VEASEY, Chief Justice.
In this appeal, we address the question whether a request for a continuance by a defendant in a criminal case operates as a waiver of the defendant’s right to a trial within 180 days under the Interstate Agreement on Detainers. We hold that a defendant waives the right to a speedy trial under the detainer agreement only if the defendant expressly agrees to or acquiesces in a trial date outside the 180-day time limit. Thus, where the defendant requests a continuance but does not agree to a trial date outside the time limit, the time limit is tolled. Because the defendant in this case requested a continuance but did not agree to a trial date outside the time limit, we conclude that he did not waive his rights under the detainer agreement.
We nevertheless conclude that, in the circumstances of this case, the trial court’s final decision to postpone the start of trial beyond the (appropriately tolled) time limit complied with terms of the detainer agreement because the postponement was for good cause and “in open court.” We find no reversible error on any of the other issues raised in this appeal. Accordingly, we affirm the judgment of the Superior Court.
Facts
At about 10:15 a.m. on September 17, 1998, two armed men in masks entered a bank in Talleyville, Delaware, and ordered the bank employees and customers to get on the floor. The two robbers took several bags of cash from the bank and escaped in a white Chevrolet Cavalier driven by a third person. Several witnesses saw the car in the bank’s parking lot around the time of the robbery. One witness, Karen Ramsey, saw two men in a white car parked near the bank. She later found a sack of money with an exploded dye pack and turned it over to the police. A second witness, Nina Parker, noticed “red stuff’— apparently tear gas from an exploded dye pack — coming from a white car as it pulled out of the parking lot. She then saw a passenger in the car throw a bag out a window. Parker testified that the car quickly pulled over and the occupants fled the scene. She saw at least one of the occupants get into a black Lexus that had pulled up next to the car. A third witness, Daniel Carson, testified that he saw one of the occupants of a white car discard a hat and a handgun while the car was moving. Carson retrieved the hat and gun and turned them over to the police.
During the ensuing investigation, the police recovered the getaway ear and eventually traced latent fingerprints on the car to Mark Bruce. Several days after the robbery, Nina Parker identified Bruce from a photographic line-up as one of the occupants of the getaway car, but she testified at trial that she was not certain of the identification. Bruce was eventually charged with first-degree robbery, possession of a firearm during the commission of a felony, second-degree conspiracy, and wearing a disguise during a robbery. Af
ter his trial in March 2000,
the jury convicted Bruce on all counts, and the trial court sentenced him to fifteen years in prison followed by probation.
The Right to a Speedy Trial under the Interstate Agreement on Detainers
Bruce first argues that the trial court violated his right to a speedy trial under the Interstate Agreement on Detainers, codified at 11
Del. C.
ch. 25.
Under 11
Del. C.
§ 2542, once the State indicts a prisoner who is incarcerated in another state and files a detainer
for the prisoner, the prisoner may file a request for “final disposition” on the Delaware charges. Upon filing this request, the State must bring the prisoner to trial within 180 days “provided that for good cause shown in open court, the prisoner or his counsel being present, the court having jurisdiction of the matter may grant any necessary or reasonable continuance.”
Bruce argues that the 180-day time limit expired before his trial began on March 16, 2000 (excluding a three-month delay attributable to confusion over Bruce’s representation during which the time limit was tolled). The State counters that Bruce’s “unqualified request for a continuance” in July 1999 operated as an automatic waiver of his rights under the detainer agreement.
The basic timeline of events relating to this issue is undisputed. On October 26, 1998, the State charged Bruce with participating in the September 18, 1998 robbery and, shortly thereafter, issued a warrant for his arrest. While Bruce was incarcerated in Pennsylvania on unrelated charges, the State transported Bruce to Delaware for an arraignment on May 4, 1999. At the arraignment, the Public Defender’s Office was appointed to represent Bruce and the 180-day clock under the detainer agreement began to run.
The Superior Court scheduled Bruce’s trial to begin on August 3, 1999. During a case review on July 6, 1999, Bruce notified the court that he and his family intended to retain private counsel from Pennsylvania to represent him at trial. By July 26, 1999, however, Bruce’s Pennsylvania counsel had not entered an appearance for Bruce,
and the trial court concluded that the public defender was still Bruce’s counsel. Because the public defender had not prepared for the August 3rd trial, he requested a continuance at the July 26, 1999 hearing. The court granted counsel’s request and, on October 22, 1999, the court rescheduled Bruce’s trial for January 27, 2000, In the scheduling order, the court allowed the parties two weeks to notify the court of any conflicts and/or witness unavailability on the scheduled date.
