (then-prosecutor) Norman in which he related the impact of being “ ‘specifically targeted as the object of the defendant’s criminal endeavor, singled out because I fulfilled my professional responsibilities as a prosecutor.’ ” Id. at 654, 837 A.2d 944. That victim impact statement formed the basis of Mr. Bishop’s Bias Motion.

Judge Norman held a hearing on the Motions for Recusal on September 8, 2010 (the “Recusal Hearing”). Mr. Bishop contended that the State sought the death penalty against him because he committed the murder under a “contract for remuneration” that, under the death penalty laws in effect at the time, constituted an aggravating factor. See Md.Code (2002) § 2-303(g)(1)(vi) of the Criminal Law Article (“CL”) (repealed 2013). He argued that Judge Norman’s victim impact statement in Denicolis demonstrated that the Judge had “considered himself a victim” in that case, which, Mr. Bishop contended, meant that his “impartiality might reasonably be questioned” in this case, as the Maryland Code of Judicial Conduct uses the term. He claimed that this appearance of impropriety compelled Judge Norman to recuse himself in this complex and protracted death penalty case that was subject to a “heightened standard of reliability.” See Miller v. State, 380 Md. 1, 79, 843 A.2d 803 (2004) (“ ‘In capital proceedings generally, this Court has demanded that factfinding procedures aspire to a heightened standard of reliability.... This especial concern is a natural consequence of the knowledge that execution is the most irremediable and unfathomable of penalties; that death is different.’ ” (quoting Ford v. *479 Wainwright, 477 U.S. 899, 411, 106 S.Ct. 2595, 91 L.Ed.2d 335 (1986) (Marshall, J., plurality opinion))).

Judge Norman denied the Bias Motion at the Recusal Hearing. He explained that although the case could readily have been reassigned at that point (neither the parties nor the court had yet invested significant time), the court had an obligation to hear cases whenever possible, and he felt he could hear and decide the case fairly notwithstanding his experience in Denicolis:

[U]nder the Maryland Rules of judicial conduct, among other things it talks about [how] a judge shall hear and decide matters assigned to the judge unless recusal is appropriate. It also states that judges must be available to decide matters that come before the court.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
98 A.3d 317, 218 Md. App. 472, 2014 Md. App. LEXIS 85, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bishop-v-state-mdctspecapp-2014.