State v. Armstead
State v. Armstead
Opinion
"Ninety-nine bottles of beer on the wall, Ninety-nine bottles of beer. You swab one down and run it through CODIS, Ninety-eight bottles of beer on the wall."
Lines spoken by the character Greg Sanders on "CSI" Season 3, Episode 19 "A Night at the Movies" (CBS-TV. Episode aired 10 April 2003)
At the core of this post-conviction case is the rectitude of the failure of trial counsel for Appellee, Kevin Armstead, to object to a so-called "anti-CSI effect" 1 voir dire question propounded on 25 March 2009 to the venire by a trial judge of the Circuit Court for Baltimore City. Armstead contends that that failure amounts to ineffective assistance of trial counsel because he would have had a reasonable probability of success on direct appeal had a challenge to the propriety of the voir dire question been preserved. The circuit court granted Armstead a new trial in 2016 in this post-conviction proceeding, which Armstead initiated in 2014.
Appellant, the State of Maryland, complains that the award of a new trial is inappropriate because, on 25 March 2009, Maryland common law (such as it was) approved of such a CSI question. Mistakenly, according to the State, the 2016 post-conviction court relied on contrary, subsequently-decided case law to justify ordering a retrial. The State maintains that Armstead's trial counsel was not obligated in 2009 to "see into the future" and anticipate the outcomes in the later-decided cases. Moreover, Armstead "did not call his trial defense counsel, or any other attorney, as a witness [in the post-conviction phase] to testify concerning the propriety of trial counsel's deliberate [trial strategy] decision not to object to the voir dire question." Thus, "there is no basis in which the post-conviction court could conclude that Armstead's [t]rial counsel was ineffective as alleged." Armstead failed, therefore, to satisfy his burden under the factors in Strickland v. Washington 2 to prove ineffective assistance of counsel. The State argued also that Armstead failed to demonstrate satisfactorily how he was prejudiced by the lack of an objection, the second factor in the Strickland analysis.
In this appeal, Appellant poses one question:
I. Did the post-conviction court err when it determined, based on case law that issued after Armstead's trial, that Armstead's trial counsel was ineffective for failing to object to the circuit court's issuance of a CSI voir dire question?
We hold that the post-conviction court erred when it granted Armstead's petition and ordered a new trial. Armstead's trial counsel was not ineffective for failing to object to the CSI voir dire question. Even if we assumed his trial counsel's omission constituted ineffective representation, the claimed error was harmless, beyond a reasonable doubt, on the circumstances of this record.
Statement of Facts
We, like the post-conviction court, adopt in relevant part the summary of the evidence presented at Armstead's 2009 trial, as stated in our opinion regarding Armstead's direct appeal,
Armstead v. State
,
On [20 March 2007], Ricardo Paige was found lying dead on the living room floor of his residence at 502 East 43rd Street in Baltimore City, Maryland, having suffered multiple gun shot wounds. He was discovered by his daughter, Deneen Woods, and his grandson, Ricardo McDonald.
Woods testified at trial that she had seen [Armstead], also known as "Muggs," on the block on prior occasions with [Jamal] Fulton, who she knew as "Nube," and with Trendon and Tremaine Washington, twin brothers, both of whom she knew as "Twin." Fulton lived in the house next door, 500 East 43rd Street. Drugs were a "big problem" with Fulton. On the Friday before Woods's father was murdered, Fulton came to 502 East 43rd Street and argued with Paige. Fulton told Woods that her father was "making his spot hot." Woods responded by telling Fulton that she did not want any drugs to be around her father, and Fulton replied that "he would not say nothing else to [her] dad."
At some point after Paige's death, Woods spoke to a person in the neighborhood she knew as "Lurch." Lurch provided Woods with some information, and Woods conveyed that information to Detective James Lloyd.
Leroy Simon testified that he is known as "Lurch" and that he knew Paige through Woods. In late March 2007, intending to exchange drugs for sex, he was with a woman behind the victim's residence. At that time, he saw [Armstead], Fulton, known to him as "Nuke," and "Twin" and another unidentified individual near Paige's house.
He observed [Armstead] go into Paige's house first, and then he heard some "tussling." A few minutes later, he saw "Twin" enter the house. Fulton went inside the residence as well. The unidentified person remained outside the residence where he was giving orders.
After [Armstead], Fulton, and "Twin" were inside, Simon heard gunshots. He then heard sounds as if someone was sweeping up some glass and then saw the trio emerge from the residence.
Simon knew both Tremaine and Trendon Washington, and was aware that one of them was incarcerated at the time. He identified a photograph of Trendon Washington as the person he was referring to as "Twin" in his testimony.
After Simon testified that he spoke to Detective Lloyd on three occasions, the State sought to refresh his recollection with a statement, but Simon testified that he could not read or write. Because there was some confusion about whether Simon ever told police that he saw Fulton enter the residence, the jury was excused, and the tape of Simon's third interview was played to refresh Simon's recollection.
After the jury returned, Simon testified that Fulton was standing outside of the house and actually never went inside. Simon admitted he had made a mistake earlier during his testimony when he said Fulton had gone inside.
Simon continued his testimony as follows: While [Armstead], "Twin" (Trendon Washington), and an unidentified third person were inside the residence, Simon heard tussling. After he heard these sounds, Fulton, "who remained outside, hollered, 'handle your business.' " Simon then heard two to three gunshots. After the shooting, Simon saw all four individuals run from the residence.
