Carillo v. State

773 A.2d 248, 2001 R.I. LEXIS 194, 2001 WL 674167
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJune 14, 2001
Docket92-155-C.A.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 773 A.2d 248 (Carillo v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carillo v. State, 773 A.2d 248, 2001 R.I. LEXIS 194, 2001 WL 674167 (R.I. 2001).

Opinion

OPINION

LEDERBERG, Justice.

The applicant, John Carillo (Carillo or applicant), convicted in 1978 of murdering a correctional officer at the Adult Correctional Institutions (ACI), appealed the denial of his application for post-conviction relief. The basis for Carillo’s appeal was that his due process rights were violated because the “true” nature of a plea agreement between the state and a witness who testified against him was not disclosed. We affirm the denial of post-conviction relief.

Facts and Procedural History

In 1973, applicant was found guilty of murder and conspiracy for stabbing correctional officer Donald Price to death while Price was on duty at the ACI. The applicant was sentenced to life in prison on the murder charge and to a concurrent term of ten years for conspiracy. This Court affirmed the conviction in State v. Carillo, 122 R.I. 392, 407 A.2d 491 (1979), which contains a thorough recitation of the facts underlying the convictions. 1 There *250 fore, we relate here only those facts necessary to the disposition of this appeal.

At Carillo’s trial in November 1973, Christopher Perry, who was a co-defendant in the murder case and who was a fellow inmate of Carillo’s at the time of the murder, testified on behalf of the state. Perry testified that in the early morning hours of June 22, 1973, while Perry was speaking with Officer Price, he saw Carillo creep up behind Price and plunge a knife twice into his chest. Perry testified that in exchange for his testimony on behalf of the state and his pleading guilty to second-degree murder, he was promised that he would receive a sentence of “no more than forty-five years,” that he would be transferred to a prison out of the state, and that he would be given a name change.

On cross-examination, applicant’s counsel asked Perry, “Did anyone say anything to you in addition to [the agreement you described] to lead you to believe that your sentence’ might only be fifteen years or twenty years?” Perry answered in the negative. The prosecutor also informed the trial justice immediately before Perry’s testimony that the agreement between the state and Perry was that the state would recommend to the court a sentence of no more than forty-five years. When the trial justice inquired about this detail, Perry confirmed the prosecutor’s version of the agreement. In closing arguments, the prosecutor, attempting to emphasize Perry’s credibility as a witness, stated,

“[Defense counsel] talks about Christopher Perry, a boy that’s twenty years old. Who says he has a deal? A deal of 45 years? Measure it to your own life and your own expectancy of life, and the life that you’ve lived, and take 45 years and carve it out of your life, and see what kind of a deal that is. See what kind of a deal 45 years at the Adult Correctional Institution [sic] would be to anyone closed up and to be incarcerated. And if that’s a deal, and if that’s a great interest, and if that is an encouragement to tell the truth on the stand, or to tell a lie on the stand, I don’t know what a deal really is.”

The jury returned a verdict that Carillo was guilty of first-degree murder and conspiracy, and he was sentenced to life in prison and ten years to run concurrently. In denying applicant’s motion for a new trial, the trial justice characterized the evidence against Carillo as “overwhelming” and stated, “I firmly believe that all of the circumstantial evidence and physical evidence would have supported a guilty verdict on both counts against [applicant] without the eyewitness testimony of Perry.”

In January 1974, the trial justice sentenced Perry “on the charge of murder in the second degree to which [he] pleaded guilty * * * to serve thirty years at the Adult' Correctional Institutions.” A ten year concurrent term was imposed on Perry for the charge of conspiracy to commit murder. In July 1974, while he was incarcerated in Oxford, Wisconsin, ten years of Perry’s thirty-year sentence were suspended after a motion to reduce sentence was made by Perry’s attorney.

Perry was released in 1982 and arrested in 1989, after which a justice of the Superi- or Court revoked the previous suspension of his sentence and reinstated the original thirty-year sentence, sending Perry back to the ACI. While at the ACI, Perry was housed for a time in the High Security Center, where applicant also resided. Apparently, applicant had learned that Perry’s original January 1974 sentence had been modified. According to Carillo, Perry told him that this modification had been part of the agreement that Perry made in exchange for his testimony.

*251 In September 1988, Carillo filed the instant application for post-conviction relief, that was amended in 1990 to include the claims that are the basis for this appeal. 2 In his amended application, Carillo claimed that the prosecutor knew during the 1973 trial that Perry expected to have his sentence reduced after the initial sentencing. 3 The applicant contended that the prosecutor deliberately failed to disclose this evidence, that it was exculpatory evidence that tended to impeach Perry’s credibility, and that Perry’s testimony was central to Carillo’s conviction. According to Carillo, these facts represented a violation of his Fifth, Sixth, and Fourteenth Amendment rights under the United States Constitution. The applicant asked for a full evi-dentiary hearing on his allegations, and that request was granted.

In September 1990, an evidentiary hearing was held before a justice of the Superi- or Court to determine the validity of Caril-lo’s allegations. Both Perry and Carillo testified. 4 At the close of the presentation of evidence, the state made an oral motion for a directed verdict under Rule 50 of the Superior Court Rules of Civil Procedure, and the case was continued for the submission of memoranda by the parties.

Carillo’s application for post-conviction relief was denied in a January 1992 written decision in which the hearing justice found that at the time Perry testified against Carillo, Perry had been promised only that the charge would be reduced to second-degree murder and that there would be a ceiling of forty-five years on his sentence on his guilty plea to that charge. She found that before he testified against applicant, no promise had been made to Perry that at some later time he would receive a reduction of whatever sentence would be imposed upon him, nor had the issue of a reduction come up before Perry testified. The justice further found that the sentence reduction was discussed between the time Perry testified at Carillo’s November 1973 trial and the time Perry was sentenced in January 1974.

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Bluebook (online)
773 A.2d 248, 2001 R.I. LEXIS 194, 2001 WL 674167, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carillo-v-state-ri-2001.