Kenneth Wayne PARKER, Appellant, v. COMMONWEALTH of Kentucky, Appellee.
No. 2006-SC-000102-MR.
Supreme Court of Kentucky.
May 21, 2009.
Rehearing Denied Aug. 27, 2009.
291 S.W.3d 647
Susan Jackson Balliet, Assistant Public Advocate, Department of Public Advocacy, Frankfort, KY, for Appellant.
Jack Conway, Attorney General of Kentucky, Todd Dryden Ferguson, Assistant Attorney General, Office of Attorney General, Criminal Appellate Division, Frankfort, KY, George G. Seelig, Lebanon, KY, for Appellee.
Opinion of the Court by Chief Justice MINTON.
I. INTRODUCTION.
After a jury trial, Kenneth Parker was sentenced to, along with lesser sentences, two terms of imprisonment for life without the possibility of parole for twenty-five years. Parker, the alleged leader of the Victory Park Crips gang in Louisville, also known as the Rat Pacc, appeals the judgment as a matter of right,1 raising numer-
II. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY.
The facts underlying Parker‘s conviction are long, sordid, and difficult to recite chronologically. The indictment against Parker is twenty-eight pages long. So we will outline here only the most basic facts underlying Parker‘s convictions and present more detailed facts where necessary in our analysis of Parker‘s individual issues.
A. The Levolia Baker Shooting.
In 1998, Parker and fellow gang members or acquaintances Dominique Coffey and JaJuan Stephenson went looking for Parker‘s missing sister, who allegedly had been spending time with Levolia “Squirrel” Baker. When Parker and his companions saw Baker, they shot him. Stephenson was charged with the shooting. But Stephenson taped conversations, allegedly with Parker, in which Parker implicated himself in the Baker shooting. Stephenson was acquitted by a jury, and Parker was indicted for the Baker shooting.
B. The Laknogony McCurley Murder.
In July 2000, at an intersection near Jewish Hospital in Louisville, a car carrying four African-American males pulled next to Laknogony McCurley‘s car. Three members of the Bloods gang, a rival gang to the Victory Park Crips, were in McCurley‘s car. Gunfire broke out, and McCurley‘s car was riddled with bullets. McCurley died; one of her passengers, Chicoby Moore, was injured; two other passengers, Kerry Williams and DeLeon “Keoni” Burks, were uninjured. Parker was eventually indicted for McCurley‘s murder, the
C. The Tao Parker Shooting.
Tao Parker is Kenneth Parker‘s cousin. According to Coffey, Kenneth had an argument with Tao in March 2001 over the fact that Tao owed Kenneth money for drugs. Tao was shot; and, as a result, Kenneth was charged with assault in the first degree and attempted murder.
D. Murder of JaJuan Stephenson.
In April 2001, a masked gunman killed JaJuan Stephenson in broad daylight. According to Dominique Coffey, he lent Parker a gun and a thousand dollars; and Parker gave the gun and the money to Clifford Warfield to kill Stephenson, who had implicated Parker in the Levolia Baker shooting. A witness, Sheldon Wright, identified Warfield as someone he saw fleeing the murder scene. Parker, along with Warfield and Coffey, was ultimately charged with Stephenson‘s murder.
E. Murder of William Barnes.
In March 2002, a deal had been set up between Coffey and his acquaintance, Rommell Taylor, in which Coffey was to buy cocaine from Taylor. When the deal was to be commenced, Taylor was accompanied by William Barnes. Shots rang out as those three men (Coffey, Taylor, and Barnes), accompanied by a fourth man, walked down an alley. Coffey shot and wounded Taylor; Barnes was shot and killed. Taylor contended that Parker was the fourth man present. Parker, Warfield, and Coffey were charged with murdering and robbing Barnes, and attempting to murder Taylor.
F. Procedural History.
In July 2002, the grand jury issued a twenty-five count indictment against Parker and others named and un-named. The charges against Parker proceeded to a jury trial. The jury convicted Parker of (1) assault in the first degree of Baker, (2) the attempted murder of Burks, (3) the attempted murder of Williams, (4) assault in the second degree of Moore, (5) tampering with physical evidence, (6) the attempted murder of Taylor, (7) robbery in the first degree, (8) conspiracy to traffic in a controlled substance, (9) criminal syndication, (10) the murder of Barnes, and (11) the murder of McCurley.
The trial court ultimately sentenced Parker in accordance with the jury‘s recommendations. The trial court‘s judgment imposed (1) ten years for assaulting Baker, (2) twenty years each for the attempted murders of Burks and Williams, (3) five years for the assault of Moore, (4) five years for tampering with physical evidence, (5) fifteen years for the attempted murder of Taylor, (6) ten years for the robbery of Barnes, (7) twenty years for conspiracy to traffic in a controlled substance, and (8) twenty years for criminal syndication. The trial court ordered all those sentences to be served concurrently, except the robbery sentence, which the trial court ordered to be served consecutively to the other offenses. In total, the effective sentence was for thirty years’ imprisonment. Also, the trial court accepted the jury‘s recommendation and sentenced Parker to life imprisonment without the possibility of parole for twenty-five years each for the murders of Barnes and McCurley.
III. ANALYSIS.
Parker raises a host of issues in this appeal. We shall address each separately,
A. The Criminal Syndication Count of the Indictment Did Sufficiently State an Offense.
Parker contends the criminal syndication count of the indictment fails to state an offense. We disagree.
