State v. Vincent

768 P.2d 150, 159 Ariz. 418, 26 Ariz. Adv. Rep. 33, 1989 Ariz. LEXIS 13
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 19, 1989
DocketCR-87-0001-AP
StatusPublished
Cited by80 cases

This text of 768 P.2d 150 (State v. Vincent) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Arizona Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Vincent, 768 P.2d 150, 159 Ariz. 418, 26 Ariz. Adv. Rep. 33, 1989 Ariz. LEXIS 13 (Ark. 1989).

Opinion

*420 FIDEL, Judge.

Gerald Dean Vincent was convicted of murder in the first degree and sentenced to life imprisonment without release for twenty-five years. The murder victim was his estranged wife.

We reverse because we conclude that Vincent’s state and federal constitutional right to confront adverse witnesses was violated by the state’s videotaped presentation of the testimony of his minor children.

The United States Supreme Court has recently addressed the constitutional validity of statutory efforts to shield child witnesses from the confrontational rigors of courtroom testimony. Coy v. Iowa, — U.S. -, 108 S.Ct. 2798, 101 L.Ed.2d 857 (1988). We review Arizona’s child witness statute, A.R.S. §§ 13-4251 to -4253 (Supp. 1988), in light of the Supreme Court’s Coy decision. We determine that the statute is capable of constitutional application, and we elaborate on means of constitutional application for the guidance of Arizona’s courts. However, we also determine that the statute was unconstitutionally applied in the present case, where the state was permitted to shield the Vincent children from face-to-face confrontational testimony without making an individualized showing that either of them needed such protection.

Although the confrontational error is dis-positive, we also discuss an incident of prosecutorial misconduct during final argument. The offending argument concerned state’s witness Stephen Calaway, a jailmate of defendant, who testified that the defendant had confessed the murder to him. Cal-away testified pursuant to a highly favorable plea bargain with the state, and defendant’s counsel attacked his credibility. The prosecutor responded in final argument by vouching for the honesty of Cala-way’s testimony. We consider and reject the state’s contention that the prosecutor’s comments were invited, and we reiterate our repudiation of such tactics.

I. THE EVIDENCE

Donna Vincent was murdered in her home on the night of January 23, 1986. Her body was discovered by Jarred, the Vincents’ six year old son, sometime in the middle of the night. Unable to awaken Kristy, his eight year old sister, Jarred returned to bed until approximately 6 a.m. In the morning, Kristy immediatley reported the death by telephoning the 911 emergency number. According to the pathologist, the cause of death was blood loss as a consequence of stabbing.

Gerald Dean Vincent, the husband of Donna Vincent, lived apart from his family at the time of his wife’s death, but had visited them on the evening of January 23. He is the last person known to have seen the victim alive.

At trial, the prosecutor presented the testimony of Jarred and Kristy. The children testified only by videotape; they did not appear at trial. Neither claimed to have witnessed the murder, but both made statements that tended in part to incriminate their father. The taping was arranged so that Vincent could see and hear the children from a separate room but they could not see or hear him. While the defendant’s attorney and the prosecutor questioned the children, defendant had telephonic access to his attorney.

Jarred Vincent testified that he had watched TV with his sister and father until bedtime on January 23. Later he heard his parents fighting:

The Prosecutor: Jarred ... after you first went to bed, could you hear your mom and dad at all?
A: Yes.
Q: What were they doing?
A: They were fighting.
Q: [T]hey were fighting.
A: Uh-huh, they were yelling.
Q: Could you hear what they were arguing about?
A: No.

Still later Jarred awakened, left his room, and entered the living room, where he saw his mother lying on the floor cover *421 ed with a “red violet” towel. He was unable to waken his sister until morning. Then, according to Jarred, as Kristy spoke to the 911 operator, the defendant returned to the house and almost tripped over the body of his wife. Jarred stated that his father wore the same clothing in the morning that he had worn the night before. Jarred acknowledged to defense counsel that he had not seen the murder.

Defense Counsel: The night that something bad happened to your mommy you didn’t see anything, did you?
A: No.

Kristy Vincent’s recollections were similar. Although at one point Kristy testified that her father did not trip over her mother’s body on the morning after the murder, she later stated, “he may have almost” done so. Kristy was unable to testify definitively whether her father was wearing the same clothes in the morning as he had worn the night before. Kristy told the 911 operator that her father had stabbed her mother. However, Kristy, like Jarred, testified that she did not know who had killed her mother and that she had not witnessed the actual killing.

Defense Counsel: You don’t know what happened to your mom other than that you discovered her, right, that you found her?
A: Yes.
Q: You don’t know who did that to your mom?
A: No.
Q: Okay. And you slept that whole night and you never saw what happened to your mom.
A: No.

At approximately 6 o’clock on the evening of Janaury 23, 1986, before Donna Vincent’s murder, defendant went to his cousin John Schull’s motel room to discuss the Vincents’ impending divorce. According to Schull, both he and Vincent had arrived “around 6 in the evening.” Schull testified that he and Vincent had remained together in the room for approximately 40-45 minutes and that the manager of the motel had joined them for approximately 15 minutes; Schull was not certain whether he and Vincent had left the motel at the same time. Schull visited several bars with a friend that night and did not return until 4 a.m. on January 24. There, he said, he found defendant asleep and the room full of gas fumes. Schull awakened defendant, who stated that he needed to return to his wife’s trailer. Schull testified that defendant had changed his clothes from the night before and that a broken plate, which he had last seen in a trash bag, was now stacked on the floor. Schull testified that he commented on the bag’s absence and that defendant responded that he had needed the bag but gave no further explanation. Schull accompanied defendant to Donna Vincent’s mobile home, but they traveled in separate cars. Schull stated that he did not enter the home, but that, as defendant entered, he heard Kristy scream out: “Daddy, why did you have to kill her?”

Vincent entered while Kristy was speaking with the 911 operator. He took the phone, and his comments, like Kristy’s, were tape recorded.

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Bluebook (online)
768 P.2d 150, 159 Ariz. 418, 26 Ariz. Adv. Rep. 33, 1989 Ariz. LEXIS 13, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-vincent-ariz-1989.