State v. Taylor ( 2022 )


Menu:
  •            IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE
    STATE OF DELAWARE,                   )
    )
    v.                             )     ID. No. 1605012921A
    )
    DIAMONTE TAYLOR,                     )
    )
    Defendant.              )
    MEMORANDUM OPINION
    Date Submitted: March 4, 2022
    Date Decided: June 30, 2022
    Upon Defendant’s Motion to Dismiss
    DENIED.
    Benjamin S. Gifford IV, Esq. of The Law Office of Benjamin S. Gifford IV and John
    A. Barber, Esq. of The Law Office of John A. Barber, Wilmington, DE. Attorneys
    for Defendant.
    Matthew Frawley and Mark Denney, Deputy Attorneys General, Wilmington, DE.
    Attorneys for State of Delaware.
    MEDINILLA, J.
    INTRODUCTION
    After a ten-day jury trial in March of 2018, 1 a jury returned guilty verdicts
    against Defendant Diamonte Taylor (“Defendant”) for Murder in the First Degree,
    Gang Participation, two counts of Reckless Endangerment, Possession of a Firearm
    during the Commission of a Felony, two counts of Aggravated Menacing, and
    Assault in the First Degree.2
    On direct appeal, 3 the Supreme Court reversed Defendant’s conviction and
    remanded the case for a new trial. 4 Defendant now moves to dismiss his indictment
    claiming a new trial violates the Double Jeopardy Clause of the Delaware
    Constitution5 due to alleged prosecutorial misconduct in a pretrial hearing.6 Having
    considered Defendant’s Motion to Dismiss, the State’s Response in Opposition, oral
    arguments, and the record in this case, Defendant’s Motion is DENIED.
    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY 7
    This case stems from various charges related to a gang feud in the City of
    Wilmington between a Wilmington street gang called Shoot to Kill (“STK”) and a
    rival gang Only My Brothers (“OMB”). What began following the murder of an
    1
    See Jury Trial Held Before Judge Medinilla, D.I. 77.
    2
    See Verdict Sheet, D.I. 78.
    3
    See Letter from Supreme Court RE: A Notice of Appeal was Filed, D.I. 106.
    4
    See generally Taylor v. State, 
    260 A.3d 602
     (Del. 2021).
    5
    See Del. Const. Art. I, § 8.
    6
    Defendant’s Motion to Dismiss, D.I. 136, at 1 [hereinafter Motion to Dismiss].
    7
    The recitation of facts is from the Supreme Court of Delaware decision in Taylor v. State, 
    260 A.3d 602
     (Del. 2021).
    2
    STK affiliate in January of 2015 culminated in the murder of fourteen-year-old
    Brandon Wingo, shot in the face when walking home from school on May 19, 2016.
    Defendant was indicted for charges of Murder in the First Degree, as well as charges
    of Gang Participation, Conspiracy in the First Degree, and multiple other gang-
    related violent felonies to include Reckless Endangerment, Possession of a Firearm
    during the Commission of a Felony, two counts of Aggravated Menacing, and
    Assault in the First Degree.8
    On January 22, 2018, Defendant filed a Motion to Suppress regarding
    evidence seized from his cell phone pursuant to a search warrant.9 He raised two
    separate arguments as to why evidence downloaded from his cell phone should have
    been excluded. First, that the search warrant failed to establish a specific nexus
    between any crime and the device to be searched, 10 and second that the search
    warrant was inadequately particular and thus constituted an impermissible general
    warrant. 11
    This Court held a suppression hearing on February 16, 2018. Defendant
    argued that the use of female pronouns throughout the search warrant—and its
    averments in support—clearly demonstrated that the targeted cell phone was that of
    8
    See Indictment, True Bill Filed No. 55, D.I. 1.
    9
    See Motion to Suppress, D.I. 53.
    10
    See Exhibit A to Motion to Dismiss, ¶¶ 20-34.
    11
    See id. ¶¶ 35-47.
    3
    his girlfriend. Thus, the search warrant did not sufficiently establish probable cause
    to search his phone. At the suppression hearing, the prosecutor responded that any
    incorrect pronouns were merely a scrivener’s error, not substantive to warrant