Simon identified a photo of [Armstead] as a person who was present at the crime scene and had entered the residence. He also identified both Tremaine and Trendon Washington, distinguishing between them and identifying Trendon Washington as the twin present at the scene. Simon was originally unable to identify the person who remained outside the residence, but, after refreshing his recollection, recalled that during the third interview with police, he identified a photograph of Fulton, indicating that he was the one who stayed outside and "gave orders."
Asked why he did not go to the police earlier, Simon stated: "It ain't good to snitch, it ain't good to snitch. Snitchers get stitches, that's how I always looked at it." However, when he learned that the victim was Wood[s]'s father, Simon decided to come forward. He learned two days after he saw the individuals at Paige's residence that Paige had died.
On cross-examination, Simon testified that he had not testified in the trial involving Trendon Washington and that he was incarcerated when he first spoke to Detective Lloyd about this case.
Detective Chris Glanville testified that he encountered [Armstead], and both Trendon and Tremaine Washington, on [28 April 2007]. At that time, he recovered a loaded .45 caliber Springfield nineteen eleven model firearm from Trendon Washington. All of the bullets recovered in this case were .45 auto caliber. The ballistics evidence was compared to the recovered firearm, and two of the cartridge casings recovered from the crime scene were fired from that pistol. Other bullet specimens could neither be identified nor eliminated as being fired from the recovered gun. However, three of the five bullets recovered in this case were fired by the same firearm, while the two remaining bullets lacked proper markings for comparison.
Detective Lloyd testified that Trendon Washington, Fulton, and [Armstead] were arrested in connection with this case. [Armstead] was arrested in Decatur, Georgia, where he gave the name "James L. Jefferson." When [Armstead] was interviewed on [10 April 2008], the parties stipulated that [Armstead] stated: "I already looked up the case. Why am I not just charged with conspiracy, what about the other three?" The charging documents at that time did not mention conspiracy. Also, Detective Lloyd testified that he had never told [Armstead] about a conspiracy charge or that there were three other people involved in the crime.
Detective Lloyd testified that he was aware that DNA evidence had been collected at the crime scene, but the parties stipulated that all of that evidence came back as being consistent with the victim's DNA. Latent fingerprints recovered from the crime scene were also consistent with being from the victim. Additionally, a search warrant was obtained for [Armstead]'s home and nothing was recovered from that search relating to this investigation.
The State's last witness was the medical examiner, Dr. Theodore King. According to Dr. King, Paige died of multiple gunshot wounds, and the manner of death was homicide. He could not pinpoint the exact time of death.
After the State rested, defense counsel called Fulton. Fulton testified that he knew [Armstead] and that he knew him by the name of "Muggs." Fulton used to live at 500 East 43rd Street in Baltimore City, "[u]p to prior to [his] arrest" in 2007. Paige, who Fulton knew as "Poppy," lived next door at 502 East 43rd Street. Fulton also knew Woods, Woods's son, Ricky, and Simon, also known as "Lurch." Fulton stated that he was originally charged with Paige's murder.
Fulton testified that, on [18 March 2007], Trendon Washington called and asked Fulton to drive him to the "vial store." Trendon Washington sold drugs, including crack and marijuana, and usually stored his drugs in a vacant house located nearby at 508 East 43rd Street. Fulton, along with [Armstead], accompanied Washington to the store to buy vials so he could package his drugs. When they returned, Fulton parked in front of 508 East 43rd Street while Washington went inside. Moments later, Washington emerged and angrily informed them that his drugs were missing and that the back door to that location had been knocked down. Recalling that Paige was outside when the three of them left to go to the "vial store," Washington and [Armstead] then went to Paige's home, while Fulton remained with his car.
Trendon Washington engaged Paige in a conversation, but Fulton could not hear what they were saying. After that conversation, Washington and [Armstead] returned to Fulton's car, and Washington said, "I'm going to go do that." Fulton understood this to mean that Washington was going to beat and then kill Paige.
Fulton testified that he saw Trendon Washington the next day, but he did not mention Paige or the drugs. Fulton then saw Trendon Washington again, on [20 March 2007], at around noon or 1:00 p.m., and Fulton asked him where Paige was because he had not seen him in two days. Washington replied, "I done what I said I was going to do." Fulton understood this to mean that Washington had killed Paige. Around 5:00 or 6:00 p.m. that same day, Fulton learned that Paige was dead.
Fulton further testified that he had seen Trendon Washington carry a .45 caliber semi-automatic handgun on prior occasions, including in January and February of 2007. Fulton described the gun, and then identified State's Exhibit 6A as Trendon Washington's gun.
On cross-examination by the State, Fulton confirmed that he was not present at the time of the murder[ ]and, further, that Trendon Washington did not provide him with any details of what he had done. Nor did Washington tell Fulton if he was with anyone at the time of the murder.
(Emphasis added).
Armstead was charged with "conspiracy to commit murder, murder, use of a handgun in the commission of a felony and crime of violence, and wearing, carrying and transporting a
handgun."
Armstead
,
Now I'm going to assume that many of you watch way too much television including those so-called realistic crime shows like Law and Order and CSI New York and CSI Miami and CSI Glenn Burnie and the rest of them. I trust you understand that these crime shows are fantasy and fiction and for dramatic effect to entertain you they claim to rely upon 'scientific evidence' to convict people.
This is certainly acceptable as entertainment but you must not allow your entertainment to interfere with your solemn duties as a juror. Therefore, if you are currently of the view that you cannot convict the defendant without 'scientific evidence' regardless of all of the other evidence in the case and regardless of the instruction that I give you as the law, please stand. All right, I see no responses .
(Emphasis added).
Armstead's trial counsel did not object to this question. The empaneled jury convicted Armstead of conspiracy to commit first-degree murder and second-degree murder. The court sentenced him to life imprisonment, plus a consecutive thirty years.
