People of Michigan v. Robert James Carter ( 2018 )


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  •                           STATE OF MICHIGAN
    COURT OF APPEALS
    PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF MICHIGAN,                                   UNPUBLISHED
    February 20, 2018
    Plaintiff-Appellee,
    v                                                                  No. 336265
    Wayne Circuit Court
    ROBERT JAMES CARTER,                                               LC No. 16-001900-01-FC
    Defendant-Appellant.
    Before: SAWYER, P.J., and MURRAY and STEPHENS, JJ.
    PER CURIAM.
    Defendant was convicted by a jury of first-degree murder, MCL 750.316; armed robbery,
    MCL 750.529; and possession of a firearm during the commission of a felony (felony firearm),
    MCL 750.227b. He was sentenced to life in prison without parole for the first-degree murder
    conviction, a term of 20-40 years’ imprisonment for the armed robbery conviction, and the
    mandatory two-year consecutive term of imprisonment for the felony firearm conviction.
    Defendant appeals as of right. We affirm.
    I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND
    Defendant and Drakile Jones, were convicted in separate jury trials of robbing and
    murdering Phillip Pentecost.1 Around midnight on January 26, 2016, defendant and Jones went
    to the home of Justin Harris, with whom Jones had spoken earlier in the day about getting
    together. Shortly before arriving at Harris’s house, Jones called him and inquired about “hitting
    licks” (which meant getting some money) and also about whether Harris had a “stick” (meaning
    a gun). Jones informed Harris that he had a friend with him (defendant), and when Harris
    indicated he was not interested in meeting anyone at that time, Jones reassured Harris that he
    need not worry because defendant was so loyal to Jones that “he would blow [Harris] if [Jones]
    told him to,” meaning he would “shoot” or “kill” Harris. Harris did not take this as a threat, but
    rather as Jones vouching for defendant’s loyalty.
    1
    Jones was tried by a separate jury some months before defendant’s trial and his appeal, Docket
    No. 334635, has been submitted jointly with defendant’s appeal.
    -1-
    Jones subsequently arrived at Harris’s home with defendant. Harris was there with a
    cousin and a friend. Jones discussed “hitting licks” with Harris and again asked whether Harris
    had a “burner” (a gun). Defendant stood nearby but did not participate in the discussion.
    Defendant was armed with a handgun. Eventually, Jones and defendant left the house. Harris
    testified that Pentecost’s car, a black Chevrolet HHR, was parked in a driveway two houses away
    with the engine running; Harris could not determine if Pentecost was inside the car.
    Harris went back inside, but shortly afterwards he heard a gunshot, a scream, and then
    another gunshot. He then saw Pentecost’s car speeding away and went outside to find Pentecost
    lying on the ground bleeding from his head. Harris called 911, got a towel to hold to Pentecost’s
    head, and stayed with him until the police and ambulance arrived. Harris found an iPhone next
    to Pentecost, which he assumed belonged to Pentecost. He picked it up, but the police took it
    from him and later determined that it was defendant’s cell phone. Harris testified that shortly
    after he went back inside his home, he spoke on the telephone with Jones who told him not to
    admit to the police that he had seen Jones. Harris was interviewed by the police and did not
    initially mention defendant or Jones. However, in later interviews he admitted that defendant
    and Jones had been present at his home, and also told them about Jones’s call.
    An autopsy determined that Pentecost had been shot twice: once in the abdomen and once
    in the head. Either shot would have been fatal.
    Tavion Williams 2 testified that defendant came to his house and asked for his help in
    hiding a black Chevrolet. Williams and defendant drove the vehicle around the block and parked
    it behind a store. The following morning, defendant told Williams about the robbery and
    shooting. Defendant left at Williams’ request. Defendant returned that night and asked Williams
    to help dispose of the black Chevrolet; Williams refused and defendant left.
    Subsequently, the fire department discovered a black Chevrolet HHR on fire behind an
    abandoned house. It was determined that the fire had started in the passenger compartment; a
    hidden vehicle identification number revealed the vehicle’s owner and it was determined that
    there was a “hold for homicide” notification associated with the vehicle.