    suppression. As to the first argument, this Court accepted the State’s representations
    and, as to the second, it based its decision on the law applicable at that time; this
    Court denied suppression. 12
    After a two-week trial in March 2018, 13 the jury returned its guilty verdicts.14
    On August 2, 2019, Defendant filed a Motion for New Trial, 15 which this Court
    denied on December 2, 2019.16 On January 31, 2020, Defendant was sentenced to a
    mandatory life sentence for Murder First Degree and an additional eleven years
    incarceration.17
    On Defendant’s direct appeal, 18 the Supreme Court reversed Defendant’s
    convictions and remanded the case for a new trial on the basis that the search warrant
    used to search Defendant’s cell phone constituted an impermissible general
    warrant. 19
    12
    See Motion to Suppress Search Warrant Denied, D.I. 59.
    13
    See Jury Trial Held Before Judge Medinilla, D.I. 77.
    14
    See Verdict Sheet, D.I. 78.
    15
    See Motion for New Trial, D.I. 98.
    16
    See Order for a New Trial is Denied, D.I. 104.
    17
    See Sentence: ASOP Order Signed and Filed, D.I. 105.
    18
    See Letter from Supreme Court RE: A Notice of Appeal was Filed, D.I. 106.
    19
    See generally Taylor, 
    260 A.3d 602
    .
    4
    During the pendency of the direct appeal, the defense discovered a search
    warrant for the cell phone of Defendant’s girlfriend, Latasha Pierce (“Pierce”), of
    which a redacted copy had been provided by the State in its initial discovery
    response.20 The language of a particular paragraph in that search warrant is identical
    to a paragraph in the search warrant that targeted Defendant’s devices. 21 Upon a
    closer review of the Affidavit and Application for Defendant’s devices, Pierce’s
    name on the page is obstructed by the Justice of the Peace Court seal stamped on the
    center of the page. 22
    Based on this discovery, on November 5, 2021, Defendant filed this Motion
    to Dismiss (the “Motion”), alleging the State misrepresented information to the
    Court at the suppression hearing. The State filed its response on November 9, 2021.
    The day before oral arguments were scheduled to be heard, defense counsel noticed
    that he mistakenly attached the incorrect search warrant to the Motion and
    substituted the correct warrant in a subsequent letter.23 Oral arguments were heard
    on March 4, 2022. This matter is now ripe for decision.
    20
    See Exhibit D to Motion to Dismiss.
    21
    See id. ¶ 22; Exhibit B to Motion to Dismiss, at Exhibit A, ¶ 23.
    22
    Motion to Dismiss, ¶ 11.
    23
    See Letter from Defense Counsel, D.I. 148.
    5
    CONTENTIONS
    Defendant claims a retrial would constitute double jeopardy on the basis of
    prosecutorial misconduct. Essentially that the prosecutor made an intentional or
    reckless misrepresentation to the Court that the use of female pronouns in
    Defendant’s warrant was merely a scrivener’s error when the prosecutor knew or
    should have known that the language was copied from another warrant.24 He further
    posits he has satisfied the Hughes v. State 25 test for prosecutorial misconduct through
    his Supreme Court remand.26 Alternatively, he argues he has also satisfied the
    Hunter v. State27 test by extension through State v. Bobby Taylor.28
    The State’s response is brief. It succinctly contends the scrivener’s error was
    “self-evident from the warrant and the Court agreed.”29 It further asks this Court to
    reject the Motion as meritless. The State elects not to respond to the constitutional
    arguments raised, nor does it address the claims of prosecutorial misconduct.
    24
    Defendant argues that the detective who authored a search warrant targeting Pierce’s cell
    phone drafted a paragraph designed to establish a nexus between her device and evidence of an
    alleged crime. The detective then used the language aimed at Pierce’s device and “recycled” it
    four days later when she applied for a warrant to search Defendant’s cell phone. See
    Defendant’s Reply to State’s Letter Responding to His Motion to Dismiss, D.I. 141, ¶¶ 2-3
    [hereinafter Defendant’s Reply].
    25
    
