Gantt v. State

CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 4, 2019
Docket0902/18
StatusPublished

This text of Gantt v. State (Gantt v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Special Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gantt v. State, (Md. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

Gantt v. State, No. 902 of the 2018 Term, Opinion by Moylan, J.

POST-CONVICTION HEARING – UNAPPEALED BATSON CHALLENGE

– INEFFECTIVE ASSISTANCE OF COUNSEL – THE SCOURGE OF

LEXINGTON PARK – THE ADJUDICATORY SAGA – STRICKLAND V.

WASHINGTON: THE TWO-PRONGED TEST – THE PERFORMANCE PRONG

– THE PREJUDICE PRONG – ADEQUACY OF APPELLATE COUNSEL – THE

SELECTION OF APPELLATE ISSUES – SELECTION OF ISSUES IN THIS

CASE – A. MULTIPLE SENTENCES OF LIFE WITHOUT PAROLE – B.

MARYLAND RULE 4–215 AND SELF-REPRESENTATION – C. THE RIGHT TO

TESTIFY VERSUS THE RIGHT NOT TO TESTIFY – D. SUBPOENAS FOR

WITNESSES AND A REQUEST FOR A CONTINUANCE – E. TEN

PEREMPTORY CHALLENGES AND LIFE IMPRISONMENT WITHOUT

PAROLE – F. THE BOTTOM LINE – THE BATSON CHALLENGE: INHERENT

PROCEDURAL WEAKNESSES – A. NON-PRESERVATION – B. WAIVER – C.

THE COMBINED PROCEDURAL FLAWS – THE BATSON MERITS: THE

PURKETT V. ELEM THREE-STEP – A. STEP ONE: AN EXPRESS OBJECTION,

LOUD AND CLEAR – B. STEP TWO: HE LOVED NOT CAESAR LESS, BUT

ONLY ROME MORE – C. STEP THREE: ALL QUIET ON THE BATSON FRONT

– INEFFECTIVENESS CUBED Circuit Court for St. Mary’s County Case No. 18-K-07-000578 REPORTED

IN THE COURT OF SPECIAL APPEALS

OF MARYLAND

No. 902

September Term, 2018 ______________________________________

ANTONIO GANTT

v.

STATE OF MARYLAND ______________________________________

Wright, Reed, Moylan, Charles E., Jr. (Senior Judge, Specially Assigned),

JJ. ______________________________________

Opinion by Moylan, J. ______________________________________

Filed: June 4, 2019

Pursuant to Maryland Uniform Electronic Legal Materials Act (§§ 10-1601 et seq. of the State Government Article) this document is authentic.

2019-06-06 12:08-04:00

Suzanne C. Johnson, Clerk It would be challenging to declare that in this case the 1986 decision of Batson v.

Kentucky, 476 U.S. 79, 106 S. Ct. 1712, 90 L. Ed. 2d 69, is robustly alive and well. The

mundane reality, however, is that in this case, the raising of a Batson issue is but an

opportunistic afterthought on tenuous life-support. Even without Batson, however, the

appellant’s criminal history has a stubborn vitality of its own that is slowly hardening into

local legend.

The Scourge Of Lexington Park

The appellant is Antonio Warren Gantt. His specialty is bank robbery. For a town

the size of Lexington Park (population 11,626 as of the census of 2010), the appellant was

for a decade a one-man crime wave. Prior to the two bank robberies which we will be

mentioning in fuller detail, the appellant had already compiled a not insignificant criminal

history. The first of the actual bank robberies occurred on September 24, 2007, at the

Lexington Park branch of the Maryland Bank and Trust. The appellant, single-handedly,

walked up to a teller and demanded cash in hundreds and fifties, threatening to kill the

teller if she did not comply. The teller turned over to him approximately $22,000. The

appellant was not immediately apprehended and remained at large to strike again.

Five weeks later, on October 31, 2007, the appellant, again single-handedly, robbed

the same Lexington Park branch of the Maryland Bank and Trust for yet a second time,

making off on that occasion with between $43,000 and $44,000. Eight separate witnesses

identified him at trial. Three of the tellers were sprayed with gasoline and ordered to go

into the back room where the money was stored. The appellant threatened to “kill [them]

and burn the bank down” if they did not follow his orders. The appellant herded them into the vault and shut the door. On that occasion, however, the bank manager was able to turn

over to the appellant $1,000 in “bait money.” The appellant was shortly thereafter

apprehended.

On November 18, 2008, a St. Mary’s County jury convicted the appellant of the

October 31, 2007, bank robbery. On the next day, November 19, 2008, another St. Mary’s

County jury convicted the appellant of the September 24, 2007, bank robbery. At a joint

sentencing for both sets of convictions on January 16, 2009, the appellant was sentenced,

as a subsequent offender, to concurrent terms of life imprisonment without parole for each

of the bank robberies.

The appellant took a consolidated appeal to this Court. In an unpublished opinion,

we concluded that Rule 4–215 had been violated because the appellant had been permitted

to discharge his counsel without having been informed that he was facing the possible

sentence in each case of life without parole. Gantt v. State, No. 2704, September Term,

2008, filed on August 24, 2010.

Some indication of the local reaction to the reversals may be had from the August

23, 2011, article in the St. Mary’s County Enterprise which quoted one of the exasperated

trial judges, upon being informed of the reversals, as saying, “I think the Court of Special

Appeals made a very stupid decision . . . . It’s obvious I hate him. I think he should be

hung. Go get me a rope.”1

1 The trial judge’s rancor would surface again several years later at a hearing considering the appellant’s Petition for Post-Conviction Relief.

2 On September 6, 7, and 8, 2011, the appellant was retried for the October 31, 2007,

bank robbery by a St. Mary’s County jury, presided over by Judge Karen H. Abrams. The

appellant was again convicted. The appellant then took his second appeal to this Court.

Gantt v. State, No. 1871, September Term, 2011, filed on April 1, 2013. In a footnote, the

opinion of this Court on that occasion took note of the “less than amicable” feeling of the

appellant toward the judiciary.

The mood throughout this pre-trial hearing was less than amicable. At one point the appellant requested that he be at the trial in civilian clothing. In declining that request, Judge Abrams reminded the appellant that he had actually been bound and shackled at his first trial. At one point Judge Abrams advised him that, as a pro se defendant, he was “going to have to show respect for the court or be removed from the courtroom.” The appellant responded:

MR. GANTT: You bitch. You are a bitch. You are a real bitch. I never came into this courtroom and did anything. These officers tazed me and they tape me up. You have the nerve to chastise me about if I act up? You were the ones who abused me. I never abused anyone. So I don’t want to hear that shit. We want to go to trial, let’s go to trial. Don’t chastise me like I came into this courtroom and did something to someone. You want me – you got blood on your –

(Emphasis supplied).

Thus, the cast of characters (the appellant) and the mood of the local community.

Feelings were running high.

The Adjudicatory Saga

Both that second trial of September 6, 7, and 8, 2011, for the October 31, 2007, bank

robbery and that second appeal to this Court will be examined in full detail. In that appeal,

the appellant raised five contentions. In response to one of the contentions, this Court

3 vacated the enhanced sentence for two of the armed robbery convictions, but we otherwise

affirmed the convictions. On the sentencing remand, Judge Abrams sentenced the appellant

to a term of 20 years on each of the armed robbery convictions, the sentences to run

concurrently. Calhoun v. State, 46 Md. App. 478, 488–89, 418 A.2d 1241

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Bluebook (online)
Gantt v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gantt-v-state-mdctspecapp-2019.