Wedgeworth v. State
Wedgeworth v. State
Opinion
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 1246
The appellant, Zackery Wedgeworth, received a sentence of life imprisonment without parole for intentional murder, made capital because it was committed during a robbery in the first degree, in violation of §
On the morning of November 10, 1989, officers of the Tuscaloosa Police Department went to the home of Mrs. Corinne Harless in response to a missing persons report. Upon entering Mrs. Harless's home, investigators determined that a possible *Page 1247 burglary and kidnapping had occurred, because the home had been ransacked. Mrs. Harless's automobile, a gold 1985 Mercury Cougar, was also missing.
That afternoon at approximately 2:30 the appellant and four others were seen by police in Mrs. Harless's automobile. All five occupants, including the appellant, were subsequently ordered out of the car, were searched, were handcuffed, and were placed in patrol cars. The appellant was taken to the police station by Officer Everette and the appellant was advised of his Miranda rights before entering the station.
While transporting one of the occupants of the vehicle, Tracy Caldwell, to the homicide unit, Officer M.A. Flowers learned from her that she and the appellant had been living in a room at the Moon Winx Lodge Motel. Officer Flowers then radioed this information to Officer Everette and several officers, and investigators were dispatched to the motel to search for Mrs. Harless.
Upon entering the motel room, the police found several items containing the victim's name. The investigators also seized several items implicating the appellant in the kidnapping of Harless. However, Mrs. Harless was not found in the motel room.
At approximately 4:00 p.m., the appellant, after having been advised of his Miranda rights, made a statement indicating that he did not know anything about the victim or where the victim could be found. Later, at approximately 8:15 p.m., after being advised of his Miranda rights again, the appellant confessed to the kidnapping of Mrs. Harless and, after being allowed to speak privately with Tracy Caldwell, the appellant confessed to murdering Mrs. Harless.
In his statements, the appellant stated that he and his accomplices grabbed Mrs. Harless as she got out of her automobile just after arriving at her house. Mrs. Harless screamed and a pair of panties were shoved into her mouth and the group forcibly held her down on the ground. They went through the contents of her purse and used a Pepsi Cola soft drink bottle to hit her in the face.
Mrs. Harless's body was found in a large mud hole around 4:00 or 4:30 p.m. on November 10, 1989.
This court has held that a motel room is protected by the Fourth Amendment's prohibition against unreasonable searches and seizures. Dawson v. State,
The appellant argues specifically that no exigent circumstances existed because the only reason the police gave for entering the motel room was because Mrs. Harless was still missing and because the appellant and Caldwell had been living in the motel room. However, this court has ruled that exigent circumstances exist to justify a warrantless search upon a reasonable cause to believe that those premises contain individuals in imminent danger of death or severe bodily harm.Ash v. State,
Though the appellant claims that the fact that the appellant had been living at the Moon Winx Lodge Motel would not give the police reason to believe that the victim would be in the motel room, the police were trying to locate the victim at the time of Caldwell's statement to Officer Flowers. The Fourth Amendment does not require police officers to delay in the course of an investigation of a serious crime if to do so would endanger the lives of others. Jones v. State,
The appellant also contends that even had the search of the motel room not violated the Fourth Amendment, the evidence seized there should not have been admitted at trial because it was not within the "plain view" of the police. The plain view doctrine authorizes the warrantless seizure of personal property where the initial intrusion is lawful, and the incriminating nature of the property is immediately apparent.Williams v. State,
Items are seizable that come into view of an officer lawfully searching in connection with another crime. King v. State,
"Immediately apparent" for purposes of the plain view doctrine requires that the officer has probable cause from the nature of the seized property, to associate the property with criminal activity. For example, the seizure of clothing under the plain view doctrine is permissible when it is probable that the defendant wore the clothing at the time of the crime and the clothing contained blood or mud, and would aid in establishing a fact. See Williams, supra. Furthermore, the requirement for a warrantless search that the officer immediately recognize the object as evidence of wrongdoing requires that the officer's judgment be grounded in probable cause. However, the officer need not be convinced beyond a reasonable doubt as to the incriminating nature of the evidence discovered, and it is sufficient if the evidence raises the probability that criminal activity is afoot.
A review of the record indicates that the discovery of the evidence obtained in the appellant's motel room was justified under the plain view doctrine.
