Commonwealth v. Wood

56 Va. Cir. 128, 2001 Va. Cir. LEXIS 448
CourtNorfolk County Circuit Court
DecidedApril 16, 2001
DocketCase No. CR00003038
StatusPublished

This text of 56 Va. Cir. 128 (Commonwealth v. Wood) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Norfolk County Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth v. Wood, 56 Va. Cir. 128, 2001 Va. Cir. LEXIS 448 (Va. Super. Ct. 2001).

Opinion

By Judge Lydia Calvert Taylor

This matter came before the Court for an evidentiary hearing on November 2,2000, on Defendant’s Motion to Suppress both out-of-court and in-court identifications by witnesses Frank Crummitt, Fleeter Reyes, and Whitney Lowrance; each identified Defendant, who is charged with a robbery they witnessed, shortly afterward and near the scene. Defendant argued that the out-of-court identification took place at a showup1 that was so suggestive that not only should its results, the witnesses’ out-of-court identification at the showup, be suppressed but also any later in-court identification as well, as impermissibly based on the prior suggestive showup, rather than having as its origin the view by the witnesses of the defendant at the time of the crime. Defendant therefore claims that any in-court identification would have a high likelihood of misidentification, as likely based on the suggestive showup, in violation of Defendant’s rights to due process of law, rather than having its [129]*129origin in the view the witnesses/victims had of the perpetrator at the time of the commission of the crime. The prosecution, in contrast, argued that the showup was not so suggestive that its results, the out-of-court identification, should be suppressed and that, at any rate, the in-court identification did not have a substantial likelihood of misidentification as, based on the factors set out in long-standing case law, any in-court identification would be based on the witnesses’ view of the Defendant at the time of the crime, untainted by the showup, even if the Court were to find it suggestive.

This Court finds that the out-of-court identifications of the Defendant by Crummitt and Reyes may be admitted and that the two will be allowed to identify the Defendant at trial, because, even if the police procedures were suggestive, the totality of the circumstances using the five relevant factors, including the witnesses’ prior detailed descriptions of the Defendant, demonstrate that the identifications were sufficiently reliable that there is no substantial likelihood of misidentification. It follows that any in-court identifications will similarly be admitted if made at trial.

Factual Background

On May 12,1990, during the late evening hours, on 21st Bay in the City of Norfolk, Frank Crummitt, Hector Reyes, and Whitney Lowrance were robbed by two men. Crummitt described both men as black, neither wearing a mask, and one of the men as having a gun. Lighting conditions were moderate, with light from the street lights, he said, enabling him to clearly look at one of the men, the man without the gun, for approximately forty-five seconds, and to describe the man’s clothing and height and weight. He described one man as wearing a white cloth, like a bandanna or headdress, on his head, with what Crummitt thought were dreads underneath it; he was dressed in a plain white T-shirt and long bluish-black below-the-knee pants and white socks. Crummitt described the man as five feet, four inches to five feet, eight inches tall, and between 130 to 150 pounds, with skin color not extremely dark or light, but somewhere in the middle. Crummitt gave that physical description to a police officer, who then left; approximately 15 minutes later, another police officer came to Crummitt’s location and had Crummitt and the other two witnesses sit in a police car, which was then driven to another location. At that second location, the police brought six or seven people, one at a time, in front of the police car in which the witnesses were sitting; each of the witnesses was asked to tell the police officer in the car if he or she saw either of the two men who robbed them. Crummitt, upon recognizing one of the men that the police brought to the front of the car in [130]*130which he was sitting, said, “That’s him;” at the hearing, he testified that the two other witnesses both said the same thing at the same time. Crummitt then identified the Defendant in court as one of the men who robbed him and as the man he had later identified at the police showup. Crummitt stated that he was one hundred percent certain of the identification, both at the time he made the identification at the showup and at the time of the suppression hearing. He testified that he did not base his identification on any identification of the Defendant provided by the other two witnesses.

Hector Reyes, who also was robbed by the two men on the night of May 12,2000, described both robbers to a Norfolk police officer — one as a young black male in his twenties, wearing a ball cap, dark blue shirt, and jeans and the other as slightly shorter, with dreads in his hair, a dark doo-rag, white tank top, and dark-colored pants, neither wearing a mask. He stated that there were bright streetlights in the area, allowing him to see the two men clearly. Reyes testified that he was taken with the other two witnesses in a police car to another location, where the three witnesses were shown 14 individual suspects. Reyes only recognized the final suspect as the man wearing the white tank top and dreads, but he did not recall the doo-rag. Reyes testified that Crummitt immediately said, “That’s him,” when the fourteenth man came into view; that he and Ms. Lowrance said, “That’s him” at approximately the same time.2 Reyes identified the Defendant at the suppression hearing as the final suspect whom he and the others had identified at the showup that night. He also testified that he asked the police officer to turn the suspect around so he could be sure of his identification, and he acknowledged that in part, the man’s clothing and dreads caused him to identify the final suspect as one of the men who robbed him, but Reyes added that he was one hundred percent certain of his identification of the Defendant at the showup and at the hearing.

Officer John Kowalski of the Norfolk Police Department, who was on duty on the night of May 12, 2000, noticed the Defendant initially at approximately 18th or 19th Bay Street; he came into contact with him again at 16th Bay and Pleasant Avenue in Norfolk, a few minutes later. He had initially seen two black men running westbound on Pleasant Avenue at approximately 17th or 18th Bay; he then heard a message over his police radio, approximately two minutes later, that a man had been robbed by two black males at 20th Bay and that the two last were seen going westbound. [131]*131Therefore, Officer Kowalski turned his patrol car around to begin looking for the two men he had seen a few minutes earlier. The descriptions on the radio call was two black males, one with small dreads, wearing a T-shirt and shorts, which matched the two men he had seen running on Pleasant Avenue. When he arrived at 16th Bay and Pleasant Avenue, he saw people on a porch, the Defendant among them. Recognizing the Defendant as one of the two men he had seen running on Pleasant Avenue, he walked up to him. Although the Defendant seemed nervous, he cooperated with Officer Kowalski. Kowalski broadcast to Officer Reed, the officer who had earlier interviewed the three witnesses, that he had a possible suspect and for Officer Reed to come to 16th Bay and Pleasant Avenue. Approximately ten minutes later, Officer Reed arrived with the three witnesses in his police car. The showup of the fourteen black men, as described as above, followed. There was no testimony that the men were greatly different in looks from the Defendant.

Defendant’s only contention of suggestiveness is that the Defendant was the only person in the showup with a tank top and the only one not brought out from the house.

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Bluebook (online)
56 Va. Cir. 128, 2001 Va. Cir. LEXIS 448, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-wood-vaccnorfolk-2001.