State of Delaware v. Madison.
This text of State of Delaware v. Madison. (State of Delaware v. Madison.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE
IN AND FOR NEW CASTLE COUNTY
STATE OF DELAWARE, ) ) v. ) ID#: 1312014951 ) JEROME MADISON, ) Defendant. )
ORDER
Upon Defendant’s Motion to Suppress -- DENIED; Upon Defendant’s Motion for Full Psychological Evaluation – DENIED; Upon Defendant’s Motion to Reduce Bail – DENIED; Upon Defendant’s Counsel’s Motion to Withdraw – DENIED.
1. On the morning set for trial, June 24, 2014, Defendant filed the
above-named motions. As a result, the trial in this major sex-case was continued over
the State’s objection, at literally the last minute. As discussed below, the motions are
all out of order because they violate a “firm” motion deadline imposed by the court.
The court also sees that they are borderline frivolous. As recited next, the history
leading-up to these last-minute motions brings their untimely, disruptive nature into
sharp relief.
2. On December 24, 2013, over six months ago, Defendant was
arrested for rape, home invasion, kidnaping, possession of a firearm during a felony, and related, less-serious charges involving a female and a male complaining witness.
At the time, admittedly after receiving and acknowledging Miranda warnings,
Defendant made a 50-minute, recorded, incriminating statement.
3. Defendant appeared for a preliminary hearing on January 10,
2014. He was indicted January 21, 2014 and he appeared for arraignment with court-
appointed counsel on February 18, 2014. Consistent with the scheduling order issued
February 27, 2014, Defendant appeared with privately retained counsel at case
reviews on March 24 and June 16, 2014. Thus, it seems the final case review on June
16, 2014 was at least Defendant’s fourth court appearance with two, separate lawyers.
4. In the almost six months leading to the final case review, neither
defense lawyer moved to suppress Defendant’s statement nor suggested that they had
reason to file notice of a mental illness defense. Not until the final case review did
counsel mention a retrospective competency determination. Further, Defendant, who
is 35, has been neither treated for nor diagnosed with mental illness.
5. On June 18, 2014, after counsel mentioned mental illness and
suppression at the June 16, 2014 final case review, the court issued another
scheduling order. The order gave defense counsel a “firm motion deadline ending on
June 23, 2014,” the day before trial. Instead of obeying the order, counsel filed a
continuance request on June 23, 2014. Only after business hours were the motion
-2- papers left with the Prothonotary when, as a practical matter, it was too late to docket
them and refer the paperwork to the assigned judge, the undersigned. Accordingly,
the papers were docketed the next morning, mere hours before the trial’s scheduled
start and too late for even cursory review.
6. Even if the court had not issued an order, what makes Defendant
believe it is appropriate to file a flurry of motions and a continuance request on the
morning of trial? How can the court administer justice in an “I can do as I please”
environment?
7. Instead of first filing a continuance motion to his liking and then
filing the above-named motions as the court insisted, counsel filed the motions out
of order, placing Defendant’s interest in a continuance over the court’s interest in
addressing the motions in an orderly way. “Firm” means firm. Defendant’s motions
were filed too late, so they are DENIED.
8. As a courtesy and for completeness, the court mentions that it is
not oblivious to the motions. The court observes that generally counsel is presumed
effective. Consistent with that presumption, the court takes notice that defense
counsel is among the most experienced and effective criminal defense lawyers. By
the same token, the court presumes counsel did not wait to file the motions to stymie
the court. Again, that is not how this defense attorney practices. Yet, counsel has
-3- offered nothing, much less an admission that he is to blame for not seeing sooner that
Defendant had a potentially meritorious suppression motion and a retrospective
mental examination was appropriate. If counsel stood behind the motions, he would
have explained why he took so long to file them. As suggested above and discussed
below, these motions seem merely intended to appease Defendant, not to vindicate
his rights.
9. Specifically, as to suppression, the motion rests entirely on
Defendant’s last-minute claim that in December he incriminated himself because he
had “overdosed” on prescribed narcotics. Besides his self-serving, conclusory
statement made at an unspecified time to his counsel, and his “highly emotional and
volatile” demeanor during the entire interrogation, Defendant’s only support is an
April 21, 2014 letter from his pain management doctor confirming that the doctor
prescribed Oxycontin and Percocet for Defendant on December 16, 2013, eight days
before the incident and Defendant’s interrogation, and mentioning that Defendant
“can also have impaired judgment while on these narcotic medications.” That’s it.
10. Despite having had the doctor’s letter since April, counsel has not
submitted an expert opinion or anything along the line that Defendant’s behavior at
the time of the incident and during the recorded interrogation appears consistent with
Defendant’s new claims. At trial, Defendant may present evidence that his statement
-4- is untrustworthy. Meanwhile, it seems far-fetched that he was so intoxicated he did
not understand the Miranda warning, nor did he know what he was doing when he
chose to speak with the police.
11. As for a full mental evaluation, the support for that boils down to
Defendant’s voluntary substance abuse and his cri de coeur upon reviewing his police
statement, “That’s not me. If it is, I was out of my mind.” But, Defendant is 35. He
has never been under a psychiatrist or psychologist’s care. And, neither of his
counsel has reported seeing any behavior justifying a full examination.
12. As to reducing bail, Defendant offers no new reason for that. To
the contrary, Defendant is now claiming that he has a substance abuse problem and
maybe even an unspecified and heretofore undiagnosed major mental illness. At this
point, the court is focused on getting this case resolved as soon as possible.
Defendant’s bail motion is another distraction.
13. Finally, as to withdrawal, the court appreciates that defense
counsel has not been paid recently, and Defendant has become obstreperous and he
may intend to testify untruthfully. As mentioned, however, counsel is among the
most skilled and experienced. Difficult and dishonest clients are nothing new to
seasoned defense attorneys.
-5- 14. The court will hold a hearing for the airing of grievances. But,
there is no reason to think a third lawyer will fare better than the first two, and
appointing one would just be a misuse of limited resources and mean further delay.
Moreover, because Defendant is in custody, which makes trial preparation
problematic, and considering the charges’ nature, which makes witness examination
delicate, it is hard to believe Defendant would be so foolhardy as to ask to represent
himself. Besides, if he has major mental illness as he now insists, how could he assert
his right to self-representation?
Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI
Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
State of Delaware v. Madison., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-delaware-v-madison-delsuperct-2014.