State v. Miles

585 N.W.2d 368, 1998 Minn. LEXIS 697, 1998 WL 697078
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedOctober 8, 1998
DocketC9-97-1639
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 585 N.W.2d 368 (State v. Miles) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Miles, 585 N.W.2d 368, 1998 Minn. LEXIS 697, 1998 WL 697078 (Mich. 1998).

Opinion

OPINION

STRINGER, Justice.

On the evening of July 31, 1996, three eyewitnesses observed various stages of the killing of Tyrone Harrell in an alley in north Minneapolis. Appellant John Miles was convicted of the crime but claims the trial court erred in excluding from evidence the testimony of an expert witness as to the unreliability of eyewitness testimony, and that there was insufficient evidence of his guilt. We affirm, concluding that the trial court was within its discretion to exclude the proffered testimony and that there was sufficient evidence to support the convictions.

When police responded to a report of gunfire in the alley on the 2900 block between Queen and Penn Avenue North in Minneapolis on the evening of the crime, they found the victim, Tyrone Harrell, lying dead in a driveway with a gunshot wound to his chest. Nearby was a green Jeep Cherokee, Minnesota license plate 071 ECA, crashed into a utility pole but with the engine still running. There were bullet holes in the Jeep Cherokee and shell cásings near the vehicle and the victim. Bullets and casings recovered from the scene were consistent with having been fired from a single 9 mm handgun.

Three neighbors witnessed various stages of the shooting as it evolved. Eight-year old K.B. was playing basketball with her brothers in the back yard of 2914 Queen Avenue North when the Jeep Cherokee crashed into the pole less than 25 feet away. K.B. saw a man with a gun jump from behind a garage and shoot at the driver who got out of the Jeep Cherokee and ran up the alley, and she heard more gunfire as the armed man pursued the driver.

Nearby, Candra Edwards heard the gunfire and looked out the back window of 2942 Queen Avenue North. She saw a man jogging northbound up the alley holding his hand to his waist and looking over his shoulder. While she did not get a good look at his face and saw no gun, she heard something heavy and metallic fall, and she saw the man bend down as if to pick up a fallen object before he continued out of sight.

Farther up the block at 2951 Penn Avenue North, Bart Becker was taking out the trash when he heard the gunshots. He saw a man jogging northbound up the alley with his hand to his stomach. Becker and the man made eye contact briefly before the man continued past.

All the eyewitnesses described to police the person they saw as a young African-American male with some facial hair who was wearing a white shirt over black shorts. K.B. stated when shown a photographic dis *370 play of six individuals that the photo of appellant “looked like the man” she had seen in the alley, but her older brother, who had also been in the back yard, identified a different photograph. Edwards identified the photo of appellant as most closely resembling the man she’d seen in the alley but that another photo also bore a resemblance. After viewing the photographs, Becker was certain that the photo of appellant was of the man he’d seen in the alley.

Two weeks before the shooting on July 17, 1996 appellant had reported a robbery to the Minneapolis police. He told a police officer that a man known to him only as “Tyrone” had robbed him at gunpoint of $50 and a gold necklace and matching bracelet. He described “Tyrone” in detail and pointed out a vehicle that he believed belonged to Tyrone: a green Jeep Cherokee with Minnesota license plate 071 ECA.

Appellant was arrested on a probable cause warrant on September 15, 1996. He denied having anything to do with Harrell’s shooting and was released pending formal charges. In November of 1996, Marcell Du-pree Scott contacted the police from prison to discuss what he knew of Harrell’s murder. 1 Scott’s story corroborated that of the eyewitnesses and included information not publicly known. Scott told authorities, and later testified at trial, that appellant had visited him early in the morning of July 18, 1996 and told him that a man named Tyrone had robbed him the night before of approximately 13 to 14 ounces of cocaine and between $15,000 and $20,000. Appellant was extremely upset about the robbery and thereafter began to carry two handguns — a 9 mm Glock and a .45. Scott testified that after the robbery Appellant began looking for Tyrone and had followed him briefly on at least two occasions in an attempt to find out where he lived.

Scott also testified as to the events on the night of the killing. His testimony was that he and Appellant were drinking and hanging out in the front yard of 2911 Penn Avenue North with some other friends when Tyrone Harrell drove by in his green Jeep Cherokee and turned west on 30th Avenue North as if to go around the block. After watching Harrell drive past, Appellant left the front yard and headed toward the alley in back. Appellant was wearing a white jersey and black shorts that night and Scott saw him look northward up the alley, gun in hand, before ducking around the garage. Hearing gunfire, Scott and the group rapidly dispersed. Scott and another friend drove to the house of appellant’s uncle several blocks away where they found appellant. Appellant seemed “on edge.”' He told Scott “the punk tried to run” but that he had chased him and “popped him a couple more times” before running. When asked what had happened to the gun, appellant replied “they will never find that.” Scott testified that the friends then drove off to find some marijuana.

Appellant was indicted on December 18, 1996 on charges of first and second-degree murder. In exchange for Scott’s testimony at Appellant’s trial, the state promised financial assistance for the relocation of Scott’s family, immunity from prosecution for aiding an offender, and the chance for work-release four months earlier than normal eligibility.

In a pre-trial proceeding, the defense moved the court to admit the expert testimony of Dr. Edith Green on the reliability of eyewitness identification. The defense specifically wanted to introduce testimony regarding the potential for error in eyewitness identification, citing principally the lack of correlation between reliability of the identification and the level of certainty of the witness, and the lack of reliability of cross-racial identifications relating particularly to the identification testimony of Becker, the only white eyewitness. The trial court denied the motion:

This Court finds that Dr. Green’s testimony regarding the vagaries of the eyewitness identification would not be particularly helpful to the jury and in fact would tend to cause more confusion for them * * * * The jurors will be able to view the demeanor of the witnesses, evaluate the consistencies or inconsistencies of their testimony, and after the Court’s instruc *371 tions, be able for themselves to determine their credibility and accuracy. 2

During voir dire defense counsel queried virtually every venire member about the potential for error in eyewitness identifications. After jury selection, defense counsel requested a reconsideration of its motion to permit expert testimony on eyewitness identification. The trial court again denied the motion stating that the jurors “appear to be quite knowledgeable about what items may or may not create a problem with eyewitness identification * * * and my prior ruling shall stand.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
585 N.W.2d 368, 1998 Minn. LEXIS 697, 1998 WL 697078, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-miles-minn-1998.