Wilkerson v. State

776 A.2d 685, 139 Md. App. 557, 2001 Md. App. LEXIS 125
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJuly 10, 2001
Docket2044, Sept. Term, 2000
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 776 A.2d 685 (Wilkerson 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
Wilkerson v. State, 776 A.2d 685, 139 Md. App. 557, 2001 Md. App. LEXIS 125 (Md. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

THIEME, Judge.

Appellant Omar Wilkerson was tried and convicted of murder and related charges in a jury trial in the Circuit Court for the City of Baltimore. He was sentenced to life for first degree murder, and twenty years consecutive, the first five years without parole, for use of a handgun in a crime of violence. The third count of conviction, for carrying a handgun, was merged with the latter count. Wilkerson appeals and asks:

*561 1. Did the court below err by overruling Wilkerson’s objection to the use of “other crimes” evidence regarding robbery of a drug dealer on March 13,1999?
2. Did the court below err by excluding Prince Broadway-Bey’s testimony about Antoine Lucas’s alleged admission that he had murdered the victim?
3. Did the court below err by allowing the detective’s hearsay testimony about Lakisha Pridgeon’s unreliable identification of appellant’s photograph when Pridgeon was not present to testify?

To these questions, we answer “no” and explain.

Facts

Wilkerson was charged with the murder of Shaborn Sha-bazz Allah on North Avenue in the City of Baltimore on the afternoon of March 5, 1999. He became a suspect on March 13 after police found a handgun, later shown to be the likely murder weapon, in a car he occupied with three others. He was convicted after a four-day trial in which the State presented evidence regarding both the March 13 incident and the homicide itself.

A

The largest body of evidence at trial pertained to an incident that occurred on March 13, a robbery of a drug dealer in which Wilkerson allegedly participated, along with Prince Broadway-Bey and Antoine Lucas. Police recovered a handgun from the back of the car in which the three were riding; it was found at the foot of the seat in which Lucas had been sitting. On the first day of the trial, Wilkerson objected to admission of any evidence of the robbery, except for the discovery of the handgun itself. The court reserved its ruling.

The next day, prior to the beginning of testimony, the State offered its rationale for admitting the “other crimes” evidence pertaining to the robbery, namely:

*562 i. to show identity, ie., that the person in possession of the weapon on March 13 also possessed that weapon on March 5;
ii. to show lack of mistake, ie., that the State had found the right suspect, because that suspect was in possession of the murder weapon; and
iii. that the State needed the evidence of the weapon’s use for the robbery to establish Wilkerson’s possession of it. 1

The defense argued for exclusion of this “other crimes” evidence as being unfairly prejudicial, especially after another witness had testified that the murder “looked like, to him, like a robbery gone bad, and then you have the state trying to show there was a robbery a week later involving Mr. Wilkerson.” The court rejected this argument:

The testimony is, as proffered, appears to be relevant, certainly on identity and also on what Solomon v[.] State refers to [as] assumption of the risk, including when several offenses are so connected in point in time and of time, or circumstances, that one can’t fully prove or fully show without proving the other, which I think is the case here.
And the evidence has been proffered for reasons other than to prove the criminal character of the defendant. In other words, it transcends mere evidence of bad character.

The court, however, granted the defense a continuing objection to any testimony related to the March 13 robbery.

Richard Jolley testified about the March 13 incident. On that day, he was hacking, ie., offering rides in his Pontiac Grand Am in exchange for money. He picked up three men, *563 including Wilkerson, who sat in the front passenger seat. One of the men asked Jolley to stop so that he could buy marijuana. Jolley complied, and Wilkerson and the others got out.

Over defense objections, Jolley testified that he saw Wilkerson grab the drug dealer’s arm, keeping his other hand in his pocket. The second passenger rummaged through the dealer’s pockets. Jolley testified, however, that he saw no weapon brandished during the robbery. When Wilkerson and the others got back into the car, he “gave the boy [sitting behind Jolley] the bag of weed they had took from the guy.” Shortly thereafter, police stopped the car and arrested its occupants. In doing so, they found the handgun. The police search was the first time Jolley noticed the gun. Though Jolley was charged in the robbery, the charges were later dropped when it was determined he had not been involved.

Officer Elihea Rushdan of the Housing Authority Police testified that, on March 13 at 5:25 p.m., he was on patrol in the 700 block of Lanvale Street. After a citizen pointed out the Grand Am to him, he and other officers pursued it for three blocks, then successfully stopped it and ordered the occupants out of the car. The front seat passenger ran away. Officer Rushdan chased that passenger, Wilkerson, who eventually hid behind a shed. After ordering the escapee into the open, Officer Rushdan arrested him. The three other persons in the car, Jolley, Broadway-Bey, 2 and Lucas, were also arrested. The officers who searched the car told Officer Rushdan that they found a .38 caliber handgun on the floor of the right rear side of the passenger compartment.

Officer Joseph Green, also of the Housing Authority Police, testified regarding the March 13 incident as well. While on patrol in a marked vehicle with Officer John Ross, Officer Green participated in the stop of the Grand Am and stood guard over the car’s other occupants, including Jolley, the driver, Broadway-Bey, the left rear passenger, and Lucas, the *564 right rear passenger; during the period in which Wilkerson was fleeing the scene. Officer Green testified that he found the handgun in the Grand Am. He described Wilkerson as standing five feet and five inches tall and weighing 160 pounds. Officer Green also averred that the stop on March 13 was unrelated to the murder investigation pertaining to the incident of March 5.

Officer Christopher Reisanger, also of the Housing Authority Police, testified that he participated in the March 13 stop of the Grand Am. He saw Wilkerson exit the right front seat of the car and flee. Officer Reisanger participated in the chase and arrest of Wilkerson.

Mark Takacs, a firearms expert for the Baltimore City Police Department, testified that two bullets were recovered from the murder scene on March 5 and one from the victim’s body. Takacs examined the handgun seized on March 13 and, after firing test rounds and making comparisons, he determined that its rifling characteristics closely resembled those for the seized weapon.

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Bluebook (online)
776 A.2d 685, 139 Md. App. 557, 2001 Md. App. LEXIS 125, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilkerson-v-state-mdctspecapp-2001.