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NO. COA07-1517
NORTH CAROLINA COURT OF APPEALS
Filed: 2 September 2008
STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA
v. Durham County
Nos. 02 CRS 48600-48604
FRANKIE DELANO WASHINGTON 02 CRS 48607-48608
Appeal by defendant from judgments entered 26 February 2007 by
Judge Henry W. Hight in Durham County Superior Court. Heard in the
Court of Appeals 1 May 2008.
Attorney General Roy Cooper, by Assistant Attorney General
Kevin Anderson, for the State.
Parish, Cooke & Condlin, by James R. Parish, for defendant
appellant.
McCULLOUGH, Judge.
Frankie Delano Washington (defendant) appeals his
convictions of first-degree burglary, two counts of second-degree
kidnapping, robbery with a dangerous weapon, attempted robbery with
a dangerous weapon, assault and battery, and attempted first-degree
sex offense. We vacate and dismiss.
The relevant facts and procedural history are as follows: At
around 2:45 a.m. on 30 May 2002, sixteen-year-old Mary Katherine
Breeze (Katherine) returned home from a party. Katherine entered
her home located at 911 North Gregson Street in the Trinity Park
neighborhood of Durham through a sliding door on the side of the
house. She testified at trial that although the neighborhood was a
little bit of a rough neighborhood, she did not want to wake herparents. Accordingly, she did not lock the door as she came in.
Mary Breeze (Mrs. Breeze), Bill Breeze (Mr. Breeze) and their
twelve-year-old son, Will, were the only ones home at the time.
At around 3:00 a.m., an intruder entered the Breezes' home
through the unlocked sliding glass door. The intruder was a light
complected African-American male, wearing blue jeans, tan boots,
and a dark-colored T-shirt with some sort of white writing on the
front and back. The intruder wore a blue bandana over his nose and
mouth and had a dark covering on his head, leaving only a small
slice of the front of his head exposed. He was not wearing any
gloves.
The Breezes were awakened by the barks of their family dog.
Without putting on his glasses, Mr. Breeze went downstairs to check
on the dog. When he reached the bottom landing of the stairs, the
intruder pointed a sawed-off shotgun toward Mr. Breeze's face and
ordered him to give him his money.
Mrs. Breeze heard scuffling, came out of her bedroom, and
peered down the spiral staircase. Although she was not wearing her
glasses, Mrs. Breeze could see the intruder standing on the landing
in front of the staircase, holding a gun to Mr. Breeze's head.
Mrs. Breeze screamed, and Will came out of his bedroom into the
upstairs hallway. Katherine stayed in her bedroom and dialed 911.
The intruder headed up the stairs, and Mr. Breeze fled the
house, seeking help. The intruder pushed Will ahead of Mrs. Breeze
and held the gun to the back of Mrs. Breeze's head, threatening
that she was going to give him everything he wanted or he wasgoing to kill [her]. He forced Mrs. Breeze and Will into the
living room and pushed Will onto the couch.
While holding a gun to the back of Mrs. Breeze's head, the
intruder directed Mrs. Breeze into the den and shut the door. While
standing behind Mrs. Breeze, the intruder proceeded to stick his
hand into Mrs. Breeze's underpants, reaching her crotch area.
Mrs. Breeze had just undergone major abdominal surgery and had
several drain lines coming from her body. She explained to the
intruder, if you're not careful, you're going to kill me. The
intruder removed his hand from her underpants.
Placing the gun to the back of Mrs. Breeze's head, the
intruder took her by the arm and told her that he wanted all of her
money. She gave the intruder her purse, which contained
approximately $150 cash, a palm pilot (PDA), and PDA accessories.
The intruder then fled through the side door. In total, the
intruder was in the Breezes' home for ten to fifteen minutes. At
trial, Mrs. Breeze testified that for most of that time, her back
was turned towards the intruder.
Mr. Breeze had been unsuccessfully banging on his neighbors'
doors when the intruder found him on Markham Street and ordered him
to return to his house. Mr. Breeze refused, and the intruder struck
him in the face. The intruder then fled down Markham Street towards
Duke University. Mr. Breeze followed the intruder and saw him turn
onto Watts street.
Durham police arrived at the Breezes' home shortly thereafter.
The Breezes gave law enforcement descriptions of the intruder'sclothing and told officers that the intruder appeared to be taller
than five foot seven inches and under the age of thirty, with a
receding hairline. Although most of the intruder's face was covered
by the bandana, Mr. Breeze noted the distinctively young, smooth
skin around the intruder's eyes.
Law enforcement used a K-9 unit to track a human scent from
the street where Mr. Breeze was assaulted, while Officer William
Bell patrolled the area by car.
The K-9 unit had tracked the human scent from Markham Street
several blocks, through an alleyway, and through some backyards to
Lancaster Street when, sometime between 3:30 a.m. and 4:00 a.m.,
the unit heard a call out that defendant had been detained. Upon
hearing the call, the K-9 unit stopped tracking the scent.
Officer Bell testified at trial that he was patrolling the
neighborhood, looking for a black male wearing a blue T-shirt with
writing on the front and jeans. He observed defendant, who was
forty-one years old and 5 feet 6 inches in height, walking south on
the 1200 block of Berkeley Street. Defendant was wearing a blue T-
shirt with an emblem on the front of the shirt and white lettering,
blue jeans, and work-type boots. Defendant was sweating and
appeared nervous. His T-shirt was dirty with grass stains, and he
had some mud on his jeans.
