Jerard Garrett v. Commonwealth of Kentucky ( 2017 )


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  •                                               MODIFIED: DECEMBER 20, 2017
    RENDERED: DECEMBER 14, 2017
    TO BE PUBLISHED
    .cSupr:em:e filnurf nf I&:enfurku
    - 2016-SC-000263-MR
    JERARD GARRETT                                                        APPELLANT
    ON. APPEAL FROM JEFFERSON CIRCUIT COURT
    .
    v.                  HONORABLE.JAMES M. SHAKE, JUDGE
    NOS. 1.3-CR-000246 AND 13-CR-000744
    COMMONWEALTH OF KENTUCKY                                               APPELLEE
    OPINION OF THE COURT BY JUSTICE VANMETER
    AFFIRMING
    Jerard Garrett appeals as a matter of 'right from a judgment of the
    Jefferson Circuit Court sentencing him to life in prison without ·the possibility
    of parole for twenty-five years for two counts of murder, two counts of first-
    degree robbery, one count of first-degree wanton endangerment, and one count
    of terroristic threatening. For the following reasons, we affirm the judgm~nt
    and sentence.
    I. BACKGROUND.
    In one indictment, a Jefferson County gr~djury charg~d Garrett and
    his co-defendant, Billy Richardson, with one count each of murder, first-degree
    robbery, first-degree wanton endangerment, third-degree terroristic
    threatening, and being a first-degree persistent felony offender ("PFO 1"), arising
    from the murder of Jamie Young on December 29, 2012. In a separate
    indictment, the granp jury charged Garrett .and Richardson with one count
    each of murder and first-degree robbery, arising from the murder of Kenny
    Forbes on December 23, 2012. Over Garrett's objection, the trial court
    consolidated the charges in the two indictments for trial. Pursuant to RCrl
    6.18, the trial court found that the defendants' practice of scheduling meetings
    throug~    a known intermediary to conduct a drug transaction, then robbing the
    victim, was sufficiently unique to warrant joinder of the charges and           /
    consolidation of the indictments. Garrett now challenges this decision of the
    trial court, as well as several of its other decisions. We do not find any of
    Garrett's challenges to have merit.
    II. ANALYSIS.
    a. The Trial Court Did Not Abuse Its Discretion by Admitting the
    Commonwealth's Ballistics Evidence.
    Garrett suggests, as a general matter, that an opinion from a firearm and
    toolmark examiner that a particular bullet was fired from a parlicular gun
    should no longer be admissible in criminal trials in Kentucky. We note that
    ballistics   te~timony   has been allowed by this· Court since at least 1948. Mof!is
    v. Commonwealth, 
    306 Ky. 349
    , 
    208 S.W.2d 58
    (1948). Still, Garrett argues
    that the methodology and reliability. of the    Com~onwealth's    ballistic examiner's
    testimony that bullets found at both murder       ~cenes   were fired from the same
    1   Kentucky Rules of Criminal Procedure.
    2
    weapon did not meet the criteria set forth in KRE2 702 for admissibility, and
    therefore should not have been admitted. After conducting Daubert3 hearings
    on the admissibility of testimony from the Commonwealth's Kentucky State
    Police ("KSP") firearms expert, Leah Collier, and Garrett's expert, William Tobin,
    a forensic metallurgist materials scientist who worked for the FBI for 27 years,
    the trial court concluded that both experts' testimony would be admissible.
    .           .
    This Court reviews a trial court's ruling on the admissibility of expert
    testimony for an abuse of discretion unless the challenge is to the trial court's
    findings of fact regarding the Dauberl factors, which we review for clear error ..
    Miller v. Eldridge, 
    146 S.W.3d 909
    , 915 (Ky. 2004). Because Garrett challenges
    the trial court's preliminary factual determination as to the reliability of
    ballistic evidence under Daubert, we review for clear error.
