483 N.E.2d 187 | Ohio Ct. App. | 1984
Appellant, Harold Caldwell, was indicted on two counts of rape, one count of kidnapping, and two *105 counts of aggravated robbery, because of his alleged participation in events which occurred the night of May 19-20, 1980.
The victims of these crimes were Octavia Walker and Gordon Mattox. Walker testified that her car stalled at about midnight near the intersection of 131st Street and Miles Avenue. A man named "Slim" initially stopped to assist her, and left to obtain jumper cables. A second man by the name of Gordon Mattox then stopped his car, and offered to assist her. While Mattox was standing in front of the car, and as Walker was bending down in the front seat to release the hood latch, two men approached Mattox. When Walker sat up, she saw the appellant and another "heavy-set" man robbing Mattox at gunpoint. His wallet containing $20 and his car keys were stolen. The two robbers were facing Walker throughout the robbery, which lasted two to three minutes. The area where the incident occurred is described as a brightly-lit commercial district.
Following the robbery of Mattox, the heavy-set man with the gun entered Walker's car, while appellant walked over to the car operated by Mattox. Walker's car would not start, so the heavy-set man "snatched" her out of the car and forced her into Mattox' car. Walker was pushed onto the floor of the back of the car, as appellant drove it three blocks west. She was then removed to a third car, where she was again forced onto the rear floor. A towel was placed over her head, and she was beaten and raped, first by the heavy-set man, and second by appellant. She was able to see appellant's face as he was raping her.
When the men had finished, they allowed her to leave the car. The men stole a few dollars from her, and some personal papers containing her address.
She solicited help at a nearby house, which (fortuitously) was the home of a policewoman. Patrolman Willene Mitchell testified that Walker was extremely upset, her hair was messed up, her clothing was soiled, and she was carrying her stockings. A medical examination revealed motile sperm on the victim's cervix. Police were unable to make an arrest at that time.
Three or four days after the rape, while Walker was reading on her porch, appellant allegedly stopped his car in front of her house, gestured obscenely, and drove away quickly.1 Seventeen months later, in October 1981, Walker saw the pictures of Harold and Darryl Caldwell in the newspaper, in connection with their acquittal in another rape case.2 She recognized appellant, and phoned police. Police accompanied her to a courtroom, where appellant was on trial in an unrelated matter. Appellant was the only black male in the room apart from a police officer. Walker was told by the police that the man she had identified from the photograph was in the courtroom, and to determine whether he was her assailant. After several minutes, appellant turned around, and Walker unequivocally identified him. She heard appellant's voice as he hollered when he was arrested.
On the basis of this evidence the jury found appellant guilty on all counts. *106 Upon appeal, appellant assigns six errors for review by this court.
This identification procedure employed by the police to identify appellant was clearly unnecessarily suggestive. Only one suspect was exhibited to Walker. She was told by the police that the man she had already identified from a photograph was in the courtroom. Appellant was the only black male in the courtroom apart from a police officer. She already knew that he had been acquitted of a rape which also involved the abduction of a young woman from a public street at night.
In determining whether a court should suppress identification testimony which has been tainted by suggestive police procedures, the Supreme Court has articulated a balancing standard. The totality of the circumstances is considered. The victim's opportunity to view the accused at the time of the offense, her degree of attention, the accuracy of descriptions given to police, her level of certainty, and the lapse of time from the event to the identification are measured against suggestiveness of the identification procedure. Manson v. Brathwaite, supra.
In the case at bar, the record demonstrates that Walker had ample opportunity to view appellant during the robbery of Mattox and during her abduction and rape. Her degree of attention was either heightened or skewed, due to her excited state. Her description of the accused was general in nature. She was unequivocal in her identification of appellant, both during the "show-up" procedure, and in court. Seventeen months had elapsed since the rape, before she identified appellant.
Two additional factors of importance are (1) that she saw appellant three days after the rape, and was therefore able to reinforce her memory of his features, and (2) that she identified him from a newspaper photograph before the police arranged the "show-up" in the justice center.
Absent these final two factors, and with the evidence in this posture, the trial court may have been required to suppress the testimony of the victim in this case. The county prosecutor and the Cleveland police are cautioned regarding the use of suggestive identification procedures. While such procedures are likely to result in positive identifications, such procedures are less likely to result in accurate ones.