Armstead filed numerous post-trial motions, all of which the trial court denied. Armstead asserted five questions for review in his direct appeal. 4 We affirmed Armstead's conviction in 2010. The Court of Appeals denied his petition for writ of certiorari in 2011.
On 1 July 2014, Armstead filed a petition for post-conviction relief, calling-out his trial counsel as ineffective for failing to object to the circuit court's posing of the CSI voir dire question. As he perceived the query, it deprived him of his Sixth Amendment right 5 and his right under Article 21 of the Maryland Declaration of Rights. 6
The circuit court held a hearing on Armstead's post-conviction petition on 6 January 2016. 7 The post-conviction court granted Armstead's petition and awarded a new trial. The court held, in relevant part:
Although trial counsel is not required to object to every possible trial judge error, trial counsel is ineffective for failing to object to rulings where there is a reasonable probability of success during an appeal ... the question propounded in [Armstead's] case, was inherently ... prejudicial ... Thus, the trial counsel rendered ineffective assistance of counsel by failing to preserve the issue for appeal because there is a reasonable probability that [Armstead] would have succeeded on appeal had trial counsel objected on the grounds that the question prejudiced the voir dire panel ... [Armstead's] first allegation of error [ ] is sufficient to grant a new trial.
Analysis
I. Ineffective Assistance of Counsel.
a. Appellant's Arguments.
Appellant avers that the post-conviction court granted erroneously Armstead a new trial. In support of its ambition, the State contends that, under Strickland , Armstead failed to overcome the presumption that his trial counsel's inaction in not objecting to the CSI voir dire question was strategic. Armstead called neither his trial counsel nor any other attorney during his post-conviction hearing as a witness to testify whether his trial counsel's election not to object to the CSI voir dire question deviated grievously from sound professional judgment.
Furthermore, there was, at the time of the 25 March 2009 voir dire , no reported Maryland jurisprudence suggesting the impropriety of such a CSI voir dire question. Rather, the common law (such as it was at the time) favored such a voir dire question. Trial counsel was not expected to possess foresight to anticipate the subsequent change in the law limiting substantially the situations in which a CSI voir dire question or jury instruction may be appropriate. Appellant finds error also in the post-conviction court's conclusion that, had trial counsel objected to the CSI voir dire question, "Armstead stood 'a reasonable probability' of obtaining appellate reversal of his convictions." The State maintains "that there was no evidence before the post-conviction court that Armstead's direct appeal counsel ... would have ... [raised] a challenge to the CSI voir dire question had that claim been preserved for appellate review."
b. Appellee's Arguments.
Armstead responds that his trial counsel's failure to object to the court's deployment of the CSI voir dire question was "not sound trial strategy because she knew that there was no scientific evidence linking [him] to the crime, and that the very notion served as the substantial basis of the defense theory of innocence." Trial counsel's failure to object "could not have been the result of reasonable professional judgment because it allowed the court to suggest to the jury that the lack of any scientific evidence [connecting him to the crime] could be ignored." The inherent prejudicial nature of the court's CSI voir dire question, notably the court's use of the word "convict," rendered it untenable. This suggested to the potential jurors that convicting Armstead was a foregone conclusion.
Further, Armstead contends that he should benefit in this case from the state of the law regarding the proper use of CSI instructions and
voir dire
questions that came into existence following his trial, i.e., the later-decided case law should apply retrospectively. Specially, Armstead maintains that
Allen v. State
,
c. The Strickland Standard.
The federal Sixth Amendment and Article 21 of the Maryland Declaration of Rights guarantee all criminal defendants the right to the assistance of counsel.
Duvall v. State
,
The defendant who claims that he or she received ineffective assistance of counsel, as a general rule under the test announced in Strickland and followed ever since, must make two showings: [ (1) ], the defendant must show that counsel's performance was deficient [the performance factor] [; and (2) ], the defendant must show that the deficient performance prejudiced the defense [the prejudice factor].
[t]he standard of review of the [trial] court's determinations regarding issues of effective assistance of counsel is a mixed question of law and fact. We will not disturb the factual findings of the post-conviction court unless they are clearly erroneous. But, a reviewing court must make an independent analysis to determine the ultimate mixed question of law and fact, namely, was there a violation of a constitutional right as claimed. In other words, the appellate court must exercise its own independent judgment as to the reasonableness of counsel's conduct and the prejudice, if any .... [The appellate court] will evaluate anew the findings of the [trial] court as to the reasonableness of counsel's conduct and the prejudice suffered. As a question of whether a constitutional right has been violated, we make our own independent analysis by reviewing the law and applying it to the facts of the case.
State v. Sanmartin Prado
,
Strickland also instructs that courts need not consider the performance prong and the prejudice prong in order, nor do they need to address both prongs in every case. As [ Strickland ] explained, [i]f it is easier to dispose of an ineffectiveness claim on the ground of lack of sufficient prejudice, which we expect will often be so, that course should be followed. 8
Regarding Strickland's performance factor,
[t]he defendant must show that counsel's performance was deficient. This requires showing that counsel made errors so serious that counsel was not functioning as the counsel guaranteed the defendant by the Sixth Amendment ... [T]he defendant must [also] demonstrate that counsel's alleged acts or omissions, based on the facts of the particular case, viewed as of the time of counsel's conduct, fell outside the wide range of professionally competent assistance.