On November 15, 1999, the State notified the trial court by email that it
could not go to trial on January 27th because of scheduling conflicts.
In a December 10, 1999 order, the court rescheduled the trial for March 16, 2000.
Defense counsel immediately objected to the new date via email, arguing that the date exceeded the 180-day time limit. In response to the objection, in a February 7, 2000 bench ruling the court scheduled the trial for February 10, 2000. During a scheduling hearing the next day, the State informed the court that several witnesses would be unavailable on February 10th, and the trial court scheduled the trial to begin on March 16, 2000.
Defense counsel moved to dismiss Bruce’s indictment because (1) the new trial date fell outside the 180-day limit and (2) the trial court’s December 10, 1999 decision to schedule the trial for March 16, 2000 was not made after a hearing “in open court” as required by 11
Del. C.
§ 2542(a). The Superior Court held that the only continuance granted during the case was the continuance requested by the defense in July 1999 and that Bruce had waived his right to be brought to trial within 180 days by requesting that continuance.
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VEASEY, Chief Justice.
In this appeal, we address the question whether a request for a continuance by a defendant in a criminal case operates as a waiver of the defendant’s right to a trial within 180 days under the Interstate Agreement on Detainers. We hold that a defendant waives the right to a speedy trial under the detainer agreement only if the defendant expressly agrees to or acquiesces in a trial date outside the 180-day time limit. Thus, where the defendant requests a continuance but does not agree to a trial date outside the time limit, the time limit is tolled. Because the defendant in this case requested a continuance but did not agree to a trial date outside the time limit, we conclude that he did not waive his rights under the detainer agreement.
We nevertheless conclude that, in the circumstances of this case, the trial court’s final decision to postpone the start of trial beyond the (appropriately tolled) time limit complied with terms of the detainer agreement because the postponement was for good cause and “in open court.” We find no reversible error on any of the other issues raised in this appeal. Accordingly, we affirm the judgment of the Superior Court.
Facts
At about 10:15 a.m. on September 17, 1998, two armed men in masks entered a bank in Talleyville, Delaware, and ordered the bank employees and customers to get on the floor. The two robbers took several bags of cash from the bank and escaped in a white Chevrolet Cavalier driven by a third person. Several witnesses saw the car in the bank’s parking lot around the time of the robbery. One witness, Karen Ramsey, saw two men in a white car parked near the bank. She later found a sack of money with an exploded dye pack and turned it over to the police. A second witness, Nina Parker, noticed “red stuff’— apparently tear gas from an exploded dye pack — coming from a white car as it pulled out of the parking lot. She then saw a passenger in the car throw a bag out a window. Parker testified that the car quickly pulled over and the occupants fled the scene. She saw at least one of the occupants get into a black Lexus that had pulled up next to the car. A third witness, Daniel Carson, testified that he saw one of the occupants of a white car discard a hat and a handgun while the car was moving. Carson retrieved the hat and gun and turned them over to the police.
During the ensuing investigation, the police recovered the getaway ear and eventually traced latent fingerprints on the car to Mark Bruce. Several days after the robbery, Nina Parker identified Bruce from a photographic line-up as one of the occupants of the getaway car, but she testified at trial that she was not certain of the identification. Bruce was eventually charged with first-degree robbery, possession of a firearm during the commission of a felony, second-degree conspiracy, and wearing a disguise during a robbery. Af
ter his trial in March 2000,
the jury convicted Bruce on all counts, and the trial court sentenced him to fifteen years in prison followed by probation.
The Right to a Speedy Trial under the Interstate Agreement on Detainers
Bruce first argues that the trial court violated his right to a speedy trial under the Interstate Agreement on Detainers, codified at 11
Del. C.
ch. 25.
Under 11
Del. C.
§ 2542, once the State indicts a prisoner who is incarcerated in another state and files a detainer
for the prisoner, the prisoner may file a request for “final disposition” on the Delaware charges. Upon filing this request, the State must bring the prisoner to trial within 180 days “provided that for good cause shown in open court, the prisoner or his counsel being present, the court having jurisdiction of the matter may grant any necessary or reasonable continuance.”
