State v. Greco

24 A.3d 135, 199 Md. App. 646, 2011 Md. App. LEXIS 90
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJuly 7, 2011
Docket2343, September Term, 2009
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 24 A.3d 135 (State v. Greco) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Special Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Greco, 24 A.3d 135, 199 Md. App. 646, 2011 Md. App. LEXIS 90 (Md. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

IRMA S. RAKER

(Retired, Specially Assigned), J.

This is a State appeal from the grant of post-conviction relief to appellee Vincent Greco, Jr., pursuant to Maryland Code (2001, 2008 RepLVoL, 2010 Cum.Supp.) § 7-106(c) of the Criminal Procedure Article. 1 The Circuit Court for Baltimore County vacated the judgment of conviction for the offense of first degree murder, and granted appellee a new trial on that offense. 2 The State filed an application for leave to appeal, presenting a single question:

“Did the circuit court err in granting post-conviction relief under Section 7-106(c) of the Criminal Procedure Article, based on the improper retroactive application of a non-constitutional evidentiary standard that was not intended to be applied retroactively?”

Greco presents two additional issues in his brief, questioning the jurisdiction of this Court to hear this State’s appeal and the preservation of certain arguments in the State’s brief. 3

*650 We shall hold that this Court does have jurisdiction to hear this appeal, that the State did not waive its challenge to the applicability of § 7-106(c), and that the circuit court erred in granting Greco post-conviction relief under § 7-106(c).

I.

This case has a long history in the courts. We set forth the facts as set out by this Court in Greco’s direct appeal in Greco v. State, No. 1671, Sept. Term 1982, unreported (Md. Ct. Spec.App. June 23, 1983):

“Greco was tried for killing 78 year old Leta Jeanette Larsen who he allegedly beat brutally before he strangled and raped her in her living room on April 17,1981.
On the eve of Larsen’s death, Greco, who had steadily dated Larsen’s granddaughter, Sheryl Fitch, received a call from Larsen. She allegedly told Greco that she did not want him to continue to date her granddaughter. Larsen expressed concern over Greco’s use of drugs and alcohol. That night, at approximately 9 p.m., Greco, while at the Ridgley Inn, drank ‘a few beers’ and smoked marijuana. Additionally, he ‘got some’ caffeine pills. He then went to a party at the ‘Storeroom Bar’ where he stayed until about 2 a.m. While at the party, Greco says he drank ‘about ten drinks-Jack Daniels and Coke and Molson’s Ale.’ He also ‘had some marijuana cigarettes.’ When Greco left the party, he ‘took a six-pack of Michelob with’ him.
While driving on Charles Street toward the City of Baltimore, Greco ‘remembered the conversation with Mrs. Larsen.’ Because he knew she stayed up late at night watching television, he decided to stop off to see her.
At Larsen’s home, Greco testified, he and Larsen had a lengthy conversation about his relationship with Sheryl as *651 well as his use of alcohol and marijuana. Larsen and Greco allegedly began to aggravate each other. Larsen, according to Greco, ‘started talking about sex.’ She then went to fix coffee. Greco reportedly went to the bathroom and when he returned, Larsen, allegedly with the top of her pajamas unbuttoned, approached him while he was drinking coffee and requested that they have sexual intercourse. Greco told the jury that he and Larsen engaged in copulation on the kitchen floor. Upon the completion of the coupling, Greco ‘dozed off.’ Suddenly he was awakened by a feeling of pain in his chest. He observed Larsen standing over him with a knife in her hand.
A struggle ensued as Greco wrestled with Larsen to obtain the knife. During that struggle Larsen cut her hand and Greco is said to have fainted from the sight of blood. He regained consciousness when Larsen allegedly stabbed him in the side. He in turn grabbed her around the neck. They then stumbled into the living room and fell upon the sofa. Fearing that Larsen would kill him, Greco put a pillow over Larsen’s face ‘because she looked so bad.’ He found later that she had ceased breathing.
Greco testified that while he was in a state of panic and frenzy, he rinsed the blood from the knife, washed his face and hands, cleansed his wounds as well as Larsen’s, notwithstanding that she was obviously dead, bandaged Larsen’s wounds, and then covered her with an afghan.
Ten year old Mary Lee Derriekson and eleven year old Joelle Myers, respectively granddaughter and great granddaughter of Larsen, were staying in the house that night with Larsen. Greco, realizing that they were there, awakened them from their supposed sleep and informed them that they were leaving the house with him.
The trio journeyed to College Park, Maryland, in order to find Sheryl Fitch. Greco told Sheryl what had happened. He asserted that Larsen had seduced him and then tried to stab him. He sustained several minor wounds. Sheryl returned to Baltimore with the trio and after dropping the two children at their parents’ home, Greco and Sheryl *652 proceeded to Larsen’s house where Sheryl discovered that the police had arrived. Greco drove to his parents’ house where he was subsequently arrested.”

In a jury trial in the Circuit Court for Baltimore County, Vincent Greco, Jr., testified in his own defense that he and Mrs. Larsen had consensual intercourse on the night of her death, and that, when he killed her, he believed that his actions were necessary to save his life. To corroborate his testimony, Greco sought to introduce the expert testimony of Dr. Leonard Rothstein, a defense psychiatrist who had examined Greco. Dr. Rothstein offered to testify, in relevant part, that Greco’s psychiatric makeup included a specific phobia regarding physical assaults and the sight of blood which caused him to misperceive the threat that the 78-year-old victim posed towards him when she allegedly stabbed him on the night he killed her.

The trial court admitted some, but not all, of Dr. Rothstein’s proffered testimony. The trial court noted that, under Johnson v. State, 292 Md. 405, 439 A.2d 542 (1982), testimony offered in support of a diminished capacity defense was not admissible, and further explained its ruling, in part, as follows:

“Now, I would follow the opinion in Waine v. State, 37 Md.App. [222] at 243 [377 A.2d 509 (1977)] ...

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Bluebook (online)
24 A.3d 135, 199 Md. App. 646, 2011 Md. App. LEXIS 90, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-greco-mdctspecapp-2011.