Dickson v. State

982 A.2d 850, 188 Md. App. 489, 2009 Md. App. LEXIS 165
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedOctober 28, 2009
Docket2521, September Term, 2007
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 982 A.2d 850 (Dickson v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Special Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dickson v. State, 982 A.2d 850, 188 Md. App. 489, 2009 Md. App. LEXIS 165 (Md. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

DEBORAH S. EYLER, J.

A jury in the Circuit Court for Baltimore City convicted Anthony Dickson, a/k/a Robert Louis Dixon, the appellant, of first-degree murder and carrying a weapon with intent to injure in the shooting death of 16-year-old Robert “Butch” Martin. The court imposed a life sentence for the murder conviction and a consecutive sentence of three years for the weapon conviction.

The appellant raises two questions for review, which we quote:

I. Was it error to deny the motion for mistrial, after witness Christina Thomas was improperly coerced by the court, in front of the jury, into testifying for the State, in violation of Appellant’s due process rights?
II. Did the trial court err in proceeding with a portion of the trial, during the illness of Appellant’s counsel?

*494 For the following reasons, we shall answer Question I affirmatively, reverse the judgments of conviction, and remand for further proceedings. As Question II is unlikely to resurface on remand, we shall not address it.

FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

On the evening of January 1, 2006, Butch Martin was killed by a shotgun blast to the head as he was sitting in the back seat of a white Dodge Intrepid owned by Christina Thomas, his girlfriend. The car was parked with the key in the ignition in front of 2600 Marbourne Avenue, in Baltimore City. Martin was alone when he was shot. He was sitting in the back seat because the front seat doors to the car were broken.

When he was shot, Martin was talking on a cell phone to his mother, Roberta Martin. According to Mrs. Martin, her son called her because he was upset that she had not let her friend lend him a gun. He said on the phone that “Bobby” was coming up the street and that it looked like “Bobby” had a gun. Mrs. Martin “fussed,” telling her son to “just walk away,” and then she heard a loud sound, like a shot fired. Her son would not respond and he did not answer when she called back. She then got a call from Thomas, who was screaming and crying, and another woman got on the phone and told her that her son had been shot.

The day after the murder, on January 2, 2006, and again on January 25, 2006, Thomas gave audiotaped statements to the police.

Two men were arrested and charged in Martin’s murder: Michael McFadden and the appellant, nicknamed “Bobby.” McFadden and the appellant were tried separately, with McFadden’s trial taking place in June 2007 and the appellant’s trial taking place about four months later, in late September/early October of the same year. McFadden was convicted by a jury of second-degree murder and carrying a concealed dangerous weapon. The court imposed a 30-year prison term for the murder and a consecutive three-year prison term for the weapon conviction. On appeal, this Court reversed *495 McFadden’s weapon conviction. 1 McFadden v. State, 186 Md.App. 738 (2009).

In the McFadden trial, Thomas testified for the State. 2 She said she and Martin had spent most of January 1, 2006, “riding around” in her car. She was driving. Sometime in the evening, she decided to visit her best friend Amber, 3 who was living at 2600 Marbourne Avenue. After she parked her car in front of Amber’s house, she and Martin sat and talked for about four minutes. Then Thomas saw a man she identified as “Bobby” drive by in a red Cadillac. She did not see anyone else in the Cadillac at that time. She got out of her car and entered Amber’s house.

About two minutes later, Thomas heard a gunshot. She ran outside and saw a “big hole” in the rear driver’s side window of her car, and saw the same red Cadillac speeding down the street with “Bobby and Mike” inside. She did not see their faces, but claimed she could identify them from the backs of their heads. “Bobby” was the appellant and “Mike” was McFadden. Thomas tried to get inside the car to check on Martin but the doors would not open because they were locked and the key was in the ignition. Several of her friends arrived and used a hammer to break the rear passenger side window and found Martin dead from a gunshot to the head.

Also in her McFadden trial testimony, portions of the taped statements Thomas had given the police were read into evidence. In one part of her January 2, 2006 statement, she said that Martin and the appellant had been involved in an altercation in December 2005, during which the appellant had threatened to kill Martin. She also described seeing the appellant shoot a large green gun in an alley in the “New Orland” area of Baltimore City on New Year’s Eve, the night before the murder. In one part of her January 25, 2006 statement that *496 was read into the record, Thomas admitted that part of her January 2 statement, in which she said she was looking out the window and saw the shooting as it occurred, including the red Cadillac, was not true. In her McFadden testimony, Thomas repeated that she had not told the truth about that point in her January 2, 2006 statement, but that everything else she had said in her statements to the police was true.

At the trial in the case at bar, defense counsel in opening statement told the jurors they would hear evidence that would lead them to conclude that Thomas committed the murder by orchestrating a “hit” and that the appellant was uninvolved.

The prosecution called police officer witnesses who testified that, on January 1, 2006, at about 9:50 p.m., they responded to 2600 Marbourne Avenue where they found a white Dodge Intrepid with its motor running and both back windows broken out. A broken hammer and a spent shotgun shell were on the ground next to the car. Martin’s body was in the back seat, on the driver’s side. He was dead with a large shotgun wound to the head. He was holding a cell phone in his right hand. He had an unloaded .38 caliber handgun in his right, front pants pocket. People at the scene reported that, after hearing the gunshot and seeing the hole in the car window, they had used the hammer to break into the car. Thomas was at the scene and was “extremely distraught.”

The police witnesses further testified that, in response to information obtained in their investigation, they went to the 2700 block of Norland Road, also in Baltimore City, and found five spent shotgun shells in the alley. The shells were similar to each other and to the shell found next to Thomas’s car. Upon obtaining a search warrant for a residence at 3903 Edmondson Avenue, the police recovered a loaded shotgun in the backyard, near the steps to the basement. Parked in front of that address was a maroon Cadillac with a large Christmas bow on the front grill. The appellant’s fingerprints were found on a CD inside the Cadillac.

As we shall explain, infra, Thomas was called as a State’s witness in the trial in the case at bar. Initially, she refused to *497 be sworn; then, after being sworn, she recanted most of her prior testimony. Her prior recorded testimony in the

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Johnson v. State
139 A.3d 1039 (Court of Special Appeals of Maryland, 2016)
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63 A.3d 647 (Court of Special Appeals of Maryland, 2013)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
982 A.2d 850, 188 Md. App. 489, 2009 Md. App. LEXIS 165, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dickson-v-state-mdctspecapp-2009.