This matter comes before the Court on remand from the Supreme Court of Virginia.
Megel v. Commonwealth,
Megel appealed the conviction to this Court. In his petition for appeal, Megel presented the following four questions:
1. Is participation in an electronic home detention program a per se waiver of Fourth Amendment rights of privacy in the home one shares with others?
2. Can a court deny the defense access to exculpatory evidence indicating perjury on the part of a key prosecution witness?
3. Can a court quash a defense subpoena duces tecum for exculpatory evidence on which the defense wishes to rely to establish perjury on the part of a key prosecution witness without the court first reviewing the information at issue so that it knows for itself what is in controversy?
4. Is the defense entitled to its theory of the case instructions in its words so long as the instructions are consistent with the facts and the law?
We granted an appeal on Questions 1, 2 and 3.
A panel of the Court, with one judge dissenting, affirmed the judgment, and held that Megel had no reasonable expectation of privacy in his home while in the electronic incarceration program.
Megel v. Commonwealth,
On appeal, we will consider “[o]nly those arguments presented in the petition for appeal and granted by this Court....”
Alexander v. Commonwealth,
Because Megel failed to raise the issue of consent as a question presented in his petition for appeal, his challenge to the trial judge’s finding that he consented to the search is procedurally barred. We accordingly affirm his conviction.
Affirmed.
