State v. Briggs

886 A.2d 735, 2005 R.I. LEXIS 206, 2005 WL 3287950
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedDecember 6, 2005
Docket2003-404-C.A.
StatusPublished
Cited by44 cases

This text of 886 A.2d 735 (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, 886 A.2d 735, 2005 R.I. LEXIS 206, 2005 WL 3287950 (R.I. 2005).

Opinion

OPINION

Chief Justice WILLIAMS,

for the Court.

The defendant, Chester R. Briggs (defendant), appeals from his conviction of first-degree murder of Patricia Jacques (Jacques). Prior to trial, this Court, on appeal from a pretrial lower court ruling, suppressed a substantial portion of the statements the defendant made to police during an almost thirteen-hour interrogation. State v. Briggs, 756 A.2d 731, 739 (R.I.2000). The defendant now puts forward a list of errors of a Brobdingnagian length and asks this Court to vacate the jury conviction and grant him a new trial. For the following reasons, we hold that the trial justice did not commit reversible error and, therefore, we affirm the conviction.

I

Facts and Travel

Late Wednesday evening on February 19, 1997, Patricia Jacques was found fatal *743 ly shot near the stables adjacent to her Tiverton home. At the crime scene, the police found a handwritten note addressed to “Chester,” with defendant’s fax number on it, indicating that money belonging to Jacques had not yet been returned. The police soon learned that defendant previously had secreted away assets belonging to the victim to conceal them from her creditors and the Internal Revenue Service. The defendant had been in the process of returning those assets. 1 Briggs, 756 A.2d at 733-34.

A more thorough discussion of the initial investigation, the interrogation of defendant, and the search of his New Hampshire home — as well as other properties owned by defendant in New Hampshire— can be found in Briggs, 756 A.2d at 732-35. For purposes of this appeal, we reiterate that our earlier decision suppressed a portion of defendant’s statement made while in police custody, id. at 739, but allowed into evidence the contents of a trash bag discarded by Robert Courtemanche, a tenant of defendant, in a communal dumpster on defendant’s tenement property, id. at 743-44. Before tackling the multitude of legal issues raised on appeal, we will highlight the most important evidence presented at trial.

Despite defendant’s repeated assertions that he had finished repaying Jacques just prior to her murder, the state sought to prove that the financial scheme between defendant and Jacques gave defendant motive to commit the crime charged. As noted in Briggs, 756 A.2d at 733, the police found a handwritten note addressed to defendant at the crime scene “concerning the return of money belonging to the victim.”

The testimony of Sandra Paiement (Paiement) further corroborated the state’s theory of the case. At defendant’s request, Paiement contacted Jacques by phone and gave her a number that Jacques would need to receive a package. Jacques, who sounded upset during the phone call, told Paiement that she had been trying to reach defendant and was worried about defendant’s health. Concerned about Jacques’s tone during the phone call, Paiement then gave Jacques her personal telephone number in case Jacques needed to speak to her. Jacques called Paiement a couple of days later and said she was upset because she had not yet received the package. Paiement testified that Jacques sounded as if “she wasn’t taking a breath” and that she tried to calm Jacques. That was the last time Paiement spoke to Jacques.

The testimony of Alan Shepard (Shepard) placed defendant in Tiverton on the night of the murder. Shepard, who worked at the Tiverton Getty on Main Road in Tiverton, testified that defendant bought gas from him on the evening of Wednesday, February 19, 1997. According to Shepard, he remembered defendant because he was his last customer of the evening. The defendant drove an early 1990s blue pickup truck with a New Hampshire registration. Shepard testified that, while pumping gas for defendant, he looked at his face for “a few seconds” and saw a white man in his mid-forties.

Shepard’s testimony was consistent with that of Francis Jerome (Jerome). Jerome testified that he heard gunshots fired at approximately 9 p.m. on the evening of the murder and then watched a small pickup truck drive around on the Jacques’ property.

*744 The state demonstrated that defendant had access to a handgun through the testimony of Robert White (White), the boyfriend of a tenant of defendant. White testified that he bought from William Lyonnais (Lyonnais), a friend of White’s family, 2 “a chrome automatic” handgun, which he described as “bigger than a .22” but “smaller than a 9 millimeter,” and delivered that gun to defendant. The defendant told White not to tell anyone about the gun. Robert A. Hathaway (Hathaway) of the Rhode Island State Crime Laboratory concluded from the shell casings and projectiles found at the crime scene that the murder weapon was a .38-caliber handgun, which was consistent with White’s description of the gun he sold to defendant.

Finally, Timothy Ayers (Ayers), an inmate at the Adult Correctional Institutions (ACI), testified that defendant told Ayers, in significant detail, that he murdered Jacques. According to Ayers, defendant said he owed Jacques approximately $110,000 and that he “had to kill her because [defendant] didn’t have her money and she wanted it.” Ayers also testified to many details of the murder, such as how many shots were fired, where on the property the murder took place, and the fact that defendant stopped to get gas after murdering Jacques.

While the jury deliberated, the trial justice denied defendant’s renewed motion for judgment of acquittal pursuant to Rule 29 of the Superior Court Rules of Criminal Procedure. The jury then found defendant guilty of first-degree murder of Patricia Jacques. The trial justice imposed the statutory life sentence on defendant.

After the conviction, defendant filed a motion for a new trial pursuant to Rule 33 of the Superior Court Rules of Criminal Procedure based on newly discovered evidence and alleged discovery violations. This , new evidence pertained to Ayers, the jailhouse informant who testified against defendant at trial. After the jury rendered its verdict in this case, Ayers admitted to an investigator for the Public Defender that he had given a statement to authorities concerning a separate criminal case that he now knew to be false. The defendant first argued that Ayers’s recantation of his earlier statement in that case amounted to newly discovered evidence that warranted a new trial. The defendant argued further that the state’s failure to hand over information that defendant requested concerning Ayers’s involvement in that criminal case, as well as the state’s failure to disclose three of Ayers’s prior convictions, constituted discovery violations. The trial justice denied the motion on all counts.

The defendant now appeals. The analysis portion of this opinion has been divided for purposes of simplicity into issues related to the confrontation clause, evidentiary issues, and miscellaneous issues.

II

Confrontation Clause Issues

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
886 A.2d 735, 2005 R.I. LEXIS 206, 2005 WL 3287950, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-briggs-ri-2005.