PEOPLE v MONET
Docket No. 77-966
Michigan Court of Appeals
Submitted October 5, 1978, at Detroit.—Decided June 6, 1979.
90 Mich App 553
Leave to appeal applied for.
- The testimony regarding the intimidation by the polygraph examiner was improperly excluded. The testimony could have been given without reference to the polygraph, and in the first two trials it had in fact been so given. Exclusion of the testimony deprived the defendant of much of his coercion defense.
- Exclusion of the bank records was also improper, as the records were probative of the defendant‘s theory of the case, and their exclusion deprived the defendant of part of his defense.
Reversed and remanded.
M. J. Kelly, J., dissented. He would hold that under the circumstances of this case the exclusion of the testimony regarding the alleged intimidation was not an abuse of the trial court‘s discretion, nor was the exclusion of the bank records an
REFERENCES FOR POINTS IN HEADNOTES
[1] 29 Am Jur 2d, Evidence § 831.
[2] 29 Am Jur 2d, Evidence §§ 542, 590.
[3] 30 Am Jur 2d, Evidence § 928.
[4] 29 Am Jur 2d, Evidence §§ 251, 253, 256.
[5] 29 Am Jur 2d, Evidence § 543.
[6] 30 Am Jur 2d, Evidence §§ 928, 950.
OPINION OF THE COURT
- CRIMINAL LAW — EVIDENCE — POLYGRAPH EXAMINATIONS.
Evidence that an accused was subject to a polygraph examination and the results of that examination are not admissible at trial.
- CRIMINAL LAW — CONFESSIONS — COERCION — EVIDENCE.
A trial court erred in excluding testimony by a defendant that he had been coerced into making a confession by a police officer who administered a polygraph examination; the fact that the alleged coercion occurred during the course of a polygraph examination need not have been revealed to the jury, and the exclusion of the testimony was reversible error where it effectively deprived the defendant of much of his coercion defense.
- CRIMINAL LAW — EVIDENCE — BANKING TRANSACTIONS.
The records of certain banking transactions of a deceased, offered by a defendant in a homicide case in an effort to support his defense that the deceased may have been killed as the result of trafficking in drugs, were erroneously excluded where the prosecution was permitted to introduce records of “normal banking transactions” of the deceased and where the excluded records were probative of facts supporting the defendant‘s theory.
DISSENT BY M. J. KELLY, J.
- EVIDENCE — EXCLUSION OF EVIDENCE — JUDGE‘S DISCRETION — RULES OF EVIDENCE.
A trial court is permitted to exclude relevant evidence if its probative value is substantially outweighed by the danger of unfair prejudice, confusion of the issues, or by considerations of undue delay, waste of time, or needless presentation of cumulative evidence, and a trial judge‘s exercise of discretion should be upheld unless he acted arbitrarily or irrationally (MRE 403).
- CRIMINAL LAW — EVIDENCE — POLYGRAPH EXAMINATIONS — CONFESSIONS — COERCION.
A trial court properly excluded testimony by a defendant that he
had been coerced into making a confession by a police officer who administered a polygraph examination to the defendant, where the defendant‘s allegations in this regard were unsup- ported by any other competent evidence and where other allegations of coercion were substantially aired before the jury. - CRIMINAL LAW — EVIDENCE — DEFENDANT‘S THEORY OF CASE.
Evidence of a single banking transaction of a deceased, which the defendant sought to introduce in order to support his theory that the deceased had been involved in drug trafficking, was properly excluded where the other facts adduced at trial did not support the inference that the deceased had been involved in drug trafficking.
Frank J. Kelley, Attorney General, Robert A. Derengoski, Solicitor General, William L. Cahalan, Prosecuting Attorney, Edward R. Wilson, Principal Attorney, Appeals, and H. Gail McKnight, Assistant Prosecuting Attorney, for the people.
Noel D. Culbert, for defendant.
Before: Bronson, P.J., and M. J. Kelly and D. C. Riley, JJ.
D. C. RILEY, J. Defendant appeals as of right his conviction of manslaughter,
The defendant had originally been charged with the second-degree murder of one Mohammed Tahir Khan. The prosecution alleged that the homicide had taken place on February 15, 1976. The badly-decomposed body of the deceased was found on June 10, 1976, in the trunk of his car in a shopping center in the city of Southgate, Michigan. Identification was made through fingerprints and the apparent cause of death was strangulation. The defendant had three trials in this case, the first two ending in jury deadlock. The third jury ultimately convicted the defendant of manslaughter.
The events of record below which follow form
On July 10, 1976, the defendant indicated he would cooperate with the police by taking a polygraph examination. He was taken to the Michigan State Police post in Detroit where he met briefly with Sgt. Chester Romatowski, a polygraph operator. The defendant and Romatowski were alone together for 1-1/2 hours during the polygraph examination. After this period, the defendant indicated that he wanted to make a statement. The statement given constituted a confession by the defendant that he had killed the deceased.
The defense strategy in each of the defendant‘s trials was to create a reasonable doubt in the minds of the jury by contesting the voluntariness of defendant‘s confession and by presenting alternative theories explaining the decedent‘s death. To this end, defendant presented allegations of coercion from three distinct sources, (threatening telephone calls, conversations with his cousin, and from Sgt. Romatowski), and presented testimony which, arguably, led to the inference that the
Of defendant‘s four issues raised on appeal, we need address only two and reverse for yet another trial.