Bruce argues that the 180-day time limit expired before his trial began on March 16, 2000 (excluding a three-month delay attributable to confusion over Bruce’s representation during which the time limit was tolled). The State counters that Bruce’s “unqualified request for a continuance” in July 1999 operated as an automatic waiver of his rights under the detainer agreement.
The basic timeline of events relating to this issue is undisputed. On October 26, 1998, the State charged Bruce with participating in the September 18, 1998 robbery and, shortly thereafter, issued a warrant for his arrest. While Bruce was incarcerated in Pennsylvania on unrelated charges, the State transported Bruce to Delaware for an arraignment on May 4, 1999. At the arraignment, the Public Defender’s Office was appointed to represent Bruce and the 180-day clock under the detainer agreement began to run.
The Superior Court scheduled Bruce’s trial to begin on August 3, 1999. During a case review on July 6, 1999, Bruce notified the court that he and his family intended to retain private counsel from Pennsylvania to represent him at trial. By July 26, 1999, however, Bruce’s Pennsylvania counsel had not entered an appearance for Bruce,
and the trial court concluded that the public defender was still Bruce’s counsel. Because the public defender had not prepared for the August 3rd trial, he requested a continuance at the July 26, 1999 hearing. The court granted counsel’s request and, on October 22, 1999, the court rescheduled Bruce’s trial for January 27, 2000, In the scheduling order, the court allowed the parties two weeks to notify the court of any conflicts and/or witness unavailability on the scheduled date.
On November 15, 1999, the State notified the trial court by email that it
could not go to trial on January 27th because of scheduling conflicts.
In a December 10, 1999 order, the court rescheduled the trial for March 16, 2000.
Defense counsel immediately objected to the new date via email, arguing that the date exceeded the 180-day time limit. In response to the objection, in a February 7, 2000 bench ruling the court scheduled the trial for February 10, 2000. During a scheduling hearing the next day, the State informed the court that several witnesses would be unavailable on February 10th, and the trial court scheduled the trial to begin on March 16, 2000.
Defense counsel moved to dismiss Bruce’s indictment because (1) the new trial date fell outside the 180-day limit and (2) the trial court’s December 10, 1999 decision to schedule the trial for March 16, 2000 was not made after a hearing “in open court” as required by 11
Del. C.
§ 2542(a). The Superior Court held that the only continuance granted during the case was the continuance requested by the defense in July 1999 and that Bruce had waived his right to be brought to trial within 180 days by requesting that continuance.
The first question raised under the detainer agreement is whether the July 27, 1999 continuance requested by the public defender operated as a waiver of Bruce’s rights under the statute or merely tolls the 180-day time limit. The United States Supreme Court held in
New York v. Hill
that defense counsel may waive the defendant’s right to a speedy trial under the detainer agreement by agreeing to a trial date outside the 180-day limit.
But the Supreme Court in
Hill
did not hold that
any
request for a continuance operates as a waiver of the defendant’s rights. The holding in
Hill
implicitly contemplates a waiver only where the defendant makes a request or agrees to a government request for a continuance that is “inconsistent with the IAD’s time limits.”
In contrast, where a defendant requests a continuance
that is consistent with the time limits under the statute, the 180-day limit is tolled for the duration of the delay rather than waived completely.
Applying this analysis to the present case, we conclude that the July 27, 1999 defense request for a continuance tolled the 180-day limit until the confusion about Bruce’s representation was resolved.
The public defender’s request for time to prepare a defense did not operate as a waiver of the time limit under the detainer agreement because Bruce did not agree to a trial date outside the time limit. This is therefore not a case in which the defendant “willingly accepted] treatment inconsistent with the IAD’s time limits, and then recant[ed] later on.”
The next question is whether the trial court’s actions violated Bruce’s rights under the detainer agreement. Bruce argues (1) that the March 16 trial date violated his right to a speedy trial and (2) that the trial court’s December 10, 1999 decision to schedule the trial for March 16th violated the detainer agreement’s “open court” and “good cause” requirements.
Section 2542(a) provides that the trial court “may grant any necessary or reasonable continuance” beyond the 180-day limit “for good cause shown in open court.” Although the trial court found that the continuance requested by the defense was the only continuance granted before trial,
we think that the trial court’s decisions to postpone the January 27, 2000 and February 10, 2000 trial dates are best characterized as “continuances” granted at the State’s request over Bruce’s objection.
