State v. Mariney

CourtSuperior Court of Delaware
DecidedOctober 7, 2024
Docket2008012017; 2204003380
StatusPublished

This text of State v. Mariney (State v. Mariney) 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. Mariney, (Del. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

STATE OF DELAWARE, ) ) v. ) ID Nos. 2008012017 ) 2204003380 TARIQ MARINEY, ) ) Defendant. )

ORDER DENYING POSTCONVICTION RELIEF

INTRODUCTION

On April 26, 2023, Tariq Mariney moved this Court for postconviction relief

(“Motion”) from his June 21, 2022 convictions for Possession of a Firearm by a

Person Prohibited and Drug Dealing.1 Mariney argues he is entitled to relief under

Superior Criminal Court Rule 61 (“Rule 61”) because his December 20, 2021

suppression motion was improperly denied.2 This Court concludes Mariney’s

Motion lacks merit and must be DENIED.

BACKGROUND

Probation is an act of grace3 through which a convicted criminal offender,

sentenced to Level V incarceration, is permitted to remain at liberty under the

1 See Docket Item (“D.I.”) 27, 32, 37 in Case ID. Nos. 2008012017/ The facts in this decision reflect the record developed at the May 18, 2022 suppression hearing. D.I. 34. Citations to the hearing transcript are in the form “Tr. #.” 2 See D.I. 14, 37. 3 Kurzmann v. State, 903 A.2d 702, 716 (Del. 2006). 1 supervision and rules of the Office of Probation and Parole (“P&P”). Mariney broke

these rules. Despite being subject to intensive supervision, Mariney tested positive

for cocaine and marijuana on several urine screens and provided the wrong home

address to P&P.4 Operation Safe Streets conducts home visits for probationers who

are noncompliant with supervision.5

On the morning of August 25, 2020, probation officer Kevin McClure led a

nine-man Operation Safe Streets Team (“OSS Team”) to conduct a routine curfew

check at 606 North Washington Street, Apartment 2, in Wilmington, Delaware.6

4 Tr. 13:8–18, 14:9–15:8. 5 Id. at. 12:15–20, 69:6–11. The purpose of the visit was to ensure Mariney’s compliance with conditions of his supervision because of his prior history. Tr. 64:10–14. OSS is a local crime-reduction initiative, Department of Community Corrections assists Wilmington police officers in conducting “home visits . . . community contacts, curfew checks, contacting offenders involved in suspicious activities or violating conditions of supervision, arresting them when necessary, and doing searches when appropriate.” Id. 5:16–6:18. McClure testified that “one of the assignments or mandates, if you will, of Safe Streets is we are assigned to people that are . . . classified high risk based upon curfew or . . . the fact that they’re on intensive supervision. So it doesn’t necessarily have to be the probation officer assigned to that person to go out and contact them.” Id. 10:22–11:11. McClure further explained that Department of Correction Procedure (“DCP”) 7.3 provides the purpose of home visits is: “[t]o verify the residence, that the person is actually living there[;]” making a “collateral contact” in the event “you can’t contact the offender in case of an emergency[;]” to “view the home environment that they’re in” to enforce no-contact orders and “gather who’s living there[;] . . . to understand the layout of the house . . . for future home visits[;]” and to “ensure compliance with the supervision conditions that were assigned to that person.” Id. 9:14–10:17. 6 Id. 12:15–20. Nine OSS members executed the home visit: probation officers McClure, Collins, Scioli, and Phelps and police officers Evans, McNamara, Nolan, Wiggins, and Rosaio; each were assigned individual responsibilities—probation officers were properly trained to do the searching, and police officers provided security and secured the evidence seized. Id. 29:10–18, 34:14–35:3. Conducting a home visit requires a minimum of two team members; they typically “ride four . . . or three deep.” Id.. 65:19–66:2.

