Blackwood v. State

CourtSupreme Court of Delaware
DecidedOctober 11, 2023
Docket246, 2022
StatusPublished

This text of Blackwood v. State (Blackwood v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Blackwood v. State, (Del. 2023).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

GLENFORD BLACKWOOD, § § Defendant Below, § No. 246, 2022 Appellant, § § Court Below—Superior Court v. § of the State of Delaware § STATE OF DELAWARE, § Cr. ID No. N1809011229 § Appellee. §

Submitted: August 11, 2023 Decided: October 11, 2023

Before SEITZ, Chief Justice; LEGROW and GRIFFITHS, Justices.

ORDER

After consideration of the parties’ briefs and the record on appeal, it appears

to the Court that:

(1) At the conclusion of a ten-day trial in July 2021, a Superior Court jury

found the defendant-appellant, Glenford Blackwood, guilty of two counts of first-

degree murder, two counts of attempted first-degree murder, and four counts of

possession of a firearm during the commission of a felony (“PFDCF”). The Superior

Court imposed a life sentence for each of the murder and attempted murder offenses

and a total of twenty years in prison for the PFDCF offenses. This is Blackwood’s

direct appeal. For the reasons discussed below, we affirm the judgment of the

Superior Court. Facts

(2) Sometime after 1:00 a.m. on June 17, 2018, Duncan Dorsey and his

friend Vincent DiMenco were sitting in the front yard of Mr. Dorsey’s home at 1

Lloyd Street in Wilmington, celebrating Mr. Dorsey’s birthday. Mr. Dorsey’s

fifteen-year-old daughter, Doris, was sitting in the family car, which was parked in

the driveway, talking and playing games with a friend via FaceTime. Mr. Dorsey’s

wife, whose name was also Doris Dorsey,1 was inside the house. As Mrs. Dorsey

descended the stairs, she looked through a window and saw someone walking onto

the property. Not expecting any other visitors, she opened the door to find out what

was happening. Mr. Dorsey also noticed someone approaching, carrying a shotgun.

As he stood up to confront the person, the individual smiled,2 cocked the shotgun,

and fired into the car where Doris was sitting. In an attempt to defend his daughter,

Mr. Dorsey threw a chair at the shooter, who fired a second shot into the car. After

shooting into the car, the perpetrator also fired at least two more shots. One struck

DiMenco in the head as he tried to run away, killing him. The other penetrated the

front door, grazing Mrs. Dorsey’s back, and proceeded through several walls and a

cabinet before lodging in a shed in the back yard.

1 To distinguish among the members of the Dorsey family, we refer to Duncan Dorsey as “Mr. Dorsey,” to his wife Doris as “Mrs. Dorsey,” and to their daughter as “Doris.” 2 Reporting on the homicide, the Delaware News Journal dubbed the unknown perpetrator the “Smiley Face Killer.”

2 (3) Mr. Dorsey ran to a nearby fire station to call 911. The first 911 call

was received at 1:26 a.m. New Castle County Police Department (“NCCPD”)

officers and other emergency personnel were dispatched to the crime scene; Doris

was transported to Christiana Hospital for treatment of multiple gunshot wounds,

where she was ultimately pronounced dead. Some officers began securing the scene

and collecting evidence, including four shotgun shells. Officers found DiMenco’s

body after some time on the scene; he was pronounced dead at the scene. Officers

obtained descriptions of the shooter from Mr. and Mrs. Dorsey at the scene. Each

of the Dorseys was also interviewed at the police station on the morning of the

shooting. The Dorseys stated that they did not recognize the shooter but described

him, using various words and gestures, as a tall man with a large build, a bald head

or short-cropped hair, and a wider, clean-shaven face.3

(4) As part of the investigation, NCCPD officers collected video

surveillance from various residences and businesses. A motion-activated camera at

7 Lloyd Street, three houses down from the crime scene, captured a white SUV

3 On June 21, 2018, after NCCPD identified Blackwood as a person of interest, a detective presented Mr. Dorsey with a six-person photographic lineup. The fourth photo in the array was Blackwood. A video recording of Mr. Dorsey’s review of the photo array was played at trial. Mr. Dorsey did not identify Blackwood as the shooter, and in fact he identified certain features of the individuals shown in two other photos as similar to the shooter. On that same day, Mr. Dorsey also met with a composite sketch artist employed by NCCPD. A video recording of the meeting with the sketch artist was also played at trial. Mr. Dorsey was emotional and agitated during the meeting and struggled to select images from the sketch artist’s “catalog” of facial features that he could identify as similar to the shooter’s features.

3 traveling on Lloyd Street at 12:31 a.m., 12:32 a.m., and 1:19 a.m. A sales manager

at a GMC dealership reviewed still shots clipped from the 7 Lloyd video and

identified the vehicle as a GMC Terrain SLE-2 model from between 2009 and 2017.

Detectives then obtained a list of all white 2009-2017 GMC Terrains registered in

Delaware.

(5) On June 21, 2018, a detective visited a local Walmart store and

determined that the store sold the same type of Federal brand, 12-gauge ammunition

that officers had found at the crime scene. The most recent sale of that ammunition

had occurred on April 27, 2018. Walmart required ammunition purchasers to

provide a birthdate and had recorded the purchaser’s birthday as August 21, 1986.

Surveillance videos from the interior and exterior of the store from the date of the

ammunition sale showed the purchaser to be a large-framed man who arrived in a

white GMC Terrain with a license plate number beginning with PC14. The

registered address of one of the vehicles on the list of GMC Terrains, with a license

plate number of PC146126,4 matched the address of a man with a birthdate of August

21, 1986, Glenford Blackwood.

(6) Other surveillance video footage captured on the night of the shooting

appeared to show a white SUV traveling from an area near Blackwood’s residence

4 Another surveillance video that NCCPD later obtained from the Walmart store showed that the complete license plate number of the ammunition purchaser’s vehicle was PC146126.

4 at approximately 12:26 a.m. on June 17, 2018, before appearing on the 7 Lloyd video

at 12:31 and 12:32 a.m., and then returning to the area of Blackwood’s residence at

approximately 12:37 a.m. Additional footage appeared to show a white SUV

traveling from the area of Blackwood’s residence at approximately 1:13 a.m. and

passing 7 Lloyd at 1:19 a.m., before the first 911 call at 1:26 a.m. As described in

greater detail below, the State’s theory that the white SUV was Blackwood’s was

corroborated by—and Blackwood’s alibi defense was undermined by—data

obtained from Blackwood’s cell phone, cell phone service provider, and Google.

(7) Detectives developed a theory that Blackwood harbored a grudge

against Mrs. Dorsey arising from an incident that had occurred in 2015. Blackwood

was a loss prevention officer and greeter at a Family Dollar store in Wilmington. He

was working in October 2015 when Mrs. Dorsey and an individual named Keith

Whitaker arrived at the store in the Dorseys’ car. Blackwood observed Whitaker

shoplifting and confronted him. Blackwood was injured in an ensuing altercation

during which Whitaker punched and kicked Blackwood, knocking him out, and tried

to run Blackwood over with the Dorseys’ car. Blackwood received medical

treatment and workers’ compensation related to his injuries. Whitaker was

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Blackwood v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blackwood-v-state-del-2023.