First, defendant asserts that the trial court erred in forbidding inquiry by defense counsel as to possible coercion of the defendant by Sgt. Romatowski during the time they were alone together. We agree with the defendant‘s contention that the exclusion of this testimony constituted reversible error.
As previously noted, defendant sought to discredit the confession given immediately after the 1-1/2 hour polygraph test by asserting a coercion defense. The trial court excluded inquiry into what transpired during that 1-1/2 hour period for the reason that the prosecution would be unable to inform the jury of the taking of the polygraph test and its results. Therefore, it would be unfair to permit the defendant to raise the police coercion issue where the prosecution was in no position to rebut defendant‘s allegations.
At trial, Sgt. Henry, who had investigated the homicide, testified on direct examination that defendant was not coerced at any time during the day on which the polygraph was administered. Before defense counsel had the opportunity to cross-examine, the prosecutor moved that the defense be prohibited from asking questions concern-
The prosecution argues that the ban against evidence of polygraph tests and their results precluded defendant‘s coercion testimony. While it is true that Michigan law specifically forbids both the introduction of evidence that an accused was subject to a polygraph test and its results, People v Frechette, 380 Mich 64; 155 NW2d 830 (1968), People v Bush, 54 Mich App 77, 80; 220 NW2d 333 (1974), lv den 393 Mich 755 (1974), see also People v Barbara, 400 Mich 352; 255 NW2d 171 (1977), such facts were easily separable from evidence pertinent to defendant‘s coercion defense in the case at bar. All the jury need have known was that Sgt. Romatowski had interrogated the defendant. In fact, during each of the first two trials, defendant testified that he felt intimidated by Sgt. Romatowski; that the officer had raised his voice, shook his fist, and threatened him. At both proceedings, Sgt. Romatowski effectively asserted in rebuttal that he did nothing to intimidate the defendant, nor did anything to coerce the statement other than accuse defendant of lying. Thus, two previous juries had gone through the same evidence without notice of any impermissible reference to the polygraph examination. There is no valid reason why the same could not have been
We briefly review one other allegation of error that may arise again at trial. Defendant claims that the trial court improperly excluded proffered evidence of the deceased‘s bank records. As noted, a substantial part of the defense was the propounding of alternative theories explaining the killing. Defendant argued that the deceased might have been killed as a result of a feud in the Pakistani community or as a result of his involvement in drug trafficking. As a means of substantiating the latter theory, defendant sought to introduce the deceased‘s bank records which indicated only that there had been an $11,000 deposit and withdrawal approximately six weeks prior to the murder.
Other evidence at trial served to refute defendant‘s claim; however his allegation was not without support. Igbal Monet testified that the deceased had previously, in his presence, sold packages wrapped in aluminum foil.
When defendant attempted to introduce the
Reversed and remanded for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Bronson, P.J., concurred.
PEOPLE v MONET
90 Mich App 553, 560
M. J. KELLY, J. (dissenting). I am convinced from a reading of the partial transcript (permitted upon defendant-appellant‘s request), the briefs and the exhibits that the defendant‘s belated claim of police coercion was completely makeweight. The defendant‘s confession, given after full and fair Miranda1 warnings, revealed that when defendant confronted the victim about his stepdaughter‘s pregnancy the deceased laughed at him. The defendant then strangled him, put his body in the
This record does not document the fact of the time interval during which defendant was interrogated by the polygraph operator. This is a difficult and sensitive area and, while People v Barbara, 400 Mich 352; 255 NW2d 171 (1977), sanctions polygraph examinations for limited purposes, the black letter law in this state is still that neither the fact of the taking nor the results obtained are admissible in a criminal prosecution. The trial court, therefore, was called upon to exercise its discretion with regard to the conversation, interview and test conducted by Sgt. Romatowski. The court decided not to allow the defendant to claim that he was intimidated by the examiner raising his voice, shaking his fist and threatening him when, on the other hand, the prosecution could not counter with the examiner‘s complete denial that any such intimidation occurred and the fact that defendant was shown to be lying on 10 out of the 11 questions relating to the murder. I am not convinced that the trial court erred in its original ruling.
In the instant case, defendant‘s allegations of coercion by the police investigator were unsupported by any other competent evidence. Moreover, these allegations were rebutted, in both of the prior trials, by the testimony of Sgt. Romatowski that no coercion had occurred during the course of the polygraph examination. Indeed, the defendant did not even call the stenographer who took down his statement as a witness regarding the circumstances that existed at the time the statement was taken. Furthermore, the record indicates that the defendant was permitted to present his other allegations of coercion, resulting from mysterious threatening telephone calls made by an unknown person and conversations with his cousin, to the jury. In light of the all-embracing coercion trial strategy adopted by the defendant, and the fact that other allegations of coercion were substantially aired before the jury, I find no abuse of discretion in the trial court‘s decision to limit the defendant‘s testimony on a point which could have added further confusion to this case. United States v Harris, 542 F2d 1283 (CA 7, 1976), cert den sub nom Clay v United States, 430 US 934; 97 S Ct 1558; 51 L Ed 2d 779 (1977).
As to the other allegation of error addressed by the majority, I would likewise find that the trial court properly exercised its discretion. A substantial part of the defense strategy was the propound-
I repeat, the trial judge enjoys a wide discretion in the admission or exclusion of relevant evidence.
Again, I find no abuse of trial court discretion. Here, the court was confronted with a plethora of
I would affirm.
