Court Opinion

ID: 5142083
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2021-12-31 01:08:48.775981+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:24:32.840940
License: Public Domain

Eric Antonio Alarcon-Ozoria v. State of Maryland, No. 4, September Term 2021. Opinion
by Hotten, J.

CRIMINAL LAW – DISCOVERY – MANDATORY DISCLOSURE

The Court of Appeals held that the scope of the mandatory obligation of the State to
disclose materials to the defense without request does not extend to materials held by a
state correctional facility, which is not within the ambit of control by the State, does not
regularly report to the State’s Attorney, and did not report to the State’s Attorney in the
instant case. Maryland Rule 4-263(c)(2) obligates the State to disclose materials that “are
in the possession or control of the [State’s] attorney, members of the [State’s] attorney’s
staff, or any other person who either reports regularly to the [State’s] attorney’s office or
has reported to the [State’s] attorney’s office in regard to the particular case.” In the instant
case, the State requested and received recordings from a state correctional facility of inmate
phone conversations made by Petitioner. The state correctional facility is a distinct entity
from the State’s Attorney and did not participate in the investigation or prosecution of the
defendant. Therefore, the scope of mandatory disclosure of discoverable materials did not
extend to the correctional facility.

CRIMINAL LAW – DISCOVERY – DUE DILIGENCE

The Court of Appeals held that the State did not violate its obligation of due diligence by
providing jail call recordings of statements made by Petitioner on the morning of trial.
Maryland Rule 4-263(c)(1) obligates the State to exercise due diligence in identifying “all
of the material and information that must be disclosed under this Rule.” (Emphasis added).
The obligation for due diligence was not triggered until the State received approximately
200 jail call recordings three days before trial. The State did not violate its due diligence
obligations by reviewing the recordings over the weekend and providing Petitioner with a
select group of twelve recordings that it may have used as impeachment evidence and one
recording used in its case-in-chief.

CRIMINAL LAW – DISCOVERY – HARMLESS ERROR

Assuming arguendo that the State violated its discovery obligations by providing jail call
recordings to Petitioner on the morning of trial, the Court of Appeals held that the error
was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt. The Court held in Thanos v. State, 330 Md. 77,
622 A.2d 727 (1993), that assuming the State violated Md. Rule 4-263 by surprising the
defendant with three witnesses before trial, “any error in the State’s discovery violations
was harmless” given the existence of corroborating evidence. Id. at 97, 622 A.2d at 736.
Similar to the corroborating evidence in Thanos, the State provided additional evidence to
establish consciousness of guilt independent of the jail call recordings, including a text
message exchange, witness testimony, forensic evidence, a 911 call recording, pictures,
and video footage of the incident. Therefore, the Court concluded any error was harmless.
Circuit Court for Montgomery County
Case No. 135035C
Argued: September 14, 2021                                                             IN THE COURT OF APPEALS

                                                                                             OF MARYLAND

                                                                                                   No. 4

                                                                                          September Term, 2021

                                                                                   __________________________________

                                                                                   ERIC ANTONIO ALARCON-OZORIA
                                                                                                     v.
                                                                                         STATE OF MARYLAND
                                                                                   __________________________________

                                                                                        Getty, C.J.,
                                                                                        McDonald,
                                                                                        Watts,
                                                                                        Hotten,
                                                                                        Booth,
                                                                                        Biran,
                                                                                        Adkins, Sally D. (Senior Judge,
                                                                                        Specially Assigned),

                                                                                                   JJ.
                                                                                   __________________________________

                                                                                           Opinion by Hotten, J.
                                                                                             Watts, J., dissents.
                                                                                            Adkins, J., concurs.
                                                                                   __________________________________

                                                                                        Filed: December 21, 2021

 Pursuant to Maryland Uniform Electronic Legal
Materials Act
(§§ 10-1601 et seq. of the State Government Article) this document is authentic.

                            2021-12-21
                            10:28-05:00

Suzanne C. Johnson, Clerk
       This appeal arises from a shooting outside a restaurant in Silver Spring, Maryland

shortly after 1:00 a.m. on June 9, 2018. Witnesses and security camera footage identified

two suspects involved in the shooting. Following an anonymous tip, law enforcement

identified one of the men as Ruben Gilbert. Law enforcement obtained a search warrant

for Mr. Gilbert’s cell phone and gathered evidence implicating Eric Alarcon-Ozoria

(“Petitioner”) as the other person involved in the shooting.

       Petitioner was charged with assault in the first-degree, use of a firearm in the

commission of a crime of violence, and illegal possession of a firearm after a felony

conviction. Mr. Gilbert was charged as a co-conspirator, but the State entered a nolle

prosequi disposition in June 2019. Petitioner’s jury trial was scheduled for Monday,

August 5 through Thursday, August 8, 2019 in the Circuit Court for Montgomery County.

       On the morning of August 5 before trial, the State shared with defense counsel for

the first time approximately 200 jail call recordings of conversations between Petitioner

and Mr. Gilbert. The State had requested recordings of calls made by Petitioner from a

state correctional facility on Wednesday, July 31, and received the calls on Friday, August

2. The State reviewed the recordings over the weekend, and on Sunday, August 4,

requested additional recordings of any outgoing calls from the jail to Mr. Gilbert’s phone.

At 6:00 a.m. on Monday, August 5, the correctional facility provided one additional

recording of a jail call between Mr. Gilbert and a person originally identified as another

inmate but later identified as Petitioner. During an on-the-record chambers conference, the

State identified twelve recordings received on Friday, August 2 that it might use for
impeachment purposes and the one recording received Monday, August 5 that it said it

planned to use in its case-in-chief.

       Over objection of defense counsel, the circuit court admitted the jail call recordings

with the State’s assurance that it would not use the recordings in its case-in-chief or as

impeachment evidence until the second day of trial, to give defense counsel time to review

the recordings.

       The jury convicted Petitioner of illegal possession of a firearm. The circuit court

sentenced Petitioner to fifteen years’ imprisonment, with all but twelve years suspended

and upon release five years of supervised probation. Petitioner timely appealed to the Court

of Special Appeals, which affirmed.

       We granted certiorari on April 9, 2021 to address the following questions:

       1. Does the State’s obligation to exercise due diligence in identifying and
       disclosing relevant materials in criminal litigation extend to phone call
       recordings collected and preserved by the State’s jail facilities?

       2. In a criminal case, does a recording of a defendant’s own statement that
       is not disclosed until the morning of trial constitute an unfair surprise to the
       defense, such that it requires relief?

       We answer both questions in the negative and shall affirm the judgment of the Court

of Special Appeals.

                         FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

                                 The Underlying Incident

       On June 9, 2018, a shooting occurred outside Abyssinia, an Ethiopian restaurant in

downtown Silver Spring, Maryland.         The shots occurred in a nearby and “heavily

populated[]” alleyway by the outdoor side patio bar. No one was injured. The restaurant

                                              2
had an outdoor surveillance camera facing the alleyway, but the view of the shooting was

blocked by restaurant awnings.

       Amir Abdella, the manager of Abyssinia, heard the first gunshot and turned to see

a person running away, followed by the shooter, later identified as Petitioner, holding a

gun pointed towards the victim running away. A second man, who was later identified as

Mr. Gilbert, walked behind the shooter. Mr. Abdella testified that he was only five to six

feet away when he watched the shooter fire a second shot at the person running away. He

heard a third shot, but did not see it.

       Mr. Abdella testified that he saw the shooter and the second man earlier sitting

together in the restaurant. He recognized these men because they sat with a group of

women not eating or drinking and “saw the discomfort of the [women.]” He eventually

called security to ask them to leave. Mr. Abdella provided to law enforcement security

footage depicting the two men sitting together at a table and identified one of the men as

Petitioner. Mr. Abdella described the shooter at trial, but admitted that he might not be

able to identify the shooter again if he saw him.1 At least one other witness, Christopher

Parkes, a security guard at the adjacent Kaldi’s Social House restaurant, heard multiple gun

shots and saw muzzle flashes followed by people scattering in the alleyway. A firearms

       1
          The description of the shooter provided by Mr. Abdella at trial contradicted, in
part, his description of the shooter made during the initial 911 call. During trial, he testified
that the shooter was 5’8” wearing a white shirt and black pants, but during the 911 call, he
described the shooter as about 5’1” or 5’2” and wearing a white shirt with a black logo,
black pants, and black sneakers.
                                               3
expert corroborated the testimony of Mr. Parkes and opined that the two collected shell

casings came from the same weapon.

       The State also produced another nearby restaurant surveillance video that depicted

the two suspects: a taller man and a shorter man holding a gun. On July 30, law

enforcement issued a press release seeking the public’s help in identifying the two men

involved in the shooting. An anonymous tip identified the taller man as Mr. Gilbert. Law

enforcement compared the Motor Vehicle Administration photo of Mr. Gilbert with the

surveillance footage and determined they were the same person.            Law enforcement

obtained a search warrant of Mr. Gilbert’s phone and found the following text conversation

between Mr. Gilbert and Petitioner:

       [Petitioner:] Is dere a camera At dat lil side bar[?]
       [Petitioner:] And Erin just asked me bout you[.]
       [Mr. Gilbert:] Tell her hit me[.]
       [Mr. Gilbert:] N id[]k we Gucci doe babe[.]

This text exchange occurred approximately one hour after the shooting. According to the

detective assigned to the case, the “[s]idebar” referred to Abyssinia’s outdoor side patio

bar in the alleyway—“the only [s]idebar in this entire area.” The detective also explained

that the phrase “we Gucci” is slang for “we’re good.”

       Law enforcement executed an arrest warrant for Petitioner and Mr. Gilbert. Officers

seized clothes in the home of Petitioner consistent with those worn by the shooter in the

surveillance video. The Grand Jury for Montgomery County indicted Petitioner on charges

of assault in the first-degree, use of a firearm in the commission of a crime of violence, and

illegal possession of a firearm after a felony conviction. A jury trial was scheduled for

                                              4
August 5 through August 8, 2019 in the circuit court. Mr. Gilbert was charged as a co-

conspirator, but a nolle prosequi disposition was entered for Mr. Gilbert in June 2019.

