Lead Opinion
Appellant Deric Bell was found guilty of trafficking in heroin and sentenced to life imprisonment. After reserving her objections to the trial court’s instructions to the jury, defense counsel sought a mistrial on the ground that the prosecutor had injected prejudicial matters not in evidence by making reference to a drug-related, execution-style
Argument of counsel is a valuable privilege, and may not be unduly restricted. On the other hand, the court must not allow such latitude as will defeat the justice of the cause, such as introducing prejudicial matters not in evidence. The dignity of the court, and the public interest in having its courts properly conducted, are involved.
Brooks v. State,
In recent years, the content of the prosecutor’s closing argument has been the subject of several appeals, giving us the opportunity to examine the scope traditionally given attorneys in closing argument. At times, procedural problems have thwarted our ability to formulate an opinion that is not dictum. See, e.g., Hodge v. State,
In the case at bar, there was no evidence of drug-related murder or serial rape, or evidence from which serial rape and murder would be a reasonable inference. Compare Todd v. State,
Judgment reversed.
Notes
Adherence to the limitation on the latitude of oral argument is also integral to legal professionalism.
[T]he habit of counsel in addressing the Jury, of commenting upon matters not proven and not growing out of the pleadings . . . [is] illegal and highly prejudicial to a fair and just administration of the rights of parties. . . . [I]t is the duty of counsel to guard, by the most scrupulous propriety of demeanor, in the conduct of a cause, the dignity and honor of the profession.
Mitchum v. State,
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
I respectfully dissent.
Nothing in the record, the Court of Appeals opinion, or the majority reveals what the prosecutor said in closing, or the context in which she said it. Her purpose in making the remarks objected to is unclear.
All that can be discerned from the record is that the prosecutor, in closing argument, made some reference to the “Red Oak murder,” a drug-related murder in a housing project, and to a “ski mask rapist.” With regard to the Red Oak murder, the prosecutor’s stated justification for the reference was that an expert witness for the defense testified regarding violence in connection with drug trafficking, that the Red Oak murder was a drug-related murder in a City of Atlanta
With regard to the “ski mask rapist,” the prosecutor justified her use of that reference to illustrate the meaning of and purpose for proof regarding similar transactions. It does not appear, and neither the majority nor the defense state, that the prosecutor argued or implied that drug trafficking, such as that which occurred in this case, leads to, or is similar to rape. The reference, insofar as we can reasonably speculate about what was said in light of the lack of a record, could not have been prejudicial in this context.
In my view, the reversal of this drug trafficking conviction is completely unwarranted.
The reason there is no record of the remarks is that the trial court refused the defense request that final arguments be recorded. While this is a matter of discretion on the part of the trial court, I question whether that discretion was not abused under the circumstances of this case.
