Harris v. State

CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedOctober 30, 2019
Docket2298/17
StatusPublished

This text of Harris v. State (Harris 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
Harris v. State, (Md. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

Lloyd Harris v. State of Maryland, No. 2298, September Term, 2017. Submitted on Brief: February 14, 2019. Opinion by Battaglia, J.

CRIMINAL LAW – RIGHT OF ACCUSED OF COMPULSORY PROCESS – RELEVANCY OF ALTERNATIVE SUSPECT EVIDENCE

Trial judge properly exercised discretion in excluding from evidence material in which appellant proffered to insinuate that another individual had committed the crime for which he had been charged, including evidence of that individual’s criminal conviction which consisted of similar underlying acts that occurred in the same area and around the same time of the acts underlying the charges faced by the appellant; the proffered evidence, however, did not give credence to the theory that someone other than the appellant committed the crime at issue, and therefore, was properly excluded pursuant to Maryland Rule 5-403.

CRIMINAL LAW – DUE PROCESS – PRE-INDICTMENT DELAY

Trial judge did not err in denying motion to dismiss based upon a 20-year pre-indictment delay where appellant failed to demonstrate that the State purposefully delayed the indictment to gain a tactical advantage, pursuant to Clark v. State, 364 Md. 611 (2001), and solely argued that the State recklessly disregarded the risk that delay would impair his ability to mount an effective defense, a standard not recognized by case law and that was not argued below.

CRIMINAL LAW – ADMISSIBILTY OF EXPERT TESTIMONY – DUELING EXPERTS

Trial judge properly exercised discretion in admitting the State’s expert witness, concluding that the expert’s testimony, juxtaposed by the testimony of the appellant’s expert, provided the grist for the jury to best weigh, based upon a finding that the scientific testimony proffered, and the underlying methodology and conclusion thereof, was accepted by the relevant scientific community. Circuit Court for Frederick County Case No.: 10-K-16-057851 REPORTED

IN THE COURT OF SPECIAL APPEALS

OF MARYLAND

No. 2298

September Term, 2017 ______________________________________

LLOYD HARRIS

v.

STATE OF MARYLAND ______________________________________

Berger, Leahy, Battaglia, Lynne, A. (Senior Judge, Specially Assigned),

JJ. ______________________________________

Opinion by Battaglia, J. ______________________________________

Filed: October 30, 2019

Pursuant to Maryland Uniform Electronic Legal Materials Act (§§ 10-1601 et seq. of the State Government Article) this document is authentic.

2019-10-30 13:58-04:00

Suzanne C. Johnson, Clerk On October 2, 1996, the victim, then a 15-year old girl, was reported missing by her

mother. Over two months later, her body was discovered in a wooded area of Frederick,

Maryland. Prior to the discovery of the victim’s body, appellant, Lloyd Harris, had resided

at a “campsite” nearby in the wooded area, and, during the course of the investigation into

the victim’s death, became the primary suspect. The investigation largely concluded in

2000.

On January 22, 2016, a grand jury indicted Harris of first-degree murder, first-

degree rape and third-degree sex offense, charges for which he was convicted by a jury

sitting in the Circuit Court for Frederick County. The trial judge sentenced Harris to life

in prison for the murder and rape convictions, which were to run concurrently, and merged,

for sentencing purposes, the sex offense conviction. The issues in this case involve an

alternative suspect, pre-indictment delay and expert testimony, as queued up by Harris in

the following questions, which we have renumbered:

1. Did the trial court err when it granted the State’s motion to exclude defense evidence regarding an alternate suspect?

2. Did the trial court err when it denied Mr. Harris’s motion to dismiss due to pre-indictment delay?

3. Did the trial court err when it denied Mr. Harris’s motion to exclude the testimony of the State’s expert regarding acid phosphatase and “time since intercourse” on Frye-Reed grounds?

For the reasons set forth below, we shall answer Harris’s questions in the negative

and shall affirm the judgment of the Circuit Court. ALTERNATIVE SUSPECT

Before trial, the State filed a motion in limine to exclude evidence related to

individuals who Harris contended were alternative suspects in the case. One of those

individuals was Elmer Spencer, who had been convicted of first-degree assault in

connection with an attempted rape which took place in Frederick, Maryland on October 9,

1996, days after the victim went missing. Harris had informed the State that he intended

to introduce evidence related to Spencer’s assault conviction to bolster the theory that

Spencer was an alternative suspect:

• Call Michael Hansell to testify about his arrest of Elmer Spencer on October 9, 1996;

• Call the woman, who was assaulted, to testify that Elmer Spencer had attacked her on October 9, 19961;

• Introduce the police report in State v. Elmer Spencer, Frederick County Circuit Court Case No. K-96-021289;

• Introduce a Frederick News-Post article dated December 28, 2000 regarding Elmer Spencer as a potential suspect in the rape and murder of the victim; and,

• Introduce a true test copy of Circuit Court Case K-96-021289, State v. Elmer Spencer.

The trial judge subsequently held a hearing on the issue and orally granted the

State’s motion to exclude, but reserved Harris’s ability to cross-examine the State’s

witnesses about information regarding potential suspects that was developed during the

1 At the time of trial, both Elmer Spencer and the woman he had attacked had died. 2 course of the investigation. The State, then, would be able to introduce evidence as to why

those suspects had been excluded as potential suspects.

During trial, before the testimony of Candace Mercer, a childhood friend of the

victim, the State again orally moved to exclude testimony from Ms. Mercer regarding her

having allegedly seen the victim and Spencer together shortly before her disappearance.

Harris proffered that Ms. Mercer, when interviewed in either late 2016 or early 2017 by

defense counsel, indicated that she may have seen Spencer in the victim’s “neighborhood

right around the time she disappeared.” The State disagreed, contending that Ms. Mercer

informed prosecutors that she “had no idea” when she had seen the victim with Spencer.

Both defense counsel and the prosecutor, however, also informed the trial judge that

Ms. Mercer had never mentioned Spencer to the police during the initial investigation,

proffering a two-page police report of her interview conducted in 1996 in which no mention

was made of Spencer. The trial judge granted the State’s motion to exclude the testimony,

reasoning that, because Ms. Mercer never told anyone that she had seen the victim and

Spencer together in October 1996, a statement elicited twenty-one years later was “too far

removed”:

The first time that [Spencer] comes up is 21 years afterwards. She says, yes, she thinks she saw him about that time, and now she’s expected to testify that she doesn’t. I think it’s too far removed. If there was any mention whatsoever [sic] in the report of Mr. Spencer back at that time, I may have let her testify to that; there’s not.

Furthermore, the State also sought to exclude testimony from Thomas Chase, the

former head of the Criminal Investigation Division of the Frederick City Police

Department, recounting the statement he made to a local newspaper in which he said that

3 Spencer could not be ruled out as a suspect in the rape and murder of the victim.2 The trial

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Bluebook (online)
Harris v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harris-v-state-mdctspecapp-2019.