Lead Opinion
ORDER.
The petition for writ of certiorari in the above-entitled case having been granted and argued, it is this 20th day of September, 2011,
ORDERED, by the Court of Appeals of Maryland, that the writ of certiorari be, and it is hereby, dismissed with costs, the petition having been improvidently granted.
MURPHY, J., Dissents.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
Although the denial of a cert. petition does not enhance the precedential value of an opinion, because a reported opinion of the Court of Special Appeals may be cited as precedent,
Even though Sivells v. State,
I would also make it clear that improper prosecutorial “vouching” did not occur in the case at bar. While holding that “[t]he invited response doctrine does not salvage the prosecutor’s remarks in this case,” the Court of Special Appeals stated:
The objected to comments, that the officers could lose their pensions and livelihood if they lied, and that these honorable officers “told the truth,” were not a response to defense counsel’s argument that this was one of the lamest prosecutions he had seen. Rather, it was a response to defense counsel’s attacks on the credibility of the officers, and we have already concluded that these credibility attacks were not improper.
Thus, the prosecutor’s response, vouching for the credibility of the State’s primary witnesses against appellant, was not a reasonable response to an improper defense remark[.] Sivells, supra,
In Riggins v. State,
It is of course improper for a prosecuting officer to assert his personal belief or personal conviction as to the guilt of the accused, if that belief or conviction is predicated upon anything other than the evidence in the case. But, upon the other hand, such prosecuting officer has the undisputable right to urge that the evidence convinces his mind of the accused’s guilt. Indeed, it would be mere stultification if it were contended that the prosecuting attorney could argue to the jury that the evidence should convince their minds although it did not convince his. A prosecuting officer therefore has the right to state his views as to what the evidence shows.
Id. at 174,
For the above stated reasons, this Court should not deny— as improvidently granted—the petition before us in the case at bar. We should instead reverse the judgment of the Court of Special Appeals on the ground that the rebuttal argument at issue was a fair response to (inadmissible) evidence—and argument on that evidence—introduced over the objection of the State, and was predicated upon nothing other than the evidence presented to the jury.
Notes
. The reported opinion of a Maryland appellate court "remains the law unless and until it is overruled]].]” Deems v. Western Maryland Railway Company, 247 Md. 95, 102,
. Even if the federal judge had been subpoenaed to express his personal opinion about Detective Wilson’s character for veracity, "a brief and limited encounter” with Detective Wilson is an insufficient foundation for the admission of that opinion. Durkin v. State,
