Cole v. State

922 A.2d 364, 2007 Del. LEXIS 104, 2007 WL 731406
CourtSupreme Court of Delaware
DecidedMarch 12, 2007
Docket425, 2004
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 922 A.2d 364 (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 364, 2007 Del. LEXIS 104, 2007 WL 731406 (Del. 2007).

Opinions

STEELE, Chief Justice,

for the Majority:

Pursuant to an agreement he thought he had with the State, the defendant-appellant, Donald Cole, gave a statement to a Deputy Attorney General implicating one of Cole’s accomplices to a crime. The police confronted the accomplice with Cole’s statement. Cole asserts 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 this decision, as well as her decisions to admit a Section 3507 statement and a window screen into evidence. Because the trial judge’s factual findings are supported by the record, and because it does not appear that she abused her discretion, we must affirm the denial of Cole’s motion to suppress evidence derived from his statement. We also affirm the trial judge’s exercise of discretion when she admitted the Section 3507 statement and the window screen into evidence.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

On December 3, 2001, the State charged Donald Cole and Elwood Hunter with attempted murder, robbery and related charges arising from an incident that occurred on August 22, 2001, at 1348 Lancaster Avenue in Wilmington. The two men allegedly entered the house with handguns, intending to steal money and drugs. When the occupants discovered the intruders, a fight ensued and Cole and Hunter allegedly shot two of the occupants.

Before the trial for the conduct that occurred at 1348 Lancaster Avenue, the Deputy Attorney General assigned to prosecute the case filed a motion in limine, seeking to admit evidence about a double homicide that had occurred on August 31, 2001, at 105 East 23rd Street in Wilmington. No one had been charged with the murders at that time, but the motion proffered that ballistics evidence would show that the firearms used in the attempted murder at 1348 Lancaster Avenue were the same as those used in the murders at 105 East 23rd Street. The motion in li-mine also proffered that the State would [367]*367produce a witness who would testify to having seen both Cole and Hunter near the alley behind 105 East 23rd Street, armed with handguns on the night of August 31, 2001. The trial judge denied the State’s motion.

During the “1348 Lancaster Avenue” trial, the State did not produce any witness who identified Cole. The State, however, did produce an eyewitness who identified Hunter as one of the assailants in the attempted murder. That witness testified that she was so sure of her identification, that her level of certainty was an eleven on a zero to ten scale.

Cole, however, knew that the witness had mistakenly identified Hunter. In an effort to exonerate Hunter, Cole informed his trial attorney, Brian Bartley, that he would plead guilty to the charges in the 1348 Lancaster Avenue case if the State would drop its prosecution of Hunter. Bartley advised Cole not to plead guilty and told him that the State’s case against him was weak. Bartley also advised Cole that, if he pled guilty to the charges in the 1348 Lancaster Avenue case, the State, based on the ballistics evidence proffered in the motion in limine, likely would charge Cole with the 105 East 23rd Street murders and seek the death penalty.

Despite Bartley’s advice, Cole was determined to exonerate Hunter. On January 13, 2003, during a break in the trial, Bart-ley told the DAG that Cole wanted to give a statement exonerating Hunter. Bartley sought to strike a deal with the DAG in which the State would not seek the death penalty in the 105 East 23rd Street murders. In exchange for not seeking the death penalty, Cole would plead guilty to the 1348 Lancaster Avenue charges, and would give a full statement regarding both the 1348 Lancaster Avenue and the 105 East 23rd Street incidents. The DAG told Bartley that he was interested in this deal, but he would have to take Cole’s offer to “the senior staff’ in the Attorney General’s office before he could confirm the deal.

The senior staff met on the morning of January 14, 2003, to discuss Cole’s offer. The trial judge, however, refused to delay the ongoing trial, so the trial continued with the State and the defense resting by midday on January 14. After a lunch break, the DAG and Bartley resumed their negotiations. They decided that Cole would confess to the attempted murder at 1348 Lancaster Avenue, and provide a statement regarding the 1348 Lancaster Avenue and 105 East 23rd Street crimes. Also, the DAG informed Bartley that the senior staff would not consider waiving the death penalty for Cole with regard to the 105 East 23rd Street murders until they knew the content and substance of Cole’s statement. The DAG and Bartley, however, did not put any agreement in writing and have since disagreed about the terms of any such agreement.

Both Bartley and Cole believed that, in exchange for Cole’s truthful statement, the State would not seek the death penalty for the 105 East 23rd Street murders. Bart-ley also believed that the DAG’s comments before and after Cole’s statement confirmed that the State would limit the use of Cole’s statement to the senior staffs review and consideration of the death penalty. In other words, Bartley believed that the trial DAG had represented that he would present Cole’s statement to the senior staff so they could assess its truthfulness and that the State would not use Cole’s statement for any other purpose.

On the afternoon of January 14, 2003, Cole, pursuant to what he now asserts was his understanding of the agreement, gave an audiotaped statement regarding the two cases. At the beginning of Cole’s statement, the DAG told Cole that:

[368]*368the 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?

The DAG proffered no other use of the statement before Cole began to speak.

Cole responded that he understood. Cole then admitted his involvement in the 1348 Lancaster Avenue attempted murder, provided a detailed statement of the incident, including how he gained entry into the residence,1 and identified his accomplice. Cole also gave a detailed statement concerning the 105 East 23rd Street murders and implicated Travanian Norton and Larry Johnson as his accomplices. At that time, the State had no evidence linking Norton to the 105 East 23rd Street murders. At the end of the interrogation, the following exchange occurred between the DAG and Cole:

[DAG]: We’ll we’ll [sic] terminate this and uh I’m gonna 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. Plus you don’t want us to discuss the substance of this outside this room. Yeah we’re not gonna talk about this with Sticky or Larry Johnson or anybody else. I I [sic] understand what you’re saying, but listen why this is still ongoing there’s a reason why we we [sic] want that. We know what you’re saying to us and we we’re [sic] gonna hold up our end.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cooke v. State
97 A.3d 513 (Supreme Court of Delaware, 2014)
Taylor v. State
28 A.3d 399 (Supreme Court of Delaware, 2011)
Johnson v. State
983 A.2d 904 (Supreme Court of Delaware, 2009)
Lopez-Vazquez v. State
956 A.2d 1280 (Supreme Court of Delaware, 2008)
Sykes v. State
953 A.2d 261 (Supreme Court of Delaware, 2008)
Scarborough v. State
938 A.2d 644 (Supreme Court of Delaware, 2007)
Cole v. State
922 A.2d 364 (Supreme Court of Delaware, 2007)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
922 A.2d 364, 2007 Del. LEXIS 104, 2007 WL 731406, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cole-v-state-del-2007.