State v. Burroughs

CourtSuperior Court of Delaware
DecidedApril 13, 2022
Docket2011011781
StatusPublished

This text of State v. Burroughs (State v. Burroughs) 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.

Bluebook
State v. Burroughs, (Del. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

STATE OF DELAWARE ) )

V. ) I.D. No. 2011011781 ) TYRESE BURROUGHS, ) ) Defendant. )

Submitted: March 3, 2022 Decided: April 13, 2022 MEMORANDUM OPINION

Upon Review of Defendant’s Motion for Review of Commissioner’s Order - AFFIRMED

Matthew Buckworth, Deputy Attorney General for the State of Delaware.

Elliot Margules, Esquire, and Alanna Faber, Esquire, Attorneys for Defendant Tyrese Burroughs.

LeGrow, J. The State charged Defendant with possessing of a firearm during the course of a felony and other related charges. After Defendant was detained and presented to the Court of Common Pleas, and following a preliminary hearing with presentation of the State’s case, the Superior Court Commissioner! imposed bail in the amount of $110,501 cash.

Defendant filed a Motion for Non-Financial Conditions of Release (the “Motion for Non-Financial Conditions”) in response to the imposition of monetary bail, but the Commissioner ultimately denied that motion in her September 7" Order (the “Order”).

Defendant now asks this Court to review the Order denying his Motion for Non-Financial Conditions (Defendant’s “Motion”), which challenged Delaware’s

bail system’ as unconstitutional and in violation of his rights to (i) equal protection;

| While the motions in this case were pending, the presiding Superior Court Commissioner was appointed Judge of the Court of Common Pleas. To maintain continuity of decision making, on May 17, 2021, the Chief Justice of the Delaware Supreme Court issued an Order cross-designating now Judge Mayer as a Commissioner of the Superior Court for the purposes of resolving the pending motions. See Comm’r Order at 5 n. 12. For clarity, and given the procedural posture of the case, this Opinion refers to Judge Mayer as “the Commissioner.” No disrespect is intended. The Court sincerely appreciates the time Judge Mayer devoted to this case.

? Since Defendant filed his Motion, the Delaware Supreme Court has replaced the Interim Special Rule of Criminal Procedure for Pretrial Release with the Special Rule of Criminal Procedure for Pretrial Release. Delaware’s General Assembly enacted legislation in 2018 to reform the system under which courts subject defendants to pretrial conditions of release (the “Bail Reform Act”). See Comm’r Order at 1. The Bail Reform Act took effect January 1, 2019 and required the judiciary to put in place an interim rule, subject to revision and improvement based on experience using it, data, and feedback. Jd. On March 1, 2022, the Supreme Court of Delaware announced it was replacing the Interim Special Rule of Criminal Procedure for Pretrial Release with the Special Rule of Criminal Procedure for Pretrial Release, effective April 4, 2022. These rule changes are ex post facto in application to this immediate case. But the Court believes even under the Special Rule of (ii) substantive due process; (iii) procedural due process; and (iv) sufficient sureties. In his Motion seeking review of the Commissioner’s Order, Defendant first argues he presented evidence in his Motion for Non-Financial Conditions that he falls within a suspect class and, or in the alternative, was deprived of his fundamental right to liberty because of his pretrial detention. Defendant argues the Court therefore erred in failing to apply the strict scrutiny standard to Delaware’s bail statute. Under such standard, Defendant contends, the State had the burden to provide clear and convincing evidence (i) of a compelling interest in Defendant’s detention at the assigned monetary bail amount; and (ii) that the detention, according to the bail statute, was narrowly tailored to meet that compelling interest. According to Defendant, the State failed to do so. Next, because Defendant contends a fundamental liberty interest was at issue, additional protections were not afforded to him in violation of procedural due process requirements. Lastly, Defendant alleges his cash bail was not “bail” but an attempt to hold him in detention, a violation of

the Delaware Constitution’s “sufficient sureties” clause.

Criminal Procedure for Pretrial Release, the outcome of this Motion would not change. The parties have not argued otherwise. 1 have reviewed the Commissioner’s Order, Defendant’s Motion, and the State’s response.*? For the reasons set forth below, the Commissioner’s Order is AFFIRMED.

FACTUAL & PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

A. Defendant’s Charges

On November 25, 2020, Defendant Tyrese Burroughs (“Defendant”) was arrested and charged with Possession of Firearm During Commission of a Felony, Possession of a Firearm by a Person Prohibited, Possession of Ammunition by a Person Prohibited, two counts of Possession of a Controlled Substance with Intent to Deliver, Carrying a Concealed Deadly Weapon, and Possession of Marijuana.‘ According to the affidavit of probable cause included in the warrant for Defendant’s arrest, an officer on patrol observed Defendant engaging in what the officer believed was an illegal hand-to-hand drug transaction.° After witnessing the exchange, the officer approached Defendant, but Defendant fled the scene.® The officer then pursued Defendant on foot and verbally commanded Defendant to stop, but

Defendant continued to run.’ Eventually, Defendant fell, and the officer detained

3 T asked the State to submit supplemental briefing explaining its position on whether Delaware’s bail statute could meet the strict scrutiny standard if the Court applied that standard, since that argument previously was not addressed by the State. See D.I. 66.

* Comm’r Order at 3; D.J. 14, State’s Resp. to Def’s Mot. for Non-Financial Cond. of Release (hereinafter, “State’s Resp.”) at 4.

> Comm’r Order at 4.

8 Id.

"Id. him with the assistance of additional officers who had arrived on the scene.® During the struggle to detain Defendant, the patrol officer felt a large bulge on the right side of Defendant’s waistband, consistent with the shape of a firearm.’ Defendant was advised of his Miranda rights and taken into custody." B. Defendant’s Preliminary Hearings

Defendant’s case was scheduled for a preliminary hearing in the Court of Common Pleas on November 30, 2020.'! The hearing was continued to December 14, 2020, and then again to December 21, 2020.'* At that time, the Court found probable cause for the charges, and the case was bound over to the Superior Court for trial.'> Defendant filed his Motion for Non-Financial Conditions after the case

was transferred to the Superior Court, and the first hearing in that Court was held on

” Id. During the pat down, a loaded, silver Smith and Wesson Walther .380 with seven live rounds in the magazine was confiscated. Jd. Defendant revealed he had drugs on his person. Jd. At the scene, officers seized fifty-eight bags of suspected heroin and a bag of crack cocaine with a weight of 1.5 grams. Jd. Upon transportation to the station, officers located 3.3 grams of marijuana within Defendant’s personal effects. Jd.

'0 Defendant filed a Motion to Suppress on December 22, 2021, arguing for the suppression of evidence seized due to (1) lack of reasonable suspicion for the hand-to-hand exchange and (2) lack of evidence regarding waiver of Defendant’s Miranda rights. D.I. 63. That motion remains pending.

'! Comm’r Order at 5.

!2 Td. Defendant did not object to the continuances. During Defendant’s initial appearance before the Court of Common Pleas, the court reduced his bail to $20,000 cash, $14,501 secured, pre-trial supervision, and home confinement or GPS monitoring. Comm’r Order at 5.

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Bluebook (online)
State v. Burroughs, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-burroughs-delsuperct-2022.