In the case at bar, this court is persuaded that Walker demonstrated sufficient independent recollection of her assailant to defeat the appellant's motion to suppress. The first assigned error is not well-taken.
Appellant requested the court to give an instruction stressing the inherent unreliability of identification testimony. This instruction is from the Model Special Instructions on Identification, adopted by the United States Court of Appeals inUnited States v. Telfaire (C.A.D.C. 1972),
The trial court refused to read this instruction, instead giving the jury the following neutral charge on the question of identification testimony, taken from the second paragraph of theTelfaire charge:
"Now, in reference to identification testimony in this case. An identification testimony is an expression of belief or impression by the witness. Its value depends on the opportunity the witness had to observe the offender at the time of the offense and make a reliable identification later.
"You must consider the credibility of each identification witness in the same way as any other witness. Consider whether she or he is truthful and consider whether he or she had the capacity and opportunity to make a reliable observation on the matter, and must be proven to your satisfaction by evidence beyond a reasonable doubt."
In State v. Guster (1981),
In the case at bar, the witness' testimony is comparable to the testimony of the police officer in Guster. The trial judge in the case at bar, unlike the trial judge in Guster, did give a part of the Telfaire charge, which alerts the jury to their duty to carefully weigh the reliability of eyewitness testimony. This fact also distinguishes this case from State v. Dale (1982),
Finally, at the close of the jury charge in the case at bar, the defense indicated that it had no additions, deletions or corrections to the charge. The defense was apparently satisfied with the partial Telfaire instruction read by the court. The second assigned error is not well-taken.
The trial court deferred ruling on this motion until after voirdire. During voir dire, it was discovered that only two jurors remembered seeing news reports concerning the appellant. One of these jurors was excused. It is not clear from the record whether the other juror was seated; but the defense, in any event, did not exercise all of its peremptory challenges, and pronounced itself "satisfied with the panel."
This court is not convinced from the evidence that the jurors who were selected were influenced to any extent by news reports of this or other crimes of which the appellant had been accused. The third assigned error is not well-taken.
These matters were initially testified to by Walker without objection by the defense. Any objection to their subsequent admission was thereby waived. The fourth assigned error is not well-taken.
Appellant subpoenaed the investigating police officer's reports. The trial court, with counsel participating, perused these reports prior to the testimony of the police officer. Contained therein were two points concerning which defense counsel sought to cross-examine *109 examine the police officer. Both of these points involved slight inconsistencies between Walker's statements to police and her testimony on the stand. If these parts of the report had qualified as the statements of Walker, and if the inconsistencies had been "material," they might have been employed to impeach her testimony pursuant to Crim. R. 16(B)(1)(g). But these statements could not be used to impeach the testimony of the police officer. The fifth assigned error is not well-taken.
A charge of complicity may be presented in terms of the principal offense. R.C.
Accordingly, the judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.
MARKUS, P.J., and PRYATEL, J., concur.
"The trial court committed prejudicial, reversible error in admitting the testimony of the identification witness at trial because of the procedures which were so unnecessarily suggestive and conducive to irreparable mistaken identification as to deny Defendant-Appellant due process of law in violation of the
"The trial court committed prejudicial, reversible error in denying Defendant-Appellant due process of law in violation of the
"A trial court is not required in all criminal cases to give a jury instruction on eyewitness identification where the identification of the defendant is the crucial issue in the case and is uncorroborated by other evidence. A trial court does not abuse its discretion in deciding that the factual issues do not require, and will not be assisted by, the requested instructions, and that the issue of determining identity beyond a reasonable doubt is adequately covered by other instructions."
"Overruling the motion for change of venue constituted prejudicial, reversible error by the trial court, which deprived Defendant-Appellant of his
"The trial court committed prejudicial, reversible error in denying Defendant-Appellant's motion for a mistrial on the ground that the admission of the irrelevant, prejudicial evidence deprived him of a fair and impartial trial."
"Failure of the trial court to allow Defendant-Appellant's counsel to use the police reports, with exculpatory evidence, to cross-examine the witnesses deprived Defendant-Appellant of his
"Defendant-Appellant's conviction as to the rape counts in the indictment was prejudicial, reversible error because the indictment did not adequately inform him of the charges against him."