Matthews v. State

CourtSupreme Court of Delaware
DecidedJune 10, 2024
Docket24, 2023
StatusPublished

This text of Matthews v. State (Matthews 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
Matthews v. State, (Del. 2024).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

SHAHEED MATTHEWS, § § C.A. No. 24, 2023 Defendant Below, § Appellant, § Court Below—Superior Court § of the State of Delaware v. § § Cr. ID. No. 1806004163(N) STATE OF DELAWARE, § § Appellee. §

Submitted: March 13, 2024 Decided: June 10, 2024

Before SEITZ, Chief Justice; VALIHURA, TRAYNOR, LEGROW, and GRIFFITHS, Justices, constituting the Court en Banc.

Upon appeal from the Superior Court of the State of Delaware. REVERSED AND REMANDED.

Shaheed Matthews, pro se, New Castle, Delaware.

John R. Williams, Esquire (argued), Delaware Department of Justice, Dover, Delaware, for Appellee State of Delaware.

Garrett B. Moritz, Esquire (argued) and Elizabeth M. Taylor, Esquire, Ross Aronstam & Moritz LLP, Wilmington, Delaware, Amicus Curiae for Appellant.1

1 The Court expresses its appreciation to the law firm Ross Aronstam & Moritz, and in particular attorneys Garrett Moritz and Elizabeth Taylor, for serving by Court appointment as amicus curiae and their commitment of time and effort in pursuing postconviction relief on behalf of Mr. Matthews. GRIFFITHS, Justice:

On December 28, 2017, just after midnight in New Castle, Delaware, police

found Antoine Terry lying on the sidewalk unresponsive due to multiple gunshot

wounds. He died from his injuries. The police later arrested Terry’s friend, Shaheed

Matthews, for the murder.

In 2019, Matthews was tried for murder and possession of a firearm during

the commission of a felony. No direct physical evidence linked Matthews to Terry’s

shooting. Instead, the State relied on circumstantial evidence—including evidence

from Matthews’s cellphone, witness testimony, video camera footage of varying

quality, and gunshot residue of an unknown vintage found on Matthews’s jacket.

On direct appeal, this Court affirmed Matthews’s convictions.

Matthews then filed a pro se motion for postconviction relief in the Superior

Court. He claimed that his trial counsel was ineffective on four grounds. The

Superior Court denied Matthews’s motion and this appeal followed. On appeal,

Matthews limits the scope of his claim for relief to one ground: that trial counsel’s

failure to move to suppress the evidence obtained from his cellphone constituted

ineffective assistance of counsel.

With the State’s entire case dependent on circumstantial evidence, it was

essential for trial counsel to suppress any inappropriately derived evidence. Our

review leads us to conclude that there is a reasonable probability that the outcome

2 of the trial would have been different if Matthews’s trial counsel had moved to

suppress the evidence obtained from his cellphone. Therefore, we reverse his

convictions and remand to the Superior Court for a new trial without the taint of the

improperly seized evidence.

I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND2

A. The Shooting of Antoine Terry

Antoine Terry and Shaheed Matthews were friends.3 Matthews frequently

stayed with his girlfriend, Devon Johnson. Johnson’s residence was located at 227

Parma Avenue in New Castle, Delaware.4 The residence was in a “high crime area”

with “a lot of shootings.”5 On December 27, 2017, Terry, Matthews, and Johnson

spent the evening together at Johnson’s house watching a basketball game and eating

Chinese food.6 Johnson testified that around 10:30 p.m., she went upstairs to use the