    Daubert assigns the trial court the role of "gatekeeper" charged with
    preventing the admission of unreliable, pseudoscientific evidence:
    [T]he trial judge must determine at the outset ...
    whether the expert is proposing to testify. to (1)
    scientific knowledge that (2) will assist the trier of fact
    to understand or determine a fact in issue. This entails
    a preliminary assessment of whether the reasoning or
    methodology underlying the testimony is scientifically
    valid and of whether that reasoning or methodology
    properly can be applied to the facts in issue.         ·
    
    Daubert, 509 U.S. at 592-93
    , 113 S.Ct. at 2796 (footnote omitted); KRE 702.
    2   Kentucky Rules of Evidence.
    3   Dc;iubert v. Merrell Dow Phann., Inc., 
    509 U.S. 579
    , 
    113 S. Ct. 2786
    , 
    125 L. Ed. 2d 469
    (1993).
    The. trial court may consider the following factors in assessing the
    reliability of expert testimony:
    (1) whether a theory or technique can be and has been
    tested; (2) whether the theory or technique has been
    subjected to peer review and publication; (3) whether,
    with respect to a particular technique, there is a high
    known or potential rate of error and whether there ar.e
    standards controlling the technique's operation; and
    (4) whether the theory or technique enjoys general
    acceptance within the relevant scientific, technical, or
    . other specialized community.
    Goodyea_,r Tire & !?ubber Co. v. Thompson, 
    11 S.W.3d 575
    , 578-79 (Ky. 2000}
    (citing 
    Daubert, 509 U.S. at 592-94
    , 113 S.Ct. at 2796-97). "In addition to
    being reliable, the proposed testimony must assist the trier of fact to
    understand the evidence or to determine      E;l   fact in issue. This condition. goes
    primarily to relevance." 
    Miller, 146 S.W.3d at 914
    (internal quotations and
    citation omitted).
    Garrett maintains that the scientific community has attacked and
    refuted the reliability of the premises and methods of specific source
    attribution_in ballistics' analysis, thus rendering Collier's testimony
    incompetent. In support of his _position, Garrett primarily relies on a 2009
    National Research Council's report titled Strengthening Forensic Science in the
    United States: A Path Fonuard ("NRC. Report"), which calls into question the
    validity. of the assumptions about toolmarks that underlie firearms
    identificatiop. .. Howeve:i:-, the Association of Firearm·and Toolmark Examiners
    ("AFTE") theory of identification, which Collier testified she utilized and which
    the federal courts have recently held satisfies Daubert, permits .a conclusion
    4
    that two or more bullets are of common origin "when the micro.scopic surface
    contours of the toolmarks are in sufficient agreement." United States v. Otero,
    
    849 F. Supp. 2d 425
    (D.N.J. 2012), aff'd $57 Fed. Appx. 146 (3rd Cir. 2014).
    In Otero, the defendants sought to exclude the testimony of the
    government's firearms examiner that a bullet was discharged by a specific
    
    weapon. 849 F. Supp. 2d at 427
    . The Otero court recognized that the AFTE
    theory of identification innately contains a subjective component in
    determining "sufficient agreement" which "must necessarily be based on the
    examiner's training and experience." 
    Id. ~t 432.
    In assessing the admissibility
    of the firearm examiner's testimony, the Otero court meticulously analyzed the ·
    Daubert factors and found the proffered testimony satisfied each one. 
    Id. at .
    431-435.
    Specifically, the Otero court found that "the AFTE theory is testable and
    has been tested." 
    Id. at 432.
    The court acknowledged the same NRC Report,
    .upon which Garrett relies, and found that while the toolmark identificatjon
    procedures "do indeed involve some degree of subjective analysis and reliance
    upon the expertise and experience of the examiner'' the methodology is reliable.
    
    Id. at 438.
    Garrett points to the Otero court recognition that "claims for
    absolute certainty as to identifications made by practitioners in this area may
    well be overblown" to argue that Collier's identification of the bullets improperly
    amounted to absolute certainty, as opposed to a reasonable degree of certainty.