                                    Legal Proceedings

A.     Discovery

       On January 23, 2019, defense counsel filed a discovery request, “in accordance with

Maryland Rule 4-263:[2] . . . [for all] material and information in the possession or control

of the State’s Attorney . . . and any others who have participated in the investigation or

evaluation of the case and who either regularly report or, with reference to the particular

case, have reported to the State’s Attorney of his/her office.” (Emphasis added). The

purpose of the request was to “obtain disclosure of material and information to the fullest

extent authorized and directed by Maryland Rule 4-263[.]” (Emphasis added). On May

15, 2019, defense counsel requested additional discovery pursuant to the State’s

       2
           Maryland Rule 4-263(c) provides:

       (c) Obligations of the Parties.

       (1) Due Diligence. The State’s Attorney and defense shall exercise due
           diligence to identify all of the material and information that must be
           disclosed under this Rule.

       (2) Scope of Obligations. The obligations of the State’s Attorney and the
           defense extend to material and information that must be disclosed under
           this Rule and that are in the possession or control of the attorney,
           members of the attorney’s staff, or any other person who either reports
           regularly to the attorney’s office or has reported to the attorney’s office
           in regard to the particular case.

       Cross reference: For the obligations of the State’s Attorney, see State v.
       Williams, 392 Md. 194[, 896 A.2d 973] (2006).
                                              5
obligations under the Maryland Rules and State v. Williams, 392 Md. 194, 896 A.2d 973

(2006), for any “recordings . . . or other materials concerning any . . . statements made by”

Mr. Gilbert or Petitioner.

       The State assured defense counsel that it would “open its evidentiary file” so defense

counsel could see the State did not possess any “written statements by any witnesses

otherwise not provided.” The State also assured the circuit court about its good faith

compliance with discovery obligations: “I think it’s important that the Court know that we

have met with counsel. . . . Open file discovery is the policy of my office, and open file

discovery has been the practice in this case. We have met no less than two times . . . where

we’ve gone through the file to make sure everything in counsel’s file reflects everything in

the State’s file[.]” The circuit court acknowledged the two parties’ cooperation during a

status hearing on July 25, 2019: “I appreciate counsel working together as you obviously

are doing to try to work out as many of these issues as you can.”

       On July 26, the State disclosed additional evidence that it intended to introduce.

The evidence was an activity log, gathered from Mr. Gilbert’s cellular phone, that

purportedly counted Mr. Gilbert’s steps during different time frames on the night of the

shooting. Defense counsel moved to exclude the evidence as untimely and non-compliant

with Md. Rule 4-263(c). On July 31, the circuit court agreed with defense counsel that the

evidence should be excluded, but not because of a bad faith or unduly late disclosure on

behalf of the State. The circuit court found the disclosure unfair to the defense under the

circumstances “given that the parties had reached an agreement on . . . the scope of the

                                             6
information that would be used from the cell phone [seized from Mr. Gilbert].” The

activity log exceeded the scope of the parties’ stipulation and was excluded.

       On July 31, in preparation for trial, the State requested from Mr. Amando Gomes,

an employee at the Montgomery County Correctional Facility, any recordings of jail calls

made by Petitioner as an inmate at the correctional facility. Counsel for the correctional

facility delivered 201 jail call recordings to the State’s Attorney on Friday, August 2. The

assigned prosecutor took them home over the weekend and began reviewing the calls on

Saturday, August 3.

       The recordings contain calls made by Petitioner from December 19, 2018 to August

1, 2019. Petitioner first made a call to Mr. Gilbert on April 15, 2019 and subsequently

called Mr. Gilbert “no less than 12 times.” The last call Petitioner made to Mr. Gilbert

occurred on July 16, 2019. Each call lasted approximately twenty minutes.

       The State characterized most of the conversations as “sundry discussi[on]” and

devoid of a “smoking gun in terms of [‘]I did this.[’]” A few of the conversations discussed

the case and referenced the unwillingness of Mr. Gilbert to provide testimony. The “State

was concerned at the potential of suborning perjury and obstruction of justice. . . .” The

State concluded that it would not use these calls in its case-in-chief, but could use some of

them for impeachment if Mr. Gilbert testified.

       The State emailed Mr. Gomes on Sunday, August 4, requesting a backwards search

of Mr. Gilbert’s phone number to identify any jail calls made to his phone. Mr. Gomes

replied via email at 6:00 a.m. on Monday, August 5 with one jail call made to Mr. Gilbert

on April 2 (“the April 2 call”) from the account of another detainee with the last name

                                             7
Pinto.3 In the April 2 call, Mr. Gilbert answered the phone and asked if the person calling

was named “Sosa”—a nickname used by Petitioner. Petitioner answered in the affirmative

and they proceeded to discuss the case over the course of a fifteen-minute conversation.

       The State shared the call recordings with defense counsel at the courthouse on the

morning of August 5. During an on-the-record chambers conference, the State identified

twelve calls between Petitioner and Mr. Gilbert that could be used to impeach Mr. Gilbert

during his testimony. The State also proffered the April 2 call between Mr. Gilbert and

Petitioner to use in its case-in-chief. While the call was made through another inmate’s

PIN number, the State explained that the call was between Petitioner and Mr. Gilbert.

       Defense counsel objected to the proposed evidence as untimely and requested a one-

day continuance. The State argued that Petitioner waived any right to challenge the call

because he attempted to conceal it using another inmate’s PIN number. The State offered

to withhold reference to the recordings in its opening statement and not to call Mr. Gilbert

until the second day of trial because “the State certainly d[i]dn’t want to catch [defense

counsel] by surprise.” The State also asked the circuit court and defense counsel to

“understand the predicament the State is bound in when [it’s] listening to calls of

obstruction of justice within this trial. And then [it] learn[s] of a call that was made by the

defendant that was hidden and was [not] meant to be [] found which [the State] found.”

       3
        Each inmate at Montgomery County Correctional Facility receives an individual
personal identification number (“PIN”) to make outgoing calls.
                                              8
         The circuit court did not rule on whether the State violated its discovery obligations,

but denied the request for continuance. The circuit court articulated its belief that defense

counsel would have an opportunity to review the April 2 call by the second day of trial.

B.       The Trial

         The State neither mentioned the April 2 call during its opening statement, nor called

Mr. Gilbert as a witness on the first day of trial. In addition to Mr. Gilbert’s testimony, the

State called thirteen witnesses, consisting of civilians, members of law enforcement, and

forensic experts. The State also presented fifty-eight exhibits, including three surveillance

videos from nearby establishments. When the State called Mr. Gilbert, on the second day

of trial, he testified that he was friends with Petitioner, and they were together at Abyssinia

on the night of the shooting. He testified that the surveillance video depicted him and

Petitioner, but that he did not see Petitioner with a gun, nor did he see Petitioner fire any

shots.

         Over a renewed objection from Petitioner, the State introduced the jail call

recording:4

         Mr. Gilbert: Who is this, is this Sosa?
         [Petitioner]: Yeah, yeah.
                                                ***
         [Petitioner]: I said I’m trying to figure something out []. . . .
         Mr. Gilbert: Uh-huh. It’s still looking like nothing going, man. . . . So, I
         ain’t worried about this, get you back on the brick, bro.
         [Petitioner]: Yeah, yeah. []. . . .
                                                ***
         Mr. Gilbert: []. Sorry, I’m trying to get you situated. . . . I feel like you were
         with that bitch. And that bitch was fucking with (unintelligible). . . . It was
         her or somebody close to us.

         4
             This excerpt of the recording omits numerous lines of unintelligible dialogue.
                                                 9
                                            ***
       Mr. Gilbert: I ain’t done nothing.
       [Petitioner]: Shut up.
       Mr. Gilbert: Hey, I don’t. That’s how it is bro. That’s how I’m going to be,
       you feeling me? . . . There wasn’t no problem when you did that.
       [Petitioner]: Yeah.

Mr. Gilbert confirmed that the call was between him and Petitioner, even though the call

was made using the PIN number of another inmate.

       At the close of evidence, the circuit court granted judgment of acquittal as to first-

degree assault and use of firearm in a crime of violence. The jury convicted Petitioner of

illegal possession of a firearm. The circuit court sentenced Petitioner to fifteen years’

imprisonment, with all but twelve years suspended, and upon release five years of

supervised probation.

C.     The Court of Special Appeals

       The Court of Special Appeals affirmed the circuit court in an unreported opinion.

Alarcon-Ozoria v. State, No. 2149, Sept. Term, 2019, 2020 WL 7706980 (Md. Ct. Spec.

App. Dec. 29, 2020). The Court reached the merits of the discovery violation, even though

the circuit court did not find a discovery violation, and Petitioner failed to insist upon a

ruling “as he is required to do[.]” Id. at *5. In the absence of a “specific finding as a matter

of law that the State violated the discovery rule,” the Court “exercise[d] independent de

novo review to determine whether a discovery violation occurred[.]” Id. (quoting Williams

v. State, 364 Md. 160, 169, 771 A.2d 1082, 1087 (2001)).

       The Court concluded that the State did not violate its discovery obligations. Id. at

*6. According to the Court, the disclosure of the jail call recordings did not violate Md.

                                              10
Rule 4-263 because the State did not have an underlying obligation to seek or obtain the

jail call recordings. Id. The Court explained, “the State was not under a duty to disclose

materials that it did not have.” Id. The Court rejected the argument that the State had an

obligation to seek the records at any point prior to trial. Id.

       The Court also found that the State exercised due diligence. According to the Court,

“[i]t is significant that [Petitioner] attempted to conceal the call by using another inmate’s

phone number to make the call, and we agree that [Petitioner] cannot claim unfair surprise”

when Petitioner was “an active concealer.” Id.