    Eventually, a search was conducted of defendant’s apartment. The police discovered a
    leather jacket that had belonged to Pentecost. The police also used tracking software to follow
    where defendant’s and Jones’s cell phones had been during the time immediately before the
    murder and for the day after the murder. Defendant was interviewed by the police and gave
    several inconsistent versions of what happened during the robbery and murder. Eventually he
    blamed the events on Jones, claiming that Jones had forced him to participate in the robbery and
    then had shot Pentecost. Based on this claim, defendant subsequently offered a duress defense at
    trial. Defendant also admitted that he drove Pentecost’s vehicle away from the scene and later
    disposed of it.
    2
    Williams’s first name was spelled Taevion in Jones’s trial.
    -2-
    II. INEFFECTIVE ASSISTANCE OF COUNSEL
    Defendant first claims that his trial counsel failed to provide effective assistance of
    counsel as required by the Sixth Amendment because he failed to present Tavion Williams as a
    witness. Williams had testified in Jones’s trial about his interaction with defendant shortly after
    the murder, and defendant argues that this testimony would have assisted him in getting the jury
    to accept his duress defense. This claim is without merit.
    Defendant failed to preserve this issue by moving for a new trial or an evidentiary
    hearing in the trial court. People v Payne, 
    285 Mich. App. 181
    , 188; 774 NW2d 714 (2009). This
    Court’s review is therefore limited to the existing record. People v Cox, 
    268 Mich. App. 440
    , 453;
    709 NW2d 152 (2005). Whether defendant received the effective assistance of counsel is a
    mixed question of fact and law. People v Trakhtenberg, 
    493 Mich. 38
    , 47; 826 NW2d 136
    (2012). This Court reviews the trial court’s findings of fact for clear error and reviews questions
    of constitutional law de novo. 
    Trakhtenberg, 493 Mich. at 47
    .
    To establish ineffective assistance of counsel, a defendant must show that his counsel’s
    performance was below an objective standard of reasonableness under prevailing professional
    norms, and that a reasonable probability exists that, without counsel’s unprofessional errors, the
    outcome of the proceedings would have been different. Strickland v Washington, 
    466 U.S. 668
    ,
    687; 
    104 S. Ct. 2052
    ; 
    80 L. Ed. 2d 674
    (1984); People v Pickens, 
    446 Mich. 298
    , 303; 521 NW2d
    797 (1994). “A reasonable probability is a probability sufficient to undermine confidence in the
    outcome.” 
    Strickland, 466 U.S. at 694
    .
    As this Court observed in People v Russell, 
    297 Mich. App. 707
    , 716; 825 NW2d 623
    (2012):
    This Court does not second-guess counsel on matters of trial strategy, nor does it
    assess counsel’s competence with the benefit of hindsight. People v Horn, 
    279 Mich. App. 31
    , 39; 755 NW2d 212 (2008).
    * * *
    Decisions regarding whether to call or question witnesses are presumed to
    be matters of trial strategy. People v Rocky, 
    237 Mich. App. 74
    , 76-77; 601 NW2d
    887 (1999). “[T]he failure to call witnesses only constitutes ineffective assistance
    of counsel if it deprives the defendant of a substantial defense.” People v Dixon,
    
    263 Mich. App. 393
    , 398; 688 NW2d 308 (2004).
    In Russell, this Court found that the trial court abused its discretion in granting a new trial
    based on the trial counsel’s failure to present a witness. This Court noted that the witness’s
    testimony was contradictory and would likely not have benefitted the defendant. Furthermore,
    this Court concluded that even if the trial counsel’s failure to investigate and call the witness was
    deemed an error that fell below an objective standard of reasonableness, the defendant had still
    failed to show that his counsel’s decision had prejudiced him. Counsel had argued that the
    incident was an accident, it was unclear that the witness’s testimony would have assisted the
    -3-
    defense since it was contradictory, and defendant was not denied a substantial defense by the
    absence of the witness’s testimony. 
    Russell, 297 Mich. App. at 718
    .