    
    Id. However, our
    review of the record shows that Collier testified that she
    examined the two bullets from this case visually and microscopically and
    5
    "made the determination that they were fired from the same firearm." Collier
    went oh to testify that bullet condition can vary. She stated that while bullet
    condition runs the full range, even completely mutilated, the bullets in this
    . case were in very good condition. Assessing Collier's conclusion that the ·
    '
    bullets were fired from the same gun in the context of her entire testimony, .
    which reflects the varying condition of bullets and her subjective experience
    analyzing them, we do not believe her testimony amounted to "absolute
    certainty" so as to require exclusion.. Rather, we believe the jury. was charged
    with assessing the reliability and credibility of her opinion, given all the
    evidence presented.
    We agree with the Otero court's application of the Daubert factors to
    ballistics testimony such as that at hand, and with the trial court's analysis of
    the Dauberl factors and ultimate decision to admit Collier's testimony. The
    . proper avenue for Garrett to address his concerns about the methodology and
    reliability of Collier's testimony was through_ cross-examination, as well as
    through the testimony of his own expert. In this way, the jury was presented
    . with both parties' positions, and with any limitations to the testimony, and
    charged with weighing all the _evidence presented.
    b. The Triat Court Did Not Abuse Its Discretion by Joining the Offenses
    for Trial.-
    Garrett argues that the trial court abused its discretion by joining the
    Forbes and Young murder charges together for a single trial because the
    murders were not sufficiently .similar i_n character, and therefore did not meet
    the common scheme and plan rubric of RCr 6.18.
    6
    The interaction of RCr 9.12 and RCr 6.18 allows
    the charges brought in separate indictments to be
    joined for trial only when the offenses are "of the same
    or similar character" or are "based on the same acts or
    transaGtions·connected together or constituting parts
    of a common scheme or plan." When the conditions
    set forth in RCr 6 .. 18 and RCr 9.12 are present, the
    trial judge has broad discretion to allow the joinder of
    offenses charged in separate indictments. We review
    such decisions for abuse of discretion. Nevertheless,
    to be reversible, an erroneous joinder_ of offenses must
    be accompanied by "a showing of prejudice" to the
    defendant. This showing of prejudice cannot be based
    on mere speculation, but must be supported by the
    record.
    ***
    [A] significant factor in identifying prejudice from
    joining offenses for a single trial is the extent to which
    evidence of one offense would be inadmissible in th~
    trial of the other offense.
    Hammond v. Commonwealth, 
    366 S.W.3d 425
    , 428-29 (Ky. 2012) (internal
    citations and footnote omitted). .
    Because a defendant is prejudiced simply by being tried at all, a
    defendant is required to show prior to trial that he would be "unfairly
    prejudiced" by ajoinder. Parker v. Commonwealth, 
    291 S.W.3d 647
    , 656-57
    (Ky. 2009).
    Offenses closely related in character, circumstance[,]
    and time need not be severed. If evidence from one of
    the offenses joined in the indictment would be
    admissible in a separate trial of the other offenses; the
    joinder of offenses generally will not. be prejudicial.
    Additionally, considerations of judicial economy and
    the efficiency of avoiding multiple trials are reasons for
    joint trials;
    7
    Cohron v. Commonwealth, 
    306 S.W.3d 489
    , 493-94 (Ky. 2010) (footnote
    omitted); see also Peacher v. Commonwealth, 
    391 S.W.3d 821
    , 836 (Ky. 2013)
    (discussing the liberal joinder of offenses considering the advantages of joint
    trials).
    Garrett emphasizes the differences between the crimes: the murders
    occurred six days apart, in different parts of the city; no connection existed
    between the victims; one murder occurred inside a car in a parking lot in the
    middle of the afternoon; the other murder took place in a residenGe during the
    evening; and no common witnesses to the two murders were identified. Thus,
    Garrett asserts that joinder was improper since no nexus or relationship exists
    between the two murders, nor·a common plan or.scheme.