The criminal syndication charge is contained in count one of the indictment. Count one reads in its entirety as follows:
That between the 1st day of January, 1996, and the 17th day of July, 2002, in Jefferson County, Kentucky, the above named defendants, Kenneth Parker, DeShawn Parker, Wilbert Bethel, Marcus Stallard, Clifford Warfield and Dominique Coffey, and others known and unknown, committed the offense of Criminal Syndication by doing one or more of the following: (a) organizing or participating in organizing a criminal syndicate; (b) providing material aid to a criminal syndicate; (c) managing, supervising or directing any of the activities of a criminal syndicate; (d) conspiring or attempting to commit, or acting as an accomplice in the commission of a criminal syndicate; (e) conspiring or attempting to commit or act as an accomplice in the commission of[] any offense of violence.
According to
(1) A person, with the purpose to establish or maintain a criminal syndicate or to facilitate any of its activities, shall not do any of the following:
(a) Organize or participate in organizing a criminal syndicate or any of its activities;
(b) Provide material aid to a criminal syndicate or any of its activities, whether such aid is in the form of money or other property, or credit;
(c) Manage, supervise, or direct any of the activities of a criminal syndicate, at any level of responsibility;
(d) Knowingly furnish legal, accounting, or other managerial services to a criminal syndicate;
(e) Commit, or conspire or attempt to commit, or act as an accomplice in the commission of, any offense of a type in which a criminal syndicate engages on a continuing basis;
(f) Commit, or conspire or attempt to commit or act as an accomplice in the commission of, any offense of violence; or
(g) Commit, or conspire or attempt to commit, or act as an accomplice in the commission of bribery in violation of
KRS Chapters 518 or521 , orKRS 119.205 ,121.025 ,121.055 ,524.070 ,156.465 ,45A.340 ,63.090 ,6.080 ,18A.145 , or244.600 .
Similarly, a criminal syndicate is defined in
(3) As used in this section “criminal syndicate” means five (5) or more persons collaborating to promote or engage in any of the following on a continuing basis:
(a) Extortion or coercion in violation of
KRS 514.080 or521.020 ;(b) Engaging in, promoting, or permitting prostitution or human trafficking in violation of
KRS Chapter 529 ;(c) Any theft offense as defined in
KRS Chapter 514 ;(d) Any gambling offense as defined in
KRS 411.090 ,KRS Chapter 528 , orSection 226 of the Constitution ;
(e) Illegal trafficking in controlled substances as prohibited by
KRS Chapter 218A , in intoxicating or spirituous liquor as defined inKRS Chapters 242 or244 , or in destructive devices or booby traps as defined inKRS Chapter 237 ; or(f) Lending at usurious interest, and enforcing repayment by illegal means in violation of
KRS Chapter 360 .
Parker acknowledges that our precedent holds that all that is necessary for an indictment properly to charge an offense “is to name the offense.”2 And the indictment at issue sufficiently names the offense of criminal syndication. But Parker contends that we should adopt a specificity requirement for criminal syndication charges. Toward that end, Parker contends that a criminal syndication indictment must allege at least one of the seven methods of committing the crime set forth in
Parker has not cited any specific authority that would move us to except criminal syndication from our general pronouncement that an indictment sufficiently charges an offense simply by naming the offense. Holding in Parker‘s favor on this issue would be a de facto return to the old Code of Criminal Practice, which our predecessor Court stated “requir[ed] an indictment to contain every essential element of the crime charged.”3
In sum, we reiterate our commitment to the principle that an indictment properly states an offense merely by naming the offense charged. In other words, a criminal syndication indictment is not infirm and subject to dismissal solely because it lacks a detailed recitation of the underlying facts. The protocol for a defendant who desires more information is to serve a motion for a bill of particulars.4 The indictment in the case at hand closely tracked
B. Trying All of the Charges Against Parker in One Trial was Permissible.
Parker contends that the trial court erred by permitting all of the charges to be tried together because trying all of the charges together constituted an improper “piling on.” We disagree.
The very nature of the offense of criminal syndication, as set forth in
C. The Trial Court Did Not Err in Refusing to Grant a Mistrial.
At trial, Sheldon Wright, who was a reluctant witness, testified that he did not recall telling the authorities he saw Warfield running from the scene of Stephenson‘s murder. Instead, Wright contended he had no personal knowledge of the matter and had merely repeated back to the police what he had heard being discussed in the neighborhood. In response to a question from the Commonwealth, Wright testified that he did recall telling a detective he (Wright) might be hurt if he testified in court. No objection was made to that exchange.
On cross-examination, Parker‘s counsel asked if Wright had been hiding in fear of retribution. In a rambling answer, Wright stated, without objection, that he had wondered if he was going to be a target.
Later, the Commonwealth asked Wright on re-direct if he recalled telling a detective that he (Wright) would be killed if he showed up for court. Wright stated that he did not remember making that statement but added that he felt like he could have been in danger. The Commonwealth then asked Wright whether he felt like he could be in danger, to which Wright responded, “Right.” The trial court then interjected, “Let‘s move on.” Only then did defense counsel move for a mistrial. During the colloquy at the bench, defense counsel stated that the trial court could “certainly” admonish the jury to disregard the last question and answer. The trial court found the testimony to be improper but denied the mistrial and admonished the jury to disregard the last question and answer. Parker claims the trial court‘s refusal to grant a mistrial was an error. We disagree.
We agree with Parker that Wright‘s statement about fearing that he would be harmed for testifying against Parker was improper. Jury verdicts must be based upon admissible evidence, not jurors’ fear of the allegedly vengeful nature of a defendant. And the Commonwealth does not argue in its brief that Wright‘s statements were proper. But we disagree with Parker‘s contention that a mistrial was necessary.