    After the prosecution rested, defendant’s trial counsel specifically stated that she was
    making a strategic decision not to present Williams as a witness. Williams’s testimony was
    mostly inculpatory with respect to defendant and only minimally exculpatory. Williams testified
    in Jones’s trial that he knew both defendant and Jones. He stated that he received a telephone
    call from defendant on January 27 or 28, 2016, at around 2:00 or 3:00 a.m.; he recognized his
    voice and he also saw defendant’s name appear on the screen. Defendant sounded scared or
    frantic and said he needed somewhere to go and asked if he could come to Williams’s home.
    When defendant arrived, he called Williams and asked him to come outside; Williams found
    defendant seated alone in a black Chevy. Defendant told Williams he needed somewhere to put
    the vehicle, and Williams told him he could put it around the corner. Together they drove the car
    about two blocks away, parked it behind a store, and then walked back to Williams’s house and
    went to sleep. When they awoke the next morning, defendant told Williams that he had
    participated in a robbery and someone had been shot. Williams specifically testified:
    “[Defendant] told me that him and [Jones] was on the west side, and they were looking to make
    some money.” Williams further testified that defendant told him that he and Jones were looking
    to rob someone and found someone to rob. According to Williams, defendant chose whom to
    rob. Williams also testified that defendant and Jones argued over whether it was a good idea to
    go through with the robbery, and according to defendant, Jones threatened to turn the gun against
    him if he did not participate. Defendant finally told Williams that they went to the car, Jones
    shot the man, and defendant left the scene in the man’s car. Williams denied that defendant had
    ever told him a third person was involved in the robbery. Further, Williams agreed that
    defendant had previously sent him photographs of a firearm that were posted on Facebook. He
    explained to Williams that “his Dad had some guns, and he was going to take them.”
    Williams testified that he told defendant he had to leave and defendant did so. Later that
    evening, defendant came back and asked if Williams would help him burn the black Chevy.
    Williams refused and again told defendant to leave.
    Although this testimony provided some support for defendant’s claim that he acted under
    duress because of Jones’s threat, it also provided inculpatory evidence that defendant actively
    planned a robbery with Jones, including selecting the victim, and acted on his own to drive the
    victim’s car away, conceal it, and later return looking for assistance in burning that vehicle.
    Williams’s testimony also linked defendant to the possession of two guns, established that
    defendant had a Facebook photo with a gun, and contradicted defendant’s claim that a third
    person was involved in the robbery. Moreover, defendant testified in his own behalf and
    claimed that he was forced by Jones to participate in the robbery. Therefore, he was able to
    present a duress defense. Given the, at best, contradictory testimony of Williams, as well as the
    other evidence presented by the prosecution, it is not probable that a different result would have
    occurred had Williams’s testimony been presented at defendant’s trial. Moreover, trial counsel
    was aware of Williams’s testimony because it had already been offered at Jones’s trial. It was
    therefore clearly a matter of trial strategy to determine that it was best not to present that
    testimony and instead to attempt to establish the duress defense through defendant’s own
    testimony, and this Court does not second-guess such strategic decisions. Russell, 297 Mich App
    -4-
    at 716. Defendant has therefore failed to carry his heavy burden of showing that his trial counsel
    failed to provide effective assistance.
    III. WITNESS PRODUCTION AND DUE DILIGENCE
    Defendant next claims that the prosecution failed to demonstrate due diligence in
    attempting to produce witness Anthony Cox-Rogers, and that the trial court therefore abused its
    discretion by ruling that the prosecutor could use Cox-Rogers’s preliminary examination
    testimony. This claim is meritless.
    A trial court’s determination of due diligence is reviewed on appeal for an abuse of
    discretion. People v Bean, 
    457 Mich. 677
    , 684; 580 NW2d 390 (1998). “A defendant has the
    right to be confronted with the witnesses against him or her.” People v Yost, 
    278 Mich. App. 341
    ,
    369; 278 NW2d 753 (2008), citing US Const, Am VI; Const 1963, art 1, § 20; and Crawford v
    Washington, 
    541 U.S. 36
    , 42; 
    124 S. Ct. 1354
    ; 
    158 L. Ed. 2d 177
    (2004). “The Sixth Amendment
    bars testimonial statements by a witness who does not appear at trial unless the witness is
    unavailable and the defendant had a prior opportunity to cross-examine the witness.” 
