Wharton v. State

CourtSupreme Court of Delaware
DecidedJanuary 19, 2021
Docket548, 2019
StatusPublished

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

Bluebook
Wharton v. State, (Del. 2021).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

DAI’YANN WHARTON, § § § Defendant-Below, § No. 548, 2019 Appellant, § § § v. § Court Below: Superior Court § of the State of Delaware § § STATE OF DELAWARE, § § C.A. No. 1705016524 A&B § Plaintiff-Below, § Appellee. § §

Submitted: November 4, 2020 Decided: January 19, 2021

Before VALIHURA, TRAYNOR, and MONTGOMERY-REEVES, Justices.

Upon appeal from the Superior Court. AFFIRMED.

Elise K. Wolpert, Esquire (argued), Eugene J. Maurer, Jr., Esquire, Wilmington, Delaware, for Appellant.

Andrew J. Vella, Esquire (argued), Delaware Department of Justice, Wilmington, Delaware for Appellee. VALIHURA, Justice:

In a bench trial beginning on June 19, 2019, the Superior Court found Dai’yann

Wharton guilty of several charges, led by a count of Murder in the First Degree for the

slaying of Yaseem Powell. Wharton seeks reversal of his conviction because the State

identified a group of highly incriminating text messages less than two weeks prior to trial,

though the messages themselves had been contained in a digital discovery disclosure made

by the State to Wharton more than a year earlier.

Because of the State’s earlier disclosure, and because we reject Wharton’s assertions

that the State engaged in any discovery violations or other misconduct, we hold that the

Superior Court was within its discretion to deny Wharton’s motion to exclude the text

messages. Accordingly, we AFFIRM the Superior Court’s conviction and judgment of

sentence.

I. Statement of Facts

Shortly after 4:00 p.m. on March 28, 2017, Officer Brenda Merced of the

Wilmington Police Department responded to reports of a shooting in the Riverside

neighborhood of Wilmington.1 Within minutes of the call, Officer Merced arrived on the

scene, and found Yaseem Powell wounded on the ground. Officer Merced immediately

1 App. to Op Br. at A154 (Testimony of Officer Brenda Merced).

2 began performing first aid.2 While she did so, Powell’s cell phone fell out of his pocket.3

Powell later died of a gunshot to his head.4

Police investigators subsequently recovered shell casings 175 feet away from where

Powell lay.5 They also recovered the contents of Powell’s cell phone.6 Shortly before the

shooting, Powell communicated with an associate on a cell phone app that he was walking

behind Dai’yann Wharton and Benjamin Smith.7 Surveillance footage showed instead that

Powell was being followed rather than following others.8

Hours later, Andrew Ervin was shot in the foot on Heald Street.9 While hospitalized,

Ervin told police he was the victim of an armed robbery.10 Ervin asserted that a firearm

recovered at the site of his shooting belonged to one of the robbers whom Ervin had

disarmed.11 Ballistic evidence showed the recovered weapon had fired the shell casings

recovered near the Powell murder.12

2 Id. at A155. 3 Id. 4 Id. at A167 (Testimony of Detective MacKenzie Kirlin). 5 Id. at A177 (Testimony of Detective Hugh Stephey). 6 Id. at A166 (Testimony of Detective MacKenzie Kirlin). 7 Id. at A220 (Testimony of Detective Robert Fox). 8 Id. at A230–31. 9 Id. at A156–57, 161 (Testimony of Andrew Ervin). 10 Id. at A162. Although Ervin was an uncooperative witness and denied almost all memory of the events surrounding the shooting, he confirmed the authenticity of a video recording of his conversation with police. Id. 11 Id. 12 Id. at A173 (Testimony of Detective MacKenzie Kirlin); A204 (Testimony of Robert Freese).