“A jury is presumed to follow an admonition to disregard evidence[,]” and an admonition is presumed sufficient to cure errors.11 The only two circumstances in which an admonition is deemed an insufficient curative measure are:
(1) when there is an overwhelming probability that the jury will be unable to follow the court‘s admonition and there is a strong likelihood that the effect of the inadmissible evidence would be devastating to the defendant, or (2) when the question was asked without a factual basis and was inflammatory or highly prejudicial.12
But this case does not fall within those exceptions because the improper testimony was relatively brief in nature given the lengthy trial. And defense counsel did not object when Wright first mentioned fearing retribution and, in fact, raised that issue himself during cross-examination. Also, although not mentioned by the parties, the record reflects that at one point, Coffey testified without objection that he did not want to “turn against” Parker because he feared for his safety. In short, we believe the trial court‘s admonition was a sufficient curative measure, rendering a mistrial unnecessary.
D. Parker‘s Prosecutorial Misconduct Argument Fails.
Parker raises three separate arguments under the umbrella of prosecutorial misconduct. He contends reversible error occurred (1) when the Commonwealth repeatedly referred to Parker as the leader of the Crips; (2) because the Commonwealth made repeated references to an allegedly incriminating rap CD, which was not introduced into evidence; and (3) because the Commonwealth committed discovery violations. We reject Parker‘s arguments that reversible error occurred.
1. Standard of Review.
Counsel is allowed “broad latitude” in presenting a case to a jury.13 So mere improper remarks, standing alone, are not sufficient for reversal.14 Rather, a reviewing court must determine whether the complained-of prosecutorial miscon-
2. References to Parker as Gang Leader Not Reversible Error.
During both opening statement and closing argument, the Commonwealth repeatedly referred to Parker as the leader of the Crips. Parker contends those references constitute prosecutorial misconduct because they lacked an evidentiary basis.
Our review of the record shows that the Commonwealth repeatedly referred to Parker as the leader of the Crips. But despite Parker‘s contention to the contrary, we have not been directed to a place in the record where Parker lodged a contemporaneous objection to that characterization.18 So we deem this issue unpreserved for appellate review, meaning that we may reverse only if the misconduct was a palpable error that resulted in manifest injustice.19
The comments at issue were not so egregious as to have undermined the basic integrity and fairness of Parker‘s trial. As the Commonwealth noted in its response to Parker‘s motion for a new trial, the jury could reasonably have inferred that Parker was the leader of the Victory Park Crips by virtue of the fact that he seemed to be the person who made the ultimate decisions to commit the acts in question. After all, Coffey testified, without objection, that Parker had named the gang the Rat Pacc and that he and Parker were above the other gang members in the drug-dealing hierarchy. The fact that no witness specifically identified Parker as the leader of the gang does not necessitate reversal. An attorney is permitted to make reasonable comments on the evidence and urge the jury to draw reasonable inferences from the evidence.20 For example, it was not improper for the Commonwealth to contend in closing argument that Coffey‘s testimony showed that he lacked sufficient intelligence to have planned and executed the crimes allegedly committed by the Crips. In sum, having considered the comments, we do not believe they are so egregious as to have undermined the fairness and integrity of the proceedings.
3. References to Rap CD Not Reversible Error.
Parker contends that the Commonwealth engaged in reversible error when it repeatedly referred to a rap CD, which allegedly contains a rap in which Parker and other Crips rapped about a violent act they committed in July 2000
The Commonwealth called as a witness a person who helped produce the CD. The Commonwealth also called as a witness a police officer who purchased the CD, in Parker‘s presence, from another member of the Crips. The Commonwealth also questioned Coffey about the CD. The direct testimony linking Parker to the CD was Coffey‘s assertion that Parker had acknowledged that he participated in performing the rap recorded on the CD.
This is not the first time we have confronted this same CD. In a separate trial, the Commonwealth played the CD during opening statements in the trial of Kenneth Parker‘s brother, DeShawn Parker.21 But the Commonwealth was unable later to persuade the trial court to admit the CD into evidence because, like in the case at hand, the CD could not be properly authenticated.22 We held in DeShawn Parker‘s case that it was error to play the CD during opening statements and to refer to it during the trial.23 We held that the trial court erred in not granting a mistrial because:
the Commonwealth was able to tell the jury that the CD referred to the Appellant having committed the murder of which he was accused, and that he was bragging about it through the CD recording (which was clearly prejudicial) even though the CD could not be sufficiently authenticated to be admitted into evidence. . . . By using unauthenticated materials in opening statement the Commonwealth unfairly exposed the jury to inflammatory information of such a nature that no admonition could reasonably be believed to cure it.24
But the question before us in the case at hand is not the same question that was before us in DeShawn Parker‘s case. Kenneth is not alleging that the trial court erred by not granting his request for a mistrial. Actually, Kenneth has not argued that he even requested a mistrial. Instead, Kenneth argues that the Commonwealth engaged in prosecutorial misconduct by referring to an inadmissible item of evidence (the CD). The Commonwealth‘s terse response only generically argues that the trial court did not abuse its discretion.
We are somewhat at a disadvantage because none of the parties have pointed to any specific point in the record where the trial court actually denied a motion by the Commonwealth to admit the CD into evidence; and we shall not search the voluminous record in this case to try to pinpoint that event, if it occurred.25 Regardless, the question is whether it was proper for the trial court to permit the Commonwealth to refer to a CD that, apparently, was never introduced into evidence. To ask that question is to answer it because a jury‘s verdict must be based on the evidence actually admitted into evidence, which the CD was not.26 So the
The references to the CD were neither fleeting nor brief. The CD was discussed by at least three witnesses for the Commonwealth. But a crucial distinction between the case at hand and DeShawn Parker‘s case is that the CD was apparently never played for the jury in the case at hand. So, unlike DeShawn Parker‘s case, the jury in the present case was not given the impossible task of attempting to disregard the damning contents of the CD. So the error in the case at hand was not nearly as egregious as in DeShawn Parker‘s case. We conclude that the references to the CD in the case at hand were not so far beyond the bounds of ethical propriety as to undermine the basic fairness and integrity of the trial.
