Gregg v. State

976 A.2d 999, 409 Md. 698, 2009 Md. LEXIS 564
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJuly 24, 2009
Docket21 September Term 2008
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 976 A.2d 999 (Gregg v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gregg v. State, 976 A.2d 999, 409 Md. 698, 2009 Md. LEXIS 564 (Md. 2009).

Opinion

BARBERA, J.

In 2001, the Maryland General Assembly enacted the DNA Postconviction statute. The statute is codified at Maryland Code (2001, 2008 Repl.Vol.), § 8-201 of the Criminal Procedure Article and, as amended several times in the ensuing-years, has consistently provided persons convicted of serious crimes to pursue DNA testing of physical evidence, in the possession of the State, that might prove exculpatory or mitigating and result in a new trial or sentencing. 1

Appellant Donte Gregg was convicted in 2003 of first degree murder. He sought relief under § 8-201 by filing a petition for DNA testing of epithelial cells that were collected on the murder weapon’s trigger during investigation of the crime. The circuit court judge who had presided over Appellant’s trial denied the petition without a hearing.

Appellant argues that the Circuit Court erred in denying the petition for DNA testing, and, moreover, doing so without a hearing. For the reasons that follow, we agree with Appellant that the court erred by summarily denying the petition. Moreover, because the record that has developed in this case plainly shows Appellant’s entitlement to the relief he seeks, we *702 shall vacate the Circuit Court’s order denying the petition and remand the case with the direction that the court order the requested DNA testing be done.

I.

Appellant was convicted of firing a single shot, during the early morning hours of June 15, 2002, that fatally wounded Phillip Adams. The only witness to the shooting was Anthony King, who at that time was selling drugs for Adams and was intoxicated from heroin and cocaine. From his position 30 to 40 yards away, King saw a man hold a gun to Adams’s head and heard him twice ask Adams to “give it up.” Adams replied that he had nothing, and the man shot him. The shooter then got into the passenger seat of a van about ten feet away and said to the driver, “drive or I’ll shoot you, too.” King was unable to see the driver. The van left the scene.

The police soon located the van being driven in an area near the crime scene. As the police followed, the van stopped and two occupants alighted. Shortly thereafter, police stopped and arrested Appellant. According to the police, Appellant had been the passenger in the van.

Police searched the van and found a .45 caliber shell on the passenger seat and blood, later determined to be Adams’s, spattered across the back bumper and back door of the van. Police also found a .45 caliber handgun in the passenger side wheel axle area, beneath a removable storage compartment. Registration forms in the van identified Appellant as the owner. Ballistics test established that the gun retrieved from the van was the murder weapon. Shortly after Appellant arrived at the police station, the police dabbed his hands for the purpose of detecting gunshot residue. The State’s expert witness testified that testing of the material removed from Appellant’s hands produced evidence of gunshot residue in an amount consistent with his having fired a gun. The witness agreed with defense counsel, however, that the number of particles taken from Appellant’s hands did not prove that he had fired a gun. The witness explained that particles could *703 have been transferred to Appellant’s hands if they were adjacent to a gun when it was fired, or if he touched a surface with gunshot residue on it.

Latent fingerprints of comparison value were retrieved from the gun, the storage surface area where the gun was found in the van, a cup on the passenger side of the van, and the interior of the vehicle’s passenger area. None of the prints matched those of Appellant.

Swabbing of the murder weapon produced epithelial cells on its trigger. The parties have since disputed whether the defense was informed during discovery of the existence of the epithelial cells. The parties do not dispute, however, that neither the State nor the defense had a DNA analysis of the cells performed before or during trial.

The State’s eyewitness to the shooting, King, testified that he had never seen Appellant before trial. He also testified that Appellant’s physical appearance did not match the physical appearance of the shooter.

Appellant testified that, on the night in question, he was the driver of the van, not the passenger, and he had nothing to do with the crime. He acknowledged having driven a man by the name of Andre Robinson to the area where the shooting took place, explaining that Robinson had asked to be taken to his girlfriend’s home. Appellant testified that he saw Robinson shoot Adams, whom he, Appellant, did not know. Robinson then ran to the van, pointed the gun at him, and told him to drive.

Appellant testified that he grabbed the barrel of the gun when Robinson pointed it at him and pushed it away. Appellant started driving and Robinson went into the back of the van. Robinson then told Appellant to pull over and he did. He and Robinson got out of the van and walked away from it. Sometime thereafter, the police arrested Appellant and took him into custody.

Andre Robinson, though subpoenaed by the defense, failed to appear in court. Defense counsel proffered that, although *704 he knew from Robinson’s attorney that Robinson would invoke his Fifth Amendment privilege, the defense simply wished the jury to assess Robinson’s physical appearance. It was not until the jury had begun deliberating that Robinson was located in the courthouse. The court denied Appellant’s request to allow the jury to view Robinson at that time. The court, however, ordered that Robinson be held in the courthouse in case the jury asked about him. The jury did not ask about Robinson before rendering the verdict.

The jury found Appellant guilty of first degree murder, conspiracy to commit murder, and use of a handgun in the commission of a felony, and acquitted him of attempted robbery. The court sentenced Appellant to concurrent life sentences for murder and conspiracy and a concurrent twenty-year sentence on the handgun conviction.

The Court of Special Appeals affirmed the judgments in an unreported opinion filed on October 25, 2004.

Appellant’s post-trial efforts to obtain DNA testing

On or about September 18, 2003, while the direct appeal was pending, Appellant filed a “Petition for DNA Evidence—Post Conviction Review,” pursuant to § 8-201. 2 The petition was prepared by Appellant’s trial counsel. Appellant represented in the petition that, “during the course of the trial the state produced evidence that the murder weapon contained[,] on the trigger, cells that were capable of comparison through DNA analysis.” Appellant recounted his version of the events surrounding the crime and summarized what had occurred at trial concerning Robinson. Appellant argued that DNA evidence analysis of the epithelial cells found on the trigger of the murder weapon would show that he had not fired it and therefore would exonerate him of the charges. Under those *705 circumstances, Appellant asserted, he was entitled to the requested court-ordered DNA testing.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
976 A.2d 999, 409 Md. 698, 2009 Md. LEXIS 564, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gregg-v-state-md-2009.