Boulden v. State

CourtSupreme Court of Delaware
DecidedMay 7, 2026
Docket309, 2025
StatusPublished

This text of Boulden v. State (Boulden 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
Boulden v. State, (Del. 2026).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

RONALD BOULDEN, § § Defendant Below, § No. 309, 2025 Appellant, § § Court Below: Superior Court v. § of the State of Delaware § STATE OF DELAWARE, § Cr. ID No. 2404004434 (N) § Appellee. § §

Submitted: March 17, 2026 Decided: May 7, 2026

Before SEITZ, Chief Justice; VALIHURA, TRAYNOR, LEGROW, and GRIFFITHS, Justices, constituting the Court en Banc.

ORDER

The Court, having considered the briefs and the record below, and after oral

argument, rules as follows:

(1) A grand jury indicted Ronald Boulden for crimes relating to pointing a

gun at his neighbor and threatening to kill him. A Superior Court jury found Boulden

guilty of Aggravated Menacing and Terroristic Threatening. The court sentenced

Boulden to four years at Level V, with credit for time served, suspended for 18

months of Level III probation, to be suspended after 12 months for 6 months at Level

II. Boulden has appealed his convictions. He claims that the Superior Court erred

by denying his motion in limine to dismiss the charges or by not providing a missing evidence instruction related to doorbell camera video and audio evidence. We

affirm.

(2) According to the evidence at trial, Boulden and Alessi were neighbors

in New Castle, Delaware.1 On April 10, 2024, Alessi was changing car tires in his

driveway.2 Alessi saw that Boulden’s granddaughter had arrived at Boulden’s

home.3 Alessi walked towards Boulden’s property but remained on another

neighbor’s driveway and spoke with her.4 He asked the granddaughter to speak with

his stepdaughter and resolve their dispute.5

(3) Boulden came out of his house, began screaming to “get out,” and

pointed a gun at Alessi.6 Alessi replied that he was not on Boulden’s property.7

Boulden responded that he did not care and threatened to kill him. 8 Alessi backed

1 Appendix to Appellant’s Opening Br. at A71 [hereinafter A__]. 2 A98–99. 3 A99. 4 A99–100, A102. The other neighbor’s driveway was located in between Alessi’s and Boulden’s properties. A99–100. 5 A99–100. 6 A100–101. 7 Id., A112. 8 A100–103.

2 away from Boulden’s property towards his garage and called the police.9

(4) After the police arrived, a neighbor came out of another home.10 While

the police watched, the neighbor scrolled through his doorbell camera clips on his

cell phone.11 They identified two clips, but only one had recorded part of the

incident.12 The one clip captured a verbal exchange between Alessi and Boulden.13

Police determined that the clip did not capture any video evidence of the incident.14

The police replayed the clip and recorded the audio on Corporal Andrew Davis’s

bodycam.15

(5) The police took Boulden into custody and obtained search warrants for

his home and car.16 They recovered a revolver from Boulden’s residence.17 The

State charged Boulden for Possession of a Firearm During the Commission of a

9 A100–101, A112. 10 A71, A260, at 0:10. 11 A260, at 0:20. 12 Id. at 1:58. 13 Id. at 2:17. 14 Id. at 2:00.

A71, A74–75, id. The bodycam footage only captures the audio from the doorbell camera clips. 15

Boulden was not seen walking into the view of the doorbell camera. A74–75, A247. 16 A79–80, A84–85. 17 A91, A125–27.

3 Felony, Aggravated Menacing, and Terroristic Threatening.18

(6) On the day of trial, Boulden filed a motion styled as a motion in limine

to dismiss the case, or in the alternative, to provide a missing evidence instruction

under Lolly v. State.19 Boulden argued that the police had a duty to preserve the

neighbor’s doorbell video evidence. The court denied the motion, finding that the

doorbell video was not in the police’s possession and that the police did not have a

duty to ask for the video at the time.20 The court also held that, even if the police

had a duty to collect the video, “the purported failure to collect . . . was not negligent

or in bad faith” and therefore did not require a missing evidence instruction.21

Finally, the court found that the police preserved the relevant evidence because the

bodycam captured the audio while the police reviewed the video clips.22

(7) On the second day of trial, the court granted Boulden’s motion for

judgment of acquittal on the Possession of a Firearm During the Commission of a

18 A1, A5–6. 19 A231–43; see Lolly v. State, 611 A.2d 956 (Del. 1992). Boulden sought the missing evidence instruction to explain that if the video had been extant, it “would have tended to exculpate” him. Opening Br. at 4. 20 A28–30. The court was “not prepared to make a blanket statement at this time that the police are required to ask for the video under every circumstance as [Boulden] implies.” A29–30. 21 A30. 22 Id.

4 Felony count.23 The jury found Boulden guilty of the two remaining charges.24

(8) On appeal, Boulden argues that the court erred when it denied his

motion in limine to dismiss or give a missing evidence instruction. He argues that

the case should have been dismissed because the State failed to preserve potentially

case dispositive evidence. Alternatively, he claims that the court should have given

a missing evidence instruction because the full doorbell camera footage, if it had

been preserved, would have been exculpatory. We review the issues of law presented

in this appeal de novo.25

(9) Although Boulden’s motion in limine sought two forms of relief, the

trial court properly confined its analysis to one – a Deberry/Lolly missing evidence

instruction. A motion to dismiss should be raised through a dispositive motion, not

a motion in limine.26 The court did not err by denying in summary fashion the

23 A135–40, A167–73. 24 A220–21. 25 Hercules, Inc. v. AIU Ins. Co., 784 A.2d 481, 499 (Del. 2001) (“We review de novo the trial court’s initial determination that the motion in limine was actually a [dispositive] motion.”); Coleman v. State, 289 A.3d 619, 623–24 n.16 (Del. 2023) (reviewing a trial court’s denial of a requested Deberry/Lolly instruction de novo); Baynum v. State, 133 A.3d 963, 967 (Del. 2016) (same). 26 See Erhart v. DirecTV, Inc., 2012 WL 2367426, at *3 n.5 (Del. Super. June 20, 2012) (“The majority of these motions in limine should have been filed as motions to dismiss or motions for partial summary judgment. Since the deadline for dispositive motions has long since expired, the Court could just as easily have declined to decide these matters.”), aff’d 53 A.3d 301, 2012 WL 4137289 (Del. Sep. 19, 2012) (TABLE) (denying motion for interlocutory appeal); see also Hercules, Inc., 784 A.2d at 499–500 (denying the “motion in limine” because it was actually an untimely motion for summary judgment).

5 request to dismiss because the request was procedurally improper.

(10) The court also did not err by denying the request for a missing evidence

instruction. In a criminal case, the defendant is entitled to a so-called Deberry/Lolly

missing evidence instruction when the State fails to collect or preserve evidence

material to the defense.27 The judge instructs the jury to infer that the missing

evidence, had it been available at trial, would have tended to prove that the defendant

was not guilty.28 Before a Deberry/Lolly instruction is warranted, however, the

police must have a duty to collect that evidence.

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Related

Deberry v. State
457 A.2d 744 (Supreme Court of Delaware, 1983)
Hercules, Inc. v. AIU Insurance
784 A.2d 481 (Supreme Court of Delaware, 2001)
Lolly v. State
611 A.2d 956 (Supreme Court of Delaware, 1992)
Baynum v. State
133 A.3d 963 (Supreme Court of Delaware, 2016)
Weber v. State
38 A.3d 271 (Supreme Court of Delaware, 2012)

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Boulden v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boulden-v-state-del-2026.