Smith v. State ( 2021 )


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  • Everett Smith v. State of Maryland, No. 1273, Sept. Term 2020. Opinion filed on October
    27, 2021, by Berger, J.
    INHERENT PREJUDICE - RIGHT TO FAIR TRIAL - “THIN BLUE LINE” FLAG
    FACE MASK
    The appellant was not deprived of his constitutional right to a fair trial when the trial court
    permitted a uniformed law enforcement officer serving as a courtroom bailiff to wear a
    “thin blue line” flag face mask in the courtroom. The “thin blue line” flag symbol does not
    have one generally accepted meaning and is interpreted to mean a wide variety of things.
    Because a wide range of inferences could be drawn from the “thin blue line” flag face
    mask, the wearing of this symbol by a uniformed law enforcement officer did not constitute
    inherent prejudice that deprived the accused of his right to a fair trial.
    CLOSING ARGUMENT - SCOPE OF CLOSING ARGUMENT - RHETORICAL
    FLOURISH
    The trial court did not commit reversible error by overruling defense counsel’s objection
    to the prosecutor’s closing arguments when the prosecutor described the teenage victim
    who testified at trial as having been “dragged through the mud” and argued to the jury that
    the victim’s mental health history “did not matter.” The comments were an attempt to
    encourage the jurors to consider the victim’s perspective when assessing the credibility of
    her testimony and were within the scope of permissible closing argument.
    Circuit Court for Kent County
    Case No. C-14-CR-19-000193
    REPORTED
    IN THE COURT OF SPECIAL APPEALS
    OF MARYLAND
    No. 1273
    September Term, 2020
    ______________________________________
    EVERETT SMITH
    v.
    STATE OF MARYLAND
    ______________________________________
    Berger,
    Wells,
    Ripken,
    JJ.
    ______________________________________
    Opinion by Berger, J.
    ______________________________________
    Filed: October 27, 2021
    Pursuant to Maryland Uniform Electronic Legal
    Materials Act
    (§§ 10-1601 et seq. of the State Government Article) this document is authentic.
    2021-10-27 12:42-04:00
    Suzanne C. Johnson, Clerk
    Following a jury trial in the Circuit Court for Kent County, Everett Smith, appellant,
    was convicted of second-degree child abuse and second-degree assault. On appeal, Smith
    presents two issues for our review, which we have rephrased as follows:
    1.     Whether Smith’s right to a fair trial by a fair tribunal
    was violated when the circuit court denied Smith’s
    request that courtroom bailiffs not wear “thin blue line”
    face masks during Smith’s trial.
    2.     Whether the circuit court abused its discretion in its
    regulation of the prosecutor’s closing argument.
    For the reasons explained herein, we shall answer both questions in the negative and affirm
    the judgment of the circuit court.
    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    On October 3, 2019, an altercation occurred between Smith and his
    fourteen-year-old daughter, L.H. At the time, L.H. and Smith were both residing at L.H.’s
    grandmother’s home. L.H.’s telephone privileges had been revoked due to her behavior,
    but L.H. picked up a cordless telephone in the dining room to make a telephone call. L.H.’s
    grandfather had recently passed away, and L.H. wanted to call her other grandmother,
    whom L.H. described as her “safe person” in times when she was “in a state of mind where
    it’s not really safe for [her].” L.H. was feeling “very anxious” and was experiencing a
    “panic attack.” L.H. had previously experienced panic attacks, which presented with
    symptoms including “blanking out,” where she did not “have full recollection of things”
    and was “not fully aware.”
    Smith saw L.H. pick up the cordless phone and began yelling at her, asking, “What
    are you doing and who are you calling?” Smith “grabbed the phone from [L.H.]” and hung
    it up. When L.H. “went to grab it again,” Smith “got close to [L.H.] and smashed the phone
    on [her] head and threw it on the floor.” Smith “continued to be in [L.H.’s] face so [she]
    couldn’t really get away.”
    L.H. “pushed him away gently” in order to “get away from the situation.” She
    walked toward the door, but Smith “got in [her] face right after that and began to hit [her].”
    Smith “punch[ed]” her multiple times on her head. L.H. “put [her] hands up on [her] head
    to try to protect [her]self as much as [she] could,” but Smith continued to strike her. L.H.
    “tried to go out the back door,” but Smith “continued to follow [her], cuss at [her], scream
    at [her] and everything.” L.H. eventually was able to get out of the house. She ran out into
    the street screaming for help. L.H. ran down the street to her cousin’s house. L.H. told her
    cousin that Smith was “trying to kill [her]” and asked her cousin to call the police, but she
    did not.
    L.H. went to her aunt’s porch “which was across the street” and saw Smith standing
    “outside trying to block the door” of L.H.’s grandmother’s house. Ultimately, L.H. spent
    the night at her cousin’s house. L.H. was “not feeling well” and was “dizzy.” She was
    able to sleep that night, but the next morning, she vomited after eating breakfast. L.H.’s
    aunt called 911 and L.H. was subsequently transported to the hospital by an ambulance.
