Ex Parte Sharp, 1080959 (Ala. 12-4-2009)

151 So. 3d 329, 2009 WL 4506564, 2009 Ala. LEXIS 284
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedDecember 4, 2009
Docket1080959
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 151 So. 3d 329 (Ex Parte Sharp, 1080959 (Ala. 12-4-2009)) 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 Sharp, 1080959 (Ala. 12-4-2009), 151 So. 3d 329, 2009 WL 4506564, 2009 Ala. LEXIS 284 (Ala. 2009).

Opinion

STUART, Justice.

Jason Michael Sharp was convicted of murder made capital because it was committed during the course of a rape or an attempted rape, see § 13A-5-40(a)(3), Ala. Code 1975. After a sentencing hearing, the jury recommended, by a vote of 11-1, that Sharp be sentenced to death. The trial court took the jury’s recommendation and sentenced Sharp to death. The Court of Criminal Appeals affirmed Sharp’s conviction and sentence. Sharp v. State, 151 So.3d 308 (Ala.Crim.App.2008).

This Court granted Sharp’s petition for a writ of certiorari to review two issues: whether plain error occurred in the admission of the testimony of the emergency-room nurse who examined the victim and [332]*332whether plain error occurred in the State’s exercise of its peremptory challenges.1 We reverse and remand.

The facts of the offense are adequately stated in detail in the Court of Criminal Appeals’ opinion and will not be repeated here. See Sharp v. State, 151 So.3d at 320.

“Plain error is
“‘error that is so obvious that the failure to notice it would seriously affect the fairness or integrity of the judicial proceedings. Ex parte Taylor, 666 So.2d 73 (Ala.1995). The plain error standard applies only where a particularly egregious error occurred at trial and that error has or probably has substantially prejudiced the defendant. Taylor.’
“Ex parte Trawick, 698 So.2d [162,] 167 [ (Ala.1997) ].”

Ex parte Walker, 972 So.2d 737, 742 (Ala.2007).

First, Sharp contends that plain error occurred when the trial court admitted opinion testimony of a lay witness. He further argues that plain error occurred when the State referenced that testimony in its opening and closing arguments.

The record establishes that during its opening argument the State argued:

“In the meantime [the victim] is being transported to Huntsville Hospital. When she gets to the ER [emergency room], she is administered by a trauma nurse at the ER by the name of Kim Heliums. And Kim Heliums describes — when [the -victim] came in she assessed her situation and based on her experience as an ER nurse she surmised, she determined that she was dealing with the victim of a sexual assault. She began her job there in the ER to try to save [the victim’s] life. Police officers had arrived on the scene as well. And during her work with [the victim] in the ER she began to realize that she knows [the victim]. They’re both nurses, they’ve worked together, they know each other, they’re acquainted with each other, but she says that she didn’t even recognize [the victim] because of all the blood and the condition of her face, the swelling.
“She sees what she describes as a semen smear on the inner thigh of [the victim] as she is in the hospital. She points it out to the investigator. She takes a sterile gauze and she collects that semen smear that is preserved, handed to the police officer that’s in the room, and that piece of evidence continues on with us today.”

During the trial, the State called Kim Heliums, the emergency-room nurse, to testify as to what happened in the emergency room when the victim was brought in. Heliums was one of the first witnesses [333]*333to testify. The following occurred during the State’s direct examination of Heliums:

“[State]: Let me ask you this, Ms. Heliums. Were you working on or about January 2,1999, when [the victim] was transported to the emergency room?
“[Heliums]: Yes.
“[State]: And were you working as a nurse in the emergency room when she was transported?
“[Heliums]: Yes.
“[State]: If you would tell the folks on this jury what you recall about your shift and specifically when [the victim] was transported to the hospital.
“[Heliums]: I remember they informed us that we had a trauma coming in, it was a stabbing. And when she arrived they placed her over on the bed and we started an assessment, which is protocol for us.
“[State]: If you would just describe to us what an assessment is.
“[Heliums]: When I say rapid assessment, it’s a rapid head to toe assessment of the patient and they’re assessing their injuries, their level of consciousness, their wounds, their vital signs. So in the first three minutes I have to go head to toe on a patient, assess their airways, see if they are breathing, see if we need to set up to breathe for them, put a tube down, have two IV’s placed in the patient, and I assess perineal area and go ahead and insert a Foley catheter to obtain a urine specimen also, and I obtain labs, basically get them set up for surgery if they need to go to surgery.
‘When this patient was brought in she was placed over on the bed. They placed her on the bed and she still had foreign objects attached to her and those were left in place initially just to look at her head. She had so much swelling about her face that she was unrecognizable to me, a lot of swelling to her orbits, ones that you typically see on assaults.
“[State]: What are you talking about the orbits?
“[Heliums]: Her eyes were swollen and you usually see — we see these injuries after somebody’s been repeatedly pounded. You wouldn’t get the swelling from one blow. There was a lot of soft tissue injury about the face, sinus area, eyes. I don’t recall whether her pupils were equal at this point because there was so much swelling I couldn’t get her eyes open. Checking her airways, see if there was blood in it. She had a lot of dried blood on her. Like I said I didn’t recognize her.
“Going down her body I noticed that she' had silver duct tape, silver tape which I would call duct tape, still attached to her right hand. And on the left there was pieces of it.
“Assessing her chest they were saying that they thought she had been — they knew she had been stabbed with something and I was looking at the entrance wounds and describing them to the person [who] was writing.
“As I moved down I listened to her breath sounds and as I moved down to abdominal area, I was noting whether she had any swelling, any bruising there.
“And when I got to her perineal area I stopped.
“[State]: I’m sorry, I don’t mean to interrupt you, Ms. Heliums. But what are you saying what area the peri—
“The perineal area, the area of the groin, beneath the pubic bone, the inside of the thighs.
“[State]: Okay. Go ahead.
“[Heliums]: When I got to this point in my assessment — there were, of course, a physician at the head of the [334]*334bed, a trauma physician at the bed side. They were assessing the airway, getting ready to go ahead and put a tube down her throat to breathe for her and someone else was checking blood as I’m doing my physical assessment. And my role in that was doing the physical assessment and yelling out to the person that was writing.

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Related

Sharp v. State
151 So. 3d 342 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Alabama, 2010)

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Bluebook (online)
151 So. 3d 329, 2009 WL 4506564, 2009 Ala. LEXIS 284, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ex-parte-sharp-1080959-ala-12-4-2009-ala-2009.