ON
A jury сonvicted defendant of two counts of armed robbery, MCL 750.529, and one count of possession of a firearm during the commission of a felony, MCL 750.227b. The trial court sentenced defendant to concurrent terms of 15 to 30 years’ imprisonment for the armed robbery convictions and a consecutive term of 2 years’ imprisonment for the felony-firearm conviction. This Court reversed defendant’s convictions and remanded fоr a new trial.
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Our Supreme Court granted the prosecution’s application for leave to appeal.
People v Murphy,
I. UNDERLYING FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS
Defendant’s convictions arise from the armed robbery of Christopher Holman and
As Holman attempted to get into the car, he heard someone yell, “Get down on the ground now.” Holman looked toward the truck and saw defendant standing behind its passenger door, pointing “[sjome type of shotgun” at him. Holman got down on his hands and knees and produced his wallet in response to the pickup driver’s demand for money. As he handed the driver money from the wallet, Holman heard defendant knock on the Neon’s passenger window and yell: “Get out of the car now. Get out of the car now.” Holman could not see exactly what happened, but believed that Isaac “was thrown onto the ground.” When Holman turned, he observed defendant inside the Neon “going through our stuff.” Holman testified that defendant stole two сell phones and Isaac’s purse. After the Dodge Ram departed, Holman and Isaac drove to a state police post and reported the incident. On the basis of Holman’s testimony, the district court bound defendant over for trial on the charged counts of armed robbery and felony-firearm.
Defendant’s trial commenced on April 22, 2004, before Judge Deborah Thomas. After the parties selected a jury, the prosecutor and defense counsel addressed with Judge Thomas several “housekeeping matters,” including “the People versus Hall issue.” 2 This evidentiary matter concerned a separate case filed against defendant that arose from a carjacking committed on the day after Thanksgiving 2003. The prosecutor sought to introduce in defendant’s armed robbery prosecution evidence obtained at the time of defendant’s arrest in the caijacking case. Coincidentally, Judge Thomas had been assigned to preside over the caijacking case. By the time of defendant’s armed robbery trial, Judge Thomas had dismissed the carjacking charges filed against defendant and a codefendant on the basis that inadequate evidence linked defendant to the caijacking.
This Court ultimately reversed Judge Thomas’s decision to quash the carjacking charges against defendant. 3 4 In an unpublished opinion, this Court summarized the facts surrounding the alleged carjacking as follows:
[T]he victim was delivering newspapers in Detroit at approximately 4:30 [a.m.] when a black pickup truck approached, someone from the truck pointed a sawed-off long gun at him and demanded that he not look in that direction, and told him to hе face down on the ground. Multiple assailants then threatened to shoot him, demanded money, searched him, and took his glasses and keys. The victim saw both the truck and his own car driving away. He called the police with his description ofthe truck and firearm, but he could not identify any of the assailants.[ 4 ]
During the preliminary examination conducted in the carjacking case, Detroit police sergeant Ramon Childs exрlained that shortly after hearing a report regarding the caijacking, he located a black Dodge Ram pickup and followed it to a gas station. As Childs watched from across the street, one of the pickup’s passengers left the truck and entered the gas station. Another passenger walked to the rear of the gas station, while the other two occupants remained outside the truck, near thе gas pumps. The four men got back in the pickup and began to drive away. The police stopped the pickup shortly thereafter and arrested its occupants, including defendant. The police found a live shotgun shell inside the pickup. A search at the gas station yielded a sawed-off shotgun in a dumpster behind the building and additional live shotgun shells in trash receptacles near the gas pumps. All the live shells were “caliber consistent” with the shotgun.
The prosecutor argued that Childs’s testimony summarizing his observations after the carjacking was admissible against defendant at his armed robbery trial pursuant to Hall. Specifically, the prosecutor urged the trial court to admit “the testimony of the officer that made the observations before the gas station and at the gas station and the officers that were involved in the detention оf the Black Dodge Ram Pickup and the officers that were involved in securing the evidence that I’ve made reference to.” The prosecutor stated that he would “sanitize out” the carjacking circumstances prompting Childs’s pursuit of the pickup. Defense counsel countered that Childs’s testimony failed to establish that any of the men at the gas station “had a shotgun in his hand or even an object of any sort.” Judgе Thomas ruled that the prosecutor could present testimony related to the shotgun shells found in the pickup and the trash cans near the gas pumps, but not the shotgun or testimony regarding its discovery “because nobody gave any testimony they saw anybody taking anything behind the gas station.” In her bench ruling, Judge Thomas elaborated that Childs “didn’t say he saw anybody going around the store carrying anything. If I had that, I would allow it. I don’t have any of that.”
