State v. Jennings

461 A.2d 361, 1983 R.I. LEXIS 957
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJune 3, 1983
Docket81-215-C.A.
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 461 A.2d 361 (State v. Jennings) 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. Jennings, 461 A.2d 361, 1983 R.I. LEXIS 957 (R.I. 1983).

Opinion

OPINION

BEVILACQUA, Chief Justice.

The defendant, Robert P. Jennings, appeals from judgments of conviction entered on a two-count indictment after a jury trial in the Providence County Superior Court. Count 1 of the indictment charged the defendant with murdering one Robert Cappel-li on November 4, 1979, in violation of G.L. 1956 (1969 Reenactment) § 11-23-1. Count 2 charged the defendant with possession of a firearm while committing a crime of violence on said date in violation of G.L. 1956 (1969 Reenactment) § 11-47-3. After due deliberations the jury found the defendant guilty of the lesser included offense of manslaughter on count 1. In regard to the other count, the jurors found the defendant guilty as charged.

At trial, the following facts were established. On November 4, 1979, at approximately 6:30 p.m., the Providence rescue squad responded to 414 Plainfield Street, Providence, as a result of a call by defendant. Upon arrival at the scene, they found a young man in critical condition lying on the ground outside the building. He was suffering from what was later determined to be six gunshot wounds. The victim, Robert Cappelli, was immediately transported to Roger Williams Hospital accompanied by defendant. Shortly thereafter, Cappelli died. The defendant, while at the hospital, told the police that he was a friend of the victim and that the victim had rung his doorbell that evening. He said that when he went downstairs from his second-floor apartment, he found Cappelli bleeding and asking for help. In response to questioning by the police, defendant further stated that the victim frequented a club where he gambled quite a bit and that he owed unknown persons money. The defendant was then taken to the police station to give a witness statement. During this time, defendant was not a suspect.

The police, as a result of the rescue call, also proceeded to 414 Plainfield Street. The first officer on the scene was a patrolman. Shortly thereafter, Sergeant Richard DiCicco and Detectives Martin Hames and Donald Alberico arrived on the scene. DiCicco immediately went to the hospital. *364 Alberico noticed a bloodstain on the sidewalk and went into the building to speak with the landlady, Mrs. Mary Powers, who lived on the first floor. He and Hames then left and went to the hospital where they spoke briefly with defendant. Alberi-co then returned to the scene. Meanwhile, Walter Powers, the landlady’s son, not knowing that defendant had gone to the hospital, decided to go upstairs to see if defendant knew what was going on. Finding the door to defendant’s apartment slightly ajar, he walked in and saw that the apartment appeared to have been ransacked. Concerned, he went downstairs and asked Detective Alberico to accompany him back into the apartment. After pointing out the condition of the apartment, Powers returned to his mother’s apartment.

Detective Alberico testified that he noticed a bloodstain at the top of the inside stairway landing outside defendant’s apartment. He observed that the apartment appeared to have been ransacked and proceeded to check the four rooms to see if an intruder was present. While checking the rooms, he spotted a spent cartridge on the kitchen floor. In the bathroom he found under the sink an open cupboard with all its contents strewn over the floor. He also noticed a dark open doorway set in one wall but did not at that time notice the stairs behind the door leading from the bathroom to the attic. He checked both the bedroom and the living room and found no one there.

Alberico then left the apartment and went downstairs to the first floor, keeping the apartment “under visual control.” When he got downstairs, he saw Lieutenant Detective Pasquale Rocchio, his superior, and asked him to accompany him upstairs to see the ransacked apartment.

Rocchio and Alberico entered the apartment and proceeded to conduct a full scale, intensive search. As a result of this search, the police found and seized five spent cartridges, a box of .22-caliber ammunition, a lit flashlight on the bathroom vanity, and a gun under the mattress in the bedroom. This search further revealed that the dark doorway in the bathroom actually led to the attic, and during a search of the attic, bloodstains on the wallpaper and insulation were discovered. Samples of the blood as well as photographs were taken.

Meanwhile, by approximately 8:30 p.m., defendant had finished giving an oral statement to Detective Collins at the police station. This statement was basically a reiteration of the statements he made at the hospital regarding his relationship with the victim and the victim’s gambling.

While defendant was waiting for a ride at the station, Collins received a telephone call from Lieutenant Detective Rocchio who was still at the scene, informing him that a gun and cartridges had been found and that defendant was now a suspect and was no longer merely a witness. Collins then confronted defendant with the evidence, read him his rights, and told him he was a suspect in the homicide. The defendant, “visibly shaken” by the information, agreed to make a statement. He then gave a detailed oral statement regarding the incident wherein he admitted that he had fired the fatal shots.

The defendant moved to suppress the evidence seized from the apartment and his confession on the ground that they were the products of an “unreasonable” search and seizure of defendant’s apartment without a warrant in violation of the Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution and art. I, sec. 6, of the Rhode Island Constitution. The motion was granted in regard to the pistol that was found under the mattress and the blood samples taken from the insulation and the wallpaper in the attic and denied in regard to the remaining tangible evidence. The motion to suppress the confession was denied.

On appeal, defendant raises several issues:

1. Whether the “search” of defendant’s apartment without a warrant was “unreasonable” and in violation of the Fourth Amendment.
2. Whether the statements and admissions by defendant in the police station *365 shortly after the search of the apartment, were constitutionally admissible.
3. Whether the trial justice erred in denying defendant’s motion for judgment of acquittal or refusing to vacate the conviction on count 2 because conviction of both the carrying of a firearm during commission of a crime of violence and manslaughter constitutes double jeopardy-
4. Whether the trial justice erred in his supplemental charge when he instructed the jury that in general a person must take all preventive steps, including retreat, before resorting to force.

In view of our disposition of the first two issues, an exhaustive analysis of the remaining issues will be unnecessary. 1

I

We first address the validity of the second entry and search of defendant’s apartment.

In the instant case, the police never obtained a warrant to search defendant’s apartment. The defendant does not contest the legitimacy of the initial entry by Powers and Alberico and Alberico’s cursory sweep through the rooms.

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Bluebook (online)
461 A.2d 361, 1983 R.I. LEXIS 957, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-jennings-ri-1983.