       Finally, the Court found that the State was sufficiently prompt in providing the

recordings to Petitioner. The State shared the recordings after having an opportunity to

review the materials over the weekend. The circuit court did not abuse its discretion,

according to the Court, by declining to continue the case for a day. Id. The circuit court

fashioned an appropriate remedy by allowing the State to refrain from mentioning the

recording in its opening statement and to delay calling Mr. Gilbert so Petitioner could

review the recording. Id.

       Petitioner timely filed a petition for certiorari, which this Court granted on April 9,

2021. Alarcon-Ozoria v. State, 474 Md. 220, 253 A.3d 1076 (2021).

                                         DISCUSSION

                                    Standard of Review

       The circuit court is vested with broad discretion in administering discovery.

Williams v. State, 416 Md. 670, 698, 7 A.3d 1038, 1054 (2010). Therefore, this Court

“reviews for abuse of discretion a [circuit] court’s decision to impose, or not impose a

                                              11
sanction for a discovery violation.” Dackman v. Robinson, 464 Md. 189, 231, 211 A.3d

307, 332 (2019) (citing Beka Indus., Inc. v. Worcester Cty. Bd. of Educ., 419 Md. 194, 232,

18 A.3d 890, 913 (2011)).

       If the circuit court “made no specific finding as a matter of law that the State violated

the discovery rule, we exercise independent de novo review to determine whether a

discovery violation occurred.” Williams, 364 Md. at 169, 771 A.2d at 1087.

       We review any discovery violation for harmless error. Johnson v. State, 360 Md.

250, 269, 757 A.2d 796, 806 (2000); Green v. State, 456 Md. 97, 165, 171 A.3d 1162, 1201

(2017) (“Having established that the State violated [Md.] Rule 4-263[] . . . we must next

inquire as to whether the error was harmless.”). “If the trial judge erred because the State

did in fact violate the discovery rule, we consider the prejudice to the defendant in

evaluating whether such error was harmless.” Williams, 364 Md. at 169, 771 A.2d at 1087

(citation omitted).

                              The Contentions of the Parties

       Petitioner contends that the State violated its discovery obligations by producing jail

call recordings on the morning of the trial. According to Petitioner, the State had a

mandatory and automatic obligation to disclose the jail call recordings without delay or

request pursuant to Md. Rule 4-263. This obligation extended to material in the possession

or control of the correctional facility because, according to Petitioner, the State exercised

a supervisory relationship over the facility.

       Petitioner argues that the supervisory relationship can be demonstrated by the

State’s direct and informal access to materials held by the correctional facility. The State

                                                12
received the recordings within 48 hours of an email request, and the recordings were “hand-

delivered” to the State’s Attorney’s Office. According to Petitioner, private counsel would

need to wait at least nine days pursuant to Md. Rule 4-265(d)5 before a subpoena request

for jail call recordings would be enforceable.

       Because the jail call recordings were purportedly under the constructive possession

and control of the State, Petitioner asserts that the State violated its obligation of due

diligence pursuant to Md. Rule 4-263(c)(1) by failing to identify and disclose the jail call

recordings until the morning of trial. Petitioner cites this Court’s definition of due diligence

from Argyrou v. State, 349 Md. 587, 604, 709 A.2d 1194, 1202 (1998), which examined

due diligence in the context of Md. Rule 4-331(c) (providing the grant of a new trial on the

basis of newly discovered evidence). Petitioner notes that due diligence requires both good

faith and timeliness. According to Petitioner, the State’s effort to locate the jail recordings

on the eve of trial violated the timeliness component of due diligence. The lack of

knowledge of the recordings, according to Petitioner, did not excuse the State from its

obligation of due diligence during discovery. Petitioner also argues the State’s assertion,

       5
           Maryland Rule 4-265(d) provides:

       (d) Filing and Service. Unless the court waives the time requirements of
       this section, a request for subpoena shall be filed at least nine days before
       trial in the circuit court, or seven days before trial in the District Court, not
       including the date of trial and intervening Saturdays, Sundays, and holidays.
       At least five days before trial, not including the date of the trial and
       intervening Saturdays, Sundays, or holidays, the clerk shall deliver the
       subpoena for service pursuant to [Md.] Rule 4-266(b). Unless impracticable,
       there must be a good faith effort to cause a trial subpoena to be served at least
       five days before the trial.

                                              13
that Petitioner deliberately concealed his conversation with Mr. Gilbert by using the PIN

number of another inmate is unsupported by the record.

       Finally, Petitioner contends that the late disclosure prejudiced his defense and

necessitates vacating his conviction. Petitioner notes that the purpose of discovery is to

assist the defendant in preparing a defense and to prevent unfair surprise. According to

Petitioner, both of these purposes were violated by the State. Petitioner did not learn about

the jail call recordings until the morning of the trial, which meant that it had no time to

adjust its trial strategy that had been in the works for months. Petitioner asserts that the

State intentionally delayed seeking the calls and in doing so, engaged in “gamesmanship”

in violation of discovery rules.       The call itself provided evidence of Petitioner’s

consciousness of guilt, which meant the jury was presented incriminating evidence without

an adequate opportunity for the defense to respond.

       The State argues that the scope of its discovery obligations did not extend to the

correctional facility, because the scope of its obligations extends only to materials under

the possession or control of the State’s Attorney, or someone who reports regularly to the

State’s Attorney, such as a staff member or law enforcement. A correctional facility staff

member, according to the State, is not a person who regularly reports to the State’s

Attorney. The State asserts that its discovery obligations may extend to persons outside of

its office only if they constitute a prosecutorial arm of the government. A correctional

facility, like other state agencies including mental health facilities or juvenile detention

facilities, do not operate for the purpose of investigating or prosecuting cases. Nor does a

correctional facility, unlike a prosecutor or a police officer, report to the State’s Attorney.

                                              14
       The State contends no reporting relationship emerged between the correctional

facility and the State’s Attorney’s Office in the case at bar. The State requested the calls

from a correctional facility employee, who did not respond until the next day. The

Assistant State’s Attorney also emailed the employee over the weekend preceding the trial

and did not receive a response until Monday morning. In both of these instances, according

to the State, the correctional facility fulfilled requests for information, which does not

establish a reporting relationship as contemplated by Md. Rule 4-263(c).

       The State also raises practical concerns about Petitioner’s interpretation of the

State’s discovery obligations. Incarcerated defendants, including Petitioner, may make jail

calls from the time of arrest until trial. The State argues that it would be impractical to

require continuous requests for jail calls during this time period. Interpreting the scope of

Md. Rule 4-263(c) to include a correctional facility, according to the State, would place an

undue burden on prosecutors because it would extend mandatory disclosures from within

the State’s Attorney’s Office and its agents to virtually any state agency that may possess

discoverable information.

       The State also rejects Petitioner’s contention that its late disclosure constituted

“strategic, last-minute gamesmanship[,]” by drawing a distinction between the State’s

capacity to acquire the jail call recordings at an earlier date and the State’s obligation to

acquire the jail call recordings at an earlier date. The State notes that it could have made

an earlier inquiry, but it was not required to do so.

       Therefore, the State asserts that its obligation to act promptly in disclosing the jail

calls did not materialize until the State gained possession of the material. The State

                                              15
received the calls on Friday, August 3, reviewed them over the weekend to identify which

calls were relevant, and disclosed the calls on Monday, August 5. The State notes that the

April 2 call—used in its case-in-chief—was not obtained by the State until Monday,

August 5. The State alternatively argues that even if it had an obligation to disclose the

jail recordings sooner, Petitioner’s attempt to conceal the call from detection prevents any

finding of unfair surprise.

       Assuming arguendo that a discovery violation occurred, the State argues that the

circuit court imposed an appropriate remedy. The State contends that the circuit court has

discretion to impose or not impose a sanction for a discovery violation. In this case, the

circuit court declined the defense’s request for a one-day continuance, but accepted the

State’s offer to delay mentioning the April 2 call or Mr. Gilbert’s testimony until the second

day of trial to give defense counsel an opportunity to review the recording. The circuit

court’s exercise of discretion, according to the State, appropriately remedied any violation

that may have arisen from the State’s morning-of disclosure.

       Finally, the State argues that even if the circuit court erred by not continuing the

trial one day for a fifteen-minute phone recording that the State received and disclosed

within the same day, the error was harmless. Defense counsel reviewed the call but did

not make any arguments during trial relating to its late disclosure. The State conceded the

call was not a “smoking gun” because it only contained speculation about who made the

anonymous tip to police about the identity of Mr. Gilbert. The recording tended to

demonstrate consciousness of guilt of Petitioner, but according to the State, did not affect

                                             16
the verdict given the panoply of other evidence that more clearly demonstrated

consciousness of guilt.

                            Application of Md. Rule 4-263(c)

A.     The scope of the State’s mandatory disclosure obligations pursuant to Md.
       Rule 4-263(c)(2) does not include jail call recordings held by a state
       correctional facility that has not reported to the State in a particular case.

Md. Rule 4-263(c) provides:

       (c) Obligations of the Parties.

       (1) Due Diligence. The State’s Attorney and defense shall exercise due
       diligence to identify all of the material and information that must be disclosed
       under this Rule.

       (2) Scope of Obligations. The obligations of the State’s Attorney and the
       defense extend to material and information that must be disclosed under this
       Rule and that are in the possession or control of the attorney, members of the
       attorney’s staff, or any other person who either reports regularly to the
       attorney’s office or has reported to the attorney’s office in regard to the
       particular case.

       Cross reference: For the obligations of the State’s Attorney, see State v.
       Williams, 392 Md. 194[, 896 A.2d 973] (2006).

       “To interpret [discovery rules], we use the same canons and principles of

construction used to interpret statutes.” Williams, 392 Md. at 206, 896 A.2d at 980 (quoting

State ex rel. Lennon v. Strazzella, 331 Md. 270, 274, 627 A.2d 1055, 1057 (1993)). We

begin our analysis by looking at the plain meaning of the rule. Johnson, 360 Md. at 264–

65, 757 A.2d at 804.

