Gilchrist v. State

585 So. 2d 165, 1991 Ala. Crim. App. LEXIS 73
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Alabama
DecidedJanuary 18, 1991
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 585 So. 2d 165 (Gilchrist v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal Appeals of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gilchrist v. State, 585 So. 2d 165, 1991 Ala. Crim. App. LEXIS 73 (Ala. Ct. App. 1991).

Opinion

In 1982, Robert Steven Gilchrist was indicted for capital murder, convicted of murder, and sentenced to life imprisonment. His conviction was affirmed on direct appeal.Gilchrist v. State, 466 So.2d 988 (Ala.Cr.App. 1984), cert. quashed, Ex parte Gilchrist, 466 So.2d 991 (Ala. 1985). In quashing its writ of certiorari, the Alabama Supreme Court held that the District Attorney had improperly assumed the dual roles of both witness and prosecutor at Gilchrist's trial, but that Gilchrist was precluded from challenging the impropriety on appeal because his lawyer had failed to object in the trial court.

Gilchrist subsequently filed a petition for writ of error coram nobis, alleging that his trial counsel's failure to object to the District Attorney's conduct denied him the effective assistance of counsel at trial. This court agreed and, in 1988, reversed the conviction and remanded the cause for a new trial. Gilchrist v. State, 534 So.2d 1120 (Ala.Cr.App. 1988). In 1989, Gilchrist was retried for murder, convicted of that offense, and sentenced to life imprisonment. On this appeal of that conviction, he raises two issues.

In April 1982, 20-year-old Christina Zane disappeared. The initial investigation revealed that the defendant was the last person with whom she had been seen. On May 11, two Mobile police officers went to the defendant's apartment to question him regarding Ms. Zane's disappearance. The defendant was not at home, but the officers met and talked with Derenda Henderson, the defendant's sometime live-in girlfriend. When the officers inquired whether Ms. Henderson knew Ms. Zane, Henderson replied that she did not. The officers told Ms. Henderson they thought the defendant had been "seeing" Ms. Zane and they said they would like to talk to the defendant about Zane's disappearance.

Later that afternoon, Ms. Henderson confronted the defendant with the information she had received from the police and she drove the defendant to the police station, where he made the first of five inculpatory statements regarding Christina Zane. The defendant told the police that he met Christina Zane at a bar, went home with her for the evening, and saw her again a few days later when she came to his apartment. On the second occasion, Zane, the defendant, and the defendant's male roommate had a "sex orgy," after which, according to the defendant, Christina Zane left his apartment and he never saw her again.

After he talked to the police on May 11, the defendant was released and the authorities continued their investigation. Ms. Henderson testified at trial that, in a series of conversations she had with the defendant from May 11 to early June 1982, the *Page 167 defendant recounted to her how he had killed Christina Zane and hidden her body in a swampy, wooded area. On June 24, the defendant was incarcerated in the Mobile City Jail for an unrelated offense. Ms. Henderson gave statements to the police on July 6, July 7, and July 19. Those statements are not contained in the record. The defendant was served with an arrest warrant for the instant offense on July 15. The defendant made four additional statements after he was incarcerated. At trial, the defendant testified that he was present at the scene of the homicide but did not kill Zane. He claimed that Ms. Henderson, in a jealous rage at finding him with Christina Zane, murdered the girl. Zane's body was never found.

I
The defendant first argues that the totality of the circumstances surrounding his prosecution was so marred by police misconduct and prosecutorial overreaching that the indictment against him should have been quashed. He argues that the Mobile police devised a plan to circumvent his Fifth and Sixth Amendment rights to counsel by interrogating him in the absence of his counsel and by using his girlfriend, Derenda Henderson, and his cellmate, Steve Puckett, to extract inculpatory statements from him after he had invoked his right to deal with the police only through counsel. He also argues that Mobile District Attorney Chris Galanos exhibited prosecutorial vindictiveness by seeking a capital murder indictment against him because he refused to disclose the location of the victim's body.

The first argument was not raised at trial in the context of a motion to quash the indictment and was made only in relation to the claimed inadmissibility of the defendant's statements. It is, therefore, not preserved for review in the present context, but will be discussed in Part II of this opinion dealing with the admissibility of the defendant's statements.

The second argument was raised before the defendant's first trial and was incorporated by reference at the defendant's second trial when defense counsel refiled "all prior motions." The following response was filed prior to the first trial by the District Attorney:

"[O]n July 21, 1982, the District Attorney, in response to a query from the defendant, did tell the defendant that if he would tell where the body of Christina Zane was buried, he (the District Attorney) would charge the defendant with murder and recommend a bond of $50,000 to the Court. Conversely, if the defendant refused to disclose the location of Miss Zane's body, he would be charged with capital murder. It is of salient importance to note that (a) this plea bargaining was at the request of the defendant, and (b) this conversation occurred prior to the [presentation of the] defendant's case to the Grand Jury."

The question of the prosecutor's alleged vindictiveness in seeking a capital murder indictment, which was at issue in the first (capital) trial, is simply not at issue on this appeal, which follows the defendant's trial for non-capital murder. Even assuming the first trial was marred by the vindictiveness of the prosecutor's seeking the greater charge, the defendant's remedy for that error would have been a new trial on the lesser charge of murder — exactly what he in fact received, albeit on other grounds.

Prior to the second trial, the court granted a defense motion in limine requesting "the State . . . to refrain from reference to or mention of capital murder or any possible penalties as a result of a conviction for capital murder [because] the defendant is charged with murder." Our review of the trial record reveals that the order in limine was scrupulously followed.

Moreover, there is no violation of due process when a prosecutor carries out a threat made during plea negotiations that, unless the accused agrees to forgo a constitutional right, the prosecutor will have the accused indicted for the more serious of two possible charges to which he is subject.Bordenkircher v. Hayes, 434 U.S. 357, 98 S.Ct. 663,54 L.Ed.2d 604 (1978). In Bordenkircher, the accused was indicted for uttering a forged instrument. *Page 168 The state's attorney offered to recommend a reduced 2 to 5-year sentence if the accused would plead guilty, but threatened to seek a reindictment under the habitual offender provision if the accused insisted on going to trial. The accused pleaded not guilty, was convicted of the enhanced offense, and received a mandatory life sentence. 434 U.S. at 358-59,98 S.Ct. at 665-66.

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Bluebook (online)
585 So. 2d 165, 1991 Ala. Crim. App. LEXIS 73, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gilchrist-v-state-alacrimapp-1991.