2 Mariney, who had been celebrating his birthday the night before, awoke to loud

knocks at his door.7 The OSS Team spotted a man peeking through a window and

Officer McClure motioned and asked to him to come to the door.8 Mariney asked,

“[W]ho’s there[?]”9 Officer McClure identified himself and Mariney replied he

needed to get dressed.10 Moments later, Mariney opened the door wide—which the

OSS Team understood as an invitation to enter the premises.11 Mariney was wearing

shorts but no shirt.12 His mouth was caked with a white substance resembling

cocaine.13 Aside from Mariney’s disheveled look, delay in answering the door, and

the white substance on his mouth, there were other red flags.

7 Mariney submits he was “pretty intoxicated” from celebrating his birthday the day before the home visit. Tr. 73:11–20. 8 Id. 15:12–16:4. But see id. 70:22–71:3 (Mariney denies peeking through the window). 9 Id. 15:15–17. This Court gave little credibility to Mariney’s testimony regarding his surprise when he opened the door to eight officers who purportedly bum-rushed their way into his home and immediately put him in handcuffs as they searched the apartment. Id. 69:20–70. See Tr. 36:3– 37:19 (the OSS Team was easily identifiable as law enforcement officers because they were wearing tactical vests and badges), Id. 17:13–18:1 (McClure testified: “It’s odd that you would ask . . . who’s there when you’ve looked out the window and you’ve seen uniformed law enforcement officers there. I mean . . . you know who’s there. So that raises a flag for me, number one. I guess number two, it is odd when you say you’re getting dressed and then you just come to the door and you just have a pair of shorts on. . . . It’s just in my experience people that delay coming to the door, it’s usually because they’re trying to hide things.”). Moreover, Mariney was on Level III probation in August 2020, requiring Mariney to allow officers into his home to conduct a home visit. Id.. 74:4–8. 10 Id. 15:18–21. 11 Id. 16:14–17:7, 49:11–50:11, 69:13–20. 12 Id. 17:18–21, 69:15–17. 13 Id. 50:1–8

3 The second-story apartment was modest—it had a living room, galley kitchen,

long hallway, and one bed and bath.14 Upon entry, the OSS Team immediately

noticed contraband and drug paraphernalia in plain view. 15 A hookah pipe was in

the living room.16 Ziploc baggies containing green vials commonly used to store

crack cocaine rested in a little cart next to the kitchen.17 A marijuana blunt balanced

on an ashtray.18 A razor blade and a small-cut straw were perched on the

microwave—a white substance blotched the razor blade, indicative of drug use.19

Because of the visible contraband and drug paraphernalia in plain view, the

OSS Team detained Mariney.20 Upon learning there were other occupants in the

14 Id. 19:7–13, 56:16–21. 15 Id. 18:15–17, Tr. 19:7–13, 56:16–21. 16 Id. . 18:20–19:7, 47:12–20 (McClure explained that “a hookah pipe is . . . a water pipe . . . used to smoke shisha or flavored tobacco, but you can also smoke marijuana out of it. They call it dirty hookah.”), 19:19–20:4 (the clear plastic baggies “had what they call on the street ‘trash cans’, but they’re little vials that you open, they’re tiny, and you store drugs in them. Mostly it’s crack cocaine.”) (internal quotations added), Tr. 51:1–16 (the plastic baggies containing the vials were in a little cart protruding next to the kitchen). 17 Id. 18:20–19:7, 47:12–20 (McClure explained that “a hookah pipe is . . . a water pipe . . . used to smoke shisha or flavored tobacco, but you can also smoke marijuana out of it. They call it dirty hookah.”), 19:19–20:4 (the clear plastic baggies “had what they call on the street ‘trash cans’, but they’re little vials that you open, they’re tiny, and you store drugs in them. Mostly it’s crack cocaine.”) (internal quotations added), Tr.

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Related

Kurzmann v. State
903 A.2d 702 (Supreme Court of Delaware, 2006)
Culver v. State
956 A.2d 5 (Supreme Court of Delaware, 2008)
McAllister v. State
3 A.3d 1098 (Supreme Court of Delaware, 2010)
State v. Barnes
116 A.3d 883 (Supreme Court of Delaware, 2015)
Walker v. State
205 A.3d 823 (Supreme Court of Delaware, 2019)
Wallace v. State
62 A.3d 1192 (Supreme Court of Delaware, 2012)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
State v. Mariney, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-mariney-delsuperct-2024.