People of Michigan v. Deneal Lee Smith

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 17, 2022
Docket353734
StatusUnpublished

This text of People of Michigan v. Deneal Lee Smith (People of Michigan v. Deneal Lee Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People of Michigan v. Deneal Lee Smith, (Mich. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

If this opinion indicates that it is “FOR PUBLICATION,” it is subject to revision until final publication in the Michigan Appeals Reports.

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF MICHIGAN, UNPUBLISHED March 17, 2022 Plaintiff-Appellee,

v No. 353734 Allegan Circuit Court DENEAL LEE SMITH, LC No. 18-022225-FC

Defendant-Appellant.

Before: RIORDAN, P.J., and K. F. KELLY and SWARTZLE, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

A jury convicted defendant, Deneal Lee Smith, of two counts of armed robbery, MCL 750.529, and one count of fourth-degree fleeing and eluding a police officer, MCL 257.602a(2).1 The trial court sentenced defendant as a fourth-offense habitual offender, MCL 769.12, to concurrent terms of 30 to 45 years’ imprisonment for each armed robbery conviction, and 2 to 15 years’ imprisonment for the fleeing and eluding conviction. Defendant appeals his convictions as of right, claiming that the trial court violated his right to self- representation, raising a number of evidentiary issues, and asserting ineffective assistance of counsel. Finding no error requiring reversal, we affirm defendant’s convictions.

I. BASIC FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

On October 15, 2018, at approximately 8:41 p.m., the Clark gas station on 10th Street in Martin, Michigan, was robbed. The clerk testified at defendant’s trial that he looked up at the sound of the door chime and saw a gun pointed at his head. The robber demanded that the clerk give him all the money from the register, and the clerk complied. The clerk described the robber as a black male, with a black shirt around his face, wearing black sunglasses and gray gloves. The robber grabbed the money and a black plastic bag that he had brought with him. The robber left

1 The jury acquitted defendant of three counts of possession of a firearm during the commission or attempted commission of a felony (felony-firearm), MCL 750.227b, and one count of felon in possession of a firearm, MCL 750.224f.

-1- the store, and the gas station’s manager, who had been in his office doing paperwork, followed him, hopped into his car, and began to pursue the robbery suspect, who ran north through some bushes and got into a car parked in a driveway just north of the gas station. A call about the robbery went out from dispatch at approximately 8:42 p.m. Officers from Otsego Police Department, Allegan County Sheriff’s Department, and the Michigan State Police (MSP) responded.

According to the gas station manager, the suspect led him on a high-speed chase down local roads and onto US 131. At some point, the manager wrote the license plate of the fleeing car on his arm. When the suspect led the manager onto northbound US 131, the manager saw Otsego Police Officer Michael Gudith sitting in his patrol car in the median, watching southbound US 131 for any sign of the suspect. The manager stopped and gave Officer Gudith a description of the suspect’s car and the car’s license plate number, and told him that the suspect was headed northbound on US 131. Officer Gudith got onto northbound US 131 and informed other units that the suspect was last seen “northbound from the 106th area in a Chevy Impala.” Officer Gudith caught up with the suspect’s car, observed that the license plate number was identical with the one the store manager had given him, and notified other units that he was following the suspect and of their location. The suspect pulled off at Exit 55, the exit for Martin, then drove over the highway and down the ramp to merge onto southbound US 131. Officer Gudith, Allegan County Sheriff’s Deputy William Greene, and MSP Trooper Michael Shaw followed, lights and sirens activated. The suspect pulled onto the shoulder of US 131, slowed almost to a stop, but then pulled back into the lane of travel, repeating this weaving motion several times for approximately two miles. Eventually, the suspect pulled onto the right shoulder of the highway and stopped. The suspect, who turned out to be defendant, was arrested, transported to the Allegan County Sheriff’s Department, and eventually charged with two counts of armed robbery, one count each of fourth- degree fleeing and eluding and felon-in-possession of a firearm, and three counts of felony-firearm.

After defendant left the scene, Allegan County Sheriff’s Deputy William Greene searched defendant’s car, collecting and placing into evidence a pair of black sunglasses; a black, long- sleeved thermal top; and a pair of gray knit gloves; all items that were consistent with what Deputy Greene had been informed the robber was wearing. He stayed with defendant’s car until it was towed to the Sheriff Department’s secure garage. At about midnight, Allegan County Sheriff’s Deputy Ryan Rewa discovered a black plastic bag 15 to 20 feet from the edge of the roadway in a cornfield, approximately a quarter mile south of the Clark station. He called his find into dispatch, who turned the information over to Deputy Greene. Deputy Greene came to the location, used a pair of plastic gloves to collect the bag, and placed it into an evidence bag.

Allegan County Sheriff’s Department Detectives Mark Lytle and Craig Gardiner searched defendant’s car again on October 16, looking specifically for a gun and for the money stolen from the gas station. Among the items searched was a pair of jeans, the pockets of which Detective Lytle turned inside out, finding a few dollars, but nothing more, and a red hoodie sweatshirt, which Detective Lytle picked up by the hood and ran his hands down. No evidence was recovered. On October 24, Allegan County Sheriff’s Deputy Cory Harris, an evidence technician, searched defendant’s car again, as a result of a mix-up. Deputy Harris’s superior had intended for him to process a stolen car that had been recovered from Holland to determine if there was any evidence indicating who stole the car. The stolen car was a brown (or gold) Chevrolet Malibu, but Deputy Harris received instructions to “tech” the silver (or gray) Chevrolet Impala, which happened to be

-2- defendant’s car. As he was processing defendant’s car, Deputy Harris found $232 dollars wadded up and shoved into the red hoodie on the back seat.

The gas station clerk, the store manager, and all of the law enforcement officials involved in the pursuit and arrest of defendant, in the subsequent investigation of the robbery, and in the search of defendant’s car, testified at defendant’s trial. The jury also heard from two experts who analyzed information obtained from defendant’s phone and concluded that he was in the area of the robbery at the time the robbery occurred. The jury also heard from forensic scientists who concluded from their analysis of DNA obtained from the handle of the black plastic bag found by Deputy Rewa that defendant had contributed 70% of the DNA obtained and that it was “at least 150 septillion times more likely” that the DNA on the plastic bag came from defendant and three random individuals than that it came from four random individuals.

Testifying on his own behalf, defendant explained that he was driving from Kalamazoo, where he had spent the weekend with his brother, back to his home in Grand Rapids, when he stopped at the Dollar Store in Martin, near the gas station, to purchase something to repair his tire, snacks, and a two-pack of cigars. In the parking lot, he emptied the tobacco from one of the cigars and stuffed the wrapper with marijuana. He was headed back to Kalamazoo on southbound US 131 to pick up the medical marijuana that he had purchased earlier that day but accidently left at his brothers. However, he remembered that his brother would not be home and that he did not have a key to his brother’s apartment. Consequently, he exited the highway, drove over the overpass, and then onto the ramp that would take him northbound on US 131.

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People of Michigan v. Deneal Lee Smith, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-of-michigan-v-deneal-lee-smith-michctapp-2022.