Sanmartin Prado
,
Prevailing professional norms define what constitutes reasonably effective assistance, and all of the circumstances surrounding counsel's performance must be considered. Because it is tempting for both a defendant and a court to second-guess a counsel's conduct after conviction, courts must be highly deferential when they scrutinize counsel's performance. Reviewing courts must thus assume, until proven otherwise, that counsel's conduct fell within a broad range of reasonable professional judgment, and that counsel's conduct derived not from error but from trial strategy.
Mosley v. State
,
First, we consider whether trial counsel violated Armstead's right to effective assistance of counsel when she failed penultimately to object to the circuit court's CSI voir dire question, failing ultimately to preserve the issue for appellate review on direct appeal (and perhaps as well in this collateral proceeding).
i. The CSI Voir Dire Question.
The Sixth Amendment and Article 21 of the Maryland Declaration of Rights grant to criminal defendants not only the right to effective assistance of counsel, but also "the right to a fair trial, which includes a requirement that trial judges refrain from making statements that may influence improperly the jury."
Stabb
,
should be exceedingly careful in any remarks made by [them] during the progress of a trial [including voir dire ], either in passing upon evidence or ruling upon prayers, and should carefully refrain, either directly or indirectly, from giving expression to an opinion upon the existence or not of any fact, which should be left to the finding of the jury ....
Gore
,
Voir dire is critical to ensuring protection of a criminal defendant's "Sixth Amendment [and Article 21 right] to an impartial jury."
White v. State
,
Md. Rule 4-312(d), governing the conduct of voir dire , states in relevant part:
(d) Examination and challenges for cause. (1) Examination. The trial judge may permit the parties to conduct an examination of qualified jurors or may conduct the examination after considering questions proposed by the parties. If the judge conducts the examination, the judge may permit the parties to supplement the examination by further inquiry or may submit to the jurors additional questions proposed by the parties. The jurors' responses to any examination shall be under oath. On request of any party, the judge shall direct the clerk to call the role of the array and to request each qualified juror to stand and be identified when called.
Voir dire's
primary purpose is to ensure a fair and impartial jury.
Charles & Drake
,
a ruling reviewed under an abuse of discretion standard will not be reversed simply because the appellate court would not have made the same ruling. The decision under consideration has to be well removed from any center mark imagined by the reviewing court and beyond the fringe of what that court deems minimally acceptable.
King v. State
,
A CSI effect jury message received its initial reported appellate analysis in Maryland in
Evans v. State
,
As relevant to this appeal,
Stabb
and
Atkins
(the present day standard-setters) make clear, based on the "inconclusive state of the scholarly legal and/or scientific research
11
taken as a whole," that Maryland disapproves of preemptive anti-CSI messages to the venire or the empaneled jury.
Stabb
,
Stabb
, "with a [clairvoyant] nod to the future," noted that there might be situations where CSI effect messages may be appropriate.
Stabb
,
The question before us requires consideration of the status of the law at the time of Armstead's trial, and that which evolved to the contrary afterwards. After doing so, we find no dilemma holding in this case that trial counsel's performance was not deficient for failing to object to the CSI voir dire question. There was no legal signpost alerting trial counsel to the possibly inappropriate nature of this CSI effect voir dire question .
ii. The Direction The Legal Winds Were Blowing in 2009 Regarding a CSI Effect Voir Dire Question.
Armstead concedes that at the time of his jury trial, "the current body of case law regarding this 'CSI instruction' had not yet arrived." In fact, there was little case law existing at the time of Armstead's trial regarding CSI effect voir dire questions. Trial counsel may be imputed reasonably to know only of the Evans opinion from this Court, filed two years earlier, discussing a defense counsel's objection to a CSI effect jury instruction , which instruction was suggested to be proper.
Evans was convicted of possession-related heroin charges.
Evans
,
During this trial, you have heard testimony of witnesses and may hear argument of counsel that the State did not utilize a specific investigative technique or scientific tests. You may consider these facts in deciding whether the State has met its burden of proof. You should consider all of the evidence or lack of evidence in deciding whether a defendant is guilty. However, I instruct you that there is no legal requirement that the State utilize any specific investigative technique or scientific test to prove its case. Your responsibility as jurors is to determine whether the State has proven, based on the evidence, the defendants' guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.
Evans
,
As the parties note correctly in their briefs, there was
no law
on CSI effect
voir dire
questions existing at the time of Armstead's trial. The only arguable basis that trial counsel might have had imputable notice of the possible impropriety of such a
voir dire
question would have been
Drake & Charles
,
iii. What Changed in the Post-2009 Law?
The legal analysis of CSI effect voir dire questions and instructions took a sharp turn from Evans beginning with the Court of Appeals's decision in Charles & Drake v. State (a direct appeal case), which reversed our 2009 decision in Drake & Charles v. State . In Charles & Drake v. State , over the defendant's objection , the trial judge propounded the following CSI effect question to the prospective jurors during voir dire :
I'm going to assume that many of you, from having done a few of these, watch way too much TV, including the so-called realistic crime shows like CSI and Law and Order. I trust that you understand that these crime shows are fiction and fantasy and are done for dramatic effect and for this dramatic effect they purport to rely upon, 'scientific evidence,' to convict guilty persons. While this is certainly acceptable as entertainment you must not allow this entertainment experience to interfere with your duties as a juror. Therefore, if you are currently of the opinion or belief that you cannot convict a defendant without 'scientific evidence,' regardless of the other evidence in the case and regardless of the instructions that I will give you as to the law, please rise.
