Hammersla v. State

965 A.2d 912, 184 Md. App. 295, 2009 Md. App. LEXIS 18
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedFebruary 26, 2009
Docket2083, September Term, 2006
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 965 A.2d 912 (Hammersla 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
Hammersla v. State, 965 A.2d 912, 184 Md. App. 295, 2009 Md. App. LEXIS 18 (Md. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

WOODWARD, J.

Jack Lewis Hammersla, Jr. 1 , appellant, was charged with murder, robbery, theft, assault, burglary, and malicious destruction. A jury trial was held in the Circuit Court for Washington County from October 3-6, 2006. Appellant was found guilty of felony murder, second degree murder, burglary, theft, and malicious destruction of property. He was sentenced to incarceration for life without the possibility of parole on the felony murder charge and to a concurrent term of 30 years on the second degree murder charge. The trial judge merged the burglary charge into the felony murder *298 charge and did not impose separate sentences on the theft and malicious destruction charges.

Appellant presents two questions for our review:

I. Did the trial court err in instructing the jury that witnesses had identified [ajppellant as the person who committed the crime?
II. Did the trial court err in sentencing appellant to life without parole?

We answer “no” to the first question and “yes” to the second.

FACTUAL BACKGROUND

On the morning of November 12, 2003, Edwyn Finfrock of Smithsburg, Washington County, awoke between 5:00 a.m. and 5:30 a.m. to get ready for work. Finfrock’s wife, Shirley, got up with him to make his breakfast as she always did. When Mr. Finfrock left for work around 6:30 a.m., Mrs. Finfrock went back to bed. Mr. Finfrock arrived home from work at 11:25 that morning and called out his wife; after a couple of moments, he went to their bedroom to look for her. He found his wife lying on the floor of their bedroom with blood all over her. He immediately called 911 and told the dispatcher that he thought his wife might have killed herself. The dispatcher advised Mr. Finfrock to begin CPR on his wife.

Upon attempting CPR, Mr. Finfrock noticed that his wife’s “head was busted open.” There was also blood spattered throughout the bedroom. Mrs. Finfrock was later pronounced dead by emergency medical services employees. According to the autopsy, Mrs. Finfrock died of multiple blunt force injuries to the head between 7:00 a.m. and 8:30 a.m., the victim of a homicide. 2 Upon surveilling his house, Mr. Finfrock noticed some things out of place, as well as a board lying on a divider between the kitchen and the dining room. He believed the board had previously been on his wood pile outside. He later *299 determined that several items, including his wife’s purse, were missing from the home.

Trooper Brian Smith of the Maryland State Police lived down the street from the Finfrock residence and was the first police officer on the scene. When he arrived, Trooper Smith pointed out to Mr. Finfrock that the window in a back door was broken. Mr. Finfrock stated that the window had not been broken when he left for work that morning. Trooper Smith also examined the board found by Mr. Finfrock and believed it to be covered in blood. The medical examiner testified that the board “certainly could have been” the instrument that caused Mrs. Finfrock’s injuries. Trooper Smith also located several rocks on the bedroom floor where Mrs Finfrock was found, which were the same type of rocks that he had seen around the railroad track that ran behind the Finfrocks’ house.

As part of the investigation, Sergeant Eric Fogle of the Maryland State Police’s canine unit arrived at the scene of the homicide with a bloodhound in an attempt to track the suspect from the Finfrocks’ home. Sergeant Fogle’s team found a heel print and beaten down grass leading away from the house and toward the railroad tracks. The bloodhound found a fresh scent leading west on the railroad tracks. Following the scent led Sergeant Fogle’s team to discover fresh footprints, probably from a sneaker, as well as dislodged rocks. During a subsequent search of the area on November 18, 2003, the police located, on the edge of a cornfield one fifth of a mile west of the Finfrocks’ home, Mrs. Finfrock’s purse, her wallet, an orangish-red knit cap, and a pile of five rocks consistent with rocks from the railroad bed.

On the morning of the incident, November 12, 2003, Christie Phillips (then named Williams) left her house to go to work at 8:50 a.m. As she exited her house, she saw a man stumbling near the railroad tracks; the man caught her eye because she did not recognize him from her small town. She was uneasy with his presence because her home had been burglarized two months prior to that day, and the burglar had not been found. *300 She watched the man for a few moments as he walked past her while looking over his shoulder several times.

When the man was about 50 feet away from her, Phillips got into her car and wrote down everything she could remember about him: brownish/gray hair, semi-curled, shoulder length; wrinkles; high cheekbones; blue, tan, black, and white flannel jacket; blue tee shirt; baggy blue jeans; black sneakers; dark sunken eyes; and slightly bald on the back of his head. At trial, Phillips identified the flannel jacket, which was taken from appellant at the time of his arrest, as the jacket worn by the man she had seen the morning of November 12. She also identified the jeans and sneakers as clothes that the man had been wearing. Finally, Phillips identified appellant as the man she hhd seen that morning.

Later on November 12, Investigator Greg Alton of the Washington County Sheriffs Department was called to the scene of the homicide and conducted a walk-through of the Finfrocks’ home. After he finished, Investigator Alton returned to the Sheriff’s Department where he received a phone call from Phillips. Upon hearing her description of the man she had seen, Investigator Alton realized that he had seen a person matching that description when he had responded to the scene. The man, who garnered the investigator’s attention, had shoulder length brown hair and was wearing a multicolored flannel shirt or jacket. Investigator Alton testified that the jacket taken from appellant upon his arrest was similar in style and color to that of the man he had seen that day. At trial, Investigator Alton identified the man he had seen as appellant.

Four witnesses, Brenda Coleman, Ann Riker, Patricia Biancolli, and Pamela Smith, testified that sometime between 6:30 a.m. and 8:20 a.m., each had seen a man walking on the railroad tracks that ran behind the Finfrocks’ house. The women noticed the man because it was unusual to see anyone walking on the railroad tracks. Each woman testified that the man she had seen was wearing a plaid flannel jacket, and each identified the jacket taken from appellant at the time of his *301 arrest as that jacket. Biancolli further stated that the man was wearing an orange-red knit cap. Coleman and Riker identified appellant as the man they had seen that morning.

At about 1:45 p.m. on November 12, Jennifer Silver noticed a man behind her place of employment when she went to take trash out to the dumpster. He surprised her because she did not expect anyone to be there at that time. She returned inside and asked a male employee, Tony Ralls, to go outside and find out why the man was there.

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Bluebook (online)
965 A.2d 912, 184 Md. App. 295, 2009 Md. App. LEXIS 18, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hammersla-v-state-mdctspecapp-2009.