       “When the words are clear and unambiguous, ordinarily we need not go any

further. . . . Only when the language of the rule is ambiguous is it necessary that we look

elsewhere to ascertain legislative intent.” Williams, 392 Md. at 207, 896 A.2d at 980

                                             17
(quoting Strazzella, 331 Md. at 274–75, 627 A.2d at 1057) (citations omitted). This Court

may “search[] for rulemaking intent in other indicia, including the history of the Rule or

other relevant sources intrinsic and extrinsic to the rulemaking process, in light of: (1) the

structure of the Rule; (2) how the Rule relates to other laws; (3) the Rule’s general purpose;

and (4) the relative rationality and legal effect of various competing constructions.” Green,

456 Md. at 125, 171 A.3d at 1178 (citations, quotations, and other marks omitted).

       “We may also consider other persuasive sources beyond the text of the rule,

particularly case law interpreting the rule in question.” Williams, 364 Md. at 171 n.13, 771

A.2d at 1088 n.13. Case law interpreting prior versions of the rule is both persuasive and

instructive. Id., 771 A.2d at 1088 n.13.

       This Court in Williams examined the plain text of the substantially similar

predecessor to Md. Rule 4-263.6 The scope of mandatory discovery obligations for the

State comprised three groups: (1) the State’s Attorney, (2) his or her staff members, (3) and

those “who have participated, or are participating, in the case itself, by, for example,

participating ‘in the investigation or evaluation of the action[,]’ regularly reporting to the

       6
        The previous version of Md. Rule 4-263(c), which was formerly labeled Md. Rule
4-263(g), stated:

       The obligations of the State’s Attorney under this Rule extend to material
       and information in the possession of the State’s Attorney and staff members
       and any others who have participated in the investigation or evaluation of the
       action and who either regularly report, or with reference to the particular
       action have reported, to the office of the State’s Attorney.

Williams, 364 Md. at 176–77, 771 A.2d at 1091.
                                             18
State’s Attorney’s Office, or, with respect to the case under review, have reported to the

State’s Attorney’s Office.” 392 Md. at 208, 896 A.2d at 981 (emphasis added).

       While the Williams Court did not address whether the scope of the State’s discovery

obligations extended to other State agencies, this Court held that such mandatory

disclosures would only apply in limited circumstances, precisely enumerated by the rule.

Id. at 209–10, 896 A.2d at 982 (“We hold that by referring only to the ‘State’s Attorney

and staff members,’ without any restriction, and then including ‘any others,’ restricted to

those with a direct present or past involvement with the particular action, [the rule] draws

a distinction between the State’s Attorney’s Office and those outside that Office who are

on the prosecution team.”) (Emphasis added).

       This Court reached a similar conclusion in Thomas v. State, 397 Md. 557, 919 A.2d

49 (2007). In Thomas, a defendant told an FBI Agent, following his arrest, that “God has

forgiven me.” Id. at 564, 919 A.2d at 53. The case proceeded to trial in the Circuit Court

for Charles County. The prosecutor advised the circuit court that he learned of the “God

has forgiven me” statement one week before trial and informed defense counsel the same

day. Id., 919 A.2d at 53–54. The defense objected to the untimely disclosure as a violation

of Md. Rule 4-263, but the circuit court determined that there was no discovery violation.

Id. at 565, 919 A.2d at 54. The defendant was convicted and appealed. Id. at 565–66, 919

A.2d at 54. Noting that FBI agents do not regularly report to the State’s Attorney’s Office,

the Court of Special Appeals held that the defendant’s statements to the FBI agent did not

fall within the State’s disclosure obligation until the agent first “reported” that information

                                              19
to the State’s Attorney. Thomas v. State, 168 Md. App. 682, 695, 899 A.2d 170, 178

(2006).

       This Court agreed that the scope of discovery obligations generally does not extend

to agents outside the State’s Attorney’s Office:

       Ordinarily, the obligation to . . . provide discovery [and] impute information
       within the knowledge of a State agent to the State’s Attorney, does not apply
       to federal agents because they do not usually participate in the investigation
       or evaluation of the action and do not either regularly report, or with
       reference to the particular action, actually report to the office of the State’s
       Attorney.

Thomas, 397 Md. at 569, 919 A.2d at 56 (emphasis added). However, the FBI agent in

Thomas may have triggered the discovery obligations of the State because “[h]e

participated in the investigation as a member of the Washington, D.C. Cold Case Unit, he

arrested [Thomas], and he wrote a report in the matter.” Id., 919 A.2d at 56.7

       This Court’s prior interpretation of the scope of the State’s discovery obligations

demonstrates that a jail call recording, held by a correctional facility, does not trigger the

State’s mandatory disclosure requirements pursuant to Md. Rule 4-263(c) because the

correctional facility is not part of the State’s Attorney’s Office, nor does it directly or

regularly report to the State’s Attorney in this case. This Court considered extending the

scope of Md. Rule 4-263(c) to an FBI agent in Thomas because the record demonstrated

that the FBI agent was working hand in glove with Maryland law enforcement and the

State’s Attorney. Unlike the FBI agent in Thomas, who arrested the defendant, solicited

       7
        This Court never determined whether the statement made to an FBI agent triggered
the mandatory disclosure obligation of the State because it concluded the belated disclosure
was not prejudicial. Id. at 569, 919 A.2d at 56.
                                             20
an incriminating statement during a criminal investigation, and wrote a report, a

correctional facility generally takes no part in the investigation or prosecution of someone

who happens to be detained in that facility.

       We reject Petitioner’s contention that the correctional facility reported to the State’s

Attorney in this particular case by providing the jail call recordings upon request. The

State requested material held by the correctional facility that was equally available to both

parties. The correctional facility, like any state agency responding to an information

request, fulfilled a ministerial function. See Blundon v. Taylor, 364 Md. 1, 17 n.9, 770

A.2d 658, 667 n.9 (2001) (“[c]lerical duties are generally classified as ministerial”)

(citations and quotation omitted).

       We are not persuaded by the claim of Petitioner that requesting the records via

email, as opposed to subpoena pursuant to Md. Rule 4-265(d), demonstrates preferential

treatment, thereby establishing a reporting relationship between the correctional facility

and the State’s Attorney. The plain text of the rule does not define “reports regularly” or

“has reported[,]” but Petitioner’s interpretation of the rule would lead to untenable results.

See Frost v. State, 336 Md. 125, 137, 647 A.2d 106, 112 (1994) (“[W]e seek to avoid

constructions that are illogical, unreasonable, or inconsistent with common sense.”). If

information sharing between state entities without a subpoena established a reporting

relationship, then there would be no limit to the State’s Attorney’s disclosure obligations.

Petitioner’s interpretation would significantly expand the scope of the rule as articulated

by this Court in Williams and Thomas, which held that mandatory disclosure only extends

                                               21
to the State’s Attorney’s Office, its support staff, and agents who regularly participate in

the investigation or prosecution of a case, or who have participated in the specific case.

       We hold that the scope of the State’s discovery obligations did not extend to a jail

call recording in the possession of a state correctional facility, a facility that was not part

of the State’s Attorney’s Office, nor did it participate in the investigation or prosecution of

the instant case.

B.     The State exercised due diligence in disclosing the jail call recordings under the
       circumstances.

       Maryland Rule 4-263(c)(1) obligates parties to exercise due diligence in identifying

all information and material that must be disclosed under the rule. This Court has not

examined the due diligence requirement pursuant to Md. Rule 4-263(c)(1) since its addition

to the rule in a 2008 amendment. Like Md. Rule 4-263(c)(2), we interpret the plain text of

Md. Rule 4-263(c)(1) in light of the object and purpose of the rule, and may consult its

enactment history and case law for interpretive guidance.

       The plain text of Md. Rule 4-263(c)(1) indicates that the obligation for due diligence

only attaches to material “that must be disclosed under this Rule.” (Emphasis added).

Material must be disclosed when two conditions are satisfied. First, as discussed above,

the material must fall within the scope of discovery obligations pursuant to Md. Rule 4-

263(c)(2), i.e., “in the possession or control of the attorney, members of the attorney’s staff,

or any other person who either reports regularly to the attorney’s office or has reported to

the attorney’s office in regard to the particular case.” Md. Rule 4-263(c)(2).

                                              22
       Second, the material must satisfy one of the several categories of information

enumerated by Md. Rule 4-263(d).          Maryland Rule 4-263(d)(1) is the category of

information relevant to the instant case because it pertains to statements of the defendant.

It requires the State’s Attorney to provide the defense, without a request, “[a]ll written and

oral statements of the defendant and of any co-defendant that relate to the offense charged

and all material and information, including documents and recordings, that relate to the

acquisition of such statements[.]” Md. Rule 4-263(d)(1) (emphasis added). We assume

without deciding that at least some of the jail call recordings between Petitioner and Mr.

Gilbert satisfied Md. Rule 4-263(d)(1) because the material contained statements of the

defendant that referenced the ongoing prosecution.

       The statements did not meet the first condition necessary for mandatory

disclosure—“in the possession or control” of the State’s Attorney or a person that reports

regularly to the State’s Attorney or had reported in the particular case—until Friday,

August 5 when the State received the recordings from the correctional facility. Md. Rule

4-263(c)(2). Therefore, the obligation to exercise due diligence, according to the plain text

of the rule, did not attach until it came into the actual or constructive possession or control

of the State’s Attorney. See Warrick v. State, 302 Md. 162, 170–71, 486 A.2d 189, 193

(1985) (“There are, nevertheless, limitations on the State’s obligations under Md.[ ]R. 741

a 2 [the predecessor to Md. Rule 4-263]. . . . [The rule] limits that which is discoverable .

