Stanley Germiah Oliver v. Commonwealth of Virginia

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedMarch 13, 2012
Docket0166113
StatusUnpublished

This text of Stanley Germiah Oliver v. Commonwealth of Virginia (Stanley Germiah Oliver v. Commonwealth of Virginia) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stanley Germiah Oliver v. Commonwealth of Virginia, (Va. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA

Present: Judges Frank, McCullough and Senior Judge Willis Argued at Richmond, Virginia

STANLEY GERMIAH OLIVER MEMORANDUM OPINION * BY v. Record No. 0166-11-3 JUDGE ROBERT P. FRANK MARCH 13, 2012 COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF PITTSYLVANIA COUNTY Charles J. Strauss, Judge

J. Patterson Rogers, 3rd, for appellant.

Donald E. Jeffrey, III, Senior Assistant Attorney General (Kenneth T. Cuccinelli, II, Attorney General, on brief), for appellee.

Stanley Germiah Oliver, appellant, was convicted, in a jury trial, of two counts of

robbery, in violation of Code § 18.2-58, one count of armed burglary, in violation of Code

§ 18.2-89, one count of animate object sexual penetration, in violation of Code § 18.2-67.2, and

two counts of use of a firearm in the commission of a felony, in violation of Code § 18.2-53.1.

On appeal, he contends the evidence was insufficient to prove the robbery of S.S. and the use of

a firearm in connection with that robbery. He also argues the evidence was insufficient to prove

he was one of the perpetrators of the felonies. For the reasons stated, we affirm.

BACKGROUND

During the nighttime, appellant and two others forced entry into a single-wide trailer in

which D.C. and her twelve-year-old daughter, S.S., resided. S.S. testified she awoke at night

* Pursuant to Code § 17.1-413, this opinion is not designated for publication. with a gun in her face. Two men told her to walk down the hall to her mother’s room. 1 S.S.

testified a third individual was also in the trailer. A living room is situated between the two

bedrooms.

The intruders made S.S. lie down next to her mother. They asked D.C. “where’s the

money and where’s the drugs and all that stuff.” At trial, S.S. could not identify any of the

intruders because they were wearing black masks, although she testified one of the three wore

gray and blue checkerboard shoes. She indicated the one with the gun was “giving all the

orders.” The gunman, later identified as co-defendant Chadwich Price, stayed in the bedroom

with D.C. and S.S. the entire time while the other two were taking property from within the

residence. The intruders took S.S.’s cell phone, iPod, and camera, all from inside her

pocketbook located in the living room. 2

D.C. testified she went to bed around 10:30 p.m. Early in the morning, she awoke to the

aggressive barking of her dog. She saw someone standing in the hallway with a flashlight. That

person ran toward D.C., pointed a “silverish gray” automatic gun in her face and ordered her out

of bed and onto the floor. D.C. struggled with Price. One intruder brought S.S. into the room

and ordered her to lie on the floor. Price had his gun pointed at D.C.’s head, yelling for her to

shut up or he would kill her and her daughter. The two intruders kept asking D.C. where the pills

and money were. They were telling a third person to put the “stuff” in the trunk.

Appellant asked where the key to the safe was located. D.C. said it was taped to the side

of the safe. Appellant then opened and rifled through the safe.

1 S.S.’s bedroom is on one end of the trailer; D.C.’s bedroom is on the other end, with the living room in between. 2 While D.C. testified that the purse was stolen from S.S.’s bedroom, S.S. testified that it was taken from the living room. This evidentiary inconsistency bears no relevance to our analysis. -2- The gunman, Price, removed D.C.’s pants and underwear and penetrated her vagina with

his fingers, wearing latex gloves. As D.C. remained face down, appellant digitally penetrated

her vagina. S.S. remained in the room throughout the assault. After removing the stolen items

from the trailer, the three men left. D.C. then notified the sheriff’s department.

At trial, D.C. identified Price as one of the intruders. She identified appellant as the

perpetrator who wore eyeglasses. 3 She indicated the gunman wore “bluish gray checkered print

Timberland boots” and blue jeans. She said appellant wore “white sneakers,” black jogging

pants with a little white symbol, which looked like “a puma symbol.” In court D.C. identified

the Timberland boots and indicated the white sneakers and jogging pants introduced into

evidence looked like the clothes one of the perpetrators wore.

D.C. testified that a number of items were stolen from her residence: lottery tickets, a

carton of cigarettes removed from her automobile, pepper spray, a desktop computer, a cell

phone, prescription medicine, several digital cameras, a Wii video game, a small vacuum

cleaner, and cash.

The police contacted the cell phone provider to locate the stolen cell phones. After

receiving certain information, Investigator Robert Worsham and other officers went to 961

Locust Drive at approximately 7:00 a.m., which was located approximately five minutes from

the scene. While en route, Worsham located “two separate white gloves, rubber and latex” on

the side of the road. Upon arriving at the Locust Drive address, Worsham found more latex

gloves in the driveway.

A female occupant allowed Worsham into the residence. Upon entering, he noticed a bag

containing white gloves similar to those found on the side of the road.

3 Appellant wore eyeglasses at trial. -3- His investigation led to an adjacent house, the Oliver residence at 1035 Locust Drive.

Officers observed a red car drive towards that house. Worsham ordered the occupants, appellant

and Price, to stop, but they ran inside the trailer. After a period of time, appellant exited the

trailer, and a few minutes later, Price followed. Appellant was wearing white shoes and black

sweat pants with a symbol on the leg. Price was wearing checkered-style Timberland boots. At

trial, D.C. identified the Timberland boots as the ones worn by Price. At trial, Lieutenant C.M.

Webb testified that D.C.’s description of appellant’s clothing was an “exact match.” 4

Pursuant to a consensual search, police found a portion of an audio cord inside the Oliver

house and another piece of an audio cord in the yard. The piece of an audio cord in D.C.’s trailer

was “physically fitted together and were at one time a single unit.” The search of a bedroom also

revealed a partially full bottle of Real Sangria, which D.C. identified as the bottle of wine that

had been in her refrigerator. Officers also recovered a weed eater, a vacuum cleaner, a Wii

fitness board, more latex gloves, and a partial carton of Marlboro Lights with the same lot

number as the cigarettes found in Price’s pocket. A package of Marlboros recovered from D.C.’s

car matched the same lot number. D.C. identified the vacuum cleaner and Wii board as

appearing similar to her property.

An expert in DNA analysis testified that both of the gloves found inside appellant’s

bedroom contained a mixture of D.C.’s DNA and appellant’s. The second glove contained a

mixture of D.C.’s DNA and that of Price.

At trial, D.C. testified the following items police recovered from the appellant’s bedroom

as being her property (or at least appearing similar to property stolen from her trailer):

4 While D.C. described the logo as “Puma,” Lieutenant Webb testified the logo was “Air Jordan,” but indicated the two logos “look similar.”

-4- (1) pepper spray, (2) a camera, (3) a desktop computer, (4) the audio cord described above, and

(5) the purple cell phone cover belonging to S.S.

ANALYSIS

I.

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