State v. Culp ( 2018 )


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  • IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE
    STATE OF DELAWARE,
    ID No. 9807019438
    v. : In and For Kent County
    CATHERINE W. CULP, §
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    MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER 31 r_~._> g
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    Submitted: March 1, 2018
    Decided: March 22, 2018
    Corrected: March 26, 2018
    Dennis Kelleher, Esquire, DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE, Dover, Delaware, for the
    State.
    William T. Deely, Esquire, OFFICE OF DEFENSE SERVICES, Dover, Delaware,
    for the Defendant.
    Primos, N.
    This case presents an issue which is easily stated but difficult to resolve:
    Whether the Court should grant a plea of leniency.l The State of Delaware Board of
    Parole (hereinafter the “Board”), upon application of the Department of Correction
    (hereinafter the “Department”), has recommended to this Court that it reduce the
    sentence of Catherine W. Culp (hereinafcer “Ms. Culp”), Who Was convicted of the
    murder of Lee Hicks (hereinafcer “Mr. Hicks”). In reaching its decision, the Court
    must contemplate a variety of considerations, both practical-the extent of Ms.
    Culp’s rehabilitative efforts and whether she poses a danger to the community; and
    esoteric_When does leniency serve the ends of justice?
    I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    At approximately one o’ clock in the morning on July 29, 1998, Ms. Culp
    frantically banged on the door of Corinthian and Kimberly Cuffee. When Mr. Cuffee
    opened the door, Ms. Culp told him “I need help . . . he is hurt, I need somebody to
    come call 911.” They called the police, and Ms. Culp described her involvement in
    Mr. Hicks’s death: “He told me to give him his gun, and I gave it to him. And the
    gun Went off and it shot him in the back.” Police arrived at the Cuffee residence and
    Ms. Culp directed the officers to Mr. Hicks’s home, just a few houses down the
    street. Inside, police discovered Mr. Hicks lying dead in his bed. Investigators later
    discovered that Mr. Hicks had died from a single, close range, gunshot Wound.
    In December of 1999, this Court convicted Ms. Culp of murder in the first
    degree and possession of a firearm during the commission of a felony. Ms. Culp
    1 A motion that seeks the reduction of a lawfully imposed sentence is “essentially a plea for
    leniency . . . and is addressed to the sound discretion of the trial court.” Unitea' States v. Robinson,
    
    344 F. Supp. 956
    , 959 (D. Del. 1972), a/j"d, 
    474 F.2d 1337
    (3d Cir. 1972).
    2
    appealed. The Supreme Court of Delaware reversed the convictions on the basis of
    a breach of the Delaware Rules of Evidence, and a new trial was held. In July of
    2001, Ms. Culp was again convicted, this time of murder in the second degree and
    possession of a firearm during the commission of a felony. She was sentenced
    effective July 29, 1998, to 25 years in prison. For almost eighteen years, beginning
    with her initial incarceration in July 1998, Ms. Culp remained continuously
    incarcerated at Delores J. Baylor Women’s Correctional Institution (hereinafter
    “WCI”).
    During these years, Ms. Culp exhibited exemplary behavior and commitment
    to rehabilitation She achieved an Associates of Applied Science Degree in
    Marketing, graduating with honors, and completed courses qualifying herself to
    teach other inmates on a variety of subjects, including G.E.D. classes, Thresholds,
    and drug education classes. She served as an educational tutor at WCI, completed
    numerous computer courses, achieved a State of Delaware computer operator
    certificate, and attained abilities in Spanish, culinary arts, women's health, public
    speaking, dancing, and floral design.
    On April 18, 2016, this Court modified Ms. Culp’s sentence, citing her
    extraordinary rehabilitation Ms. Culp was released for time served and moved to
    Florida to reside with her brother and sister, Douglas Wiggins and Angela Wiggins.
    During this time, she complied with the requirements of her probation in all respects.
    She obtained and held employment, received a driver’s license, saved enough money
    to purchase her own car, and joined a church.
    Ms. Culp’s freedom was, however, short-lived. On December 8, 2016, the
    Supreme Court reversed this Court’s decision to modify her sentence, holding that
    the Superior Court is not empowered to grant pleas for leniency sua sponte based
    upon rehabilitative efforts, if they are filed more than 90 days after sentencing2 The
    Supreme Court indicated that the Superior Court may only grant such a plea upon
    the application of the Department, filed with the Board pursuant to 
    11 Del. C
    . §
    4217_as the Court has received here.3 In so holding, the Supreme Court emphasized
    the “important role” that Section 4217 assigns the Department and the Board in
    assuring “community safety and public welfare in the evaluation of claims of
    successful rehabilitation.”4
    Upon receiving this news, Ms. Culp voluntarily paid her way back to
    Delaware and submitted herself to the custody of the Department on January 5, 2017.