. . to material and information in possession or control of [the State’s Attorney, of]

members of his [or her] staff and of any others who have participated in the investigation

or evaluation of the case and who either regularly report or with reference to the particular

                                              23
case have reported to his [or her] office.”) (quotation and footnote omitted) (emphasis

added).

       This plain text interpretation of due diligence is consistent with the object and

purpose of discovery, the history of Md. Rule 4-263(c)(1), and relevant case law. Berry v.

Queen, 469 Md. 674, 688, 233 A.3d 42, 50 (2020) (“In addition to the plain language, the

modern tendency of this Court is to continue the analysis of the statute beyond the plain

meaning . . . in order to ‘check [] our reading of a statute’s plain language[.]’. . .”) (quoting

In re: S.K., 466 Md. 31, 50, 215 A.3d 300, 311 (2019)) (citations omitted).

       The main objective of the discovery rule is to assist the defendant in preparing his

defense, and to protect him from surprise. Hutchins v. State, 339 Md. 466, 473, 663 A.2d

1281, 1285 (1995); Mayson v. State, 238 Md. 283, 287, 208 A.2d 599, 602 (1965). The

rule accomplishes its purpose through its mandatory disclosure provisions. Collins v. State,

373 Md. 130, 146–47, 816 A.2d 919, 928 (2003) (quoting Williams, 364 Md. at 172, 771

A.2d at 1089). There is nothing in the plain text of Md. Rule 4-263(c)(1) that requires due

diligence in identifying material that falls outside mandatory disclosure provisions. State

v. Cork, 322 Md. 93, 103, 585 A.2d 833, 838 (1991) (noting that the Maryland Rules are

“precise rubrics” to be strictly followed). The obligation of due diligence helps protect the

defendant from unfair surprise, but the underlying purpose of Md. Rule 4-263 does not

warrant extending the obligation of due diligence to materials beyond the grasp of the

State’s Attorney. The State should always err on the side of disclosure, State v. Brown,

327 Md. 81, 95, 607 A.2d 923, 930 (1992), but the right to discovery is not unlimited. Derr

v. State, 434 Md. 88, 124, 73 A.3d 254, 275 (2013).

                                               24
       The history of Md. Rule 4-263 supports the conclusion that the obligation of due

diligence does not attach until the material comes within the possession or control of the

State’s Attorney, or a person who regularly reports to the State’s Attorney, or has reported

to the State’s Attorney in the particular case. The Standing Committee on Rules of Practice

and Procedure (“the Rules Committee”) submitted its One Hundred Fifty-Eighth Report to

this Court in 2007, in which it proposed the addition of the due diligence requirement to

Md. Rule 4-263. The purpose of the amendment was to “to clarify the State’s discovery

obligations . . . and make other changes to discovery in a criminal action in a circuit

court[.]” Standing Committee on Rules of Practice and Procedure, One Hundred Fifty-

Eighth Report of the Standing Committee on Rules of Practice and Procedure at 4 (Sept.

26, 2007). The Committee Note8 explained the addition of due diligence to the rule:

       The due diligence required by subsection (a) (1) does not require affirmative
       inquiry by the State with regard to the listed examples [of materials that must
       be disclosed under the rule] in all cases, but would require such inquiry into
       a particular area if information possessed by the State, as described in
       subsection (a) (2), would reasonably lead the State to believe that affirmative
       inquiry would result in discoverable information.

Id. at 110 (emphasis added).

       The Committee Note highlights that the obligation for due diligence is not an

affirmative duty, but one triggered by information in possession of the State. As an

example, the Committee Note provides that “[d]ue diligence does not require the State to

obtain a copy of the criminal record of a State’s witness unless the State is aware of the

       8
         A Committee Note is incorporated into the Maryland Rules. Green, 456 Md. at
145 n.8, 171 A.3d at 1189 n.8.
                                             25
criminal record. If, upon inquiry by the State, a witness denies having a criminal record,

the inquiry and denial generally satisfy due diligence unless the State has reason to question

the denial.” Id. at 110–11 (emphasis added). A criminal record, like a recorded statement

of the defendant, constitutes a type of material that the State’s Attorney shall provide to the

defense without request. Md. Rule 4-263(d)(2). The Committee Note indicates that the

State would not have an obligation to track down a criminal record with due diligence,

unless the State is at least aware of the criminal record.

       The history of Md. Rule 4-263(c)(1) demonstrates that the State’s Attorney does not

have an obligation to track down a recording made by the defendant in the possession of a

third party, unless the State’s Attorney was at least made aware of the existence of that

recording. Once the State became aware of the recording held by a third party, it likely

would have the obligation to exercise due diligence in identifying and obtaining the

recording. This conclusion is underscored by the reporter’s note which acknowledged that

the obligation of due diligence attaches to material that each party is required to provide.

Id. at 119. Nothing in the report submitted by the Rules Committee indicated that due

diligence obligates the State to proactively request materials that may or may not be held

by third parties.

       In the case at bar, the State did not become aware of the recorded statements made

by the Petitioner while incarcerated at the correctional facility until it requested and

received such statements on Friday, August 2. Upon receipt of the materials, the State had

had an obligation to exercise due diligence in identifying whether any of the recordings

must be disclosed pursuant to Md. Rule 4-263(d)(1). We find nothing in the record that

                                              26
indicates the State’s prior awareness of the recorded statements until it received the

materials from the correctional facility on Friday, August 2, 2019.

       Petitioner argues that the requirement of due diligence pursuant to Md. Rule 4-

263(c)(1) should have obligated the State to investigate the existence of any jail call

recordings prior to the week before trial. Even if the State was not actually aware of the

recordings, Petitioner contends that the State should have been aware of the recordings.

       Petitioner’s argument is not supported by the text or history of the rule. The plain

text of the rule expressly omits any language that the State should proactively discover

materials held by third parties uninvolved in the prosecution or investigation of a case. The

history of the rule indicates that this omission was not inadvertent. Following a hearing on

the One Hundred Fifty-Eighth Report, the Rules Committee undertook “a further review

of the discovery process in criminal cases in light of the ABA Standards, what is ultimately

required under both Federal and Maryland Constitutional law, and how the discovery

process can be clarified, made more effective, and promote greater fairness and efficiency

in overall criminal procedure.” Standing Committee on Rules of Practice and Procedure,

Supplement to the One Hundred Fifty-Eighth Report of the Standing Committee on Rules

of Practice and Procedure at 2 (Mar. 28, 2008) (“the Supplement”). The rule as it stands

now reflects the changes proposed by the Rules Committee.

       In its review, the Rules Committee:

       obtained and considered both the ABA Standards and the ABA Commentary
       to them. It had available to it the discovery rules applicable in Federal
       criminal cases and the rules adopted in other States, along with relevant case
       law. All of the individuals and groups that had indicated an interest in the
       matter were invited to submit written comments regarding the ABA

                                             27
       Standard[s,] and whether, or to what extent, there should be any departure
       from them. The Criminal Rules Subcommittee met, [and] gave initial
       consideration to the ABA Standards and the written comments that had been
       received[.] . . .

Id.

       This Court considered but declined to fully adopt the more permissive ABA

Standards with respect to Md. Rule 4-263. Id. at 3. “[O]ne of the principal objectives of

the rewriting of [Md.] Rule[] . . . 4-263 is to bring greater clarity to what is required, so

that disputes can be avoided and the process can work more effectively. To that end, [Md.]

Rule 4-263 provides some common examples of information . . . [that] would need to be

disclosed. Those examples are not intended to extend the scope of discovery but better to

define it.” Id. at 3–4 (emphasis in original).

       The Supplement also reveals an intent to make the due diligence obligation less

demanding than the ABA counterpart. Appendix C of the Supplement9 noted that the due

diligence requirement “is generally consistent with [ABA Standards] but is stated in

somewhat broader terms.” Supplement, App’x C at 3.10

       9
        “Unlike a Committee Note, an appendix to a Report of the Rules Committee does
not become incorporated into the Maryland Rules.” Green, 456 Md. at 145 n.8, 171 A.3d
at 1189 n.8.
       10
        Assuming arguendo that the more permissive ABA due diligence obligation was
the Maryland Rule, the State presumably still would have not violated discovery rules.

       Standard 11-4.3(b) requires the [prosecutor] to make reasonable efforts to
       ensure that information relevant to the defendant and the offense is provided
       to the prosecutor by investigative personnel. Standard 11-4.3(c) provides
       that, if the prosecutor is aware of discoverable information possessed by a
       government agency that does not report to the prosecutor’s office, the
                                                        (continued . . . )
                                             28
       The Rules Committee added to Md. Rule 4-263(c) the cross-reference to State v.

Williams, 392 Md. 194, 896 A.2d 973 (2006), to illustrate, in part, the limits of the

obligation of due diligence. Williams concerned exculpatory information pertaining to a

registered police informant that was unknown to the assigned prosecutor, but was well

known to the Baltimore City Police Department and the State’s Attorney. Id. at 200, 896

A.2d at 976. While describing the disclosure obligations under Brady, this Court remarked:

       [I]t is proper to consider the State’s Attorney Office as a single entity. As
       the seeker of truth, the State, as prosecutor, cannot seek to insulate itself from
       its constitutionally mandated duty by dividing itself into pieces, thus
       permitting one piece to claim ignorance of the knowledge of the other pieces.
       . . . By enforcing a consistent standard applicable to all in the State’s
       Attorney’s Office, we believe that nondisclosures such as the one leading to
       this appeal will be avoided.

Id. at 223, 896 A.2d at 990 (emphasis added). The State violated its obligation of due

diligence in Williams because it failed to overcome artificial divisions within its office and

law enforcement to provide material to the defendant. The material was at all times within

the possession, control, or at least knowledge, of the State’s Attorney or one of its agents,

but the State failed to take reasonable steps to deliver the information to defense counsel.

(. . . continued)
         prosecutor must disclose the existence of that information.

