State v. Gibson

CourtSuperior Court of Delaware
DecidedNovember 2, 2022
Docket2106004632 2106004704 2107000202 2107000514
StatusPublished

This text of State v. Gibson (State v. Gibson) 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. Gibson, (Del. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

STATE OF DELAWARE ) ) v. ) ) ID Nos. 2106004632; 2106004704 KEITH GIBSON, ) 2107000202; 2107000514 ) Defendant. )

Submitted: July 15, 2022 Decided: November 2, 2022

ORDER

Upon Defendant Keith Gibson’s Motion to Sever Charges. GRANTED.

Upon Defendant Keith Gibson’s Motion for Disclosure of Non-Recorded Portions of Witness Statements. DEFERRED.

Upon Defendant Keith Gibson’s Motion to Suppress Defendant’s Statement. GRANTED.

Upon Defendant Keith Gibson’s Motion to Suppress Evidence Seized from Defendant’s iPhone. DEFERRED.

Upon Defendant Keith Gibson’s Motion for Identification of 404(b) Evidence. DEFERRED.

Upon Defendant Keith Gibson’s Motion to Exclude Admission of Photo Lineup. DENIED. Matthew B. Frawley, Esquire and John W. Downs, Esquire, Deputy Attorneys General, DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE, 820 North French Street, Wilmington, Delaware 19801, Attorneys for the State.

Eugene J. Maurer, Esquire, and Elise K. Wolpert, Esquire, EUGENE J. MAURER, JR., P.A., 1201-A King Street, Wilmington, Delaware 19801, Attorneys for Defendant Keith Gibson.

WHARTON, J.

1 This 2nd day of November, 2022, upon consideration of Defendant Keith

Gibson’s (“Gibson”) six motions: (1) Motion to Sever Charges;1 (2) Motion for

Disclosure of Non-Recorded Portions of Witness Statements;2 (3) Motion to

Suppress Defendant’s Statement;3 (4) Motion to Suppress Evidence Seized from

Defendant’s iPhone;4 (5) Motion to Identify 404(b) Evidence;5 and (6) Motion to

Exclude Admission of Photo Lineup;6 and the State’s responses, it appears to the

Court that:

1. On July 6, 2021, Gibson was indicted in a forty-one-count indictment.7

His charges include Murder First Degree (four counts);8 Attempted Murder First

Degree (one count) and multiple counts of Robbery First Degree, Possession of a

Firearm During the Commission of a Felony (“PFDCF”), and Possession of a

Firearm by a Person Prohibited (“PFBPP”). The charges stem from five separate

criminal investigations that took place between May 15, 2021 and June 8, 2021. All

of Gibson’s purported crimes in this case took place in either the City of Wilmington

or the contiguous Town of Elsmere, Delaware.

1 D.I. 45. (Docket Items numbers are from ID No. 21060045632.) 2 D.I. 42 3 D.I. 40. 4 D.I. 41. 5 D.I. 39. 6 D.I. 44. 7 Indictment, D.I. 1. 8 The four First Degree Murder counts are comprised of one intentional murder charge and one felony murder charge for each of the two homicide victims.

2 2. The State alleges that on May 15, 2021, Gibson shot and killed Metro

PCS employee Leslie Basilio (“Basilio”) while robbing the store where she worked

in Elsmere.9 Gibson is also accused of stealing her car.10 On June 5, 2021, Gibson

is alleged to have shot and killed Ronald Wright (“Wright”),11 supposedly also

stealing his sling bag.12 The next day, June 6, 2021, Gibson is accused of shooting

and attempting to kill Belal Almansoori (“Almansoori”) while robbing the Good

Deli where Almansoori worked.13 During the early morning hours of June 8, 2021,

Gibson is accused of stealing Secret Harris’ (“Harris”) phone, hitting her with a gun,

and shooting at her fleeing car.14 Later that morning, Gibson (along with an alleged

co-conspirator, Alexander Delgado) is accused of robbing a Rite Aid and threatening

an employee, Sandra Collins.15

3. Motion to Sever Charges.16 Gibson asks the Court to sever the 41

counts of his indictment into three separate trial groupings.17 He further asks the

Court to sever the PFBPP charges within those groupings from the underlying

9 State’s Resp. to Def.’s Motion to Sever at ¶ 2, D.I. 55. 10 Id. 11 Id., at ¶ 3. 12 Id. 13 Id., at ¶ 4. 14 Id., at ¶ 5. 15 Id., at ¶ 6. 16 D. I. 45. 17 Id., at ¶ 13.

