State v. Sublett

887 S.W.2d 618, 1994 WL 475660
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 6, 1994
DocketWD 46035, WD 48030
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 887 S.W.2d 618 (State v. Sublett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Sublett, 887 S.W.2d 618, 1994 WL 475660 (Mo. Ct. App. 1994).

Opinion

KENNEDY, Judge.

Defendant appeals from convictions of first degree robbery (Section 569.020, RSMo 1986), and armed criminal action, (Section 571.015.1, RSMo 1986), and from the trial court’s denial of his Rule 29.15 motion without an evidentiary hearing. In conformance ■with the jury verdicts, defendant was sentenced to 20 years’ imprisonment for robbery and 30 years for armed criminal action. The trial court made the two sentences consecutive.

The facts of the case are as follows:

Cheryl Ostrow at 10:30 in the morning on November 5, 1990, had parked her car and was walking toward her office in Westport, when she was physically assaulted by a man with a knife, and forcibly robbed of her briefcase and purse. Her assailant she described to the police as a black male between 20 and 30 years of age, with a medium build and a medium complexion. He ran from the scene.

The police followed footprints in the snow leading from the crime scene to a parking lot at 40th and Main, and continuing toward the 4000 block of Walnut. In the 40th and Main parking lot, they found a coat and gloves which Ostrow identified as her assailant’s. Defendant lived nearby at 4011 Walnut.

At 10:30 that evening, according to the testimony of Karen Turner, who lived in the same apartment building as defendant, she and another resident of the apartment building saw someone climbing up the back of the building. The other resident did not testify. The residents called out, “Vernon, is that you?” but the climbing figure did not answer. Karen testified she could not identify the climber. In explanation of an earlier statement to the police in which she identified defendant as the person she had seen, she said she “assumed” it was defendant. The next morning, these residents found Cheryl Ostrow’s briefcase and purse on the basement floor of the apartment complex.

Defendant was arrested on December 24, and was identified by Cheryl Ostrow as being the robber.

Defendant does not challenge the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the conviction, but wants a new trial because of alleged prejudicial trial error.

One of defendant’s points is that the prosecutor, in closing argument, repeatedly urged the jury to “send a message” to the defendant and other would-be robbers by sentencing him to a lengthy term of imprisonment, to deter others who might commit similar offenses in Westport or other areas of the city. There was no objection, so we may review only for plain error under Rule 30.02. Rarely, if ever, has a Missouri ease reversed *620 a conviction for such an argument. Such arguments have been approved in a number of cases, including, most recently, State v. Cobb, 875 S.W.2d 533, 537 (Mo. banc 1994). The argument in the present case goes well beyond the Cobb argument, urging the jurors, at considerable length, to assess severe sentences. Part of the argument: “The message that you put on the billboards. “Welcome to Westport, Robbers. On October 25th, the jury sentenced Vernon Sublett, a robber, [to] 500 years.’ We don’t ever want you back. A thousand years ... It’s your community. We all go to Westport or the Landing or whatever part of town that a particular robbery is going to take place.” A less inflammatory argument caused reversal of a conviction in U.S. v. Solivan, 937 F.2d 1146 (6th Cir.1991), even though the court had sustained the defense objection and admonished the jury to disregard the offending argument, but had declined to declare a mistrial. 1

We decline to reverse under the strict standards for plain error, and defendant’s point is denied. We cannot say how we might rule if an objection had been made to the argument, and if the overruling of the objection had been preserved for review. Counsel’s failure to object may be assessed on the Rule 29.15 motion, which we are remanding for an evidentiary hearing.

Defendant claims it was error for the court to deny his motion to strike the hearsay testimony of Officer Keith Harrison about a prior inconsistent statement of Karen Turner, one of the women who lived at 4011 Walnut. Karen Turner testified she had seen a figure climbing up the back of the building at 10:30 in the evening of the day of the crime, but that she did not recognize the person as Vernon Sublett. Officer Harrison was then permitted to testify that Karen Turner had earlier said that she, and the other resident, had seen Vernon Sublett climbing the back stairs of the apartment building, and that she had spoken to him and he had answered her.

We will not examine the question whether Officer Harrison’s testimony about Karen Turner’s prior inconsistent statement was admissible or not. If we should determine it was erroneously admitted, we would be unable to find prejudice to defendant. Defendant did, after all, live in the building. There was nothing incriminating about his climbing the back stairs toward his apartment — which was on the floor above the apartment occupied by Karen Turner — as Karen Turner had told Officer Harrison, according to Harrison’s testimony. It had no more tendency to connect him with the stolen Ostrow briefcase and purse, found the next morning on the basement floor of the building, than his admitted residence in the building would connect him with them.

Defendant’s next point is that Cheryl Os-trow’s out-of-court and in-court identifications of defendant were the result of impermissible suggestion by the police. The trial court, after an evidentiary hearing, overruled defendant’s motion to suppress the identifications, and permitted the identification evidence over defendant’s objection. This is said by the defendant to be error.

To succeed in showing that the photograph identification procedures improperly prejudiced appellant at trial, the appellant must show: (1) that the investigative procedures employed by the police were impermis-sibly suggestive; and (2) that the suggestive procedures made the identification at trial unreliable. State v. Cooper, 811 S.W.2d 786, 788 (Mo.App.1991). We have examined the identification process closely, and we find no error in the court’s rulings.

Cheryl Ostrow was at first shown seven photographs by the police, including 1981 photographs of Vernon Sublett and Errol Jones — who, the trial court noted, closely resemble each other. Cheryl Ostrow picked out Errol Jones as looking most like the robber, with Vernon Sublett also looking like the robber. The subjects of the other five photographs she rejected as suspects. She *621 saw a videotaped lineup which included Errol Jones, but not the defendant. This time, she said Errol Jones resembled the person who had attacked her, but she was uncertain. In a second video, seeing defendant in a lineup, she immediately pointed him out as the robber. (After she pointed out Vernon Sublett in the video, a police officer told her he was the same one she had selected from the earlier photographs. This was not true; it was Errol Jones’s photograph which she had selected earlier.

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Bluebook (online)
887 S.W.2d 618, 1994 WL 475660, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-sublett-moctapp-1994.