    On cross-examination, defense counsel inquired, inter alia, as to whether L.H.
    remembered the incident accurately in light of the panic attack she was experiencing at the
    time. L.H. testified regarding her mental health history, explaining that she had received a
    2
    “pre-diagnosis” of bipolar disorder, which she explained as “steps to bipolar.”1 L.H.
    testified that she had been previously diagnosed with bipolar disorder, but medical
    professionals informed her “that it was a misdiagnosis.” L.H. acknowledged that she had
    been diagnosed with depression, anxiety, and post-traumatic stress disorder and that she
    was taking Prozac. When asked whether her panic attacks were “related to the diagnoses
    of depression, anxiety and PTSD,” L.H. responded: “Suicidal comes with my head
    thoughts. Those will come with the depression, anxiety and PTSD.”
    State Trooper Tanner Nickerson, the officer who responded to L.H.’s aunt’s 911
    call, testified at trial. Smith told Trooper Nickerson that he struck L.H. “one time with an
    open hand.” When Trooper Nickerson asked Smith how many times he hit L.H., Smith
    “stated ‘I’m not really sure.’” Smith told Trooper Nickerson that “he wished to press
    charges on [L.H.]” because “he did nothing wrong and he was in self-defense.”
    Trooper Nickerson went to the hospital where L.H. had been transported. Trooper
    Nickerson testified that “[t]he doctor told me directly that, yes, they did a brain scan on
    [L.H.] that came back clear” but “[t]hey believe that she had received a concussion.”
    Trooper Nickerson did not observe any other physical injuries on L.H. Trooper Nickerson
    testified that L.H. told him that she had been struck with hands and elbows on her head.
    Smith called L.H. as a witness during his case-in-chief. When defense counsel
    inquired as to whether L.H. had “any long-term problem as a result of [her] concussion,”
    L.H. answered that she experienced headaches as a result of her injuries.
    1
    L.H. testified that the “only reason [medical professionals] said that [she had
    bipolar disorder] is because [her] parents have it.”
    3
    Smith was convicted of second-degree child abuse and second-degree assault
    stemming from this incident. He received a sentence of fifteen years’ imprisonment with
    all but five years suspended for the child abuse offense and a concurrent sentence of five
    years’ imprisonment for the assault offense, to be followed by a five-year term of
    probation. Smith noted a timely appeal. Additional facts shall be discussed as necessitated
    by our consideration of the issues raised on appeal.
    I.
    The first issue raised by Smith on appeal focuses upon the trial court’s denial of
    Smith’s request that the trial court prohibit bailiffs from wearing “thin blue line” flag face
    masks in the courtroom.2 Prior to the start of the trial, defense counsel objected to the “thin
    blue line” flag face mask that courtroom bailiffs were wearing, raising the issue in the
    following exchange:
    [DEFENSE COUNSEL]: So the defense has raised a couple
    of questions and I wanted to formally address those at this time.
    I think, first and foremost, we did not file a line or some
    sort of motion to preclude this from happening but have been
    communicating with the State and the [c]ourt over a period of
    a week or more regarding the facial coverings that the bailiffs
    have been ordered to wear.
    These facial coverings, as I understand it, are not a
    choice that the bailiffs have in terms of wearing or not wearing
    but, rather, have been ordered by the elected sheriff of this
    county to be as part of their uniform.
    These facial coverings, for the record, depict[] what is
    commonly [known] as the thin blue line, American Flag. It’s
    2
    The trial occurred during the COVID-19 public health emergency when face
    masks were required throughout Maryland’s courthouses.
    4
    a black and white copy of an American Flag with one of the
    bars across instead of being in black, it is in blue. It makes a
    visual representation of this concept of a thin blue line as
    something that the police are standing between order and
    chaos. That they -- it is inherently a political statement. It is
    often used as a counterpoint in terms of arguments about
    whether black lives matter and if that’s a political statement or
    not, this is often a counterpoint and an argument I think is
    inherently a political statement, especially if it’s ordered by
    someone elected in political office.
    I think that the [c]ourt can exercise its judicial power in
    establishing decorum and procedures in this courtroom and I
    think it, in fact, is inherent in judicial ethics to make sure that
    the Defendant receives every appearance of a fair trial and, in
    fact, does receive a fair trial.
    The Defendant, Mr. Smith, and I have discussed this
    matter. He feels that the presence of this emblem on the facial
    coverings of the bailiffs indicates a bias in favor o[f] either
    police o[r] the State and therefore is preventing him from
    receiving --
    THE COURT: Doesn’t their . . . uniform do that?
    [DEFENSE COUNSEL]: I don’t believe that the uniform of a
    police office[r] is an inherently political statement.
    I think that the facial covering, and this particular
    emblem, is used both by members of the police but also by
    member[s] of the public to indicate a political statement in
    support of police and in contradiction to some of the
    movements, social movements, that we’re seeing today.
    And, for that reason, Mr. Smith believes that having that
    representation on the facial coverings is making a political
    statement in a place that is supposed to be unbiased and
    providing a neutral and fair place for his trial today.
    THE COURT: Okay. [Prosecutor].
    [THE PROSECUTOR]: Thank you, Your Honor.
    5
    I don’t think we can just assume that it is a political
    statement. I don’t think we can take [defense counsel]’s
    argument for what that stands for [at] face value.
    There’s no evidence before the [c]ourt or the testimony
    from the sheriff or from the deputy what exactly this means. It
    simply is an American Flag with a blue stripe. There are no
    words present on it that convey anything.