    Since returning to WCI, Ms. Culp has continued to exhibit the indicia of substantial
    rehabilitation.
    On July 18, 2017, the Department applied with the Board, pursuant to Section
    4217, to reduce Ms. Culp’s sentence, stating that “[w]e feel that [she] is not a danger
    to herself or the community at this time, Ms. Culp demonstrated during her reprieve
    that she is willing to be a productive part of her community.” On December 4, 2017,
    the Board submitted its recommendation for sentence reduction to this Court,
    reporting that the Department had shown good cause for sentence reduction in that
    Ms. Culp was fully rehabilitated, and that she would not pose a risk to anyone if
    released. The Board voted four to one to modify Ms. Culp’s sentence by suspending
    the remainder of her Level V incarceration for two years of Level III probation.
    Due to reduction of her sentence for “good time,” Ms. Culp is set to be
    released on March 15, 2019.
    2 State v. Culp, 
    152 A.3d 141
    , 146 (Del. 2016).
    3 
    Id. 4 Id.
    II. ARGUMENTS OF PARTIES
    As previously indicated, the Department asserts that Ms. Culp’s release “into
    the community would not constitute a substantial risk to the community or [her]self.”
    Further, Ms. Culp has “demonstrated rehabilitation through appropriate program
    participation.”
    The Department interviewed Ms. Culp in connection with this application.
    When asked about the cause of Mr. Hicks’s death, Ms. Culp said, “Mr. Hicks asked
    her to get his gun from the dresser . . . . Ms. Culp stated that she never handled a gun
    before. Her judgment was blurred due to the amount of alcohol she consumed and
    she was playing with the gun when it accidentally went off shooting Mr. Hicks.” The
    Department further probed Ms. Culp on the issue of remorse, and she responded that
    “she knows that what happened that night was entirely her fault” and that she “feels
    for the loss Mr. Hicks’s family had to endure because of her actions.” In the
    Department’s view, “Ms. Culp appears to be truly remorseful for what happened to
    Mr. Hicks and his family.”
    At the hearing held with regard to this matter on February 13, 2018, counsel
    for Ms. Culp emphasized her accomplishments and good behavior, which have been
    
    recounted supra
    , and argued that she was genuinely remorseful. Counsel attributed
    Ms. Culp’s continued insistence that the killing was accidental to the fact that the
    traumatic experience and her intoxication may impede her ability to recall precisely
    what happened. Counsel conceded that the 25-year sentence was appropriate when
    imposed, but argued that Ms. Cqu is a completely different person today.
    The State’s concise written response reads, in its entirety, as follows:
    On July 29, 1998 Catherine Culp shot Lee Hicks in the back killing
    him. She was arrested and convicted of Murder in the Second Degree
    and Possession of a Firearm During the Commission of a Felony. She
    was sentenced to a total of 25 years in prison for her senseless killing
    of Mr. Hicks. The State’s position is that this was an appropriate
    sentence at the time and remains appropriate in light of the serious and
    unprovoked nature of this offense. Therefore, the State remains
    opposed to the reduction pursuant to 
    11 Del. C
    . § 4217.
    The State’s attorney also remarked at the hearing that Mr. Hicks’s family opposes
    the motion, and indicated that the seriousness of the crime weighs against this
    Court’s granting of the motion.
    III. STANDARD
    As previously indicated, ll Del. C. § 4217 empowers the Superior Court to
    modify a prisoner’s sentence upon receipt of an application filed by the Department
    with the Board. Such a modification may be granted “for good cause shown which
    certifies that the release of the defendant shall not constitute a substantial risk to the
    community or the defendant’s own self.”5 In this context, good cause is defined as
    including, but not limited to, “rehabilitation of the offender, serious medical illness
    or infirmity of the offender and prison overcrowding.”6 Rehabilitation is in turn
    defined as “the process of restoring an individual to a useful and constructive place
    in society especially through some form of vocational, correctional, or therapeutic
    retraining.”7 While the legislature has instructed this Court to consider the factors of
    5 
    11 Del. C
    . § 4217(b).
    6 §4217(@).