Charles & Drake
,
Four months later, in Kelly v. State (also a direct appeal), we considered a situation where a trial judge, without objection from the defense trial counsel , asked the prospective venire a question nearly identical to the one administered in Charles & Drake :
Now, I'm going to assume, having done this a few times, that many of you watch way too much television, including those so-called realistic crime shows like CSI: New York and CSI: Miami and CSI: Glen Burnie and Law and Order and the rest of it. And I trust that you understand that these crime shows are fiction and fantasy and for your entertainment. And for dramatic effect, they purport to rely upon 'scientific evidence' to convict guilty persons.
While this is certainly acceptable as entertainment, you must not allow your entertainment to interfere with your duties as a juror. Therefore, if you are currently of the opinion that you cannot convict a defendant without 'scientific evidence,' regardless of all of the other evidence in the case and regardless of the instructions that I give you as to the law of the case, please stand.
In McFadden & Miles (yet another direct appeal), a trial judge asked, over defense counsel's objection , the venire during voir dire :
I'm going to assume, based on having done this before, that many of you watch way too much television, including the so-called realistic crime shows, like CSI, Miami, and CSI, New York, and CSI, Glen Burnie, Law and Order, and Illegal and Unwarranted and the rest of them.
Now, I trust you understand that these crime shows are fiction and fantasy. And for dramatic effect and for you to stay tuned in, they purport to rely upon 'scientific evidence.' This is certainly entertainment, but you must not allow that entertainment to interfere with the high duty you will have in this case as a juror.
Therefore, if you are currently of the opinion or belief that you cannot convict a Defendant without 'scientific evidence,' regardless of the other evidence in the case and regardless of the instruction I give you as to law, please rise. I see no responses. Okay.
The year 2012 saw a trinity of reported cases issue from our State appellate courts regarding CSI effect
voir dire
questions. In
Stringfellow
, another direct appeal, the trial court put to the venire the following query, "[d]oes any member of the panel believe that the State is required to utilize specific investigative or scientific techniques such as fingerprint examination for the defendant to be found guilty beyond a reasonable doubt?"
Stringfellow
,
In Morris v. State , involving another direct appeal, the trial court, during voir dire , issued, over defense objection, the following question to the venire:
Ladies and gentlemen, televisions shows such as C.S.I., Crossing Jordan and some of the like are fiction. They are not true. Many of the scientific methods used in those kinds of television shows are exaggerated or do not even exist. If you are selected as a juror in this case[,] you will be required to base your decisions solely on the evidence presented in court. Would any potential juror be unable to ignore the so called crime dramas they have been seeing on television, the movies and [i]nternet or such and putting that aside in making your decision based solely on the evidence that you hear in court and not through some expectation of something that you've seen through the media or television? Is there anyone who would be so persuaded by such a show that they would not be able to judge this case fairly and impartially? Please rise if that applies to you. Let the record reflect that there is no such response.
In Burris v. State , 14 our most recent reported opinion assessing CSI voir dire questions (again in a direct appeal context), the trial court asked, with no objection from defense counsel :
Within this world of, of science or circumstantial evidence is the world of scientific evidence and within that world there is now what is referred to as crime scene investigation type of evidence. The type of evidence that's been dramatized in the television programs, the Hannibal Lecter books and movies that deal with trace evidence. Trace evidence being hair and fingerprints and DNA and one book fingerprints on an eyeball. These are dramatizations of forms of circumstantial evidence. The jurors will be called upon to consider all of the evidence that is presented no matter who it is presented by . No matter what the person, the party is urging you to consider. Is there any member of the jury panel who would require trace evidence in order to accept a proposition presented by one of the parties? In other words, you say well, she didn't present this or he didn't present that. I can't accept it. Is there any member of the jury panel who set that form of artificial standard?
iv. So, What Now?
It has long been established that an attorney is not required ordinarily to be prescient as to changes in the law and act accordingly.
See
Maryland v. Kulbicki
, --- U.S. ----,
We "must assume, until proven otherwise, that counsel's conduct fell within a broad range of reasonable professional judg[ ]ment, and that counsel's conduct derived not from error but from trial strategy."
Sanmartin Prado
,
To overcome these failings, Armstead demands the benefit of
Charles & Drake
(2010) and
McFadden & Miles
(2011) ; that is, their holdings and reasoning should apply retrospectively to the ineffective counsel analysis in his post-conviction case, based on
Allen
,
Moreover, the potential for lingering impact of an arguably inappropriate voir dire question at the beginning of trial, although such a question may keep a responding venire person favorable to the defendant from serving, is of concern because it may plant invasive species' seeds in the minds of non-responding venire persons who end-up being empaneled. As to the latter, whether the argued prejudice of voir dire questioning carries through in undiluted strength to the jury deliberation process is debatable. Evaluation of prejudice turns ordinarily on a contextual consideration of individual trial records. On the other hand, jury instructions given on the cusp of deliberations are arguably more likely to be retained by and impress the jury in deliberation because of the close proximity in time.
Armstead's present case is a 2014-16 post-conviction challenge, not a direct appeal from his 2009 conviction. Moreover, the critical issue, as noted above, is unpreserved for our review. Armstead's current case fails each predicate of Allen's analysis to support retrospective application of the relevant post-2009 case law. Moreover, Armstead's reasoning overlooks Kelly , which, if applied retrospectively, would work a likely detriment to Armstead's objective. The post-conviction court, therefore, applied erroneously Charles & Drake v. State to the present case, thus misapplying ultimately the Strickland standard. Trial counsel's performance in 2009 was not ineffective for failing to object to the trial judge's CSI effect voir dire question.
Even were we to assume, for the moment, that Armstead's invocation of Maryland's post-2009 reported, direct appeal jurisprudence regarding a trial court's use of CSI effect voir dire questions (or instructions) were applicable here, we find no prejudice (the other component of Strickland ) on this record. Therefore, the error (if any), was harmless.
d. Harmless Error.
