Walker v. Commonwealth

CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJune 1, 2023
Docket220378
StatusPublished

This text of Walker v. Commonwealth (Walker v. Commonwealth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Walker v. Commonwealth, (Va. 2023).

Opinion

PRESENT: Goodwyn, C.J., Powell, Kelsey, McCullough, Chafin, and Mann, JJ., and Koontz, S.J.

JACQUES LAMAR WALKER OPINION BY v. Record No. 220378 JUSTICE STEPHEN R. McCULLOUGH June 1, 2023 COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA

FROM THE COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA

This appeal presents two primary issues. First, we consider whether the Due Process

Clause of the United States Constitution requires a court to pre-screen eyewitness identification

testimony before the eyewitness can be permitted to make an identification of the defendant for

the first time in open court. We also examine whether the jury was properly instructed that the

defendant was subject to the second or subsequent offense provisions of Code § 18.2-53.1 for

using a firearm in the commission of robbery. With regard to the first issue, in accord with the

majority of courts that have considered this question, we conclude that the Due Process Clause

does not require a court to pre-screen an eyewitness identification made for the first time in

court. Second, we hold that the jury was properly instructed on the second or subsequent offense

provisions of Code § 18.2-53.1.

BACKGROUND

I. A WELLS FARGO BANK IS ROBBED AT GUNPOINT BY A MASKED INDIVIDUAL.

On the afternoon of May 23, 2016, a man wearing a mask, a hooded sweatshirt, and a

distinctive yellow work vest “barge[d]” into the lobby of a Wells Fargo bank branch. Edlin

Cottrell, one of the tellers, heard a scream, which another teller described as a “blood curdling

scream.” Cottrell saw the masked man and ducked behind her desk. The robber struck a customer and knocked him down. The robber then went behind the

teller line to where the bank employees were. He pointed a gun at the tellers and told them in a

“demanding,” and “rushed” voice to put money in a bag. His demeanor was “forceful.” The

bag, a black bag with handles, appeared to be the kind of plastic bag used at liquor stores. The

teller complied, as did other bank employees. A third teller mostly hid under her desk. Once the

money was placed in the bag, the robber then ran out the front door. All told, the robber ran off

with over $15,000.

The mask covered the robber’s nose and mouth. His eyes and skin tone were visible.

Based on skin tone, he was described as black. A teller described the robber as medium build

and maybe 5’8” or 5’9”.

A person in the parking lot observed the robber exiting the bank and getting into the

passenger side of a white Acura automobile. Another person was driving.

II. THE INVESTIGATION AND WALKER’S ARREST.

The Wells Fargo bank branch that was robbed is located at Tackett’s Mill Shopping

Center in Prince William County. Approximately four hours before the robbery of the Wells

Fargo bank, an employee of a different bank, a branch of BB&T, located a few miles from the

Wells Fargo bank that was robbed, heard a report of suspicious activity. Acting on this report,

she followed a suspicious vehicle with two men in it. The vehicle was a late model white Acura.

She wrote down the license plate and reported it to the police. She also was able to observe the

two men when they stepped out of the car. One of the men was “shorter and . . . stockier” and

the other was “taller and thinner.” The thinner, taller man was in the passenger seat. The

thinner of the two was wearing a “yellow shirt.” She saw their faces. She identified Walker at

2 trial as one of the men in the white Acura. Police later learned that an Acura with the reported

license plate was registered to a Jacques Walker.

Some of the money the Wells Fargo tellers placed in the bag was “strapped money,”

meaning a stack of bills wrapped with a band. The straps have a Wells Fargo Bank stamp on

them, which has a date and a number for a particular branch. These straps also bear the initials

of a service manager and a particular teller. These straps help ensure the money is accounted for

and help the tellers identify certain bundled amounts, such as $500 or $5,000.

A police officer who responded to the 9-1-1 call from the bank robbery observed a

yellow vest on the ground, by the road. Police collected the vest, as well as additional items of

clothing, including a black ski mask and a pair of jeans, further down the road from the Wells

Fargo bank that was robbed.

After the robbery, one of the bank customers, the man struck by the robber, noticed a

pistol on a mulch pile in the bed of his pickup truck. He called the police, who retrieved the gun.

The gun turned out to be a BB gun.

Two days after the robbery, on May 25, 2016, police arrested Walker in Maryland, after a

traffic stop. The white Acura he was traveling in was being driven 91 miles per hour in a 55

mile per hour zone. The license plate matched the license plate for the white Acura that the

BB&T bank employee had noted. Walker was the passenger in the vehicle. Walker had about

$2,600 in cash in his pocket. There was also a suitcase in the back seat. It contained a backpack,

and inside that backpack was a black plastic bag with $9,060 in cash. The cash from the suitcase

was wrapped in the distinctive bands from the Wells Fargo bank. Walker told the police in

Maryland that they were headed to a casino. Police also recovered two cell phones.

3 When questioned by the police about the Wells Fargo robbery, Walker stated that he was

working for an employment service called Labor Ready that day, on a moving job in Warrenton.

He said he worked from 8:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m. A work ticket from Labor Ready, however,

showed that Walker had worked four hours that day. The evidence established that four hours is

the minimum amount of pay a worker receives; the actual hours worked could have been less.

A manager for Labor Ready confirmed that Walker worked on May 23, 2016, for a

moving job. She identified the yellow vest worn by the robber as “the same type” of vest the

company provides to persons who work for them. She identified Walker as the bank robber from

a still photo. When asked how she could identify Walker as the robber, when the robber was

wearing a mask, she responded:

Well, he started working for us in the colder months so a lot of the workers come in very bundled up so you learn to recognize them when they’re coming in.

So and I had worked with him for four months, he’d been coming in every day just about asking for work so after a while you really get to know your workers and so I recognized him.

App. 236.

A search of the phones recovered from the Acura in Maryland revealed that someone

used one of the phones to pull up an article titled A Man in a Yellow Vest Robs Tackett’s Mill

Wells Fargo. A forensic analysis of the search history of the phone revealed a query for “do

sweat have DNA.”

DNA testing on the mask recovered by the side of the road revealed a mixture. Walker

could not be eliminated as the major contributor to the mixture. No DNA was recovered from

the yellow vest found by the road. The pair of jeans found near the road also contained a DNA

mixture that was a match for Walker.

4 Walker offered alibi evidence from a “good friend” and five-time convicted felon, who

testified that Walker worked on the moving job all day, from around noon to about 6:00 p.m.

Walker himself testified to that effect. However, this evidence differed in a number of ways

from the alibi he provided to a detective just days after the robbery.

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