    7 § 4217(h).
    good cause and risk to the community, this Court is nonetheless empowered with
    “discretion [to] grant or deny the application for modification of sentence.”8
    IV. DISCUSSION
    A. Good Cause and Danger to the Community
    This Court’s practical considerations are straightforward The Board and the
    Department both represent to the Court that Ms. Culp has shown good cause for her
    release and that she is not a threat to anyone. Ms. Culp’s rehabilitation, as 
    explained supra
    and in this Court’s previous order correcting her sentence, is evident. She has
    demonstrated extraordinary self-improvement efforts through her participation in
    classes, courses, certifications, community involvement, and service to others.
    Additionally, her positive disciplinary record and nine months spent in Florida,
    which passed without incident, demonstrate that she is not a threat to the community,
    The Court considers evidence of`` remorse to be relevant to Ms. Culp’s
    rehabilitation, and whether she poses a continuing danger to the community,9 The
    Department, after interviewing Ms. Culp, opined that she was “truly remorseful for
    what happened to Mr. Hicks and his family.”
    The Court notes that from the initial 911 call to the interview with the
    Department, Ms. Culp has continuously asserted that Mr. Hicks’s death was an
    accident, and denied that she ever intended to kill him. However, Ms. Culp’s
    8 § 4217(e); Robinson, 344 F. Supp. At 959. In her supplemental briefing regarding this issue, Ms.
    Culp agreed that “[t]he ultimate choice of whether to grant or deny such an application lies in the
    discretion of the Superior Court Judge.”
    9 See Pickens v. State, 
    850 P.2d 328
    , 337 (Okl. Cr. 1993) (holding that “[e]vidence of lack of
    remorse is pertinent to a finding that the defendant is a continuing threat to society”); State v.
    Ramos, 
    2003 WL 21186032
    at*3 (Ohio Ct. App. 2003) (finding that “failure of the defendant to
    acknowledge or accept responsibility for the conduct further is an indicia of the danger posed to
    the public”).
    continued insistence that the death was accidental does not necessarily indicate a
    lack of remorse or denial of responsibility. Ms. Culp’s conflicting accounts of Mr.
    Hicks’s death may reflect a lack of memory. The record shows that Ms. Culp was
    highly intoxicated at the time, and the Court understands that trauma or stress can
    affect a person’s recollection.
    The jury in Ms. Culp’s second trial determined that she was guilty of second
    degree murder, i.e., that she killed Mr. Hicks in a manner that exhibited a “cruel,
    wicked, and depraved indifference to human life.”10 Nonetheless, while Ms. Culp
    may characterize her legal responsibility for Mr. Hicks’s differently than did the
    jury, she does admit that “what happened that night was entirely her fault.”
    Additionally, Ms. Culp’s substantial efforts toward rehabilitation indicate her
    appreciation for the imperrnissibility of her prior conduct. In United States v. Sally,11
    the Third Circuit explained that, with regards to the effect of remorse in the
    analogous context of sentencing, actions speak louder than words: “[u]nlike the
    usual adjustment for acceptance of responsibility where defendants may all-too-
    often be tempted to feign remorse for their crimes and be rewarded for it, we view
    the opportunity for downward departures based on extraordinary or exceptional post-
    conviction rehabilitation efforts as a chance for truly repentant defendants to earn
    reductions in their sentences based on a demonstrated commitment to repair and to
    rebuild their lives.”12
    The Court considers one circumstance particularly demonstrative of Mr.
    Culp’s complete rehabilitation: the fact that, upon being informed of the Supreme
    Court’s December 2016 decision, she returned voluntarily, and at her own expense,
    to Delaware to serve out the remainder of her sentence. The Court finds that Ms.
    10111)€1. C. § 635.
    11 
    116 F.3d 76
    (3d Cir. 1997).
    12 
    Id. at 81.
    Culp has been fully restored as a useful and constructive member of society and
    poses no danger to the community.
    B. The Court’s Discretion
    The Court alluded earlier to the esoteric consideration of whether justice is
    served by Ms. Culp’s serving the remaining year of her sentence.