Id. (Emphasis added). The ABA rule requires due diligence once the information comes
into the possession of an investigator or the prosecutor becomes aware of the information.
Like its Md. Rule 4-263 counterpart, the ABA rule notably omits language such as “should
have been aware” of the information. The correctional facility was not a State investigator,
and the State could not have been aware about the discoverable material until it received
the recordings on August 2.
                                              29
       Pursuant to the plain text of Md. Rule 4-263(c)(1), persuasive commentary of the

Rules Committee and relevant case law, the obligation of due diligence did not take effect

in the case at bar until the State received the jail call recordings on Friday, August 2. Once

the State acquired the recordings, it satisfied its due diligence obligation by disclosing the

material within several days. Whether a party exercised due diligence depends on the

circumstances of the case. See Argyrou, 349 Md. at 605, 709 A.2d at 1203 (noting the

assessment of due diligence, at least in the context of newly discovered evidence, must be

assessed “in light of the totality of circumstances”); Joyner v. State, 208 Md. App. 500,

529, 56 A.3d 787, 805 (2012) (holding no discovery violation occurred when the State

disclosed expert testimony eight days before trial because State fulfilled its continuing duty

to disclose); Raynor v. State, 201 Md. App. 209, 229, 29 A.3d 617, 629 (2011) (concluding

that defendant may have been surprised by the reference to previously undisclosed emails

during trial, but the circuit court did not abuse its discretion in not granting a mistrial).

       In anticipation of trial, the State requested jail calls made by Petitioner from an

employee at the correctional facility on Wednesday, July 31. The employee responded

Thursday, August 1 and informed the State that it would deliver the material on Friday

August 2. The State reviewed the calls on Saturday. The State contacted the employee on

Sunday to request a reverse-look up of Mr. Gilbert’s number, and received the April 2 call

at 6 a.m. on Monday, August 5.

       Three days elapsed between the State’s possession of the 201 recordings of calls

made by Petitioner and sharing with defense counsel. The State could have immediately

disclosed all 201 calls that it received on Friday, but under the circumstances, it would have

                                               30
only provided at most two days extra notice to defense counsel. Considering these calls

arrived on the eve of trial, sending 201 recordings, most of which the State decided not to

use for trial, could have unduly burdened the defense with extraneous discovery review

during a period of critical trial preparation. Baltimore Transit Co. v. Mezzanotti, 227 Md.

8, 13, 174 A.2d 768, 771 (1961) (noting the purpose of discovery is to “eliminate, as far as

possible, the necessity of any party to litigation going to trial in a confused or muddled

state of mind[.]”). The April 2 recording—used in the State’s case-in-chief—was shared

with defense counsel on the same day that it was received. The State could not have shared

the April 2 call any sooner.

       The State’s decision to request a reverse look-up of Mr. Gilbert’s phone number

also tends to demonstrate the exercise of due diligence under the circumstances. The initial

request of jail calls made by Petitioner did not include the April 2 call because it was made

through the PIN number of another inmate. Regardless of whether Petitioner deliberately

attempted to conceal the call by using another inmate’s PIN number, it would not have

been found but for the endeavor of the State under the circumstances. We conclude that

the State exercised due diligence in this case.

C.     Even if the State violated its discovery obligations through its late disclosure,
       the error was harmless.

       In the past, this Court has applied harmless error review when assessing the impact

of a discovery violation. Green, 456 Md. at 165, 171 A.3d at 1201. The purpose of the

harmless error rule is to prevent a small error, “assuming, [arguendo], that [there] was

error[,]” from setting aside convictions for a defect that would not have changed the result

                                             31
at trial. State v. Babb, 258 Md. 547, 552, 267 A.2d 190, 193 (1970). Assuming arguendo

that the State’s disclosure of the jail call recordings on the morning of trial violated its

discovery obligations, it was harmless error beyond a reasonable doubt.

       “[W]hen a discovery violation comes to light in the course of trial, whether any

sanction is to be imposed and, if so, what it is to be, is in the first instance committed to

the discretion [of] the trial judge. The exercise of that discretion includes evaluating

whether a discovery violation has caused prejudice.” Warrick, 302 Md. at 173, 486 A.2d

at 194 (citations omitted). The rule “does not require the court to take any particular action

or any action at all.” Bellard v. State, 229 Md. App. 312, 340, 145 A.3d 61, 78 (2016)

(quoting Thomas, 397 Md. at 570, 919 A.2d at 57) (emphasis added).

       The determination of the circuit court “will be disturbed on appellate review only if

there is an abuse of discretion. That review, however, does not involve a search of the

record for grounds, not relied upon by the [circuit] court, which the appellate court believes

could [or could not] support the [circuit] court’s action.” North River Ins. Co. v. Mayor

and City Council of Baltimore, 343 Md. 34, 47–48, 680 A.2d 480, 487 (1996). “An

appellate court does not reverse a conviction based on a [circuit] court’s error or abuse of

discretion where the appellate court is satisfied beyond a reasonable doubt that the [circuit]

court’s error or abuse of discretion did not ‘influence the verdict’ to the defendant’s

detriment.” Hall v. State, 437 Md. 534, 540–41, 87 A.3d 1287, 1291 (2014) (citations

omitted). A discovery violation that unfairly surprises a defendant and prejudices the

ability of a defendant to mount an adequate defense generally “cannot be construed as

harmless error.” Collins, 373 Md. at 148, 816 A.2d at 929; Thomas, 397 Md. at 574, 919

                                             32
A.2d at 59 (explaining that prejudice pursuant to Md. Rule 4-263 turns on the harm

resulting from delay in disclosure).

       In Thanos v. State, 330 Md. 77, 622 A.2d 727 (1993), the circuit court declined to

grant relief for an asserted discovery violation by the State. Id. at 96, 622 A.2d at 736.

According to the defendant in Thanos, “the State neglected to provide him with the names

of three witness whom it called at trial, in violation of Maryland Rule 4-263(b)(1).[11]” Id.

at 96, 622 A.2d at 736 (footnote omitted). This Court held that assuming the State violated

Md. Rule 4-263 by failing to provide the names of three witnesses called at trial, “any error

in the State’s discovery violations was harmless” given ample corroborating evidence. Id.

at 97, 622 A.2d at 736. The defendant had confessed to the crime, and the State provided

testimony of a medical examiner that “independently corroborated [the defendant’s]

confession[.]” Id., 622 A.2d at 736. “The [circuit] court’s failure to grant relief for the

State’s discovery violations was not reversible error.” Id., 622 A.2d at 736–37.

       Similar to the State’s corroborating evidence in Thanos, in the case at bar, the State

presented evidence that established consciousness of guilt independent of the April 2 call.

The State introduced the April 2 call to establish that Petitioner knew about the security

camera footage of the shooting and that somebody had revealed the identity of Petitioner

or Mr. Gilbert to law enforcement:

       Mr. Gilbert: It was her or somebody close to us.
                                          ***
       Mr. Gilbert: I ain’t done nothing.

       11
          Maryland Rule 4-263(b)(1) formerly required the State provide the defense
without request the names of each State’s witness. This requirement is now provided by
Md. Rule 4-263(d)(3)(A).
                                             33
        [Petitioner]: Shut up.
        Mr. Gilbert: Hey, I don’t. That’s how it is bro. That’s how I’m going to be,
        you feeling me? . . . There wasn’t no problem when you did that.
        [Petitioner]: Yeah.

        The conversation does not directly reference the shooting or the camera, and was

hampered by unintelligible dialogue when played before the jury. Conversely, the text

exchange between Petitioner and Mr. Gilbert expressly demonstrates relief that certain

events were not caught on film by the alleyway camera where the shooting took place:

        [Petitioner:] Is dere a camera At dat lil side bar[?]
        [Petitioner:] And Erin just asked me bout you[.]
        [Mr. Gilbert:] Tell her hit me[.]
        [Mr. Gilbert:] N id[]k we Gucci doe babe[.]

        The State also provided additional evidence that established the guilt of Petitioner,

including forensic evidence, pictures and video footage of the scene, 911 audio, and

multiple witnesses’ testimony.

        The call also did not unfairly surprise the defendant or prejudice the ability of the

defendant to mount a defense. Thomas, 397 Md. at 574, 919 A.2d at 59. Petitioner was

already prepared to negate the allegation of consciousness of guilt from the text exchange

between Petitioner and Mr. Gilbert. Petitioner emphasized throughout the trial that the

State relied on circumstantial evidence, and the April 2 call was another example of the

State using a chain of inferences, instead of an express statement by Petitioner, to

demonstrate consciousness of guilt. Petitioner also chose not to address the April 2 call in

his case-in-chief, instead presenting an argument about its authentication.          Finally,

Petitioner argued throughout the trial, and even before this Court, that the State had a weak

case.

                                               34
       We find no indication that the April 2 call, coupled with other evidence presented

over the course of two days at trial, had substantial bearing on the outcome of the case.

The disclosure of evidence in this case was undoubtedly last minute, but the impact of the

disclosure did not unduly surprise the defendant, undermine the ability to prepare a defense,

or substantially influence the jury. Thomas, 397 Md. at 574, 919 A.2d at 59. Therefore,

the decision of the circuit court not to find a discovery violation, assuming arguendo that

it was made in error, was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt.

                                       CONCLUSION

       For the reasons previously explained, we affirm the judgment of the Court of Special

Appeals.

                                                  JUDGMENT OF THE COURT OF
                                                  SPECIAL APPEALS IS AFFIRMED.
                                                  COSTS   TO   BE    PAID  BY
                                                  PETITIONER.

                                             35
Circuit Court for Montgomery County
Case No. 135035C
Argued: September 14, 2021
                                            IN THE COURT OF APPEALS

                                                 OF MARYLAND

                                                       No. 4

                                                September Term, 2021
                                      ______________________________________

                                        ERIC ANTONIO ALARCON-OZORIA

                                                         v.

