OPINION
This case comes before us on an appeal by Keith Werner (defendant or Werner) from a judgment of conviction entered in the Superior Court for the County of Providence on a charge of assault with a dangerous weapon. The defendant had been charged by criminal information with one count of assault with a dangerous weapon and one count of assault upon a correctional officer. The trial began on April 3, 1995. On April 7, 1995, the jury returned a verdict of guilty on count 1 (assault with a dangerous weapon) and not guilty on count 2 (assault upon a correctional officer). The trial justice denied the defendant’s motion for a new trial and sentenced him to serve five years imprisonment at the Adult Correctional Institutions (ACI). The sentence was to run consecutively to other sentences that the defendant already was serving at that time. We deny and dismiss the appeal. The facts and procedural history of the case insofar as pertinent to this appeal are as follows.
Facts and Procedural History
On March 4, 1991, Christopher Noon (Noon), a correctional officer employed by the ACI, was assigned to the H-Module in the Intake Service Center of the ACI. At approximately 1 p.m., Werner was allowed to emerge from his cell for a one-hour recreational period. At this time, Noon was stopping at individual cells, offering inmates a match to light their cigarettes. As Noon stood near Cell Number 7, defendant grabbed the front of Noon’s shirt, ripped a Cross pen from his breast pocket, and began stabbing at Noon’s face and neck with the pen. Noon testified that he suffered a slash across his left ear, a puncture wound to his left chest, and a laceration to his right middle finger. As Noon and defendant struggled, another correctional officer, Frank Pezza (Pezza), saw defendant’s right hand moving in a stabbing motion toward Noon and heard a scream. Pezza also observed that Noon was bleeding from an area near his mouth. Pezza attempted to separate defendant and Noon. In the course of struggling, Pezza caused defendant and Noon to fall backwards on the floor. Noon testified that he struck his head on the floor when he fell and was dazed for a few moments by the blow. Noon said that when he regained consciousness, defendant was on top of him, attempting to bite his face. After the assault, Noon was brought to the prison infirmary, where he was examined by a nurse. He then was taken by ambulance to Rhode Island Hospital.
Pezza tried to pull Werner from Noon’s body. As he did so, defendant jumped backward and his forearm struck the right side of Pezza’s rib cage. The defendant continued to struggle, causing Pezza to hit the wall several times. Pezza did not see a weapon of any type in Werner’s hands. Two other correctional officers, Steven Guilmette (Guilmette) and William Be-
To support his appeal, defendant has raised three issues in a brief filed by the public defender on his behalf. The defendant also has filed a pro se supplemental brief on his own behalf in which he raises four issues and numerous subissues. These issues will be discussed in the order of their significance to this opinion. Further facts will be supplied as needed to deal with these issues.
I
Dismissal of the Charges for Violation of the Interstate Agreement on Detainers Act
The defendant argues that the criminal information should have been dismissed because the state failed to bring the case to trial within the time limitations required by the Interstate Agreement on Detainers Act (IADA), G.L.1956 chapter 13 of title 13. The trial justice denied the motion to dismiss on this ground and, in his ruling, incorporated the reasoning of other Superior Court justices who had denied similar defense motions based on this alleged IADA violation.
For the reasons stated in our opinion in
State v. Werner,
The defendant, in his
pro se
supplemental brief, raises the additional ground that the Superior Court for the County of Kent, which denied his motion to dismiss on IADA grounds, was without subject-matter jurisdiction to do so. We reject this argument, since the several counties of this state do not constitute separate jurisdictions. They are separate venues in which trials normally take place involving offenses that have been committed within a particular county. However, by order of a justice of the Superior Court for the convenience of parties and witnesses, proceedings may be transferred to another county.
See
Rule 21 of the Superior Court Rules of Criminal Procedure. In the case at bar, a justice of the Superior Court for the County of Kent heard a number of motions relating to the IADA time frames in the County of Kent. Since the same issue was involved in all cases (including the information in the case at bar), it was convenient for the parties to argue all motions at the same time since they involved nearly identical issues. There was no absence of subject-matter jurisdiction on the part of the motion justice who heard these arguments and ruled on defendant’s contentions in respect to several cases. The
II
The Trial Justice’s Ruling In Respect to Defendant’s Previous Acts of Violence
The defendant contends that the trial justice committed reversible error by ruling that if Werner took the stand and testified that he was acting in self-defense when he assaulted Noon, evidence of defendant’s previous assaults on other inmates and correctional officers would have been allowed into evidence to rebut the claim of self-defense. The defendant further argues that as a result of this ruling, he was constrained to decline to be a witness and thus prevented from taking the stand in his own defense.
