State of Missouri v. TJ Russell ( 2015 )


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  •                      In the Missouri Court of Appeals
    Eastern District
    DIVISION TWO
    STATE OF MISSOURI,                            )       No. ED101482
    )
    Respondent,                            )
    )       Appeal from the City of St. Louis
    vs.                                           )       Circuit Court
    )
    TJ RUSSELL,                                   )       Honorable Michael F. Stelzer
    )
    Appellant.                             )       Filed: June 9, 2015
    Introduction
    T.J. Russell (Defendant) appeals the judgment and sentence of the Circuit Court of the
    City of St. Louis entered after a jury convicted him of first-degree murder and armed criminal
    action. In two points relied on, Defendant claims that the trial court (1) clearly erred in admitting
    the identification testimony of three witnesses and (2) plainly erred by allowing the State’s
    comments regarding deliberation in closing argument. We affirm.
    Factual Background
    On March 19, 2011, Charlene Otey and Dennis Fox visited Kenyatta Moore’s apartment.
    Otey and Moore were drinking “Syrup” (a combination of NyQuil and painkillers) and Fox had
    ingested heroin. Jermaine Johnson and Antoine Rayner came to the apartment. After Moore
    opened the door and let them inside, Defendant came down the hallway and started shooting at
    Rayner. Defendant asked Rayner, “Where is my money? Where is my phone?” After the
    shooting, Defendant ran. Rayner died as a result of his gunshot wounds.
    Defendant was charged with first-degree murder and armed criminal action. Prior to
    trial, defense counsel filed a pre-trial motion to suppress identification evidence. In the motion,
    defense counsel argued that Moore, Otey, Fox, and Johnson’s identifications of Defendant as the
    shooter should be suppressed because (1) Moore knew and had a relationship with Defendant
    prior to the shooting; (2) all of the witnesses were under the influence of drugs at the time of the
    shooting; and (3) the apartment was not well-lit during the incident. The trial court denied the
    motion, finding that defense counsel’s objections to the identifications went to the weight, not
    the admissibility, of the identifications.
    At Defendant’s trial, the State presented the testimony of Officer Michelle Vetter, who
    responded to the scene after Rayner was shot.           The State also presented the testimony of
    Kenyatta Moore. Moore recalled that on March 19, she, Otey, and Fox were at her apartment
    when Johnson and Rayner arrived.             Moore said that Rayner entered the apartment before
    Johnson, and then she “heard claps.” She testified that Defendant was standing in the doorway,
    holding a gun, and that she told Defendant to stay at her apartment. Moore went to tend to
    Rayner, and when she looked up again, Defendant was gone. Later that night, Moore spoke to
    homicide detectives and told them Defendant shot Rayner. Moore identified Defendant in a
    photo line-up. On cross-examination, Moore admitted that she had done drugs that day and she,
    had been drinking “Syrup” prior to the shooting.
    Charlene Otey also testified on behalf of the State. She testified that she did not know
    Defendant prior to the shooting. That evening, she had “dozed off” on the couch, and the sound
    of three gunshots woke her up. She testified that she saw a man standing in the doorway, and
    2
    saw Rayner and Johnson run into the kitchen. She recalled that the man in the doorway said,
    “Where’s my money at? Where’s my phone at?” Otey testified that she went to the police
    department and identified the person who shot Rayner. Defense counsel objected, as follows:
    [Defense Counsel]: I’m going to object at this point based on my pretrial
    motions to suppress the identification. When the procedures that were used were
    suggest[ive] and her basis for identifying him [w]as based on the information she
    got from other person, not her own observations.
    [The State]: Your Honor, she is taken from the scene to homicide. She doesn’t
    know the guy’s name. No one told her anything. She learns his name later and
    then she knows the name. It certainly doesn’t affect her ability to identify this
    piece of paper.
    [The Court]: I don’t think it’s an issue of suppression. There may be some
    credibility issues you can bring out, but I don’t think it’s about suppression. I am
    going to deny the request.
    [Defense Counsel]:    May I have a continuing objection?
    [The Court]: Yes, you may.
    Otey then recalled that she identified Defendant as the shooter in a photo line-up. On cross-
    examination, Otey again admitted she was high at Moore’s apartment the night of the shooting.
    Jermaine Johnson and Dennis Fox testified similarly.         On cross-examination, both
    Johnson and Fox admitted that they had done heroin that day. Fox testified that he was sitting on
    the couch next to Otey, dozing, and that the gunshots “blew [his] high.” Fox also testified that
    both Otey and Moore told him Defendant’s name before he talked to the police.
    The State also presented the testimony of Douglas Eatherton, an evidence technician;
    Detective Thomas Walsh, who investigated the shooting; Steven Taubenheim, a former
    computer forensics investigator; Officer David Menendez, a firearms examiner; and Dr. Jane
    Turner, a medical examiner. Defendant did not present any evidence.
    3
    During closing argument, the State discussed the elements of first-degree murder with the
    jury. Regarding deliberation, the State argued the following:
    What’s deliberation? Cool reflection for any amount of time no matter
    how brief, okay? Let’s talk about what cool reflection is. Under the law cool
    reflection is not, I got to sit down, I got to write out a plan. I gotta tell somebody
    about it. Maybe I need to get some help. That’s not cool reflection, ladies and
    gentlemen. Cool reflection under the law, deliberation under the law is that
    reflection for any length of time no matter how brief, okay?
    So for argument sake, pulling a gun out of a waistband is deliberation on
    its own. So pulling a gun, aiming it, pulling the trigger, not one, not two, not
    three, but at least four times is without a doubt deliberation. That is a conscious
    decision made by the shooter, and that, ladies and gentlemen, is deliberation.
    The jury found defendant guilty of first-degree murder and armed criminal action. Defendant
    was sentenced to life in prison without parole for first-degree murder, to run consecutively with
    his 30 year sentence for armed criminal action.
    Defendant filed a motion for new trial, arguing that the trial court abused its discretion in
    allowing the witnesses’ identification of Defendant as the shooter because “the circumstances of
    the out-of-court identification were inherently suggestive and conducive to mistaken
    identification, in that the witnesses had discussed the identity of the shooter prior to being asked
    by the police to make an identification and the witnesses were under the influence of drugs at the
    time of the shooting.” The trial court denied the motion. This appeal follows.
    Point I: Identification Evidence
    In his first point on appeal, Defendant argues that the trial court erred in admitting Otey,
    Fox and Johnson’s out-of-court and in-court identifications of Defendant as the shooter.
    Specifically, Defendant contends that the admission of the identifications violated his right to
    due process because they were inherently unreliable and that the identification evidence was
    more prejudicial than probative. The State argues that the identifications were reliable and
    admissible.
    4
    Standard of Review
    This Court has discerned that Defendant raises two arguments for why the identification
    testimony should have been excluded. Defendant first argues that the identification evidence
    violates his right to due process of law. In Defendant’s motion to suppress, Defendant argued
    that the in-court and out-of-court identifications should not be admitted because the out-of-court
    identifications “were inherently suggestive and conducive to mistaken identification” and that
    any in-court identification would be subject to the same problems. Defendant renewed this
    objection to the evidence when Charlene Otey testified at trial, and again in his motion for new
    trial. Accordingly, this issue is properly preserved for appeal. Our review of the trial court’s
    denial of a motion to suppress is limited to whether the ruling was clearly erroneous. State v. Ivy,
    
