Flowers v. State

858 A.2d 328, 2004 Del. LEXIS 385, 2004 WL 1965638
CourtSupreme Court of Delaware
DecidedAugust 31, 2004
Docket264,2003
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 858 A.2d 328 (Flowers 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
Flowers v. State, 858 A.2d 328, 2004 Del. LEXIS 385, 2004 WL 1965638 (Del. 2004).

Opinion

STEELE, Chief Justice.

On this direct appeal from his conviction for the murder of Alfred Smiley and related charges, Damone Flowers asserts four grounds for reversal: (1) the trial judge erroneously admitted an involuntary statement by a witness; (2) the prosecutor made unfairly prejudicial remarks during the opening statement that were unsupported by the evidence, thereby directly affecting the outcome of the trial; (3) the prosecutor recklessly elicited testimony from a witness that Flowers had recently been released from “jail;” and (4) a prosecution witness, during cross examination by defense counsel, unresponsively disclosed that defense counsel had represented him (the witness) on an earlier weapons charge.

After carefully reviewing the record and considering his claims, we are satisfied that the trial judge acted appropriately within her discretion by admitting the challenged evidence and by denying the mistrial applications. We also conclude that two errors that did occur during trial were rendered harmless by the trial judge’s timely and sufficiently curative instructions.

I.

On August 1, 1998 Alfred Smiley drove a car with two passengers in the area of 22nd and Lamotte Streets in Wilmington. At some point, Smiley became involved in an argument with several people on the street. A gunshot fired from the sidewalk next to the car struck Smiley in the chest. The car careened out of control on the street and came to rest against a utility pole. Wilmington Police responded to the call and took Smiley to the hospital where he died from the gunshot wound.

The State charged Damone Flowers with Smiley’s murder and presented five witnesses at trial who were alleged to have been present at the scene of the shooting. Most of the incriminating evidence was presented through pretrial taped statements. Flowers presented no witnesses and did not testify. A jury convicted Flowers of First Degree Murder 1 and Possession of a Firearm During the Commission of a Felony. 2 The trial judge denied Flowers’ motion for a new trial. 3

II.

Flowers first argues that the taped statement of Ronetta Sudler, an eyewitness who identified him as the shooter, was not voluntarily obtained and therefore was improperly admitted. We review the record to determine whether Sudler voluntarily made the out-of-court statement. 4 Determining whether a statement is voluntary requires a “careful evaluation of all the circumstances of the interrogation.” 5 Promises of leniency or inducements to cooperate may affect the reliability or trustworthiness of a statement, but they *331 do not make a statement per se involuntary unless they are “so extravagant, or so impressionable as to overbear the person’s will and rational thinking process.” 6

During an August 11, 1998 videotaped interview conducted by Detective Andrew Brock, Sudler stated that she was across the street from where the shots were fired and that Flowers was the person firing the gun. Sudler was not aware that she was being videotaped at time she made her statements to the police. At trial, and after being transported from a Sussex County work release center, Rosetta Su-dler reluctantly testified as a prosecution witness. She testified that she did not remember what she had told Detective Brock in her statement and that she did not recall seeing Flowers with a gun at the scene of the shooting. She further stated that Brock threatened to take her children from her if she did not cooperate and give a statement. When the State proposed to call Detective Brock in order to authenticate the contradictory videotaped interview, pursuant to 11 Del. C. § 3507, 7 Flowers objected on the basis that Sudler involuntarily gave the videotaped statement.

The trial judge allowed voir dire examination of Sudler in order to determine the voluntariness of her August 11th videotaped statement. Sudler testified during voir dire that she was probably high on drugs, and possibly hallucinating, on the night of the shooting. During voir dire she maintained that she could not remember anything about her statement, including Brock’s alleged threats to take her children from her if she did not cooperate. Because voir dire produced no new significant, credible, evidence touching on the voluntariness of Sudler’s statement, defense counsel asked the trial judge to view the tape. After viewing the tape, the trial judge stated:

I believe the questions of the witness were within the realm of ordinary police work. She did not want to talk- His job was to get her to talk, and he did. I don’t find that the statement was involuntary, despite her initial unwillingness to talk. 8

The trial judge’s ruling acknowledges Sudler’s initial unwillingness to make a statement, but characterizes the police questioning as reasonably calculated to obtain her statement about the incident. The trial judge, herself, viewed the tape and determined that Detective Brock was not so unfairly oppressive or overbearing that his manner compromised Sudler’s willingness to make a statement.

The trial judge admitted Sudler’s out-of-court pretrial statement to Detective Brock only after making a careful factual finding that Sudler gave the statement voluntarily. Because the record supports the trial judge’s findings, we affirm her denial of Flowers’ objection to the admission of the statement.

III.

Flowers next challenges remarks made during the State’s opening statement and summation. On the first day of trial *332 the prosecutor made reference to a “code of silence” that was set into motion after the shooting by various eyewitnesses. Flowers insists that the remark was unsupported by the evidence and constituted unfairly prejudicial, reversible error.

The defense did not object to the “code of silence” reference at trial. Therefore, we review it for plain error. 9 To be plain error, the remark must have affected Flowers’ substantial rights, or, generally, it must have affected the outcome of the trial. 10 We find that, while the record is sparse, it nonetheless supports the State’s reference to “a code of silence” among those who witnessed the shooting. Ronetta Sudler’s reluctance to confirm her videotaped interview suggests a change of heart arguably consistent with a pattern of silence among the eyewitnesses. A reasonable inference about the existence of a code of silence may also be drawn based on evasive, reluctant testimony by eyewitnesses Othello Predeoux and Tysheik McDougall. We find no plain error here because the State substantiated the remark’s suggested inference in the State’s opening through sufficient record evidence.

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Bluebook (online)
858 A.2d 328, 2004 Del. LEXIS 385, 2004 WL 1965638, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/flowers-v-state-del-2004.