Two officers testified that various personal items from the victim's purse were found on a nightstand and that some items of identification contained the victim's name, including the victim's checkbook. Other purses were found under the nightstand. A bag from Wagner's was found under the dresser. An umbrella was found behind the door. The innersoles of tennis shoes and dirty socks were found in the sink. Pepsi Cola soft drink bottles with mud on them were sitting on the vanity. An investigating officer testified that they took only what was in plain view and that they did not look in "every nook and cranny."
The appellant contends that the police searched under the dresser and under the nightstand. However, the items taken from under the dresser and nightstand were still in plain view. Nowhere in the testimony is there anything to suggest that the officers had to open or move anything to find these items. These items were clearly in plain view. Moreover, the police testified that they did not look up into the ceilings, take the mattresses apart, or dismantle the television.
Furthermore, the items seized from the appellant's motel room could also have been admitted under the inevitable discovery rule. Under the inevitable discovery rule, evidence is admissible that would otherwise be excludable if it inevitably would have been discovered by lawful means had the illegal conduct not occurred. United States v. Hernandez-Cano,
Officer Everette testified that he advised the appellant of his Miranda rights before he took him inside the police station's homicide interrogation room. The appellant contends that the testimony conflicts on whether Everette was the officer who transported the appellant from the arrest scene to the station room. The appellant testified that he had been transported by Officer Bies, but Bies testified that he did not transport the appellant to the homicide unit, but that he had transported another suspect.
This conflict, however, does not affect the admissibility of the statement because the credibility of the witnesses is for the factfinder to determine. Bush v. State,
The appellant also contends that he was coerced into making his statement and that the statements, therefore, should not have been admissible at trial. The appellant supports his contention with evidence that he had been in custody for several hours at the time the statement was made, that he had been told that his girlfriend had already tried to help police and that the victim's body had already been found.
However, the record indicates that the appellant was not subjected to any extraordinary circumstances in regard to his interrogation. The appellant was questioned at several intervals, spent some of the time talking with narcotics officers about helping them set up a drug dealer, and was also allowed the opportunity to talk with his girlfriend, Tracy Caldwell. Even where there is credible testimony to the contrary, if the evidence is fairly capable of supporting the inference that the rules of freedom and voluntariness were observed in obtaining a confession, the ruling of the trial court on voluntariness need only be supported by substantial evidence and voluntariness need not be established to a moral certainty. Jackson v. State,
In addition, the appellant claims that he could not comprehend or understand the cursory advisement of hisMiranda rights and the purported waiver of his rights because he had dropped out of tenth grade special education classes at the age of 19 and functions at a level "significantly below normal." However, there was no evidence presented that the appellant was unable to understand his rights. The level of the defendant's mental capability is merely one factor affecting the validity of a waiver of rights and the voluntariness of the confession. Whittle v. State,
However, this court has held that a conviction will not be set aside on the basis of insufficiency, unless, allowing all reasonable presumptions for its correctness, the preponderance of the evidence is so decided against the verdict as to clearly cause the reviewing court to find that the verdict was wrong and unjust. Brown v. State,
The appellant was arrested while driving the victim's vehicle; personal items belonging to the victim were found in the appellant's motel room; and the victim's body had been recovered from a mud hole and clothing and socks with mud on them were found in the appellant's motel room. Furthermore, the appellant's girlfriend stated that they had disposed of the body. His friend Mark McKinney testified that the appellant had planned to burglarize the victim's house and to kill her if she returned during the robbery. Moreover, Anthony Brown testified that the appellant sold the victim's ring, at which time he stated that the ring had come from a dead woman. The victim had been beaten, and bloodstains were found on a pair of her panties in her house; a similar pair of the victim's panties had been found in the appellant's motel room. The appellant by his own admission stated that he and his accomplice had beaten the victim, tied her up, and put her in the trunk of the car. Clearly, the evidence presented at trial was sufficient to find the appellant guilty as charged.
The appellant claims that the State knew of Brown's identity long before trial and that it did not provide his identity during discovery proceedings, but that contention is not supported by the evidence. Moreover, this court has held on numerous occasions that there is no requirement of the pretrial discovery of the identity of a State's witness. Law v. State,
Furthermore, the witness did not possess any exculpatory or impeachment evidence that would have been beneficial to the appellant. Thus, under Brady v. Maryland,
The judgment of the trial court is due to be affirmed.
AFFIRMED.
All the Judges concur.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Zackery Wedgeworth, Alias v. State.
- Cited By
- 11 cases
- Status
- Published