    The fact that it may even be political speech would inure
    more protections for it.
    I think that argument, you know, has a little more merit,
    probably not any merit, but a little more merit with a uniform
    versus what is protected, constitutionally protected speech.
    So the question is whether this mask, which it is the
    deputy’s constitutional right to wear, whether that infringes on
    the Defendant’s constitutional right to a fair and impartial trial.
    And I would submit that any potential bias is -- from -- from a
    face covering that probably nobody even noticed would be
    completely diminished by an officer wearing a uniform with a
    badge and a firearm.
    And I think that this argument that this face mask needs
    to be swapped for something different just doesn’t hold water.
    Moreover, the mask, in and of itself, has more
    protections than a standard even paper mask that Your Honor’s
    wearing. It’s thick. It’s got a filter. It serves a function[al]
    purpose to keep the deputies safe, beyond that which most
    people would wear.
    Now that’s argument and I can, you know, call the
    deputy to the stand and see if he has any knowledge of that but
    I don’t think that this even gets -- the Defendant hasn’t met his
    burden to even have this considered by the [c]ourt.
    There’s absolutely just conjecture and argument but
    really no substance.
    THE COURT: All right. [Defense counsel.]
    [DEFENSE COUNSEL]: But, Judge, an[ec]dotally, just for
    the [c]ourt’s awareness, a similar email was sent by the deputy
    6
    public defender for Baltimore County to the court system there
    and they agreed with the public defender in that instance that
    this should not be present in the court procee[dings].
    I’m happy to elicit testimony from the deputy who is
    present in the courtroom right now regarding whether or not he
    has been ordered to wear this face mask. I think that the State’s
    argument that it’s political speech and it would be the deputy’s
    choice, is not present here because then he -- I don’t believe he
    has the choice whether or not to wear that.
    I think the only thing that would prevent him from
    wearing that is an order from this [c]ourt.
    The trial court “assume[d], for the sake of argument [that the mask is] a political
    statement,” noting that “that’s only one possible interpretation.” The trial court commented
    that “the case law is pretty clear that the courthouse is a public forum and that it’s -- political
    speech is constitutionally protected and any regulation to limit it has to be narrowly tailored
    to serve a compelling government interest.” The trial court further commented that “it’s
    the [c]ourt’s ability to enforce the decorum as the [c]ourt sees fit but it has -- that has to be
    done within the framework of the constitution.”
    Ultimately, the court denied Smith’s request, explaining its ruling as follows:
    Well, the [c]ourt’s heard argument here today. The
    [c]ourt’s going to find that while it is, you know, arguable, it’s
    potential that these are intended to be a political statement,
    there is no evidence to suggest that that’s what, in fact, it is;
    that it’s merely something that the elected sheriff of this
    county has purchased for whatever reason and required his
    deputies to wear that it -- that even if it does reach the level of
    being only worn for -- to make some sort of political
    statement, that it’s protected by the First Amendment to the
    Constitution in a public forum and therefore the [c]ourt’s
    going to deny the request.
    7
    On appeal, Smith asserts that the trial court both abused its discretion and erred as
    a matter of law by denying his request that the court prohibit the bailiff from wearing a
    face mask depicting the “thin blue line” flag symbol in the courtroom. Smith contends that
    the “thin blue line” flag symbol is “a provocative, pro-police symbol” and asserts that the
    trial court “sabotaged [Smith’s] right to due process and a fair trial” by permitting the mask
    to be worn. As we shall explain, we shall hold that the bailiff’s wearing of the “thin blue
    line” mask in the courtroom was not so inherently prejudicial as to deprive Smith of a fair
    trial.
    First, we briefly address Smith’s contention that the trial court incorrectly applied
    the First Amendment standard for a public forum rather than a nonpublic forum. Smith
    devotes several pages of his brief to his argument that the trial court erred by determining
    that the symbol on the bailiff’s mask “was protected by the First Amendment to the
    Constitution in a public forum.” Smith asserts that the trial court’s determination that a
    courthouse is a public forum was incorrect. The State concedes that although this precise
    issue has not been addressed by this Court or the Court of Appeals, the weight of authority
    outside Maryland has found that a courtroom is a nonpublic forum for First Amendment
    purposes. We agree. See, e.g., Mezibov v. Allen, 
    411 F.3d 712
    , 718 (6th Cir. 2005) (“The
    courtroom is a nonpublic forum, where the First Amendment rights of everyone (attorneys
    included) are at their constitutional nadir. In fact, the courtroom is unique even among
    nonpublic fora because within its confines we regularly countenance the application of
    even viewpoint-discriminatory restrictions on speech.”); Berner v. Delahanty, 
    129 F.3d 20
    ,
    26 (1st Cir. 1997) (“A courthouse -- and, especially, a courtroom -- is a nonpublic forum.”).
    8
    In a nonpublic forum, the government has “much more flexibility to craft rules
    limiting speech” and “may reserve such a forum ‘for its intended purposes, communicative
    or otherwise, as long as the regulation on speech is reasonable and not an effort to suppress
    expression merely because public officials oppose the speaker’s view.’” Minnesota Voters
    Alliance v. Mansky, ___ U.S.___, 
    138 S. Ct. 1876
    , 1885 (2018) (quoting Perry Ed. Assn. v.
