White v. State

CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedApril 28, 2015
Docket0912/12
StatusPublished

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

Bluebook
White v. State, (Md. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

REPORTED

IN THE COURT OF SPECIAL APPEALS

OF MARYLAND

No. 912

September Term, 2012

ROBERT ARMSTRONG WHITE

v.

STATE OF MARYLAND

Meredith, Graeff, Leahy,

JJ.

Opinion by Leahy, J.

Filed: April 28, 2015 Science and technology play a vital role in the criminal justice system, especially

in cold cases, by, for example, exonerating the innocent and identifying the guilty

through advances such as forensic DNA testing. But technology can also trample

important constitutional protections, as demonstrated by the incessant struggle to protect

privacy rights. Technical innovations must, therefore, satisfy the perennial dictates of the

United States and Maryland Constitutions before they may be utilized in a criminal case.

In this appeal, we examine, among other things, whether use in the courtroom of a two-

way video conference in lieu of physical, in-court testimony by one of the State’s

forensic technicians violated Appellant Robert Armstrong White’s constitutional right to

confrontation.

Two women—T.K. and E.L1—were raped during separate incidents in

Montgomery County, Maryland in 1979. Despite the investigations launched in each

case, their assailant was never identified. Approximately three decades later, the

Montgomery County Police Department reopened these cold cases and sent the forensic

evidence collected in each case to the lab for DNA testing—an investigative tool not

available in the 1970s.2 Those DNA analyses ultimately revealed a match with

Appellant’s DNA. Consequently, in the spring of 2012, Appellant was separately tried

for each case before two different judges in the Circuit Court for Montgomery County.

1 We use the victims’ initials in order to protect their privacy. 2 Modern DNA testing was first used in criminal investigations in the 1980s. See Dist. Attorney's Office for Third Judicial Dist. v. Osborne, 557 U.S. 52, 62 (2009). At trial, the State presented the testimony of Jeanne Hostetler, the serologist who

examined the original rape kits in each case, via two-way video conference. The juries in

each case ultimately convicted Appellant of the first-degree rapes, as well as other related

offenses. In his timely appeal,3 Appellant presents three questions for our review, which

we have reordered:

I. Did the trial court err in denying Appellant’s motion to dismiss based on Appellant’s right to a speedy trial?

II. Did the trial courts err in admitting testimony via video conference in violation of Appellant’s confrontation rights?

III. Did the trial court err in allowing the State to make improper and prejudicial statements at closing argument?

We hold that the circuit court properly denied Appellant’s motion to dismiss filed

in the second trial because Appellant’s right to a speedy trial was not violated.

Specifically, we conclude that, under the good faith standard applied to the government’s

dismissal of charges announced in United States v. MacDonald, 456 U.S. 1 (1982), the

speedy-trial clock did not begin to run in this case until the filing of the second statement

of charges and detainer, and the resulting delay did not impair Appellant’s right to a

speedy trial. We also hold that after conducting a fact-sensitive inquiry, the circuit court

did not err in finding Ms. Hostetler unavailable to testify at trial, and correctly determined

3 The charges as to both victims were contained in the same indictment, and both trials shared the same case docket number and record in the circuit court; therefore, Appellant appealed both trials jointly. See Md. Rule 8-421 (“All appeals on the same record, whether in the same action or in two or more actions consolidated in the lower court, shall be docketed as one action on appeal.”).

2 that under the circumstances, admission of her testimony via two-way video conference

subject to full cross-examination in lieu of physical, in-court testimony did not violate

Appellant’s constitutional right to confrontation pursuant to the principles espoused in

Maryland v. Craig, 497 U.S. 836 (1990). Appellant failed to preserve his argument that

the State made improper and prejudicial arguments during closing, and we conclude that

the prosecutor’s statements did not deny Appellant his fundamental right to a fair trial as

to warrant plain error review. Accordingly, we affirm the judgments of the trial courts.

BACKGROUND

In 2009, the Montgomery County Police Department re-opened two cold cases

involving the 1979 rapes of T.K. and E.L. The DNA of the semen samples taken from

each case was run through the Combined DNA Index System and revealed a match to

Appellant’s DNA.4 The State then obtained a search warrant for the buccal swab of

Appellant, and additional testing of the buccal swab with the samples taken from each

cold case confirmed the DNA match.5 In T.K.’s case, Appellant was charged with two

4 Following a motion to preclude filed by Appellant, the State agreed not to mention at trial that Appellant’s DNA profile was in the Combined DNA Index System (“CODIS”), a database maintained by the Federal Bureau of Investigation for the “storage and exchange of DNA records submitted by federal, state, and local forensic DNA laboratories.” Md. Code (2003, 2011 Repl. Vol.), Public Safety Article (“PS”) § 2- 501(b)(1). The Public Safety Article requires submission of DNA samples from individuals who are convicted of a felony or a violation of § 6-205 or § 6-206 of the Criminal Law Article and from those charged with a crime of violence or burglary or an attempt to commit a crime of violence or burglary. PS § 2-504(a)(1), (3). 5 Pursuant to PS § 2-510, “[a] match obtained between an evidence sample and a (continued . . . ) 3 counts of first-degree rape, two counts of second-degree rape, and robbery with a

dangerous weapon. In E.L.’s case, Appellant was charged with two counts of first-degree

rape, two counts of second-degree rape, first-degree sexual offense, and kidnapping.6

Although the crimes relating to each victim were charged in the same indictment,

Appellant requested, and the State ultimately agreed, that each case be tried separately.

A. Trial One—March 19-22, 2012—Judge McCormick Presiding

T.K. testified that in March of 1979, she was twenty years old, working at the

National Bureau of Standards and at the Montgomery Ward, and attending a night class

at Montgomery College in Rockville, Maryland. On March 12th, after her class ended at

8:30 p.m., she left the building and started walking toward her car in the parking lot.

Suddenly a man grabbed her from behind and placed his arm across her mouth. He stuck

a sharp object, which she thought was a knife, against her neck. The man told her not to

make any noise and dragged her into the cover of nearby pine trees. The man made T.K.

pull her pants down and forced her to engage in vaginal intercourse. He made her wear a

sweater over her head so she could not see. After making her pull her pants up again, he

dragged her to another location, still holding the sharp object to her neck. Again he

forced her to pull her pants down, got on top of her, and repeated the rape. T.K. testified

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White v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/white-v-state-mdctspecapp-2015.