    455 S.W.3d 13
    , 17 (Mo. App. E.D. 2014). We review findings of fact and conclusions of law
    only to determine whether they are supported by substantial evidence. 
    Id. at 17-18.
    We defer to
    the credibility findings of the trial court and view the facts in a light most favorable to the
    judgment. 
    Id. Defendant also
    contends that the trial court erred in admitting the identifications because
    prejudice to the Defendant outweighed the identifications’ probative value.          Generally, we
    review the trial court’s admission of identification testimony for an abuse of discretion. 
    Id. at 17.
    However, because this argument was never raised at the trial court, it is not preserved for review.
    Therefore, we review only for plain error under Rule 30.20, and we will affirm unless we find
    that the trial court committed an error which caused manifest injustice or a miscarriage of justice.
    State v. Floyd, 
    347 S.W.3d 115
    , 123 (Mo. App. E.D. 2011). Under the plain error standard, the
    defendant must show that the trial court committed an error which is “evident, obvious, and
    5
    clear” and that such error resulted in a manifest injustice or a miscarriage of justice. 
    Id. at 123-
    24.
    Discussion
    A. Due Process & the Reliability of the Witnesses’ Identifications
    “Identification testimony is admissible unless the pretrial identification procedure is
    impermissibly suggestive, and this suggestive procedure made the identification unreliable.”
    
