Myers v. State

243 Md. App. 154
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedNovember 6, 2019
Docket2933/18
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 243 Md. App. 154 (Myers 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
Myers v. State, 243 Md. App. 154 (Md. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

Myers v. State, No. 2933 of the 2018 Term, Opinion by Moylan J.

SECOND-DEGREE BURGLARY – TWO SECURITY CAMERAS ARE

BETTER THAN ONE – THE CONTENTIONS – A CASE OF BAYING AT THE

MOON – IDENTIFYING THE RIGHT CHURCH – SUPPRESSION HEARING LAW

101 – STANDARD OF APPELLATE REVIEW – WAS THERE A DISCOVERY

VIOLATION? – SANCTIONS AND WINDFALLS – A PROCEDURAL CAVEAT –

THE PERMISSIBILITY OF A LINE OF QUESTIONING – A NON-

BLOCKBUSTER ERROR IN ANY EVENT Circuit Court for Baltimore City Case No. 118057003 REPORTED

IN THE COURT OF SPECIAL APPEALS

OF MARYLAND

No. 2933

September Term, 2018 ______________________________________

MURRAY MYERS

v.

STATE OF MARYLAND ______________________________________

Fader, C.J., Berger, Moylan, Charles E., Jr. (Senior Judge, Specially Assigned),

JJ. ______________________________________

Opinion by Moylan, J. ______________________________________

Filed: November 6, 2019

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

2019-11-06 14:29-05:00

Suzanne C. Johnson, Clerk The appellant, Murray Myers, was convicted in the Circuit Court for Baltimore City

by a jury, presided over by Judge Althea M. Handy, of burglary in the second degree,

conspiracy to commit second-degree burglary, and theft of more than $100 but less than

$1,500.

Two Security Cameras Are Better Than One

The evidence of the appellant’s complicity was straightforward. At approximately

3:44 a.m. on December 12, 2017, a burglary was committed at an animal clinic operated

by the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals at 4007 Falls Road in Baltimore

City. Not one, but two security surveillance cameras memorialized the crime. One of the

cameras was located on the SPCA Clinic property itself. The second was located on the

Red Fish Liquor Store, on the same side of the street as the burglarized premises but one

building away.

The security camera on the SPCA Clinic building did a yeomanlike job of recording

the corpus delicti but utterly failed to establish anyone’s criminal agency. Initially it

showed two individuals walking south on Falls Road toward the SPCA Clinic. As one of

them, referred to as “Individual One,” closed in on the target, the other, referred to by the

State simply as the “lookout,” was observed walking back and forth generally in front of

the clinic. At 3:44 a.m., Individual One entered the building through a side window. A

hoody, however, obscured his face. As the burglar alarm sounded, Individual One exited

the clinic. Almost immediately, however, he returned to the side window, grabbed a cash

register that was sitting on a desk, and fled the scene with the cash register in hand. The cash register was later determined to have been empty, but its own value was established

to have been $500.

Because of the hoody covering his face, the identity of Individual One could not be

established either by the SPCA Clinic manager, Amy Stormann, or by Detective William

Nickles, both of whom viewed the security tape from the clinic’s camera. The identity of

the other individual, the “lookout,” was never established. The crime might well have

become an unsolved cold case, but for a stroke of good fortune. Although the security

camera on the burglarized premises itself had come up short, a Good Samaritan security

camera on the neighboring Red Fish Liquor Store stepped in to save the day. It was a day

later as part of his follow-up investigation that Detective Nickles visited Red Fish to see if

it had any surveillance footage from the night of the burglary. It had. From its more

fortuitous coign of vantage, moreover, the burglar’s face was visible, unhidden by the

hoody. Detective Nickles, who had known the appellant for years, immediately identified

Individual One as the appellant. Detective Nickles actually knew the appellant by name

and was thereby able to obtain his address from the Department of Motor Vehicles. The

appellant was shortly thereafter arrested and indicted.

At trial, the clinic manager testified briefly. The only other State’s witness, and its

key witness, was Detective Nickles. He testified that he was “[o]ne hundred percent

positive that that is Mr. Murray Myers [(the appellant)] in that video.” He explained to the

jury that he possessed that level of certainty because “I’ve known of Mr. Murray Myers for

many years being associated from the same neighborhood.” Detective Nickles further

explained that he and the appellant had numerous mutual friends.

2 My ex-sister-in-law, which is [the appellant’s] cousin, by the name of Brenda Brown. Numerous friends from the neighborhood. We have multiple mutual Facebook friends. From being from the neighborhood, I mean, it’s only obvious that we would have these mutual friends. I guess, numerous.

(Emphasis supplied). Detective Nickles also identified the appellant in court:

Q. Okay. The person you see in the video with the cash register, do you see that person in court here today?

A. I do, yes.

Q. Can you please identify him by an article of clothing?

A. Sitting at the Defense table with a black shirt and a green and black tie with a cane in his hand.

Q. How certain are you that that is that person?
A. I’m a hundred percent certain.

(Emphasis supplied). The appellant, moreover, was established as living at 3735 Falls

Road, just under three blocks away from the burglarized premises.

In his cross-examination of Detective Nickles, the defense never really challenged

the detective’s ability to recognize the appellant as someone he had known for a number

of years. The appellant neither took the stand nor offered any witnesses or other evidence

in his defense. The jury convicted him on all counts.

The Contentions

On appeal, the appellant raises three contentions.

1. THE TRIAL COURT ERRED WHEN IT DENIED [THE APPELLANT’S] MOTION TO SUPPRESS DETECTIVE NICKLES’[S] PRE-TRIAL IDENTIFICATION.

2. THE TRIAL COURT VIOLATED [THE APPELLANT’S] SIXTH AMENDMENT RIGHT AND ARTICLE 21 OF THE MARYLAND

3 DECLARATION OF RIGHTS WHEN IT DENIED DEFENSE COUNSEL’S ABILITY TO PRESENT A FULL DEFENSE DURING CROSS-EXAMINATION OF THE STATE’S KEY WITNESS.

3. THE STATE COMMITTED PLAIN ERROR IN ITS CLOSING WHEN IT BOLSTERED DETECTIVE NICKLES’[S] TESTIMONY WITH FACTS NOT IN THE RECORD.

A Case Of Baying At The Moon

In military jargon, one would not characterize the appellant’s contentions as

arguments that turn square corners. He beguiles us with facts, but he never tells us where

he is going with those facts.

The most serious contention is that Judge Handy committed reversible error when

she denied the appellant’s motion to suppress a pre-trial identification of him by Detective

Nickles. A hearing was held on that motion on Tuesday, September 18, 2018. The entire

suppression hearing that day consumed a scant 24 pages of transcript. The oddity is that

that brief hearing disposed of, sequentially, not one but two suppression motions. The first

of the two denials is not now before us. It nonetheless behooves us to refer to it because it

is indicative of the general slackness of the appellant’s analysis of the legal issues in the

case, indicative of his disinclination to turn square corners.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
243 Md. App. 154, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/myers-v-state-mdctspecapp-2019.