Officer Bell asked defendant to empty his pockets, and he
recovered from defendant a long-handled pair of pliers and a short
piece of a clothes hanger. Officer Anthony Smith testified that to
his knowledge, defendant did not have any cash on him. Defendant told Officer Bell that he had been walking from his
girlfriend's house on Hillcrest Avenue, which was off of Guess
Road. He stated that he was an auto mechanic and that he used the
hanger and pliers for his work on cars; however, defendant later
told police that he had been smoking crack cocaine in a nearby
house on Claredon Street. At trial, Lieutenant John Peter testified
on cross-examination that small pieces of hanger, like the one
recovered from defendant, are commonly used as push rods. A push
rod is a small piece of metal that is used to push out debris from
a crack pipe.
Sometime between 4:00 a.m. and 5:00 a.m., law enforcement
returned to the Breezes' home and told the Breezes that they had
apprehended a suspect fitting the description of the intruder.
Police drove Mr. and Mrs. Breeze to defendant, who was standing in
custody outside of a police car, about half a mile from the
Breezes' home. Defendant was not wearing a bandana or head
covering, but he was wearing a navy blue T-shirt with white
insignia on the chest, baggy blue jeans, and tan boots.
At trial, Mrs. Breeze testified that in the dark, from about
20 feet from defendant, she identified defendant as the intruder
who broke into her home earlier that morning. She stated that she
could not determine defendant's age from that distance. Defendant
was arrested. Police did not conduct any subsequent pretrial
identification procedures.
Later that day, based on a tip from a neighborhood child,
Durham Police recovered Mrs. Breeze's black purse, PDA andattachments, a Mossburg sawed-off shotgun, a bandana, and fecal
matter in or around a creek in Walltown Park in Durham. Officers
recovered a black toboggan in an alleyway on Buchanan Boulevard,
between Green Street and Berkeley Street. An unusual cigarette butt
was also collected from the Breezes' residence, but it was later
determined to be unrelated to the case.
Defendant was held in the Durham County Jail for 366 days,
pending State Bureau of Investigation (SBI) analysis of the above
items of physical evidence for trial. After several motions by
defendant and incremental reductions by the trial court, on 7 May
2003, the trial court reduced defendant's secured bond to the
amount of $37,500.00. Defendant was thereafter released from jail
on bond.
From May of 2002 to October of 2004, defendant moved the court
twice to compel SBI analysis of the State's evidence. On 18 March
2004, the trial court granted defendant's motion, and ordered the
SBI to conduct all of the requested tests. The SBI, however, was
never notified of that order.
On 24 June 2005, defendant moved the court to dismiss all
charges with prejudice for the State's violation of his right to a
speedy trial. The trial court denied that motion. The SBI finally
completed all requested analysis of the evidence on 30 January
2006.
Approximately four years and nine months after defendant's 30
May 2002 arrest, defendant was tried before a jury at the 19February 2007, 20 February 2007, and 21 February 2007 Criminal
Sessions of Durham County Superior Court.
At trial, the State presented the identification testimony of
Mr. Breeze, Mrs. Breeze, and Will Breeze as well as the testimony
of law enforcement officers as to the location and circumstances of
defendant's 30 May 2002 arrest.
SBI lab reports and the expert testimony of SBI lab agents
were also admitted as evidence at trial. After analyzing all of the
items of evidence collected by police, the SBI determined that only
the purse and toboggan contained identifiable physical evidence.
SBI examination of this evidence revealed the following: (1) three
identifiable fingerprints were found inside of Mrs. Breeze's purse,
but none of those prints were a match to defendant; (2) the black
toboggan contained the DNA profiles of more than one donor, but
none of those profiles were a match to defendant.
Defendant was found guilty of first-degree burglary, two
counts of second-degree kidnapping, robbery with a dangerous
weapon, attempted robbery with a dangerous weapon, assault and
battery, and attempted first-degree sex offense. He was sentenced
to consecutive terms of imprisonment of 46 to 56 months, 46 to 56
months, 117 to 150 months, 117 to 150 months, 20 days, and 251 to
311 months, respectively. Defendant was given credit for the 366
days spent in confinement prior to his trial.
On appeal, defendant contends that (1) he was denied his
constitutional right to a speedy trial; and (2) the trial courterred by denying his motions to dismiss various charges for
insufficiency of the evidence.
I. Right to a Speedy Tria
l
Defendant first contends that the four-year and nine-month
delay between his May 2002 arrest and his February 2007 trial
amounted to a violation of his constitutional right to a speedy
trial. Accordingly, defendant contends that his convictions must be
vacated and the charges against him must be dismissed with
prejudice. We conclude that the circumstances of this case are
unprecedented. After a difficult and sensitive balancing of the
four factors set forth in Barker v. Wingo, 407 U.S. 514, 530, 33 L.
Ed. 2d 101, 117 (1972), we agree with defendant.
The Sixth Amendment to the United States Constitution and the
fundamental law of this State provide every individual formally
accused of a crime the right to a speedy trial. See, e.g., State v.
Lyszaj, 314 N.C. 256, 261, 333 S.E.2d 288, 292 (1985). The Sixth
Amendment states, in pertinent part, in all criminal prosecutions,
the accused shall enjoy the right to a speedy . . . trial. U.S.
