State v. Williams

586 N.W.2d 123, 1998 Minn. LEXIS 706, 1998 WL 733814
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedOctober 22, 1998
DocketC7-97-1316
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 586 N.W.2d 123 (State v. Williams) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Williams, 586 N.W.2d 123, 1998 Minn. LEXIS 706, 1998 WL 733814 (Mich. 1998).

Opinion

OPINION

BLATZ, Chief Judge.

In this appeal of his conviction for first-degree murder, appellant, Adrian Dion Williams, raises three claims. First, appellant claims that he was deprived of his right to present a defense when the trial court did not allow the admission of out-of-court statements regarding the victim’s practice of selling fake crack cocaine. Second, appellant claims that the trial court erroneously permitted the state to introduce rebuttal testimony after the close of the defense’s case. Third, appellant claims that the prosecutor committed misconduct by unfairly summarizing the evidence in her closing argument. We hold that the trial court’s evidentiary rulings were not in error and the prosecutor did not engage in prosecutorial misconduct. The judgement of the trial court is affirmed.

Appellant was convicted of first-degree murder for the shooting death of Artis Brown and given a life sentence, with 30 years minimum to be served in prison. The shooting occurred at approximately 7:25 p.m. on July 21, 1995, on 31st Street West and Pleasant Avenue South in Minneapolis. The victim, known by his street name “T.C.,” was riding his bicycle when appellant, also on a bicycle, fired five shots at him from a nine-millimeter semi-automatic weapon.

Appellant, known by his street names “Doughboy” or “Big Shorty,” had been arrested four days earlier at the same location for possession of narcotics. He was not charged, however, because the suspected narcotics were fake crack made from wax. During the murder investigation, the police learned that the victim, Brown, had a reputation for selling fake crack in the neighborhood, and reportedly sold fake crack to appellant two weeks prior to the shooting. Together, this information led police to identify the suspect known as “Doughboy” as being the shooter and to place his photograph in a photo line-up. After viewing the photo line-up, several eyewitnesses identified appellant as the shooter. Three of these eyewitnesses also identified appellant as the shooter at trial.

In addition to the eyewitnesses, the investigating officer, Lt. Scott Gerlicher, testified for the state. He was questioned on cross-examination about statements made to another police investigator by two witnesses, Dominique Willis and Tashawn Griffin, who did not testify. Willis and Griffin had made several statements relating to the victim’s practice of selling fake crack. Griffin also told the police that prior to the shooting, she had heard that four men were looking for the victim because he had sold them “fake dope.” Appellant argued to the trial court that these statements provided a basis for the police to investigate “an alternative theory that wasn’t *125 followed through.” The trial court, however, sustained the state’s hearsay objections to these statements and did not allow the statements to be admitted.

The state then called Malcom Hargraves, appellant’s probation officer, as a witness. The state asked Hargraves if appellant had told him “anything about Artis Brown in connection with fake crack cocaine?” Har-graves responded that appellant had told him “that [Brown] had a lousy reputation in the neighborhood or in that area because he sold fake rock.”

Another state’s witness, Derick Amundson, a pre-trial jailmate of Williams, testified that appellant confessed to him in jail that Brown had sold appellant fake crack two weeks before the shooting. Further, Amundson testified that appellant admitted that he “rubbed his prints off the bullet casings of his gun,” initiated a “confrontation” with Brown, and “shot Brown in the back of the head.”

The appellant’s defense at trial was that he did not shoot Brown. In support, the defense called Tawaun Lewis as an alibi witness. Lewis testified that he was with appellant at a friend’s house just prior to the shooting, then left to go to a nearby Wendy’s restaurant. When Lewis was inside the restaurant ordering food, he saw appellant take his bicycle and ride away. On the stand, Lewis recalled a confusing sequence of events:

I couldn’t catch [appellant], so I went back in and got my food and got to the door; I heal'd some shots. Then I went in and got my food, ate it * ⅜ ⅜.

Through cross-examination, the state attempted to clarify the sequence of events to determine if Lewis was actually inside Wendy’s when he heard the shots and if Lewis was able to see the shooter. Although Lewis was called as an alibi witness, the state argued that Lewis could not have seen Williams or the shooting from inside Wendy’s.

The state also cross-examined Lewis about the conflicting versions of events that he gave during his prior statements and testimony. In response to the state’s cross-examination, Lewis recalled speaking with Tonya Mouw, an investigator with the Hennepin County Attorney’s office, about the shooting. Lewis claimed that his testimony in court was consistent with his earlier statements made to Mouw.

Lewis also admitted on the stand that his testimony in court differed from a written statement he had given to defense counsel’s private investigator on October 25, 1995. In this written statement, Lewis stated that appellant took his bike from Wendy’s after Lewis heard the shots. Further, Lewis admitted that his written statement was almost identical to the written statement of Antwand Bynum, another witness for appellant. By-num and Lewis had made their written statements at the same time with the “assistance” of defense counsel’s private investigator. The written statements were textually identical in all relevant parts regarding appellant. The only minor differences were Lewis and Bynum’s description of what occurred after the shooting.

After the defense rested, the state called Mouw as a rebuttal witness. Mouw testified about the statements Lewis made to her on July 21,1995. Mouw recalled that Lewis had stated that appellant took Lewis’ bicycle from outside Wendy’s, and. that Lewis chased him, gave up, and returned for his food at Wendy’s. After returning to Wendy’s, Lewis heard five shots.

Following the state’s rebuttal witness, the prosecutor delivered her closing argument. The closing argument was prefaced by the statement:

What Counsel says at this point, the State or defense, is not .evidence. The court will instruct you that you should rely on your memory, your recollection and your collective recollection of the evidence. [The closing argument is] only meant to assist you.

The prosecutor later stated that Brown sold fake crack to appellant and that the appellant was arrested “with that fake crack cocaine.” [Emphasis added.] The prosecutor also stated: “The defendant told [his jailmate] that Artis Brown sold him fake crack cocaine. The defendant was arrested four days before the murder with the fake crack cocaine.”

*126 Finally, the prosecutor suggested to the jury that they closely examine the written statements made by Bynum and Lewis and given to defense counsel’s investigator:

[Yjou’ll have a chance to look at — the statements of Antwon [sic] Bynum and Tawaun Lewis. Please look at them carefully. Have somebody read each one simultaneously. They are word for word identical. They are not identical to their testimony before you.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
586 N.W.2d 123, 1998 Minn. LEXIS 706, 1998 WL 733814, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-williams-minn-1998.