    Perry Local Educators’ Assn., 
    460 U.S. 37
    , 46 (1983)). In this case, however, in light of
    our determination that the wearing of the “thin blue line” flag face mask did not constitute
    inherent prejudice necessitating a new trial, which we shall explain, we need not delve
    further into the public forum issue.
    Smith asserts that the trial court’s decision to permit the courtroom bailiff to wear a
    “thin blue line” face mask in the courtroom was so inherently prejudicial as to deprive him
    of his right to a fair trial. We note that Smith does not assert actual prejudice as a result of
    the bailiff’s mask. Rather, Smith asserts that the bailiff’s thin blue line face mask was
    inherently prejudicial.
    “[C]ertain courtroom practices are so inherently prejudicial that they deprive the
    defendant of a fair trial.” Carey v. Musladin, 
    549 U.S. 70
    , 72 (2006). “Whenever a
    courtroom arrangement is challenged as inherently prejudicial, therefore, the question must
    be not whether jurors actually articulated a consciousness of some prejudicial effect, but
    rather whether ‘an unacceptable risk is presented of impermissible factors coming into
    play.’” Holbrook v. Flynn, 
    475 U.S. 560
    , 570 (1986) (quoting Estelle v. Williams, 
    435 U.S. 501
    , 505 (1976).
    9
    The Court of Appeals has explained that the determination of whether a particular
    courtroom practice “violate[s] a defendant’s due process rights must be made upon a case-
    by-case basis.” Bruce v. State, 
    318 Md. 706
    , 721 (1990). A reviewing court must
    look at the scene presented to jurors and determine whether
    what they saw was so inherently prejudicial as to pose an
    unacceptable threat to defendant’s right to a fair trial; if the
    challenged practice is not found inherently prejudicial and if
    the defendant fails to show actual prejudice, the inquiry is over.
    
    Id.
     (quoting Holbrook, 
    supra,
     
    475 U.S. at 572
    ). Practices that have been held to be
    inherently prejudicial include the compelling of an accused to stand trial before a jury while
    dressed in identifiable prison clothes, Estelle, supra, 435 U.S. at 512,3 and the “use of
    physical restraints visible to the jury, absent a trial court determination, in the exercise of
    its discretion, that they are justified by a state interest specific to a particular trial.” Deck v.
    Missouri, 
    544 U.S. 622
    , 629 (2005). Inherent prejudice is “difficult to establish.” Hill v.
    Ozmint, 
    339 F.3d 187
    , 199 (4th Cir. 2003).
    In contrast, the presence of identifiable law enforcement officers in the courtroom
    does not generally implicate a due process concern:
    The chief feature that distinguishes the use of identifiable
    security officers from courtroom practices we might find
    inherently prejudicial is the wider range of inferences that a
    juror might reasonably draw from the officers’ presence.
    While shackling and prison clothes are unmistakable
    indications of the need to separate a defendant from the
    community at large, the presence of guards at a defendant’s
    trial need not be interpreted as a sign that he is particularly
    dangerous or culpable. Jurors may just as easily believe that
    the officers are there to guard against disruptions emanating
    3
    In Estelle, the Court held that the defendant in that case had waived any objection
    to being tried in prison clothes by failing to object at trial. 
    Id. at 512-513
    .
    10
    from outside the courtroom or to ensure that tense courtroom
    exchanges do not erupt into violence. Indeed, it is entirely
    possible that jurors will not infer anything at all from the
    presence of the guards. If they are placed at some distance
    from the accused, security officers may well be perceived more
    as elements of an impressive drama than as reminders of the
    defendant’s special status. Our society has become inured to
    the presence of armed guards in most public places; they are
    doubtless taken for granted so long as their numbers or
    weaponry do not suggest particular official concern or alarm.
    See Hardee v. Kuhlman, 
    581 F.2d 330
    , 332 (CA2 1978).
    Bruce, 
    supra,
     
    318 Md. at 718-19
     (quoting Holbrook, 
    supra,
     
    475 U.S. at 569
    ) (emphasis
    supplied).
    Smith asserts that the “thin blue line” flag symbol is an inherently political symbol
    that has become popularized as a response to the Black Lives Matter movement and that
    the presence of this symbol on a mask worn by a courtroom bailiff deprived him of a fair
    trial. Smith cites an NPR article discussing the controversy around the “thin blue line” flag
    symbol, observing that proponents say that the symbol “is meant to represent the men and
    women in blue standing as a line between law and order . . . and it’s been hung as a show
    of police pride and solidarity.” Smith, T. Thin Blue Line Flags Stir Controversy in Mass.
    Coastal Community, NPR (July 1, 2020), available at https://www.npr.org/2020/07/
    31/897615425/thin-blue-line-flags-stir-controversy-in-mass-coastal-community (accessed
    October 7, 2021), archived at https://perma.cc/2H4W-8H77. The article explains that
    others characterize the symbol differently, observing that “[b]ecause the flag has also been
    associated with white supremacist groups, some say it symbolizes a blatantly racist agenda.
    And since it has also been adopted by the ‘Blue Lives Matter’ movement, which launched
    11
    in response to the Black Lives Matter movement, many believe it connotes opposition to
    the goals of ending police brutality and systemic racism.” 
    Id.