    437 A.2d 559
    , 571 (Del. 1981).
    26
    Motion to Dismiss, ¶¶ 72-73.
    27
    
    815 A.2d 730
     (Del. 2002).
    28
    
    2019 WL 4647669
     (Del. Super. Sept. 23, 2019). This case will be referred to as Bobby Taylor,
    rather than Taylor, to avoid confusion with the matter presently before this Court.
    29
    State’s Response to Defendant’s Motion to Dismiss, D.I. 138, at 2.
    6
    Finally, the State argues it was the form, not the substance, of the warrant that led to
    the Supreme Court’s reversal and dismissal is therefore inappropriate.30
    DISCUSSION
    Both the United States and Delaware Constitutions protect the rights of
    ordinary citizens from double jeopardy.31 “The underlying idea . . . is that the State
    . . . should not be allowed to make repeated attempts to convict an individual for an
    alleged offense, thereby subjecting him to embarrassment, expense and ordeal and
    compelling him to live in a continuing state of anxiety and insecurity . . . .” 32 Under
    Delaware law, Double Jeopardy provides protection against a second prosecution
    for the same offense after an acquittal or a conviction, and against multiple
    punishments for the same offense.33
    I.     Double Jeopardy Does Not Attach
    Defendant was tried and now after vacatur, he may be tried for that same
    charge again.
    That in itself poses no double-jeopardy problem, because as the U.S.
    Supreme Court held in Ball v. United States, the Double Jeopardy
    Clause does not prevent a defendant from being retried for an offense
    if he succeeds in having his conviction vacated. [Therefore,] . . . a
    30
    
    Id.
    31
    See U.S. Const. Amend. V (“…nor shall any person be subject for the same offense to be twice
    put in jeopardy of life or limb….”); Del. Const. Art. I, § 8 (“[N]o person shall be for the same
    offense twice put in jeopardy of life or limb.”).
    32
    Blake v. State, 
    65 A.2d 557
    , 561 (Del. 2013) (quoting Green v. U.S., 
    355 U.S. 184
    , 187
    (1957)).
    33
    See 11 Del. C. §§ 206-210; Blake, 65 A.2d at 561.
    7
    retrial following vacatur is . . . ongoing jeopardy, not successive
    prosecution for the same offense.34
    This should end the analysis.         But Defendant asks for further review of the
    protections and distinctions afforded under both the federal and our state
    constitutions.
    Defendant concedes that under Oregon v. Kennedy35 he has no viable claim
    under the U.S. Constitution. The federal framework is clear under Kennedy that
    merely because an act before the factfinder (none here) is so unfairly prejudicial as
    to necessitate a mistrial (none here), this alone does not suffice to bar retrial even
    when that act was undertaken wrongfully by the prosecutor. 36 Thus, Defendant
    acknowledges he is afforded no double jeopardy protection under the U.S.
    Constitution.
    Defendant further acknowledges that Delaware’s Double Jeopardy Clause is
    “virtually identical” to the federal Double Jeopardy Clause and follows the same
    standards.37 Thus, “it is [also] specific intent by the prosecution to cause a mistrial
    that the Court must find in order for that resulting mistrial to bar retrial and mandate
    dismissal.” 38
    34
    Grimes v. State, 
    188 A.3d 824
    , 826 (Del. 2018) (citing Price v. Georgia, 
    398 U.S. 323
    , 326
    (1970)).
    35
    
