People of Michigan v. Marlon Scarber

CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 19, 2008
Docket135692
StatusPublished

This text of People of Michigan v. Marlon Scarber (People of Michigan v. Marlon Scarber) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court 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. Marlon Scarber, (Mich. 2008).

Opinion

Michigan Supreme Court Lansing, Michigan Chief Justice: Justices:

Opinion Clifford W. Taylor Michael F. Cavanagh Elizabeth A. Weaver Marilyn Kelly Maura D. Corrigan Robert P. Young, Jr. Stephen J. Markman

FILED DECEMBER 19, 2008

PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF MICHIGAN,

Plaintiff-Appellee,

v No. 135666

ERIC TAYLOR,

Defendant-Appellant.

v No. 135683

ROBERT LEE KING,

v No. 135692

MARLON SCARBER,

Defendant-Appellant. BEFORE THE ENTIRE BENCH

PER CURIAM.

In this case, two juries convicted three defendants of multiple crimes

related to the kidnapping and murder of Fate Washington. Defendant Robert L.

King argues that the inculpatory statements of codefendant Marlon Scarber,

admitted through the testimony of an acquaintance, violated the rules of evidence

and King’s right of confrontation under People v Poole, 444 Mich 151; 506 NW2d

505 (1993). In lieu of granting leave to appeal, we hold that, insofar as Poole held

that the admissibility of a codefendant’s nontestimonial hearsay statement is

governed by both MRE 804(b)(3) and the Confrontation Clause of the United

States Constitution, it is no longer good law. We nevertheless affirm the decision

of the Court of Appeals because we conclude that the Court sufficiently addressed

the issue of the statements’ admissibility under MRE 804(b)(3). We deny

defendants’ applications for leave to appeal in all other respects.

I. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

The Court of Appeals summarized the facts of this case as follows:

The victim, Fate Washington, was sitting in the driver’s-side seat of his Ford Expedition on the street outside his house. He had just finished speaking with a neighbor when defendant Scarber and an unidentified man, both clad in black, approached the vehicle and forced Washington, at gunpoint, further into the vehicle. Both the neighbor and Washington’s adult son, who was near a window inside the house, witnessed the scene. Washington scuffled with the men long enough that the neighbor was able to run home, retrieve a handgun, and open fire on the vehicle from his front porch. The eyewitnesses verified that Scarber climbed into the driver’s seat while a second vehicle[,] driven by defendant King, rolled up and

opened fire on the neighbor with an automatic rifle. Other witnesses confirmed that the tandem of vehicles sped off through the streets after the shots were fired. Soon afterward, defendant King forced Washington to make a series of calls demanding ransom in return for his life.

A former friend of Scarber’s and associate of [Taylor and King], Troy Ervin, provided a detailed account of events after Washington was taken captive. The group took Washington to a house owned by Ervin’s sister, and defendant King persuaded Ervin to trade cars with him for a while. When Ervin visited the house, he was initially denied access into the home. Scarber later called him and told him that he and the other defendants had kidnapped Washington and held him at the house. Scarber explained that Taylor had helped and that King had shot at the man’s defenders. Scarber also admitted that he almost blew himself up burning the man’s vehicle. This information was confirmed at trial by a witness who heard a large explosion that night and saw a vehicle, later identified as Washington’s Expedition, on fire outside her home. Ervin visited the house again and found Washington lying on the floor of a back room wearing nothing but a sheet. Taylor guarded the man with an automatic rifle like the one described by witnesses to Washington’s capture, and King was armed with a handgun like the one Scarber had used. While Ervin was there, he heard Taylor deny Washington’s request to use the phone again to make more ransom calls.

Ervin left, but returned again later after Scarber called and told him that King had shot Washington in the legs and he had bled to death. Ervin was agitated at finding that Washington was killed in his sister’s house, because it associated him with the murder. He saw the dead body in the back room, and then he went to the hardware store for King and purchased tools for burying the body. After he dropped off the tools, he was again called and informed that the group had buried the body in the back yard of the property. Ervin was again agitated at the use of his sister’s property, but Taylor assured him that the burial site was inconspicuously concealed by the doghouse and the body was secure under a layer of concrete. Searchers later found the body buried as Ervin described it. The body was found with two gunshot wounds, one through each leg.

Upon hearing that Ervin, who was not charged with a crime, had made a statement to police about Washington’s murder, defendant Scarber also decided to make a statement. Except for Scarber’s self-serving insistence that he participated in the crimes under duress and tried to care for Washington by bandaging his first gunshot wound and bringing him water, Scarber’s statement to police was remarkably consistent with Ervin’s. Scarber’s statement confirmed the details of a successful ransom recovery that involved a peculiar delivery method, a particular mailbox, and a relatively small amount of money and drugs. Scarber’s statement described defendant King as Washington’s killer, and explained that, before he shot Washington a second time, King expressed a frustrated lack of concern with Washington’s life and an unabashed willingness to kill him. Because the prosecutor wanted to place defendant Scarber’s statement into evidence, Scarber received a separate jury for the purpose, isolating defendant King’s and defendant Taylor’s jury from Scarber’s blame-shifting account of Washington’s captivity. [People v Taylor, unpublished opinion per curiam of the Court of Appeals, issued November 29, 2007 (Docket Nos. 273443, 273543, and 273955), at 2-3.]

A jury convicted King and Taylor of second-degree murder,1 MCL

750.317; first-degree felony murder, MCL 750.316(1)(b); kidnapping, MCL

750.349; and possession of a firearm during the commission of a felony, MCL

750.227b. It also convicted King of armed robbery, MCL 750.529, but acquitted

Taylor of armed robbery. The trial court sentenced King to life imprisonment for

the first-degree felony murder conviction, 25 to 80 years for the second-degree

murder, armed robbery, and kidnapping convictions, and two years for the felony-

firearm conviction. It sentenced Taylor to life imprisonment for the first-degree

1 Both were charged with first-degree premeditated murder, but the jury convicted them of the lesser offense of second-degree murder.

murder conviction, 25 to 80 years for the kidnapping conviction, and two years for

the felony-firearm conviction.2

A separate jury convicted defendant Scarber of first-degree premeditated

murder, MCL 750.316(1)(a); felony murder; armed robbery; kidnapping; felony-

firearm; and felon in possession of a firearm, MCL 750.224f. The trial court

sentenced him to life imprisonment for the premeditated murder conviction, 38 to

80 years for the armed robbery and kidnapping convictions, and two years for the

felony-firearm conviction.3

After consolidating defendants’ appeals, the Court of Appeals affirmed

Scarber’s convictions and sentences, but set aside King’s second-degree murder

and kidnapping convictions and Taylor’s kidnapping conviction on double

jeopardy grounds.4 All three defendants sought leave to appeal in this Court.

2 The trial court vacated Taylor’s second-degree murder conviction on double jeopardy grounds.

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People of Michigan v. Marlon Scarber, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-of-michigan-v-marlon-scarber-mich-2008.