Lovett v. State

516 A.2d 455, 1986 Del. LEXIS 1280
CourtSupreme Court of Delaware
DecidedOctober 9, 1986
StatusPublished
Cited by49 cases

This text of 516 A.2d 455 (Lovett v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lovett v. State, 516 A.2d 455, 1986 Del. LEXIS 1280 (Del. 1986).

Opinion

WALSH, Justice:

In this case the defendant-appellant, Jackie Ray Lovett, presses several grounds for reversal of his convictions of first degree murder and possessing a weapon during the commission of a felony. His primary argument is that the Superior Court should have suppressed certain incriminating statements he made to police because those statements were obtained in violation of his right to counsel under the Federal and Delaware constitutions. We begin with a chronological account of the facts underlying this claim.

I

On June 24,1982, the bodies of Lori Todd and Richard Bull were found floating in a tributary of the Pocomoke River in Maryland. Autopsies revealed that each had died from a bullet wound to the head. A subsequent joint investigation by Maryland and Delaware State Police indicated that the victims may have been killed in Delaware and their bodies dumped in nearby Maryland.

On each of the next four days, police talked to Charles Bower, a relative of Lo-vett, about the murders. Bower initially denied any knowledge of them, but on June 28, gave police a statement in which he claimed he was in a farmhouse near Delmar, Delaware, when Lovett took both Todd and Bull in back of the farmhouse and murdered them. Also on June 28, Lo-vett, who had previous exposure to the criminal justice system, 1 learned that he might be wanted on a murder charge in Delaware and traveled to Philadelphia to consult an attorney in that city. The attorney was unable to represent Lovett, but testified at trial that he cautioned Lovett not to make any statements to anyone until after seeking the advice of an attorney, and to make sure he got an attorney. The attorney testified “But he knew what I was talking about and he said that he certainly wouldn’t be foolish enough to make any statements to any police authorities until he had gotten the advice of an attorney.” On July 6, 1982, a Sussex County grand jury indicted Lovett for murder in connection with the deaths of Todd and Bull. A warrant for his arrest was issued the next day.

On July 15, 1982,.Maryland State Police arrested Lovett when officers stopped an automobile in which Lovett was a passenger. Lovett had dyed his hair but the arresting officers, who were aware that a fugitive warrant had been issued for Lo-vett, had been informed he would be inside. Lovett was transported to the Maryland State Police Barracks in Salisbury and placed in the custody of Officer Megee, who had been investigating the Todd-Bull murders. Megee advised Lovett of his Miranda rights, and Lovett signed a typewritten form waiving those rights. Lovett *461 also signed a typewritten form waiving his right of prompt presentment to a Maryland Commissioner, who would have advised Lo-vett of the charges against him, of his right to be represented by counsel, and other matters concerning bail, probable cause, and a preliminary hearing.

What happened next was disputed both in a suppression hearing before the Superi- or Court and at trial. At the suppression hearing Officer Megee gave the following account. He testified that he informed Lo-vett that first degree murder charges were pending against him, and that Lovett replied that “he knew what had happened.” Megee then told Lovett that Charles Bower had been arrested in connection with the deaths of Todd and Bull and had implicated Lovett in both of them, at which point Lovett responded that “he could tell me exactly what happened; that Bowers [sic] was not as innocent as he proclaimed to be; and that Bower was, in fact, as guilty as he, Lovett, was. Again, he reiterated he could tell me exactly what happened on that particular night.” Megee then told Lovett that he wished to obtain a statement from him, at which point Lovett asked whether it “would be any trouble to get an attorney.” Construing Lovett’s question as an invocation of his right to counsel, Megee ceased questioning Lovett. He attempted, without success, to telephone Lo-vett’s attorney while Lovett “listen[ed] in at the phone as it rang to be sure that he understood that I was not trying to pull anything over on him and that, in fact, I couldn’t get hold of his attorney.” Megee did not resume discussion with Lovett about the murders, but instead completed the booking process, asking Lovett only routine booking questions such as his name, birthdate, and place of residence. He also prepared the application for a fugitive warrant to be presented to a Maryland commissioner. After completing this paperwork, he told Lovett “It’s time to go now,” at which point Lovett “spontaneously began talking about the murders of Gordon Gillis and Walter Scott that had occurred prior to the incident of Lori Todd and Richard Bull.” Megee testified that “Once Mr. Lovett started talking about the Gillis-Scott murder, he eventually continued with his conversation into the Todd-Bull murder.” During this statement Me-gee asked questions such as “Well, what then happened?,” or “Then what did you do?,” but no direct questions such as “Did you do this?,” or “Did you do that?” After Lovett had talked “close to an hour” he attempted to put Lovett’s statement on tape. On the tape Lovett simply renewed his request for counsel and acknowledged that Megee had previously attempted to contact counsel for him.

Megee again ceased all discussion about the murders and again sought to contact Lovett’s attorney, eventually reaching an associate in his firm. The associate arrived at the barracks shortly thereafter and, after consulting with Lovett, informed Megee that no statement would be taped.

Lovett testified at the suppression hearing and contradicted Megee’s testimony. Apparently resolving factual disputes in favor of the State, the Superior Court refused to suppress Officer Megee’s testimony concerning Lovett’s statements.

At trial Officer Megee testified substantially as he did at the suppression hearing. His testimony included a statement that after Lovett signed forms waiving his Miranda rights and his right to prompt presentment, “I advised Mr. Lovett that there was a lot of discussion that had been done with reference to this incident and that I felt that he could tell me exactly what happened and Lovett at that point in time indicated that, yes, he could tell me what happened, that Bowers was as guilty as he was and that he could tell me basically what happened.” Megee claimed that after he told Lovett that Bower had implicated him in the murders “His response was that Bowers was just as guilty as he was.”

Megee’s trial testimony essentially replicated his testimony at the suppression hearing as to Lovett’s initial request for an *462 attorney, the unsuccessful attempt to contact Lovett’s attorney, the subsequent completion of the routine booking process, and Lovett’s lengthy spontaneous inculpatory statements concerning the murders of Gil-lis, Scott, Todd, and Bull following Megee’s statement that it was time to leave. Lo-vett, on the other hand, testified at trial that he continuously requested an attorney during his conversations with Megee and that he never made incriminating statements to Megee. By its verdict the jury, inferentially at least, chose to disbelieve Lovett.

Lovett contends that the admission of these statements violated his right to counsel under the Sixth and Fourteenth Amendments. In Deputy v. State,

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Bluebook (online)
516 A.2d 455, 1986 Del. LEXIS 1280, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lovett-v-state-del-1986.