    The trial court found that the two murders and robberies were part of a.
    common scheme: in both cases, the same two co-defendants were charged with
    murder and robbery after they arranged with the victims to purchase drugs;
    both victims were shot during the drug transactions; ballistics examination
    concluded that the bullets from both murders were fired from the same gun;
    and both sets of offenses occurred within six days of each other in the same
    city. Accordingly, the trial court concluded that the crimes committed were
    closely related ,in character, circumstance, and time, antj. were sufficiently
    similar to permit joinder under RCr 6.18. Under these circumstances, we do
    not believe the trial court abused its discretion by joining the offenses for trial,
    or that Garrett has identified "unfair prejudice" connected with the joinder ·
    sufficient to require a new trial.
    8
    c. The Trial Court Properly Permitted a Witness to Make an In-Court
    .     Identification of Garrett.
    Garrett asserts that the trial court abused its discretion by overruling his
    objection to witness Jamie Quisenberry making an in-court identification of
    him as the one who shot Young. He argues that because Quisenberry was
    .unable to identify him in a photographic lineup five days after the shooting,
    Quisenberry should not have been allowed to make an in-court identification
    under application of Neil v. Biggers, 
    409 U.S. 188
    , 
    93 S. Ct. 375
    , 
    34 L. Ed. 2d 401
    (1972).
    We review a trial court's evidentiary rulings for an abuse of discretion.
    
    ·Goodyear, 11 S.W.3d at 577
    . An abuse of discretion occurs if the trial court's
    ruling is "arbitrary, unreasonable, unfair, or unsupported by so-µnd legal
    principles." Commonwealth v. English, 
    993 S.W.2d 941
    , 945 (Ky. 1999).
    Garrett's argument is not well taken. After appellate briefs were
    submitted in this case, this Court issued an Opinion in Fairley·v.
    _/Commonwealth, 
    527 S.W.3d 792
    (Ky. 2017), rejecting the very claim Garrett
    now presents. In Fairley, we held that the witness's inability to identify the
    defendant in a photographic lineup did not bar him from making an in-court
    identification:
    [T]he proper course is to permit the witness to attempt
    to identify the suspect in court and, 1.f an identification
    is made, allow the defense to thoroughly cross-
    examine the witness concerning his failure to n:i.ake a
    prior identification. The jury is fully capable of
    determining what weight to assign to the in-court
    identification .... Accordingly the trial court did not
    9
    abuse its discretion in permitting the introduction of
    this evidence.
    
    Id. at·797. In
    Fairley, we also rejected the defendant's assertion that the witness's
    in-court identification should have been analyzed by the trial court under the
    factors set forth in Biggers before allowing the. witness to testify. 
    Id. at 798.
    "In Biggers, the   S~preme     Court set forth a two-prong due process test for
    considering an identification by a witness following impermissible suggestive
    pretrial procedures such as a photo array or line-up." 
    Id. at 797-98.
    We
    expressly declined to extend Biggers to in-court identifications when no unduly
    suggestive pretrial behavior has been alleged; "'a primary aim of the Biggers
    line of cases   ~as   deterrence of law enforcement's use of improper "lineups,
    showups, and photo arrays, a factor clearly not present in the case before us. m
    
    Id. at 799
    (citation omitted).
    Garrett has not suggested that the photographic lineup presented to
    Quisenberry was unduly suggestive, or alleged any other improper pretrial
    procedures; rather, Garrett argues that the in-court identification by a witness
    who did not make an identification previously is unduly suggestive. This
    reasoning does not trigger application of Biggers, and is unsupported by
    Kentucky case law.       T~e   trial court followed the proper course of action by
    allowing Quisenberry to make an in-court identification, allowing Garrett the
    opportunity to cross-examine him, and letting the jury assess Quisenberry's
    credibility and weigh the evidence presented.