    In further support of his assertion that the bailiff’s “thin blue line” flag face mask
    was inherently prejudicial, Smith points to several additional articles and sources. Smith
    directs our attention to an opinion piece by Jeff Sharletis, an Associate Professor of English
    and creative writing at Dartmouth College, who argues that the thin blue line symbol “poses
    the old question of organized labor -- which side are you on? -- as a loyalty test” and
    emphasizes the connection between the symbol and the “Blue Lives Matter movement,
    which began after the December 20, 2014, slaying of two New York City police officers.”
    Jeff Sharletis, A Flag for Trump’s America, Harpers (July 2018), available at
    https://harpers.org/archive/2018/07/a-flag-for-trumps-america/      (accessed   October     7,
    2021), archived at https://perma.cc/YC56-K3G2. Smith also directs our attention to an
    article authored by Professor Seth Stoughton of the University of South Carolina School
    of Law, who described the “thin blue line” as an “intentionally evocative” symbol that has
    had “multiple variations . . . all of which depict law enforcement as standing alone, the
    only barrier that protects an otherwise helpless society.” Seth W. Stoughton, Principled
    Policing: Warrior Cops and Guardian Officers, 51 Wake Forest L. Rev. 611, 636 (2016).
    In his reply brief, Smith quotes extensively from a piece from the Baltimore Sun
    Editorial Board that was published in response to a mandate issued by Chief Judge John P.
    Morrissey of the Maryland District Court banning all District Court employees from
    wearing any items displaying the “thin blue line symbol” in the Maryland District Court
    12
    courthouses.4 The Editorial Board praised Judge Morrisey’s action, commenting that “thin
    blue line” flag symbol “is problematic wherever -- and by whomever -- it’s worn, given its
    association with white supremacist groups and others offended by the Black Lives Matter
    movement and protests over police killings of Black people.” Baltimore Sun Editorial
    Board, Banning ‘Thin Blue Line’ Masks In Maryland District Courts The Right Thing To
    Do, Circuit Courts Must Follow, Baltimore Sun (May 7, 2021), available at
    https://www.baltimoresun.com/opinion/editorial/bs-ed-0510-blue-line-maryland-courts-
    20210507-jjtvek6ljzemfnt5lznksd3joa-story.html (accessed October 7, 2021), archived at
    https://perma.cc/VA99-WHLX. The Editorial Board maintains that “[e]mployees who don
    the [“thin blue line”] mask risk giving the impression that the courts would favor police in
    cases involving charges against law enforcement, or that they might even take a hard stance
    against any defendant and give police the benefit of the doubt in all cases.” 
    Id.
     The Board
    further contends that “[w]hether that’s in fact the case or not [in a particular case] matters
    little; even the perception of bias hurts the credibility of the court.” 
    Id.
    No doubt, the “thin blue line” flag is perceived by many as a racist symbol
    antithetical to the Black Lives Matter Movement. Others, however, perceive the “thin blue
    line” flag to be a general symbol of support of law enforcement or pride in policing. In
    this appeal, however, we are not asked to determine whether the wearing of a “thin blue
    line” flag face mask by courtroom bailiffs is a wise practice, or whether Chief Judge
    Morrissey’s prohibition of the wearing of such symbols in the District Court of Maryland
    4
    We were not provided with a copy of Judge Morrissey’s order. Some language
    from the order is quoted in “The Sun” Editorial Board’s piece.
    13
    was a prudent and sensible decision.5 Indeed, Judge Morrissey’s determination that
    “[e]mployees of the District Court wearing any clothing item or apparel which promotes
    or displays a logo, sticker, pin, patch, slogan, or sign which may be perceived as showing
    bias or favoritism to a particular group of people could undermine the District Court’s
    mission of fair, efficient, and effective justice for all and call into question the Judiciary’s
    obligation to remain impartial and unbiased” is eminently reasonable. It is entirely
    appropriate for the judiciary and individual judges to take measures to ensure that all court
    personnel -- from the judge to the courtroom clerk to the bailiff -- appear neutral and
    unbiased at all times. In this appeal, however, we are mindful of the precise determination
    before us: whether the wearing of a “thin blue line” flag face mask by a courtroom bailiff
    is so inherently prejudicial as to deprive an accused of his constitutional right to due
    process.
    Smith asserts that courtroom bailiffs and other staff are “extensions of the court”
    and must exhibit the same neutrality expected from the presiding judge. 6 In connection
    5
    We note that Judge Morrissey, as Chief Judge of the District Court of Maryland,
    is vested with the authority to make decisions regarding court policy in district court
    locations throughout Maryland. Alternatively, each county circuit court is led by an
    administrative judge who oversees the day-to-day operations and has the authority to set
    similar policies for the circuit court of each county.
    6
    Smith cites Maryland Rule 4-326(d) in support of this assertion. Rule 4-326(d)
    addresses “Communications with Jury” and provides as follows:
    (1) Instruction to Use Juror Number. The judge shall instruct
    the jury, in any preliminary instructions and in instructions
    given prior to jury deliberations that, in any written
    14
    communication from a juror, the juror shall be identified only
    by juror number.
    (2) Notification of Judge; Duty of Judge.
    (A) A court official or employee who receives any written or
    oral communication from the jury or a juror shall immediately
    notify the presiding judge of the communication.