As to
Strickland's
prejudice factor, a post-conviction petitioner must show that there is a reasonable probability that, but for counsel's unprofessional errors, the result of the proceeding would have been different.
Sanmartin Prado
,
When a trial court injects erroneously a CSI effect
voir dire
question, in order for a court to find harmless error, the court must be satisfied beyond a reasonable doubt that the abuse of discretion was harmless.
Hall
,
The record must demonstrate that the reference to a lack of scientific evidence was not material to the contested issue.
Compare
Hall
,
Factors relevant in determining whether an erroneous CSI effect
voir dire
question was given harmlessly include, but are not limited to: the timing and content of the CSI
voir dire
question,
see
Morris
, 204 Md. at 490, 796-97, 42 A.3d at 85, 88-9, whether the erroneously given question was "reiterated during jury instruction or other comments from the bench while the jury was present;" the presence of alleviating jury instructions or "follow-on instruction/
voir dire
question"; whether the State or defense stressed the importance of the CSI effect
voir dire
question in trial, and whether the judge allowed the parties an unrestrained chance to argue the adequacy or inadequacy of scientific evidence necessary to his or her defense.
See
Stringfellow
,
In Stringfellow , the Court found that the circuit court's CSI voir dire question was given harmlessly. 17 In reaching that decision, the Court noted:
the error was not reiterated during jury instructions or other comments from the bench while the jury was present. While the error occurred during an important part of the trial process, the judge's management of closing argument ameliorated significantly any prejudice to Stringfellow. The judge permitted Stringfellow's attorney to make a closing argument, over the State's objection, about how the police officers' failure to request testing of the confiscated handgun for latent fingerprints created reasonable doubt ... The failure to request a fingerprint analysis became, in defense counsel's words, "a big issue" ... Thus, the judge's management of closing argument defused any prejudicial impact of the erroneously propounded voir dire question.
Stringfellow
,
toward the end of trial, the judge admonished the jury during his final instructions, 'I may have commented on evidence or asked a question of a witness. You should not draw any inferences or conclusions from my comments or questions either as to the merits of the case or as to my views regarding the witness ... the State had the constant burden to prove that Stringfellow was guilty beyond a reasonable doubt and that if you are not satisfied of the defendant's guilt to that extent, then reasonable doubt exists and the defendant must be found not guilty.'
Stringfellow
,
In Armstead's case, the
voir dire
question is nearly identical to the question posed in
Charles & Drake
,
Kelly
, and
McFadden & Miles
. The problematic language in the
voir dire
questions was "if you are currently of the view that you cannot
convict
the defendant without 'scientific evidence' regardless of all the other evidence in the case and regardless of the instruction I give you as to the law, please stand." (emphasis added).
Charles & Drake
,
Kelly
, and
McFadden & Miles
noted the potential for prejudice inherent in the use of the word "convict" in the heart of the query. The words preceding and following "convict" suggest to the jury that a conviction is their only option.
Hall
,
Robinson
,
Stabb
, and
Atkins
note the inconclusive empirical proof of the existence of a CSI effect
and whether it affects adversely the work of a jury,
19
but indicate that an anti-CSI effect message may be appropriate if tailored "to situations where it responds to correction of a pre-existing overreach by the defense, i.e., a curative instruction."
Robinson
,
Had Armstead noted an objection to the trial judge's voir dire question and/or assuming the post-2009 relevant case law is applicable properly to find error here, we do not believe that the trial judge's administration of the question merits a new trial. We agree with Appellant that, employing Stringfellow's and Kelly's rationales, the trial court's CSI effect voir dire query was harmless on the record of Armstead's trial.
Stringfellow
and
Kelly
persuade us that the circumstances surrounding the trial court's assumedly erroneous
voir dire
question here did not cause Armstead any resultant prejudice. In other words, we conclude that the question did not cause impermissibly the guilty verdict. In reaching this conclusion, we look, contextually, at the "the cumulative effect of all errors
on the ability of a jury to render a fair and impartial verdict in the context of the case."
Donaldson v. State
,
Neither the trial court nor the parties' counsels repeated the anti-CSI effect message (as such) during the trial. Moreover, the trial judge, after a seven-day jury trial and at the close of all the evidence, instructed correctly the jury as follows:
The instructions I give you are binding upon you ... You will have, and I will pass them out ... a verdict sheet.... A verdict is either guilty or not guilty ... Each verdict that you render must be the considered judgment of each of you ... Now, this defendant and every defendant is presumed to be innocent of all of the charges . This presumption remains with him throughout every stage of the trial and is not overcome unless you are convinced beyond a reasonable doubt that he is guilty. The State has the burden of proving the guilt of the defendant beyond a reasonable doubt. This burden remains with the State throughout trial ... However, if you are not satisfied of the defendant's guilt to that extent, then reasonable doubt exists and the defendant must be found not guilty
* * *
During the trial, if I commented on the evidence, I don't know that I did, or asked a question of a witness, do not draw any inferences or conclusions from any comment I may have made or question, either as to my view as to the merits of the case or to my views regarding the witness.
* * *
The court repeated the State's burden of proof later in its jury instructions:
Now, the burden is on the State to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the offense was committed and that the defendant was the person who committed it.
These instructions, like those in
Stringfellow
, "assisted in dislodging any residual bits of potential prejudice concerning the weight of presented (or unpresented) evidence and reminded the jury of the State's fixed burden of proof."
