Floudiotis v. State

726 A.2d 1196, 1999 Del. LEXIS 112, 1999 WL 203766
CourtSupreme Court of Delaware
DecidedApril 6, 1999
Docket436, 1997, 443, 1997, 435, 1997, 440, 1997
StatusPublished
Cited by43 cases

This text of 726 A.2d 1196 (Floudiotis v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Floudiotis v. State, 726 A.2d 1196, 1999 Del. LEXIS 112, 1999 WL 203766 (Del. 1999).

Opinion

VEASEY, Chief Justice:

In this appeal of a joint trial of four co-defendants allegedly involved in an assault and conspiracy, we reverse the judgment of the trial court following a jury verdict against the defendants. We hold, in part, that the trial court committed reversible error in the admission of unfairly prejudicial evidence of marginal relevance against all defendants. This prejudicial evidence included photographs of the defendants’ tee-shirts and tattoos and offensive comments attributed to certain defendants, all of which (in varying degrees) tended to depict the defendants as racist in a case where all the defen *1200 dants and both of the victims were white. Race was not an issue and the evidence was not probative on the identification issue.

In view of the possibility of a new trial, we have expressed our views on other evidentia-ry issues and the proper procedures for the trial court to employ in determining whether, and to what extent, any retrial that is likely to involve essentially the same complex evi-dentiary problems among the various defendants will be joint or several.

Facts

At about 1:15 a.m. on July 16, 1995, Kimberly and Mark Butler exited the Deer Park Tavern. According to the Butlers’ testimony at trial, a young white male with a crew cut hairstyle threw beer on Kimberly as Mark began backing his truck out of its parking space in the Deer Park parking lot. Kimberly opened her door and began exiting the vehicle when she was dragged to the ground and beaten to the point of unconsciousness. Mark exited the truck to see what was happening when several young white males suddenly surrounded him and began to beat him. That was his last recollection before losing consciousness. Both Kimberly and Mark suffered serious injuries. Both sustained broken jaws, cuts and bruises, and Mark also sustained a broken collarbone.

The only eyewitness to the actual assault was Augustino Parodi, a musician playing at the Deer Park that night. At trial, Parodi testified that he was stowing his musical equipment in his car in the Deer Park parking lot when he saw a group of six to eight young white males with crew cuts attack a couple walking in the parking lot. He saw one person deliver a flying kick to the back of the male victim followed by everybody in the group participating in the assault by punching and kicking the male victim. At one point, according to Parodi, one of the assailants took a metal object out of a pickup truck and hit the male victim with it. After the attack, Parodi saw some of the young men get into a small light colored car while others entered the pickup truck from which the assailant had taken the metal object. Parodi described this truck as “maybe orange and rusty, kind of tan.”

Upon learning of an incident in the parking lot, David Fecak, a Deer Park employee, ran outside. He saw four men standing over a man and a woman, but he did not see any physical violence. Soon after he arrived on the scene, Fecak observed the four men get into a “red maroon-like-rust-colored pickup truck” in the parking lot and leave the scene. As the truck exited the parking lot, Fecak recorded the license plate number and went to aid the Butlers, the man and woman he had observed on the ground.

Corporal Ted Ryser of the Newark Police Department noticed the same pickup truck exiting the Deer Park parking lot and followed it on suspicion of drunken driving. Eventually, he pulled the pickup truck over. In addition to the driver, Michael Reynolds, Corporal Ryser observed three passengers in the truck: Christopher Floudiotis, Owen Carr and Brent Eaton. After obtaining Reynolds’ license and registration, Corporal Ryser heard a broadcast on his police radio warning officers to be on the lookout for suspects in the Deer Park assault. The report, using information provided by Fecak, stated that the suspects were driving a pickup truck with a license number matching the license plate of Reynolds’ truck. At this point, Corporal Ryser called for backup and two more officers arrived on the scene. Corporal Ryser arrested Reynolds for driving under the influence and transported him to the Newark police station. The other officers transported Floudiotis, Carr and Eaton to the police station in a separate vehicle.

After interviewing the Butlers at the hospital and conferring with officers who had taken statements from witnesses at the Deer Park, Detective Ralph Johnson arrived at the Newark police station to interview the four suspects. At the hospital, Detective Johnson had noted a distinctive imprint on Mark Butler’s stomach that appeared to come from the heel of a boot. Realizing that Reynolds and Floudiotis wore heavy combat boots, Detective Johnson directed all four suspects to raise their shoes so that he could observe the patterns on their boots. Detective Johnson immediately noticed a similarity in pattern between the imprint he observed on Mark *1201 Butler’s stomach and the pattern on the boots worn by Reynolds and Floudiotis.

After interviewing and photographing them, Detective Johnson seized the footwear of all four suspects even though Carr and Eaton were not wearing combat boots. Detective Johnson testified that he did so because he had reason to believe that all four were involved in the assault at the Deer Park and because he thought that the footwear might contain hairs or fibers that would tie the suspects to the crime. According to his later testimony, however, Detective Johnson did not subjectively believe at the time that he possessed sufficient probable cause to arrest any of the suspects for the assault. Through subsequent forensic tests, the State discovered fibers on Eaton’s shoes that were consistent with the same source of the fibers taken from the tank top Kimberly Butler wore the night of the attack.

The police eventually arrested Reynolds, Floudiotis, Carr and Eaton in connection with the assault on the Butlers. The State charged each defendant with one count of First Degree Assault based on the assault of Mark Butler, one count of Second Degree Assault based on the assault of Kimberly Butler and one count of Second Degree Conspiracy. The State chose to prosecute the defendants in a joint trial. The defendants’ motions for severance were denied by the trial court.

At trial, the State proceeded on a theory that the defendants were part of a larger group of similarly dressed young men with crew cuts who had gone to the Deer Park on the night in question to drink in memory of a recently deceased mutual friend and to incite a fight. Hoping to connect the defendants to intimidating behavior in the Deer Park prior to the assault as a means of showing a conspiracy, the State called two witnesses to testify to events inside the Deer Park.

Shane Hamby, who is white, was at the Deer Park that evening with his friend Sheila Sainson, who is black. Sainson testified that as. she entered the bar that evening, she walked past a group of about eight young men with crew cuts wearing similar clothing when an individual with dark hair and a red dragon tattoo on his arm said something like “I’m going to have some black meat tonight.” Hamby testified that he was walking back to his table when he noticed Michael Reynolds, an acquaintance of his, with two other individuals.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Jewell v. State
Supreme Court of Delaware, 2025
El-Abbadi v. State
Supreme Court of Delaware, 2024
State v. Gibson
Superior Court of Delaware, 2022
State v. Gregg
Superior Court of Delaware, 2021
Anderson v. State
Supreme Court of Delaware, 2021
Lloyd v. State
Supreme Court of Delaware, 2021
State v. Frost
Superior Court of Delaware, 2019
State v. Land
Superior Court of Delaware, 2019
State v. Clay
Superior Court of Delaware, 2018
State v. Robert
Superior Court of Delaware, 2018
Clay v. State
164 A.3d 907 (Supreme Court of Delaware, 2017)
State v. Kman
Superior Court of Delaware, 2017
Phillips v. State
154 A.3d 1146 (Supreme Court of Delaware, 2017)
Land v. State
Supreme Court of Delaware, 2017
Taylor v. State
Supreme Court of Delaware, 2016
Urquhart v. State
Supreme Court of Delaware, 2016
State of Delaware v. Taylor.
Superior Court of Delaware, 2015

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
726 A.2d 1196, 1999 Del. LEXIS 112, 1999 WL 203766, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/floudiotis-v-state-del-1999.