State v. Marquise Lamont Brown

CourtCourt of Appeals of Wisconsin
DecidedJanuary 18, 2023
Docket2022AP000273-CR
StatusUnpublished

This text of State v. Marquise Lamont Brown (State v. Marquise Lamont Brown) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Wisconsin primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Marquise Lamont Brown, (Wis. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS DECISION NOTICE DATED AND FILED This opinion is subject to further editing. If published, the official version will appear in the bound volume of the Official Reports. January 18, 2023 A party may file with the Supreme Court a Sheila T. Reiff petition to review an adverse decision by the Clerk of Court of Appeals Court of Appeals. See WIS. STAT. § 808.10 and RULE 809.62.

Appeal No. 2022AP273-CR Cir. Ct. No. 2017CF5716

STATE OF WISCONSIN IN COURT OF APPEALS DISTRICT I

STATE OF WISCONSIN,

PLAINTIFF-RESPONDENT,

V.

MARQUISE LAMONT BROWN,

DEFENDANT-APPELLANT.

APPEAL from a judgment and an order of the circuit court for Milwaukee County: STEPHANIE ROTHSTEIN, Judge. Affirmed.

Before Brash, C.J., Donald, P.J., and Dugan, J.

Per curiam opinions may not be cited in any court of this state as precedent

or authority, except for the limited purposes specified in WIS. STAT. RULE 809.23(3).

¶1 PER CURIAM. Marquise Lamont Brown appeals his judgment of conviction for second-degree reckless homicide with the use of a dangerous No. 2022AP273-CR

weapon, as a party to a crime, and for being a felon in possession of a firearm. He also appeals the order denying his postconviction motion, in which he claimed his trial counsel was ineffective for failing to object to the testimony of three witnesses, which he asserted included inadmissible hearsay. Upon review, we affirm.

BACKGROUND

¶2 The charges against Brown stem from a shooting that occurred in September 2015. According to the criminal complaint, at approximately 2:00 a.m. on September 17, 2015, shortly after a Shot Spotter alert indicated gunfire in the area of North 12th Street in Milwaukee, Alvin Brown1 was brought to the District 5 Station of the Milwaukee Police Department (MPD) on North 4th Street; he was sitting in the front passenger seat of a blue Buick Rendezvous, and had been shot. Lifesaving measures were performed on Alvin, but he died at the scene. An examination of the Rendezvous indicated that Alvin had been seated in the passenger seat of the vehicle when he was shot.

¶3 Meanwhile, officers investigating the Shot Spotter alert on North 12th Street recovered two spent brass shell casings from a 9mm semiautomatic firearm. They also found a silver and black pistol magazine for a 9mm gun, loaded with live rounds.

¶4 Later that day, security officers at a Fleet Farm in Germantown stopped Letreya Powell and Darren Washington because Washington had stolen some ammunition. Brown was with them and was waiting in the car, but upon

1 The State noted that there is no familial relationship between the defendant and the victim, although they have the same last name. For ease of reading, we refer to the victim by his first name.

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seeing that Powell and Washington had been stopped, he got out of the car and ran; he was caught and taken into custody.

¶5 Officers from the MPD subsequently interviewed Powell several times. She stated that she had been “riding around” with Brown in her brown Volkswagen Jetta during the early morning hours of September 17, 2015. She said they were stopped on North 12th Street when a blue Buick Rendezvous, which had been driving toward them, “blocked them in.”

¶6 Powell stated that there was another passenger in the Jetta—a man who was unknown to her. When the Rendezvous stopped next to their vehicle, the unknown man announced that someone in the Rendezvous was “holding something out the window.” Powell said she then saw Brown pull something from “somewhere on his right side”; he then fired two shots at the Rendezvous from a black handgun.

¶7 Powell explained to police that she had then picked up Brown later that day, at about 1:00 p.m. Powell heard Brown talking on the phone, saying that he had to “get rid of his gun” after a “situation the other night,” and that “all it needs is a new magazine.” Powell said they then picked up Washington to go with them to buy the magazine because he “had an ID.”

¶8 Powell said that when they arrived at the Germantown Fleet Farm, they all went into the store. They picked out a 9mm magazine and “some 9mm ammo” which Powell purchased, since it turned out that Washington did not have his identification with him.

¶9 Powell stated that Brown left the store while she was making the purchase. After she and Washington were subsequently stopped by security on their

3 No. 2022AP273-CR

way out and Brown ran from the vehicle, she was “let go” because she had the receipt for the items she had purchased. She then returned to her car and discovered a black handgun and a bag of drugs had been stuffed between the front passenger seat and the center console. She assumed Brown had put them there because they were not there when she had gotten out of the car. Powell told police she threw the gun and the drugs underneath the vehicle parked next to her.

¶10 Officers from the Germantown Police Department recovered the gun from the parking lot at Fleet Farm. A DNA swab was taken from the gun and analyzed; it indicated that Brown was the “major contributor” of the DNA profile that was found on the gun. Additionally, it was determined that the shell casings recovered from the shooting scene on North 12th Street, as well as a bullet that was recovered from Alvin’s body during the autopsy, all came from that gun.

¶11 Brown was ultimately charged with first-degree reckless homicide with the use of a dangerous weapon, as a party to a crime, and with possession of a firearm by a felon in December 2017. The matter proceeded to a jury trial in January 2020.

¶12 At the trial, Powell was called as a witness for the State. She testified that she was looking down at her phone and did not see the shooting, but rather only heard gunshots. She stated that she did not see Brown pull a gun out from his right side, and did not recall telling detectives that she had seen him shoot at the Rendezvous when she was being interviewed. When asked about the differences in her testimony as compared to her statements to police that Brown was the shooter, Powell said that she was “scared” at the time of the interviews, and had not told the detectives the truth.

4 No. 2022AP273-CR

¶13 The State subsequently called two of the detectives who had interviewed Powell in October 2015, and a portion of her interviews were played for the jury. Those interviews, along with the corresponding testimony from the detectives, demonstrated that Powell had changed her story as to who had shot at the Rendezvous: she had first stated that it was the unidentified man in the Jetta with them at the time of the shooting; then she said that she did not see who fired the shots; and finally, she stated that she had seen Brown with a gun and he was the shooter.

¶14 Another witness for the State was Destyn Montaque. Montaque confirmed that he knew both Brown and Powell. Montaque’s testimony regarding the shooting involved statements that he asserted Powell made to him in February or March of 2017. Specifically, Montaque testified that Powell had told him she had been “in a car” with Brown in 2015 and he ended up “shootin’ a guy,” and that Brown had “lost the clips” for the gun so they went to a gun store that was “far out” to “get some bullets and clips[.]” He further stated that Powell had told him about being stopped by security officers at the store, and that Brown had fled during that incident. Montaque said that Powell also told him about finding the gun and drugs in her car after that incident and throwing them out of the car, and that they were subsequently found by the police.

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Bluebook (online)
State v. Marquise Lamont Brown, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-marquise-lamont-brown-wisctapp-2023.