4. Alleged Discovery Violations Do Not Constitute Reversible Error.
Although he makes passing reference to other alleged discovery violations, Parker‘s only substantive claim is that the Commonwealth failed to meet its obligation to provide an alleged oral statement by Levolia Baker. When Parker called Baker as a witness, Baker testified that Parker did not shoot him. That testimony apparently was consistent with Baker‘s testimony in the trial of JaJuan Stephenson. In rebuttal, the Commonwealth called Detective Harvey Hunt, who testified that Baker had told Hunt after Stephenson‘s trial that Parker had shot Baker. Parker contends the Commonwealth‘s failure to provide Baker‘s statement to Hunt in discovery was a violation mandating reversal. We disagree.
Although not mentioned in the briefs, our review of the videotape of Baker‘s testimony reveals that the Commonwealth asked Baker whether he had told Hunt after Stephenson‘s trial that Parker was the person who shot him (Baker). Baker responded that he had not. Immediately after that exchange, a bench conference occurred in which Parker‘s counsel stated that he did not receive any such statement by Baker in discovery. The Commonwealth responded that there was no written statement and that it planned to call Hunt later to testify concerning his conversation with Baker. The trial court then stated simply that the issue would be addressed at the time Hunt was called in rebuttal.
Two days later, the Commonwealth called Detective Hunt in rebuttal. Before Hunt testified, Parker objected to Hunt‘s testimony on the grounds that it was a reopening of the Commonwealth‘s case-in-chief, not impeachment. Importantly, that objection contained no reference to Baker‘s alleged statement to Hunt not being provided to Parker during discovery. The trial court permitted the questioning because Baker had testified that he did not make a statement to Hunt that Parker had shot him (Baker). Hunt then testified that he had a conversation with Baker after Stephenson‘s trial, during which Baker told Hunt that he (Baker) was scared to say that Parker had shot him. Parker then called the prosecutor from Stephenson‘s trial, Joseph Gutmann. Gutmann testified that Baker had identified Stephenson as the shooter. Gutmann further testified that Detective Hunt never told
We question whether this alleged discovery violation is properly preserved since Parker‘s counsel seemingly abandoned the discovery argument when Hunt testified. But even if we assume solely for the purposes of argument that the issue is preserved, Parker is not entitled to relief. Baker testified that he did not make an incriminating statement regarding Parker to Hunt. And Prosecutor Gutmann testified that he was not told by Hunt that Baker had identified Parker as the shooter. So instead of being caught unawares, Parker was able to blunt most, if not all, of the force of Hunt‘s testimony.
Even if we assume the Commonwealth failed to meet its discovery obligation by timely failing to turn Baker‘s statement over to Parker,27 there has not been a showing of prejudice sufficient to constitute reversible prosecutorial misconduct. In other words, any discovery error by the Commonwealth regarding Baker‘s statement was not so egregious as to have undermined the basic fairness and integrity of the trial.28
E. Trial Court Did Not Abuse its Discretion in Admitting Rommell Taylor‘s Identification of Parker.
Parker contends that his identification by Rommell Taylor should have been suppressed as being unduly suggestive. We disagree.
As mentioned before, Taylor had set up a drug transaction with Coffey. Others were present at the transaction, including Barnes. Barnes was shot and killed, and Taylor was wounded. At a suppression hearing, an officer testified that Coffey had told the officer, before the officer‘s discussion with Taylor, that Parker was present when Barnes was killed and Taylor was wounded. The officer testified that he showed Taylor a large photograph (actually, a fake “wanted” poster) containing six members of the Crips; and Taylor picked Parker from that photograph as having been present during the shootings, although he stated that the person he chose (Parker) usually wore glasses. The officer did state that Taylor had said he could not be certain Parker was the person present at the shootings. Taylor later identified Parker from a lineup. The trial court stated on the record that the fact the poster said, “Wanted, U.S. Marshal, $1,000,000,” was suggestive. So the trial court continued the hearing so that Taylor could testify. When the hearing resumed about two weeks later, Taylor also testified that he had seen the fourth individual (Parker) before and had picked Parker out of a lineup. Taylor testified all four men were face-to-face before the shootings. But Taylor also testified he was not completely sure if Parker was the man present during the shootings.
When a defendant challenges an identification procedure, “the primary
(1) the opportunity of the witness to view the criminal at the time of the crime, (2) the witness’ degree of attention, (3) the accuracy of the witness’ prior description of the criminal, (4) the level of certainty demonstrated by the witness at the confrontation, and (5) the length of time between the crime and the confrontation.32
Since Taylor‘s initial identification of Parker was based upon his depiction in a fake wanted poster, we accept, for the purposes of argument, the trial court‘s conclusion that Taylor‘s identification of Parker was suggestive. So we move on to consider the five factors set forth in Neil v. Biggers, using the abuse of discretion standard.33
1. Taylor‘s Opportunity to View the Criminal at the Time of the Crime.
Taylor testified that all four men involved in the drug deal were face-to-face for about five minutes and that the lighting was sufficient for him to see the others. We disagree with Parker‘s baseless conclusion that five minutes is an insufficient time for valid eyewitness identification. The relatively brief period of time in which Taylor viewed Parker and Taylor‘s testimony that he was not focused upon Parker during that time more properly fall within the next factor under Neil. So this factor weighs in favor of the Commonwealth.
2. Taylor‘s Degree of Attention.
Neither the Commonwealth nor the trial court analyzed this factor.34 But, by his own admission, Taylor did not pay a great deal of attention to Parker since he (Taylor) was more focused upon Coffey. So we must conclude that this factor weighs somewhat in Parker‘s favor.
