Brown v. People

54 V.I. 496, 2010 WL 4961740, 2010 V.I. Supreme LEXIS 62
CourtSupreme Court of The Virgin Islands
DecidedOctober 27, 2010
DocketS. Ct. Crim. No. 2008-0073
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 54 V.I. 496 (Brown v. People) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of The Virgin Islands primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brown v. People, 54 V.I. 496, 2010 WL 4961740, 2010 V.I. Supreme LEXIS 62 (virginislands 2010).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

(October 27, 2010)

Hodge, C.J.

Appellant, Kareem Jamal Brown (“Brown”), appeals from the Superior Court’s September 9, 2008 Judgment and Commitment, which sentenced him to life imprisonment without parole for his convictions for first degree murder, among other crimes. For the reasons which follow, we will reverse the Superior Court’s Judgment and Commitment and remand this matter to the trial court for a new trial on all counts.

I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

This appeal arises from the fatal stabbing of Jahleel Halliday (“Halliday”), which occurred on September 12, 2005 during a fight at the Foot Locker store located in Lockhart Gardens on St. Thomas. During the fight, Halliday suffered three stab wounds including one which pierced his heart and led to his death. In a Third Amended Information, the People of the Virgin Islands (“the People”) charged Brown with first degree murder pursuant to V.I. CODE Ann. tit. 14 §§ 922(a)(1)2 [500]*500and 11(a),3 possession of a dangerous weapon during the crime of violence of first degree murder pursuant to 14 V.I.C. § 2251(a)(2)(B), assault in the first degree pursuant to 14 V.I.C. §§ 295(1) and 11(a), and possession of a dangerous weapon during the crime of violence of assault in the first degree pursuant to 14 V.I.C. § 2251(a)(2)(B). The essential facts established during the March 25-28, 2008 trial were as follows.

During lunch time on September 12, 2005, a fight broke out at Charlotte Amalie High School between students from the Savan neighborhood and students from the Oswald Harris Court neighborhood. Brown, a seventeen-year old senior who lived in Oswald Harris Court, participated in the fight, as did Robertson Timothy (“Timothy”), a minor student from Savan. After campus security ended the fight, Timothy called his friend, Halliday, to pick him up from school. Halliday, who was not a student at the high school, picked up Timothy and another student, Viggo Niles, Jr. (“Niles”), in his employer’s delivery van, and the two students accompanied Halliday while he made deliveries for his employer. Thereafter, they drove to the Foot Locker store, and Timothy and Niles waited outside the store while Halliday shopped inside the store.

According to Timothy’s testimony, Brown and Keelo Jacobs (“Jacobs”), a graduate of Charlotte Amalie High School, were among a group of six to eight young men who approached Timothy and Niles outside the Foot Locker store with various weapons including brass knuckles and a knife, which was being carried by Brown. Timothy testified that he and Niles ran into the store as someone from the group threw a plastic bottle containing liquid at them and then proceeded to attack Halliday’s van and slash its tires. He further testified that Jacobs and Brown pursued them into the store and that Jacobs asked Brown whether Halliday was “one of them” before taking the knife Brown was holding and stabbing Halliday. According to Timothy, after Halliday fell to the ground, Brown and Jacobs were cursing and throwing shoes around the store while Timothy attempted to stop Halliday’s bleeding. The police eventually arrived at the scene and Halliday was taken to the hospital in an ambulance, where he later perished. Timothy subsequently identified Brown as the attacker from a photo array.

[501]*501Jacobs, who had entered into a plea agreement4 with the People prior to Brown’s trial and was awaiting sentencing, testified against Brown and gave an account of the altercation which differed from Timothy’s account. According to Jacobs, he and Brown were at the nearby McDonald’s restaurant, when Halliday’s van pulled in front of the nearby Foot Locker store. Jacobs testified that Brown stated, “[t]hose the guys that jump me in school,” before running towards the Foot Locker. Jacobs further testified that he followed Brown across the street to the Foot Locker and that Brown went inside the store and started to hit Halliday while Jacobs waited outside. Jacobs testified that he entered the store and began to kick and hit Halliday after he saw that Halliday was winning the fight with Brown. According to Jacobs, Brown suddenly stabbed Halliday three times with the knife he was carrying.

During his case-in-chief, Brown called several witnesses who testified that he was a quiet, peaceful, law-abiding person. On rebuttal, the People called two witnesses who testified concerning specific incidents in which Brown did not act as a peaceful, law-abiding person. Specifically, the People called Angel Barthlett (“Barthlett”) who testified that when Brown was in elementary school he witnessed Brown and a female Assistant Principal engaged in a choking struggle. Additionally, the People called Elita Bradshaw (“Bradshaw”) who testified that Brown used to bag groceries at the Pueblo grocery store where she was a store director and that Brown had once stolen a veggie burger and had slashed her vehicle’s tires after she told him he could not work at the store anymore. Brown objected to the testimony of both rebuttal witnesses on grounds that the testimony impermissibly concerned specific instances of prior bad acts. The trial court overruled Brown’s objection on grounds that Brown had called character witnesses to testify on his own behalf. After the close of all the evidence but prior to closing arguments, Brown made a motion to call a surrebuttal witness to rebut Bradshaw’s testimony, but the trial court denied the motion.

On March 28, 2008, the jury returned its verdict finding Brown guilty of all four counts charged in the Third Amended Information. Following the jury’s verdict, Brown orally renewed his motion for judgment of [502]*502acquittal and orally moved for a new trial; and the trial court permitted the parties to file written memoranda for and against Brown’s motions. On July 16, 2008, Brown filed his Amended Motion for Judgment of Acquittal or for New Trial or Evidentiary Hearing and a memorandum of law in support thereof, arguing that he was entitled to a judgment of acquittal because the People had failed to meet its burden of proving that he aided and abetted another in committing first degree murder. Brown also argued that he was entitled to a new trial either on grounds of newly-discovered evidence or on grounds that the trial court erred in admitting the People’s rebuttal witnesses and denying his motion to call a surrebuttal witness. With respect to the newly-discovered evidence, Brown submitted an affidavit by Niles in which Niles averred that Brown was not present at the Foot Locker at the time of the fight and that Niles had never told the police that Brown was present. Brown also submitted an affidavit from his counsel declaring that his counsel had learned in October 2007 — five months before Brown’s trial — that Niles had contacted the People and given a tape-recorded statement indicating that Brown was not at the Foot Locker during the stabbing. The People provided Brown with a copy of the Niles tape in February 2008 — a month before trial — but the voice on the tape was inaudible. Brown maintained in his motion for judgment of acquittal or new trial that he diligently attempted to interview Niles prior to trial but was unsuccessful in locating him and that Niles’s affidavit was newly-discovered evidence that was material to his defense and would likely have resulted in his acquittal.

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Bluebook (online)
54 V.I. 496, 2010 WL 4961740, 2010 V.I. Supreme LEXIS 62, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-people-virginislands-2010.