                                              STATE OF MARYLAND
                                      ______________________________________

                                                Getty, C.J.
                                                McDonald
                                                Watts
                                                Hotten
                                                Booth
                                                Biran
                                                Adkins, Sally D. (Senior Judge,
                                                Specially Assigned),

                                                      JJ.
                                      ______________________________________

                                            Dissenting Opinion by Watts, J.
                                      ______________________________________

                                                Filed: December 21, 2021
       Respectfully, I dissent. I cannot join the Majority’s determination that in a criminal

case the State’s requirement to exercise due diligence with respect to discovery extends no

further than to material already within the State’s Attorney’s possession or control. See

Maj. Slip. Op. at 22. Such an interpretation of Maryland Rule 4-263 is contrary to its plain

language and rulemaking history.         Maryland Rule 4-263(c)(1) obligates the State’s

Attorney to “exercise due diligence to identify all of the material and information that must

be disclosed under this Rule.” The plain language of the subsection is not qualified or

limited by a requirement that the State’s Attorney use due diligence to identify only

discoverable information that is already in the State’s possession or control.

       I would not read into the subsection a requirement that does not exist and that the

history of the Rule does not support. I would hold that the State’s Attorney in this instance

failed to exercise due diligence by waiting until the Wednesday before a trial was scheduled

to begin on Monday to request, as part of “last-minute” trial preparation, jail call recordings

and by disclosing the recordings on the first day of trial. I would determine that a discovery

violation occurred and that the error was not harmless.

       I share the view that a correctional facility does not become an agency that reports

to the State’s Attorney by virtue of having responded to a request for jail call records and,

as such, the records were not under the control of the State’s Attorney within the meaning

of Maryland Rule 4-263(c)(2). See Maj. Slip. Op. at 21. A contrary result could lead to

the illogical conclusion that any agency, or perhaps any individual, would “report” to the

State’s Attorney within the meaning of the Rule by simply responding to a request for

information. See Maj. Slip. Op. at 21.
       This inquiry, however, distracts from recognizing the State’s Attorney’s obligation

under Maryland Rule 4-263(c)(1), which provides: “The State’s Attorney and defense shall

exercise due diligence to identify all of the material and information that must be disclosed

under this Rule.” Maryland Rule 4-263(c)(2) provides:

       The obligations of the State’s Attorney and the defense extend to material
       and information that must be disclosed under this Rule and that are in the
       possession or control of the attorney, members of the attorney’s staff, or any
       other person who either reports regularly to the attorney’s office or has
       reported to the attorney’s office in regard to the particular case.

Clearly, material and information that must be disclosed under the Rule may be distinct or

different from material and information that is possessed by or under the control of the

State’s Attorney. Under a plain reading of Maryland Rule 4-263(c)(1), the State’s Attorney

is required to use due diligence to identify all of the material and information that must be

disclosed under the Rule regardless of whether the material and information is in the

possession or control of the State’s Attorney.

       Maryland Rule 4-263(d) sets forth a list of material and information that the State’s

Attorney is required to disclose without the necessity of a request. Under Maryland Rule

4-263(c)(1), the State’s Attorney must use due diligence to identify all material and

information that must be disclosed under section (d); and, under Maryland Rule 4-

263(c)(2), the State’s Attorney is required to disclose all such material and information that

is in the State’s Attorney’s possession or control. Maryland Rule 4-263(c)(1) does not limit

the duty of the State’s Attorney to identify material and information that must be disclosed

to a discrete look at what the State already possesses or controls. Rather, Maryland Rule

4-263(c)(1) requires that the State’s Attorney identify or promptly follow up on identifying

                                            -2-
information that must be disclosed under the Rule, such as a defendant’s oral statements,

regardless of whether the information is in the State’s possession or control.

       Under Maryland Rule 4-263(d)(1), “[w]ithout the necessity of a request, the State’s

Attorney shall provide to the defense[ a]ll written and oral statements of the defendant and

of any co-defendant that relate to the offense charged[.]” No one disputes that the jail calls

at issue in this case are “oral statements of the defendant” under Maryland Rule 4-

263(d)(1). Because a defendant’s oral statements constitute material that the State’s

Attorney would be required to disclose under Maryland Rule 4-263(d)(1), the plain

language of Maryland Rule 4-263(c)(1) obligated the State’s Attorney to exercise due

diligence in identifying the existence of the statements. The Majority concludes that

material must be disclosed when two conditions are met—first, “the material must fall

within the scope of discovery obligations pursuant to Md. Rule 4-263(c)(2),” and second,

“the material must satisfy one of the several categories of information enumerated by Md.

Rule 4-263(d).” Maj. Slip Op. at 22-23. But, the Majority fails to give effect to the plain

language of Maryland Rule 4-263(c)(1).

       The construction of Maryland Rule 4-263(c)(1) that is consistent with its plain

language is that a State’s Attorney must exercise due diligence to identify material and

information that must be disclosed. The plain language of (c)(1) does not confine the

State’s Attorney’s due diligence requirement to the scope provision of (c)(2) or use any

limiting language. In other words, if the circumstances of a case indicate to the State’s

Attorney that material and information described in Maryland Rule 4-263(d) exists outside

of the State’s Attorney’s office’s possession or control, the State’s Attorney may not delay

                                            -3-
in identifying the material and information. The choice of the word “identify” in Maryland

Rule 4-263(c)(1) is instructive. Logically, if the State’s Attorney’s obligation to exercise

due diligence with respect to oral statements of the defendant applied only to material that

the State’s Attorney already possessed or controlled, the requirement that the State’s

Attorney “identify” material and information that must be disclosed would be rendered

meaningless. The plain language interpretation of the Rule would prevent the absurd

outcome of permitting the State’s Attorney to be aware of the likelihood of oral statements

by a defendant or exculpatory information, for example, but having no duty to exercise due

diligence to identify the statements or exculpatory information because the statements or

exculpatory information are in the custody of a third party and not in the State’s Attorney’s

possession or control.

       In addition to its plain language, the history of Maryland Rule 4-263(c)(1) supports

the proposition that the due diligence obligation extends beyond material in the possession

and control of the State’s Attorney. In 2007, the Standing Committee on Rules of Practice

and Procedure (“the Rules Committee”) undertook a major overhaul of the criminal

discovery rules and issued its 158th Report, in which it, among other things, proposed

amendments to Maryland Rule 4-263. See Rules Committee, 158th Report at 1 (Sept. 26,

2007), available at https://www.courts.state.md.us/sites/default/files/import/rules/reports/

158thReport.pdf [https://perma.cc/SU9T-RDTE]. In a cover letter to this Court dated

September 26, 2007, Judge Joseph H. Murphy, then Chair of the Rules Committee,

explained that “[a]mendments to Rule 4-263 [were] proposed to clarify the State’s

discovery obligations under Brady v. Maryland, 373 U.S. 83 (1963) and its progeny and

                                            -4-
make other changes to discovery in a criminal action in a circuit court, as explained in the

Reporter’s note that follows the Rule.” 158th Report at 4. In the 158th Report, the

Committee note following proposed sections (a) and (b) of Maryland Rule 4-2631

explained the due diligence requirement as follows:

       The due diligence required by subsection (a)(1) does not require affirmative
       inquiry by the State with regard to the listed examples in all cases, but would
       require such inquiry into a particular area if information possessed by the
       State, as described in subsection (a)(2), would reasonably lead the State to
       believe that affirmative inquiry would result in discoverable information.
       Due diligence does not require the State to obtain a copy of the criminal
       record of a State’s witness unless the State is aware of the criminal record.
       If, upon inquiry by the State, a witness denies having a criminal record, the
       inquiry and denial generally satisfy due diligence unless the State has reason
       to question the denial.

158th Report at 110-11 (underlining omitted).

       This Court held an open meeting on the 158th Report and deferred consideration of

the proposed amendment to Maryland Rule 4-263 “pending further study[.]” Court of

Appeals of Maryland, Rules Order at 3 (Dec. 4, 2007), available at https://www.courts.

state.md.us/sites/default/files/import/rules/rodocs/ro158.pdf      [https://perma.cc/RC3C-

UPDX]. After we deferred consideration of the 158th Report for further study, on March

7, 2008, the Rules Committee held a meeting and discussed the proposed amendment of

Maryland Rule 4-263. See Rules Committee, Minutes of Meeting at 4 (Mar. 7, 2008),

available at https://www.courts.state.md.us/sites/default/files/minutes-rules/20080307.pdf

[https://perma.cc/QA6Q-FGX3]. Subsequently, in a Supplement to the 158th Report, the

       1
        Proposed Maryland Rule 4-263(a) and (b) later became Maryland Rule 4-263(c)
and (d), respectively.

                                            -5-
Rules Committee explained Maryland Rule 4-263(c)(1)’s relationship to the American Bar

Association (“ABA”) Standards for Criminal Justice. See Rules Committee, Supplement

to 158th Report at 2 (Mar. 25, 2008), available at https://mdcourts.gov/sites/default/files/

import/rules/reports/158supplementappx.pdf [https://perma.cc/MW5A-AGHV].

       In the Supplement, the language of Maryland Rule 4-263(c)(1) was substantively

identical to the language in subsection (a)(1) in the 158th Report. See 158th Report at 108;

Supplement to 158th Report at 14. However, the Committee note describing the due

diligence requirement no longer existed. See 158th Report at 110-11; Supplement to 158th

Report at 14-15. Instead, in an appendix to the Supplement, the Rules Committee stated

that Maryland Rule 4-263(c)(1) “is generally consistent with Standard 11-4.3(b) and (c)

but is stated in somewhat broader terms.” Supplement to 158th Report, App. C at 3.

According to the Rules Committee, ABA “Standard 11-4.3(b) requires the prosecutor to

make reasonable efforts to ensure that information relevant to the defendant and the offense

is provided to the prosecutor by investigative personnel.” Id. (emphasis in original). And,

ABA “Standard 11-4.3(c) provides that, if the prosecutor is aware of discoverable

information possessed by a government agency that does not report to the prosecutor’s

office, the prosecutor must disclose the existence of that information.” Id.

