Ex Parte Appleton

828 So. 2d 894, 2001 WL 1658658
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedDecember 28, 2001
Docket1991630)
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 828 So. 2d 894 (Ex Parte Appleton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ex Parte Appleton, 828 So. 2d 894, 2001 WL 1658658 (Ala. 2001).

Opinion

828 So.2d 894 (2001)

Ex parte Jarrell APPLETON.
(In re Jarrell Appleton v. State.

1991630).

Supreme Court of Alabama.

December 28, 2001.

*896 Wayne T. Johnson, Phenix City, for petitioner.

Bill Pryor, atty. gen., and G. Ward Beeson III, asst. atty. gen., for respondent.

JOHNSTONE, Justice.

Jarrell Appleton was convicted of first-degree robbery and was sentenced to 30 years' imprisonment. The Court of Criminal Appeals affirmed Appleton's conviction in an unpublished memorandum. Appleton v. State, 805 So.2d 788 (Ala.Crim.App. 2000) (table). The Court of Criminal Appeals also overruled his application for rehearing. Appleton petitioned this Court for a writ of certiorari, which we granted.

Appleton argues that the trial court erred in denying his motion to suppress the victim's identifications of him in a pretrial one-man showup and in court. Appleton claims that the testimony and evidence relating to the pretrial identification should have been suppressed because it derived from an unduly suggestive one-man showup. He also claims that, because the suggestiveness of the pretrial identification tainted the in-court identification, it should have been suppressed also.

The robbery victim, Vincent Flores, a taxicab driver, testified at the suppression hearing and at trial. On December 17, 1998, between 9:00 p.m. and 10:00 p.m., while Flores was using a pay phone at a service station in Phenix City to call his wife, he heard footsteps behind him. Two masked gunmen walked up behind him. The taller of the two—later identified by Flores as Appleton—held a gun to Flores's head, and the shorter robber told Flores to "give it up, give it up." Flores told the robbers that the money was in his cab, and the shorter robber searched the cab while the taller robber kept the gun to Flores's head. As he held the gun to Flores's head, the taller robber asked Flores who he was talking to, and Flores told him he was talking to his wife, who had just had a baby. The taller robber responded, "Congratulations, I'm not going to kill you." (R. 19.) That exchange was the extent of the conversation between the taller robber and Flores.

The robbery lasted only "five [to] seven minutes." (R. 23.) After the shorter robber took money from the cab, the two robbers ran toward a car parked on the street around the corner from where Flores was robbed. As soon as the robbers were out of his sight, Flores followed the robbers around the corner. He heard a door slam and tires squeak, and he saw the car speed away. At trial, Flores described the car, in which he believed the robbers fled, as a rust-colored, four-door, "early antique Ford LTD or Chevy type car." (R. 56.) Flores said that he "eyeballed" the robbers but did not see the robbers' faces because they were covered *897 by ski masks. However, he did see the robbers' clothes and pistols.

Flores testified at the suppression hearing that, about 15 minutes after the robbery, he described the robbers to the police as follows:

"They both had three-quarter length black leather coats with hoods on. The leather coats had hoods. The tall guy had a black ski mask on. He had gloves, it looked like gray, olive-type kind. Black trousers. Black boots. And held an automatic weapon, which I believe was a 45. I say it was a 45. I can distinguish the difference between a 45 and nine mill. Nine mill is smaller, so I told the guy it was a 45, and even described it was blue nickel with a brown handle."

(R. 24-25, emphasis added.) At trial, Flores further described the robbers as "black" men wearing "ski masks, three-quarter length black leather jackets with hoods, black trousers, black shoes, and ... grayish olive-type gloves." (R. 55.)

About the same time Flores was reporting the robbery, some officers responded to call from someone complaining about people loitering in the streets in an area in Phenix City. Appleton and another black man were standing on the street when the police patrol car pulled onto the street and stopped. Upon seeing the patrol car, Appleton and the other man ran. The police officers pursued the two men, followed Appleton into a wooded area, and found him hiding in a creek bed. The officers attempted to apprehend Appleton, but he resisted the officers, who subdued him by spraying him with pepper spray. The officers then searched him and found a black, nine-millimeter Beretta, fully loaded with a 15-round clip in it, and an additional 15-round clip in the pocket of his jacket. They also found a black ski mask and a black glove on Appleton. They did not find any money in his possession. The officers arrested Appleton for carrying a concealed weapon.

Shortly after the officers had apprehended and arrested Appleton, they learned that he matched the description of one of the men who had robbed Flores. Upon arriving at the police department with Appleton, the officers told Sergeant Kenneth Youngblood that they had apprehended a suspect who matched the description of one of the robbers given by Flores. Sergeant Youngblood then telephoned Flores and told him to come to the police department because they had a suspect in custody.

About 15 minutes after Flores had reported the robbery, he went to the police department to "actually identify the guy." (R. 21.) Before Flores saw the suspect (Appleton), Sergeant Youngblood showed Flores "a coat, a mask, [and] a glove, and asked him did [these] look familiar." (R. 59.) Flores testified also that Youngblood showed him a pistol which Flores identified as the .45-caliber pistol, "blue, black in color with a brown handle," which the taller robber had held to his head. (R. 59.) He told Sergeant Youngblood that the clothes and pistol looked like those belonging to one of the robbers. (R. 59-60.) Sergeant Youngblood then asked Flores whether he could identify the robbers. Flores told him that he could not identify the robbers by their physical appearances because he had not seen their faces but that he could identify them by their voices. (R. 59.) Sergeant Youngblood took Flores into a room where Appleton was sitting. Because Appleton had been sprayed with pepper spray during his apprehension by the police, he could not see Flores. Sergeant Youngblood then asked Appleton to state his name and address. Thereafter, Flores identified Appleton as one of the robbers. (R. 22.)

*898 During the suppression hearing, Flores was not able to identify Appleton as the man he had identified in the one-man showup. (R. 22.) During the trial, however, Flores did identify Appleton as the man he had identified in the one-man showup as one of the robbers.

Flores acknowledged that his pretrial identification of Appleton as one of the robbers was based primarily on his voice. (R. 28.) He acknowledged further that the pretrial identification was based also on the clothes which Sergeant Youngblood had shown him before he saw Appleton in the one-man showup. On recross-examination by defense counsel during the suppression hearing, Flores specifically testified as follows:

"Q. Mr. Flores, you first testified here this morning that you were shown some items of clothing as it matched exactly what you recall one of the robbers wearing; is that correct?

"A. That's correct, sir.

"Q. Did that lead you to believe that the police already had a pretty good hold on one of the robbers?

"A. Yes, sir.

"Q. And that was in your mind as soon as you saw the items; was it not?

"A. Well, yes, sir.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
828 So. 2d 894, 2001 WL 1658658, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ex-parte-appleton-ala-2001.