Booth v. State

507 A.2d 1098, 306 Md. 172
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 15, 1987
Docket151, September Term, 1984
StatusPublished
Cited by69 cases

This text of 507 A.2d 1098 (Booth 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
Booth v. State, 507 A.2d 1098, 306 Md. 172 (Md. 1987).

Opinions

RODOWSKY, Judge.

We shall affirm the judgments of conviction and death sentence in this case for the reasons set forth below. Of the nineteen issues raised on appeal only issues eight through ten present questions of any novelty. These deal with the right of allocution conferred by a Maryland Rule of Procedure which was made applicable to capital cases as of July 1, 1984.

Appellant, John “Ace” Booth (Booth), and his friend, Willie “Sweetsie” Reid (Reid), in order to obtain money for heroin, on May 18, 1983, robbed and murdered an elderly couple in the victims’ home. The victims were Irvin Bronstein, age 78, and his wife, Rose, age 75. Their bodies were found by their son on May 20 in the living room of their home. Each had been stabbed in the chest twelve times, after having been bound and gagged. Mr. Bronstein was [182]*182found reclining face up on the sofa, with a cloth covering his face. Mrs. Bronstein was found face down on the floor. Their home had been ransacked. Property, including television sets, jewelry, and their 1972 Chevrolet Impala automobile, had been taken. The police found the automobile abandoned and partially stripped on the parking lot of the Flag House high-rise public housing projects in East Baltimore. The police were able to associate Booth with the abandoned car and arrested Booth June 7, 1983.

The first trial of the charges against Booth, before Honorable James W. Murphy, ended in a mistrial on April 23, 1984. See Booth v. State, 301 Md. 1, 481 A.2d 505 (1984). At retrial, a jury presided over by Judge Edward J. Angeletti in the fall of 1984 heard both the guilt or innocence phase and the sentencing phase. The jury found Booth guilty of the murder of Mr. Bronstein in the first degree, both premeditated and felony, and found that Booth was a principal in the first degree to that murder for which they imposed the death sentence. The jurors found Booth guilty of murder in the first degree of Mrs. Bronstein for which the court imposed a life sentence.1 Booth also received three consecutive sentences of twenty years each, the first of which was consecutive to the life sentence, for the robbery of Mr. Bronstein, the robbery of Mrs. Bronstein, and for conspiring with Reid and with his nephew, Darrell Brooks, to rob the Bronsteins.

On this appeal Booth challenges the sufficiency of the evidence against him only as to the charge of conspiracy to rob. Neither Booth nor Reid testified as witnesses at Booth’s trial at which the jury could have found the following facts on guilt or innocence.

[183]*183The Bronsteins lived at 3412 Rockwood Avenue in West Baltimore. Booth, age 29 at the time of the murders, lived with his mother at 3416 Rockwood Avenue. Booth’s friend Reid lived with his girlfriend, Veronda “Ronnie” Mazyck and her two sons, age nine and four at the time of the murders, in Ms. Mazyck’s apartment at 400 Aisquith Street in East Baltimore. On May 18, 1983, Booth met Reid at Mazyck’s apartment at about 4:00 p.m. Mazyck went out with her children and, when she returned about 8:00 to 8:30 p.m., no one was at home. Reid and Booth returned to the apartment at about 9:00 p.m. They had heroin which Booth, Reid, and Mazyck injected. Reid also had a small brown paper bag filled with jewelry.

When the contents of the bag were spread on a tabletop, Mazyck commented that the jewelry was cheap to which Reid, in the presence of Booth, replied that it was “white people’s shit.” In response to a question from Mazyck, Reid, in Booth’s presence, said he had made a “hustle” which Mazyck interpreted as meaning that “they went out and stole it.”

At some point Booth telephoned his girlfriend, Jewell “Judy” Edwards,2 who lived in the 2600 block of Harford Road, and asked her to meet him at Mazyck’s apartment. Booth wanted Edwards to drive a car. She was a licensed operator but Booth, Reid, and Mazyck were not licensed.

Renee “Tony” Collins, a 17-year-old mother of two children who lived in the apartment across the hall from Mazyck, dropped by Mazyck’s apartment while the jewelry was spread on the table. Booth and Reid asked her if she wanted to buy any of it. While Ms. Collins was in the apartment, Eddie Smith, his girlfriend, and another couple stopped by the apartment. Smith paid Reid $2 so that he and his companions could use the apartment to inject themselves with heroin. Ms. Collins heard Booth and Reid [184]*184asking “the junkies” for the use of a car so that Booth and Reid could pick up some television sets.

When Ms. Edwards arrived at the Mazyck apartment, Booth explained that he wanted her to drive the car of a friend of his and that he needed someone who had a driver’s license in the event the car was stopped by the police.

Late on the evening of May 18 or early in the morning of May 19 all of the adults left the Aisquith Street apartment. Smith and his companions went their separate way. Booth and Ms. Edwards, Reid and Ms. Mazyck told Ms. Collins that they were going “[t]o pick up the T.V.’s.”

The two couples took a cab to Booth’s mother’s home. Booth went in the house while the other three remained outside. Booth came out with green plastic trash bags. He then went back into his mother’s house and came out with gloves for everyone to wear. The group then went to the rear of the Bronstein home. Before entering, Booth pointed the Bronsteins’ car out to Ms. Edwards as the car which she would be driving and handed her the keys to the car. Also before the group entered the Bronstein home, Booth told the women that they should pay “no mind” if they saw any dead bodies.

The two couples entered the house through the rear door and the two women saw the bound and gagged corpses of Mr. and Mrs. Bronstein in the living room. The group looted the house and loaded the loot, including two television sets, into the Bronsteins’ car. When someone realized that they had left a trash bag in the house, Booth said not to worry because the police would think that the bag had been left by people who were working on the Bronsteins’ lawn that day.

The two couples returned with the loot to the Aisquith Street apartment. Booth and Reid obtained heroin and the couples “fired up” and went to bed, Reid and Ms. Mazyck in the bedroom, while Booth and Ms. Edwards used a sofa bed in the living room. While lying in bed Ms. Edwards asked Booth if the people whom she had seen in the house were [185]*185actually dead, and Booth replied that they were and that he had killed the man while Reid had killed the woman.

The next morning Ms. Mazyck asked Booth why the elderly couple had been killed, and Booth told her that it was because the elderly couple knew Booth and his nephew.

Issues as to Guilt or Innocence

I

During voir dire of prospective jurors Booth had moved to strike one of them for cause and the motion was denied. Booth argues that the juror had heard that a previous guilty verdict had been overturned and had stated that he would give more weight to the testimony of a police officer than to other witnesses. Error, if any, in denying the challenge was waived and was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt. The venireman in question did not serve as a juror and was not the object of the exercise by the defense of one of its allotted peremptory challenges. The jury was impaneled without Booth’s having exhausted all of his peremptory challenges.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
507 A.2d 1098, 306 Md. 172, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/booth-v-state-md-1987.