    10
    d. Detective Guffy Did Not Improperly Bolster His Own Credibility by
    Answering Questions from Co-Defendant's Counsel on Cross-
    Examinatie>n.
    Garrett alleges that the trial court improperly allowed Det. Guffy to
    bolster his credibility during co-defendant Richardson's cross-examination of
    him, over Garrett's objection. We review the trial court's ruling for an abuse of
    discretion. 
    Goodyear, 11 S.W.3d at 577
    .
    I
    During Garrett's cross-examination of Det. Guffy, Garrett's courisel
    questioned him vigorously regarding the phone call Det. Guffy testified he
    received froni Garrett's older brother, Je.rmaine Garrett, after the murders, in
    which Jermalne informed Det. Guffy that the last phone number Forbes called
    before his death, 419-262-5824 ("the 419 number"), belonged to Garrett.
    Garrett's counsel implied that Det. Guffy was not being truthful about receiving
    the phone call from Jermaine because he did not swiftly record it in an
    investigative letter. Det. Guffy testified that three months after his
    conversation with Jermaine, he recorded in an investigative letter, "I spoke with
    a person later identified as a family member of Jerard Garrett, from phone
    number 502-4 71-8873. This conversation assisted in the verification of
    ·number 419-262-5824 as being the number associated with.Jerard." Det.
    Guffy further testified that no police policy mandates that investigative letters
    be recorded within a specified time frame, or contain specified information.
    During co-defendant Richardson's       cro~s-examination   of Det. Guffy,
    '
    Richardson's counsef followed up on the line of questioning regarding Det.
    Guffy's truthfulness, to which Det. Guffy responded that he did his work as
    11
    diligently, as honestly as he could, and that he found any suggestion he was
    dishonest to be distasteful. At this point, Garrett's counsel objected, arguing
    . that Det. Guffy's testimony constituted improper self-bolstering.
    The la:w is well established that "[a] witness is not permitted to bolster
    her own. testimony unless and until her credibility has been attacked." Tackett
    v. Commonwealth, 
    445 S.W.3d 20
    , 32 (Ky. 2014). As the Commonwealth points
    out, though, Garrett plainly attacked Det. Guffy's credibility during his. cross-
    examination of him, insinuating that he was lying and committing perjury.
    Garrett put Det. Guffy's credibility squarely at issue, thus allowing it to be
    bolstered by Richardson's counsel during his cross-examination of Det. Guffy.
    Accordingly, the trial court did not abuse its· discretion by overruling Garrett's
    . objection to Det. Gu,ffy's testimony.
    e. ·The Commonwealth's Use of the CourtNet Information Was Not
    Improp~r.
    Garrett contends that he should be granted a new trial because the
    Commonwealth's use of a CourtNet printout to impeach Jermaine prejudiced
    Garrett and denied him the right to a fair trial. Whether Jermaine lived at 426
    South 12th Street in 2012 was relevant because a call was placed from the
    number associated with that address, 502-471-8873 ("the 502 number"), to
    Det. Guffy after the murders, during which Det. Guffy testified that Jermaine
    identified the 419 number as belonging to Garrett. Det. Guffy had left a
    voicemail at the 502 number after obtaining Forbes' cellphone records and
    discovering that the last two calls Forbes placed before .his death were to the
    419 number. Det. Guffy obtained the call log for the 419 number and left
    12
    voicen:iails with the most recent numbers called, including the 502 number.
    He testified that he received a call back from the 502 n\].mber, and that the
    caller identified himself as Jermaine, who said the 419 number belonged to
    Garrett.
