State v. Coppola

536 A.2d 1236, 130 N.H. 148, 1987 N.H. LEXIS 298
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedDecember 7, 1987
DocketNo. 87-004
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 536 A.2d 1236 (State v. Coppola) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Coppola, 536 A.2d 1236, 130 N.H. 148, 1987 N.H. LEXIS 298 (N.H. 1987).

Opinion

Souter, J.

A jury trial in the Superior Court (Bean, J.) resulted in the defendant’s convictions on one count of burglary, RSA 635:1, and two counts of aggravated felonious sexual assault, RSA 632-A:2. He was sentenced under RSA 651:6, 11(a) to consecutive extended terms of imprisonment totaling twenty to sixty years for the assaults, and to a further, but suspended, consecutive term of three and one-half to seven years for the burglary. In this appeal, the defendant advances four claims of trial court error: (1) in admitting his pre-arrest statement to the police; (2) in admitting the victim’s statement to police investigators at the scene of the crime; (3) in imposing extended terms of imprisonment under RSA 651:6 despite the county prosecutor’s failure to specify before trial which of several possible statutory grounds he would rely upon in seeking the enhanced penalties; and (4) in considering circumstantial evidence of prior bad acts by “giv[ing] it such weight as . . . it deserve[d].” We sustain the convictions but remand for reconsideration of the sentences.

The female victim lived alone in Epsom, where she was awakened at 12:14 a.m. on January 24, 1986, by a thumping sound on her front door. She got up to see what was the matter, and as she stood near the source of the noise a hand broke through a glass panel from outside, unfastened the lock and opened the door. A man [150]*150entered and struggled with the victim, whom he overpowered, dragged to the bedroom and stripped of her night clothes. After the intruder had forceably engaged in cunnilingus and intercourse with the victim, he dressed himself and left about 12:45 or 12:50, after threatening further harm if the victim reported the crime.

The victim was not deterred and telephoned the police. One officer who arrived at the house about 1:00 a.m. described the victim as “very upset and excited,” and another spoke of her as “very hysterical, [having] a very hard time talking to the trooper [who] had a hard time calming her down.” The victim herself later recalled her responses to the police as “just kind of raving on . . . .” About 1:15 a.m., the victim was able to tell what had happened, and she gave an account that she substantially repeated at trial.

After listening to the victim describe both her assailant and a car that she had seen near her house when the assailant left, the police focused their suspicion on the defendant. About 2:30 a.m., the police arrived at the defendant’s house and spoke with him and his wife. After further investigation, the police returned to the defendant’s house that evening and asked him to talk with them again. “Let me tell you something,” he replied. “I’m not one of your country bumpkins. I grew up on the streets of Providence, Rhode Island. And if you think I’m going to confess to you, you’re crazy.” The defendant nonetheless made some further statements, which were not admitted into evidence, and showed the police some clothing for examination in light of the victim’s statement.

The defendant remained free, however, until March 6, 1986, the day on which the victim reported that she had found fresh footprints in the snow around her house. When the prints turned out to be about the size that the defendant would have made, he was arrested, charged with the January crimes and committed to the Merrimack County Jail.

Although the defendant did not testify at the ensuing trial, his defiant remark to the police was received into evidence, and his challenge to the admissibility of this statement presents the first issue here on appeal. In the trial court, the defendant did not rest his claim on any tenet of State constitutional law, see State v. Dellorfano, 128 N.H. 628, 633, 517 A.2d 1163, 1166 (1986), and he relies here on the fifth and fourteenth amendments of the Constitution of the United States, as applied in a trilogy of cases dealing with the conditions under which a defendant who takes the stand in his defense may be impeached by his prior silence. Doyle v. Ohio, 426 U.S. 610 (1976), held that the requirement of fundamental fairness inherent in the due process guarantee bars [151]*151the State from impeaching a defendant with evidence that he remained silent after arrest and Miranda warnings. The Court reasoned that such silence is insolubly ambiguous and arguably responsive to the assurance implicit in the warnings, that a choice to exercise the constitutional right to silence will carry no penalty. Id. at 617-18. Next, the defendant relies upon Jenkins v. Anderson, 447 U.S. 231 (1980), which explained Doyle by holding that the fifth and fourteenth amendments raise no bar to impeachment by otherwise probative evidence of pre-arrest, pre-Miranda silence, where there has been no governmental inducement, such as Miranda warnings, to exercise the privilege of remaining silent. Finally, the defendant cites Fletcher v. Weir, 455 U.S. 603 (1982), which held that there is no fourteenth amendment bar to a defendant’s impeachment by evidence of post-arrest but preMiranda silence, where again the government has given no affirmative assurance, like Miranda warnings, that the choice to keep silent will carry no adverse consequences.

From these cases, the defendant proceeds by two lines of reasoning. In the first, he argues that his boast to be Rhode Island street-wise was tantamount to an invocation of his fifth amendment privilege to remain silent, which he claims was induced by the police when they asked to question him in his house. From this it follows for him that fundamental fairness as espoused in Doyle and explained in Jenkins forbids any evidentiary use of his statement.

In his second line of thought, the defendant points out that Jenkins and Fletcher involved nothing more than proof of silence to impeach a defendant who had testified, and he argues that the cases implicitly teach that introducing evidence of pretrial silence against a defendant who maintains his silence throughout his trial offends fifth amendment standards. If we understand the defendant’s reasoning, it begins, once again, with the assumption that his statement was equivalent to an invocation of his right to stay silent, which is an ambiguous act for the reason that silence may, but does not necessarily, reflect mere consciousness of guilt. Presumably, the defendant is concerned that the presentation of evidence of such silence as part of the State’s case in chief would impermissibly burden his exercise of the privilege to remain silent at trial. For if he relied on that privilege, he would necessarily waive his opportunity to explain that his pre-arrest silence was itself the exercise of his constitutional privilege or was, for some other reason, free from any implication of guilt. The defendant suggests, indeed, that the evidentiary use of his choice to remain silent at his house would be as offensive to the fifth amendment as a [152]*152prosecutor’s comment on a defendant’s choice to remain silent at the trial itself. See Griffin v. California, 380 U.S. 609, 615 (1965). But see, e.g., Jenkins v. Anderson, supra

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Bluebook (online)
536 A.2d 1236, 130 N.H. 148, 1987 N.H. LEXIS 298, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-coppola-nh-1987.