State v. Briggs

756 A.2d 731, 2000 R.I. LEXIS 170, 2000 WL 995187
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJuly 17, 2000
Docket99-145-C.A.
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 756 A.2d 731 (State v. Briggs) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Briggs, 756 A.2d 731, 2000 R.I. LEXIS 170, 2000 WL 995187 (R.I. 2000).

Opinion

OPINION

BOURCIER, Justice.

Chester R. Briggs stands indicted for the February 19, 1997, murder of Patricia Jacques. Following a pretrial hearing, a Superior Court trial justice granted Briggs’s motion to suppress statements made by Briggs when questioned by members of the Rhode Island State Police at the New Hampshire State Police Headquarters, and to suppress introduction at trial of evidence found in a trash bag seized from a dumpster on property Briggs owned in New Hampshire. The state appeals.

The defendant Briggs appeals from the denial of his motion to suppress certain other statements he made prior to being questioned at the New Hampshire State Police Headquarters, and additionally contends that the trial justice erred in applying Rhode Island law when passing upon the various motions.

*733 Facts and Procedural History

On Wednesday, February 19, 1997, at 11:52 p.m., Tiverton rescue personnel were called to the scene of a shooting at 149 Nanaquacket Road in Tiverton, Rhode Island. There, Patricia Jacques (Mrs. Jacques), was discovered lying fatally shot near the property’s adjacent stables. During a search of the crime scene, a handwritten note addressed to “Chester” was found. The note contained the defendant’s fax number and requested an explanation concerning the return of money belonging to the victim. The ensuing homicide investigation revealed that Mrs. Jacques previously had entrusted approximately $80,000 to the defendant for safekeeping. The investigation further revealed that the defendant visited Mrs. Jacques’s residence on the night before the murder and left a note indicating that he probably would return the next day. In addition, two witnesses saw a pickup truck similar to one owned by the defendant leave the general crime-scene area shortly after they heard gunshot sounds.

Two days later, on February 21, 1997, members of the Rhode Island State Police and the Tiverton Police decided to visit and speak with the defendant at his residence at 111 Kaime Road in Chichester, New Hampshire. Upon arriving in New Hampshire, the Rhode Island police were joined by a member of the New Hampshire State Police, and they went to the defendant’s residence. Once there, they encountered Robert Courtemanche (Cour-temanche), a neighbor and tenant of the defendant, who lived at 109 Kaime Road. Courtemanche told the police that Briggs was not home.

Shortly thereafter, the police, while waiting for Briggs to return, observed Courtemanche drive away in the defendant’s pickup truck. They followed him for approximately fifteen miles to a multid-welling tenement house, also owned by the defendant, in Pittsfield, New Hampshire. 1 There they observed Courtemanche remove a white trash bag from the back of the defendant’s pickup truck and throw it into a dumpster located in the property’s parking lot. After Courtemanche left, the police immediately seized the bag and then followed Courtemanche back to Chiches-ter. 2

Soon afterward, at approximately 7 p.m., the defendant arrived home accompanied by a friend, Norman Cease (Cease). Detective Corporal Elwood Johnson, Jr., 3 (Detective Johnson), Detective Nicholas Telia (Detective Telia) of the Rhode Island State Police and a member of the New Hampshire State Police greeted the defendant and offered him their condolences on the loss of his friend, Mrs. Jacques. After the detectives told him that they were conducting a homicide investigation and that they wanted to ask him some questions, the defendant invited the detectives into his home.

Inside his home, the defendant told the police that on February 18, 1997, he had been to the Jacques’s home to give Mrs. Jacques $5,000. He revealed that she had called him the next day (the morning of her murder), and he volunteered to show the police his telephone caller ID box. He informed them that he kept a gun in the house and allowed the police to inspect it. Approximately fifteen minutes later, the detectives asked the defendant to accompany them to the New Hampshire State Police Headquarters (police station) for questioning. The defendant readily agreed. The defendant and the police then left the defendant’s home in three *734 separate vehicles. The New Hampshire state trooper drove alone to the police station. Cease and the defendant drove in Cease’s vehicle, and the Rhode Island detectives, in a third car, followed Cease and the defendant.

At the police station, they were met by Corporal Russell Conte (Corporal Conte) from the New Hampshire State Police. The defendant was brought into a small room, and Cease remained in the hallway. Before the questioning began, the defendant was informed that he was a suspect in the Jacques homicide investigation and was read his Miranda rights. 4 He read aloud the Miranda rights police form, and then initialed and signed the form indicating that he understood all his Miranda rights. He additionally signed two written police consent forms in which he consented to the search of both his residence and his pickup truck. Subsequently, the defendant was questioned for approximately twelve to thirteen hours, six and three-quarter hours of which were tape-recorded.

During the course of the questioning, the defendant casually and readily explained his relationship with the victim and her two children, Ronald and Robin Seav-ey. Apparently, he .met Mrs. Jacques some sixteen or seventeen years earlier, when her son Ronald was placed with him in foster care after becoming a ward of the State of New Hampshire. He explained that Mrs. Jacques and her husband previously had suffered financial difficulties and had given him approximately $100,000 of their assets to conceal from their creditors and from the Internal Revenue Service. Once their financial difficulties had been cleared, the defendant said he began returning their money to them at various intervals. He stated that he had returned the final installment of $5,000 in cash on the night before the murder by leaving it, and a note, in an envelope under the front seat of Mrs. Jacques’s car. He claimed that Mrs. Jacques called him on the following day to thank him. The defendant stated that he first learned that she had been murdered when Ronald called him at approximately 10:30 p.m., on Thursday, February 20, 1997, the day after the murder.

During the course of the questioning by Detectives Johnson and Telia, they made numerous references to the defendant’s sexual orientation and habits, his closet homosexuality, and his alleged sexual relationship with Ronald when Ronald was a minor.

At the suppression hearing, Detectives Johnson and Telia conceded that the majority of their unrecorded conversations with Briggs did, in fact, relate to sexual matters. The taped and recorded portion of the questioning also reveals that the detectives again asked the defendant many questions relating to those same matters. Such questions included: what kind of sex he participated in, with whom did he have sex, and whether he and Ronald were circumcised.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

State v. Josue Morillo
Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 2022
State v. Christopher Jimenez
Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 2022
State v. Joseph Corcoran
Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 2022
State of Iowa v. Alan James Kuuttila
Supreme Court of Iowa, 2021
State of Iowa v. Nicholas Dean Wright
Supreme Court of Iowa, 2021
Commonwealth v. Britton, S., Aplt
Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 2020
Carroll v. State
207 A.3d 675 (Court of Special Appeals of Maryland, 2019)
State v. Michael Patino
93 A.3d 40 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 2014)
State v. Jimenez
33 A.3d 724 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 2011)
State v. Barros
24 A.3d 1158 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 2011)
State v. Pinheiro
Superior Court of Rhode Island, 2011
Commonwealth v. Banville
931 N.E.2d 457 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 2010)
State v. Keeper of Records R.I. Hosp.
Superior Court of Rhode Island, 2010
Tassone v. State
Superior Court of Rhode Island, 2010
State v. Pagan
985 A.2d 1010 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 2009)
State v. Beltz
160 P.3d 154 (Court of Appeals of Alaska, 2007)
State v. Quinlan
921 A.2d 96 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 2007)
State v. Vieira
913 A.2d 1015 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 2007)
State v. Forbes
900 A.2d 1114 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 2006)
State v. Briggs
886 A.2d 735 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 2005)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
756 A.2d 731, 2000 R.I. LEXIS 170, 2000 WL 995187, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-briggs-ri-2000.