Gupta v. State

CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedApril 28, 2016
Docket1185/15
StatusPublished

This text of Gupta v. State (Gupta 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
Gupta v. State, (Md. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

REPORTED

IN THE COURT OF SPECIAL APPEALS

OF MARYLAND

No. 1185

September Term, 2015

_________________________

RAHUL GUPTA

v.

STATE OF MARYLAND

Graeff, Nazarian, Friedman,

JJ.

Opinion by Nazarian, J.

Filed: April 28, 2016 Rahul Gupta was charged with the first-degree murder of his friend, Mark Waugh,

who died from multiple stab wounds on the floor of an apartment that Mr. Gupta shared

with his girlfriend, Taylor Gould. No physical evidence definitively identified Mr. Gupta

as the assailant, and Ms. Gould claimed not to remember anything from that night (all three

had been out drinking with friends). But something had obviously gone wrong among the

three, and as the police investigated, Mr. Gupta told an officer, among other things, that

“[his] buddy and [his] girl were cheating” and that he had “killed [his] buddy.” At trial in

the Circuit Court for Montgomery County, Mr. Gupta contended instead that Ms. Gould

had stabbed Mr. Waugh. The jury found Mr. Gupta guilty of first-degree murder, and he

contends on appeal that the circuit court erred in refusing to give the jury a “missing

evidence” instruction, mishandled a communication from a juror, unfairly restricted his

counsel’s cross-examination of Ms. Gould, and wrongfully denied his motion to suppress

statements he made during interrogation. We find no reversible errors and affirm.

I. BACKGROUND

Mr. Gupta and Ms. Gould met while studying biomedical engineering as

undergraduates at George Washington University. They began dating their senior year,

graduated in May 2012, and in February 2013, Mr. Gupta moved into Ms. Gould’s Silver

Spring apartment.

On the night of October 12, 2013, the two went for a night out in Washington D.C.’s

Dupont Circle neighborhood to celebrate Mr. Gupta’s birthday. After a steak dinner, they

moved to a neighboring bar where they met Mr. Waugh, a friend of Mr. Gupta’s from high

school, and Josh White, a friend from college. An hour and several drinks later, the group

2 relocated to another bar, where all four consumed more alcohol and split into pairs: Mr.

Gupta and Mr. White went outside to smoke marijuana while Ms. Gould talked with Mr.

Waugh inside. Mr. Gupta testified that during this time, Mr. White told him that Ms. Gould

had been flirting with him. Ms. Gould, on the other hand, testified that she confided in Mr.

Waugh that she felt uncomfortable because she thought Mr. White was flirting with her.

The conflict came to a head some time later (at yet another bar) when Mr. Waugh

confronted Mr. Gupta and told him, “Your friend, [Mr. White], is trying to make a move

on your girlfriend.” Mr. White denied the accusation, but it was enough to break up the

party—Mr. White returned to his apartment in Woodley Park, while Mr. Gupta and Ms.

Gould returned to the Silver Spring apartment with Mr. Waugh. Ms. Gould testified that

she wanted Mr. Waugh to return to the apartment with them to “be a witness to what had

happened [between her and Mr. White] at the bar, and to help [her] tell [Mr. Gupta] what

had happened.” Mr. Gupta testified that he did not recall such a conversation, and that Mr.

Waugh had merely accepted his invitation to return to Silver Spring with them.

The parties returned to the apartment without incident; they took shots of vodka and

Mr. Gupta smoked more marijuana. Mr. Gupta testified that there was another discussion

about who had been flirting with whom at the bar. Neither Mr. Gupta nor Ms. Gould could

clearly recount the events occurring next, but there is no dispute that at 3:25 AM on October

13, 2013, Ms. Gould placed a call to 911 and told the operator that “my friend is . . . here

and I need emergency right now,” that “[h]e’s not breathing,” that “[t]here’s blood

everywhere,” and that “I don’t know what happened.” Police officers arrived on the scene

quickly and encountered a “very intoxicated” Ms. Gould at the entrance to the apartment.

3 She told the officers she wasn’t sure what happened, and officers placed her in handcuffs

and detained her outside the apartment, while others continued inside.

The officers who went inside found Mr. Gupta lying on the floor, groaning and

“[c]overed in blood,” just to the left of Mr. Waugh’s body. He too was intoxicated, and

when officers asked him what happened, he said, “They were cheating. My girlfriend was

cheating on me. My buddy and my girlfriend were cheating. I walked in on my buddy and

my girlfriend cheating. I killed my buddy.” Medical technicians on the scene confirmed

that Mr. Waugh was dead. The medical examiner later testified that he suffered six stab

wounds as well as five “cutting injuries.” One stab wound punctured a lung, another

severed his jugular vein, killing him in a matter of minutes. The murder weapon, a kitchen

knife, was recovered under Mr. Waugh’s leg.

Officers transported Mr. Gupta and Ms. Gould to police headquarters, where they

were questioned separately. While placed in a holding cell to await interrogation, Mr.

Gupta blurted out to the police officer assigned to guard him, unsolicited: “[P]lease, sir,

look, I fucked up. He tried to stab me, though” as well as, “[G]uy’s a real dick. He tried to

kill me and my family.” He also screamed, two or three times, “I want a lawyer.” Later,

two detectives moved Mr. Gupta to an interrogation room. Before asking Mr. Gupta any

questions, an officer read him his Miranda rights and asked whether he understood. He

responded, “Yes. When do I get to—” just as the detective interrupted him to start the

interrogation. Mr. Gupta did not request counsel during the rest of the interrogation, but

cooperated with the detectives and answered their questions.

4 At trial, Ms. Gould testified that she did not remember much of the night because

she was intoxicated and “blacking out.” She had no memory of attacking Mr. Waugh and

claimed that she could not have been involved because she is “not capable of doing that.”

Mr. Gupta’s theory of the case was that Ms. Gould was the assailant, and that she was

angry and upset about what had happened at the bar. He testified that Ms. Gould became

even angrier when, after returning to the Silver Spring apartment, Mr. Waugh suggested

that he and Mr. Gupta leave for the evening in order to give everyone time to cool off.

While looking for his shoes, Mr. Gupta said, he fell and hit his head; when he got up, he

saw that Mr. Waugh had been attacked. He explained that he yelled for Ms. Gould to call

911, tried to slow Mr. Waugh’s bleeding, and administered CPR before emergency

personnel arrived. In support of his theory, Mr. Gupta produced evidence that Ms. Gould’s

hairs were on the murder weapon, in blood spatter on the wall near the victim, and found

in one of the victim’s hands. He also tried to introduce evidence that Ms. Gould carried a

knife for protection, but the State objected and the court sustained the objection. In

addition, Mr. Gupta testified that he told police falsely that he had killed Mr. Waugh to

keep Ms. Gould out of trouble.

The jury convicted Mr. Gupta of first-degree murder, and the court sentenced him

to life imprisonment. Mr. Gupta’s timely appeal followed. We will discuss additional facts

below, particularly details relating to the conduct of the trial.

II. DISCUSSION

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Gupta v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gupta-v-state-mdctspecapp-2016.