    Yost, 278 Mich. App. at 370
    , citing 
    Crawford, 541 U.S. at 53-54
    . Defendant claims his constitutional right to
    confrontation was denied because the prosecution failed to produce Cox-Rogers at trial or to
    show due diligence in attempting to locate and produce him.
    MRE 804(a)(5) provides, in relevant part:
    (a) Definition of Unavailability.        “Unavailability as a witness” includes
    situations in which the declarant –
    * * *
    (5) is absent from the hearing and the proponent of a statement has been unable to
    procure the declarant’s attendance . . . by process or other reasonable means, and
    in a criminal case, due diligence is shown.
    “The test is one of reasonableness and depends on the facts and circumstances of each case, i.e.,
    whether diligent good-faith efforts were made to procure the testimony, not whether more
    stringent efforts would have produced it.” 
    Bean, 457 Mich. at 684
    .
    Cox-Rogers testified at the preliminary examination and was cross-examined by defense
    counsel as well as Jones’s counsel. He appeared on the first day of trial and was told to return on
    October 17, 2016. Arrangements were made for him to be picked up by a taxi cab; however, on
    the morning of October 17th he apparently called the cab company and told them he was not
    going to court. The prosecutor requested a material witness warrant pursuant to MCL 767.35,
    and the court ordered that the witness was to “be picked up and brought before the Court
    immediately.”
    Two days later, the prosecutor reported that efforts to locate Cox-Rogers had been
    unsuccessful and asked to be allowed, pursuant to MRE 804(b)(1), to use his preliminary
    examination testimony. Defendant’s counsel then asked that the officer-in-charge detail the
    -5-
    steps that had been taken to secure Cox-Rogers’s presence. Officer Michael Crosby then
    testified that he had been given a witness detainer for Cox-Rogers on October 17th. At one point
    he made contact with defendant’s sister, who told him that Cox-Rogers had just left. He gave
    information regarding Cox-Rogers, including the address he had for Cox-Rogers and information
    concerning his place of employment, to the Headquarters Surveillance Unit, which began
    surveillance of the witness’s home, aided by a unit from the Ninth Precinct’s Special Operations
    Unit. Crosby also checked the Wayne County and Macomb County jails. He did not check any
    hospitals. Crosby testified that Cox-Rogers was not in any morgue.
    Noting that Cox-Rogers had appeared on the first day of trial, the trial court ruled that
    Cox-Rogers was unavailable:
    Yes, I think that is true. So certainly he knew he had to be here because
    he was here [on the first day of trial]. And [the prosecutor] indicated as an officer
    of the court, he had instructed Mr. Cox-Rogers that he had to be back. He didn’t
    and specifically told the cab driver who had come to pick him up that he wasn’t
    coming.
    Surveillance on his residence, surveillance on his place of work have been
    fruitless. Sibling has indicated that he had just left. I think a reasonable
    conclusion to be drawn in light of the fact that he’s not in the Wayne County Jail
    or Macomb County Jail is that Mr. Cox-Rogers has decided to absent himself
    during the course of these proceedings.
    Michigan law requires that in term[s] of showing unavailability that there
    must be a showing that what was done was reasonable efforts made to find him.
    Surveillance efforts, going to his home to pick him up to actually deliver
    him here certainly was reasonable. I do think that an adequate record has been
    made, and certainly the only reasonable inference to draw at this particular point
    is that Mr. Cox-Rogers is, for want of a better term, laying low until all this is
    over, and I will allow his Preliminary Examination testimony to be read to the
    jury. Okay.
    Defendant has failed to show an abuse of the trial court’s discretion. On appeal, he
    claims that the police failed to determine what restaurant Cox-Rogers worked at, but Crosby
    testified that he provided the surveillance team “the location of his employment at Apple Bee’s
    [sic] in Sterling Heights, and they took that information and gathered more to find out where that
    actual Apple Bee’s [sic] was.” Moreover the testimony indicates that surveillance was
    conducted on the restaurant without success.