3 According to Smith, he and Wharton were members of the gang “Shoot to Kill”

(“STK”), which formed after the murder of Smith’s friend Jordan Ellerby in 2015.13 The

gang’s purpose was to obtain revenge against another gang, Only My Brothers (“OMB”),

for that killing.14 Smith claims he and Wharton waited outside of the Job Corps building

for Powell to finish work, intending to shoot him.15 Smith asserts that Wharton shot Powell

with Smith’s pistol, then returned the weapon. Smith further recounts that he was with

Ervin when Ervin was shot in the foot a few hours later. Smith described the shooting as

a reprisal attack for the Powell slaying, and claims he gave his gun to Ervin before they

stepped outside and were attacked. According to Smith, Ervin created the story of being

robbed while alone and disarming one of his assailants to disguise Smith’s ownership of

and connection to the firearm.16

Hours after Powell’s death and Ervin’s shooting, Isaiah Baird and Wharton

communicated (“Incriminating Messages”) through a cell phone messaging app.17 In the

first part of this conversation, the two discuss Ervin’s shooting.18 Baird told Wharton that

13 Id. at A233 (Testimony of Benjamin Smith). Smith testified pursuant to a plea agreement for which he received a five-year sentence for manslaughter and conspiracy for his actions in relation to Powell’s death. Id. at A244–45. 14 Id. at A233–34. 15 Id. at A239. 16 Id. at A244. 17 Id. at A109–13 (Cell Phone Extraction). The Incriminating Messages begin at 4:45 a.m. EDT on March 29, 2017 and are between a user “isaiahbaird0@gmail.com” and “Self.” “Self Made” is Wharton’s name on social media. Id. at A236 (Testimony of Benjamin Smith). 18 Id. at A217–18 (Testimony of Detective Robert Fox); see also id. at A109 (Cell Phone Extraction): “isaiahbaird0@gmail.com”: Bro they shot twin 4 Ervin had been shot, and that police had recovered a weapon that Ervin had dropped.19

Wharton expressed apprehension because that weapon had been used to murder someone20

and asked Baird, speaking of the attack on Ervin, if “U think it cus I hit there folks??”21

Two days later, the conversation continued and Wharton discussed with Baird that

a third individual, Aubrey, was telling people that “I killed boul.”22 When Baird asked

why Wharton told Aubrey, Wharton asserted “I didn’t tell him shit.”23 When Baird asked

how Aubrey knew, Wharton explained “before I did it we was all out [in] front of Twin

crib [Ervin’s home].”24

“Self”: I know Ervin has a twin sibling, Id. at A159 (Testimony of Andrew Ervin), and is nicknamed Twin. Id. at A238 (Testimony of Benjamin Smith). 19 Id. at A217 (Testimony of Detective Robert Fox); see also id. at A109 (Cell Phone Extraction): “Self”: How 12 get the pole? “isaiahbaird0@gmail.com”: Twin dropped it. “Self”: Omg. “Twelve” is a slang term for the police. Id. at A217 (Testimony of Detective Robert Fox). “Pole” is a common term for a firearm. Id. 20 See id. at A109–110 (Cell Phone Extraction): “Self”: How and it’s already a body on it tf “isaiahbaird0@gmail.com”: Idk bro facts “Self”: I’m scar dawg “isaiahbaird0@gmail.com”: Bro just be cool you going be straight. 21 Id. at A110. 22 Id. at A218 (Testimony of Detective Robert Fox); A110–11 (Cell Phone Extraction) (containing the timestamps of the messages and showing the two-day gap between them). According to a police detective, “Boul,” also spelled “Bull” or “Bul” is a slang term akin to “dude” or “guy.” Id. at A218 (Testimony of Detective Robert Fox); see also id. at 245 (Testimony of Benjamin Smith) (“It’s referring to somebody, anybody.”). 23 Id. 24 Id. at A218 (alteration added).

5 II. Procedural History

A grand jury indicted Wharton on May 30, 2017.25 On January 14, 2018, the State

produced discovery material to Wharton and his then-codefendants on a USB flash drive.26

Included in the materials produced were cell phone extractions from Wharton and Baird,

and two other individuals.27 The parties agree that this production included the

Incriminating Messages.28

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Related

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Taylor v. State
982 A.2d 279 (Supreme Court of Delaware, 2008)
Ray v. State
587 A.2d 439 (Supreme Court of Delaware, 1991)
Wright v. State
25 A.3d 747 (Supreme Court of Delaware, 2011)
Doran v. State
606 A.2d 743 (Supreme Court of Delaware, 1992)
Oliver v. State
60 A.3d 1093 (Supreme Court of Delaware, 2013)
Valentin v. State
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Wharton v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wharton-v-state-del-2021.