    (B) The judge shall determine whether the communication
    pertains to the action. If the judge determines that the
    communication does not pertain to the action, the judge may
    respond as he or she deems appropriate.
    (C) If the judge determines that the communication pertains to
    the action, the judge shall promptly, and before responding to
    the communication, direct that the parties be notified of the
    communication and invite and consider, on the record, the
    parties’ position on any response. The judge may respond to
    the communication in writing or orally in open court on the
    record.
    (3) Duty of Clerk.
    (A) The clerk shall enter on the docket (i) the date and time that
    each communication from the jury or a juror was received by
    or reported to the judge, (ii) whether the communication was
    written or oral, and, if oral, the nature of the communication,
    (iii) whether the judge concluded that the communication
    pertained to the action, and (iv) if so, whether the parties and
    attorneys were notified and had an opportunity on the record to
    state their position on any response.
    (B) The clerk shall enter in the electronic or paper file each
    written communication from the jury or a juror and each
    written response by the judge. Any identification of a juror
    other than the juror number shall be redacted.
    (C) In any entry made by the clerk, a juror shall be identified
    only by juror number.
    Md. Rule 4-326(d). We do not read Rule 4-326(d) as providing that courtroom bailiffs are
    to be considered extensions of the presiding judge.
    15
    with this argument, Smith discusses the case of Parker v. Gladden, 
    385 U.S. 363
    , 364
    (1966). In Parker, the Supreme Court emphasized that “the official character of the
    bailiff -- as an officer of the court as well as the State -- beyond question carries great
    weight with a jury which he had been shepherding for eight days and nights.” 
    Id. at 365
    .
    The issue in Parker involved a bailiff who told certain jurors that a defendant was a
    “wicked fellow” who was “guilty” and that “[i]f there is anything wrong (in finding [the
    defendant] guilty),” the appellate court “will correct it.” 
    Id. at 363-64
    . We do not read
    Parker as broadly as Smith suggests. The Parker Court’s comment that the bailiff was “an
    officer of the court” was within the context of assessing the impact of the bailiff’s
    inappropriate comments to the jury. The characterization of the bailiff as “an officer of the
    court” was not a broad statement that the standard of conduct for a bailiff should be
    identical to that of a judge.
    Indeed, as we discussed supra, the presence of uniformed law enforcement officers
    is a common practice in courtrooms across Maryland and across the United States and does
    not constitute inherent prejudice that would deprive an accused of the right to due process.
    See, e.g., Bruce, 
    supra, 720-21
     (1990) (determining that the presence of a uniformed
    sheriff’s deputy near the defendant in the courtroom was reasonable). A judge, on the other
    hand, would not be able to wear a police uniform in the courtroom without conveying an
    inappropriate pro-prosecution message.
    The United States Supreme Court has explained that “[t]he chief feature that
    distinguishes the use of identifiable security officers from courtroom practices we might
    find inherently prejudicial is the wider range of inferences that a juror might reasonably
    16
    draw from the officers’ presence.” Holbrook, supra, 
    475 U.S. at 569
    . In our view, a
    similarly wide range of inferences could have been drawn from the bailiff’s “thin blue line”
    face mask. Even one of the authors cited by Smith in support of his assertion that the “thin
    blue line” symbol is inherently prejudicial acknowledges that the symbol is interpreted
    differently by different individuals.
    For example, the NPR article cited by Smith observes that “some [people] see [the
    ‘thin blue line’ flag] as a proud tribute to police officers, and others denounce [it] as a racist
    symbol.” Smith, T., supra. The flag has been “flown at Trump campaign rallies, at the
    white supremacist rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, and worn as face masks by officers
    policing the Black Lives Matter protests in 2020,” but also has been “used to show support
    and mourn the deaths of five Dallas police officers who were ambushed by a gunman in
    2016.” Lauren Frias, The ‘Thin Blue Line’: How a Simple Phrase Became a Controversial
    Symbol of the Police, Insider (February 24, 2021), available at https://www.
    insider.com/how-thin-blue-line-became-controversial-symbol-to-represent-police-2021-2
    (accessed October 7, 2021), archived at https://perma.cc/GU5F-PM92. The creator of the
    “thin blue line” American Flag, Andrew Jacob, asserts that “[t]he flag has no association
    with racism, hatred, [or] bigotry” but rather is “a flag to show support for law enforcement
    -- no politics involved.”      Id.   Although the symbol has been affiliated with white
    supremacists and extremist events, some continue to view the “thin blue line” flag as a
    symbol of pride or support. Dallas Police Sgt. Stephen Bishop explained that “whenever
    he sees ‘that flag as a sticker on a car or flying in someone’s yard, I know that there is
    someone there that knows what I’m going through.’” Id.
    17
    In our view, the symbol of the “thin blue line” flag does not have one generally
    accepted meaning but instead is interpreted as meaning a variety of different things.
    Notably, the context in which the “thin blue line” face mask was displayed in this case
    must be considered. Specifically, the “thin blue line” flag at issue in this case appeared on
    the face mask of a uniformed and armed law enforcement officer serving as a courtroom
    bailiff.7 Inasmuch as the “thin blue line” flag is seen by some as a symbol of general
    support for law enforcement, a reasonable juror may have inferred that the law enforcement
    officer wearing the “thin blue line” flag face mask was doing so in order to display his
    pride in being a law enforcement officer.8 As in Holbrook, jurors may have drawn a
    “wide[] range of inferences” from the bailiff’s face mask. Accordingly, we reject Smith’s
    inherent prejudice argument and hold that the wearing of a “thin blue line” flag face mask
    by a uniformed courtroom bailiff did not constitute inherent prejudice depriving Smith of
    his right to a fair trial.