On April 23, 2004, the prosecutor filed an emergency application for leave to appeal in this Court. Late that afternoon, this Court entered an order peremptorily reversing Judge Thomas’s exclusion of evidence of the shotgun and remanding for further proceedings. People v Murphy, unpublished order of the Court of Appeals, entered April 23, 2004 (Docket No. 255101). On April 26, 2004, defense counsel informed Judge Thomas that she had not received notice of the prosecutor’s appeal and planned to file a motion for reconsideration. Judge Thomas granted a stay of the proceedings, but defense counsel failed to pursue appellate relief.
In September 2004, the armed robbery case proceeded to trial before Judge Michael Hathaway, and a jury convicted defendant of all charges. Defendant filed an appeal of right, and this Court reversed his convictions because he entirely lacked the assistance of counsel during the prosecutor’s interlocutory appeal.
People v Murphy (On Reconsideration),
unpublished opinion per curiam of the Court of Appeals, issued October 12, 2006 (Docket No. 258397). Our Supreme Court thereafter reversed this Court’s order granting defendant a new trial and instead held that defendant is
II. THE SHOTGUN EVIDENCE
Defendant contends that because no testimony directly linked him and the shotgun, Judge Thomas properly ruled the shotgun evidence and Childs’s testi
mony inadmissible. According to defendant, the prоsecutor established only defendant’s proximity to the shotgun and the shells, not his knowing possession and control over these items. Defendant additionally asserts that even if he had possessed the shotgun, MRE 403 would bar its admission because of the substantial danger that this evidence would confuse the issues and mislead the jury. We review for an abuse of discretion a trial court’s decision whether to admit evidence.
People v Lukity,
In
People v Hall,
The Supreme Court affirmed the defendant’s conviction, holding that the trial court properly admitted the shotgun and the testimony of the witnesses who participated in supplying information used by the police to arrest the defendant:
We hold that, as direct physical evidence of the commission of the armed robbery, the shotgun was properly admitted notwithstanding the fact that mere possession of it was a distinct criminal offense. We also hold that the testimony of the various witnesses to the circumstances surrounding the defendant’s arrest was admissible to establishthe defendant’s possession and control of both the shotgun and a vehicle similar to the one used in the charged robbery. In both instances, admissibility is governed by MRE 401 and not, as defendant claims, by MRE 404(b). [Id. at 575.]
The Supreme Court reasоned that evidence of the defendant’s “possession of a weapon of the kind used in the offense with which he is charged is routinely determined by courts to be direct, relevant evidence of his commission of that offense.” Id. at 580-581. In Hall, the Supreme Court determined that “both the gun and the testimonial evidence of defendant’s possession of it and the car . .. were clearly relevant to make the defendant’s identity as the gunman in the charged robbery ‘more probable . . . than it would be without the evidence.’ ” Id. at 582-583, quoting MRE 401.
Here, unlike in
Hall,
the prosecutor lacked direct evidence demonstrating defendant’s possession and control of the weapon. However, the appropriate test is not whether sufficient evidence existed to convict defendant of constructively possessing the shotgun, but whether the circumstances surrounding the gun’s discovery tеnded to establish defendant’s connection to it. “This demand is one of simple, logical relevancy, measured by logic, common experience, and common sense, apart from legal technicalities.”
People v McKinney,
In this Court’s previous opinion regarding precisely the same issue, we observed that
there was evidence that Murphy was driving the truck when the police stopped it. That Murphy was driving then is circumstantial evidence that he assumed the role of driver in general. The obvious inference from stopping the truck both for the assault, and then to jettison contraband, is that the driver was fully involved in those actions.... Murphy’s role as driver circumstantially links him to the crime beyond his mere presence in the truck .... [People v Jones, unpublished opinion per curiam of the Court of Appeals, issued November 10, 2005 (Docket Nos. 254939 and 254964), at 2.]
