Roebuck v. State

813 A.2d 342, 148 Md. App. 563, 2002 Md. App. LEXIS 216
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedDecember 23, 2002
Docket01799, Sept. Term, 2001
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 813 A.2d 342 (Roebuck 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
Roebuck v. State, 813 A.2d 342, 148 Md. App. 563, 2002 Md. App. LEXIS 216 (Md. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

HOLLANDER, Judge.

This case has its roots in the brutal murder of fourteen-year-old Jacoby (“Coaster”) Fagan. A jury sitting in the Circuit Court for Harford County convicted Akil Jabari Roebuck, appellant, of the first degree murder of Fagan, as well as the use of a handgun in the commission of a felony or crime of violence. Upon conviction, the court sentenced appellant to life imprisonment as to the murder charge, and imposed a consecutive five-year sentence for the handgun offense.

*568 On appeal, we have been asked to decide whether the circuit court erred in barring appellant from introducing into evidence a statement made by appellant’s cousin, Rolston James, Jr., a co-defendant who was tried separately for Fagan’s murder. Appellant claimed that James’s statement, which was incriminating as to James and arguably exculpatory as to appellant, constituted a declaration against penal interest. Although the State had already relied on James’s statement at James’s murder trial, it objected to appellant’s use of the statement. Finding the statement unreliable, the trial court sustained the State’s objection.

Roebuck presents three questions to the Court, which we have reordered and reworded:

I. Under Maryland Rule 5-804(b)(3), did the trial court err in barring defense counsel from introducing a declaration against penal interest that was made by an unavailable co-defendant, which was exculpatory as to appellant?
II. Did the trial court err in admitting into evidence enlarged color autopsy photographs depicting the victim’s injuries?
III. Notwithstanding appellant’s consent and waiver of any conflict, did the trial court err in allowing an attorney to represent appellant when that same lawyer previously represented an alleged accomplice in the murder, who testified for the State in exchange for a nol pros of the charges against him.

For the reasons that follow, we answer-“yes” to Question I. Therefore, we shall vacate the judgment of conviction and remand for further proceedings. For the benefit of the parties and the court on remand, we shall also address Question II. Despite the interesting issue raised by appellant in Question III, we decline to address it, because it surely will not resurface on remand.

FACTUAL SUMMARY

Fagan was savagely murdered on January 27, 2000. Early that morning, a group of young men spotted Fagan on Magno *569 lia Road in Harford County, with blood in the snow around him. The vietim was transported to Shock Trauma, where he died from massive injuries that included thirty-one stab wounds, eighteen cutting wounds, and three gunshot wounds to the head.

John Miller, Jr., Rolston James, Jr. (“Bible”), and appellant were charged with Fagan’s murder. All three were friends, and James and appellant are also cousins. At the time of the murder, appellant was nineteen years old. In exchange for Miller’s cooperation, the State subsequently nol prossed the charges against him. James was tried separately; by the time of appellant’s trial, he had been convicted of Fagan’s murder.

Following appellant’s arrest on February 7, 2000, Roebuck gave a recorded statement to Sergeant Jason Merson of the Maryland State Police. In the statement, Roebuck said that he entered the woods with James and the victim, while Miller remained behind in the car. According to Roebuck, James cut Fagan’s throat and stabbed him repeatedly. Although Roebuck admitted that he handed the gun to James at James’s request, appellant claimed that James was the one who shot the victim. 1

On February 8, 2000, Sergeant Merson also took a custodial statement from James. According to James, on the night of Fagan’s murder, appellant, Fagan, and Miller were all at his house when “sparks startled]” between Fagan and James. Fagan got up and sat by his coat, which “concerned” James because James knew that Fagan had a gun in his coat. James recounted: “I went over in his face and got close and [said] do not sit beside your coat in my house disrespecting me like that when I know what you got in your coat.” James claimed that he (i.e., James) was “high and drunk” at the time. To clear his mind, James suggested that the four “go out” to “have fun,” and so the group left to see some girls. James recalled *570 that, at some point, he “just snapped, just snapped and got real tired of it.”

According to James, he told Miller to stop the car near a wooded area. Then, James and the victim exited the vehicle. James also stated: “I was there, I could see myself doing it but I was begging myself to stop. I was begging literally begging myself to stop.”

The following colloquy during James’s interrogation is also relevant:

[MERSON]: Okay and then what happened[?]
[JAMES]: The only thing I can tell you is I remember Akil [Roebuck] tapping me on my shoulder and hitting me and beating me and telling me to stop.
[MERSON]: Akil, Akil was?
[JAMES]: Begging me to stop.
[MERSON]: Did you have a knife?
[JAMES]: Uh, huh.
[MERSON]: Was it your knife?
[JAMES]: Uh, huh.
[MERSON]: Okay. Alright, um, so the next thing you remember is AMI tapping you on the shoulder and trying to get you to stop?
[JAMES]: Actually he wasn’t tapping me. He was physically telling me to stop.
[MERSON]: Okay were you stabbing Coaster at that time? [JAMES]: I can’t really tell you.
[MERSON]: Who had a gun?.... Did you take the gun away from Coaster?
[JAMES]: Uh, huh.
[MERSON]: ... [U]m, but you don’t know if you kept the gun or [appellant] had the gun?
[JAMES]: All I can really tell you I wish I could tell you more but all I can tell you is that I wasn’t there ... *571 mentally.... To me it’s, to me it don’t really happen[.][I]t’s still like a blur.
[MERSON]: Did Akil stab Coaster? Are you saying you don’t know?
[JAMES]: Like I told you, I, I really can’t tell you from the point where he was....
[MERSON]: Okay do you remember having the gun? Do you remember shooting Coaster? Either you did it, Akiel [sic] did it, or John [Miller] did it?
[JAMES]: [Inaudible] don’t know what happened.
[JAMES]: I know what I did. Like I told you I could have seen myself but it was just like me begging myself to stop and just by me just blocking out and just saying please stop.

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Bluebook (online)
813 A.2d 342, 148 Md. App. 563, 2002 Md. App. LEXIS 216, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roebuck-v-state-mdctspecapp-2002.