Stringfellow
,
Further, the trial court afforded counsel broad exuberance in arguing during closing the absence or insufficiency of scientific evidence linking Armstead to Ricardo Paige's murder. Defense counsel argued:
What evidence, beyond the very less than credible Leroy Simon, does the State have? Zip. Detective Lloyd, Officer Carl Page, Technician Teresa Havrilla, walked through that crime scene and none of them saw anything that pointed to Kevin Armstead as the perpetrator. Dr. Theodore King did an autopsy. He said on the average it's about three hours to do one of those. There was nothing in the autopsy that pointed to Kevin Armstead as the one who murdered Ricardo Paige. Technician Havrilla lifted some suitable prints, and they were examined by Loraine Lansey of the latent print unit, and you can see that in defendant's exhibit 9, it's Teresa Gavrilla's run sheet .... Nothing they found pointed to Kevin Armstead.
The police searched [Armstead's] home and found nothing connecting [Armstead] to the murder. The gun, the gun that was used to kill Ricardo Paige was found on Trendon Washington just weeks after the murder of Ricardo Paige .... And then as I told you the DNA. The DNA that was found belonged to Ricardo Paige, not Kevin Armstead. There is nothing that connects Kevin Armstead to the murder of Ricardo Paige.
In response, the prosecution countered, in his rebuttal closing argument: 21
[Armstead's trial counsel] brings up an interesting point about the DNA. She talks about the DNA that's there. It's all Mr. Paige's. When [the crime scene technicians] checked [Paige's] fingernails it was his own DNA. But if you're in a tussle and I'm Mr. Paige and I'm being struck and I reach out, I grab clothing, I'm not necessarily going to grab skin cells or anything like that ....
[t]here are two explanations [for] the injuries on [Paige's] lip and to his face. [There are two reasons for this]. One, terminal collapse, two, being punched in the face and being punched in the mouth. What happens when you punch somebody in the mouth and you hit their teeth or you punch them in the face and you draw blood? You get their DNA on you. But why don't we have ... [Paige's] DNA from [Armstead's] hands? ... He ran, he ran away. He ran to Georgia. DNA and all, Mr. Paige's DNA on his, he's gone. That's the DNA that we should be worried about, not the DNA that was under Mr. Paige's skin. The DNA that was on his fist when he pounded on [Paige], when [Fulton, Twin, Armstead, and an unidentified fourth person] committed this vicious murder.
It is apparent counsel were allowed amplitude in arguing their positions as to the adequacy or inadequacy of the scientific evidence admitted (or not). Such latitude ameliorated further any prejudice the assumedly erroneous CSI voir dire question may have planted in the minds of the venire that was empaneled. The trial court allowed Armstead to assert his innocence due to the absence of DNA evidence linking Armstead to Paige's murder.
Armstead continues, however, that he was "highly prejudiced by the
voir dire
question because the question invaded the fact-finding province of the jury to weigh the evidence as
presented." We disagree. The absence of scientific evidence linking Armstead to the murder was not critical to the State's establishment, beyond a reasonable doubt, of Armstead's involvement in the death of Ricardo Paige. In reaching this view, we find the reasoning in
Evans
(noted earlier) and
Atkins
persuasive.
22
In
Atkins
, the Court reached a different result than
Evans
. Atkins was convicted of second-degree assault because he threatened the victim (in alleged self-defense) using a pocketknife.
Atkins
,
In holding improper the anti-CSI effect instruction,
24
the Court of Appeals reasoned that "the knife used was of
critical
importance
in the case, considering its size and character, and the defense sought to discredit the alleged connection between the knife found at Atkins's home and the crime."
Atkins
,
Here, Armstead asserted that there was no scientific evidence, e.g., DNA, linking him to Paige's death. The absence of DNA evidence was unnecessary, however, for the State to convince a reasonable jury, beyond a reasonable doubt, to convict, considering the evidence adduced actually.
Armstead was arrested in Georgia (where he had been living under the alias "James L. Jefferson" for the two weeks after the police discovered Paige's body). It was unlikely at that point in time that DNA evidence of Paige would be located on Armstead's person. Moreover, Leroy Simon (a testifying eyewitness) observed Armstead, Fulton, one of the twin Washington brothers (Twin), and a fourth unidentified individual outside of Paige's home on the night of Paige's death. Simon saw Armstead and Twin subsequently break-and-enter Paige's home. Fulton and the fourth unidentified individual stayed outside to give the other two directions. Simon heard "tussling" from inside the house, several gunshots, and then watched Armstead and Twin emerge from Paige's home.
As in
Evans
where the supposed non-existent evidence, i.e., pictures or videos of the heroin transaction, might have bolstered the eyewitness account, but was deemed cumulative, the circumstances of the present case are similar. The recovery of any DNA placing Armstead at the scene
would have bolstered Simon's testimony, but would have been cumulative
and thus not essential in the State's overall case.
See
Branch v. State
,
Perhaps the strongest evidence linking Armstead to the death of Ricardo Paige was Armstead's statement made to Detective Lloyd during Armstead's pre-trial interrogation. Detective Lloyd testified, and the parties stipulated, that Armstead stated, "I already looked up the case. Why am I not just charged with conspiracy, what about the other three?" The charging documents at that time did not mention conspiracy. Detective Lloyd testified further that, before Armstead made this statement, he had not told Armstead about the conspiracy charge or that there were three other people known by the police to be involved in the crime. Armstead's statement was both voluntary and inculpatory. Had there been available DNA evidence corroborating further Armstead's participation in the crime, it would have been merely another layer on the already-baked cake.