    At trial, the Commonwealth sought to link Jermaine with the 502
    number, and the phone call made to Det. Guffy, by showing that he resided at
    426 South 12th Street around the time of the murders. Jermaine testified that
    he did not remember his phone number from 2012, denied having spoken with
    Det. Guffy after the murders, denied telling Det. Guffy that the 419 number
    belonged to Garrett; and said he never lived at 426 South 12th Street. The
    Commonwealth then presented him with        a CourtNet printout of a district court
    misdemeanor showing Jermaine's listed address as 426 South 12th Street in
    2012. Over Garrett's objection that the CourtNet docun:ient was unreliable, the
    trial court permitted the Commonwealth to show it to Jermaine and ask ifthe
    address listed on the CourtNet document, 426 South 12th Street, was his
    address in 2012. The document was not admitted into evidence or otherwise
    shown to the jury. We.review the trial court's ruling for an abuse of discretion.
    
    Goodyear, 11 S.W.3d at 577
    .
    CourtNet is a product that is compiled by the
    Administrative Office of the Courts (AOC) that is
    generally useful for investigation into a person's
    background, but it is not intended as an official record
    of that background. In fact, CourtNet's user
    agreement states that the AOC "CANNOT GUARANTEE
    the accuracy of information obtained via CourtNet."
    Criminal Justice Agency, CourtNetindividual User
    Agreement, http://courtnet.kycourts.
    net/courtnet/manuals/CourtNetCJindividual.pdf. It
    13
    further states that "[d]ata obtained from this system is
    not an official court record" and that "[i]nformation
    received from CourtNet ... may not at any particular
    moment reflect the true status of court cases." 
    Id. Finnell v.
    Commonwealth, 
    295 S.W.3d 829
    , 834 (Ky. 2009).
    In Finnell, this Court disapproved of the use of a CourtNet document to
    prove a defendant's prior convictions during the sentencing phase of trial. 
    Id. In that
    caf:!e; the Commonwealth introduced into evidence, and spent over eight
    minu~es   reading from, ten pages of a CourtNet printout listing Finnell's 14
    prior .misdemeanor convictions, including one felony that it had already
    introduced by testimony from a certified copy of the judgment. 
    Id. at 834.
    We
    reversed and remanded for a new sentencing phase on the following grounds:
    CourtNet is not an appropriaty document to use to.
    influence ajury's decision on fixing a penalty. It lacks
    the requisite indicia of reliability nec~ssary to reliably
    prove a defendant's prior convictions. To do that, the
    evidence of prior convictions must come from the
    official court record, or certified copies thereof.
    However, other elements of proof, such as proving a
    defendant's parole status or age, may be introduced
    through other appropriate records.
    
    Id. at 835.
    Relying on an unpublished decision from the Court of Appeals,
    Merriweather v. Commonwealth, No. 2011-CA-001398-MR, 
    2012 WL 6651882
    (Ky. App. Dec. 21, 2012), Gan:ett argues that CourtNet documents should not
    be used to impeach a witness. In Merriweather, prior to the sentencing phase,
    ·the parties discussed introduction of the defendant's prior felony convictions
    for purposes of the PFO charge; the Commonwealth had certified documents
    relating to three prior felonies of the defendant, but only a CourtNet printout of
    14
    a fourth 1995 felony conviction. 
    Id. at *3.
    The trial court determined that the
    CourtNet document was not reliable enough to be used for purposes of
    establishing a PFO charge and the parties agreed to remove the 1995 felony
    conviction from the PFO instructions. 
    Id. In Merriweather,
    on cross-examination of the defendant, the
    Commonwealth inquired into whether he had a 1995 felony conviction; defense
    counsel objected, arguing that the conviction was riot to be mentioned. 
    Id. at *4.
    The trial court overruled the objection and allowed the Commonwealth to
    ask the question; the defendant replied that he did not recall whether he had a
    felony conviction from 1995. 
    Id. On appeal,
    the Court of Appeals held that no
    error occurred:
    In the case at hand, the Commonwealth sought to .
    elicit testimony from Merriweather about his 1995
    conviction for truth-in-sentencing purposes, not
    persistent felony offender purposes. The
    Commonwealth did not introduce the CourtNet
    document showing the 1995 conviction into evidence,
    it only used it as a basis to inquire from Merriweather
    as to whether the conviction existed. Had the
    Commonwealth sought to use the CourtNet document
    to impeach Merriweather, or tried to introduce it when
    Merriweather stated he did not remember a 1995
    conviction, then that would have been improper.