    Defendant also claims that the surveillance of Cox-Rogers’s home was “ineffectual”
    because the police learned he had “just left” and that if the trial court had excluded Cox-Rogers’s
    preliminary examination testimony, the police would have made more diligent efforts to locate
    him. Due diligence does not guarantee that every effort undertaken by the police will be
    successful. Both our Supreme Court and this Court have repeatedly stated that “due diligence”
    means “doing everything reasonable, not everything possible.” People v Travis, 
    443 Mich. 668
    ,
    -6-
    692; 505 NW2d 563 (1993); People v Eccles, 
    260 Mich. App. 379
    , 391; 677 NW2d 76 (2004).
    Again, the test is not whether more stringent efforts would have resulted in locating the witness,
    but whether the efforts that were made were reasonable and diligent. 
    Bean, 457 Mich. at 684
    .
    Notably, the trial court concluded that Cox-Rogers was “laying low” to avoid having to come to
    trial. We conclude that the police made reasonable good-faith efforts to locate Cox-Rogers, and
    that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in determining that the prosecution had
    demonstrated due diligence and that it was proper for the prosecutor to present Cox-Rogers’s
    prior testimony from the preliminary examination.
    IV. COCONSPIRATOR EXCEPTION TO HEARSAY
    Defendant next claims that admission of a hearsay statement from Harris was improper
    and that it did not qualify as a statement by a conspirator in furtherance of the conspiracy. We
    disagree.
    At trial, defendant specifically objected to Harris’s testimony relating the statement by
    Jones vouching for defendant’s loyalty. Harris testified: “He told me that basically he was good,
    and you know what I’m saying in so many words if I told him to blow you, he will blow you. He
    would shoot you, in other words.”
    MRE 801(d)(2(E) provides (in relevant part):
    (d) Statements Which Are Not Hearsay. A statement is not hearsay if –
    (2) Admission by Party-Opponent.
    (E) a statement by a coconspirator of a party during the course and in furtherance
    of the conspiracy on independent proof of the conspiracy.
    In People v Martin, 
    271 Mich. App. 280
    , 316-317; 721 NW2d 815 (2006), aff ’d 
    482 Mich. 851
    (2008), this Court summarized the relevant law:
    The proponent of evidence bears the burden of establishing its relevance
    and admissibility. Gilbert v DaimlerChrysler Corp, 
    470 Mich. 749
    , 781; 685
    NW2d 391 (2004). In order to qualify under the exclusion for statements by a
    coconspirator, the proponent of the statements must establish three things. First,
    the proponent must establish by a preponderance of the evidence that a conspiracy
    existed through independent evidence. People v Vega, 
    413 Mich. 773
    , 780; 321
    NW2d 675 (1982). A conspiracy exists where two or more persons combine with
    the intent to accomplish an illegal objective. People v Blume, 
    443 Mich. 476
    , 481-
    482; 505 NW2d 843 (1993). It is not necessary to offer direct proof of the
    conspiracy. People v Justice (After Remand), 
    454 Mich. 334
    , 347; 562 NW2d 652
    (1997). Instead, it is “sufficient if the circumstances, acts, and conduct of the
    parties establish an agreement in fact.” People v Atley, 
    392 Mich. 298
    , 311; 220
    NW2d 465 (1974), overruled on other grounds by People v Hardiman, 
    466 Mich. 417
    , 428 (2002). Circumstantial evidence and inference may be used to establish
    -7-
    the existence of the conspiracy. People v Gay, 
    149 Mich. App. 468
    , 471; 386
    NW2d 556 (1986). Second, the proponent must establish that the statement was
    made during the course of the conspiracy. People v Bushard, 
    444 Mich. 384
    , 394;
    508 NW2d 745 (1993). The conspiracy continues “until the common enterprise
    has been fully completed, abandoned, or terminated.” 
    Id. Third, the
    proponent
    must establish that the statement furthered the conspiracy. 
    Id. The requirement
           that the statement further the conspiracy has been construed broadly. 
    Id. at 395.
           Although idle chatter will not satisfy this requirement, statements that prompt the
    listener, who need not be one of the conspirators, to respond in a way that
    promotes or facilitates the accomplishment of the illegal objective will suffice.
    
    Id. The statement
    to which defendant specifically objected occurred during the course of a
    telephone conversation between Jones and Harris.3 The following colloquy occurred between
    the prosecutor and Harris:
    Q. So he asked about a gun, and he asked about hitting a lick; is that
    correct?
