Garnett v. Com.

657 S.E.2d 100, 275 Va. 397, 2008 Va. LEXIS 24
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedFebruary 29, 2008
DocketRecord 070980.
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 657 S.E.2d 100 (Garnett v. Com.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Garnett v. Com., 657 S.E.2d 100, 275 Va. 397, 2008 Va. LEXIS 24 (Va. 2008).

Opinion

OPINION BY Justice G. STEVEN AGEE.

A jury in the Circuit Court of Madison County convicted Howard Z. Garnett, Jr., of four felonies related to the abduction and rape of Victoria Duff. On appeal to the Court of Appeals, Garnett contended the circuit court erred in failing to set aside the verdict because the Commonwealth withheld exculpatory evidence. Garnett also claimed that he was entitled to a new trial on the basis of newly discovered evidence. The Court of Appeals sitting en banc affirmed the judgment of the circuit court. For the reasons set forth below, we will affirm the judgment of the Court of Appeals.

*103 I. RELEVANT FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS BELOW

Victoria Duff met Garnett in 2001 when he sold her a parcel of land in Madison County adjacent to the farm where he lived with his mother. Duff soon began a consensual sexual relationship with Garnett and lived with the Garnetts in their farmhouse while Duff built a house on the parcel she had purchased. When her house was completed in August 2002, Duff moved out of the Garnett home. According to Duff, she ended the sexual relationship with Garnett around November 2002, but the two maintained contact because of the proximity of their homes. Duff alleged that Garnett was verbally and physically abusive throughout the relationship.

Duff testified at trial that on July 24, 2003, she drove to the barn on Garnett's farm to retrieve some property she had stored there. As Duff loaded the items into her truck, Garnett approached her and told her not to remove the items. Duff complied and attempted to leave, but Garnett told her that he wanted her to stay and took her truck keys by force, painfully bending her hand back when she attempted to stop him. Garnett then walked to his nearby house and Duff followed asking for her keys. After collecting some items from the kitchen of the house, Garnett returned to the barn with Duff still following and asking for her keys. Duff did not seek any assistance from Garnett's mother, whom she had seen in the kitchen, or a Department of Transportation road crew paving the road a few hundred feet from the barn. At that point, Garnett told Duff "there was something in the barn that was mine that he wanted to give to me, so I followed him into the barn."

Garnett sat in a chair in the barn and pulled Duff onto his lap. Duff said that she repeatedly objected to Garnett's advances and demanded. Garnett return her keys. When Duff attempted to leave the barn, Garnett physically blocked her escape. Garnett then pushed Duff to the back of the barn where he threatened her, swung his fist and a hoe at her, and pulled her hair and ears. When Duff tried to scream, Garnett held his hand over her face. Garnett bent Duff over a waist-high wall in the back of, the barn, pulled down her shorts, and penetrated her vagina with his fingers and penis. Garnett then drove Duff in her truck to her house, left the keys, and walked home. Duff then drove herself to the Madison County Sheriff s Office.

When Duff arrived at the sheriff's office, her clothes were dirty and in disarray. Her face was red and puffy and she bore scratches and bruises on her body. She made a short written statement of the foregoing events on a one-page police form. A deputy drove her to the emergency room at the University of Virginia hospital for a sexual assault examination by a forensic' nurse. During the examination, the forensic nurse detected bruising and abrasions on Duff's hands, legs, buttocks, and face, as well as genital injuries consistent with recent sexual penetration. However, no trace of ejaculate was detected. DNA recovered from Duff's ears, cheeks, and neck was subsequently analyzed by the Division of Forensic Science, which determined that it was between 55 trillion to 440 trillion times more likely that the DNA originated from Duff and Garnett than from Duff and any unidentified third person.

Following the forensic examination, Duff returned to the sheriffs office where she was interviewed by Investigator Michael. Duff participated in another interview with Investigator Michael on July 31, 2003. Both of the interviews were audio recorded and subsequently transcribed. In the July 24 interview, Duff indicated that Garnett had raped her on prior occasions.' In the July 31 interview, Duff provided additional information alleging Garnett had previously raped her on January 19 and April 29, 2003. Garnett was arrested and later indicted upon charges of felony abduction with intent to defile, felony assault and battery of a former household member, animate object penetration, and three counts of rape.

The controversy in this case centers, in large part, on the verbatim content of the three statements noted above (collectively, the "Duff Statements"). The Duff Statements comprise: (1) the one-page written statement Duff gave at the Madison County *104 Sheriff's Office on July 24, 2003, when she first reported the events of that day to police and consisting of 12 handwritten lines on a police form; (2) the transcript of Duff's July 24, 2003, recorded interview with Investigator Michael, which consists of 12 typewritten pages; (3) the transcript of Duff's July 31, 2003, recorded interview with Investigator Michael, which consists of 5 typewritten pages.

The Commonwealth disclosed to Garnett statements that he made to police, his criminal record, photographs and diagrams relating to the July 24 incident, as well as Duff's medical records and certificates of DNA analysis. The Commonwealth also provided to Garnett two, four-page documents summarizing the Duff Statements (the "Commonwealth's Summary"), describing certain inconsistencies within those statements and between the statements and her testimony at a preliminary hearing in the case. The Commonwealth did not disclose the Duff Statements verbatim - that is, Garnett was not given either the audiotapes or transcripts of the July 24 or July 31 interviews, nor was he given a copy of the July 24th written statement.

Garnett filed a motion for discovery seeking access to the audiotapes of the Duff Statements "on the grounds that their content is potentially exculpatory." Garnett stated in his motion "these conversations are potentially exculpatory, but cannot be known simply having the Commonwealth identify inconsistencies.... For example, [Duff's] demeanor is potentially exculpatory."

In a hearing on the motion, Garnett argued that

by listening to the tape you can tell that [Duff's] demeanor was calm, that she is not crying, that she is not upset, that those are things that are also potentially exculpatory. ['inflections in her voice and things of that sort have value for us in cross-examining her, perhaps.... There are subtleties and the inflection of a voice, the length of time it takes to answer a question, somebody's demeanor, and all of those things that I think are potentially exculpatory.

The Commonwealth proffered that it had reviewed the Duff Statements and "turned over to the defense what it finds to be exculpatory as that term has been defined under case law and under the rules of ethics that govern prosecutorial duties."

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Bluebook (online)
657 S.E.2d 100, 275 Va. 397, 2008 Va. LEXIS 24, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/garnett-v-com-va-2008.