Rule 404(b) of the Rhode Island Rules of Evidence precludes the admission of “[ejvidence of other crimes, wrongs, or acts * * * to prove the character of a person in order to show that the person acted in conformity therewith.” The rule, however, permits evidence of previous bad acts to be admitted as proof of “motive, opportunity, intent, preparation, plan, knowledge, identity, absence of mistake or accident * *
Id.
In
State v. Parkhurst,
Our standard of review of the admission of previous bad acts is that of abuse of discretion.
State v. Garcia,
The defendant also argues in his supplemental
pro se
brief that a previous
Ill
The Motion for Mistrial
The defendant contends that the trial justice committed prejudicial error in declining to grant a motion for a mistrial when a correctional officer referred on cross-examination to the term “segregation” in referring to the unit in which Werner was confined. The facts leading up to this motion were as follows.
Before trial, defendant moved in limine to preclude state’s witnesses from referring to the H-Module, where defendant was confined at the ACI, as the “segregation” block. The jury was aware that defendant was allowed out of his cell only one hour each day. This fact was necessary to disclose in order to establish that defendant was the only inmate on the H-Module who was out of his cell at the time Noon was assaulted.
The trial justice stated, in response to this motion, that he assumed that the prosecutor would avoid such an “inflammatory” reference. The prosecutor informed the trial justice and defense counsel that he specifically had instructed his witnesses to avoid such a reference. However, during cross-examination by defense counsel of correctional officer Frank Pezza, the following exchange occurred:
“Q How many times have you seen Mr. Werner before March 4, 1991 come out [from his cell] that particular way that you just described * * *?
“A Seven or eight times.
“Q So, it’s fair to say then, at least seven or eight other times you were in H-Mod[ule] before March 4, 1991, right?
“A Well, segregation- — excuse me — sorry, H-Mod has been moved around to different blocks so sometimes it goes down in C and sometimes it was in H.
“Q But the people that were in H-Mod were the same people all the time, weren’t they?
“A Not necessarily.
“[DEFENSE COUNSEL]: Okay.
“THE COURT: I’m going to send the jury upstairs. I want to have a chat with you gentlemen. Please don’t discuss the case among yourselves.”
After the jury had left the courtroom, defendant’s counsel moved for a mistrial and explained that he had not moved to pass the case immediately after Pezza had used the word “segregation” because he did not want to draw extra attention to it. For the same reason, he did not request a cautionary instruction because he feared it would highlight the testimony and cause further damage. He argued that the only remedy for Pezza’s lack of compliance with the admonition, even if it was unintentional, would be to grant the motion for a mistrial. The trial justice responded that he would not pass the case because he felt that the officer’s “slip of the tongue” was inadvertent and was not meant to inflame the jury.
We have held that a decision to grant or deny a motion for mistrial is within the discretion of the trial justice.
State v. Villafane,
Placing Pezza’s inadvertent use of the word “segregation” in context, we are of the opinion that the jurors would not have been inflamed to the point that they would be unable to examine the evidence in a calm and dispassionate manner. The jurors already knew that defendant was in prison and that he was required to be in his cell twenty-three hours each day. The use of the word “segregation,” even though considered to be inappropriate by the trial justice, was not so inexpiable as to require a mistrial.
State v. Brown,
We conclude that the trial justice did not commit prejudicial error in declining to grant the motion for mistrial.
IV
Other Issues
The defendant has raised a number of issues in his pro se supplemental brief. We have considered these issues and have determined that his evidentiary arguments relating to excited utterances as made to Chief Inspector Saccoccia, remarks by the prosecutor, and the various other issues to which he referred, do not disclose that the trial justice committed prejudicial error. None of his supplemental arguments persuades us that the defendant’s conviction should be reversed.
Conclusion
For the reasons stated, the appeal of the defendant is denied and dismissed. The conviction entered in the Superior Court is hereby affirmed. The papers in the case may be remanded to the Superior Court.
Notes
. The holdings in these cases are not inconsistent with
State v. Dellay,