    A. Yes.
    Q. Did he say that he was alone or with someone?
    A. He said he was with someone.
    Q. When he said he was with someone, did that cause you to be
    concerned at all?
    A. A little bit, yes.
    Q. Why?
    A. Because I expressed that I didn’t like new people around or know
    where I stayed at the time.
    Q. Did he vouch for that individual in any way?
    A. Yes.
    Q. What did he say to you?
    3
    When defendant made his objection, Harris had not yet testified in his trial. However, Harris
    had previously testified in Jones’s trial. With respect to this issue, we are referring to Harris’s
    testimony at Jones’s trial for the purpose of showing exactly what defendant was objecting to at
    the time he lodged his objection.
    -8-
    A. He told me that basically he was good, and, you know, what I’m
    saying in so many words if I told him to blow you, he’ll blow you. He would
    shoot you, in other words.
    Q. Let me understand. The defendant was talking to you on the phone?
    A. Yes.
    Q. He was talking about the person who was with him?
    A. Yes.
    Q. And says if I tell him to blow you?
    A. Yes.
    Q. He’ll blow you?
    A. Yes.
    Q. You took that to mean if I tell him to shoot you, he’ll shoot you?
    A. Yes.
    Q. Did that cause you to be more concerned or less concerned?
    A. I was more or less or more concerned because he was really
    expressing[,] [it] sounded like he was expressing it to me as how much, how loyal
    his friend was to him, how cool he was to him. So that’s what he was saying that
    he was cool, but that’s what he said, you know.
    Q. So you took that as an expression of the loyalty of his friend rather
    than a threat to you?
    A. Correct.
    Harris subsequently testified that Jones and defendant arrived at his house, that he spoke
    with Jones about “hitting licks,” and that Jones was not armed but he saw the butt of a gun
    sticking out of defendant’s hoodie pocket. Harris’s testimony at defendant’s trial covered
    substantially the same material.
    The conspiracy that the prosecution had to prove was a conspiracy to commit armed
    robbery. This required a showing, by a preponderance of the evidence, that defendant and Jones
    assaulted someone with a dangerous weapon with the intent to permanently deprive that
    individual of his money or property. MCL 750.529 and MCL 750.530. The focus of the statute
    is on the assault, and while the intent is to take money or property, it is not necessary that money
    or property actually be obtained. People v Williams, 
    491 Mich. 164
    ; 814 NW2d 270 (2012).
    -9-
    The evidence established that defendant had met with Jones and that when he did so he
    was carrying a loaded revolver. Jones talked about robbing people. Pentecost was assaulted and
    murdered with a .38 revolver; the gun defendant possessed was a revolver. Defendant stole
    Pentecost’s car and, subsequently, his leather jacket. The day after the shooting, defendant, in
    association with Jones, burned Pentecost’s vehicle. By a preponderance of the evidence, these
    facts – without the admission of Jones’s statement about defendant’s loyalty – established, at
    least by inference and circumstantial evidence, that defendant conspired with Jones to rob
    someone. Given that defendant was present with Jones when Jones called Harris to discuss
    “hitting a lick,” and subsequently came to Harris’s house armed with a revolver and proceeded to
    do just that, by inference it appears that Jones’s statement vouching for defendant’s loyalty was
    made during the course of the conspiracy to commit an armed robbery. Finally, broadly
    construed, Jones’s statement vouching for defendant’s loyalty advanced the conspiracy because
    it induced Harris to allow Jones and defendant to come over to his house where Jones and
    defendant found Pentecost and where, according to defendant’s statements, Harris indicated that
    they could get money from Pentecost. This evidence was sufficient to establish the existence of
    a conspiracy at the time Jones made his statement vouching for defendant’s loyalty.
    Accordingly, the trial court did not abuse its discretion in admitting the evidence.
    Regardless, we cannot conclude that the admission of Jones’s statement, even if
    improper, was outcome determinative. The particular statement to which defendant objected was
    simply Jones’s vouching for defendant’s loyalty, a matter which defendant’s own testimony
    subsequently established.4 Defendant’s guilt was established by the other evidence showing his
    possession of the loaded revolver and his participation in the crimes and the subsequent cover-
    up, not by Harris’s testimony concerning a statement by Jones vouching for defendant’s loyalty.
