Prince v. State

85 A.3d 334, 216 Md. App. 178, 2014 WL 765115, 2014 Md. App. LEXIS 13
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedFebruary 26, 2014
Docket1129/12
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 85 A.3d 334 (Prince 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
Prince v. State, 85 A.3d 334, 216 Md. App. 178, 2014 WL 765115, 2014 Md. App. LEXIS 13 (Md. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

NAZARIAN, J.

I shot an arrow into the air,

It fell to earth, I knew not where ...

Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, The Arrow and the Song 1

In this appeal, we have not an arrow but a “trajectory rod,” which a police officer used to show the path a bullet took when the appellant, Joshua Prince, fired a rifle from above at his ex-girlfriend as she cowered behind the rear bumper of her car in a parking garage. Mr. Prince was charged with attempted murder and other charges, tried before a jury in the Circuit Court for Montgomery County, and convicted. On appeal, he challenges the circuit court’s decision to allow the State to introduce the testimony about the rifle’s firing pattern and the bullet’s trajectory through the roof and interior of her car. He also contends that the trial court improperly denied his counsel’s request for a continuance to allow him to develop expert testimony regarding his mental state. We affirm.

I. BACKGROUND

Mr. Prince moved into the Bethesda apartment complex of his then-girlfriend, Allanna Garbe on August 28, 2010. Ms. Garbe had discouraged the move; she felt their relationship should move more slowly, but he apparently saw things differently and took an apartment one floor up from hers in the same building. The transition went badly and, as we shall see, spiraled quickly from there: Mr. Prince felt “disappointed and upset” when Ms. Garbe did not help him move in, and Ms. Garbe expressed discomfort at how quickly he viewed the relationship as progressing. On the evening of September 1, 2010, she went to his apartment and, in a conversation that lasted thirty to forty minutes and that she later characterized *183 as “peaceful,” she told him that she no longer wanted to be in a relationship.

A few nights later, on September 3, 2010, Mr. Prince saw Ms. Garbe leave her apartment with a male friend. He sent her a series of text messages beginning around 10:00 p.m. asking what she was doing and telling her that he loved her. His behavior escalated from there: he showed up at Ms. Garbe’s apartment within moments after she and her friend returned to her apartment (around midnight), and when she came out to speak with him, he seemed not to understand that she had broken up with him, then remained in the hallway twenty minutes after their conversation ended. Ms. Garbe felt uncomfortable and afraid, so her friend remained in her apartment with her through the night. Mr. Prince continued to send text messages that night and through the morning, finally culminating in a 4:46 a.m. text in which he stated, “You told me you loved me and hoped we could get married one day. You brought another man in your bed tonight. How could you live with yourself?” Mr. Prince also had a conversation in the parking garage in the early morning hours with two other residents of the complex (whom he had never met), telling them in depth about the relationship and his dismay that Ms. Garbe chose to end it.

The next morning, Ms. Garbe discovered that someone had vandalized her car during the night. The doors, trunk, roof, and hood of the car were dented and both the side mirrors had been ripped off. On the recommendation of police officers who responded to her call, she obtained a no-contact order against Mr. Prince that same day. When Mr. Prince learned about the order, he asked Ms. Garbe by text to withdraw it. He said he did not believe that she had no other romantic interest, and he continued texting her throughout the evening. 2 For the remainder of Labor Day weekend, September 5 and 6, though, the two did not communicate.

*184 Sometime between 7:00 and 7:30 a.m. Tuesday morning, September 7, Ms. Garbe went to her car, which was parked on the third floor of the parking garage. She climbed in the driver’s side, but before closing the door she sensed movement, looked up, and saw Mr. Prince on a ramp between the third and fourth floors of the garage, where he “had just stooped down and had a rifle pointed at me.” 3 When asked to describe the rifle, she explained it was “[j]ust a very large gun that he had over one shoulder directly pointed at me.” (Emphasis added.) Ms. Garbe scrambled out of the car and hid behind the rear bumper. The two or three times she looked up, she “saw [Mr. Prince] with the gun just pointed directly at [her], taking full aim at [her].”

After she heard a gunshot, Ms. Garbe looked again and saw that Mr. Prince was no longer aiming at her, so she ran into the apartment building and called 911. Minutes later, she received a new series of texts from Mr. Prince:

• “I never would have hurt you honestly”;
• “I pictured my life without you and you with another man and I snapped”;
• “I know I can’t take this back”; and
• “I know I just threw away my life.”

Ms. Garbe responded (having been told by the police to do so), and encouraged Mr. Prince to turn himself in, which he did. An investigation of the fourth-floor ramp in the garage uncovered a garment bag, a live round of ammunition, and a cartridge casing. Police also searched Mr. Prince’s apartment and found an open rifle case by his bedside. Moreover, after hearing a recorded conversation between Mr. Prince (incarcerated at the time) and a friend, police interviewed the friend, *185 who produced a box of ammunition that Mr. Prince had asked him to hide and from which three rounds were missing.

The State charged Mr. Prince with attempted first-degree murder, first-degree assault, carrying a dangerous weapon with intent to injure, and failing to comply with a peace order. He underwent a mental health evaluation at Clifton T. Perkins Hospital Center by psychologist Inna Toller. In January 2011, Dr. Toller rendered a report in which she found him competent to stand trial and criminally responsible. Although she acknowledged that Mr. Prince suffered from post-traumatic stress disorder (“PTSD”) from his military experience in Iraq as a medic, Dr. Toller concluded that it played no role in his conduct: “[Tjhere is no evidence that [his PTSD] symptoms caused him to have significant impairment in every day function.” She opined, based on how Mr. Prince acted on the morning of the incident, that “the PTSD and the adjustment disorder did not cause him to lack substantial capacity either to appreciate the criminality of his conduct or to conform his conduct to the requirements of the law.”

Trial was scheduled to begin on Monday, March 26, 2012. On the afternoon of Friday, March 23, 2012, Mr. Prince moved for a continuance. He argued that he had obtained a preliminary report from a psychologist, Rona Fields, Ph.D. (the “Fields Report”), in which, he said, she opined that Mr. Prince “most likely suffered” from PTSD at the time of the incident (emphasis added). 4 According to the motion, Mr. Prince had only recently been able to gather funds for Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
85 A.3d 334, 216 Md. App. 178, 2014 WL 765115, 2014 Md. App. LEXIS 13, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/prince-v-state-mdctspecapp-2014.