    456 U.S. 667
    , 676 (1982).
    36
    Kennedy, 
    456 U.S. at
    675–76.
    37
    See Hughey v. State, 
    522 A.2d 335
    , 338 n.5 (Del. 1987).
    38
    Bobby Taylor, 
    2019 WL 4647669
    , at *3 (citing Sudler v. State, 
    611 A.2d 945
    , 948 (Del. 1992)
    (It is only “[w]here ‘the governmental conduct in question is intended to ‘goad’ the defendant
    8
    Recognizing no viable claim exists under Delaware’s current legal
    framework, Defendant proposes a novel theory and invites the Court to: (1) reject
    and lower Delaware’s Double Jeopardy intent requirement; (2) modify the
    procedural application of this lower standard outside the context of a trial; and (3)
    apply this lower standard in the absence of a mistrial.
    Defendant’s solution is to look at the 2003 decision of Poteat v. State, 39 where
    the Delaware Supreme Court recognized the similarities in both the federal and state
    Double Jeopardy clauses but observed that the Court “ha[d] not been called upon to
    decide whether the federal and state Double Jeopardy provisions are identical in
    scope in all respects.” 40 He states that in the 2019 case of Parker v. State,41 the
    question remained unanswered,42 and open for consideration here. The law does not
    advance Defendant’s argument.
    To be clear, Poteat concerned whether, under the Double Jeopardy Clause, a
    charge of Aggravated Menacing was a lesser-included offense of Robbery First
    Degree such that an acquittal on the lesser-included offense prevented the State from
    into moving for a mistrial…[that] a defendant [can] raise the bar of double jeopardy to a second
    trial after having succeeded in aborting the first on his own motion.’”)) (quoting Kennedy, 
    456 U.S. at 676
    ).
    39
    Poteat v. State, 
    840 A.2d 599
     (Del. 2003).
    40
    See Motion to Dismiss, ¶ 16 (quoting Poteat, 
    840 A.2d at
    602 n.3).
    41
    
    201 A.3d 1181
     (Del. 2019).
    42
    Motion to Dismiss, ¶ 17 (citing Parker, 201 A.3d at 1184 n.5 (“[Defendant] is not clear about
    whether his claim is based on the U.S. or Delaware Constitution. We proceed under the
    assumption that he is claiming a double jeopardy violation under only the U.S. Constitution.”))
    (citing Poteat, 
    840 A.2d at
    602 n.3).
    9
    retrying him for the greater offense. 43 That is not this case. This matter involves
    ongoing prosecution for the same offense. Defendant’s tour of the history of
    Delaware’s Constitution and considerations for how our constitutional protections
    have been broader in some instances than its federal counterpart 44 do little to
    persuade this Court. The recitation of when a state constitutional violation may be
    raised by a party under Jones v. State45 is also not persuasive.46
    Not only is the law well-established, there also exists a procedural problem.
    The prosecutor’s comments took place at a pre-trial proceeding. Double jeopardy
    considerations arise when a defendant moves for a mistrial, and these Double
    Jeopardy clauses to bar retrial apply only when the mistrial was intentionally
    provoked by the government or the State.47 Here, there were no representations
    made at trial. Nor did Defendant move for a mistrial. Nor is the prosecutor alleged
    to have goaded a mistrial.
    43
    See Poteat, 
    840 A.2d at 601
    .
    44
    See Motion to Dismiss, ¶¶ 15-30.
    45
    
