Coleman v. State

CourtSupreme Court of Delaware
DecidedJune 17, 2026
Docket196, 2025
StatusPublished

This text of Coleman v. State (Coleman 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
Coleman v. State, (Del. 2026).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

DEVIN COLEMAN, § § Defendant Below, § No. 196, 2025 Appellant, § § Court Below—Superior Court v. § of the State of Delaware § STATE OF DELAWARE, § Cr. ID No. 2010012644A/B (K) § Appellee. § §

Submitted: April 24, 2026 Decided: June 17, 2026

Before SEITZ, Chief Justice; TRAYNOR and LEGROW, Justices.

ORDER

After consideration of the parties’ briefs and the record on appeal, it appears

to the Court that:

(1) The appellant, Devin Coleman, has appealed a Superior Court order

adopting a Superior Court Commissioner’s report and denying Coleman’s motion

for postconviction relief under Superior Court Criminal Rule 61. For the reasons

discussed below, we affirm the Superior Court’s judgment.

(2) The Court previously described the events leading to Coleman’s

convictions as follows:

In June 2020, Devin Coleman, a convicted felon prohibited from possessing a firearm, was released on probation after completing an 8- year prison sentence. Soon after his release, the police began monitoring Coleman’s calls through court-approved telephone wiretaps, as part of a joint contraband investigation by the City of Dover Police and the Delaware State Police. At the time, Coleman, a Level III probationer, lived in Room 117 of the Capitol Inn in Dover.

On July 21 and 22, the police listened to Coleman over the wiretap as he discussed guns and drugs. During the calls on July 21, Coleman expressed a desire to purchase firearms, and, the following day, Coleman was recorded telling associate Antwan Campbell, “I spent $1,700 on guns yesterday.”

After Coleman made these incriminating statements, he was observed, on the morning of July 22, 2020, carrying a blue backpack into his motel room at the Capitol Inn. A few minutes later, Coleman went outside to take a call from his friend Kendra Lewis. Lewis, who then arrived by car, was greeted by Coleman and the two walked back into the motel room together. Shortly after that, probation officer Ricky Porter and two other officers knocked on the door with the intention of conducting an administrative search. Hearing the knock, Coleman looked out the window, and Porter asked him to open the door. Lewis, James Ayers, and Shaketah Giles were also in the room. Coleman did not open the door immediately. Instead, he turned to Ayers, who was moving things around, and asked him, “Yo, you good?” and Coleman then opened the door.

Once inside, Porter and the officers found drugs containing Fentanyl. Porter also located the blue backpack that Coleman was seen carrying into the room within the preceding hour. Inside the blue backpack, Porter found (i) one Ruger handgun with a loaded 9mm magazine inserted, (ii) one Smith & Wesson with an unloaded .40 caliber magazine inserted, and (iii) one spare .40 caliber magazine that was unloaded and loose in the backpack. Porter photographed the items “before handling the weapons.”

During the evidence collection process, Porter removed the magazines from the Ruger and the Smith & Wesson and confirmed that neither weapon's chamber contained a round. Only the 9mm magazine found in the Ruger contained any ammunition. When he seized the .40 caliber magazines, both of which were unloaded and appeared to be

2 “identical,” Porter did not designate which magazine was found in the Smith & Wesson.

Porter delivered the evidence to the Dover Police Department. The items were then tagged and separately photographed. Later, Detective Nolan Matthews, a Dover Police Department crime-scene investigator, lifted three fingerprints from one of the .40 caliber magazines, an examination of which showed that the prints belonged to Coleman, Mack, and Ayers. These were the only fingerprints found that had any identification value. Because no effort had been made when seizing the evidence to differentiate between the two .40 caliber magazines, there was no way to tell which of the .40 caliber magazines the fingerprints were lifted from—the magazine found inside the Smith & Wesson or the one that was loose in the backpack.

Based on the wiretap investigation, a Kent County grand jury indicted 29 defendants, including Coleman, on racketeering, drug, and weapons offenses. Separately, Coleman faced additional charges stemming from the search of his motel room, including two charges of possession of a firearm by a person prohibited and one charge of possession of ammunition by a person prohibited. To avoid the prejudice that might attend the jury’s learning of Coleman's prior felony conviction and his status as a “person prohibited,” the court severed the “person prohibited” charges and held two trials. The same jury heard both cases and much of the separately presented evidence overlapped. To streamline the trial, the first trial was limited to one drug dealing (fentanyl) charge; the State entered nolle prosequis as to eight other charges pending against Coleman. The second trial was limited to two charges of possession of a firearm by a person prohibited and one count of possession of ammunition by a person prohibited….

[T]he jury found Coleman guilty of the lesser-included offense of misdemeanor possession of fentanyl. Then, in the second trial, after the prosecution rested, the court denied Coleman’s application for a missing evidence instruction finding no breach of the State’s duty to collect or preserve evidence.

Coleman then testified in his own defense that he was lying when he told Campbell that he had spent “$1,700 on guns.” According to Coleman, when he entered the Capitol Inn on the morning of July 22,

3 the blue backpack contained a pair of sneakers. Coleman opined that Ayers had deposited the guns and spare magazine into the blue backpack while Coleman was outside talking on the phone with Lewis in the minutes before the probation officer arrived to conduct the search. He also claimed that he only briefly touched the spare .40 caliber magazine on the morning of July 22 when he slid the “clip” across the sink to Ayers and told him to “pick this stuff up.”

At the end of the second trial, the jury found Coleman guilty of only one count of possession of a firearm by a person prohibited. Because neither of the counts charging Coleman with possession of a firearm by a person prohibited describes the firearm—that is, neither count identifies the type of firearm Coleman was alleged to have possessed— we do not know whether Coleman was convicted of possessing the Ruger or the Smith & Wesson firearm.1

(3) After granting the State’s habitual offender petition, the Superior Court

sentenced Coleman to 29 years of unsuspended Level V time for possession of a

firearm by a person prohibited (“PFBPP”) and a fine for drug possession. On appeal,

this Court affirmed Coleman’s conviction, holding that the Superior Court did not

err in denying his request for a “missing evidence” instruction. 2

(4) On May 1, 2023, Coleman filed a timely motion for postconviction

relief and a motion for appointment of counsel. The Superior Court granted the

motion for appointment of counsel and referred the matter to a Superior Court

Commissioner. Coleman’s postconviction counsel filed an amended motion for

postconviction relief. The motion alleged that Coleman’s trial counsel was

1 Coleman v. State, 289 A.3d 619-623 (Del. 2023) (citations omitted). 2 Id. at 629.

4 ineffective for failing to object to (i) the inclusion of the accomplice-liability

instruction from the jury instructions for the first trial in the jury instructions for the

second trial, and (ii) the trial court’s reliance on impermissible factors at sentencing.

Following trial counsel’s submission of an affidavit responding to the allegations,

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Related

Strickland v. Washington
466 U.S. 668 (Supreme Court, 1984)
Younger v. State
580 A.2d 552 (Supreme Court of Delaware, 1990)
Baynum v. State
211 A.3d 1075 (Supreme Court of Delaware, 2019)

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Coleman v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coleman-v-state-del-2026.