Newman v. State

CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedApril 4, 2018
Docket2629/16
StatusPublished

This text of Newman v. State (Newman 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
Newman v. State, (Md. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

Newman v. State, No. 2629 of the 2016 Term, Opinion by Moylan J.

HEADNOTE:

FIRST-DEGREE MURDER – “FOUL DEEDS WILL RISE, THOUGH ALL

THE EARTH O’ERWHELM THEM TO MEN’S EYES” – TWO CONTENTIONS –

A TALE OF THE MACABRE – “A JUG OF WINE, A BOOK OF VERSE, AND

THOU” – AND THEN THERE WERE TWO – “OUR REVELS NOW ARE ENDED”

– “OUT, DAMNED SPOT!” – DUSTIN ALERTS THE POLICE – THE

EUMENIDES – SOME NUANCES OF SELF-DEFENSE – THE STANDING

EPITHET “UNFAIR” DELIMITS THE NOUN “PREJUDICE”: A CLOSE LOOK AT

RULE 5–403 – MINIMALISM IS NOT REQUIRED: NEED FOR THE EVIDENCE

AS A NON-FACTOR – CHERCHEZ THE ADVERB – APPELLATE DEFERENCE

AS A CRITICAL DECISIONAL FACTOR – THE APPELLANT’S FACEBOOK

PICTURE – PROBATIVE VALUE – THE ABSENCE OF ANY UNFAIR

PREJUDICE – ARCA V. STATE AND BANKS V. STATE – A JURY

INSTRUCTION ON VOLUNTARY INTOXICATION – THE INSTRUCTION WAS

CORRECT – THE EVIDENCE GENERATED THE INSTRUCTION –

VOLUNTARY INTOXICATION AND SPECIFIC INTENT – VOLUNTARY

INTOXICATION GENERALLY Circuit Court for Baltimore County Case No. 03-K-15006953 REPORTED

IN THE COURT OF SPECIAL APPEALS

OF MARYLAND

No. 2629

September Term, 2016

______________________________________

TERRENCE NEWMAN

v.

STATE OF MARYLAND

Beachley, Fader, Moylan, Charles E., Jr. (Senior Judge, Specially Assigned),

JJ. ______________________________________

Opinion by Moylan, J. ______________________________________

Filed: April 4, 2018 “Foul Deeds Will Rise, Though All The Earth O’erwhelm Them To Men’s Eyes”1

For three weeks, it seemed that the appellant, Terrence Omar Newman, Jr., may

well have committed a perfect crime. One relentless nemesis he could not shake off,

however, turned out to be his own still voice of conscience. As a direct result of his own

unsolicited revelations, he was ultimately convicted by a Baltimore County jury, presided

over by Judge Ruth Ann Jakubowski, of the first-degree murder of Carlita Coleman. He

was sentenced to life imprisonment.

Two Contentions

With a troubled psyche that might have led a psychiatrist to suspect that he,

subconsciously, wanted to be caught, the appellant’s chosen contentions are relatively

small bore. He asserts

1. that a photograph of him used in his initial identification by the police, albeit unquestionably relevant, was so unfairly prejudicial that it should not have been received in evidence; and

2. that, in jury instructions, the jury should never have been invited to consider his state of possible inebriation.

A Tale Of The Macabre

The statement of facts could have been written by Edgar Allan Poe. The time was

Thursday, October 15, 2015. The place was Catonsville. A small neighborhood Gilston

Park was the site for an informal gathering of the extended Archibald family for a leisurely

afternoon of drinking and listening to music. The park was generally wooded but included

1 Hamlet, Act 1, Scene 2. a pavilion with several picnic tables on its periphery. The gathering convened shortly after

2:00 p.m. Initially in attendance were 1) Reba Archibald; 2) Reba’s brother, Dustin

Archibald; and 3) Dustin Archibald’s girlfriend, Nicole Hokanson. Within the hour, the

group was joined by the appellant. The appellant was the ex-boyfriend of Reba Archibald

and a good friend of Dustin Archibald. Another brother, Ronald Archibald, joined the

group at about 4:30 p.m. but left the group to go to work shortly before 5 p.m. It was at

about 5 p.m. that the ultimate murder victim, Carlita Coleman, joined the group. She had

formerly been a close friend of Reba Archibald. Generally speaking, the entire group had

known each other for several years, dating back to high school.

“A Jug Of Wine, A Book of Verse, And Thou”2

Throughout the afternoon, it was the appellant who provided beverages for the

group. The first serving was from a water bottle filled with slightly watered-down vodka.

The appellant shared it with Dustin and Nicole. Reba did not drink. When the threesome

had finished the vodka, the appellant repaired to a nearby Walmart and returned with an

ill-fated bottle of wine. Ill-fated because the bottle was corked but the revelers had no

corkscrew. With the swashbuckling panache of an Anthony Quinn, however, the appellant

broke off the neck of the bottle on a nearby tree. The break, unfortunately, came well below

the neckline, and a bare pint remained in what had been a receptacle designed for a quart.

The final resupply mission eschewed viniculture and produced “two big gallons of vodka.”

“And the band played on.”

2 Rubáiyát of Omar Khayyám.

2 And Then There Were Two

Tempting as the vodka may have been, for Dustin Archibald it was no rival for

Thursday Night Football, to which he was incorrigibly addicted. By 7 p.m., he and Nicole

left the party in order to be comfortably in place for the New Orleans Saints–Atlanta

Falcons kickoff. And then there were three.

As the appellant’s ex-girlfriend, Reba Archibald was for the next half-hour very

much a neglected fifth wheel. The appellant and Carlita Coleman, who had not known each

other before that afternoon, were rapidly making up for lost time. As Reba sat, forlorn, at

one table, the new acquaintances, both described by Reba as “flat out drunk,” adjourned to

a separate table for an escalating session of ill-defined but ill-disguised sexual play.

Discretion prevailed and Reba left for home. And then there were two.

“Our Revels Now Are Ended”3

With the departure of Reba Archibald at 7:30 p.m., the screen went blank. But for

his inner demons, life for the appellant went on as normal for the next three weeks. If

Carlita Coleman was missing, the world was unaware of it. As for family, her former foster-

mother was not even aware of her current street address. No one else seemed to care. The

Archibalds, who had hosted the party of October 15, were oblivious to the fact that their

family outing had gone disastrously south. For the appellant himself, October 15 might

have been dismissed as nothing more than a drunken nightmare. The appellant had left

neither fingerprint nor DNA nor any other personal token at the murder scene. He may

3 The Tempest, Act IV, Scene 1.

3 have been the last person seen with the victim alive, but the significance of that

circumstance, standing alone, would diminish with each passing day. Even murder most

foul was on its way to becoming “nameless here for evermore.”4 And then there was one.

“Out, Damned Spot!”5

The allusion to Lady Macbeth is not inapt. When the appellant three weeks later

brought his unsolicited confession of guilt to Dustin Archibald, his pursuit by his inner

demons had become truly Shakespearean. As Dustin recounted:

At first he was telling me that he needed hand sanitizer and he needed to wash his hands. And he kept going on about needing to wash his hands. Needing to wash his hands, over and over again.

(Emphasis supplied).

When the appellant arrived at the Archibald home at about 11 a.m. on November 5,

2015, his hand, according to Dustin, “smelled like a dead skunk.” That was the hand that

could not be washed clean and that apparently “could the very seas incarnadine.” The

appellant was wrestling unsuccessfully with troubled flashbacks. There were maggots,

moreover, crawling over his lower pants and shoes. Dustin Archibald’s recounting of the

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Newman v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/newman-v-state-mdctspecapp-2018.