    745 A.2d 856
     (Del 1999).
    46
    Defendant argues: “To properly raise a state constitutional violation, a party ‘should include a
    discussion and analysis of one or more of the following non-exclusive criteria: textual language,
    legislative history, preexisting state law, structural differences, matters of particular state interest
    or local concerns, state traditions, and public attitudes.’” See Motion to Dismiss, ¶ 31 (quoting
    Wallace v. State, 
    956 A.2d 630
    , 637–38 (Del. 2008)).
    47
    See Kennedy 
    456 U.S. at 676
    ; Sullins v. State, 
    930 A.2d 911
    , 916 (Del. 2007) (observing this
    includes causing mistrial by intentional violations of due process that goad defendant into
    seeking a mistrial).
    10
    Defendant fails to provide Delaware authority as to why this Court should
    consider the application of double jeopardy in a pre-trial context in the absence of a
    mistrial caused by intentional state action. The Court rejects the proposal that we
    follow Pennsylvania’s lead where certain courts have either relaxed the intentional
    standard or have considered prosecutorial misconduct in the absence of a mistrial.48
    Defendant’s reliance on these cases does little to support his argument. The unique
    circumstances presented in those cases are not present here and he fails to convince
    this Court that our Double Jeopardy standards should be lowered as presented.
    II.     No Basis to Consider Prosecutorial Misconduct
    Defendant next contends that the prosecutor’s actions at the suppression
    hearing were intentional or reckless to support a finding of prosecutorial misconduct.
    He argues that this Court should find prosecutorial misconduct on the bases of prior
    court rulings and order a remedy that does not exist as a matter of law.
    Ordinarily, when reviewing a claim of prosecutorial misconduct that was
    timely raised, the Court utilizes a harmless error standard.49 Here, the allegations of
    48
    See Motion to Dismiss, ¶¶ 15-35, 40-62; Defendant’s Reply, ¶ 15; see also Commonwealth v.
    Smith, 
    615 A.2d 321
     (Pa. 1992) (In the absence of prosecutorial misconduct to provoke the
    defendant into moving for a mistrial, the State was barred from a second prosecution “when the
    conduct of the prosecutor was intentionally undertaken to prejudice the defendant to the point of
    the denial of a fair trial.”); see also Commonwealth v. Johnson, 
    231 A.3d 807
    , 826 (Pa. 2020)
    (holding the Pennsylvania Constitution provides that “prosecutorial overreaching sufficient to
    invoke double jeopardy protections includes misconduct which not only deprives the defendant
    of his right to fair trial, but is undertaken recklessly . . . .”).
    49
    See, e.g., Justice v. State, 
    947 A.2d 1097
    , 1100 (Del. 2008).
    11
    prosecutorial misconduct were not raised at trial nor on direct appeal because the
    basis of this allegation stems from a discovery made by the defense team during
    Defendant’s pending appeal. Even if timely made, when a such a claim is raised,
    the Court must conduct a de novo review of the record to determine if misconduct
    actually occurred. 50 If so, the Court must then determine whether a substantial right
    of the defendant was prejudiced by the improper comments or conduct, applying the
    Hughes test. 51 But here, Defendant argues this Court need not conduct a de novo
    review. Instead, he argues that the Supreme Court’s vacatur satisfies the Hughes
    test. This argument is unavailing. 52
    The Supreme Court’s holding was limited to a determination that the search
    warrant used to search Defendant’s cell phone constituted an impermissible general
    warrant. 53 It said nothing about prosecutorial misconduct. Nor did the Court
    consider whether a substantial right of the defendant was prejudiced by anything
    related to the comments or conduct of the prosecutor. Defendant fails to establish
    50
    
    Id.
    51
    
    Id. at 1101
    . If prosecutorial misconduct is found, Delaware Courts determine the prejudicial
    affect by applying the three factors established in the Hughes test: “the closeness of the case, the
    centrality of the issue affected by the (alleged) error, and the steps taken to mitigate the effects of
    the error.” Hughes, 
    437 A.2d at 571
    .
    52
    Defendant argues the Supreme Court reversal essentially operated as a de facto finding to
    satisfy the Hughes test because the Court “[could not] conclude beyond a reasonable doubt that
    the jury’s verdict would have been the same without the illegally seized smartphone evidence”
    and further noted that “the jury convicted [him] on all charges related to the crimes where the
    State presented evidence from the [smart phone] extraction report,” finding “[t]he smartphone
    evidence was critical to the State’s case and Taylor’s convictions.” See Taylor, 260 A.3d at 618.
    53
    See generally id.
    12
    how the Supreme Court’s decision related to the validity of a search warrant satisfies
    the Hughes test.
    Defendant’s argument that he has established a pattern of misconduct under
    Hunter is equally without merit. 54 He argues the Hunter “pattern of misconduct” is
    established by two events: (1) the comments of the prosecutor to this Court in
    Defendant’s 2018 suppression hearing; and (2) a subsequent cross-examination
    conducted by the same prosecutor in 2019 in the case of State v. Bobby Taylor.55
    In Bobby Taylor, that Court limited its review to whether a mistrial was
    intentionally provoked by the State and considered only whether double jeopardy
    barred retrial due to the prosecutor’s cross-examination of Defendant. Even after
    that Court granted a mistrial, it found no double jeopardy bar and denied the motion
    to dismiss because there was no evidence that the prosecution’s conduct was an
    intentional attempt to achieve a mistrial.56 Importantly, though the Court castigated
    the prosecutor, it never determined the prosecutor committed prosecutorial
    misconduct under Hunter or Hughes.57
    54
    The Supreme Court found that various statements made by the prosecutor during trial
    warranted a finding of prosecutorial misconduct after a Hughes analysis failed to find that
    reversal was appropriate. There, the court found “a persistent pattern of prosecutorial
    misconduct,” such that “the integrity of the judicial process was compromised,” requiring
    reversal. Hunter, 
    815 A.2d at
    737–38.
    55
    
