Ridgeway v. State

779 A.2d 1031, 140 Md. App. 49, 2001 Md. App. LEXIS 137
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedSeptember 4, 2001
DocketNo. 761
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 779 A.2d 1031 (Ridgeway 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
Ridgeway v. State, 779 A.2d 1031, 140 Md. App. 49, 2001 Md. App. LEXIS 137 (Md. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

KRAUSER, Judge.

Early one morning, three shotgun blasts ripped through a trailer home, wounding two sleeping adults and terrifying three children. Appellant, Darrin Bernard Ridgeway, was accused of firing those shots. He was subsequently charged with, among other things, five counts of first degree assault. Following a jury trial in the Circuit Court for Howard County, appellant was convicted of two counts of first degree assault, three counts of reckless endangerment, and one count of malicious destruction of property.

Although appellant was convicted of only two of the five assault charges, he was mistakenly sentenced by the trial court to a term of ten years’ imprisonment on four of the five assault counts and a term of five years’ imprisonment on the fifth assault count. He received no sentence, however, for any of his three convictions for reckless endangerment; apparently, the trial court erroneously assumed that they merged into the three counts of assault for which he was sentenced but not convicted. Because the court ordered that the sentences on all five counts ,of first degree assault were to run consecutively, appellant received a total sentence of forty-five years’ imprisonment. His sentence for malicious destruction of property was suspended.

When the sentencing error was discovered a few hours after sentencing, the case was recalled, and the trial court, in the presence of appellant and his attorney, vacated appellant’s sentences on three of the five counts of first degree assault and sentenced appellant to a term of five years’ imprisonment for each of his three reckless endangerment convictions. As before, the trial court ordered that all sentences were to run consecutively. Appellant’s total sentence was thus reduced to thirty years’ imprisonment, fifteen years less than his initial sentence.

On appeal, appellant presents two questions, which we have rephrased to more accurately reflect the two issues before us:

I. Did the trial court err in recalling appellant’s case several hours after sentencing had ended and imposing [55]*55a sentence for each of his reckless endangerment convictions?
I. Did the trial court err in allowing a prosecution witness to testify that appellant had told him that, hours before the trailer shooting, he had fired his shotgun through the door of an apartment, where he believed his assailants were staying?

Finding that the trial court did not err in belatedly sentencing appellant for his three reckless endangerment convictions or in admitting evidence of the earlier apartment shooting by appellant, we shall affirm the judgments of the trial court.

BACKGROUND

On July 22, 1998, at 4 a.m., appellant fired a twelve-gauge shotgun three times into a trailer home, wounding two of the trailer’s five occupants, Morgan Kinney and Beth Ann Hanning, as they lay asleep in the master bedroom. Kinney received multiple wounds to his legs, and Hanning received a single leg wound. The three other occupants of the trailer home were Kinney’s eleven-year-old daughter, Erica, and her two friends, ten-year-old Danielle Tyler-Thornberg and eleven-year-old Erica Tyler-Thornberg. Fortunately, they were not physically harmed by the shotgun blasts because they were in a bedroom at the other end of the trailer home. When the shooting was over, all three were found huddled in one of the trailer’s closets.

The shooting was the result of events that were set in motion three weeks earlier when appellant was allegedly kidnapped by three men who believed that he had stolen $7000 worth of cocaine from them. According to the statement appellant gave Officer Susan Ensko of the Howard County Police Department, the three men took him at gun point to an apartment, where they tied him up and threatened to put him in a car and set it ablaze. Appellant believed that the men were drug dealers and that a man named “Morgan,” presumably the Morgan Kinney of this case, had lent his car to them [56]*56and allowed two of the three men to use his trailer for drug dealing.

Appellant subsequently purchased a twelve-gauge shotgun and told two friends of his, Mark Bell and Cathy Sowers, that he was going to kill the men who had kidnapped and threatened him. On the morning of July 22, 1998, he went to an apartment, which he believed the three men used, and fired a shotgun through the front door. He then went to Kinney’s trailer, stood at one end of it, and fired three times directly into the trailer.

Later, appellant met with his two friends, Bell and Sowers, and told them about both shootings.

DISCUSSION

I

Appellant contends that the trial judge, by imposing sentences for his reckless endangerment convictions after failing to do so at the initial sentencing, violated the prohibition in Maryland Rule 4-345(b) against increasing the sentence of a defendant after he or she has been sentenced and left the courtroom. That rule provides:

The court has revisory power and control over a sentence upon a motion filed within 90 days after its imposition (1) in the District Court, if an appeal has not been perfected, and (2) in a circuit court, whether or not an appeal has been filed. Thereafter, the court has revisory power and control over the sentence in case of fraud, mistake, or irregularity, or as provided in section (d) of this Rule. The court may not increase a sentence after the sentence has been imposed, except that it may correct an evident mistake in the announcement of a sentence if the correction is made on the record before the defendant leaves the courtroom following the sentencing proceeding (emphasis added).

The circumstances of appellant’s initial and subsequent sentencing were as follows. On April 20, 2000, the trial court [57]*57held a sentencing hearing. After hearing from both sides, the trial court stated:

Well, this was a particularly appalling, disgusting, repugnant and repulsive crime, because it involved at least four total strangers and four totally innocent persons. I mean, to lurk around in the middle of the night and pump shotgun shots into a trailer without knowing who’s in there, without caring who is in there, is awfully low. And it is correct that Mr. Ridgeway has a significant prior record. And according to the psychological evaluation, Patuxent has a feeble, although publicly recognized, purpose and that is rehabilitation. And of course that has a fault major premise (sic). The premise is that there’s something to salvage. And in Mr. Ridgeway’s case, that’s not correct.

The court then imposed sentence as follows:

All right, sentence is as follows: As to count one, Mr. Kinney — I’m satisfied that Mr. Kinney was in the drug business. He associated with drug people and, uh, that’s how Mr. Ridgeway knew him and knew about this trailer. But even Mr. Kinney, even Mr. Kinney is entitled to be protected from being shot down in the middle of the night. So as to count one, the sentence is five years in the Department of Correction. Now we get to all the innocent people. Count five, as to Beth Ann Hanning, the sentence is ten years, that sentence to run consecutive to the count one. As to nine, as to count nine, that’s as to little Erica Kirkbirde, the sentence is ten years in the Department of Correction, that sentence to run consecutive to count five.

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Bluebook (online)
779 A.2d 1031, 140 Md. App. 49, 2001 Md. App. LEXIS 137, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ridgeway-v-state-mdctspecapp-2001.