Const. amend. VI. This provision is made applicable to the states
by the Fourteenth Amendment. See Klopfer v. North Carolina, 386
U.S. 213, 222, 18 L. Ed. 2d 1, 8 (1967). Likewise, Article I,
Section 18 of the North Carolina Constitution provides that [a]ll
courts shall be open[] [to] every person . . . without favor,
denial, or delay. N.C. Const. art. 1, § 18. When reviewing speedy
trial claims, we employ the same analysis under both the SixthAmendment and Article I. See State v. Flowers, 347 N.C. 1, 27, 489
S.E.2d 391, 406 (1997).
In Barker, the United States Supreme Court set forth a
balancing test involving four interrelated factors for courts to
use in determining whether a defendant's constitutional right to a
speedy trial has been violated. Barker, 407 U.S. at 530, 33 L. Ed.
2d at 116-17. These factors include: (1) the length of the delay;
(2) the reason for the delay; (3) defendant's assertion of his
right to a speedy trial; and (4) prejudice to defendant resulting
from the delay. Id. North Carolina courts have adopted these
standards in analyzing alleged speedy trial violations. See State
v. Bare, 77 N.C. App. 516, 519, 335 S.E.2d 748, 750 (1985), disc.
review denied, 315 N.C. 392, 338 S.E.2d 881 (1986).
Our Supreme Court has emphasized that none of the four factors
identified above is determinative; rather they are to be considered
together, and each claim is to be decided on a case-by-case basis,
after a careful balancing of the facts:
We regard none of the four factors
identified above as either a necessary or
sufficient condition to the finding of a
deprivation of the right of speedy trial.
Rather, they are related factors and must be
considered together with such other
circumstances as may be relevant. In sum,
these factors have no talismanic qualities;
courts must still engage in a difficult and
sensitive balancing process. But, because we
are dealing with a fundamental right of the
accused, this process must be carried out with
full recognition that the accused's interest
in a speedy trial is specifically affirmed in
the Constitution.
State v. Spivey, 357 N.C. 114, 118, 579 S.E.2d 251, 255
(2003)(quoting Barker, 407 U.S. at 533, 33 L. Ed. 2d at 118-19).
With these principles in mind, we now balance the four factors
given the evidence contained in the record.
(1) Length of the Delay
First, the length of the delay is not per se determinative of
whether a defendant has been deprived of his right to a speedy
trial. See State v. Webster, 337 N.C. 674, 678, 447 S.E.2d 349, 351
(1994). The United States Supreme Court has noted that lower
courts have generally found post-accusation delay 'presumptively
prejudicial' at least as it approaches one year. Doggett v. United
States, 505 U.S. 647, 652 n.1, 120 L. Ed. 2d 520, 528 n.1 (1992).
However, 'presumptive prejudice' does not necessarily indicate a
statistical probability of prejudice; it simply marks the point at
which courts deem the delay unreasonable enough to trigger the
Barker enquiry [sic]. Id. Here, the length of the delay was
approximately four years and nine months. The State concedes that
this is enough to trigger examination of the other factors.
(2) Reason for the Delay
With respect to the reasons for the delay, a defendant bears
the burden of presenting prima facie evidence that the delay was
caused by the neglect or willfulness of the prosecution. Spivey,
357 N.C. at 119, 579 S.E.2d at 255. Only after the defendant has
carried his burden of proof by offering prima facie evidence
showing that the delay was caused by the neglect or willfulness of
the prosecution must the State offer evidence fully explaining thereasons for the delay and sufficient to rebut the prima facie
evidence. Id.
We have held that '[t]he constitutional guarantee does not
outlaw good-faith delays which are reasonably necessary for the
State to prepare and present its case. . . . The proscription is
against purposeful or oppressive delays and those which the
prosecution could have avoided by reasonable effort.' State v.
Hammonds, 141 N.C. App. 152, 160, 541 S.E.2d 166, 173
(2000)(citation omitted)(emphasis added), cert. denied, 536 U.S.
907, 153 L. Ed. 2d 184 (2002).
Likewise, in Spivey, the defendant asserted that a four-and
one-half-year pretrial delay was caused by the State's laggard
performance, but the record revealed that the delay was actually
the result of a neutral factor -- docket congestion in Robeson
County. Spivey, 357 N.C. at 117, 579 S.E.2d at 256. The Court
concluded that the defendant had failed to carry his burden of
proof in establishing State neglect. In holding that the defendant
had not been deprived of his right to a speedy trial, our Supreme
Court reasoned:
Defendant has failed to present any evidence
that the delay was caused by the State's
neglect or willfulness, and we see no
indication that court resources were either
negligently or purposefully underutilized.
Indeed, defendant relies solely on the length
of delay and ignores the balancing of other
factors.
Spivey, 357 N.C. at 121, 579 S.E.2d at 256 (emphasis added). See
also Hammonds, 141 N.C. App. at 160-61, 541 S.E.2d at 173-74(holding that where a four-and-one-half-year-pretrial delay was
caused by docket congestion in Robeson County and other neutral
factors, defendant failed to carry his burden of proof in showing
State neglect or willfulness).
The case sub judice, however, is distinguishable from both
Spivey and Hammonds, as the record contains overwhelming evidence
that the actual reason for the delay in this case was not a neutral
factor, but rather, was repeated neglect and underutilization of
court resources on the part of the Durham County District
Attorney's Office. The State has failed to rebut this showing, and
we must weigh this factor in favor of defendant.
