State v. Edwards

405 A.2d 1161, 122 R.I. 228, 1979 R.I. LEXIS 2153
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedAugust 20, 1979
Docket77-372-C.A
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 405 A.2d 1161 (State v. Edwards) 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. Edwards, 405 A.2d 1161, 122 R.I. 228, 1979 R.I. LEXIS 2153 (R.I. 1979).

Opinions

[229]*229Kelleher, J.

The defendant, J ames Edwards (Edwards), appeals from a judgment of conviction entered by the Superior Court after a jury found him guilty of robbery. On appeal, Edwards raises several issues which call into question certain rulings made by the trial justice. Specifically, we are concerned with a motion to suppress eyewitness-identification testimony, a motion to pass the case and declare a mistrial, and a motion for new trial.

The facts are as follows. During the cloudy midafternoon of October 30, 1975, the Baker Street branch of the Rhode Island Hospital Trust National Bank was held up by a man and a woman. (Baker Street is located in the Washington Park section of Providence.) About a year later a secret indictment was filed, charging Edwards with the theft of a sum just in excess of $4,400. The indictment against Edwards was based in large part on the grand-jury testimony of Sharon Hampton (Hampton). She had also been charged with the October robbery and apparently agreed with the state to testify against Edwards in a attempt to avoid incarceration. However, on March 1, 1977, the day Edwards’ trial was scheduled to begin, Hampton was nowhere to be found. Her last-minute disappearance forced the state to rely upon Peter S. Greenberg (Greenberg), a customer in the Baker Street branch at the time of the robbery, to identify Edwards as the thief.

Shortly before the trial commenced, Greenberg was called into the prosecutor’s office, shown six mug shots, and asked if he could identify one of them as depicting the man he had observed inside the bank some 16 months earlier. Within seconds, Greenberg identified the fifth photo as the one representing the robber. When the trial was about to begin, the prosecutor informed the court and defense counsel of the [230]*230out-of-court photo display and stated that he planned to elicit identification testimony from Greenberg during the course of the trial. The defense immediately moved for a voir dire to determine the admissibility of the incourt identification and objected to the prosecutor’s “eleventh hour” maneuver on the ground that it had violated defendant’s right to counsel.

Greenberg was the hearing’s only witness. He is the national sales manager for a manufacturer located near the bank. He testified that when he arrived at the bank about 2 o’clock, he observed a man and a woman arguing near the front door. Greenberg said he passed within a few feet of the couple and was able to get a “good look” at the man. He described him as a young man in his mid-twenties, about 6 feet tall, wearing brown elevated shoes, a black leather-type trench coat, and a hat, which rested atop a “semi-Afro.” Greenberg entered the bank and was apparently in the midst of preparing a deposit slip when he heard someone say, “Hands off the buttons. Move away. Put the money in the bag.” When he turned around, he observed the man he had just seen outside the bank now waving a gun around and adjusting a dark green scarf over the lower portion of his face. At that time, he was able to see that the man had a receding hairline and long, curly black sideburns resembling an “inverted triangle.”

Greenberg testified that the gunman ordered all the customers to one side of the bank while the woman went from teller to teller and collected the cash. Greenberg thought she looked a bit younger than her armed companion and noticed that she too wore a scarf over her face. He estimated that the entire incident lasted 10 or 15 minutes. When the police arrived, Greenberg gave a statement and informed them that he could “probably” identify the man if he saw his picture. During the' next few months, Greenberg was shown hundreds of photos by the Providence police and agents of the Federal Bureau of Investigation. However, he was unable to identify any of them as the man who brandished the gun on October 30.

[231]*231Greenberg told the trial justice that upon his 1:30 p.m. arrival at the courthouse for a trial that was to begin at 2 p.m., he was met by the prosecutor and Sergeant Gilbert Ethier of the Providence Police Department. At that time, Sergeant Ethier shuffled the six photos and handed them to Greenberg, saying, “Look at these pictures. * * * [S]ee if you can pick out the person in these pictures.” After viewing all six photos, Greenberg dropped one on the table and said, “This is the person.” Greenberg had identified Edwards as the thief.

The prosecutor told the trial justice that once the trial began, he would rely solely on Greenberg*s in-court identification of Edwards. The trial justice rejected any defense claim that the photo exhibit that had taken place in the Attorney General’s department was impermissibly suggestive and denied Edwards’ motion to suppress. In addressing the right-to-counsel argument, the trial justice conceded that he had difficulty understanding the general rule that counsel need not be provided at a photographic display; however, he felt constrained to apply that rule to his interpretation of the state’s constitution.

The general rule referred to by the trial justice was enunciated in United States v. Ash, 413 U.S. 300, 93 S. Ct. 2568, 37 L. Ed. 2d 619 (1973), where the Supreme Court held that the sixth amendment to the Federal Constitution did not guarantee an accused the right to counsel at photographic displays at which a witness attempts to identify a suspect. The Court limited that sixth-amendment right to “trial-like confrontations,” such as corporeal identification where an accused is physically present. On appeal, Edwards asks that we adopt a higher standard of protection by relying upon the assistance-of-counsel guarantee afforded by the declaration of rights embodied in art. I, §10, of the Rhode Island Constitution. We have in the past taken a similar course of action. See State v. Maloof, 114 R.I. 380, 389, 333 A.2d 676 681 (1975).

[232]*232Recently, in State v. Delahunt, 121 R.I. 565, 401 A.2d 1261 (1979), (Mr. Chief Justice Bevilacqua and Mr. Justice Kelleher, dissenting), the majority of this court adhered to the principles set forth in Kirby v. Illinois, 406, U.S. 682, 92 S. Ct. 1877, 32 L. Ed. 2d 411 (1972), and held that under our art. I, §10, an accused is entitled to counsel only at a postindictment lineup. Much of what was said in Delahunt could be repeated here. Suffice it to say, however, that the majority in Delahunt is not yet persuaded that the potential for abuse and the problems of misidentification in the use of photographic displays are so great as to require the presence of counsel. Accordingly, this court holds that the state constitution provides no right to counsel at a post-arrest photographic display.

Edwards presented an alibi defense. As his first witness he called Glenn Miller, who lives and works in St. Louis, Missouri. In direct examination he told the jury that during the fall of 1975 Edwards was in St. Louis. He remembered Edwards’ being there on October 30 because October 29 is his wife’s birthday, and all his friends, including Edwards, attended a birthday party in the Millers’ apartment that ended sometime in the early morning of October 30. According to Miller, Edwards returned later in the day and spent the afternoon at the apartment.

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State v. Edwards
405 A.2d 1161 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 1979)

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Bluebook (online)
405 A.2d 1161, 122 R.I. 228, 1979 R.I. LEXIS 2153, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-edwards-ri-1979.