    The Supreme Court of Delaware has recently stated that, in our tradition of
    criminal justice, incarceration is needed “to fulfill objectives such as retribution and
    even loftier goals such as rehabilitation.”13 The Court has already discussed the issue
    of rehabilitation and found that Ms. Culp is indeed rehabilitated. Additional
    incarceration would, in the Court’s view, do nothing to further that goal. Moreover,
    the Court views as critical the fact that the Department_an agency entrusted by
    statute with responsibility for “treatment, rehabilitation and restoration of offenders
    as usefill, law-abiding citizens within the community”_is itself applying for this
    relief.14
    The topic of retribution, however, has not yet been discussed In the law, it is
    viewed as a justly deserved punishment.15 This ancient legal principle, the lex
    talionis, holds that “[e]veryone is to be punished alike in proportion to the gravity of
    his offense or to the extent to which he has made others suffer.”16
    During the hearing on this matter, the State rightly emphasized the seriousness
    of Ms. Culp’s offenses to the Court. The murder of another human being is a heinous
    13 Raufv. State, 
    145 A.3d 430
    , 441 (Del. 2016). See also State v. Leroy, 
    1993 WL 19629
    , at *8
    (Del. Super. Jan. 14, 1993) (“[t]he philosophical underpinnings of the criminal law is part
    retributive, part rehabilitative”).
    14 11De1. C. 6502(a).
    15 Retribution, Black's Law Dictionary (10th ed. 2014).
    16 Morris R. Cohen, Reason and Law 53 (1961).
    9
    crime. To this day, Mr. Hicks’s family members continue to bear the sorrow and
    pain of his tragic death, and moum the future that was taken from him. It is,
    therefore, just and appropriate that the punishment for Ms. Culp be severe.
    However, punishment cannot be measured only by the length of time spent in
    prison. The extent and reality of Ms. Culp’s punishment thus far_her “daily pain
    and suffering inside prison”-are beyond easy quantification.17 The Court has a few
    indicators: Ms. Culp’s Department interviewer reported that Ms. Culp “feels for the
    loss Mr. Hicks’s family had to endure because of her actions” and that her heart
    “aches” because of his death.18 The Court notes that Ms. Culp has been separated
    from her four children and three grandchildren during her imprisonment, and that
    she has been deprived of taking a greater role in their lives. It was surely a painful
    experience for Ms. Culp to be returned to custody after tasting nine months of
    freedom, believing that her days of incarceration were behind her.
    The Court is also skeptical that an additional year under the custody of the
    Department would have further significant punitive value for Ms. Culp. During her
    time in prison, Ms. Culp has seized every opportunity to transform her
    incarceration_intended, in part, as a medium of punishment_into the means of
    restoring her dignity and integrity. A friend of Ms. Culp, Ms. Catherine P. Weaver,
    Wrote to the Court on this matter, indicating that Ms. Culp is a “person who seeks to
    find meaning in every experience.” The Court believes that Ms. Culp has found the
    meaning of her imprisonment,
    17 See Robert Blecker, Haven or Hell? Insia'e Lorton Central Prison.' Experiences of Punishment
    Justifiea', 42 Stan. L. Rev. 1149, 1152 (1990) (“[t]he reality of each criminal's punishment consists
    in the experience of that punishment”).
    18 See Nigel Walker, Punishment, Danger, and Stigma 129 (1980) (observing that remorse may be
    relevant to the Court’s retributive objectives because a remorseful defendant may have already
    punished himself enough).
    10
    V. CONCLUSION
    In its 2016 decision, the Supreme Court recognized Section 4217 as “the
    appropriate mechanism through which a defendant may pursue sentence
    modification based upon rehabilitation.”19 That mechanism has now been correctly
    employed. The Court finds that the objectives of retribution and rehabilitation have
    been accomplished, and that neither goal will be meaningfully furthered by Ms.
    Culp’s continued incarceration Accordingly, the Court exercises its discretion to
    grant the application of the Department to reduce the sentence of Catherine W. Culp,
    as approved by the Board, having confirmed good cause and lack of any danger to
    the community.
    WHEREFORE, for the foregoing reasons, the application for sentence
    modification is GRANTED. The balance of Ms. Culp’s Level V sentence for her
    conviction of murder in the second degree is suspended after time served for two (2)
    years of Level III probation The balance of Ms. Culp’s Level V sentence for her
    possession of a firearm during the commission of a felony conviction is suspended
    after time served for two (2) years at Level III, to run concurrent The Level III
    supervision may be transferred through interstate compact. All other aspects of Ms.
    Culp’s sentence are to remain the same.
    IT IS SO ORDERED.
    171/44
    " Noel Eason Primos, J.
    19 State v. Culp, 
    152 A.3d 141
    , 146 (Del. 2016).
    ll
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 9807019438

Judges: Primos J.

Filed Date: 3/26/2018

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 3/28/2018