Even assuming that the trial court’s December 10, 1999 decision to postpone the trial was not made “in open court”
and that the March 16, 2000 trial date was outside the statutory 180-day period, we conclude that the February 8, 2000 postponement setting the final date for trial was for good cause and complied with the “in open court” requirement of Section 2542. Since counsel for the defendant and counsel for the State were both present at the February 8th scheduling conference, the conference was “in open court.”
Moreover, the postponement was granted for good cause because the State’s witnesses could not appear on the scheduled dates in February.
As a consequence, the March 16th trial date was set in accordance with the statute, and any procedural defects before that point did not prejudice Bruce’s right to a speedy trial under the detainer agreement.
Admission of Hearsay Statements by Bruce’s Sister under the Excited Utterances Exception
The second argument that Bruce raises on appeal concerns the trial court’s admission in evidence of a hearsay statement by Towanda Bruce, the Defendant’s sister. An officer testified at trial that, upon seeing still photographs taken by the bank surveillance system, Towanda — who was unaware that her brother was a suspect in the robbery — began to cry and stated that the robber in the photographs looks like her brother.
The police conducted a second, taped interviewed with Towanda fifteen minutes later during which she repeated that remark. The trial court admitted both the officer’s testimony and Towanda’s taped statement under the hearsay exception for excited utterances
or, alternatively, under the present sense
impression exception.
We review the Superior Court’s decision to admit or exclude evidence for an abuse of discretion.
To establish the admissibility of an excited utterance under D.R.E. 803(2), the proponent must show that: (1) the excitement of the declarant was triggered by a startling event; (2) the proffered statement was made while the excitement of the event was continuing; and (3) the statement was related to the event.
There is no requirement that the statement be made within a specific time after the triggering event. Instead, Rule 803(2) requires “the declarant to be under the ‘stress of excitement’ caused by the startling event or condition at the time of the statement’s making.”
In his Reply Brief, Bruce concedes that Towanda’s initial reaction to the photograph fits within the exception for excited utterances. According to the officer’s testimony, Towanda immediately began to cry when confronted with the surveillance photograph. Since her statement that the robber looks like her brother was a spontaneous reaction triggered by viewing the photograph, the officer’s testimony describing Towanda’s reaction is admissible under D.R.E. 803(2).
Although Towanda’s later taped statement was in some respects a reenactment of her first statement, we conclude that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in admitting the taped statement as an excited utterance.
The trial court found that Towanda made the taped statement while she was “still under the influence of the startling event of having been presented with the photograph of [her] brother.” Although the taped statement was made fifteen minutes after Towanda first saw the photograph, the trial court could properly find that the statement was nevertheless an excited utterance made “under the ‘stress of excitement.’ ”
Moreover, because Towanda’s statements fall within the excited utterance exception to the hearsay rule, their admission does not violate Bruce’s confrontation rights. It is well established that the hearsay exceptions for spontaneous statements, which include the exceptions for present sense impressions and excited utterances, are firmly rooted under the confrontation provisions of the Delaware and federal constitutions.
Statements that fall within a firmly rooted hearsay exception satisfy the Confrontation Clause and do not require an individualized determination that the statements contain “particularized guarantees of trustworthiness.”
Even assuming that the trial court erred in admitting Towanda’s taped statement under an exception to the hearsay rule, and thus presumptively violated Bruce’s Sixth Amendment right to confront the witnesses against him, we conclude that any error was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt
because the taped statement was entirely cumulative of the officer’s admissible testimony describing Towanda’s initial reaction to the surveillance photograph.
Admission of Teletype Report Under the Business Record Exception
Bruce next argues that the trial court improperly admitted a computer printout from the National Law Enforcement Teletyping System (“NLETS”)
indicating that the car used in the robbery was registered to Rhonda Bowie. The trial court admitted the printout under the business record exception to the hearsay rule.
Under Rule 803(6), the State was required to provide a proper foundation for admission of the record through the testimony of “the custodian or other qualified witness.”
Because the State presented the testimony of a police officer who used the teletype service, rather than an NLETS employee, Bruce contends that the foundation for admission of the printout was inadequate.
In our view, a police officer who regularly relies on and is familiar with the NLETS teletype system is qualified to provide the requisite foundation for the admission of an NLETS printout under the business record exception.
