John Thomas Starks was convicted of malice murder, aggravated assault and possession of a firearm during commission of a crime. On direct appeal this Court affirmed in part, and remanded in part, for the limited purpose of clarifying who, after Starks had invoked his Sixth Amendment right to counsel, initiated a conversation with a probation officer which resulted in an inculpatory statement being used against him at trial.
Starks v. State,
Defendant initially entered a guilty plea to involuntary manslaughter, which was later withdrawn due to dissatisfaction with the sentence recommendation. The evidence on remand showed that a pre-sentence interview was scheduled with a probation officer in accordance with the plea. However, that meeting was postponed when Starks expressed a desire to speak with his attorney. Starks reported back to the probation office several days later, as he was instructed. He told the officer that he did not want to discuss the case without the presence of his attorney, and that his attorney was unable to attend at that time. The probation officer told him that she preferred to get the information she needed without his attorney being present. 2 She then posed questions concerning the offense, to which Starks gave responses. During this interview he disclosed for the first time that he never saw the victim in possession of a weapon, that he panicked, and in an effort to cover up, he took a shotgun from his restaurant/tire shop and placed it in the victim’s hand. In previous statements to the police, Starks claimed to have shot in self-defense after surprising an armed intruder at his shop, who threatened him with the weapon.
Based on the foregoing, the trial court concluded that the probation officer had initiated the conversation which led to the inculpatory statement. Starks filed a motion for new trial asserting that admission of the evidence constituted reversible error. The State responded that the error was rendered harmless beyond a reasonable doubt because (1) Starks testified at trial to facts which were essentially the same as those he had communicated to the probation officer and which had been used against him during the state’s case-in-chief; and (2) the other evidence of guilt was overwhelming. The trial court agreed and denied the motion for new trial. 3
In
Michigan v. Jackson,
In considering whether a federal constitutional error can be held to be harmless, the state must satisfy a reviewing court that the error was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt.
5
Chapman v. California,
The state’s argument that Starks gave cumulative testimony during the defense case misses its mark. While the erroneous admission of testimony which is merely cumulative of
properly admitted
testimony may be deemed harmless, see
Jones v. State,
“When the properly admitted evidence to sustain a guilty verdict is overwhelming so as to negate the possibility that the tainted evidence contributed to the verdict, the constitutional error may be harmless.”
Ellis v. State,
Judgment reversed.
Notes
The facts surrounding the crimes, the contents of Starks’ custodial statements, and the statement to the probation officer are fully set out at
Starks,
supra,
The probation officer could not recall whether she discussed with Starks the confidential nature of her report. Starks testified on remand that he agreed to talk without an attorney only after being threatened with jail if he refused.
A subsequent appeal was dismissed by this Court as untimely.
Rowland v. State,
Michigan v. Harvey, supra, held that the prosecution may use a statement obtained in violation of the Jackson rule to impeach a defendant’s false or inconsistent testimony.
As the court recognized in
Chapman v. California,
infra,
See
Starks,
supra,