restroom and grab additional layers of clothing because she planned to drive

Matthews to the home of his longtime friend, Chanelle Brooks.7 She told the jury

2 The facts, except as otherwise noted, are taken from the transcript of the trial testimony. See App. to Amicus Curiae’s Opening Br. at AA1–239 [hereinafter “AA[_]”] (Trial Transcript [hereinafter “Trial Tr. at [_]”]). 3 AA81 (Devon Johnson Testimony [hereinafter “Johnson Test. at [_]”] at 100:1–8). 4 AA80 (Johnson Test. at 98:3–4). 5 AA72, AA195 (Detective Eugene Reid Testimony [hereinafter “Reid Test. at [_]”] at 65:3–6; 124:4–12); see also AA99 (Johnson Test. at 174:8–11). 6 AA82–84, AA99 (Johnson Test. at 105:3–114:3; 171:9–172:16); see also AA341 (Transcription of Detective Smith’s Dec. 28, 2017 Body Camera Footage of Interview of Shaheed Matthews [hereinafter “Matthews Int.”]). 7 AA84–85 (Johnson Test. at 114:7–115:10). 3 that when she came back downstairs, Matthews and Terry were gone.8 She testified

that she waited in the house for Matthews to call her to pick him up and that she left

to pick him up at a nearby church around 10:45 p.m.9 She then drove him to

Brooks’s house.10

At 10:42 p.m., the New Castle County Police Department received a call from

a resident on Briarcliff Drive, which runs parallel to Parma Avenue.11 The resident

reported hearing five or six gunshots.12 Around the same time, another resident from

243 Parma Avenue called the police and reported being awakened by “three or four”

gunshots.13 Multiple officers responded to the area.14 The police did not

immediately locate a shooting victim.15 Shortly after midnight, however, police

found Terry’s body on the sidewalk between 243 and 245 Parma Avenue.16 He

8 AA85, AA86, AA89, AA99, AA103 (Johnson Test. at 116:13–15; 120:5–9; 131:18–132:1; 173:1–3, 188:14–18). 9 AA85, AA86, AA87, AA101 (Johnson Test. at 116:6–117:1; 121:18–122:10; 124:6–12; 180:11– 23). 10 AA84–85, AA101 (Johnson Test. at 114:16–115:10; 182:6–8); see also AA115–116 (Chanelle Brooks Testimony [hereinafter “Brooks Test. at [_]”] at 14:16–16:5). 11 AA51, AA71 (Reid Test. at 196:23–197:12; 60:23–61:10). 12 AA51, AA71 (Reid Test. at 197:16–198:10; 61:11–20). 13 AA36, AA38 (Antoine Harrison Testimony [hereinafter “Harrison Test. at [_]”] at 136:14– 137:16; 144:9–16). 14 AA71 (Reid Test. at 62:3–5). 15 AA51, AA72 (Reid Test. at 198:2–13; 63:1–15). 16 AA10–11 (Master Corporal Casey Bouldin Testimony [hereinafter “Bouldin Test. at [_]”] at 34:15–36:15); see also AA12 (Detective Ronald Phillips Testimony [hereinafter “Phillips Test. at [_]”] at 42:20–22). 4 was “cold and stiff” with multiple gunshot wounds.17 They observed that he had “a

hoodie around his head” and “a couple marks in the back of his jacket.”18

B. The Police Interview Matthews and Search His Cellphone On December 28, 2017, two detectives from the New Castle County Police

Department interviewed Matthews about Terry’s death.19 During the interview, the

detectives asked Matthews about his cellphone. At first, he told them that he did not

have a cellphone.20 Matthews ultimately relented and provided them with a

cellphone number.21 When asked why he initially refused, he told them that he

“didn’t want to give the number out.”22 The detectives then had the following

exchange with Matthews:

[Unknown Detective]: Well, listen, here’s one thing I want to go over with you, okay? So everybody that we’ve talked to, okay, uh, I know you’re kind of like funny about your cellphone, and you don’t want to give me the cellphone number.

[Matthews]: You can, you can have it [unintelligible][.]

17 AA11 (Bouldin Test. at 35:20). 18 Id. (Bouldin Test. at 36:1–3); see also AA14 (Phillips Test. at 47:2–5). Detective Reid described a photograph of Terry from the scene: “[i]t appears as though he has a – starting from the top, he has a white hood over his head, a black jacket, like a black puffy jacket.” AA72 (Reid Test. at 66:11–13). 19 See AA338–52 (Matthews Int.). The interview transcript identifies one of the detectives as “Detective Smith” and the other as “unknown detective.” See, e.g., AA338 (Matthews Int.).

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