State v. Jackson

CourtSuperior Court of Delaware
DecidedMay 2, 2017
Docket1609006213
StatusPublished

This text of State v. Jackson (State v. Jackson) 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. Jackson, (Del. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

SUPER|OR COURT oFTHl-:

STATE OF DELAWARE

CHARLES E. BUTl_ER NF_W cAsTLE couNTY couR'rHousE JuDGE 500 NORTH K|NG STREET, SUlTE 10400 WlLM|NGTON, DELAWARE l9801-3733 May 2a 2017 TEi_EPHoNE (302) 255-0656

Amanda J. DiLiberto, Deputy Attomey General Department of Justice

Carvel State Office Building

820 N. French Street

Wilmington, DE 19801

Eugene J. Maurer, Jr., Esquire Christina L. Ruggiero, Esquire 1201 -A King Street Wilmington, DE 19801

Re: State v. Javon Jackson I.D.: 1609006213

Defendant ’s Motion to Disclose Identil‘y of Confidential lnformant. GRANTED.

Counsel:

This dispute revolves around an aborted drug deal and almost stipulated facts. For reasons not clear to the Court, the parties cannot agree on what to do about the informant and so the Court Will.

The facts are fairly summarized by the State’s response to the defendant’s motion to reveal the identity of its confidential informant (“CI”):

On September 8, 2016, Offlcer Kashner of the NeWport Police

Department made contact With a Confldential Informant in reference

to a drug investigation Specifically, the CI informed Kashner that he

could purchase a “log” of heroin from a Naesean McNeil.

In the presence of Kashner, the Cl contacted (co)defendant McNeill by phone, and ordered on log of heroin for $200. Defendant McNeill

l

advised the Cl that he could meet him in approximately 10 minutes at the Burger King located at 300 South Maryland Avenue.

Kashner transported the CI to the Burger King. While at the Burger King, Kashner observed the CI take a phone call from Defendant McNeill. Kashner overheard Defendant McNeill informing the Cl that he Would be arriving in a black Cadillac. The CI advised defendant McNeill that he Would be standing in front of the Burger King Waiting.

At approximately 19:02 hours, Kashner and CPL Davidson of the

NeWport Police Department set up surveillance on the Burger King

parking lot, keeping the Cl in their direct line of sight. At

approximately 19:30 hours, police observed a black Cadillac pull into

the Burger King parking lot and drive to the front of the establishment

Where the CI Was standing When police observed the CI beginning

to Walk toward the Cadillac, they approached With their

departmentally issued firearms drawn ordering its occupants to exit.

Therefore, the planned drug transaction did not actually take place.l

Defendant McNeill Was seated in the front passenger seat. He had a log of heroin in his lap and $322 in U.S. currency in his hand. Defendant Jackson Was empty handed, had nothing in his lap, but police did recover a Second log of heroin in the door Well on the driver’s side door and a third log inside the center console of the vehicle.

Jackson has moved the Court for an order to disclose the identity of the CI, even as he takes no substantial issue With the State’s recitation above. According to Jackson, the CI dealt exclusively With the codefendant McNeill and the CI has

no testimony or evidence to give that Would in any Way implicate Defendant

Jackson. The State says as much in its recitation above and indeed, at the

l State’S Resp. at 2.

preliminary hearing, there was testimony that when a cell phone was recovered from McNeill, it was the same number called by the CI and witnessed by the police officer. In response to the motion to disclose the identity of the informant, the State says “the standard is whether the Cl’s testimony would materially aid the defense, and the State submits that, in this case, it would not.” 2

D.R.E. 509 provides the general rule of privilege to the government allowing it to refuse to identify an informant “who has furnished information to or assisted in an investigation into a possible violation of a law.” Rule 509(c) however, states that “No privilege exists under this rule if the identity of the informer or his interest in the subject matter of his communication has been disclosed to those who would have cause to resent the communication by a holder of the privilege or by the informer's own action, or if the informer appears as a witness for the government.”3

The use of informants in drug investigations enjoys a rich history, in Delaware and nationally, and little purpose would be served in chronicling all of the many ways their identities may be hidden from the Suspects in a drug investigation When the “confidential” informant orders up drugs from his

supplier, meets his supplier with the police waiting just a few feet away and

actually approaches his supplier before the police move in, there is little

21a at 5-6.

3 D.R.E. 509.

“confidential” in the informant’s identity, at least to the supplier. The informant can only be the person who called the supplier, ordered the log, said he’d be in front of the Burger King, which is where the supplier and the informant met a short while later. This informant was put into the middle of this transaction with nary an effort to hide his identity.4

The Court has little doubt but that codefendant McNeill knows full well who the informant is. The State has identified the informant’s conduct in sufficient detail to leave no doubt as to his identity. lt may be that McNeill, apparently known in the business as “No Limit” only knows the informant by some other equally colorful street name, but that is not the point: the fact is the government structured this transaction in such a way as to leave the seller no doubt as to the identity of the informant even if he did not know his name well enough to mail him a Christmas card at his family address

The waiver language in Rule 509(c) that the government waives its privilege when it makes disclosure to "‘those who would have cause to resent the

communication” comes directly from the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision in

4 See, e.g., Cooper v. State, 2011 WL 6039613 (Del. Super. Dec. 5, 2011)(informant who set up the deal came to the prearranged location but only pointed out the defendant as he ducked inside the undercover car and therefore was not a witness to the arrest. Disclosure not mandated).

Rovz'aro v. United States.5 Since our rule takes language directly from the opinion, it is one worth looking at.6

Roviaro was charged with selling heron to one “John Doe” who was acting as a government informant on the occasion in question. The defense sought government disclosure of the informant’s identity and the government claimed privilege. The Court said:

The scope of the privilege is limited by its underlying purpose. Thus,

where the disclosure of the contents of a communication will not tend

to reveal the identity of an informer, the contents are not privileged.

Likewise, once the identity of the informer has been disclosed to those

who would have cause to resent the communication, the privilege is

no longer applicable7

ln this case, the identity of the informant was effectively revealed to codefendant McNeill, with whom the informant made the delivery arrangement lt may well be that, consistent with the State’s theory, the driver of the vehicle, defendant Jackson, also knows who the informant is. Then again, it may not. lt is

not for Jackson to admit it _ he does, after all, have a constitutional privilege not to

do so. But the Court sees no distinction in the waiver analysis under Rule 509

5 353 U.s. 53, 60 (1957).

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Related

Cooper v. State
32 A.3d 988 (Supreme Court of Delaware, 2011)

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Bluebook (online)
State v. Jackson, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-jackson-delsuperct-2017.