3. The Accuracy of Taylor‘s Prior Identification of Parker.
Taylor apparently did not give the police a prior description of the fourth man present at the drug deal. So we agree with
4. Taylor‘s Level of Certainty.
At the suppression hearing, Taylor repeatedly testified that he was not certain Parker was the fourth man present at the drug deal. So this factor weighs in Parker‘s favor.
5. Length of Time Between the Crime and Taylor‘s Identification of Parker.
Taylor picked Parker from the fake wanted poster only two days after the shooting. And Taylor picked Parker from the lineup only a few days later. So we agree with the trial court that this factor weighs in favor of the Commonwealth.
Our analysis reveals that two factors weigh in favor of Parker and two factors weigh in favor of the Commonwealth. So the decision as to whether to admit Taylor‘s identification of Parker was a close call. Since reasonable minds could have differed over the admissibility of that identification, we cannot say that the trial court‘s decision to admit Taylor‘s identification was so “arbitrary, unreasonable, unfair, or unsupported by sound legal principles”35 to constitute an abuse of discretion. So we must affirm.
F. Trial Court Did Not Abuse its Discretion By Admitting Prior Testimony or Taped Conversations of JaJuan Stephenson.
As stated before, Stephenson was originally charged with shooting Baker. But Stephenson was acquitted of that charge, after which Parker was charged with shooting Baker. Parker was also charged with killing Stephenson. In an effort to prove those charges, the Commonwealth was permitted to play taped recordings for the jury of two incriminating conversations ostensibly between Stephenson and Parker. And the Commonwealth was permitted to play for the jury portions of the testimony given by Stephenson at his own trial. Parker contends the introduction of this evidence was reversible error. We disagree.
1. The Taped Conversations.
Attorney Scott Drabenstadt (who represented Coffey), testified that he recognized Parker‘s voice on the taped conversations. According to Drabenstadt, he had spoken with Parker in person between twelve and twenty-four times, and he had also spoken with Parker on the telephone an additional twelve to twenty-four times. Drabenstadt testified there was no doubt in his mind that the voice he heard on the tapes was Parker‘s. The next witness, Rocky Farmer, a former investigator for the public defender‘s office—through whom the tapes were admitted—testified that he was present when the two taped conversations occurred and that he had contemporaneously listened to Stephenson‘s side of the conversation. Farmer also testified that he listened to the taped conversations with Stephenson. But Farmer also testified he did not know for sure that Stephenson had actually called Parker because he was not familiar with Parker‘s voice and had no record of the phone number Stephenson called. And Farmer could not say with certainty that the person Stephenson called in the second taped conversation was the same person Stephenson had spoken to in the first taped conversation.
Obviously, the taped conversations are incriminating. But the question before us is whether the trial court abused its discretion by permitting the Commonwealth to play them for the jury.37
a. Authentication.
We must first address Parker‘s contention that the Commonwealth failed adequately to authenticate the tapes.38 Authentication of these tapes was complicated because the Commonwealth could not compel either alleged participant in the two conversations to testify since one participant was dead and the other had a constitutional right to refuse to testify. Nevertheless, the Commonwealth contends that the combined testimony of Drabenstadt and Farmer was sufficient to authenticate the tapes. We agree.
Although it surprisingly was not discussed by the parties, Parker‘s voice could be authenticated under
Drabenstadt testified he had spoken in person and on the phone with Parker many times. So Drabenstadt clearly had heard Parker‘s voice “at any time under circumstances connecting it with the alleged speaker.” So, under the express language of
This case is markedly different from cases cited by Parker involving identification of a defendant via a lineup for which counsel was not present.42 In the case at hand, Parker was not required to go anywhere or do anything to further Drabenstadt‘s voice identification; therefore, the constitutional concerns inherent in a post-indictment visual lineup were not present.43 Indeed, Parker‘s attorney conceded that he was on notice that the Commonwealth planned on calling Drabenstadt as a witness. So Parker‘s counsel had the opportunity to investigate the planned parameters of Drabenstadt‘s testimony. Additionally, Parker did not seek a continuance in order to have additional time to prepare for his cross-examination of Drabenstadt.
Moreover, the Commonwealth played snippets of the two taped conversations for
Drabenstadt; and Drabenstadt stated he had heard those tapes before and that he had no doubt the second voice on the tape was Parker‘s. Additionally, Farmer testified that he was present when the two taped conversations occurred, that he had listened to the tapes with Stephenson close in time to when the conversations occurred, and that the taped conversations played for the jury were the same conversations he helped Stephenson record. Finally, we note that the second person on the tape answered to the name “Wee Wee,” which was one of Parker‘s nicknames.44 In sum, the Commonwealth presented sufficient evidence to authenticate the taped conversations.b. Admissibility.