In conclusion, even if the trial judge's administration of its CSI effect voir dire question was an abuse of his discretion, we are satisfied beyond a reasonable doubt that the supposed prejudice of the question was harmless. Had Armstead's counsel preserved the CSI voir dire question for appeal, Armstead would not have had a reasonable probability of success under Strickland's prejudice factor.
Armstead had a high hurdle to surpass under Strickland , which he failed to clear. We reverse the post-conviction court's judgment granting Armstead a new trial.
JUDGMENT OF THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR BALTIMORE CITY REVERSED; CASE REMANDED WITH INSTRUCTIONS TO DENY APPELLEE'S POST-CONVICTION PETITION; COSTS TO BE PAID BY APPELLEE.
This question will be referred sometimes hereafter either as a "CSI
voir dire
question," "CSI effect
voir dire
question," or as "anti-CSI effect
voir dire
question." "CSI" stands for Crime Scene Investigation.
See
Atkins v. State
,
Strickland v. Washington
,
This question was asked at the request of the State:
THE COURT: Okay. I've got one more that I might. One of my questions was I was going to give my CSI question if you wanted it and you've asked for it in your number [seven].
[APPELLANT]: Yes, sir.
THE COURT: So I'm going to give that.
No question raised in
Armstead v. State
,
The Sixth Amendment provides: "In all criminal prosecutions, the accused shall enjoy the right ... to have the Assistance of Counsel for his defense." U.S. Const. amend. VI. The right is applicable to the states through the Fourteenth Amendment.
Gideon v. Wainwright
,
Article 21 of the Maryland Declaration of Rights declares: "That in all criminal prosecutions, every man hath a right to ... be allowed counsel[.]"
Taylor v. State
,
Although no transcript of the post-conviction hearing has been provided to this Court, the parties stipulate that Armstead "testified at the [post-conviction] hearing in support of his petition, but he did not make any remarks regarding the CSI voir dire question." Trial counsel was unable to attend the hearing, but Armstead elected to proceed without her testimony. Moreover, he failed to present "any other attorney, as a witness to testify with respect to the propriety of trial counsel's deliberate decision not to object to the voir dire question."
Strickland explained that:
Although we have discussed the performance component of an ineffectiveness claim prior to the prejudice component, there is no reason for a court deciding an ineffective assistance claim to approach the inquiry in the same order or even to address both components of the inquiry if the defendant makes an insufficient showing on one. In particular, a court need not determine whether counsel's performance was deficient before examining the prejudice suffered by the defendant as a result of the alleged deficiencies. The object of an ineffectiveness claim is not to grade counsel's performance. If it is easier to dispose of an ineffectiveness claim on the ground of lack of sufficient prejudice, which we expect will often be so, that course should be followed.
Our recital of general statements of law from appellate opinions addressing CSI effect instructions or voir dire questions, which were decided after 25 March 2009, should not be read by implication as agreeing with Armstead's retrospective application argument. The general principles we deploy from those cases were well-established in case law decided before 25 March 2009.
Compare
Hall v. State
,
The current state of scholarly research regarding the so-called "CSI effect" in litigation contexts remains inconclusive regarding the effect's authenticity.
Robinson
,
Evans was arrested with a co-defendant, Antwon Peaks. Evans and Peaks were tried jointly. Peaks objected to the aforementioned instruction, noting that '[he had] not previously seen this instruction given in the Circuit Court for Baltimore City....' The objection, duly noted by the court, was overruled."
Evans
,
See
Armstead
,
The Court of Appeals, although reversing our judgment in
Burris v. State
,
Brief for Appellant, at 1,
Drake & Charles v. State
,
Brief for Appellant, at 1,
Kelly
,
The Court held ultimately that "Stringfellow ... waived his objection to the [CSI effect]
voir dire
question."
Stringfellow
,
Stringfellow
conceded that curative instructions not given contemporaneously with the commission of the error are potentially of diminished curative value.
Stringfellow
,
As noted earlier, the parties point-out correctly that the case law at the time of Armstead's trial mitigated in favor of the appropriateness of such CSI questions.
See
Drake & Charles
,
In addition, at the beginning of
voir dire
, the trial judge advised the prospective jurors that Armstead is "presumed to be innocent" and "remains innocent unless the State convince[s] twelve jurors unanimously beyond a reasonable doubt." As was the situation in
Kelly
, this is relevant in our determination that the assumedly erroneous question resulted in harmless error. 195 Md. App. at 434,
Unlike in Stringfellow , the State here did not object to the defense's argument.
Evans and Atkins addressed the viability of anti-CSI effect jury instructions. We view in this voir dire question case their analyses convincing to the extent the CSI voir dire question was thought to excuse Appellant's need to prove its case beyond a reasonable doubt, despite the absent scientific evidence.
The circuit court instructed the jury as follows:
During this trial, you have heard testimony of witnesses and may hear argument of counsel that the State did not utilize a specific investigative technique or scientific test. You may consider these facts in deciding whether the State has met its burden of proof. You should consider all of the evidence or lack of evidence in deciding whether the defendant is guilty. However, I instruct you that there is no legal requirement that the State utilize any specific investigative technique or scientific test to prove its case.
Atkins
,
The instruction given in
Atkins
was improper because it "effectively relieved the State of its burden. [ ] [T]he instruction did not clearly explain to the jury the relation between the fact that the State was not required to produce specific evidence on the one hand, with the continuing obligation of the State to prove the defendant's guilt beyond a reasonable doubt on the other hand."
Atkins
,
Reference
- Full Case Name
- STATE of Maryland v. Kevin ARMSTEAD
- Cited By
- 3 cases
- Status
- Published