On February 11,1997, the defendant, Lewis Womack, was convicted by a jury of robbery in the first degree (§ 569.020, RSMo 1994) and armed criminal action (§ 571.015, RSMo 1994). He was sentenced as a prior offender to concurrent terms of ten years and five years. On appeal, the defendant contends that the trial court erred in restricting his voir dire examination and that the court failed to sua sponte prohibit the state’s “send a message” argument.
On January 20, 1996, Jimmie Carl stopped his 1982 Honda Civic northbound on Beardsly Road in North Kansas City at approximately 10:30 p.m. after hitting a mound of snow which loosened his muffler. Mr. Carl was attempting to fix his vehicle when he noticed oncoming headlights. A man jumped from the vehicle and pointed a gun at Mr. Carl. A streetlight above allowed Mr. Carl to see the man’s face.
Carl identified his assailant as a black man that was taller and lighter in color than he. He also stated that after the perpetrator threatened to kill him, he drove off with Carl’s car. The assailant was followed by the woman who drove the second vehicle. Carl estimated that the entire incident took approximately two to three minutes. He walked home and reported the incident to the police.
Two days later, at approximately 6:30 A.M., Kansas City, Kansas, Police Officer Mark Goehner was dispatched to check on a suspicious looking vehicle. He located a 1982 Honda Civic and followed it for several blocks. A check of the vehicle’s tags revealed that the vehicle had been stolen during a robbery in Missouri. Officer Goehner arrested the driver and its only occupant, who was later identified as Lewis Womack. The officer found a hunting knife on the defendant.
As a result of the defendant’s arrest, Carl viewed a photo lineup at the Kansas City, Missouri Police Department on January 25, 1996, and immediately identified the defendant as the man who stole his vehicle. Carl identified the hunting knife as the one in his car when it was stolen.
In his first point, the defendant argues that the trial court abused its discretion by sustaining the state’s objection to the defendant’s voir dire questions concerning Carl’s eyewitness identification of the defendant. He claims that being unable to ask these questions denied him the opportunity
Defense counsel asked the panel if “[t]here is anyone who thinks an eyewitness can never be mistaken?” There was no response. He then asked, “[i]s there anyone who thinks an eyewitness is unlikely to make a mistake?” A discussion ensued with a venireman who indicated that misidentification was a possibility. He then asked if there was anyone that agreed with that venireman. The state objected and the trial court sustained the objection.
The purpose of voir dire is to explore and develop facts which would uncover possible bias and/or prejudices of the jurors so that counsel for each party can knowledgeably use their challenges.
State v. Letcher,
In
State v. Grant,
the trial court allowed defense counsel to inquire of the venire panel “whether any of them had ever been accused either by their mother or anyone else of something that they did not do.”
In
State v. Walker,
the trial court did not allow defense counsel to ask the panel if they had ever been mistaken for someone else or had mistaken someone for someone else.
Following the rationale in
Walker,
the court in
State v. Letcher
found that the trial court did not improperly restrict the defendant’s voir dire inquiry of misidentification by sustaining the state’s objection to the defendant’s questioning of whether any of the venire panel had been victims of misiden-tification.
The questions asked by defense counsel here were not designed to uncover bias and/or prejudice. Instead, the questions were argumentative. They were intended to inject the defendant’s argument, that the eyewitness was not reliable, into the voir dire examination. Phrasing a voir dire question in such a manner which pre-conditions the panel members’ mind to react, even subconsciously, in a particular way to anticipate evidence is an abuse of counsel’s privilege to examine prospective jurors. State
v. Garrett,
Since the argument was not objected to at trial, or raised in the defendant’s motion for new trial, the matter is reviewable by this court only for plain error pursuant to Rule 30.20.
State v. Chapman,
An appellate court will rarely grant relief on assertions that the trial court erred in not
sua sponte
taking remedial action during closing argument.
Chapman,
A prosecutor may legitimately argue that the jury should “send a message” that criminal conduct will not be tolerated or should be severely punished.
State v. Cobb, 875
S.W.2d 533, 537 (Mo. banc 1994),
cert. denied,
However, using phrases like: “if
you
are going to be a victim, then
you
better make sure it happens in a crowd,” and
“you
better make sure it happens for a long time” (emphasis added), had the effect of personalizing the argument by placing the jury members in the victim’s place. Closing argument that personalizes has been repeatedly criticized. Although we do not approve of the argument, it is not reversible error.
State v. Norton,
The judgment of the convictions are affirmed.