Although we have concluded that the Commonwealth adequately authenticated the taped conversations, we must also address Parker‘s argument that the admission into evidence of those tapes violated his Sixth Amendment right to confront the witnesses against him. More specifically, Parker contends the statements on the tapes were testimonial, causing their admission to run afoul of the United States Supreme Court‘s decision in Crawford v. Washington.45 The Commonwealth contends that admission of the taped conversations did not run afoul of the Sixth Amendment or Crawford because Parker, himself, was responsible for Stephenson‘s being unavailable as a witness. And, therefore, the statements fall within the hearsay exception set forth at
We begin with the conclusion that the taped conversations are hearsay.46 Even though they were not obtained as a result of any interrogation by the police, we begin by assuming, for argument‘s sake, that the statements on the tapes were testimonial.47 Since Parker had no prior opportunity to cross-examine Stephenson on the matter, the statements would normally be excluded. But both Crawford and its progeny recognize the principle inherent in
when defendants seek to undermine the judicial process by procuring or coercing silence from witnesses and victims, the Sixth Amendment does not require courts to acquiesce. While defendants
have no duty to assist the State in proving their guilt, they do have the duty to refrain from acting in ways that destroy the integrity of the criminal-trial system. We reiterate what we said in Crawford: that “the rule of forfeiture by wrongdoing . . . extinguishes confrontation claims on essentially equitable grounds.” That is, one who obtains the absence of a witness by wrongdoing forfeits the constitutional right to confrontation.48
The Commonwealth argues that since Parker killed Stephenson, thereby rendering him unavailable as a witness, Parker cannot complain that Stephenson‘s statements were inadmissible hearsay. Parker‘s response is that the Commonwealth failed to introduce sufficient proof to show that he killed Stephenson, as borne out by the jury‘s inability to reach a verdict on that charge.49
The United States Supreme Court recently issued Giles v. California,50 which narrows the limits of the forfeiture-by-wrongdoing exception. Under Giles, it is no longer sufficient under
Although we have not yet had occasion in a published opinion to address what impact, if any, Crawford and its progeny, as well as Giles, had on
Giles left open the proper procedure for trial courts to use when facing a forfeiture-by-wrongdoing claim. A plurality of the United States Supreme Court in Giles opined that it was “repugnant to our constitutional system of trial by jury” for evidence such as that at issue to be introduced against “those murder defendants whom the judge considers guilty (after less than a full trial, mind you, and of course before the jury has pronounced guilt) . . . .”58 Yet the plurality then opined that a trial judge could “be allowed to inquire into guilt of the charged offense in order to make a preliminary evidentiary ruling . . . when, for example, the defendant is on trial for murdering a witness in order to prevent his testimony.”59
Evidence must be admissible before it can be admitted. Stated differently, a trial court—as the gatekeeper of evidence—may decline to permit a party‘s presenting evidence, including evidence of forfeiture by wrongdoing, if the trial court finds that evidence to be inadmissible. From a purely procedural standpoint, we believe a trial court promotes justice and judicial economy by engaging any forfeiture-by-wrongdoing issues before trial begins so that the parties and the court can be fully cognizant of the evidence that likely will be presented to the jury. Otherwise, the trial judge and the parties will face a recess in mid-trial to conduct an evidentiary hearing outside the jury‘s presence on whether the requirements of
Regardless of when the trial court addresses the forfeiture-by-wrongdoing issue, we agree with the California Court of Appeals that a trial court must hold an evidentiary hearing before ruling on the admissibility of the proposed hear
“[w]hen the determination [of admissibility] depends upon the resolution of a preliminary question of fact, the resolution is determined by the trial judge under
KRE 104(a) on the basis of preponderance of the evidence and the resolution will not be overturned unless clearly erroneous. . . .” Young v. Commonwealth, 50 S.W.3d 148, 167 (Ky. 2001).62
Turning again to the case at hand, we must first determine whether the Commonwealth met its burden of establishing by a preponderance of the evidence that Parker either engaged in—or at least acquiesced in—wrongdoing designed to prevent Stephenson from testifying. We find the Commonwealth met its burden. As mentioned before, Coffey testified that he loaned Parker money and lent him a gun and that Parker gave the money and gun to Warfield to kill Stephenson. Wright also testified that he saw Warfield fleeing the area of Stephenson‘s murder.
We conclude that Giles was satisfied because, although it did not have to do so, the trial court—and later the jury—could certainly have reasonably inferred from all of the unique facts and circumstances of this case that Parker was motivated to kill Stephenson in order to prevent him from testifying that Parker shot Baker.63 The dual motive of revenge and prevention of future testimony was the central point of the Commonwealth‘s theory of the case.
We next must consider whether Parker has offered credible evidence to the contrary. Parker has not pointed us to any place in the record where he offered such evidence.64 Instead, Parker merely incorrectly contends that the Commonwealth did not offer evidence sufficient to shift the burden to him. So we conclude that the taped conversations did not violate the Confrontation Clause under Crawford and Giles, meaning that the trial court‘s decision to admit those taped conversa
2. Stephenson‘s Prior Testimony.
The propriety of admitting Stephenson‘s prior testimony, in which he implicates Parker in the shooting of Baker, involves many of the same concerns. But Parker does not offer any argument regarding the authentication of the tapes.65 Rather, Parker only objects to the introduction of the prior testimony on Crawford grounds.
Again, we accept Parker‘s contentions that Stephenson‘s prior testimony was both testimonial and hearsay. But we conclude that the testimony did not violate the Confrontation Clause under Crawford and Giles. Again, the Commonwealth presented evidence from Coffey and Wright that tended to show by a preponderance of the evidence that Parker was responsible for (or at least acquiesced in) Stephenson‘s inability to be present to testify and that Parker‘s intent was to kill Stephenson so that Stephenson would be unavailable to testify in Parker‘s trial. The burden then shifted to Parker to show credible evidence to the contrary. Parker has, again, not satisfied that burden because he has not pointed us to any specific credible evidence. So we conclude the trial court‘s decision to permit the playing of Stephenson‘s prior testimony was neither clearly erroneous nor an abuse of discretion.
G. No Reversible Error Stemming from Shameka Wright‘s Testimony.
In August 2000, Shameka Wright66 told the police she had information about the gang war between the Crips and the Bloods. Shameka also told the police that on the night McCurley was murdered, she (Shameka) was at a skating rink where McCurley, Burks, Williams, and Moore were present. Shameka said she called Parker to buy marijuana; and Parker asked, using a racial slur, if Burks and Williams were present with her.67 When Shameka tried to deny their presence, Parker said he already knew they were there; and “it” (presumably meaning the gang feud) would end that night. Shameka told Burks her fear that he (Burks) would be killed by Parker. Burks, Williams, McCurley, and Moore left the skating rink; and Shameka did not see the shootings in which McCurley was killed and Moore was injured.