Failure to submit evidence to SBI for analysis
First, the record shows that much of the delay was caused by
the State's failure to submit its physical evidence to the SBI lab
to be examined.
Defendant was arrested on 30 May 2002, indicted on 19 August
2002, and was held in the Durham County Jail for 366 days, pending
SBI analysis of the physical evidence. The record shows that from
26 August 2002 to 7 May 2003, defendant moved the court four times
to reduce defendant's bond, which was originally set at $1 million.
With each motion, the trial court incrementally reduced defendant's
bond and directed the State to proceed with the testing as
expeditiously as possible.
By 20 July 2006, the case had appeared on at least three trial
calenders, but was continued at the request of the State because
the SBI had not performed the necessary tests on the evidence.
Thus, it is clear that at least 49 months of the delay, from 30 May
2002 to 20 July 2006, is attributable to the State's continuances,
pending SBI testing of the evidence.
(See footnote 1)
According to SBI lab reports, however, the black purse,
containing three exclusionary fingerprints, and the black toboggan,
containing exclusionary DNA evidence, were not submitted to the SBI
lab for analysis until 4 August 2005, which was more than three
years after these items were collected.
Moreover, Natassha Robinson, the forensic scientist who
conducted the latent print examination and comparison on the
shotgun, PDA, and purse, testified at trial that while the State
submitted the PDA and shotgun for testing in June and July of 2002,
respectively, the State did not submit any fingerprint impressions
from defendant for comparison. Lab reports show that defendant's
fingerprint impressions were obtained from the SBI's internal
system on 31 August 2005.
With the exception of the fecal matter, which could not be
tested, the lab reports show that all of the items that were
submitted to the lab in June or July of 2002 had been analyzed by
20 October 2003. Most of these items were fully analyzed within six
months of their submission. Thus, the primary reason that the SBI
did not complete its analysis of the State's evidence until January
of 2006 was not a neutral factor, but rather, was a factor whollywithin the prosecution's control: the prosecution's failure to
submit the evidence to the lab prior to August of 2005.
Failure to make appropriate requests
Next, the record reveals that during the prosecution, the
State was given notice of evidence tending to establish the guilt
of another person already in custody, yet the State failed to
request that the SBI make appropriate comparisons of the evidence
to this person.
On 23 October 2003, defendant moved to compel SBI analysis of
the State's physical evidence on the grounds that another person,
Lawrence Hawes, had been arrested as a suspect in a string of home
invasions in or near the Trinity Park neighborhood of Durham,
including six home invasions that occurred
after defendant's 30 May
2002 arrest:
8. Based on information and belief, the
Durham Police Department formed a Sexual
Assault Task Force to deal with a series of
sexual assaults and burglaries occurring over
the last year and a half;
9. [T]hese attacks were occurring in the
neighborhoods commonly referred to as
Trinity
Park, Watts-Hillandale, Walltown and Duke
University's East Campus;
10. On or about September 13, 2002
Lawrence Hawes was arrested by the Durham
Sexual Assault Task Force and charged with
burglary and sexual assault offenses;
11. . . .
Lawrence Hawes was a suspect,
according to the Durham Sexual Assault Task
Force, in the following burglary and/or sexual
assaults:
a. January 10, 2002, 400 block of
Gregson St. b. February 20, 2002, 600 block of Buchanan
St.
c. March 7, 2002, Englewood Ave.
d. April 1, 2002, Priscillas on Guess Rd.
e. July 1, 2002, 800 block of Wilkerson Ave.
f. August 17, 2002, 1400 block of Carolina
Ave.
g. September 5, 2002, 800 block of Wilkerson
Ave.
h. August 7, 2002, 1100 block of Iredell St.
i. . . . August 17, 2002, Knox St.
j. . . . August 23, 2002, 1400 block of
Carolina Ave.
* * * *
14. Based on information and belief,
Lawrence Hawes would follow females to a
residence late at night or in the early
morning hours, pull a weapon and sexually
assault the female;
* * * *
18. [T]he State Bureau of Investigation
has not compared the fingerprints or DNA
samples of the defendant to any of the
evidence recovered by the Durham Police . . .;
19. Nor has the State Bureau of
Investigation compared the known fingerprints
and DNA samples of Lawrence Hawes to the
evidence recovered by the Durham Police as
related to the burglary and assault at 911 N.
Gregson St[.]
Because it is referenced in the record of appeal and is
material to the issue of state neglect, we take judicial notice
that Lawrence Hawes was convicted on 4 June 2003 for acts committed
during a home invasion in the Trinity Park neighborhood of Durham
on 7 March 2002. State v. Hawes, No. COA03-1417, 2004 N.C. App.
LEXIS 1286, at 1, 2 (N.C. Ct. App. July 20, 2004), cert. denied,
360 N.C. 71, 623 S.E.2d 777 (2005); see 1-2 Brandis and Broun on
North Carolina Evidence § 26 (2004)(An appellate court may noticeits own records.); see, e.g., West v. Reddick, Inc., 302 N.C. 201,
203, 274 S.E.2d 221, 223 (1981)(taking judicial notice of the facts
of a North Carolina Court of Appeals decision and concluding that
an opinion of the North Carolina Court of Appeals is a readily
accessible source of indisputable accuracy); In re Trucking Co.,
285 N.C. 552, 557, 206 S.E.2d 172, 176 (1974)(The Supreme Court
will take judicial notice of its own records.).