    2019 WL 4647669
     (Del. Super. Sept. 23, 2019).
    56
    See id. at *5.
    57
    See id.
    13
    For the same reasons that the Supreme Court’s vacatur cannot satisfy the
    Hughes test, nor can the Bobby Taylor ruling—decided after the 2018 suppression
    hearing—establish a “pattern” of misconduct under Hunter. Even if the Court
    conducted a de novo review of the record, at best all that can be said is there was a
    mutual mistake discovered years later and both sides were operating under the
    assumption that the search warrant submitted for review was Defendant’s. This does
    not translate into a finding of misconduct against the State. The analysis ends here.
    No further analysis is required under Hunter or Hughes, and Defendant’s reliance
    on either case as presented is misplaced.
    III.    Remedy Has Been Afforded
    Lastly, even if prosecutorial misconduct had been found, the relief of a new
    trial available under either Hughes or Hunter has already been afforded here.58
    Defendant’s insistence that he is entitled to the remedy of dismissal—not just
    retrial—is inconsistent with Delaware law.
    The Delaware Supreme Court in State v. Robinson59 addressed the remedy of
    dismissal even upon a finding of “egregious” State misconduct.60 Though the
    58
    The relief available under either a Hunter or Hughes analysis is limited to reversal and a new
    trial. See Hughes, 
    437 A.2d at
    566–73 (remanding for a new trial after finding prosecutorial
    errors substantially affected the defendant’s right to a fair trial); Hunter, 
    815 A.2d at 738
    (reversing the conviction following a finding of prosecutorial misconduct which compromised
    the judicial process); Trala v. State, 
    244 A.3d 989
    , 998–99 (Del. 2020) (discussing the ability to
    reverse under the Hughes and Hunter tests).
    59
    
    209 A.3d 25
     (Del. 2019).
    60
    See id. at 58.
    14
    prosecutorial misconduct there involved a Sixth Amendment violation of
    defendant’s attorney-client privilege, 61            the Supreme Court determined that
    dismissal of the indictment was inappropriate where “[a] remedy less severe than
    dismissal” would ensure the defendant’s “right to a fair trial [was] protected.” 62 Any
    relief therefore ‘“should be tailored to the injury suffered and should not
    unnecessarily infringe upon society’s competing interest in the administration of
    criminal justice.”’ 63 For these reasons, where the relief of a new trial has been
    afforded, Defendant fails to establish a legal basis to warrant dismissal.
    CONCLUSION
    Defendant’s request to meld various legal theories and methods and have this
    Court serve as a catalyst to create a new body of law is reminiscent of a bad
    experiment. The Court would need to dissect the “intent” requirement out of
    Delaware’s Double Jeopardy analysis and replace it with a lesser standard. Next, it
    would need to implant double jeopardy analyses in pre-trial court proceedings
    without the necessary trial prerequisites to include mistrial or intentional goading
    caused by prosecutorial conduct.
    Then, the Court would need to transplant Defendant’s vacatur to establish
    intentional or reckless prosecutorial misconduct under the Hughes test.
    61
    See id. at 54–55.
    62
    Id. at 59.
    63
    Id. at 61 (quoting Bailey v. State, 
    521 A.2d 1069
    , 1084 (Del. 1987)).
    15
    Alternatively, the Court would need to bolt remnants of dictum from the subsequent
    decision of Bobby Taylor in order to find a pattern of intentional or reckless
    prosecutorial misconduct under Hunter.      These Shelleyan 64 theories, though
    creative, cannot survive for the reasons stated. Therefore, Defendant’s Motion to
    Dismiss is DENIED.
    IT IS SO ORDERED.
    /s/Vivian L. Medinilla
    Vivian L. Medinilla
    Judge
    cc:   Prothonotary
    64
    See MARY SHELLEY, FRANKENSTEIN; OR, THE MODERN PROMETHEUS (Lackington, Hughes,
    Harding, Mavor & Jones, 1st ed. 1818).
    16