State v. Prince

CourtSuperior Court of Delaware
DecidedJanuary 24, 2022
Docket1710010993A
StatusPublished

This text of State v. Prince (State v. Prince) 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. Prince, (Del. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

STATE OF DELAWARE, ) ) ) v. ) I.D. No. 1710010993A ) RADEE PRINCE, ) ) Defendant. )

Submitted: October 20, 2021 Decided: January 24, 2022 Upon Consideration of Defendant’s Motion for Post-Conviction Relief, SUMMARILY DISMISSED.

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Defendant Radee Prince was convicted of attempted manslaughter and related

offenses and then sentenced to 40 years at Level V. This is a ruling on Prince’s pro

se Rule 61 motion. Finding no merit in the motion, the Court will dismiss it.

BACKGROUND 1

A. The Trial

1 Unless otherwise noted, the Court has drawn the facts surrounding Prince’s trial proceedings from the appendix attached to his motion (“Def.’s Ex. [#]”) and the larger criminal file compiled during his proceedings. Where appropriate, the Court will cite to a specific document in the record. The Delaware Supreme Court provided a succinct summary of the evidence

and relevant events, so the Court quotes it in full below. In essence, Prince arrived

in Delaware after killing three of his colleagues in Maryland earlier that morning;

descended on the unarmed victim without prior warning; shot him non-fatally twice

during an unprovoked attack that was captured by video; fled the scene but failed to

evade law enforcement; and, at trial, convinced the jury that he did not commit

attempted murder because he was suffering from extreme emotional distress while

on his rampage:

[O]n October 18, 2017, Rashan Baul (also known as Jason Baul) was meeting with Cort Hughes at Baul's auto-sales business when Prince entered the building, opened the door to the small office where Baul and Hughes were meeting, and shot Baul. A bullet initially struck Baul in the face and lodged in his spine. Prince backed out of the office and stood outside the door, attempting to clear a jam in the gun. Baul struggled on the floor of the office, pushing the desk against the door. Prince then forcefully opened the door and fired again. Prince left the building, but then returned, pushed open the office door again, and fired again. At least one additional shot hit Baul and lodged in his pelvic area. As Baul and Prince struggled near the door to the office, Hughes managed to escape and fled the building. Prince then left the scene, saying “bleed out, bitch.” Baul crawled to the door of the building and called for help. As his employees came to his aid, Baul reported that Prince, whom he had known for many years, was the shooter. Ebony Wilson, one of Baul's employees, also identified Prince as the shooter. She had known Prince since childhood. On the morning of the shooting, Wilson was walking toward the building after collecting some information from cars on the lot when she saw Prince. They greeted each other by name, and Prince asked her if Baul was inside. She said that she did not know. Prince then entered the building, and Wilson saw him pull out a gun. She ran to warn another employee, and then heard a shot. She and the other employee fled. When Wilson saw a police car approaching, she ran back

2 toward the building and saw Baul lying in the doorway. Emergency personnel transported Baul to the hospital, where he was treated for his injuries and survived, although he required extensive follow-up treatment and suffered long-term effects from his wounds. Video footage from surveillance cameras located in and around the building also showed Prince arriving on the scene and shooting into the office. Other evidence confirmed that Prince drove from Maryland to Delaware shortly before the shooting, purchased ammunition from a Wal-Mart store, exchanged that ammunition for a different type, and then proceeded to Baul's auto lot. Prince did not contend at trial that he was not the shooter. Rather, his defense was that he had learned that Baul had hired someone to kill him, and that he therefore shot Baul in self-defense or under extreme emotional distress. The defense centered on evidence of a build-up of tension between Prince and Baul, beginning around the time that Baul testified in a criminal trial against Prince's brother, Aaron Bruton, who was also Baul's best friend. Prince testified that he had called Baul a rat, and that Baul had then hired some people to assault him outside of a nightclub, as a result of which Prince had a broken back and a severe laceration to his forehead, and was placed in a medically induced coma. Prince and Baul also testified about an incident that occurred in January 2016, after Bruton was released from prison. Bruton, Baul, and Prince were at the home of Prince's father, and Baul and Prince got into a fight. The testimony regarding the reason for the fight and what happened next differed somewhat, but it is clear that at some point Baul and Prince left the house and Baul drove a truck into Prince. Baul was going to testify in a criminal case against Prince in connection with that incident, but the case was ultimately dismissed. Prince, his sister, his niece, and a family friend also testified that in May 2016, as Baul and Prince were leaving Prince's father's funeral, Baul took a gun out of the console of his car and aimed it at Prince's face. Baul denied having a gun at the funeral. Prince further testified that in 2016 he heard that Baul had offered $10,000 to have Prince killed. Prince said that he moved to Elkton, Maryland, so that Baul would not know where to find him. He testified that on the Saturday before the shooting, he saw someone who knew Baul standing outside a neighbor's house and became fearful that Baul would learn where he lived. He

3 therefore decided to go to Baul's business to talk to him, but said that when he walked into the office, Baul reached toward his pocket—Prince believed to reach for a gun—and Prince opened fire. To rebut Prince's position that his past interactions with Baul supported a finding of self-defense or extreme emotional distress, the State sought to introduce evidence that on the morning of October 18, 2017, before going to Baul's business, Prince shot and killed three people and injured others at his workplace in Edgewood, Maryland. The State argued that Prince had put his state of mind at issue, and that the probative value of the evidence of the Maryland shooting was sufficient to overcome its prejudicial nature. The Superior Court weighed the highly prejudicial nature of the evidence against its conclusion that the evidence was also highly probative of Prince's state of mind, and held that the evidence was admissible under D.R.E. 403. The court also then performed an analysis under D.R.E. 404(b) and Getz v. State and ruled that the evidence was admissible under that analysis as well. The State then questioned Prince about the Maryland shooting. Prince asserted his Fifth Amendment privilege. After the defense rested, the State introduced evidence of the Maryland shooting, including a video of the incident; the ensuing manhunt; and Prince's arrest later that evening in Newark, Delaware, by agents of the federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms (“ATF”), which involved a brief foot chase during which Prince discarded a gun. Several key instructions were given to the jury. First, the jury received an instruction on self-defense as to the attempted murder charge against Prince. Second, the court instructed the jury on the lesser-included offense of attempted manslaughter under extreme emotional distress. Finally, the court instructed the jury that it could use the evidence of the Maryland shooting only for the purpose of determining Prince's state of mind as to the Baul shooting, and not for any other purpose.

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Bluebook (online)
State v. Prince, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-prince-delsuperct-2022.