    Floyd, 347 S.W.3d at 125
    (internal citations omitted). A pre-trial identification is unduly
    suggestive if the identification is not based on the witness’s first-hand recollection, but rather the
    result of suggestive police procedures. 
    Id. The issue
    is whether the witness had an adequate,
    independent basis for the identification. 
    Id. Further, the
    identification will only be inadmissible
    if the identification procedures were so suggestive that they created a “very substantial likelihood
    of irreparable misidentification.” 
    Id. (internal citations
    omitted).
    In addressing the reliability of the witness’s identification, we look to five factors: (1) the
    opportunity of the witness to view the subject; (2) the witness’s degree of attention; (3) the
    accuracy of any prior description given by the witness; (4) the level of certainty demonstrated by
    the witness in making the identification; and (5) the interval between the event and the
    identification procedure. 
    Id. Defendant does
    not argue that the police procedures in this case were impermissibly
    suggestive. Defendant concedes that for the court to address the reliability of the witness’s
    identification, the court must first determine that the police procedures were unduly suggestive.
    See Perry v. New Hampshire, 
    132 S. Ct. 716
    , 730 (2012). In Perry, the United States Supreme
    Court dealt with an argument similar to Defendant’s. The defendant in Perry argued that courts
    should address the reliability of eyewitness identification even if the police procedures were not
    6
    suggestive. 
    Id. at 725.
    In support of his argument, the defendant cited Manson v. Braithwaite, in
    which the Supreme Court stated that “reliability is the linchpin in determining the admissibility
    of identification testimony.” 
    432 U.S. 98
    , 114 (1977). The defendant argued that if reliability is
    the most important due process issue regarding admissibility, courts should examine the
    reliability of witnesses regardless of whether there were suggestive police procedures. 
    Perry, 132 S. Ct. at 725
    . However, the Perry Court noted that the determination of reliability “comes
    into play only after the defendant establishes improper police conduct.”                    
    Id. at 726.
        The
    reliability or unreliability of the identification determines whether the exclusion of the evidence
    is the appropriate remedy. 
    Id. The Court
    discussed the potential consequences of adopting the
    defendant’s argument, specifically that to do so would call for courts to review, prior to trial,
    “most, if not all, eyewitness identifications” and would result in a “vast enlargement of the reach
    of due process as a constraint on the admission of evidence.” 
    Id. at 727.
    Further, the Court
    reiterated that the unreliability of a witness’s identification does not make its admission
    “fundamentally unfair,” nor does its admission always rise to the level of a due process violation.
    