In Hawes, the State's evidence tended to show that on 7 March
2002, Lawrence Hawes, a black male, wore a maroon bandana over his
nose and mouth and pointed a sawed-off shotgun at the victim before
raping and robbing her. Hawes, slip op. at 1, 2. Lawrence Hawes'
DNA profile was a match to the DNA recovered from the victim's
pajama bottoms. Id. Hawes' shoe print matched a print recovered
from the scene of another nearby home invasion and sexual assault
that occurred on 5 September 2002. Id. Upon arresting Hawes, police
recovered a semi-automatic handgun, four types of hats, four
shirts, a bandana, and a toolbox from Hawes' car. Id., slip op. 4.
Lawrence Hawes was sentenced to three consecutive terms of 384 to
470 months' imprisonment, and we found no error by the trial court.
Id., slip op. 1.
The record shows that despite defendant's 2002 request, the
State never submitted a request to the SBI lab that any of the
physical evidence in this case be compared to the known
fingerprints or DNA profile of Lawrence Hawes, and the trial courtdenied defendant's motion to compel such testing.
(See footnote 2)
Forensic
Scientist Natassha Robinson testified that it is SBI policy that
where a suspect has been identified, latent fingerprint impressions
will not be compared to those contained in the AFIS system unless
the State specifically makes such a request. Because the State did
not make a request for such a comparison, the fingerprints obtained
from the purse, which did not match defendant, were not run through
the system for comparison. Likewise, the State did not request
that the mixture of DNA profiles obtained from the toboggan, none
of which matched defendant, be queried against the convicted
offender indexes of the NCSBI State Database. We conclude that the
State's failure to request that such comparisons be made is
evidence of the State's repeated neglect of this case over the
course of the prosecution.
Underutilization of court resources
Finally, the record shows that for nearly two years the Durham
County District Attorney's Office failed to notify the SBI that it
had been court ordered on 18 March 2004 to analyze the evidence; as
such, the SBI lab did not comply with the order and did not conduct
all of the tests mandated by Judge Stephens. As previously
discussed, we note that even if the State had provided the SBI with
a copy of Judge Stephens' Order in 2004, the SBI could not havetested the purse or toboggan at that time because the State did not
submit those items to the lab for examination until August of 2005.
The 18 March 2004 order mandated that the SBI conduct eight
types of tests on the evidence and that if any of those tests could
not be performed, that the agency provide Assistant District
Attorney Tracy Cline with a written statement explaining the reason
that any such test could not be performed. At trial, Special Agent
Jennifer Elwell of the SBI testified to the following:
Q. Is there in [the SBI files on the
case] a Court Order signed on the 18th day of
March, 2004, ordering the SBI to perform
certain tests?
A. No, sir, there is no Court Order in
either file.
Q. So [to] your personal knowledge, no
one from the Durham Police Department
contacted you and let you know sometime after
the 18th day of March, 2004 that the SBI was
under Court Order to perform certain tests?
A. I'm going to refer right now to my
phone logs, not my phone logs, but the phone
logs that were generated in this case, and see
if there is any kind of telephone
conversation. It is our standard operating
procedure that if a conversation had occurred
we would have written it down in the phone
log.
* * * *
A. No, sir, there is no indication of a
phone conversation regarding a Court Order.
Q. From the Durham Police?
A. No.
Q. Or the Durham County District
Attorney's Office?
A. That would be correct.
(Emphasis added.)
In total, four different SBI agents--Jennifer Elwell, Michael
Joseph Budzynski, Natassha Robinson, and James Gregory--testified
that they were not provided with notice of the 2004 court order.
Detective Smith of the Durham Police Department also testified that
he never received a copy of the order compelling testing, and he
had no notice of it.
Moreover, despite the 2004 order that the SBI conduct STR/DNA
analysis of the bandana and make appropriate comparisons to
defendant, the lab report shows that the State never requested such
a test. Accordingly, the SBI only conducted a hair analysis of the
bandana and never examined the bandana for the presence of DNA.
Thus, even with more than four-and-one-half years of time to
prepare its case, the State failed to completely analyze the
evidence as ordered.
In sum, the State's three-year delay in submitting the
evidence to the SBI lab, its failure to request that such evidence
be compared to the AFIS Database and convicted offender indexes of
the NCSBI State Database, and its failure to notify the SBI that it
had been court ordered to conduct tests necessary for its
prosecution is prima facie evidence of State neglect and
underutilization of court resources during the course of this
prosecution. Defendant has carried his burden of proof.
In response, the State argues that the length of time that
it took the SBI to test the items of evidence was outside of theprosecution's control. Likewise, at trial, Assistant District
Attorney Cline testified that it can take years for the SBI to
fully test an item. This assertion, however, is simply unsupported
by the evidence of record. According to SBI lab reports, all of the
items were tested within one year and four months of their
submission and most were tested within six months of their
submission.
In addition, the State contends that much of the delay was
caused by the fact that the fecal matter could not be tested;
however, the State has not submitted any evidence to support this
contention. To the contrary, SBI Agent Michael Joseph Budzynski
testified at trial that because the SBI lab does not conduct DNA
analysis on fecal matter submitted in a plastic bag, upon receiving
a fecal sample in that form, the SBI lab would have immediately
advised the State that such evidence would not be analyzed.
