McDowell v. State

807 So. 2d 413, 2001 WL 1336451
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 31, 2001
Docket2000-KA-00521-SCT
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 807 So. 2d 413 (McDowell v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McDowell v. State, 807 So. 2d 413, 2001 WL 1336451 (Mich. 2001).

Opinion

807 So.2d 413 (2001)

Gabriel McDOWELL a/k/a Gary McDowell
v.
STATE of Mississippi.

No. 2000-KA-00521-SCT.

Supreme Court of Mississippi.

October 31, 2001.
Rehearing Denied February 21, 2002.

*416 Thomas D. Berry, Jr., Bay St. Louis, Attorney for Appellant.

Office of the Attorney General, by Dewitt T. Allred, III, Jackson, Attorneys for Appellee.

Before McRAE, P.J., COBB and DIAZ, JJ.

COBB, J., for the court.

¶ 1. On December 7, 1998, Gabriel McDowell was indicted in the Hancock County Circuit Court for the sale of cocaine. McDowell's first trial ended in a mistrial. In his second trial, McDowell was convicted and sentenced as a habitual offender to 30 years imprisonment without possibility of parole. Aggrieved, McDowell now appeals raising the following issues:

I. THE TRIAL COURT ERRED IN ALLOWING ADMISSION OF A PHOTO LINEUP IDENTIFICATION OF McDOWELL.
II. THE TRIAL COURT ERRED IN ALLOWING TESTIMONY OF ATTEMPTED DRUG TRANSACTIONS WITH PERSONS OTHER THAN MCDOWELL PRIOR TO McDOWELL'S ALLEGED TRANSACTION.
III. HE TRIAL COURT ERRED IN FAILING TO EDIT THE PREJUDICIAL REMARKS MADE BY A POLICE OFFICER AFTER THE ALLEGED TRANSACTION, FROM A VIDEO TAPE SHOWN TO THE JURY.
IV. THE TRIAL COURT IMPROPERLY RESTRICTED CROSS EXAMINATION.
V. THE SECOND TRIAL WAS BARRED BY DOUBLE JEOPARDY.
VI. THE TRIAL COURT IMPROPERLY INSTRUCTED THE *417 JURY TO DISREGARD THE CONSEQUENCES OF THEIR VERDICT.
VII. THE TRIAL COURT ERRED IN ALLOWING THE STATE TO ARGUE MATTERS NOT IN EVIDENCE TO THE JURY.

¶ 2. Additionally, McDowell raises a number of additional issues by way of a supplemental pro se brief which this Court granted him leave to file in an order dated June 27, 2000.[1] Those which are not duplicative include the following, which are interpreted as best we are able:

I. THE VERDICT OF THE JURY WAS CONTRARY TO THE OVERWHELMING WEIGHT OF THE EVIDENCE SO AS TO EVIDENCE BIAS AND PREJUDICE ON THE PART OF THE JURY.
II. THE VERDICT WAS IN ERROR BECAUSE RICO LANEAUX TESTIFIED THAT McDOWELL HAD NOTHING TO DO WITH THE CHARGE.
III. THE JURY CONSISTED OF ONE BLACK PERSON AND ELEVEN WHITE PERSONS, ALL OF WHOM WERE CHOSEN OUTSIDE McDOWELL'S PRESENCE.
IV. THE TRIAL COURT ERRED IN FAILING TO DIRECT A VERDICT FOR THE DEFENDANT DUE TO INSUFFICIENCY OF THE EVIDENCE.

¶ 3. Finding all of these issues to be without merit, we affirm McDowell's conviction.

FACTS

¶ 4. On June 22, 1998, Ronald Lessner, an officer with the Biloxi Police Department, was assigned to assist the Hancock County Narcotics Task Force in undercover street operations. Lessner's assignment was to approach people randomly in an area where drug dealers were known to operate and attempt to purchase narcotics from them with funds provided by the Task Force. The Task Force also provided Lessner with a vehicle equipped with audio and video surveillance equipment and a radio link to nearby back-up officers, though Lessner himself was not wearing a wire.

