People of Michigan v. Kennie Carnail Whitby

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 28, 2017
Docket334737
StatusUnpublished

This text of People of Michigan v. Kennie Carnail Whitby (People of Michigan v. Kennie Carnail Whitby) 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. Kennie Carnail Whitby, (Mich. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF MICHIGAN, UNPUBLISHED December 28, 2017 Plaintiff-Appellee,

v No. 334737 Livingston Circuit Court KENNIE CARNAIL WHITBY, LC No. 15-022864-FC

Defendant-Appellant.

Before: O’CONNELL, P.J., and BECKERING and STEPHENS, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

A jury found defendant, Kennie Carnail Whitby, guilty of one count of first-degree home invasion, MCL 750.110a(2), 13 counts of armed robbery, MCL 750.529, and one count of resisting and obstructing a police officer, MCL 750.81d(1). The trial court sentenced defendant as a fourth habitual offender, MCL 769.13, to concurrent prison terms of 25 to 75 years for the home invasion conviction, 50 to 75 years for each of the armed robbery convictions, and 5 to 15 years for the resisting and obstructing conviction. Defendant appeals his convictions by right. We affirm.

I. STATEMENT OF PERTINENT FACTS

The charges against defendant arise from the June 5, 2015 robbery of a weekly card game held in the walkout basement of Mary Pezzoni’s home. Around 1:00 a.m., three men entered the home uninvited, armed with a bat, a baton, and a gun, and took money, keys, cell phones, and wallets from the players at the card table. One of the robbers held Pezzoni’s boyfriend, and then Pezzoni, at gunpoint, demanding to know the location of “all the money.” After rifling through various items in the basement, taking $320 from a cashbox in a cabinet, and grabbing bottles of alcohol, the robbers went upstairs, exited the house through the garage, and made their getaway in a Buick belonging to Virginia Hill, defendant’s sister and mother of two of the robbers. Pezzoni called 911, and within 12 hours of the incident, law enforcement officials had four people in custody—Toursean Pressley, Tyler Ayers, Terence Ayers, and Jemantae Perkins—all of whom implicated defendant as having “put them up to it.”

Michigan State Police (MSP) Lieutenant Joseph Brodeur, at the time a sergeant, made contact with defendant at a downtown Brighton brewery, informed defendant that a parole violation warrant had been issued for his arrest, and escorted him out of the brewery to handcuff him in relative privacy. Once outside and at Brodeur’s patrol vehicle, defendant put his hands -1- behind his back as if awaiting the handcuffs, and then ran. Authorities apprehended and arrested defendant a short while later and took him to the MSP post in Brighton, where Trooper Andrew Hayes conducted a custodial interrogation. The trial court suppressed much of the interrogation when, subsequent to a Walker1 hearing, the court determined that Trooper Hayes had continued to ask defendant questions after defendant had requested a lawyer. Toward the end of the interview, defendant signed a consent form allowing troopers to retrieve electronic data from his cell phone.

At defendant’s trial, the jury heard testimony about the robbery from Pezzoni and the victimized card players. The jury also heard Pezzoni testify that defendant had come to her house a few Thursday nights to play poker, that the last time he had played the stakes had reached $20,000, and that he had recently asked if the games were still being played. Neither Pezzoni nor any of the players testified that they saw defendant on the night of the robbery. Various law enforcement officials testified to how they apprehended the Buick and arrested its driver within minutes of the robbery, and to their encounter with defendant and his car in the driveway where they apprehended the Buick. Terence Ayers testified to the roles each of the four perpetrators played in the robbery and to defendant’s part in planning and executing the scheme. MSP Detective Sergeant Scott Singleton testified that he physically searched defendant’s phone and reviewed phone records from defendant’s service provider obtained pursuant to a search warrant. Singleton said he found text messages between defendant and Toursean Pressley, one of defendant’s nephews, planning the crime, and text messages between defendant and his sister, Virginia Hill, apologizing after the crime for getting her sons— Toursean and Tyler Ayers—into trouble. The prosecution admitted the text of the messages into evidence, and provided copies of the text to the members of the jury. After closing arguments, the trial court instructed the jury on the law; both attorneys expressed satisfaction with the court’s instructions. The jury deliberated just under two hours before returning guilty verdicts on all counts.

II. ANALYSIS

A. SUPPRESSION

Defendant advances several arguments for suppressing his custodial interview and any evidence arising therefrom. He first contends that the trial court should have suppressed the entire interview on the ground that there was no memorialization of Trooper Hayes advising him of his Miranda rights. We disagree. Notably, defendant does not assert that Trooper Hayes failed to advise him of his Miranda rights or that defendant did not initially waive those rights. Rather, defendant bases his argument for suppression on lack of a videorecording of Trooper Hayes advising him of his rights or of a signed waiver indicating that defendant understood and waived those rights. This Court reviews a trial court’s ultimate decision on a motion to suppress de novo. People v Simmons, 316 Mich App 322, 325; 894 NW2d 86 (2016). We review any findings of fact made during the suppression hearing for clear error. People v Mahdi, 317 Mich App 446, 457; 894 NW2d 732 (2016). “A finding of fact is clearly erroneous if, after a review of

1 People v Walker, 374 Mich 331; 132 NW2d 87 (1965).

-2- the entire record, an appellate court is left with a definite and firm conviction that a mistake has been made.” Id.

MCL 763.8(2) requires law enforcement officials conducting a custodial interrogation of a suspect in a major felony to “make a time-stamped, audiovisual recording of the entire interrogation.” However, failure to make or preserve a recording “does not prevent any law enforcement official present during the taking of the statement from testifying in court as to the circumstances and content of the individual’s statement if the court determines that the statement is otherwise admissible.” MCL 763.9.

Trooper Hayes testified at the suppression hearing that although he thought his custodial interrogation of defendant was being recorded, he was informed that “the very first couple of minutes” of the interview were not recorded; these included Hayes’s notifying defendant of his Miranda rights. Hayes said he informed defendant of his rights using a card he had received and kept in his pocket since his days in training, and concluded the advisement by asking if defendant understood the rights and if he waived them. Hayes testified that defendant answered both questions affirmatively. Hayes read into the record the statement of Miranda rights printed on the card, and the prosecution entered the card into evidence. Defendant did not dispute Hayes’s account of the initial minutes of the custodial interview. The trial court found Hayes’s testimony concerning the initial few minutes of the interview credible. Based on the record evidence, we cannot say that the trial court clearly erred in declining to suppress the entire interview based on the lack of a videorecording of Hayes informing defendant of his Miranda rights.

Next, in his standard 4 brief, 2 defendant asserts that the trial court should have suppressed the information obtained from his cell phone because it was obtained in a coercive environment, he did not understand the process of consent and the true significance of the consent form, and troopers began to search his phone before he ever gave consent.

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Bluebook (online)
People of Michigan v. Kennie Carnail Whitby, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-of-michigan-v-kennie-carnail-whitby-michctapp-2017.