In sum, there is no evidence in the record tending to show
that the delay was caused by a factor outside of the prosecution's
control, such as a short staff or backlog of evidence to be tested
at the SBI lab. This distinguishes the instant facts from the facts
of Spivey and Hammonds. Because the State has failed to rebut
defendant's prima facie showing that the majority of the delay was
caused by the State's neglect and underutilization of court
resources throughout the course of this prosecution, we must weigh
this factor in favor of defendant.
(3) Defendant's Assertion of His Right to a Speedy Trial
We turn to the third factor. The United States Supreme Court
has stated:
Whether and how a defendant asserts his right
is closely related to the other factors . . . .
The strength of his efforts will be affected by
the length of the delay, to some extent by the
reason for the delay, and most particularly by
the personal prejudice, which is not always
readily identifiable, that he experiences. The
more serious the deprivation, the more likely
a defendant is to complain.
Barker, 407 U.S. at 531, 33 L. Ed. 2d at 117.
Here, defendant formally asserted his right on 24 June 2005,
when he moved to dismiss the case on the grounds that the State had
deprived him of his right to a speedy trial. While this was roughly
two years and ten months after his August 2002 indictment, it was
also approximately one year and eight months before his trial began.
In addition, although not a formal assertion of defendant's
right, in order to reduce the delay, defendant moved the court twice
to compel testing by the SBI. Defendant made his first motion on 23
October 2002, just roughly two months after his indictment; he moved
the trial court again on 18 March 2004, stating:
[T]he Defendant believes the tests [sic]
results will prove he had no contact with any
of the collected items, has never been inside
the residence at 911 N. Gregson St., did not
assault any of the victims and is completely
innocent of these charges.
Wherefore the Defendant requests that the
Court enter an Order compelling the SBI to
proceed with the examinations requested in
paragraph seven (7) above as soon as
practicable.
(Emphasis added.)
Finally, defendant complained about the delay at trial by
cross-examining all of the State's witnesses from the SBI about the
reason for the delay and by calling Assistant District Attorney
Cline to the stand to testify to the same effect.
Thus, while defendant's formal assertion of his right was not
immediate, he did assert this right almost two years prior to the
start of his trial. Further, defendant began informally asserting
his right as early as October of 2002, when he began moving the
court to expedite SBI testing. Defendant continued to complain about
the delay throughout his prosecution. Accordingly, when considered
together, these actions weigh in favor of defendant.
(4) Prejudice to Defendant
Finally, we consider whether defendant has suffered prejudice
as a result of the delay of his trial. Courts will not presume that
a delay in prosecution has prejudiced the accused. The defendant has
the burden of proving the fourth factor. State v. Hughes, 54 N.C.
App. 117, 120, 282 S.E.2d 504, 506 (1981). Nevertheless, the need
to demonstrate prejudice diminishes as the egregiousness of the
delay increases. Doggett, 505 U.S. at 668, 120 L. Ed. 2d at 532.
As to this factor, the United States Supreme Court has
recognized three objectives of the right to a speedy trial: (i) to
prevent oppressive pretrial incarceration; (ii) to minimize anxiety
and concern of the accused; and (iii) to limit the possibility that
the defense will be impaired. Barker, 407 U.S. at 532, 33 L. Ed.
2d at 118 (citation omitted). Of these forms of prejudice, the mostserious is the last, as the inability of a defendant adequately to
prepare his case skews the fairness of the entire system. Id.
Here, there is evidence that the near five-year pretrial delay
resulted in actual particularized prejudice to defendant, which we
must weigh heavily in defendant's favor.
Pretrial incarceration
First, defendant was incarcerated for more than 366 days prior
to his trial. While evidence of a lengthy pretrial incarceration,
standing alone, may be insufficient to establish that a defendant's
right to a speedy trial has been violated; see Spivey, 357 N.C. 114,
579 S.E.2d 251; and Hammonds, 141 N.C. App. 152, 541 S.E.2d 166, our
Supreme Court has nonetheless stated that evidence of an oppressive
pretrial incarceration is an important consideration in our
analysis. Webster, 337 N.C. at 681, 447 S.E.2d at 352. [T]ime spent
in jail awaiting trial has a detrimental impact on the individual.
It often means loss of a job; it disrupts family life; and it
enforces idleness. Barker, 407 U.S. at 532, 33 L. Ed. 2d at 118.
Here, there is evidence that the pretrial incarceration not only
disrupted defendant's work as an auto mechanic, but also disrupted
his family life. At 3:00 p.m. on the afternoon following defendant's
arrest, police found defendant's ten-year-old son home alone in
defendant's apartment. The record does not reveal who took custody
of his son during defendant's incarceration; however, defendant's
sudden separation from his child, which lasted for more than a year,
is a form of prejudice that we must consider.
Impairment to the defense
As a preliminary matter, we note that evidence tending to
establish that another person committed the crime for which a
defendant is charged is relevant and admissible as long as it does
more than create an inference or conjecture in this regard.
State
v. Israel, 353 N.C. 211, 219, 539 S.E.2d 633, 638 (2000). It must
tend to both implicate another and be inconsistent with the guilt
of the defendant.
