State v. Camirand

572 A.2d 290, 1990 R.I. LEXIS 74, 1990 WL 40234
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedApril 10, 1990
Docket88-559-C.A.
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 572 A.2d 290 (State v. Camirand) 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. Camirand, 572 A.2d 290, 1990 R.I. LEXIS 74, 1990 WL 40234 (R.I. 1990).

Opinion

OPINION

SHEA, Justice.

This matter is before the Supreme Court on appeal by the defendant, Scott Cami-rand, from his conviction in Providence County Superior Court for robbery and assault with a dangerous weapon. We affirm the judgment of the Superior Court.

On the night of August 28, 1984, an armed robbery occurred in a bar called Club Paradise in Lincoln, Rhode Island. The bar had been owned for thirty years by two brothers, John and Tony Carvalho. John Carvalho was working that night.

Mary Lunderville, a regular patron, testified that she came into the bar at around 10:45 that evening. Another patron was in the bar at that time whom Carvalho had seen “more than once.” Carvalho testified at trial that although he did not know the patron’s surname, he “knew that he was called Scott.” The patron kept going back and forth to the door. The patron also said that there was a car in front with a flat tire, which John Carvalho knew to be Mary Lunderville’s automobile. Carvalho informed Lunderville of the man’s observation, but she took no action. When Carval-ho went outside and checked the car, he found that the tires were fine.

John Carvalho testified that the patron sat down awhile, then stood up suddenly and took out a gun. He told Carvalho to empty his cash registers. Carvalho then asked the man in disbelief “[A]re you serious?” Carvalho explained this comment at *292 trial by stating that he would not have made the comment if he had not seen this individual before. Carvalho proceeded to empty both cash registers, at which point the man asked Carvalho to get Lunder-ville’s car keys. When Carvalho asked Lunderville to come over, however, she refused. Carvalho told Lunderville that the man had a gun, Lunderville expressed disbelief, and the man shot at the display case behind the bar.

Lunderville approached the robber, who grabbed her by the arm and pulled her into the telephone booth, where he shot at and ripped out the cord. The man then told Lunderville to go outside and drive her car to the front door. The robber threatened to kill Carvalho if Lunderville did not follow his instructions. When Lunderville drove up to the door, the robber first ordered her to drive down and then up the street and next told her to turn the car around and go the other way. When she had driven a short distance further, the man told her to open the door and get out. Lunderville hesitated because she was afraid to jump from the car when it was moving. She then slowed the car down and got out three blocks from the bar.

John Carvalho described the robber to the police as a white male, five foot nine to five foot ten inches tall, clean shaven, forty to fifty years old, straight hair combed back, neat looking, wearing a black shirt and canvas vest. Mary Lunderville described the robber as a Hispanic male, five foot ten inches tall, clean shaven, straight dark brown hair hanging down to'his shoulder, with pock marks on his face between thirty-five and forty years old, wearing a blue-jean jacket and dark pants.

After giving statements to the police, Carvalho telephoned police headquarters at 5:30 a.m. With further information that the wife or girlfriend of the man who robbed the bar was the sister of a customer of the bar named Jack, whose brother-in-law Tom, reportedly worked in maintenance for the Pawtucket Public Library. A third person who might have information, known to Carvalho only as Charlie was said to work at a Pawtucket gas station on the corner of Weeden Street and Reservoir Avenue.

The Lincoln police in turn found Charlie at the gas station in Pawtucket and asked him if he knew anyone by the name of Jack or Tom. Charlie indicated that he knew a Tom who worked for the Pawtucket Public Library.

“Tom” was determined to be Thomas Pereira. He informed the police that “Jack” was a former coworker, Jack Morgan. Apparently Pereira and Morgan had a practice of going to the Club Paradise together for a few beers after work. Jack had a sister, Sharon Oldfield, who had a boyfriend or husband named Scott who would occasionally accompany her or meet her at the bar.

Jack Morgan confirmed that his sister’s boyfriend, whom Morgan knew only as Scott, might have been in the Club Paradise with him and Pereira at one time or another. Morgan also gave the police a current address of his sister, Sharon Oldfield. When the police interviewed Oldfield she established that Scott’s last name was Camirand. Oldfield indicated that she and defendant had once lived together. She gave the officers his current address and told the officers he was known to carry a gun. When she was asked how Camirand looked presently, she said he was clean shaven. Oldfield also supplied the police officers with photographs of defendant.

The police then attempted to confirm that defendant was the man Carvalho had identified as the robber through the use of a showup identification procedure. Carval-ho was shown a single dimly lit photograph approximately three inches square of a man and a woman standing beside a car. The police also told Carvalho that the man in the photograph might be the robber. Carvalho did not recognize defendant in this photograph. 1 Tony Carvalho, the victim’s brother, also viewed this photograph *293 and stated that the man in the photograph had been in the bar before the night of the robbery.

The police then obtained a photograph of defendant in full beard from the Cumberland police for the purposes of constructing the first array of photographs. This array was shown separately and both Carvalho and Lunderville identified the photograph of Camirand as depicting the robber.

On the basis of this identification Scott Camirand was arrested on September 6, 1984. At the time of arrest defendant was thirty years old five foot four inches tall, 140 pounds with a beard and mustache. The defendant did not have a pock marked face. On the day following his arrest, the police held a lineup in which defendant was a participant. The lineup included one police officer, and four town employees. Car-valho viewed the lineup but, according to police, could not positively identify defendant as the robber.

Later in September police constructed a second photo array that included a photo of defendant taken when he was arrested. This array was shown to Carvalho and Lunderville. Both Carvalho and Lunder-ville selected defendant’s photograph.

On appeal defendant argues that the trial justice committed reversible error when he denied his motion to suppress John Carvalho’s and Mary Lunderville's out-of-court and in-court identifications of defendant. Specifically defendant asserts that the showup display, the first and second photo arrays and the lineup were unnecessarily suggestive and the resulting identifications unreliable. When determining whether identification procedures employed violated a defendant’s right to due process of law the court must employ a two-step procedure. First the court must consider the question of whether the procedures used in the identification were unnecessarily suggestive. If any of the procedures are found to have been suggestive, in the second step there must be a determination of whether the identification lacks independent reliability despite the suggestive nature of the identification procedure. State v. Nicoletti,

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Bluebook (online)
572 A.2d 290, 1990 R.I. LEXIS 74, 1990 WL 40234, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-camirand-ri-1990.