Although an officer who uses these printouts cannot
testify in detail about the data entry or record-keeping processes at NLETS, we conclude that the officer could have adequate knowledge of NLETS practices to be a “qualified witness” within the meaning of D.R.E. 803(6). In this case, however, the officer did not provide a sufficient foundation for the admission of the NLETS report under the business record exception. Indeed, he did not present
any
foundational testimony concerning the business practices at NLETS. Instead, the officer simply testified that he found NLETS reports to be accurate in the past. We therefore conclude that the trial court abused its discretion in admitting the teletype printout as a business record without the required foundational testimony.
Nevertheless, we find that the court’s error was harmless. The NLETS record merely identified Rhonda Bowie as the registered owner of the getaway car and implicated Bruce only by means of Bowie’s friendship with Bruce’s sister.
In any event, the State did not have to rely on the teletype evidence to link Bruce to the car because it presented independent evidence that Bruce’s fingerprints were on the car and that Bowie was a friend of Bruce’s sister. As a consequence, the admission of the NLETS record without proper foundation could not have prejudiced the defense and was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt.
Propriety of Comments in the State’s Rebuttal Argument
Bruce’s final argument is that the prosecutor made improper comments during the State’s rebuttal argument. First, the prosecutor referred to the defense strategy as a “shotgun approach”
and then told the jury that its “concern is[:] should Mr. Bruce accept personal responsibility for taking a gun and sticking it in people’s faces and taking their money.” On appeal, the State contends that the remarks were merely “a colorful and dramatic way of saying that that the categories of evidence presented by the defendant were not persuasive and failed to undermine the state’s proof of guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.”
Because defense counsel did not object at trial to these remarks by the prosecutor, we review the remarks for plain error.
To constitute plain error, the prosecutor’s improper statements must “be so clear and defense counsel’s failure to object so inexcusable that a trial judge
... has no reasonable alternative other than to intervene
sua sponte
and declare a mistrial or issue a curative instruction.”
Both the prosecution and defense counsel necessarily have some license to present a forceful case.
Nevertheless, it is likely in most cases to be inappropriate for the prosecutor sarcastically to mock the defense case or to make comments that the jury should take the defendant’s guilt as a foregone conclusion.
But we find that the prosecutor’s comments in this case were not so extreme as to be clearly improper. Therefore, we conclude that the trial court did not commit plain error by failing to intervene
sua
sponte,
Bruce further argues that the prosecutor misrepresented the evidence when he stated that
[T]he proof in this case suggests that Mr. Bruce and his coconspirators borrowed a car from a person by the name of Rhonda Bowie, and we know that, the evidence suggests this possibility, because Rhonda Bowie when she came to pick up her car came with the defendant’s sister. So the defendant and his cohorts borrowed a car.
The trial court allowed this argument over Bruce’s objection. Bruce contends that this statement is misleading because there was no evidence that Bruce borrowed Bowie’s car.
In closing argument, a prosecutor may properly draw “legitimate inferences of the [defendant’s] guilt that flow from the evidence.”
The prosecutor may not, of course, misrepresent the evidence presented at trial.
In this case, we find that the evidence supports a reasonable inference that Bruce borrowed the car from Bowie. The State presented evidence establishing that (1) the getaway car was registered to Bowie, (2) Bowie was a
Mend of Bruce’s sister, and (3) Bruce’s fingerprints were on the car. In addition, there was no evidence presented at trial to indicate that the car had been stolen from Bowie. Because the prosecutor clearly signaled that he was presenting an inference and described evidence supporting the inference, the prosecutor’s argument on this point was not improper.
Bruce also argues that the trial court did not appropriately cure another statement by the prosecutor in which he attributed defense counsel’s statements directly to Bruce himself. As the trial court implicitly recognized by sustaining the subsequent defense objection, the prosecutor’s statement was improper because it constituted an implicit comment on Bruce’s decision to exercise his right not to testify. But the trial court neutralized any prejudice from this remark by instructing the jury: “Ladies and gentlemen, the defendant doesn’t speak. He has no obligation to speak. In fact, he’s got a constitutional right not to speak. What you heard from his counsel was argument that his counsel made based on the evidence in the record.... ” The court then struck the offending comment, and the prosecutor apologized. This remedy was more than adequate to eliminate any prejudice.
Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the judgment of the Superior Court.