    We are mindful to make explicit what this opinion does not hold. We do not suggest
    that a bailiff wearing a “thin blue line” flag face mask is a good practice, nor do we suggest
    that prejudice can never arise in different circumstances in which actual prejudice rather
    than inherent prejudice is alleged. Indeed, a litigant may have a reasonable argument that
    7
    We note that there is nothing in the record about the specific role of this particular
    bailiff in the courtroom, the specific location where the bailiff was positioned in the
    courtroom, or the manner in which the bailiff interacted with jurors. This limited record
    fails to support a finding of inherent prejudice.
    8
    That the bailiff was required to wear this particular mask at the direction of the
    Kent County Sherriff is irrelevant to the inherent prejudice determination.
    18
    a bailiff wearing a “thin blue line” flag face mask caused actual prejudice in a case
    involving, for example, allegations of excessive force or other misconduct by a law
    enforcement officer, or in a case in which a law enforcement officer’s credibility is weighed
    against that of a layperson. Our opinion in this case does not foreclose such an argument.
    Furthermore, a prohibition on the wearing of “thin blue line” symbols by courthouse staff
    may be a prudent prophylactic measure to avoid issues on appeal, as well as to err on the
    side of caution to ensure litigants’ right to a neutral and fair tribunal. Here, however, we
    do not deal with allegations of actual prejudice. Our holding, therefore, is limited to the
    inherent prejudice argument raised in this case and discussed supra.
    II.
    The second issue raised by Smith on appeal stems from a comment made by the
    prosecutor during rebuttal closing argument. Specifically, Smith asserts that the circuit
    court abused its discretion by overruling his objection in the following exchange:
    [THE PROSECUTOR]: [L.H.] told you that she’s now living
    in Georgia. Far away from the [S]tate of Maryland. She came
    up here, 15 years old, got on that stand and . . . . She had to
    reveal mental health diagnoses. She had to withstand an
    intense cross-examination . . . about minute by minute, second
    by second, things that happened over a year ago, October 4,
    2019, over a year ago.
    Imagine, 15 years old. And she’s been dragged through the
    mud today. And none of that matters.
    [DEFENSE COUNSEL]:              I’m going to object to that
    statement.
    THE COURT: Overruled. It’s argument.
    [THE PROSECUTOR]: None of that matters. What matters
    are the things that are relevant, things that relate to the crimes
    19
    charged. Her life, her history, her mental health, that is not on
    trial here. It is for you to evaluate certainly the testimony and
    things related to that. But do not disregard what she has to say
    simply because she’s had a rough life.
    We recently summarized principles and precedent governing our review of closing
    argument as follows in Winston v. State, 
    235 Md. App. 540
    , 572-73 (2018).
    “A trial court is in the best position to evaluate the
    propriety of a closing argument[.]” Ingram v. State, 
    427 Md. 717
    , 726, 
    50 A.3d 1127
     (2012) (citing Mitchell v. State, 
    408 Md. 368
    , 380-81, 
    969 A.2d 989
     (2009)). Therefore, we shall
    not disturb the ruling at trial “unless there has been an abuse of
    discretion likely to have injured the complaining party.”
    Grandison v. State, 
    341 Md. 175
    , 243, 
    670 A.2d 398
     (1995)
    (citing Henry v. State, 
    324 Md. 204
    , 231, 
    596 A.2d 1024
    (1991). Trial courts have broad discretion in determining the
    propriety of closing arguments. See Shelton v. State, 
    207 Md. App. 363
    , 386, 
    52 A.3d 995
     (2012).
    “[A]ttorneys are afforded great leeway in presenting
    closing arguments[.]” Degren v. State, 
    352 Md. 400
    , 429, 
    722 A.2d 887
     (1999). “‘The prosecutor is allowed liberal freedom
    of speech and may make any comment that is warranted by the
    evidence or inferences reasonably drawn therefrom.’” 
    Id. at 429-30,
     
    722 A.2d 887
    . “Generally, counsel has the right to
    make any comment or argument that is warranted by the
    evidence proved or inferences therefrom; the prosecuting
    attorney is as free to comment legitimately and to speak fully,
    although harshly, on the accused’s action and conduct if the
    evidence supports his comments, as is [the] accused’s counsel
    to comment on the nature of the evidence and the character of
    witnesses which the (prosecution) produces.” Wilhelm v. State,
    272 Md. [404, 412, 
    326 A.2d 707
     (1974)]; accord Degren v.
    State, 
    352 Md. at 430,
     
    722 A.2d 887
    .
    While arguments of counsel are required to be
    confined to the issues in the cases on trial, the
    evidence and fair and reasonable deductions
    therefrom, and to arguments [of] opposing
    counsel, generally speaking, liberal freedom of
    speech should be allowed. There are no hard-
    20
    and-fast limitations within which the argument
    of earnest counsel must be confined – no well-
    defined bounds beyond which the eloquence of
    an advocate shall not soar. He may discuss the
    facts proved or admitted in the pleadings, assess
    the conduct of the parties, and attack the
    credibility of witnesses. He may indulge in
    oratorical conceit or flourish and in
    illustrations and metaphorical allusions.
