Eddie Wayne Chewning v. Commonwealth of Virginia

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedMarch 11, 2014
Docket2204124
StatusUnpublished

This text of Eddie Wayne Chewning v. Commonwealth of Virginia (Eddie Wayne Chewning v. Commonwealth of Virginia) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Eddie Wayne Chewning v. Commonwealth of Virginia, (Va. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA

Present: Judges Kelsey, Alston and Decker UNPUBLISHED

Argued at Alexandria, Virginia

EDDIE WAYNE CHEWNING MEMORANDUM OPINION* BY v. Record No. 2204-12-4 JUDGE MARLA GRAFF DECKER MARCH 11, 2014 COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF STAFFORD COUNTY Charles S. Sharp, Judge

James J. Ilijevich for appellant.

Susan M. Harris, Assistant Attorney General (Kenneth T. Cuccinelli, II, Attorney General, on brief), for appellee.

Eddie Wayne Chewning (the appellant) was tried by a jury and convicted of first-degree

murder and use of a firearm in the commission of a felony, in violation of Code §§ 18.2-32 and

18.2-53.1. These convictions were based on his participation as an accessory before the fact to

his girlfriend’s murder of her mother. The appellant contends that the trial court erred by:

(1) admitting records of cellular telephone texting1; (2) permitting the Commonwealth to read

aloud numerous text messages between the appellant and his girlfriend; and (3) finding that the

evidence was sufficient to prove that the appellant was an accessory before the fact to his

girlfriend’s crimes. We hold that the trial court did not err with regard to any of these actions.

Accordingly, we affirm the convictions.

* Pursuant to Code § 17.1-413, this opinion is not designated for publication. 1 “Text messages are written communications from one cell phone to another cell phone.” 1 Jay E. Grenig & William C. Gleisner, III, eDiscovery & Digital Evidence § 14:8, at 220 (Supp. 2012-13). I. BACKGROUND

On July 5, 2011, seventeen-year-old Ashleigh Dye (Ashleigh) shot and killed her mother,

Brenda Dye, in the family’s home. At the time of the shooting, the eighteen-year-old appellant

had been dating Ashleigh for about four months and was working for Ashleigh’s father, Ronald

Dye, Sr. (Dye), a brick mason, on a brick restoration job in Alexandria.

On the day of the shooting, the appellant rode to Alexandria as usual with Dye and Dye’s

son David. At the end of the work day, the appellant rode home with the Dyes but departed

quickly. Dye and David went into the residence and found Brenda Dye dead on the bathroom

floor. Near her body was a shotgun that belonged to Ashleigh. When sheriff’s detectives

interviewed Ashleigh, she confessed to shooting her mother and then ransacking the bedrooms to

“cover up” the murder before leaving for work.

Detectives also interviewed the appellant. He initially denied knowing anything about

the murder. During a second interview, however, the appellant admitted to detectives that

Ashleigh had been talking to him about wanting to kill her mother. The detectives obtained a

search warrant for the appellant’s cell phone records, including his text messages. Based on the

content of those text messages, police obtained warrants charging the appellant as an accessory

before the fact to the crimes.

In the hour-long interview that followed the appellant’s arrest, Detective Michelle

Gibbons had “a packet” of the text messages that had been sent between Ashleigh and the

appellant on July 5, 2011. The appellant admitted exchanging text messages with Ashleigh on

that date. Gibbons confronted the appellant with the specific language of some of the text

messages in which he encouraged Ashleigh to kill her mother and referred to their apparent plan.

The appellant equivocated about his involvement, claiming first that he told Ashleigh in a

telephone call around lunchtime not to kill her mother, but later admitting that “nobody could get

-2- through to [Ashleigh] but [him]” and that he could have stopped her. The testimony of Gibbons

and the video recording of the interview show that when Gibbons asked the appellant “if he had

any questions [regarding] the text messages [between him and Ashleigh that were contained in

the packet] or if he wanted to explain anything, [the appellant] advised [her] that it was all true.”

Ashleigh pleaded guilty to murdering her mother, but the appellant denied his guilt as an

accessory before the fact. At his trial, the Commonwealth offered evidence of Ashleigh’s

romantic relationship with the appellant; letters she wrote to him, including a reference to her

plan to “KBM” or “kill bitch mom”; and ultimately, evidence that Ashleigh shot and killed her

mother in the family residence on July 5, 2011.

The Commonwealth established the cell phone numbers of the appellant and Ashleigh

and sought to admit phone records showing the content of the text message exchanges between

them before and after the murder on July 5, 2011. To provide a foundation for the admission of

these cell phone and text messaging records, the Commonwealth offered the testimony of Andrea

Mattia, an employee of Verizon Wireless. The Commonwealth also offered testimony from

Detective Gibbons that she used the records identified by Mattia when she interviewed the

appellant about the murder and that he admitted the contents were “all true.” The appellant

objected to admission of the records on hearsay grounds. After hearing argument from the

parties, the trial court admitted the records for the truth of their content.

The appellant also objected to the Commonwealth’s decision to have the prosecutor and

Detective Gibbons read aloud to the jury a portion of the text messages contained in the cell

phone records exhibit, arguing that reading them would be prejudicial. Additionally, he noted

that the text messages appeared to contain some misspellings, contractions, and abbreviations

and argued that it would be error to allow Gibbons or the prosecutor to interpret those items.

The trial court overruled the objection, stating no evidence suggested that allowing the exhibit to

-3- be read aloud would “lend[] some super credence or some potential prejudice” to the exhibit and

that the appellant could address in closing argument the interpretation of any contractions or

abbreviations that he contended were inaccurate.

Detective Gibbons read the portion of the text messages sent from Ashleigh’s phone to

the appellant’s phone, while the prosecutor read the text messages sent from the appellant’s

phone to Ashleigh’s phone. The messages covered the time from before the murder through the

period after the appellant returned from work, retrieved his truck from the Dye residence, and

drove to meet Ashleigh at her place of employment.

Ashleigh testified at trial that she killed her mother, in part, because the appellant told her

to do so. According to Ashleigh, they discussed various ways she could commit the murder.

Ashleigh confirmed that she and the appellant texted each other on the day of the murder about

their plan. She testified that the appellant’s encouragement and advice “enabled” her to kill her

mother and that without the appellant’s “advice, instigation, or help,” she would not have gone

through with the plan. Ashleigh said that although she had mentioned wanting to kill her mother

to other boyfriends, the appellant was the only one who actually told her to go through with it.

The jury found the appellant guilty of the charged offenses as an accessory before the

fact. He was sentenced to thirty-five years with ten years suspended for the murder and three

years for the firearm offense. This appeal followed.

II. ANALYSIS

The appellant challenges the admissibility of the text messages he exchanged with

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