3 offenses and try them separately.18 He proposes the charges be grouped for trial as

follows: (1) “business robberies” (counts 1–8 (Basilio), 18–22 (Almansoori), and

30–41 (Collins)), further severing the PFBPP counts (counts 8, 22, 33, 39, 40 and

41) and trying them as part of a bifurcated trial with the “business robbery” counts;

(2) “drug dealer robbery” (counts 9–17 (Wright)), further severing and bifurcating

for trial count 17 (PFBPP)); and (3) the “confrontation on the street” (counts 23–29

(Harris)), further severing and bifurcating for trial count 29 (PFBPP).19 The State

opposes, but asks for simultaneous bench or bifurcated jury trials on the PFBPP

charges if severance is granted.20

4. Gibson argues that he would suffer prejudice if severance is not

granted.21 He claims, for example, that the facts underlying the robbery-homicides

(and attempted homicide) “are not all sufficiently connected and do not follow a

common plan or scheme”22 and that each offense-category can be proven without

mention of the others.23 He also voices concern about how the jury would decide his

case - that it would aggregate evidence and infer a general criminal disposition,

ultimately finding him guilty on that basis.24 Gibson also relies on State v McKay to

18 Id. 19 Id. 20 State’s Resp. to Def.’s Motion to Sever at ¶ 30, D.I. 55. 21 Def.’s Motion to Sever Charges passim, D.I. 45. 22 Id. at ¶ 5. 23 See Id., at ¶¶ 7,11. 24 Id. at ¶ 4.

4 argue that “the sheer mass of the charges” and the “adverse publicity which this case

has engendered” would taint the jury.25 Gibson argues that a joint trial would deny

him his right to a fair trial guaranteed by the State26 and Federal Constitutions.27

Finally, he asserts that “[t]he interests of judicial economy do not outweigh [the

above-described] prejudice.”28

5. In support of severing the PFBPP charges and bifurcating the trials,

Gibson points to this Court’s history of granting these requests.29 He argues that

bifurcation is needed because the jury may be unable to consider each count

separately and improperly infer a criminal disposition.30

6. The State responds that jury instructions would remedy any prejudice31

and that joinder is “appropriate.”32 The State’s overarching argument in support of

joinder is that “the defendant’s offenses are of a similar character, similar modus

operandi, demonstrate a common scheme, and the evidence in some of the crimes is

inextricably intertwined with the evidence in others.”33 The State points to

25 Id., at ¶ 10 (citing State v. McKay, 382 A.2d 260, 262 (Del. Super. 1978). 26 Id., at ¶ 12 (citing Del. Const. art. I § 6; 7) 27 Id. (.citing U.S. Const. amend. VI; XIV). 28 Id. 29 Id., at ¶ 13 (citing e.g., State v. Williams, 2007 WL 2473428, at * 1 (Del. Super. 2007); State v. Wilson, 1978 WL 185316, *2–3 (Del. Super. 1978)). 30 Id. 31 State’s Resp. to Def.’s Motion to Sever Charges at ¶ 15, D.I. 55. 32 Id., at ¶ 13. 33 Id.

5 similarities in ballistics,34 “[the] distinct modus operandi for shooting during

robberies,”35 video footage of Gibson wearing similar clothes across

investigations,36 including wearing Wright’s bag throughout the incidents.37 It also

emphasizes that all crimes occurred within 24 days and that the majority of the

crimes occurred in “rapid-fire succession” and “within blocks of one another in the

same area of Wilmington.”38 The State argues the evidence in the Wright murder,

the Harris robbery, and the other shootings is so inextricably intertwined that the

incidents “must be tried by one jury.”39

7. The State distinguishes Gibson’s case from McKay, arguing that while

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Bluebook (online)
State v. Gibson, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-gibson-delsuperct-2022.