Crawford v. State

404 A.2d 244, 285 Md. 431, 1979 Md. LEXIS 245
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJuly 19, 1979
Docket[No. 6, September Term, 1979.]
StatusPublished
Cited by54 cases

This text of 404 A.2d 244 (Crawford v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Crawford v. State, 404 A.2d 244, 285 Md. 431, 1979 Md. LEXIS 245 (Md. 1979).

Opinion

Orth, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Lillie May Crawford died on 9 May 1978. The cause of death was “pjncised wounds of the neck and chest.” 1 The manner of death was homicide. Jeannie Yvonne Crawford, also known as Jeannie Yvonne Purnell, 2 was charged with the homicide. *433 She was tried before a jury in the Circuit Court for Baltimore County, convicted of murder in the first degree and sentenced to life imprisonment. She appealed to the Court of Special Appeals, and we ordered the issuance of a writ of certiorari on our own motion before decision by that court. The issue for decision is whether the trial court erred in admitting into evidence certain portions of taped recordings of interrogations of the accused by the police. We find that the admission was erroneous, reverse the judgment and remand for a new trial.

The police conducted two custodial interrogations of the accused. The first was shortly after her arrest on the morning the crime was committed and lasted two hours. The second, two days later, continued for about an hour and a half. The interrogations were recorded on tape, and transcriptions were made of the recordings. The accused has never claimed that the statements she made during the interrogations were involuntary in the traditional sense or obtained in violation of the dictates of Miranda v. Arizona, 384 U. S. 436, 86 S. Ct. 1602 (1966); at the trial she expressly waived any objection on those grounds. She filed a pretrial motion to suppress this evidence, however, which the court denied upon hearing.

From the moment of her arrest the accused readily admitted that she had stabbed the victim, but she maintained throughout that she had acted in self-defense. She was steadfast in her adherence to that position during the interrogations, and throughout the questioning the police attempted to have her recant her version of the incident by indicating their disbelief in her story, by exhorting her to tell the truth and arguing with her, by recounting what other persons, some named, some unnamed, had told them, by stating their opinions as to what had occurred, and by referring to what the victim had said when deposed five months before her death in a civil proceeding regarding custody of the accused’s daughter Renee. At the hearing on the motion and during the trial when the challenged evidence was offered, defense counsel made clear that there was no objection to the statements made by the accused. What he wanted kept from the jury was the comments of the police: *434 “I think the record should show I have no objection to the answers she gave. I have objections to the testimony, or the alleged testimony of the officers [included in the recordings].” And later he told the court: “Let me just explain myself. I say — I have no objection to the statements she made. What I object to is the statement that the cops make, not only in this area [how the victim’s throat was cut] but all through later on. It’s — it’s their statements, not hers. The question is, should her statements be admitted? The answer is yes, everything that she said.” In that context, defense counsel presented the bases for the motion to suppress. The first was that replete throughout the recordings were statements by the police which, if admitted, would deny the accused her constitutional right to be confronted by her accusers. The transcript of the hearing reads:

THE COURT: Well, that is a stupid argument. Confrontation means the witnesses on the witness stand. And how confrontation and the right thereto can be involved in this motion is beyond me.
MR. [R. CLARK] KINSLEY [defense counsel]: Do you want to hear my reasons?
THE COURT: No. Next reason.
MR. KINSLEY: The statements — I would, of course, like to expand upon it.
THE COURT: No. You have made the point for the record. You say that your right of confrontation has been infringed upon.
MR. KINSLEY: I think the record should also show that Your Honor is pushing this case too rapidly.
THE COURT: Mr. Kinsley, I will run this court. You have made your objection on the record. I have declined to permit you to expand on that.
Would you please state your next basis for objection.

The next basis for objection was that the recordings contained “opinions of the State Police not based on fact, but opinions, *435 and that this type of evidence should not be presented to the jury, opinions of police officers.” The court set out the procedure it thought would solve this problem:

The jury will be instructed that statements made by way of questions are not evidence and are not to be considered. That is akin to the same type of questioning that occurs every day in a trial court. The jury is instructed they don’t pay any attention to the question, it’s the answer that they get. And this Court will instruct the jury on all occasions, perhaps even before that piece of evidence is offered, that they are not to consider anything within the content of a question or a statement made, they are merely to consider the answer given by the defendant.
All right. You have made your point.

Defense counsel was not satisfied:

MR. KINSLEY: But the statement refers to people that the police have talked to, not identifying who they are.
THE COURT: Right.
MR. KINSLEY: And saying what they found out, or allegedly found out, from those people.
THE COURT: Right.
MR. KINSLEY: It also contains a reference to a custody proceeding and refers to alleged happenings at the custody proceeding, such as knife throwing, which is a very vital factor.
THE COURT: It may be. It may well be that as the testimony is offered, that there might be portions thereof that are irrelevant, and as the questions are offered to the jury, appropriate objections can be made at that time.
MR. KINSLEY: If the Court please, throughout this, questions are repeatedly asked, and they don’t even wait for an answer, so all we have coming before the jury is —
*436 THE COURT: If a question is unanswered, it will be stricken out.
MR. KINSLEY: But if they play a tape —
THE COURT: They have not yet offered a tape. They may offer a printed transcript of it.
MR. KINSLEY: Then I would ask that the tape be suppressed and only the written transcript be used, so that the Court—

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Bluebook (online)
404 A.2d 244, 285 Md. 431, 1979 Md. LEXIS 245, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crawford-v-state-md-1979.