Court Opinion

ID: 4911619
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2021-09-17 03:02:33.789668+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:01:58.147167
License: Public Domain

SUPERIOR COURT
                                     OF THE
                               STATE OF DELAWARE

Charles E. Butler                                     Leonard L. Williams Justice Center
  Resident Judge                                      500 North King Street, Suite 10400
                                                      Wilmington, Delaware 19801-3733
                                                          Telephone (302) 255-0656

                                    September 16, 2021

Karin M. Volker, Esquire
Kristina Lehman, Esquire
Department of Justice
Carvel State Office Building
820 N. French Street
Wilmington, DE 19801

Sonia Augusthy, Esquire
Office of Defense Services
Carvel State Office Building
820 N. French Street
Wilmington, DE 19801

                    Re:    State v. Tyaire Norris
                           ID: 1906002492

Counsel:

       I understand that trial in this matter is imminent and the parties need a ruling

on Defendant’s motion in limine concerning certain identification testimony. In

view of the urgency of the matter, the Court will dispense with some of the usual

rhetoric attendant upon judicial opinion writing.

       The case concerns a homicide that occurred in the City of Wilmington.

Certain individuals can be seen at or near the crime scene at the critical time. The
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identities of these individuals were unknown until a Wilmington Police officer –

unrelated to the investigation – viewed the video and recognized the Defendant on

the captured video. The State intends to offer the identifying police officer as a

witness during trial for the purpose of tying the Defendant to the crime scene.

        The prospect of identification by a police officer from a piece of video

surveillance implicates a number of sensitive issues, not the least of which being the

possibility that the jury may wonder exactly how it is that the officer knows the

defendant so well that he can identify him on a video.

        But assuming that issue can be addressed through an appropriate limiting

instruction, the Defense urges that no such identification should be permitted at all,

citing Thomas v. State,1 Saavedra v. State2 and Delaware Rules of Evidence Rules

701 and 403.

        Rule 701 concerns “lay testimony” as opposed to expert testimony and

permits lay opinions that are 1) rationally based on the witness’ perceptions, 2)

helpful to determining a fact in issue and 3) not based on scientific, technical or other

specialized knowledge within the scope of Rue 702. This testimony clearly falls

within Rule 701. The officer’s knowledge may be “specialized,” but it is not based

on scientific, technical or other specialized knowledge – as required under Rule 702

1
    2019 WL 1380051 (Del. Mar. 26, 2019)
2
    225 A.3d 364 (Del. 2020)
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– but rather it is based upon the knowledge that any citizen has upon seeing a person

they recognize.

        The cases are helpful, but not dispositive. Saavedra is the less helpful of the

two, because the identification issues arose in context of allegations of prosecutorial

misconduct when video was played and the police witness identified various actors

on the tape. The Court ruled that while it was not prosecutorial misconduct, the

Court did “not condone the use of narrative testimony during a video presentation to

a fact finder beyond what is necessary to lay the foundation for the video's admission

and to present an uncontroversial explanation of what the video depicts.”3 Here, the

video merely depicts two individuals walking on a street. Unlike Saavedra, this is

not a video of a melee with numerous individuals moving about and an officer

describing his own opinion of who is doing what.4

        Thomas v. State comes closest to our facts as it involves an officer viewing a

piece of surveillance video and offering his opinion that the person seen in the video

is the defendant. The identification testimony was permitted over defendant’s

objection. After laying out the problem of witnesses identifying defendants from a

video when the video and the defendant are both available for the jury to see for

themselves, the Court said, “We have serious reservations about the admission of

3
    Saavedra, 225 A.3d at 374.
4
    E.g., id. at 374–77.
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this type of identification testimony.”5 Nevertheless, the Court elected to “stop short

of finding an abuse of discretion in the Superior Court’s evidentiary ruling”6 – hardly

a ringing endorsement for the evidentiary ruling.

      Indeed, the Court considered that 1) the defense may have opened the door to

the testimony by suggesting that it was not the defendant in the video, 2) the

testimony was harmless due to the other evidence of defendant’s guilt and 3) he may

have been improperly “vouching” for other witnesses, but ultimately concluded he

was not.7 These specific issues are not present in the instant motion, but they

demonstrate the many tendrils that can flow from a ruling and the need for the Court

to be fully aware of the attendant facts and circumstances before giving final

approval of the proffered testimony.

      Here, for example, the State has proffered a copy of the video in question and,

unlike most video surveillance seen in court, this one is in color and of very high

quality, very clearly depicting the faces of two subjects. They are seen walking

toward the crime scene and, shortly thereafter I presume, running back. But the clear

picture is fleeting and they are not wearing name tags. So their identities are not

5
  Thomas, 2019 WL 1380051, at *3.
6
  Id.
7
  Id. at *3–4.
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known merely by viewing the video.8 Someone who could identify them by name

would obviously be relevant.

      If the State had a witness other than the police officer, perhaps a neighbor of

many years, who knows the defendant and recognizes and can identify him in the

video, there is an argument that the witness is invading the province of the jury. But

we might say that about any witness – they all have something to say about the event

in question or who did it. All of them are there to persuade the jury of something.

As between showing the video without an identification of anyone and showing the

video to a witness who knows the subject in the video and can testify that person is

the defendant, the latter is surely the more prudent course.

      Moving past the problem of relevance, we come to the problem of undue

prejudice, embedded in the fact that the witness is a police officer. Defendant has

argued that the testimony should be excluded under Rule 403 because it is more

prejudicial than helpful. But having concluded that it is helpful, abiding the

Defendant’s request that the testimony be excluded entirely is too drastic a remedy.

8
 See Saavedra, 225 A.3d at 381 (“[I]n determining whether the witness” should be
permitted to testify to the witness’s special familiarity with the defendant, “the court
should . . . consider whether the images from which identification is to be made are
not either so unmistakably clear or so hopelessly obscure that the witness is no better
suited than the jury to make the identification.” (internal quotation marks omitted));
see also id. at 381 n.78 (collecting additional supportive authority).
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The prejudice may be remediated by careful questioning of the police officer9 and

an appropriate limiting instruction to the jury.10 The Court will engage with counsel

during trial to find the least prejudicial introduction possible for the police witness

testimony and looks forward to a draft limiting instruction from both parties to

alleviate Defendant’s concerns of prejudice.

       The witness may testify to his identification. The questioning should be

circumscribed to diminish or eliminate any suggestion that the Defendant has prior

arrests. The parties should confer about a mutually agreed upon limiting instruction

and, barring one, defendant may proffer one himself.

       IT IS SO ORDERED.

                                          Resident Judge Charles E. Butler

9
   See id. at 380–81 (“Before a law enforcement witness uses a video clip . . . to
identify the defendant, due caution should be exercised to ensure that a proper
foundation is laid establishing, to the trial court’s satisfaction, that the witness has a
special familiarity with the defendant that would put him in a better position than the
jury to make the identification.”)
10
   See id. at 381 (“In [its] instruction, . . . the trial [court] emphasized that it was the
sole province of the jury to determine the identity of the [defendant]. . . . [T]hese
were meaningful and practical steps . . . and mitigated any prejudicial effect the
detective’s testimony may have caused.”)
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