Stevens v. State

353 S.W.3d 425, 2011 Mo. App. LEXIS 1573, 2011 WL 5909543
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 23, 2011
DocketSD 31059
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 353 S.W.3d 425 (Stevens v. State) 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
Stevens v. State, 353 S.W.3d 425, 2011 Mo. App. LEXIS 1573, 2011 WL 5909543 (Mo. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

DON E. BURRELL, Presiding Judge.

Damathan L. Stevens (“Movant”) appeals the motion court’s denial of his Rule 29.15 1 motion to vacate his conviction and resulting 20 year sentence for distribution of crack cocaine. See sections 195.211 and 195.291.2. 2 We affirmed Movant’s conviction on direct appeal in State v. Stevens, 304 S.W.3d 139, 140 (Mo.App. S.D.2009).

In a single point relied on, Movant claims his trial counsel was ineffective for: 1) failing to pursue a motion to suppress a police officer’s identification of Movant because that identification — made from a single photograph — was unduly suggestive; and 2) the officer did not have an adequate opportunity to observe Movant at the time of the sale. Movant claims there is a reasonable probability that such a motion would have been granted and that Movant would have been acquitted in the absence of the suppressed identification. Movant’s point also contends the motion court clearly erred in finding that trial counsel’s decision not to file the motion was trial strategy-

Because counsel pursued a reasonable trial strategy in using the officer’s questionable identification to discredit the State’s case instead of attempting to have it excluded, and because the motion court correctly found that there was no reasonable probability Movant would have been acquitted if the officer’s identification had been suppressed, we affirm.

Standard of Review

We review the motion court’s denial of post-conviction relief to determine whether its findings of fact and conclusions of law are clearly erroneous. Moss v. State, 10 S.W.3d 508, 511 (Mo. banc 2000). Those findings and conclusions are presumed correct and will be deemed clearly erroneous only if our review of the entire record leaves us “with the definite and firm impression that a mistake has been made.” Id.

Background

The Underlying Trial

In August 2008, a jury found Movant guilty of distribution of crack cocaine, a controlled substance. The relevant evidence at trial, viewed in the light most favorable to the verdict, Rousan v. State, 48 S.W.3d 576, 579 (Mo. banc 2001), established that on May 19, 2007, law enforcement officers arranged with a confidential informant (“Cl”) to conduct a controlled buy of crack cocaine at a park in Sikeston. With the supervision of Detective Bobby Sullivan, Cl called a telephone number she possessed and arranged to buy crack cocaine from someone she referred to as “Dee.”

Missouri State Highway Patrol Sergeant Jeffrey Heath, who was equipped with a video camera on his person, rode with Cl to the park while Sullivan and Sergeant Andrew Cooper followed in another vehicle. Sullivan was parked approximately 103 feet away from the spot where the transaction took place and used a “Nikon Spidascope” to observe it. Sullivan did not know who Cl was referring to as “Dee” until that person arrived at the park. At that point, Sullivan immediately recognized Movant and his female eompahion. Sullivan then witnessed Cl and Movant walk *428 together to a picnic table. Cl put money on the table, and Movant put “something” on the table. Movant then picked up the money and walked away.

At trial, Sullivan identified Movant as the person involved in the controlled buy with Cl. Sullivan was familiar with Movant because he had seen him on a “[m]inimum of 15” prior occasions and had seen Mov-ant and his companion “in the vehicle numerous times.”

Heath also identified Movant at trial and testified that he saw Movant arrive at the park as a passenger in a female’s car. As Heath and Cl walked toward Movant’s vehicle, Movant instructed Heath to wait there and indicated that Cl “could meet him at the picnic table[.]” Heath gave the money to Cl and then watched as the exchange occurred at the picnic table. Heath testified that he “got a good look at [Movant] the whole time he was there, from the time he got out of the Thunderbird until he drove passed [sic] me.” The video recording device worn by Heath did not capture a clear view of Movant’s face.

Sullivan showed Heath a single driver’s license photograph via email “within an hour or so” of the transaction. Heath did not remember what the email stated and did not remember its title or tag line. Heath testified that what he had received from Sullivan via email “was a picture of [Movant].” Heath was not familiar with Movant when the controlled buy took place.

Cl identified Movant as the person from whom she had purchased the crack cocaine. Cl admitted being “an addict” and to using drugs at the time she worked as a confidential informant. Cl testified that there was a “[z]ero percent possibility” that she was mistaken about Movant being the person who sold her the crack cocaine on May 19, 2007. Cl stated that she had met Movant two times before that particular buy occurred.

Cooper testified that he was also familiar with Movant before May 19, 2007, but he did not immediately recognize Movant when Movant appeared at the park. When Sullivan viewed the persons at the picnic table through the Spidascope and stated that the male was Movant, Cooper took the device and confirmed that it was indeed Movant. Cooper testified that even if Sullivan had not identified Movant as the person he was seeing, Cooper would still “have known [Movant] on sight.”

The Motion Hearing

Prior to trial, Movant was represented by Jacob Zimmerman. Zimmerman testified that he withdrew from Movant’s case shortly before trial for several reasons. One of those reasons was that Movant disagreed with Zimmerman’s inclination to seek a continuance of Movant’s trial setting. One of Zimmerman’s reasons for wanting a continuance was his desire to explore the distances between the persons participating in the buy and those observing it. Zimmerman was interested in “a potential pretrial [m]otion to [s]uppress, ID at least of Heath, and obviously if that were to be overruled, it could be used potentially for the trial to impeach Heath’s testimony.”

Zimmerman believed there “[were] significant issues and concerns with [Heath’s] identification of [Movant].” He believed that Sullivan’s sending a single photograph to Heath was “extremely suggestive” and that “there were objective grounds to challenge the identification of Heath[.]” Zimmerman testified that if he had represented Movant at trial, his strategy would have been to challenge the identification of Mov-ant, and he regarded Heath as “someone to attack” in support of that strategy. Zimmerman testified that “[o]bviously that *429 was difficult because there were three different, or four different IDs. Our idea was to contest the identification and one of the lynch pins we felt was Heath’s part in this.”

But Zimmerman also conceded that suppression of Heath’s identification could have actually hurt Movant’s trial strategy.

Q.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

State of Missouri v. Ogerta Helena Hartwein
Missouri Court of Appeals, 2022
Pollard v. Payne
E.D. Missouri, 2021
Kenneth Crocker v. State of Missouri
Missouri Court of Appeals, 2016
Crocker v. State
488 S.W.3d 127 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 2016)
Aundra Woods v. State of Missouri
458 S.W.3d 352 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 2014)
People v. Krueger
2012 COA 80 (Colorado Court of Appeals, 2012)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
353 S.W.3d 425, 2011 Mo. App. LEXIS 1573, 2011 WL 5909543, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stevens-v-state-moctapp-2011.