¶ 5. In the course of Lessner's undercover work, he made contact with unidentified persons driving a brown-colored Cadillac who offered to sell him "a 20", i.e. $20 worth of crack cocaine. Lessner followed the Cadillac to a local convenience store called Dash 6, where the driver of the Cadillac told Lessner to circle the block and come back, presumably so that Lessner could not observe where the driver concealed his drugs.

¶ 6. When Lessner returned, two other individuals were talking to the persons in the Cadillac: Rico Laneaux (from whom Lessner had purchased drugs in past undercover operations) and the appellant, Gabriel McDowell. Lessner, Laneaux and McDowell had a brief conversation which was captured on videotape, and then Lessner followed Laneaux and McDowell to a nearby abandoned house, where Laneaux attempted to sell Lessner counterfeit crack.

¶ 7. Lessner, in his role as a crack addict, objected to Laneaux's attempt to deceive him, and then McDowell called Lessner *418 over to the front of the yard where McDowell sold Lessner a piece of crack cocaine for $20. This transaction happened to occur in an area of the yard which was not in view of the camera in Lessner's car, although there is no indication that McDowell had reason to suspect the camera's presence. Shortly after the transaction was completed, Lessner gave a brief description of McDowell and the tag number of McDowell's car over his radio link to Karl Aderer and Shane Corr, his back-up for that operation. Aderer and Corr then drove by the area where the deal occurred, and Corr observed McDowell (who he knew personally) driving off in the vehicle described by Lessner.

¶ 8. After leaving the scene of the transaction, Lessner returned to the Task Force headquarters, where he reviewed the tape from his camera in the presence of other police officers. Lessner identified McDowell from the video footage taken at Dash 6 as the man who sold him the cocaine. Corr then identified McDowell by name, apparently outside Lessner's presence. The next day, Aderer showed Lessner a collection of six photographs, including one of McDowell, and Lessner was able to identify McDowell as the person who sold him cocaine. McDowell was not arrested until July 15, 1998, during a roundup of suspected dealers, so as not to blow Lessner's cover.

¶ 9. During McDowell's first trial, however, Aderer admitted that before administering the photo identification, he said to Lessner: "We believe that the person who sold you the narcotics is one of these pictures." The trial court then granted McDowell's motion for mistrial, although the trial court made it clear that it did not find prosecutorial misconduct and did not view the case as invoking double jeopardy.

¶ 10. Sometime between McDowell's first and second trials, the trial court heard oral arguments on whether Aderer's statement to Lessner prior to the photo identification rendered that identification unreliable, which the trial court viewed as essentially converting McDowell's motion for mistrial into a motion to suppress the identification. The trial court went on to conclude that Aderer's statement to Lessner, when viewed against the totality of the circumstances, was not impermissibly suggestive. At McDowell's second trial, the court allowed the admission of the photo identification.

¶ 11. During McDowell's case-in-chief, Laneaux testified for the defense claiming that Lessner asked McDowell for cocaine, but that McDowell did not sell Lessner anything and Lessner left empty-handed. McDowell admitted to being the person on the video footage taken at Dash 6 and to being present at the abandoned house where the transaction allegedly took place, but he denied selling cocaine to Lessner.

ANALYSIS

I. THE TRIAL COURT ERRED IN ALLOWING ADMISSION OF A PHOTO LINEUP IDENTIFICATION OF MCDOWELL.

¶ 12. In concluding that Aderer's statement to Lessner was not so impermissibly suggestive as to invalidate Lessner's identification of McDowell, the trial court applied the balancing test articulated by the U.S. Supreme Court in Neil v. Biggers, 409 U.S. 188, 199, 93 S.Ct. 375, 34 L.Ed.2d 401 (1972). The Biggers factors include:

a. the opportunity of the witness to view the criminal at the time of the crime;
b.

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Bluebook (online)
807 So. 2d 413, 2001 WL 1336451, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcdowell-v-state-miss-2001.