Sublet, Harris & Monge-Martinez v. State

113 A.3d 695, 442 Md. 632
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedApril 23, 2015
Docket42/14
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 113 A.3d 695 (Sublet, Harris & Monge-Martinez v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sublet, Harris & Monge-Martinez v. State, 113 A.3d 695, 442 Md. 632 (Md. 2015).

Opinion

BATTAGLIA, J.

The rapid rise of social networking websites, 1 themselves a branch of social media, 2 once again gives us cause to explore the authentication of documents related to this genre, under Maryland Rule 5-901, which provides that the “requirement of *637 authentication or identification as a condition precedent to admissibility is satisfied by evidence sufficient to support a finding that the matter in question is what its proponent claims”, in three cases, Sublet v. State, Harris v. State and Monge-Martinez v. State, consolidated for the purposes of this opinion. All three cases involve the same legal issues, those being the elucidation and implementation of our opinion in Griffin v. State, 419 Md. 348, 19 A.3d 415 (2011), in which we addressed the admissibility of a screenshot 3 of a MySpace 4 page, and its application to the authentication of screenshots of messages allegedly sent through social networking websites; in Sublet, via a Facebook 5 timeline; 6 in Harris, on *638 Twitter 7 through “direct messages” 8 and public “tweets”; 9 and, in Monge-Martinez, through Facebook messages. 10

We shall hold that, in order to authenticate evidence derived from a social networking website, the trial judge must determine that there is proof from which a reasonable juror could find that the evidence is what the proponent claims it to be. We shall hold in Sublet that the trial court did not err in excluding the admission of the four pages of the Facebook conversation. We shall hold in Harris that the trial court did not err in admitting the “direct messages” and “tweets” in evidence. We shall also hold in Monge-Martinez that the trial court did not err in admitting the Facebook messages authored by Monge-Martinez.

Sublet v. State

Albert Sublet, the first Petitioner herein, was charged by indictment in the Circuit Court for Anne Arundel County with three counts of first degree assault, second degree assault and reckless endangerment, as well as with one count of carrying a deadly weapon with intent to injure. The charges against Sublet arose out of a fight that occurred among Sublet, Chrishell Parker, her mother and her sister, in late October of 2012. According to the State’s theory of the case, Sublet *639 became aggressive when he arrived at Ms. Parker’s apartment to pick up his girlfriend, Ymani Conner, and initiated an altercation; Sublet urged, conversely, that it was Ms. Parker who was the instigator.

During cross-examination of Ms. Parker, Sublet’s counsel sought to introduce into evidence four pages alleged to have been a printout from Ms. Parker’s Facebook page of a “conversation” among seven different individuals. The document submitted to Ms. Parker for review consisted of four pages and written across the top of each page was “printed on 1O30-12 from Facebook”. 11 Each of the nineteen entries in the four pages contained the name of the profile that had allegedly created it, as well as the time the entry was created. Next to the name of the profile was also a picture. The four pages were collectively received for identification as Defense Exhibit A 12

With respect to the conversation in issue, the first page began on “Saturday” with a statement associated with the profile “Chaniea DatBytch Brown”, which Ms. Parker identified as Ms. Brown’s Facebook username, while the fourth post on the first page was related to the name “Cece Parker”. When asked if she had discussed the altercation on Facebook, Ms. Parker stated that she had connected with Chaniea Brown through Facebook and that she herself used the name Cece Parker:

[ATTORNEY FOR SUBLET]: Well, have you discussed [the fight] in social media?
[MS. PARKER]: Social media?
[ATTORNEY FOR SUBLET]: Like Facebook?
[MS. PARKER]: Well, I’m not going — people inboxed me and said I heard what happened to you, are you okay? And, yes, I have discussed it on Social Network.
*640 [ATTORNEY FOR SUBLET]: Okay. And you discussed it with a lady by the name of Shanika [sic] Brown, is that correct?
[MS. PARKER]: Yes.
[ATTORNEY FOR SUBLET]: And with a lady by the name of CiCi [sic] Parker?
[MS. PARKER]: That’s me.

The posts depicted on the first page were:

Chanica DatBytch Brown Saturday via Mobile
Had a BLAST lastnight ... Shit got hectic hahaha ymani has more to come..lmaowack bytch
Share
• 2 people like this
CanDii SoSeductive P Smhh
Saturday at 13:12 via mobile
Camerin Kill’Ent Johnson Yessssssa lol
Saturday at 14:15 via mobile
Cece Parker yea everytime i see that bitch ima fuck that dirty pussy bitch up. shout out to cam cam u was riden
Saturday at 15:42 via mobile • 1
Tyesha Glover hahahahaha yea whore i agree........@ cece the whole hood was ridin
Saturday at 17:24
Cece Parker yea., dey was tho that shit was crazy
Saturday at 20:27 via mobile ■ 1

On the second page was a single entry affiliated with the user name “Zaquane Graham” lamenting being left out of the conversation:

Zaquane Graham Yall n[* * * *]s maken me mad not tellin a n[* * *]a was goin on the way i feel im sayin fuck it dam im way down here and yall not tryin to keep me postedon was goin on u know wat fuck it i dn want to know
Yesterday at 18:42

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
113 A.3d 695, 442 Md. 632, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sublet-harris-monge-martinez-v-state-md-2015.