    Unlike in Finnell, the Commonwealth in this case did
    not introduce the CourtNet document and its contents
    into evidence; therefore, there is no error.
    
    Id. at *5.
    Notwithstanding that Merriweather is not binding on this Court, or any
    other court since unpublished, we briefly note that the situation at bar is
    distinguishable in that the Commonwealth used the CourtNet document not to
    15
    prove jermaine's criminal history or the status of a court case, but rather to
    confirm with Jermaine background information contained thereon: his name,
    date of birth, and address. Jermaine confirmed his name and date of birth as
    listed, but disputed the 4.26 South 12th Street address'. Based on these facts,
    we believe the Commonwealth's use of the CourtNet printout did not run afoul
    '
    of our holding.in Finnell, or of the stated purpose of CourtNet identified.in that
    case.
    Further, even without use of the CourtNet printout linking Jermaine to
    that address and consequently to the. 502 number associated therewith,
    G8!1"ett was connected to the 419 number through the testimony of Det. Guffy,
    who stated that he received a call from Jermaine informing him that the 419
    number belonged to Oarrett. The jury was charged with assessing the..
    credibility of the witnesses, and to weigh the evidence accordingly. Thus, even
    if we accepted Garrett's argument that error occurred, such error did not have
    substantial influence so as to require reversal under the harmless error
    ·standard .. See RCr 10.26; Winstead v. 9ommonwealth, 
    283 S.W.3d 678
    , 688-
    89 (Ky. 2009)[(the inquiry into whether a non-constitutional evidentiary error
    may be deemed harmless "is not simply whether there was enough [evidence] to
    support the result, apart from the phase affected by the error. It is rather, even
    so, whether the error itself had substantial influence. If so, or if one is left in
    .                   .
    grave doubt, the conviction cannot stand.") (internal quotations and citations
    offiitted)].
    16
    f. No Cumulative Error Exists.
    Garrett argues that he is. entitled to relief on the basis of cuml,Jlative
    error, "the doctrine under which multiple errors, although harmless
    individually, may be deemed reversible if their cumulative effect is to render the
    trial fundamentally unfair." Brown v. Commonwealth, 
    313 S.W.3d 577
    , 631
    (Ky. 2010). Since none of Garrett's alleged errors merit relief individually, they
    do not become meritorious .W.hen considered cumulatively.
    III.   CONCLUSION.
    For the foregoing reasons, the judgment and sentence of the Jefferson
    Circuit Court is affirmed.
    All sitting. Minton, C.J., Cunningham, Hughes,. Keller, VanMeter, and .
    Wright, J.J., concur. Venters, J., concurs in result only.
    COUNSEL FOR APPELLANT:
    Samuel N. Potter
    Robert Chung-Hua Yang
    Assistant Public Advocate
    Department of Public Advocacy
    COUNSEL FOR APPELLEE:
    Andy Beshear
    Attorney General of Kentucky
    Jason Bradley Moore
    Assistant Attorney General
    17
    2016-SC-000263-MR
    JERARD GARRETT                                                       APPELLANT
    ON APPEAL FROM JEFFERSON CIRCUIT COURT
    HONORABLE JAMES M. SHAKE, JUDGE
    v.              CASE NOS. 13-CR-000246 AND 13-CR-000744
    COMMONWEALTH OF KENTUCKY                                              APPELLEE
    ORDER
    On the Court's own motion, this Court hereby modifies the Opinion of
    the Court by Justice VanMeter rendered December 14, 2017 in the· above
    styled case by the substitution of a new opinion as attached hereto in lieu of
    the Opinion of the Court as originally entered. Said modification does. not
    affect the holding, and is made only to reflect a typographical error·on page 11
    changing "Det. Duffy" to "Det. Guffy".
    ENTERED: December 20, 2017