Id. Thus, the evidence referenced in defense
counsel's 2002 motion, that another person, Lawrence Hawes, had been
convicted of invading another home in the same Trinity Park
neighborhood, while carrying the same type of weapon and wearing the
same type of disguise, just two months prior to the date of the
offenses for which defendant was charged would have been relevant
and admissible evidence at trial. Because we see no tactical
advantage in excluding this evidence from the jury's consideration,
we find that defense counsel's failure to introduce this evidence
was likely inadvertent. We recognize, as a practical matter, that
over the years that passed between defense counsel's 2002 motion to
compel testing and defendant's 2007 trial, defense counsel may have
simply forgotten about or overlooked this evidence; however, without
an explanation in the record, we will not attribute this omission
to the delay. Thus, while the fact that this evidence was not
introduced at trial was clearly prejudicial to defendant, we do not
weigh this prejudice against the State under our
Barker analysis.
What we do weigh against the State, however, is the clear
impairment to the defense caused by the inability of many of the
witnesses to recall details pertinent to the defense.
See Barker,407 U.S. at 532, 33 L. Ed. 2d at 118 (There is also prejudice if
defense witnesses are unable to recall accurately events of the
distant past.). Here, the trial transcript reveals that the
witnesses' inability to accurately recall the events of 30 May 2002
repeatedly interfered with defendant's ability to establish
circumstantial evidence that was relevant to the defense and also
impeded defendant's ability to challenge the reliability of the
State's identification evidence on cross-examination. Given that all
of the evidence tending to establish defendant's guilt in this case
was testimonial in nature, the impairment to the defense here was
more pronounced than it might have been otherwise.
First, in establishing defendant's guilt, the State relied
heavily on the testimony of Durham Police officers concerning the
circumstances of defendant's arrest. Since it had been nearly five
years since defendant's arrest, however, officers could recall very
little beyond what was recorded in their notes. There were several
instances at trial where the defense inquired about facts that were
not contained in police reports, but were relevant to the defense,
and the officers stated that they did not recall.
For instance, the defense's ability to highlight any
discrepancies between defendant's physical characteristics and the
description of the intruder that was given to law enforcement was
repeatedly impeded by the inability of the officers to recall
details of the description that had not been recorded in their
notes. This is just one example: Q. You indicated that Officer Caldwell
gave out a description of this person who had
been in the house with the shotgun?
A. Uh-huh.
Q. What was that description?
A. The description was a black male with
a shotgun. I think he said blue T-shirt and
jeans.
Q. Did the person that gave out the
initial description say anything about his
height?
A.
I don't recall.
Q. Did they say anything about the
person's weight?
A.
I don't recall that either.
(Emphasis added.)
Likewise, another fact relevant to the defense was that
approximately $150 was missing from Mrs. Breeze's purse, yet police
reports did not show that defendant had any money in his pockets at
the time of his arrest. While the omission in the reports tended to
imply that defendant was not carrying the cash, this fact was not
affirmatively documented and not one officer was able to testify
with certainty as to this fact. For example, relying on memory
alone, Detective Anthony Smith suggested, but could not say
definitively that defendant did not have any cash on him at the time
of his arrest:
Q. Was [sic] there [] property forms
filled out for Frankie Washington?
A. There was [sic] some.
Q. How many? A. I don't know the exact amount. There
are other means of identifying where property
is also.
Q. All right. Can you tell this jury, if
a property report was done on any money that
was taken from Frankie Washington the night he
was arrested or early morning hours he was
arrested?
A. No. No.
Q. Do you remember of your own personal
knowledge whether he had any money on him at
all?
A.
I do not recall him having any money
on him.
(Emphasis added.)
Next, the crux of the State's evidence establishing defendant's
guilt was eyewitness testimony, including Mr. and Mrs. Breeze's
pretrial show-up identification of defendant as the perpetrator of
the crime and three in-court identifications to the same effect. The
victims' blurred recollections as to the details of 30 May 2002
repeatedly interfered with defendant's ability to challenge the
reliability of those identifications.
For example, defendant's opportunity to challenge the
reliability of Mr. Breeze's pretrial identification of defendant as
the perpetrator of these crimes was severely hindered by Mr.
Breeze's inability to recall the details of the 30 May 2002
identification procedure:
Q. So when they told you they had a
suspect, you knew that before you even left the
house, is that right?
A. I knew that they were going to drive me
somewhere to show me someone, yes.
Q. And when they drove you to where this
person was, you were in the back of a police
car, is that right?
A. Yes, that's correct.
I think that's
right, yeah.
I was in a police car.
Q. Think about it for a minute. Were you
in the back of the police car?
A. Yes.
* * * *
Q. How many people were sitting on the
front seat in front of you?
A. Well, there was the driver, and I
believe
there might have been somebody else,
but I'm not a hundred percent sure I wasn't
there and the other guy in the backseat, but
I
think I was sitting beside my wife.
Q. And you're looking out through the
front window of the police car, is that right?
A.
I think it was the side, I'm not sure.
I looked out the window.
Q.
How far was the police car away from
this person you were looking at?
A.
Close enough that I could see him real
well. . . .
Q. How far away were you, Attorney Breeze?
A.
I don't know. I mean it was not too
far.
* * * *
Q. So you're saying maybe back to that
first row is how far away you were?
A.
Well, you know, I don't know. I mean it
wasn't all that far because I could see him.
(Emphasis added.) It seems from the outcome of the case that the jury did not
weigh Mr. Breeze's faded memory heavily against him; however, Mr.