Despite Childs’s failure to report seeing one of the pickup’s passengers carry an object to the dumpster, the surrounding circumstances supported a reasonable inference that the black Dodge Ram containing defendant stopped at the gas station so that its occupants could dispose of evidence of their crimes, including both the shotgun and shells compatible with it. This evidence, which tended to show that defendant and his fellow passengers participated in a joint enterprise designed to
Evidence that (1) defendant drove a black pickup truck involved in a recent alleged carjacking, (2) the occupants of the truck possessed live cartridges, (3) the truck stopped at a gas station where police found live cartridges in the trash cans, and (4) the police found a shotgun compatible with the cartridges behind the gas station tended to prove that defendant participated in the carjacking and knew that the shotgun was being discarded along with the shells. And both the shotgun and the black pickup truck linked defendant to the robbery of Holman and Isaac. Although circumstantial,
this evidence had a tendency to corroborate defendant’s identity as a participant in the armed robbery, apart from also constituting evidence of his involvement in a carjacking. Judge Thomas’s apparent ruling that direct rather than circumstantial evidence must cоnnect defendant and the shotgun lacks legal support. “ ‘[C]ircumstantial evidence is oftentimes stronger and more satisfactory than direct evidence.’”
People v Wolfe,
Defendant next maintains that even if the challenged evidence satisfied the relevancy criteria set forth in
Hall,
it qualified as substantially more prejudicial than probative and should have been excluded under MRE 403. Defendant unsuccessfully raised this objection at his trial.
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MRE 403 proscribes the admission of relevant evidencе “if its probative value is
substantially
outweighed by the danger of unfair prejudice, confusion of the issues, or misleading the jury, or by considerations of undue delay, waste of time, or needless presentation of cumulative evidence.” (Emphasis added.) All relevant evidence will be damaging to some extent.
People v Mills,
Although the carjacking-related evidence involved a serious and entirely separate crime, the risk of unfair prejudice did not substantially outweigh the probative force of the evidence, which connected defendant to the Dodge Ram and the shotgun. The record supports that the prosecutor never argued to the jury that an
III. VOICE IDENTIFICATION EVIDENCE
Defendant lastly challenges Judge Thomas’s decision to admit Holman’s identification of defendant. Holman identified defendant in a lineup only after requesting that members of the lineup say, “Get down on the ground now.” After hearing defendant utter thоse words, Holman selected him from the lineup participants and identified him as the passenger with the shotgun. Defendant contends that Holman’s voice identification should have been excluded because it was not based on a peculiarity in defendant’s voice or on suffi
cient knowledge about defendant’s vocal characteristics. We review for clear error a trial court’s factual findings regarding a motion to suppress evidence.
People v Farrow,
“The fairness of an identification procedure is evaluated in light of the total circumstances to determine whether the procedure was so impermissibly suggestive that it led to a substantial likelihood of misidentification.”
People v Hornsby,
Affirmed.
Notes
On July 27, 2006, this Court issued a published opinion reversing defendant’s convictions on the ground that he was denied the assistance of appellate counsel because his counsel had failed to file a brief opposing the prosecution’s interlocutory appeal; this Court remanded for a new trial. The prosecution then filed a motion for reconsideration, arguing that defendant’s ineffective assistance claim should fail because he did not establish prejudice. This Court vacated the July 2006 opinion and on reconsideration issued an unpublished opinion that again reversed defendant’s convictions and remanded for a new trial. People v Murphy (On Reconsideration), unpublished opinion per curiam of the Court of Appeals, issued October 12, 2006 (Docket No. 258397).
People v Hall,
People v Jones, unpublished opinion per curiam of the Court of Appeals, issued November 10, 2005 (Docket Nos. 254939 and 254964).
Id. at 1.
Defendant contends that Judge Thomas excluded the shotgun evidence on the grounds of unfair prejudice under MRE 403 as well as relevancy. Our review of the record reveals no support for that contention. Rather, Judge Thomas clearly ruled that if the prosecutor had “something else that might make it both relevant and material, then it’s in.”
