State v. Pelliccia

573 A.2d 682, 1990 R.I. LEXIS 85, 1990 WL 48767
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedApril 24, 1990
DocketNo. 89-234-C.A.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 573 A.2d 682 (State v. Pelliccia) 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. Pelliccia, 573 A.2d 682, 1990 R.I. LEXIS 85, 1990 WL 48767 (R.I. 1990).

Opinion

OPINION

FAY, Chief Justice.

This case comes before us on appeal by the defendant, Alfredo Pelliccia (Pelliccia), from a judgment of conviction in Superior Court on one count of assault with intent to murder and one count of assault with a dangerous weapon. We affirm the trial court and deny the defendant’s appeal.

[683]*683On February 13, 1985, at approximately 10 p.m. the Providence police department responded to a shooting incident on Europe Street in Providence. When they arrived at the scene, they found David Hall with multiple gunshot wounds and George Hall, his brother, with a gunshot wound to the arm. Although the police could not get a statement from the barely conscious David Hall, they did receive a statement from George Hall. He told the police that “a male subject had approached him in a white station wagon and asked him if his brother was home and if so, would he go in the house and get him to come outside.” When David Hall did come out of the house, the person in the car began shooting at him. In the process George was also hit by a bullet. George Hall further gave the police a brief, vague description of the vehicle and the driver (a white station wagon driven by a white male). No written statement was obtained from George Hall at that point. The police broadcast contained this description as well as a possible name of the suspect, which had been given to the police by Julia Hall, David Hall’s wife.

George Hall testified at trial that on the night in question he was visiting his brother at his home at 18 Europe Street. At approximately 10 p.m. a white station wagon pulled up, and George Hall went outside and approached the car. He talked to the man in the car for about a minute.1 As he started going back into the house, he said, his brother walked out and the man started firing at him. David Hall testified that he left the house because he was wondering to whom his brother was talking and what was taking him so long. His recollection was that his brother had been outside for about five or ten minutes. David Hall was shot in the stomach, the chest, the side, the arm, and the hand and was taken to Rhode Island Hospital. George Hall was shot in the elbow and was taken to St. Joseph Hospital.

George Hall stated that not only had he never seen the man in the car before but the man apparently had not known who George was either. On direct examination he testified that he described the man to the police that night as having black hair and being in his fifties. On cross-examination George Hall was not totally sure he had given the police this description on the night of the incident (the police report had no record of it, but one of the policemen testified that he remembered that George Hall had told him the attacker was an older man, although he did not put this in his report). He thought he may have given the police the information the next day instead, when they came to see him in the hospital to show him a photographic array. He also stated that the lighting conditions on the night in question were fair since there was a streetlight in front of the house and some light was coming from the windows of the house.

On February 14, 1985, two detectives came to St. Joseph Hospital to show George Hall six photographs and asked him if he recognized in them the man who had shot him and his brother. George Hall picked out defendant, Alfredo Pelliccia, immediately. He was “one hundred percent” sure that this was the man because he would “never forget that face." Detective Martin F. Hames, the chief investigating officer on the case, testified that the police did nothing to single out defendant’s picture. The photographs were presented at the same time in the same manner. The detective did not remember asking George Hall for any further descriptive information at the hospital. He said he did not ask for any other description because when he put together the array of photographs, he was satisfied that Alfredo Pelliccia was the prime suspect. The rest of the photographs were picked to appear to look like Pelliccia. All photographs represented older white males with mustaches (some heavier than others).

Pelliccia had become a suspect when the police learned from Julia Hall on February [684]*68413, 1985, right after the shooting, that defendant was responsible for the shooting. Detective John McAndrew testified that he knew Pelliccia from the time that he had a lunch wagon in Kennedy Plaza. He said that prior to the night of the police broadcast regarding the shooting, he had seen Pelliccia driving around on a couple of occasions but only remembered that he had been driving a large, light-colored car that looked like a station wagon. When the detective responded to the scene, he noticed a large white station wagon at the corner of Althea and Union Streets that seemed to fit the broadcast description. It also looked like the car he had seen Pelliccia driving on other occasions. He believed that the car had just been parked there because when he touched the hood, it felt moderately warm and the skin on an ice puddle in front of the car had recently been broken.

Detective Paul Crevier took photographs of the car discovered by Detective McAn-drew. He observed an empty shell casing on the front seat. The detective searched the interior of the car and found two additional shell casings. He seized the shell casings and held them for evidence. He also retrieved a metal bullet fragment from the staff at Rhode Island Hospital, which fragment had been taken from David Hall. The detective could not say whether the bullet had come from the found cartridge casings because he had not had them looked at by a lab. To the best of his knowledge, a projectile could not be matched to the shell casing alone but had to be matched to the weapon it came from. Since no weapon was ever found, there was no way to trace the bullet to a particular gun. Pelliccia’s fingerprints were not found on the car, and the car was registered to Michael Pelliccia, defendant’s son.

On February 26, 1988, the jury returned a verdict finding defendant guilty of one count of assault with intent to murder David Hall. The jury did not find defendant guilty of assault with intent to murder David’s brother, George Hall, but did find him guilty of the lesser included offense, assault with a dangerous weapon. The defendant’s motion for a new trial was denied on May 13, 1988. On July 14, 1988, defendant was sentenced to twenty years on the first count, ten years to serve and ten suspended, and ten years on the second count to run concurrently with the sentence imposed in count 1. The defendant filed a notice of appeal with this court on July 18, 1988.

I

The first issue that we consider is whether the trial justice erred in refusing to suppress the pretrial identification of defendant by George Hall. The defendant’s motion to suppress the identification was heard on February 24, 1988. At the hearing the trial justice concluded that “certainly there was nothing suggestive about the [photographic] line-up.” We agree and are of the opinion that the trial justice correctly denied defendant’s motion to suppress the pretrial identification.

As we pointed out in State v. Barnes, 559 A.2d 136, 140 (R.I.1989), “[t]he law in this jurisdiction relating to the admissibility of an out-of-court identification is well settled.” Under the two-prong test promulgated by the Supreme Court in Manson v. Brathwaite,

Related

Michael J. Salvatore v. Thomas A. Palangio
Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 2021
Hazard v. State
Superior Court of Rhode Island, 2010

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
573 A.2d 682, 1990 R.I. LEXIS 85, 1990 WL 48767, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-pelliccia-ri-1990.