Cole v. State

922 A.2d 354, 2005 WL 2805562
CourtSupreme Court of Delaware
DecidedOctober 20, 2005
Docket425, 2004
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 922 A.2d 354 (Cole 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
Cole v. State, 922 A.2d 354, 2005 WL 2805562 (Del. 2005).

Opinion

*355 STEELE, Chief Justice:

Pursuant to an agreement he thought he had with the State, the defendant-appellant, Donald Cole, made a statement to the police and prosecutor implicating one of his accomplices to a crime. The police confronted the accomplice with Cole’s statement. Cole believed that the agreement he had reached before making his statement prohibited the State from using the statement for any purpose other than determining whether the State would seek the death penalty. On the basis of the alleged agreement, as he claims to have understood it, Cole moved to suppress all evidence obtained from the State’s use of his statement, including his accomplice’s testimony. A Superior Court judge denied the motion. Cole appeals. Because we are unclear about whether an agreement existed, and if it did, what its terms were, we remand to the Superior Court for further findings.

I.

On December 3, 2001, Donald Cole and Elwood Hunter were charged with attempted murder, robbery and related charges stemming from an incident that occurred on August 22, 2001 at 1348 Lancaster Avenue in Wilmington. Cole and Hunter allegedly entered the Lancaster Avenue residence armed with handguns intending to steal money and drugs. The residents of the house discovered the intruders and an altercation ensued. During the confrontation, Cole and Hunter allegedly shot two of the residents.

Before the trial, Daniel Miller, the Deputy Attorney General prosecuting Cole and Hunter, filed a motion in limine seeking to admit evidence concerning a double homicide that occurred on August 31, 2001 at 105 E. 23rd Street in Wilmington. Neither Cole nor Hunter had been charged with the 23rd Street murders, but the motion advised that the State would produce ballistics evidence to show that the same firearms had been used at the 1348 Lancaster Avenue attempted murder and then nine days later at the 23rd Street murders. The motion in limine also proffered that the State would produce a witness who would testify to seeing both Cole and Hunter near the alley behind 23rd Street armed with handguns. The trial judge denied the motion.

During the course of the trial of the 1348 Lancaster Avenue attempted murder, the State produced an eye-witness who identified Hunter as one of the assailants. The witness was so sure of her identification, that she considered it to be an eleven on a scale of one to ten. The State produced no witnesses that identified Cole.

Cole knew that the witness was mistaken in her identification of Hunter. He decided to plead guilty to the charges in the 1348 Lancaster Avenue case and to provide a statement regarding the incident if the State would drop the prosecution of Hunter, a man Cole knew to be innocent. Cole told his trial attorney, Brian Bartley, of his decision. Bartley advised Cole not to plead guilty in the 1348 Lancaster Avenue case. Because of the State’s in limine motion, Bartley was aware that the State had ballistic evidence tying the 1348 Lancaster Avenue case and the 23rd Street murders together. Accordingly, Bartley advised Cole that if he pleaded guilty to the 1348 Lancaster Avenue charges, there was a real probability that the State would charge him with the 23rd Street murders and possibly seek the death penalty.

Despite his attorney’s advice, Cole was still determined to exonerate Hunter. During a break in the trial on January 13, 2003, Bartley approached Miller and informed him that Cole wished to plead guilty to the 1348 Lancaster Avenue *356 charges and to make a statement exonerating Hunter. Bartley tried to strike a deal whereby Cole would be spared the death penalty should he be charged with the 23rd Street murders. He told Miller that in exchange for a waiver of the death penalty in connection with the 23rd Street murders that Cole would make a statement about both the 1348 Lancaster Avenue and the 23rd Street incidents. Miller responded that he did not have the authority to make this deal because he had to present Cole’s offer to the Senior Staff in the Office of the Attorney General who would have the final say.

Miller presented Cole’s initial offer to the Senior Staff on the morning of January 14, 2003. By the middle of the afternoon, the defense rested its case. After a lunch recess, Miller and Bartley resumed their negotiations. They decided that Cole would confess to the attempted murder at 1348 Lancaster Avenue and make a statement concerning the 23rd Street double homicides. Miller informed Bartley that the Senior Staff would not consider extending a non-capital offer on the 23rd Street homicides to Cole until they knew the content and substance of Cole’s proffered statement. The agreement was not set forth in writing and Miller and Bartley have since consistently disagreed about its terms.

Cole knew that Miller could not make an “up front deal” to avoid the death penalty in exchange for his statement. Cole thought, however, that the State would agree not to seek the death penalty against him if the information he provided turned out to be true. He believed that Miller would take the statement back to the Senior Staff and, in turn, the Senior Staff would review Cole’s cooperative statement and give bona fide consideration to abstaining from requesting the death penalty. Moreover, Cole realized that the State would attempt to corroborate the statement. Finally, Bartley thought that the State’s use of Cole’s statement would be strictly limited to the State’s determination of the death penalty question. In other words, Bartley interpreted the agreement to prohibit the State from using the statement for investigative purposes or to in any way advance the potential prosecution of Cole for the 23rd Street homicides.

With what he thought to be an agreement in place, on January 14, 2003, Cole made a detailed statement concerning both the 1348 Lancaster Avenue incident and the 23rd Street homicides. At the beginning of the statement, which Detective Scott Chaffin of the Wilmington Police Department recorded, Miller described the deal to Cole:

.. .the deal right now is that we are going to take uh a [proffer] statement of what you have to say about anything we ask you about and I’m going to take that statement back to my superiors and discuss with them whether to make you an offer where you would be spared capital punishment. Do you understand that? 1

Cole responded that he did understand. Miller and Chaffin then proceeded to question Cole about the two incidents. Cole admitted his involvement in the 1348 Lancaster Avenue attempted murder and provided a statement concerning the incident. Cole also provided a detailed statement regarding his involvement in the 23rd *357 Street murders. In connection with the 23rd Street murders, Cole implicated two of his accomplices, Larry Johnson and Travanian Norton. After about an hour of questioning, the parties finished the interrogation for the day. The following interchange then occurred:

Miller: We’ll we’ll [sic] terminate this and uh I’m gonna [sic] go -back to my office and do what I told you I was gonna do [at] the beginning of this interview. Okay and uh obviously this conversation is not over we’ll pick it up.

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Bluebook (online)
922 A.2d 354, 2005 WL 2805562, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cole-v-state-del-2005.