    Id. at 728.
    This Court has also addressed a similar argument in State v. Body, 
    366 S.W.3d 625
    (Mo.
    App. E.D. 2012).1 In Body, the defendant argued that the identification evidence violated his due
    process rights and was more prejudicial than probative. 
    Id. at 628.
    Body argued that the police
    procedures were subtly suggestive because the victim was told he may have to identify the
    perpetrator and that the defendant was the only person present in both the photo line-up and the
    physical line-up. 
    Id. at 631.
    The Court did not find any evidence of police misconduct. 
    Id. 1 The
    Court notes that defense counsel in this case also served as defense counsel in Body, and once again raises
    similar arguments for this Court’s consideration.
    7
    Accordingly, the Court denied the defendant’s point on appeal and did not address the reliability
    of the witness’s identification. 
    Id. In this
    case, Defendant does not argue on appeal that the police procedure was unduly
    suggestive. At trial, defense counsel stated that the procedures were suggestive but nothing
    more.    Because Defendant failed to show police misconduct in the identification process,
    Defendant’s due process argument fails. 
    Perry, 132 S. Ct. at 726
    .
    B. Legal Relevance of the Witnesses’ Identifications
    Defendant also contends that the identifications should have been excluded because their
    unreliability outweighed their probative value, which resulted in prejudice to Defendant. Indeed,
    identification testimony may be inadmissible if its probative value is outweighed by prejudice to
    the defendant. 
    Perry, 132 S. Ct. at 729
    ; 
    Body, 366 S.W.3d at 632
    . The State argues the
    identifications did not result in any prejudice to Defendant.
    Evidence must be both logically and legally relevant to be admissible. State v. Davis,
    
    318 S.W.3d 618
    , 639 (Mo. banc 2010). Evidence is logically relevant “if it tends to make the
    existence of any fact that is of consequence to the determination of the action more probable or
    less probable than it would be without the evidence.” 
    Id. Logically relevant
    evidence must also
    be legally relevant, meaning that its probative value must outweigh its prejudice to the defendant.
    