According to Shameka, she called Burks‘s grandmother later that night out of concern for Burks‘s welfare. Burks‘s grandmother told Shameka that Burks and Williams were okay, but McCurley was dead. Shameka then called Parker, who asked whether Burks and Williams had been shot. Shameka told Parker no, that he had killed an “innocent” person. Parker uttered an expletive and hung up.
In response to Parker‘s contention that Shameka should only be able to testify as to the events surrounding the McCurley murder, the trial court cautioned Shameka in the presence of the jury that she could testify only as to conversations she had with Parker, not about what someone else had told her. Shameka proved to be an extremely difficult witness for the Com
The Commonwealth then placed a copy of the transcript of Shameka‘s August 3, 2000,68 statement to the police at the witness stand and repeatedly referred to it during questioning. Soon the Commonwealth‘s questioning largely consisted of reading from transcripts of Shameka‘s statement to the police and asking Shameka if the Commonwealth‘s recitation was consistent with the transcripts. At many points, Shameka admitted the Commonwealth‘s statements were consistent with the transcripts but denied the transcripts’ accuracy, at one point even referring to a transcript as “crap.” Over the defense‘s objection, the Commonwealth also played for the jury an approximately thirty-minute audio tape of one of Shameka‘s statements to the police. Much of that taped statement contained statements by Shameka regarding the violent history of the feud between the Crips and the Bloods (including Williams and Burks). But, on the tape, Shameka repeatedly referred to what she had heard; and Shameka testified at trial that she had no personal knowledge of the feud‘s history.
On appeal, Parker contends that much of Shameka‘s testimony was hearsay because she only had first-hand knowledge of what occurred at the skating rink. So Parker objects on hearsay grounds to the trial court‘s permitting the Commonwealth to play to the jury the entirety of Shameka‘s taped statement.
As stated before, hearsay is inadmissible.69 And the Commonwealth in its brief does not refute Parker‘s contention that many of the statements on the taped statement are hearsay. The Commonwealth contends that Shameka‘s testimony was admissible because it “only documented the running feud that existed between the Bloods and the Crips and did not implicate the appellant‘s [Parker‘s] involvement in any way.” As Parker points out in his reply brief, however, the Commonwealth‘s argument is actually an acknowledgement that the challenged portions of Shameka‘s taped statement are irrelevant. And irrelevant evidence is inadmissible.70 So the fact that much of Shameka‘s taped statement did not directly implicate Parker is an additional reason to exclude the evidence, not a reason to admit it.
The Commonwealth also argues that Shameka‘s taped statement was admissible to show that Shameka “was coherent and cooperative during her August 9 statement . . . .” But we agree with Parker that whether Shameka was cooperative during her interactions with the police had no direct bearing on Parker‘s guilt. At most, evidence of Shameka‘s cooperative attitude could have been used to impeach her claim that the transcripts did not accurately reflect the entirety of her interactions with the police. There was no pressing need for the Commonwealth to play the entire taped conversation in order to convey Shameka‘s attitude to the jury.
We recognize that Shameka‘s recalcitrance and defiant attitude made the situa
Having determined the trial court erred by permitting the Commonwealth to play the entire taped statement to the jury we, nevertheless, conclude that the error was harmless. The inadmissible statements did not appear to implicate Parker. So Parker‘s argument to the contrary notwithstanding, the introduction of the inadmissible statements, which comprised only a small fraction of this lengthy trial, was a harmless error.
H. Parker Was Not Entitled to a Directed Verdict.
Parker contends he was entitled to a directed verdict on the conspiracy to traffic in a controlled substance charge and the criminal syndication charge. We disagree with Parker‘s contention as to the conspiracy to traffic in a controlled substance charge, but we agree that he should have been granted a directed verdict on the criminal syndication charge.
1. Standard of Review.
The familiar standard for ruling on a motion for directed verdict is:
On motion for directed verdict, the trial court must draw all fair and reasonable inferences from the evidence in favor of the Commonwealth. If the evidence is sufficient to induce a reasonable juror to believe beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant is guilty, a directed verdict should not be given. For the purpose of ruling on the motion, the trial court must assume that the evidence for the Commonwealth is true, but reserving to the jury questions as to the credibility and weight to be given to such testimony.
On appellate review, the test of a directed verdict is, if under the evidence as a whole, it would be clearly unreasonable for a jury to find guilt, only then the defendant is entitled to a directed verdict of acquittal.73
2. Conspiracy to Traffic in a Controlled Substance Charge.
The jury was instructed that to find Parker guilty of conspiracy to traffic in a controlled substance, it must find beyond a reasonable doubt three main ele
Coffey did testify that he did not have an agreement with either Parker or Warfield to sell drugs, memorably declaring to Parker‘s attorney, “We never agreed to nothing, sir.” But Coffey‘s testimony was inconsistent because he also stated that he “had arranged a drug deal” with Taylor. Coffey also testified that Barnes had showed him a block of cocaine Barnes had hidden in his coat. Coffey also testified that he was armed with a gun given to him by Parker and that Parker also was armed during the drug deal. In addition, Coffey testified that it was Parker‘s idea to rob Barnes and Taylor. Finally, Coffey testified that he unsuccessfully tried to obtain his share of the cocaine from Parker after the killing of Barnes.
Based on Coffey‘s testimony, the Commonwealth introduced sufficient evidence to show that at least one of the conspirators was armed. The question becomes whether the Commonwealth presented enough proof that there was an agreement to traffic in cocaine and that the cocaine was stolen with the intent to distribute, transfer, or sell it.
