State v. Rivera

706 A.2d 914, 1997 R.I. LEXIS 337, 1997 WL 817330
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedDecember 23, 1997
Docket96-116-C.A.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 706 A.2d 914 (State v. Rivera) 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. Rivera, 706 A.2d 914, 1997 R.I. LEXIS 337, 1997 WL 817330 (R.I. 1997).

Opinion

OPINION

FLANDERS, Justice.

This case concerns a 1993 drug raid during which Providence police officers executed search warrants for the second- and third-floor apartments in a Providence tenement. The searches yielded enough evidence of heroin and other drug-processing paraphernalia from the third-floor apartment to convict the defendants, Luis Rivera (Rivera),- Noel Cres-po (Crespo), and Manuel Barboza (Barboza), of a slew of drug-possession offenses. 1

On appeal, Crespo and Barboza (defendants) claim that their trials should have been severed, that their motions for acquittal and a new trial should have been granted, and that the trial justice should not have limited their counsels’ attempts to cross-examine a prosecution witness for the purpose of suggesting that the heroin found in the third-story apartment may have belonged to a previous tenant. Crespo also claims that the drug-possession evidence against him should have been suppressed because the police violated the so-called knock-and-an-nounee rule when they battered their way into his second-story apartment, that the trial justice erred in refusing to give certain requested jury instructions on drug possession and conspiracy, and that the trial justice should have granted Crespo’s motion for a mistrial because he had erred in commenting to the jury on the legality of the apartment searches. Finally, Barboza claims the trial justice erred (1) in failing to suppress the evidence that he had a pager with him when he was arrested and (2) in limiting his counsel’s attempted cross-examination of a prosecution witness regarding his personal use of a pager. After considering each of these arguments, we conclude that there is no merit to defendants’ appeals, and we therefore affirm their convictions.

Facts

On.October 8, 1993, six members of the Providence Police Special Investigation Bureau obtained and executed a search warrant for a second-floor apartment located in a three-story tenement (tenement) at 300-302 Douglas Avenue. The tenement contained separate apartments on each of its three floors. At approximately 7:30 p.m., four policemen entered the unlocked front door of the tenement while the remaining two officers secured the rear entrance. All the officers wore raid gear, including jackets and hats emblazoned with the word “POLICE” and the Providence police emblem.

The tenement’s front door opened into a hallway area containing a staircase that led up to the second- and third-floor apartments. Upon gaining entry into the hallway, the officers immediately observed a man, later identified as Rivera;, descending the staircase. One officer, Detective Francisco Colon, shouted in Spanish, “Police, put your hands up!” When he saw the police, Rivera wheeled around on the staircase to face back up the stairs toward the second floor apartment and began to holler, “Police!” in Spanish while thrusting his right hand in his front pocket. Bounding up the stairs, Detective Colon grabbed Rivera, removed his hand from his pocket, and pushed him against the wall of the staircase. He'then left Rivera for the remaining two officers to apprehend while he accompanied Detective Joseph Lennon up the staircase toward the second-floor apartment.

Without knocking or announcing their presence, Detectives Colon and Lennon deployed a battering ram to gain entrance to the apartment. Upon entering, the detectives first observed two women and several small children seated in the living room. In *917 addition they heard a commotion in the rear stairwell area abutting the kitchen. The detectives ran through the apartment to find out what was happening. There they observed four individuals beating a hasty retreat down the rear stairwell from the third floor. They immediately apprehended three of them, 2 including Crespo, on the second-floor landing while the officers posted at the tenement’s rear entry snagged Barboza on the first-floor landing.

The officers detained defendants and the other individuals they had seized in the second-floor apartment while Detectives Colon and Lennon proceeded to investigate the rear stairwell area where they had first observed defendants fleeing from the scene. When they reached the top of the stairs, they found themselves at the back entrance to the upstairs apartment, the rear door to which was wide open. The detectives then entered this upstairs apartment and made sure that no one else was present. In doing so, they made two noteworthy observations. First, on the kitchen table they saw several glas-sine packets, a candle, a scale, plastic bags, and a dish that contained white powder. Second, the kitchen table and chairs as well as the cutlery in the upstairs apartment matched some of the furniture and utensils they had seen in the second-floor apartment. Detective Colon then returned to his office and attempted to obtain a search warrant for the upstairs apartment.

Meanwhile, the officers searched the second-story apartment as well as each defendant. Although they found no drugs, the officers discovered that both defendants were carrying pagers on their persons. Moreover, the officers discovered two photographs in the master bedroom of Rivera’s second-floor apartment showing Rivera, Crespo, and Bar-boza all posing together. 3 Upon obtaining and executing a valid search warrant for the upstairs apartment, the officers then conducted a full search of these premises, in the course of which they seized the powder and the drug paraphernalia from the kitchen table. The officers also seized numerous glas-sine packets that were strewn about the rear stairwell. These were similar to those found on the kitchen table of the upstairs apartment. The police then caused the powder taken from the kitchen table to be tested, whereupon it was determined to contain over an ounce of heroin.

Analysis

The defendants raise three similar issues that we consider jointly; any material variations in either defendant’s particular arguments are noted. In addition Crespo raises three issues unique to his appeals, and Bar-boza raises one further point that is peculiar to his situation. We take up these issues seriatim.

I

Denial of the Severance Motions

First, defendants contend that the trial justice erred in denying their individual motions to sever their trials. Specifically they assert that their defenses compelled the jury to infer their guilt because each was trying to distance himself from- the others at the trial. In addition Barboza claims that the state introduced evidence uniquely applicable to Crespo (for example, his use of an alias, his alleged residence in the second-story apartment, and the matching kitchen furniture and utensils), which allowed the jury to infer Barboza’s guilt unfairly merely because he was tried with Crespo. In response the state argues that neither defendant suffered substantial prejudice as a result of the joinder because a core of common factual evidence existed that was admissible against all defendants. It further contends that any spillover evidence uniquely applicable to just one defendant was merely incremental when compared to the quantum of evidence applicable to all defendants. Finally, it posits that any spillover evidence was *918

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Related

State v. Day
898 A.2d 698 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 2006)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
706 A.2d 914, 1997 R.I. LEXIS 337, 1997 WL 817330, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-rivera-ri-1997.