    Therefore, “in light of the weight and strength of the untainted evidence,” 
    Musser, 494 Mich. at 348
    , this Court concludes that any error caused by the admission of Jones’s statement through
    Harris’s testimony would not have been outcome determinative.
    V. COMPELLED PRODUCTION OF EVIDENCE
    Defendant finally argues that the trial court erred in ruling that the police could properly
    compel defendant to surrender the passcode for his iPhone, which enabled the police to obtain
    call data and photographs from the cell phone’s internal storage. It is apparent to this Court that
    defendant has misunderstood the trial court’s ruling, and that therefore the issue raised by
    defendant on appeal is meritless because it has already been decided in his favor by the trial
    court. Contrary to defendant’s claim on appeal, the trial court did not rule that the passcode for
    the cell phone was non-testimonial information that did not violate defendant’s Fifth Amendment
    right against compelled self-incrimination; in fact, the trial court agreed that asking for the
    4
    Defendant also made statements to the police that showed that he participated in the armed
    robbery of Pentecost. Although defendant attempted to minimize his involvement and also
    attempted to claim that Jones coerced him into participating, the prosecution did not have to
    disprove defendant’s theory of the case in order to sufficiently prove the existence of a
    conspiracy.
    -10-
    passcode was not a routine “booking question” and that the police questioning and defendant’s
    answer violated Miranda. However, the trial court ruled that the police would have inevitably
    obtained access to defendant’s cell phone because they could have obtained a search warrant for
    his fingerprint to unlock the phone and therefore, the data and photographs were admissible
    based on the inevitable discovery exception to the exclusionary rule.
    We note that there is a Fourth Amendment concern that is triggered by searches of cell
    phones conducted without either the owner’s consent or a search warrant. This concern is not
    presented by defendant’s argument. Instead, defendant addresses only the Fifth Amendment
    concern that asking for the passcode of his cell phone constituted testimonial compulsion.
    Preliminarily, the parties, and the trial court, all agreed that asking defendant for the pass
    code to his cell phone was not a “booking-type” inquiry. Therefore, contrary to defendant’s
    position and argument on appeal, the trial court agreed that police questioning asking for
    defendant’s cell phone passcode, and defendant’s act of providing the passcode, did not amount
    to routine booking information requests or responses, and the trial court accordingly suppressed
    defendant’s response for use in the prosecution’s case-in-chief. However, the trial court also
    ruled that despite the access that the police gained to defendant’s cell phone because he provided
    them his passcode, the data and photographs that were obtained as a result would not be
    suppressed because they would have been inevitably discovered when the police obtained a
    search warrant for the cell phone’s contents and forced defendant to provide his fingerprint to
    unlock the cell phone. Defendant argues on appeal, “it may have been that if the Defendant had
    not given his passcode without Miranda warnings, the court might have been able to compel him
    to use his fingerprint--but that is not the issue before this Court.” But contrary to defendant’s
    claim, that is the only issue that could be before this Court, and it is not an issue that defendant
    has raised. Instead, defendant has raised only an issue upon which he prevailed in the trial court,
    and has specifically told this Court it need not address the only issue the trial court ruled upon
    unfavorably to the defense.
    This Court will ordinarily not address a claim that a defendant has failed to present,
    argue, or support with pertinent authority. People v Harris, 
    261 Mich. App. 44
    , 50; 680 NW2d 17
    (2004). Defendant has insisted that this Court need not review – and he has not addressed – the
    trial court’s ultimate ruling: that because defendant could have been properly compelled to
    provide his fingerprint to unlock his cell phone, the police would have inevitably discovered the
    cell phone’s data and photographs. Because defendant has not raised this issue, and has instead
    explicitly stated that this Court need not review this issue, this Court concludes that there is no
    reason for this Court to independently review this issue. We conclude that defendant has
    abandoned any claim with respect to the admission of the evidence found on defendant’s cell
    phone.
    Affirmed.
    /s/ David H. Sawyer
    /s/ Christopher M. Murray
    /s/ Cynthia Diane Stephens
    -11-