Breeze's inability to recall the conditions under which he
identified defendant as the perpetrator of the offenses at issue,
including the distance from defendant at which he made such
identification, made it substantially more difficult for defendant
to challenge Mr. Breeze's opportunity to accurately see defendant's
facial features and to contest the reliability of that
identification. This was prejudicial to defendant.
Finally, we turn to the fact that the victims in this case were
permitted to participate in several in-court identifications nearly
five years after the date of the crime.
(See footnote 3)
Without addressing whether
it was proper to admit such identification evidence, we note thatthe reliability of identification evidence is the linchpin in
determining its admissibility. 29 Am. Jur. 2d Evidence, § 637
(2008). For both in-court and out-of-court identifications, there
are five factors to consider in determining whether an
identification procedure is so inherently unreliable that the
evidence must be excluded from trial: (1) the opportunity of the
witness to view the criminal at the time of the crime; (2) the
witness's degree of attention; (3) the accuracy of the witness's
prior description of the criminal; (4) the level of certainty
demonstrated by the witness at the confrontation; and (5) the length
of time between the crime and the confrontation.
Id.; see also
Pinchback, 140 N.C. App. at 518, 537 S.E.2d at 225. Thus, we have
recognized that the longer the length of time between the crime and
the in-court confrontation, the greater the likelihood of
misidentification, and likewise, the greater the prejudice to
defendant from admission of such identification evidence.
(See footnote 4)
In May of 2002, Mrs. Breeze could only identify the color of
the intruder's shirt and that it had some sort of white insignia on
the front and back of it. At trial in 2007, she was asked whether
a photo of defendant's blue shirt depicted the same exact blue shirt
that she had seen nearly five years earlier. Similarly, Will Breezeand Mr. Breeze, who testified that they had only seen a slice of the
intruder's face for less than ten to fifteen minutes in May of 2002
and who had never seen the intruder before that time, were asked to
identify whether defendant was the same person they had seen nearly
five years before. These in-court identifications were substantially
more likely to result in a misidentification of defendant as the
perpetrator of the crimes charged than if they had been conducted
sooner in the process.
In sum, it is clear from the record that the near five-year
pretrial delay resulted in actual particularized prejudice to
defendant, including an oppressive 366-day pretrial incarceration,
the loss of circumstantial evidence surrounding defendant's arrest,
impairment to the defense's ability to challenge pretrial
identification evidence, and a substantially greater likelihood that
the in-court identifications would result in misidentification of
defendant as the perpetrator of the offenses. Accordingly, we must
weigh this prejudice heavily in defendant's favor.
Given the length of the delay, defendant's repeated efforts to
expedite his trial, the overwhelming evidence that the delay could
have been avoided if the State had exercised even the slightest care
during the course of this prosecution, and the fact that this delay
actually prejudiced defendant at trial, there is not one
Barker
factor that weighs in favor of the State. Therefore, after applying
the
Barker balancing test to the exceptional and unprecedented facts
of this case, we have no choice but to conclude that defendant has
been deprived of a right specifically affirmed in both our state andfederal constitutions. As such, we must vacate defendant's
convictions and dismiss all charges with prejudice.
Because we dismiss all charges with prejudice on speedy trial
grounds, we need not address defendant's remaining assignments of
error.
Vacated and dismissed.
Judges TYSON and STROUD concur.
Footnote: 1
On 20 July 2006, defendant continued trial to 18 September
2006, a two-month delay, which we attribute to defendant and do not
weigh against the State.
Footnote: 2
Although the trial court later granted defendant's 2004
motion to compel testing, the 2004 motion makes no reference to
Lawrence Hawes. We have no explanation as to why defense counsel
did not renew his 2002 request to have the physical evidence
compared to the DNA profile and fingerprint impressions obtained
from Hawes nor why he failed to introduce this evidence at trial.
Footnote: 3
While we are troubled by the the Durham Police Department's
use of a highly suggestive show-up procedure to identify defendant
as the perpetrator of this crime, defendant did not move to
suppress this pretrial identification evidence at trial nor does he
argue on appeal that admission of this evidence amounted to plain
error
(See footnote 5) ; accordingly, the question of whether the trial court's
admission of that evidence constitutes reversible error is not
before us for review. N.C. R. App. P. 10(b)(1)(2008). Likewise,
while defendant did object to the victims' in-court identifications
of defendant pursuant to Rule 403 of the N.C. Rules of Evidence,
defendant has abandoned this assignment of error on appeal. N.C. R.
App. P. 28(b)(6) Art. II. Thus, for purposes of our
Barker
analysis, we assume
arguendo, that the trial court's admission of
the pretrial identification evidence and in-court identification
evidence does not constitute reversible error.
But cf. State v.
Pinchback, 140 N.C. App. 512, 518, 537 S.E.2d 222, 225
(2000)
(reversing on the grounds that pretrial identification
evidence should have been excluded where the identification
procedure was a suggestive show up; the witness was only in the
presence of an unmasked perpetrator for a period of thirty minutes,
most of which time the witness's back was turned towards the
perpetrator; and the witness only accurately described the
perpetrator's clothing).
Footnote: 4
For future reference, we note that in an effort to help
solve crime, convict the guilty, and exonerate the innocent in
criminal proceedings by improving procedures for eyewitness
identification of suspects, the General Assembly has enacted the
Eyewitness Identification Reform Act. N.C. Gen. Stat. §
15A-284.51(2007). Because this legislation became effective on 1
March 2008, it is not applicable to the case
sub judice.
Footnote: 5
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