State v. Dwayne E. Slaughter (070372)

96 A.3d 246, 219 N.J. 104, 2014 WL 3905898, 2014 N.J. LEXIS 877
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedAugust 12, 2014
DocketA-134-11
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 96 A.3d 246 (State v. Dwayne E. Slaughter (070372)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Dwayne E. Slaughter (070372), 96 A.3d 246, 219 N.J. 104, 2014 WL 3905898, 2014 N.J. LEXIS 877 (N.J. 2014).

Opinion

Judge RODRÍGUEZ

(temporarily assigned) delivered the opinion of the Court.

Following a jury trial, defendant, Dwayne E. Slaughter, was convicted of aggravated manslaughter, conspiracy, and aggravated assault. These charges arose from the brutal beating of defendant’s seventy-nine-year-old neighbor, Roosevelt Morrow (Morrow). Defendant’s live-in girlfriend, the mother of his three children, Tanisha Day, gave an audiotaped statement to investigators days after Morrow’s death, in which she attributed an incriminating remark to defendant. Day’s statement was admitted at trial. However, she did not testify, although she was available to do so.

The issue in this case is whether, consistent with the Confrontation-Clause requirements of the United States and New Jersey Constitutions, reversal of defendant’s convictions is required because Day’s statement was admitted at trial and she was not available for cross-examination. We conclude that the admission of Day’s statement violated defendant’s confrontation rights and that this violation constituted harmful error. We vacate defendant’s convictions and remand the matter to the Law Division for a new trial.

*107 I.

A.

On June 19, 2005, in the mid-afternoon, Morrow’s lifeless body was discovered by his wife Callie Mae Morrow (Callie Mae) inside their Salem City home. He had been struck repeatedly on the head with a blunt instrument.

The following evidence was presented at trial. Callie Mae testified that as she left for work around 5:15 a.m., she saw defendant around the corner from her home. She had known defendant for a long time because he frequently bought cigarettes from her husband, who operated a store from their home.

Callie Mae testified that although Morrow regularly called her on workdays at around 9:00 a.m., he did not do so that day. Therefore, Callie Mae telephoned her husband at around 9:30 a.m., but received no answer. Becoming concerned, she continued to call, but did not reach him. Around 3:15 p.m., she left work to go home.

Callie Mae testified that she arrived home and found the front porch door open but the inner door locked. Once inside, she discovered the home had been ransacked. She found her husband’s lifeless body lying on the living room floor in a pool of blood. Morrow’s money clip was missing as were his two canes, one metal and one wood. Callie Mae went outside her house screaming. The Morrows’ neighbor, Laura Brown, responded to Callie Mae’s screams, went to comfort her and called 9-1-1.

Paramedic John F. Ruhl arrived at the scene and saw Morrow’s body “laying face down on the floor with an obvious injury to the head, ... not moving, ... unconscious and unresponsive[.]”

Medical Examiner Dr. Gerald Feigel opined that Morrow’s death was caused by “multiple blunt force injuries to the head.” According to Ruhl, Morrow had a number of abrasions and lacerations on, as well as internal damage to, the head.

*108 Salem County Prosecutor’s Detective Jeffrey Seozzafava, who was assigned to the forensic investigation unit, qualified as an expert in the field of bloodstain pattern analysis. He identified five footwear impressions on Morrow’s shirt, four from a work boot and one from a sneaker. According to Detective Seozzafava, a suspect’s shoe came in contact with blood and the suspect then stepped on the shirt. There were other bloodstains found on Morrow’s shirt, which were likely spattered on Morrow while he was lying on the floor. All the blood samples taken at the crime scene matched Morrow’s blood.

Police investigators also obtained one fingerprint from the crime scene. However, the fingerprint had no match in the Automated Fingerprint Identification System.

B.

As the investigation progressed, the Salem County Prosecutor’s Office began to focus on defendant. Senior Investigator Steven Dick interviewed defendant’s live-in girlfriend, Day, who initially provided no useful information. After further investigation, Investigator Dick and his partner returned to defendant and Day’s home for a second interview on June 23, 2005, four days after the homicide. She consented to a search of the home.

According to Investigator Dick, Day’s story had changed from their first conversation. She was taken to headquarters to continue the interview. Day consented to give a sworn taped statement. In her audiotaped statement, Day described her interactions with defendant on the day of Morrow’s death. In reference to defendant’s conduct, the following exchange took place.

[POLICE OFFICER]: Okay. And can you just explain to us exactly ah, how that occurred?
[TANISHA DAY]: He came in, he told me to go upstairs and get the kids, put ‘em in my room. I went upstairs, I went in my kids’ room, my son was still ‘sleep, but my youngest daughter was awoke. I took her in my bedroom, we layed across the bed and I slightly fell asl, fell asleep. And wo, I opened my eyes and he was standing in front of me and asked him what did he do. And he didn’t say anything, an, I asked him again and he told me to shut up, shush, be quiet. And then I *109 asked Mm again and then he turned around, he started taking the clothes off. I got up, put my daughter back in her room and I went downstairs and I sat on a chair, nervous. Got up, I looked out the window, I didn’t see anybody. I opened the door, I cracked it, looked out the door and I didn’t see anything and went and sat back down. I went back, got up, and went upstairs again. And I went in, I went in the room, in my bedroom. And I was asking him again what did he do. And he said he hope he didn’t kill this n — a.
Q: What did you, what did you take him to mean by saying that?
A: That he had beaten somebody up.
Q: Was there anybody else with him at the time?
A: Yes.
Q: Who was that?
A: Pritchard Watts.
[emphasis added.]

Day also stated that she had noted that defendant had blood on his pants when he entered the home the day on which the reported exchange took place.

The next day, defendant and Watts were asked to come to headquarters to meet Investigator Dick. Defendant provided a sworn statement. After giving the sworn statement, defendant spoke with his mother and grandmother. Defendant then told Investigator Dick that he was sorry for lying and wanted to tell the police, truthfully, what had happened. Defendant provided a second sworn statement, during which he admitted that he was wearing the same jeans he wore on the day of the incident. The police tested the jeans for DNA. At trial, the prosecutor stipulated that the DNA on the jeans matched defendant’s, not Morrow’s.

Defendant gave a third statement to the investigators admitting in this statement that he was present during the beating of Morrow, but that he did not participate in it and that Watts was the sole assailant.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
96 A.3d 246, 219 N.J. 104, 2014 WL 3905898, 2014 N.J. LEXIS 877, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-dwayne-e-slaughter-070372-nj-2014.