    Wilhelm v. State, 
    272 Md. at 413,
     
    326 A.2d 707
    ; accord
    Degren v. State, 
    352 Md. at 430,
     
    722 A.2d 887
    .
    Even when a prosecutor’s remark is improper, it will typically
    merit reversal only “‘where it appears that the remarks of the
    prosecutor actually misled the jury or were likely to have
    misled or influenced the jury to the prejudice of the accused.’”
    Lawson v. State, 
    389 Md. 570
    , 592, 
    886 A.2d 876
     (2005)
    (quoting Spain v. State, 
    386 Md. 145
    , 158-59, 
    872 A.2d 25
    (2005)).
    Winston v. State, 
    235 Md. App. 540
    , 572-73 (2018) (emphasis supplied).
    Although Smith acknowledges the wide latitude granted to attorneys in closing
    argument, Smith asserts that the prosecutor’s comments that L.H. had been “dragged
    through the mud” and that certain topics raised during cross-examination “did not matter”
    undermined Smith’s Constitutional right to confront his accuser and improperly denigrated
    defense counsel. As we shall explain, we perceive no such abuse of discretion by the trial
    judge in the regulation of the prosecutor’s rebuttal closing argument.
    Smith asserts that when the prosecutor commented that L.H. had been “dragged
    through the mud,” the prosecutor improperly conveyed that Smith had subjected L.H. to
    re-victimization and trauma by exercising his right to cross-examine L.H.           Smith
    analogizes to the case of People v. Unger, 
    749 N.W.2d 272
     (Mich. Ct. App. 2008), in which
    21
    the Court of Appeals of Michigan commented that “the prosecution exceeded the bounds
    of proper argument when it suggested that defense counsel had ‘re-victimized’ [the victim]
    during the course of trial.” 
    Id. at 293
    . In our view, the prosecutor’s comment that L.H.
    had been “dragged through the mud” was not an attack on the defense but an attempt to
    encourage the jurors to consider L.H.’s perspective when assessing the credibility of her
    testimony. However inartful, the comment was within the range of “oratorical conceit or
    flourish” and “metaphorical allusions” permissible in closing argument. Wilhelm, supra,
    
    272 Md. at 413
    .
    Moreover, Smith concedes that the Court of Appeals of Michigan determined that
    the improper argument in Unger did not warrant reversal. 
    749 N.W.2d at 293
    . The court
    determined that the comments were “relatively brief and did not likely deflect the jury’s
    attention from the evidence presented in this case” and also reasoned that the court had
    instructed the jury at the conclusion of trial that “[t]he attorneys’ statements and arguments
    are not evidence” and that the jury “should only accept things the attorneys say that are
    supported by the evidence or by your own common sense and general knowledge.” 
    Id.
     In
    this case, the trial court propounded the following similar jury instruction:
    [T]he lawyers are permitted to give closing arguments. These
    arguments are not evidence. They are an opportunity for the
    lawyers to summarize to you and comment on the evidence that
    you have heard and to argue as to how you should decide the
    charges in this case.
    Accordingly, we reject Smith’s assertion that the prosecutor’s reference to L.H. being
    “dragged through the mud” constitutes reversible error.
    22
    Furthermore, in our view, the prosecutor’s reference to issues that “did not matter”
    was also within the range of acceptable closing argument. Smith asserts that this comment
    was similar to a comment held to be improper in Beads v. State, 
    422 Md. 1
    , 8 (2011). We
    disagree. In Beads, the prosecutor commented in closing argument that it was defense
    counsel’s job “to throw up some smoke, to lob a grenade, to confuse.” 
    Id.
     The Court of
    Appeals agreed with the petitioner that these comments were improper but nonetheless
    determined that “[t]he prosecutor’s comments about the role of defense counsel, although
    inappropriate, are unlikely to have ‘misled or influenced the jury to the prejudice of the
    accused,” and, therefore, did not constitute reversible error.
    The allegedly improper comment in this case was much more limited and less
    extreme than those in Beads. The prosecutor did not cast aspersions on the role of defense
    attorneys in general or suggest that defense counsel was attempting to mislead the jury.
    Critically, after the trial court overruled the defense objection, the prosecutor specifically
    reminded the jury that it was their role “to evaluate [L.H’s] testimony and things related to
    that” while asking them to “not disregard what she has to say simply because she’s had a
    rough life.”
    In our view, the prosecutor’s arguments were not improper but were instead
    attempts to encourage the jury to focus on L.H.’s testimony rather than mental health
    matters that the prosecutor asserted were irrelevant to the credibility determination. This
    is within the range of permissible closing argument. Accordingly, we hold that the circuit
    court did not abuse its discretion by overruling Smith’s objection to the prosecutor’s
    rebuttal closing arguments.      Furthermore, assuming arguendo that the prosecutor’s
    23
    comments were in any way improper, there is no indication that the jury was misled by the
    challenged argument. We, therefore, affirm.
    JUDGMENT OF THE CIRCUIT COURT
    FOR KENT COUNTY AFFIRMED. COSTS
    TO BE PAID BY THE APPELLANT.
    24