State v. Edgar

CourtSuperior Court of Delaware
DecidedOctober 21, 2016
Docket1508012447
StatusPublished

This text of State v. Edgar (State v. Edgar) 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. Edgar, (Del. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

STATE OF DELAWARE, ) ) v. ) Def. I.D.: 1508012447

)

COTY EDGAR, ) )

Defendant. )

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Submitted: Septernber 16, 2016 Decided: October 21, 2016

Defendant ’s Motion to Exclude

Prior Convictionfor Purposes OfEnhanced Sentencing. GRANTED.

Michael B. DegliObizzi, Esquire, Departrnent of Justice, Wilmington, Delaware. Attorney for the State of Delaware.

Allison S.- Mielke, Esquire, Wilmington, Delaware. Attorney for Defendant Coty Edgar.

BUTLER, J.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

In August, 2015, Mr. Edgar, a twice convicted felon, was living in the City of Wilmington with a girlfriend. According to the testimony at trial, he was spotted driving a car that had a license plate that was not fully visible. He was pulled over for this traffic violation when the officers noted a “strong odor, known through training and experience to be the odor of fresh marijuana.” Although that is the last re-erence to 1-_arijuana in the recordl this odor was enough to provoke the officers to ask for Mr. Edgar’s permission to search the vehicle. Mr. Edgar consented and he and his passenger alighted, whereupon a search of the vehicle ensued.

In the trunk of the vehicle, police located a plastic shopping bag. Inside said bag was a black case containing a black firearm and 3 magazines The gun was brand new, a receipt showing that it had been purchased just a few days earlier by Edgar’s girlfriend lt was unloaded, in the trunk. To those who may wonder how a gun in the trunk that cannot be accessed from the driver’s seat can qualify as “possession,” Mr. Edgar told an officer that “although the firearm belongs to his girlfriend, he took same from their apartment and put it into the trunk of the

vehicle prior to coming in contact with us.” Mr. Edgar’s admission thus supplied

the evidence that was lacking as to his possession of the firearm.

' lt does not appear that any marijuana - fresh or otherwise - was located in the vehicle.

l

Mr. Edgar was tried and convicted of possession of a firearm by a person prohibited The issue now concerns his prior record for “violent felonies,” as that calculus directly impacts the length of his inevitable, statutorily mandated prison term. At this point, we would do well to understand the legal milieu confronting Coty Edgar in August, 2015. Some chronology is in order.

ANALYSIS

16 W!iat is a Violent Felony?

The term “violent felony” traces its bloodline to the 1996 amendments to the habitual offender law, specifically ll Del. C. §4214(a). Historically, fourth time felony defendants subject to subsection “A” of the habitual offender law could receive any discretionary penalty the Court chose to impose from probation to a life sentence. With the 1996 amendments, the habitual offender law began mandating the statutory maximum penalty on 4th conviction felony offenders guilty of committing a “violent felony.” ln other words, statutory maximum sentences became mandatory minimums for fourth time felons.

So the term “violent felony” suddenly became significant and needed a definition. The class of offenders subject to mandatory maximum sentences under the habitual offender statute could be widened or shrunk according to what the Gcncral Assembly classified as a violent felony. The definition was supplied by a

contemporaneous amendment to ll Del. C. §42()1(0).

The General Assembly adopted what can only be described as an expansive definition of what constituted a violent felony. As passed initially, the term included extortion, stalking, racketeering, delivery of drug paraphernalia to a minor, delivery of a non-controlled substance or a non-controlled prescription drug and possession of drugs within 1000 feet of a school. None of these offenses are exactly desirable behaviors, but none of them are fundamentally “violent” either.

The effect of the 1996 changes was to greatly expand the number of defendants circulating through the court system that were subject to mandatory sentences. Most notable for our purposes here, the term “violent felony” included the crime of escape after conviction. Mr. Edgar’s record includes a felony assault in 2007 and an escape after conviction in 2009. This latter charge arose from defendant’s 3 day unauthorized leave from the Plummer Center.

A “violent felony” is merely definitional - it does not criminalize any behavior. Edgar’s crime before the Court now is possession of a firearm by a prohibited person. He is not a fourth time felon and not subject to habitual offender sentencing But like the habitual offender statute, the person prohibited statute has received its own legislative makeover that greatly expanded the

mandatory sentences flowing from a violation of the statute. Again, a brief history

is in order.

2. Interaction of “Violent Felony” and Prohibited Persons

The person prohibited statute sat in relative obscurity until 1994 when the General Assembly responded to the “Cocaine Wars” then raging by adopting a one year mandatory sentence for possessing firearms by persons prohibited (which included drug felons). Then in 2003, the “person prohibited” statute was amended to boost the mandatory sentence provisions to “1-3~5,” meaning prohibited -1rearms possessors would receive one year mandatory imprisonment if they had a single previous conviction for a “violent felony,” three years imprisonment if the “violent felony” dates within 10 years of the termination of all periods of confinement resulting from the prior crime and five years imprisonment if the offender had two prior “violent felony” convictions The definition of the term “violent felony” in section 1448(e) could be found in the 1996 definitions found in section 4201(0). For the next 10 years, this was the state of mandatory minimum laws as they related to felons possessing firearms.

In the wake of the horrific shooting spree in a movie theater in Colorado in July, 2012 and the senseless murder of 20 school children in Newtown Connecticut

in December, 2012, the General Assembly voted to boost the mandatory term of

imprisonment for felons in possession of firearms under section 1448(e) from “1-3- 5” to “3-5-10.”2

Thus, defendant’s 2007 conviction for Assault 1St degree - a “violent felony” by anybody’s definition - and his 2009 conviction for Escape After Conviction makes him a twice convicted “violent felon” within the meaning of “violent felon” under section 4201(0) and subject to the 10 year mandatory sentence called for by 11 Del. C, §1448(e)(1)(c),

3. “Walk Away” Escapes Removed as a Violent Felony

BUT ~ and here is where it gets a bit tricky - the definitional term “escape after conviction” in section 4201(0) was revised by the General Assembly in 2015 to “escape after conviction if convicted as a Class C Felony or a Class B Felony.” Escape After Conviction is a Class D felony unless it is accompanied by the use of force, a deadly weapon, or someone is injured while on escape status, in which case it is elevated to a Class B or C felony.3 Effective with the 2015 amendment to 4201(c), characters such as the defendant, who “walk away” from the Plummer Center may be felons, but not “violent” ones for puiposes of enhanced sentencing

This amendment removing “walk away” escapes from the list of violent felonies

2 The connection between deranged mass murderers, with no criminal record at all, killing scores of innocents and felons putting unloaded handguns in trunks is, well, subtle.

3 11061.€.§1253.

became effective June 15, 2015. Defendant committed this offense on August 16, 2015.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
State v. Edgar, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-edgar-delsuperct-2016.