    Id. at 640.
    Defendant argues that unreliability of the witnesses’ identifications had a potential to
    confuse or mislead the jury that outweighed the probative value of their testimony. In support of
    his claim, Defendant utilizes the reliability factors generally used in considering whether the
    admission of identification testimony violates due process.         
    Floyd, 347 S.W.3d at 125
    .
    Regarding the first two factors – the opportunity of the witness to view the subject and the
    8
    witness’s degree of attention – Defendant argues that Otey, Johnson, and Fox could not have had
    great opportunity to view the witness or had a high degree of attention because they were
    admittedly under the influence of drugs and the hallway was not well-lit. Defendant next argues
    that the accuracy of the identification testimony is also suspect, as the witnesses contradicted
    themselves and none of the witnesses knew Defendant prior to the shooting. Defendant also
    compares the case to State v. Body, in which this Court held that “the record does not contain
    evidence that [the victim] was objectively incapable of perceiving his assailant, such as might
    render the evidence minimally probative and highly 
    prejudicial.” 366 S.W.3d at 632
    . Defendant
    maintains that the evidence in this case presents objective facts that make the witnesses’
    identifications unreliable.
    We disagree. While Otey, Johnson and Fox all admitted to being under the influence of
    drugs the day of the shooting, and there are some inconsistencies in their statements regarding
    the shooting in the time leading up to trial, these evidentiary problems do not rise to the level of
    outweighing the identifications’ probative value such that the evidence should have been
    excluded. While Otey admitted she had done “syrup” the night of the shooting, she also recalled
    that she woke up when she heard the gunshots, she saw Defendant standing in the doorway with
    a gun, Defendant yelled questions at Rayner, and Defendant approached her and held a gun up to
    her. Otey then identified Defendant in a photo line-up the same night as the shooting. Johnson
    testified about going into the apartment with Rayner, Defendant jumping out and shooting
    Rayner at close range, and Defendant yelling about a phone or money.              Johnson left the
    apartment after the shooting and spoke with the police a few months later and identified
    Defendant. Fox also testified about the night of the shooting. Fox did not speak with police until
    9
    a few months after the shooting, and identified two potential suspects from the photo line-up,
    including Defendant. At trial, the three witnesses identified Defendant as the shooter.
    The alleged deficiencies in the witnesses’ testimony were issues that Defendant had the
    opportunity to address, and did in fact address, on cross-examination. Defendant fails to show
    that the identification evidence confused or misled the jury. The jury, as the fact-finder, was
    given the opportunity to determine the credibility and reliability of the identifications. State v.
    Belton, 
    949 S.W.2d 189
    , 192 (Mo. App. W.D. 1997) (“Reliability and credibility are issues for
    the jury to decide”).
    The trial court did not err, plainly or otherwise, in admitting the witnesses’
    identifications. Point I is denied.
    Point II: Closing Argument
    In his second point, Defendant argues that the trial court erred in permitting the
    prosecutor to comment on deliberation during closing argument. Defendant contends that the
    prosecutor misstated the law, which misled the jury, and affected their verdict. The State
    counters that it did not misstate the law, and in any event, the jury was properly instructed
    regarding deliberation.
    Standard of Review
    Defendant concedes that this issue was not raised before the trial court and is therefore
    not properly preserved for review. Accordingly, this point is subject only to plain error review.
    Rule 30.20. We will affirm the judgment of the trial court unless we find that the trial court
    committed an error which caused manifest injustice or a miscarriage of justice. 
    Floyd, 347 S.W.3d at 123
    . Under the plain error standard, the defendant must show that the trial court
    10
    committed an error which is “evident, obvious, and clear” and that such error resulted in a
    manifest injustice or a miscarriage of justice. 
    Id. at 123-
    24.
    Discussion
    Defendant argues that the State’s closing argument regarding deliberation misstated the
    law, which resulted in manifest injustice to Defendant. Specifically, Defendant takes issue with
    the following statements by the prosecutor during closing argument:
    So for argument sake, pulling a gun out of a waistband is deliberation on
    its own. So pulling a gun, aiming it, pulling the trigger, not one, not two, not
    three, but at least four times is without a doubt deliberation. That is a conscious
    decision made by the shooter, and that, ladies and gentlemen, is deliberation.
    Defendant maintains that the phrase “conscious decision” is not the equivalent of “deliberation,”
    and that the prosecutor’s statements misled the jury into convicting Defendant of first-degree
    murder with the wrong definition of deliberation in mind. The State argues that the prosecutor
    did not misstate the law and that there was no manifest injustice to Defendant because the jury
    was properly instructed on deliberation.
    Generally, plain error “will seldom be found in unobjected closing argument.” State v.
    Walters, 
    363 S.W.3d 371
    , 376 (Mo. App. E.D. 2012) (internal citations omitted). Resulting
    prejudice from plain error in closing argument “can normally be cured by an instruction to the
    jury.” 
    Id. Additionally, “closing
    arguments must be interpreted with the entire record rather
    than in isolation.” State v. Edwards, 
    116 S.W.3d 511
    , 537 (Mo. banc 2003).
    Having reviewed the entire record, the prosecutor’s statement regarding deliberation did
    not result in plain error. In closing argument, the State emphasized the legal definition of
    deliberation – “[c]ool reflection for any amount of time no matter how brief.” To support his
    claim, Defendant cites State v. Johnson, in which the Missouri Supreme Court held that the
    State’s interchangeable use of “deliberation,” “cool reflection,” and “conscious decision” in
    11
    closing argument was not plain error. 
    284 S.W.3d 561
    , 574 (Mo. banc 2009). Defendant
    differentiates this case from Johnson because here, the State “superseded” the correct definition
    of deliberation with the phrase “conscious disregard,” and the argument that “pulling a gun out
    of a waistband is deliberation on its own.” However, as the Court in Johnson stated, “[t]he use
    of [“conscious decision”] in closing argument, especially after reciting the actual language of the
    instruction, was not plain error.” 
    Id. In the
    instant case, the jury was properly instructed on the
    meaning of deliberation in Jury Instruction No. 62, and it is presumed that juries follow the
    instructions given to them. 
    Id. Accordingly, the
    trial court did not plainly err in failing to
    intervene, sua sponte, during the State’s closing argument. Point II is denied.
    Conclusion
    The judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
    ________________________________
    Philip M. Hess, Judge
    Sherri B. Sullivan, P.J. and
    Mary K. Hoff, J. concur.
    2
    The instruction defined deliberation as “cool reflection upon the matter for any length of time no matter how
    brief.”
    12
    

Document Info

Docket Number: ED101482

Judges: Hess, Sullivan, Hoff

Filed Date: 6/9/2015

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/19/2024