We conclude that the large amount of cocaine Coffey testified to having seen hidden in Barnes’ coat74 permitted—but did not require—the jury to infer that Parker, Coffey, and Warfield intended to steal the cocaine from Barnes in order to distribute, sell, or otherwise transfer it.75 Likewise, Coffey‘s testimony that he
tried unsuccessfully to get his share of the cocaine from Parker later that night would permit the inference that Parker stole the cocaine from Barnes, even though Parker allegedly told Coffey that he (Parker) had not taken the cocaine. So drawing all reasonable inferences in favor of the Commonwealth, it was not unreasonable for the jury to have found Parker guilty beyond a reasonable doubt of conspiracy to traffic in a controlled substance.
3. Criminal Syndication Charge.
Although
But the offense of criminal syndication requires the collaboration of five or more persons.77 By contrast, the trafficking charge at hand only involved three persons—Parker, Coffey, and Warfield. “The collaboration in the statute means simply collaborating in the scheme, and it is not necessary for the Commonwealth to show that each participant collaborating in the scheme collaborated with or even was aware of the collaboration of the other participants.”78 And criminal syndication requires the illegal conduct (in this case, trafficking in a controlled substance) to occur on a “continuing basis[,]”79 as opposed to the singular drug deal that resulted in Barnes’ death. In order to prove the activity occurred on a continuing basis, “[t]he Commonwealth is not held to proving any specific number of incidents or any element of time, but must show by the proof what the jury could infer from the evidence as intent to collaborate on a continuing basis.”80
We must determine whether the Commonwealth adduced proof that at least two others joined Parker, Coffey, and Warfield in collaborating to promote or engage in trafficking in a controlled substance and that the collaboration occurred on a continuing basis.
Our efforts are greatly hampered by the unfortunate dearth of information in the Commonwealth‘s brief. After quoting
Noticeably lacking from the Commonwealth‘s brief is a single citation to precedent or other authority or to the record to support its contention that the trial court did not err in denying Parker‘s motion for a directed verdict. Indeed, the Commonwealth does not name the four or more additional persons who allegedly assisted Parker in the Crips‘s drug trafficking efforts, nor does the Commonwealth point to anything specific in the record to show that Parker and the Crips collaboratively trafficked in drugs on a continuing basis.81 It is well-settled that an appellate court will not sift through a voluminous record to try to ascertain facts when a party has failed to comply with its obligation under
In reviewing the record for the other arguments raised in this appeal, we viewed Coffey testifying in such a manner as to leave no doubt that there were at least five members of the Crips. But we have not been directed to any testimony that would show that at least five Crips collaborated on a continuing basis to traffic in drugs. In fact, Coffey testified to the contrary when he stated that the Crips made their own deals and sold their own drugs. Although Coffey testified that all of the Crips sold drugs to earn money, Coffey also memorably testified that “every man did their own thing.” And the only drug-related offense was the conspiracy to traffic in narcotics charge, for which only three individuals were named as conspirators. Additionally, that charge involved only a one-time drug deal or robbery, not a continuing collaboration to sell narcotics.
In short, the Commonwealth has not pointed to any evidence to show that it presented proof that Parker and at least four other persons collaborated to traffic in narcotics on a continuing basis. So we must conclude the trial court erred by failing to grant Parker‘s motion for a directed verdict on the criminal syndication charge.84 Parker‘s criminal syndication conviction is reversed for that reason.
I. McCurley Murder Properly Subject to an Aggravated Penalty.
McCurley was murdered in 2000, and Barnes was murdered in 2002. Parker contends he should not have been subjected to an aggravated penalty for the McCurley murder based upon his having caused multiple deaths.85 We disagree.
Parker‘s argument runs contrary to our settled precedent. In Simmons v. Commonwealth, we held that it was permissible to use multiple deaths as an aggravator even though the defendant caused the three deaths one at a time and on different dates.86 The defendant in Simmons argued that the multiple death aggravator found in
We reject Parker‘s contention that our holding in Simmons should not apply to this case because there were other statutory aggravators present in Simmons. The jury need find only one statutory ag
Likewise, we reject Parker‘s argument that Simmons should not apply to him because the murders in Simmons were so identical as to be so-called signature crimes. But the murders of Barnes and McCurley lack such commonality. Although it is true that the murders in Simmons had many common characteristics, our decision on when the multiple murder aggravator may apply was based upon the number of murders, not their commonality.
Finally, we reject Parker‘s contention that our holding in Simmons was erroneous and should be overturned or modified. To the contrary, we believe Simmons remains an accurate interpretation of
J. No Cumulative Error Sufficient for Reversal.
We disagree with Parker‘s contention that the cumulative effect of otherwise harmless errors necessitates reversal of his convictions. To the contrary, our examination of the record reveals that Parker‘s trial was fundamentally fair. Nothing more is required.91
K. No Error in Denying Request for Additional Pages in Parker‘s Brief.
Parker unsuccessfully filed a motion asking us to allow him to file a brief in excess of the fifty-page limit set by
We are cognizant that this is a complex case, as demonstrated by the length of this opinion. But we are convinced that use of concise language and careful editing enabled Parker‘s able counsel in the space of fifty pages to present adequately all potentially meritorious issues. So we conclude that Parker is not entitled to relief.92
IV. CONCLUSION.
For the foregoing reasons, Kenneth Parker‘s conviction for criminal syndication is reversed and remanded to the Jefferson Circuit Court for proceedings consistent with this opinion. All of Parker‘s other convictions and sentences are affirmed.
All sitting. ABRAMSON, CUNNINGHAM, NOBLE, SCHRODER, and SCOTT, JJ., concur. VENTERS, J., concurs in result only by separate opinion.
VENTERS, Justice, concurring in result only:
I concur with the majority on all points but one. The majority holds that an indictment is sufficiently specific if it simply “names the offense.” I disagree and respectfully submit that