       Considering this history, it is clear that the Rules Committee intended a State’s

Attorney’s due diligence obligation under Maryland Rule 4-263(c)(1) to extend beyond the

scope of Maryland Rule 4-263(c)(2). The Rules Committee expressly informed this Court

that Maryland Rule 4-263(c)(1) was intended to be “generally consistent with” ABA

Standards 11-4.3(b) and (c), but “somewhat broader[.]” Id. ABA Standard 11-4.3(c)

                                           -6-
requires that, where a prosecutor is aware of discoverable information in the possession of

an agency that does not report to the prosecutor’s office, that information must be

disclosed. See id. It was against this backdrop that we adopted Maryland Rule 4-263(c)(1)

and the requirement that a State’s Attorney exercise due diligence to identify all of the

material and information required to be disclosed under the Rule.

       In the Appendix, the Rules Committee advised that it did not recommend adopting

ABA Standards 11-4.3(d) and (e). See id. at 3-5. According to the Rules Committee, ABA

       Standard 11-4.3(d) provides that, if a request is made for identified material
       that would be discoverable if in the possession or control of a party but which
       is in the possession or control of others, the party must use diligent good faith
       efforts to cause the material to be made available.

Id. at 3 (emphasis in original). ABA “Standard 11-4.3(e) permits a court to order the

disclosure of material or information, not otherwise covered under Standard 11-4.3, upon

a showing that the items sought are ‘material to the preparation of the case.’” Id. at 4.

Thus, the Rules Committee stopped short of drafting the due diligence requirement of

Maryland Rule 4-263(c)(1) to require the State to cause the “identified” material in the

possession or control of third parties to be made available upon request. The Rule’s history

informs, just as the Rules Committee stated, that it intended to impose a due diligence

obligation “somewhat broader” than ABA Standards 11-4.3(b) and (c), which include the

requirement of disclosing the existence of information in the possession of a government

agency that does not report to the prosecutor, but less than ABA Standards 11-4.3(d) and

(e), which require obtaining information from third parties. No one who reads the history

of Maryland Rule 4-263(c)(1) could seriously contend that its due diligence obligation was

                                             -7-
intended to be limited to identifying only information and material already in the

possession or control of the State’s Attorney.

       The determination that the Majority reaches confining the State’s due diligence

obligation only to material and information under its possession or control is not consistent

with the plain language and Rule history of Maryland Rule 4-263(c)(1) and is far off the

mark that the ABA Standards have set for discovery obligations in the legal profession.

Even though our Rules Committee chose not to go as far as the ABA did in its due diligence

obligation, it is clear that the Rules Committee adopted the ABA view that due diligence

is not limited solely to identifying material and information in the possession or control of

the State. In 2008, this Court voted unanimously to approve Maryland Rule 4-263(c)(1)

based on the information provided by the Rules Committee in the Supplement to the 158th

Report. We should and indeed must interpret the Rule in a manner that is consistent with

the information that was provided to the Court by the Rules Committee at the time.

       Aside from not being consistent with the plain language of the Rule and its history,

the Majority’s approach suffers from several serious problems. First, under the Majority’s

reading, a State’s Attorney who knows of jail calls constituting statements of the defendant

would not be in violation of Maryland Rule 4-263(c)(1) by waiting, as the State’s Attorney

did here, until shortly before trial to request the calls and disclosing to the defense the

existence of the calls on the first day of trial. Next, would the State’s Attorney also be

permitted to delay until the day before trial interviewing a witness known to possess

exculpatory information and disclosing the first day of trial exculpatory information gained

from the witness because the information did not allegedly fall within the scope of the

                                            -8-
State’s Attorney’s due diligence obligation until the time of the interview?             This

interpretation of the due diligence requirement hinders, rather than advances, the purposes

of Maryland’s criminal discovery rules, which are to protect from undue surprise and to

assist the other party in preparing for trial. See, e.g., Green v. State, 456 Md. 97, 152-53,

171 A.3d 1162, 1193-94 (2017). The Majority’s interpretation of Maryland Rule 4-263

would allow the State’s Attorney to obtain a strategic and indeed unfair advantage by

delaying (including inadvertently) in having information that is required to be disclosed

under the Rule come into its possession or control.

       The State’s argument that not limiting the due diligence requirement to information

in its possession or control would place an untenable burden on the State’s Attorney is not

persuasive. The facts of a case will dictate what action, if any, the State’s Attorney must

take to use due diligence to identify material and information that must be disclosed. For

example, if an agency that does not report to the State possesses statements of a defendant

relating to a criminal case, but the State’s Attorney has no reason to know of it, due

diligence would not require the State’s Attorney to seek to identify any statements of the

defendant in the possession of the agency.

       In this case, the circumstance is different with respect to jail call recordings. Jail

call recordings, by their very nature, are statements of the defendant. If a defendant is in

custody before trial, it follows that the State’s Attorney would know that telephone calls

between a defendant and others that relate to the offense charged could exist. By the State’s

own acknowledgment at oral argument, the Assistant State’s Attorney in this case

identified the jail calls at issue during “last-minute” trial preparation. It is reasonable to

                                             -9-
expect that an Assistant State’s Attorney would perform routine trial preparation designed

to uncover oral statements of a defendant with greater diligence than what was used here.

The standard of due diligence is, at bottom, a question of reasonableness.

       We have not previously addressed the definition of due diligence under Maryland

Rule 4-263. In a different context, that of the State’s due process obligation to promptly

conduct a probation revocation hearing, due diligence is equivalent to “reasonable

promptness[.]” State v. Berry, 287 Md. 491, 500, 413 A.2d 557, 562 (1980) (citations

omitted). In Berry, id. at 499, 413 A.2d at 562, we held “that the State may conduct a

revocation hearing at any time, even if the probationary period has expired,” as long as the

State commences such a proceeding “diligently and promptly.” This Court held that a

probation revocation hearing need not take place during the probationary period so long as

the violation occurred during the probationary period. See id. at 498, 413 A.2d at 562. We

stressed, however, that due process requires the State to “bring about the revocation hearing

with due diligence or reasonable promptness to avoid prejudice to the defendant.” Id. at

500, 413 A.2d at 562 (citations omitted).

       In this case, given that the State acknowledged that requesting the jail call

recordings at issue was last-minute trial preparation and has offered no reason for the delay

in requesting the recordings that necessarily were required to be disclosed, I would hold

that the State’s Attorney failed to exercise due diligence. Maryland Rule 4-263(c)(1)

obligated the State’s Attorney to use due diligence to identify material and information

required to be disclosed under the Rule, i.e., records of jail calls or statements of the

defendant under Maryland Rule 4-263(d)(1) in this case.

                                            - 10 -
       Although there is no indication of bad faith in the record, the State’s Attorney failed

to request any jail call recordings until the Wednesday before trial. The State’s Attorney

did not disclose the recordings to defense counsel until the morning of trial. Given the

State’s acknowledgment at oral argument that requesting jail call recordings in this case

was simply part of last-minute trial preparation, disclosing the recordings to the defense on

the morning of the first day of trial was unreasonable.2 The record is devoid of any good

cause explanation for the delay and at oral argument, the State could provide none. As

such, I would hold that the State’s Attorney violated Maryland Rule 4-263(c)(1) by failing

to use due diligence to identify the existence of the jail call recordings.

       In this case, although there were eyewitnesses to the shooting, no eyewitness

positively identified Petitioner as the shooter. This was a circumstantial evidence case in

which the State relied in part on evidence of consciousness of guilt and the April 2, 2019

jail call recording was part of the consciousness of guilt evidence. Even though the taped

dialogue may have been difficult to understand, it is not possible to conclude beyond a

reasonable doubt that the April 2, 2019 jail call recording did not affect the verdict.

Because I am unable to conclude beyond a reasonable doubt that use of the April 2, 2019

       2
         The State has argued that the April 2, 2019 jail call recording should be treated
differently because the Assistant State’s Attorney obtained it after requesting a “backwards
search” for call records. To be sure, the request for the backwards search occurred after
the Assistant State’s Attorney received the initial jail call recordings. The record reflects
that the search was done quickly and that the April 2, 2019 jail call recording was produced
early on the morning following the Assistant State’s Attorney request. This, too, was a
part of last-minute trial preparation that, through due diligence, could easily have been
done more promptly or earlier. There is no reason to distinguish the April 2, 2019 jail call
recording from the others.

                                            - 11 -
jail call at trial was inconsequential or did not affect the verdict, i.e., was harmless error, I

would reverse the judgment of the Court of Special Appeals.

       For the above reasons, respectfully, I dissent.

                                             - 12 -
Circuit Court for Montgomery County
Case No. 135035C
Argued: September 14, 2021
                                            IN THE COURT OF APPEALS

                                                 OF MARYLAND

                                                       No. 4

                                                September Term, 2021
                                      ______________________________________

                                        ERIC ANTONIO ALARCON-OZORIA

                                                         v.

                                              STATE OF MARYLAND
                                      ______________________________________

                                                Getty, C.J.
                                                McDonald
                                                Watts
                                                Hotten
                                                Booth
                                                Biran
                                                Adkins, Sally D. (Senior Judge,
                                                Specially Assigned),

                                                      JJ.
                                      ______________________________________

                                           Concurring Opinion by Adkins, J.
                                      ______________________________________

                                                Filed: December 21, 2021
       I commend both the Majority and Dissent for their cogent opinions. I find myself

divided between them. I am persuaded by the analysis of Judge Watts with respect to the

Rule 4-263(c)(1) due diligence requirement and how far it extends. I agree with her that

the State’s Attorney waited too long before requesting jail call recordings.

       Yet I agree with Judge Hotten that, even if we were to say that admission of the

telephone calls from the jail was error under the circumstances, such error was harmless.

In the first place, the taped dialogue was hard to understand. Moreover, there was

testimony favorable to the State from more than one eyewitness, corroborated by video

footage and other evidence.

I would affirm the conviction.