Height v. State

970 A.2d 921, 185 Md. App. 317, 2009 Md. App. LEXIS 63
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMay 6, 2009
Docket1021, September Term, 2007
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 970 A.2d 921 (Height 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
Height v. State, 970 A.2d 921, 185 Md. App. 317, 2009 Md. App. LEXIS 63 (Md. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

DEBORAH S. EYLER, J.

A jury in the Circuit Court for Baltimore City convicted Andrew Height, the appellant, of first-degree assault, use of a handgun in commission of a felony or crime of violence, wearing, carrying, or transporting a handgun, and possession of a regulated firearm after having been previously convicted of a disqualifying crime. 1 The court sentenced the appellant to 18 years’ incarceration for first-degree assault, a concurrent ten years for use of a handgun in commission of a felony or crime of violence, a concurrent three years for wearing, carrying, or transporting a handgun, and a concurrent five years without the possibility of parole for possession of a firearm after haying been previously convicted of a disqualifying crime.

The appellant presents four questions for review, which we have rephrased slightly:

I. Did the trial judge err when, in conducting voir dire, he posed questions to the venire collectively without obtaining answers, and then questioned each venire member individually at the bench?
II. Did the trial court err by overruling the appellant’s objection to a portion of the prosecutor’s opening statement that suggested a State’s witness was reluctant to testify because of the “law of the street”?
*323 III. Did the trial court err by refusing to permit the cross-examination of a detective about whether he was suspended from the police force?
IV. Did the trial court err by not merging the appellant’s sentences for use of a handgun in a crime of violence and wearing, carrying or transporting the same handgun?

For the following reasons, we shall vacate the appellant’s sentence for wearing, carrying, or transporting a handgun, and otherwise affirm the judgments of the circuit court.

FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

On March 15, 2005, at approximately 9:45 p.m., the victim in this case, Bernard Holmstead Cure, was found near 1605 East Eager Street in Baltimore City. He had sustained a gunshot wound to the chest. Cure told Officer Andre Robinson, of the Baltimore City Police Department, that he had been shot near East Eager Street and North Madeira Street. Cure was transported to The Johns Hopkins Hospital emergency room where he repeated that information to Detective Kevin Turner. 2

The next day, Detective Turner received a telephone call from an unnamed source suggesting that the shooting actually had occurred at the High Hat Lounge, a bar then located at 967 North Wolfe Street. 3 The High Hat Lounge was about three blocks east of where Cure was found. The intersection of East Eager and North Madeira Streets, where Cure *324 claimed to have been shot, was about three blocks farther east of the High Hat Lounge. 4

Detective Turner’s investigation led him to speak with three -witnesses: Harold Sessoms, Antoinette Calhoun, and Bernard Pratt. At trial, Detective Turner and these three witnesses testified for the State.

Harold Sessoms worked at the High Hat Lounge handling-carry-out and tending bar. On March 15, 2005, he witnessed a fight between two men at the bar. In particular, he saw the appellant hit another man with a handgun. Sessoms turned away and about “three to five minutes later” heard gunshots and saw everyone run out of the bar. He did not see who was shot. When he went outside afterward, no one was there, so he did not call for an ambulance or the police. He closed up and locked the bar, but did not clean it because he was “not the clean up man.” He did not see the police or anyone from the Crime Lab photographing the bar, taking fingerprints, or recovering any bullets or shell casings from the bar. Sessoms’s first contact with the police about the incident was the next day, March 16, when he spoke to Detective Turner.

On March 25, 2005, ten days after the shooting, Sessoms gave a statement to the police and identified a photograph of the appellant. At trial, Detective Turner initially testified that Sessoms identified the appellant as the person who shot the victim in the bar; he clarified on cross-examination that Sessoms told him he did not see the actual shooting.

Antoinette Calhoun, an admitted drug user at the time of the shooting, was present in the small bar area of the High Hat Lounge on March 15, 2005, at around 7:00 p.m. Several people were in the bar at that time, including Cure, the shooter, the bartender, and others. Calhoun was standing near the side of the bar, next to Cure. The appellant was sitting next to Cure, and a woman named “Usa” was standing-nearby. Calhoun heard Cure and the appellant arguing, and *325 then saw the appellant rise up and hit Cure, apparently more than once. (Sessoms confirmed that Cure was sitting and the appellant was standing during this portion of the incident.) She then saw the appellant raise his hand, in which he was holding what appeared to be a silver gun, and heard gunshots. The fight was in progress “[l]ike a couple of seconds” before the shots were fired.

Neither Sessoms nor Calhoun testified that they actually saw the shooting. Although Sessoms heard three gunshots, he did not see who was shot. When asked whether she saw the appellant shoot the victim, Calhoun initially testified, “Let me think about that. It couldn’t have been nothing else.” In clarifying her response, Calhoun said, “1 just seen him hit him.” On cross-examination, she testified she did not see the gun being fired. When asked how many shots she heard, she replied she did not know, but that she “heard enough to leave,” and that she had run out of the bar and to a friend’s house.

Some days later, on March 23, 2005, after being taken into custody on drug possession charges, Calhoun gave a statement to the police. She also chose from a photographic array a picture of a person she knew as “Drew,” and identified him as the man who shot Cure at the High Hat Lounge. Calhoun did not look at the photographic array for long because she “looked right at it and knew it.” She handwrote on the back of the appellant’s photograph, “Drew hit him and then he shot him.” Detective Turner confirmed that Calhoun identified the appellant’s photograph within seconds of being shown the array.

Bernard Pratt testified that he was familiar with the High Hat Lounge and had known the appellant for a few years from the neighborhood. Although he knew several people who frequented the High Hat Lounge, including Sessoms and one Ingrid Lessane, a/k/a “Usa,” he did not know a person named “Bernard Cure.”

After the March 15, 2005 shooting, the police spoke with Pratt, who was near the scene. At trial, Pratt testified that he *326 did not remember telling the police he had seen a shooting at the High Hat Lounge or that he had seen the appellant with a gun. He also did not remember seeing a photographic array in this case and denied that he was shown the array identified as State’s Exhibit 3.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Correll v. State
81 A.3d 600 (Court of Special Appeals of Maryland, 2013)
Frazier v. State
13 A.3d 83 (Court of Special Appeals of Maryland, 2011)
Kelly v. State
6 A.3d 396 (Court of Special Appeals of Maryland, 2010)
Jefferson v. State
4 A.3d 17 (Court of Special Appeals of Maryland, 2010)
James v. State
991 A.2d 122 (Court of Special Appeals of Maryland, 2010)
Height v. State
988 A.2d 1054 (Court of Special Appeals of Maryland, 2010)
Drake and Charles v. State
975 A.2d 204 (Court of Special Appeals of Maryland, 2009)
Drake v. State
975 A.2d 204 (Court of Special Appeals of Maryland, 2009)
Hadden v. State
2002 WY 41 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 2002)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
970 A.2d 921, 185 Md. App. 317, 2009 Md. App. LEXIS 63, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/height-v-state-mdctspecapp-2009.