REPORTED
IN THE COURT OF SPECIAL APPEALS
OF MARYLAND
No. 2614
September Term, 2012
WILLIAM JACKSON
v.
STATE OF MARYLAND
Zarnoch,
Graeff,
Davis, Arrie W.
(Retired, Specially Assigned),
JJ.
Opinion by Graeff, J.
Filed: February 28, 2014
This appeal involves a Petition for Writ of Actual Innocence filed by William Jackson,
appellant, in the Circuit Court for Baltimore City, based on evidence that the State’s ballistics
expert, Joseph Kopera, lied about his qualifications. The circuit court denied appellant’s
petition, finding that appellant failed to meet his burden of proof pursuant to Md. Code (2011
Supp.) § 8-301(a)(1) of the Criminal Procedure Article (“C.P.”).
On appeal, appellant presents the following question, which we have rephrased
slightly, as follows:
Did the circuit court err in denying appellant’s Petition for Actual
Innocence where it was undisputed that (I) the State presented perjured
testimony of a state expert witness as to his expert qualifications; (ii) the trial
court explicitly instructed the jury that it must take into account the expert’s
qualifications; and (iii) the question of appellant’s guilt was highly contested
at trial?
For the reasons set forth below, we shall affirm the judgment of the circuit court.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
On April 16, 1987, a jury sitting in the Circuit Court for Baltimore City convicted
appellant of first-degree murder, first-degree sexual offense, and use of a handgun in the
commission of a crime of violence. The circuit court imposed consecutive sentences of life
imprisonment for the murder conviction, life imprisonment for the sexual offense conviction,
and twenty years for the handgun conviction.
On December 20, 1986, Marcella Robinson was at the home of her boyfriend,
Musa Bey. She testified that, at approximately 7:00 a.m., appellant came to Mr. Bey’s
apartment and asked to see Mr. Bey. Shortly thereafter, Ms. Robinson went upstairs and
found the two men using cocaine in one of the bedrooms. The three then smoked cocaine
for forty-five minutes.
At approximately 7:45 a.m., Ms. Robinson advised the two men that she needed to get
ready for work. She testified that appellant then fired a gun shot into the floor and said to
Mr. Bey: “[G]ive me my cocaine.” Appellant struck Mr. Bey in the head with the gun, fired
a shot behind where Mr. Bey was seated, pulled a rope out of a brown bag, and tied up
Mr. Bey. He then ordered Ms. Robinson, at gun point, to take off her clothes. Mr. Bey
pleaded with appellant to leave Ms. Robinson alone, and he told appellant that he could not
breathe. Appellant then picked Mr. Bey up off the floor and tied him to a chair.
Appellant told Ms. Robinson to perform oral sex on him or he would shoot her.
Mr. Bey continued to yell at appellant to leave Ms. Robinson alone, so appellant put Mr. Bey
in the closet. Appellant then took his clothes off, shut the door to the closet, and pulled
Ms. Robinson into another room, where he urinated into her mouth and penetrated her vagina
with his fingers after he was unable to do so with his penis. After returning to the room
where Mr. Bey was being held in the closet, appellant urinated into a yellow bowl in the
room and ordered Ms. Robinson to drink it.
Thereafter, Mr. Bey pushed the closet door part way open, and appellant turned and
shot at the door. Appellant warned Mr. Bey that, if he came out of the closet, appellant
would kill him. Mr. Bey then “came charging out of the closet,” grabbed appellant by his
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shirt, and appellant shot Mr. Bey.1 Mr. Bey fell onto appellant, and appellant hit Mr. Bey
over the head with the gun.
At that point, Ms. Robinson ran from the room, down the steps, and outside,
screaming for help. Ms. Robinson was still naked at the time. Mr. Bey’s next-door neighbor
brought her into the house and gave her clothes, and Ms. Robinson asked her to call the
police because appellant had shot Mr. Bey. The police arrived, and at approximately 1:30
p.m., Ms. Robinson was taken to the hospital, where she received an oral and vaginal exam.
On cross-examination, Ms. Robinson acknowledged that, while at the hospital, she did not
advise the physician who treated her that appellant had assaulted her vaginally.
Thomas Simpson, an officer with the Baltimore City Police Department, testified that,
on December 20, 1986, at 1:00 p.m., he received a call regarding a shooting at 414 East 21st
1
On cross-examination, Ms. Robinson testified that appellant was undressed at the
time he shot Mr. Bey, but when counsel questioned her about her testimony that Mr. Bey
grabbed appellant’s clothing, she stated:
[MS. ROBINSON]: Yes, sir. Okay. You are right , sir because – yes, sir. You
are absolutely right because when they were fussing, he walked back over and
he put on his sweater and his jacket, yes sir.
You’re absolutely right because that’s the last thing I remember because
when the police, by the time the police got there, that’s what I told the police.
He put on a jacket. He put a sweater on and his jacket because they were
fussing and Musa said, you’re a punk, you’re a punk without a gun. . . .
You’re absolutely right, sir. Yes, sir. He did have on a sweater and a
jacket. Yes, he did.
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Street. When he arrived, there was a crowd of five or six people in front of the residence,
and he heard someone yell that someone was shot, and “a naked lady” had run into the house
next door. While searching the residence, Officer Simpson found a person, who appeared
to be dead, lying face down, bleeding from the head in a small bedroom on the second floor.
Officer Simpson observed a kitchen chair in the closet of the room, with a rope wrapped
around it. He also observed a bullet hole in the floor, as well as above the frame of the closet
door. Evidence technicians recovered bullet fragments from the hole above the closet, as
well as a bullet from the first floor.
Based on the shouting he heard upon arriving at the scene, Officer Simpson went to
the residence next door, where he found Ms. Robinson. She was very upset, but he was able
to obtain a statement from her.2
Robert Bowman, a Baltimore City Police Detective, testified that Ms. Robinson
identified appellant as the shooter. When he went to the residence, he found a yellow bowl
that smelled of urine in the bedroom where Mr. Bey’s body was found.
Dr. William Zane, an Assistant Medical Examiner, testified that Mr. Bey died of a gun
shot wound to his chest. Dr. Zane recovered the bullet from Mr. Bey’s body, and he
determined that the wound was consistent with a gun shot at close range. Mr. Bey had
several lacerations on his scalp, which were consistent with being struck with part of a gun.
Dr. Zane did not observe other abrasions on Mr. Bey’s body. Although he commented that,
2
Ms. Robinson’s statement was consistent with her testimony at trial.
-4-
where an individual is bound and struggles to free himself, there should be evidence of that
struggle, the lack of such evidence in this case did not indicate that Mr. Bey was not bound.
Regarding Mr. Bey’s time of death, Dr. Zane testified as follows: “I have to refer to the
notes. I would say . . . the early morning hours of the 20th of December.” On cross-
examination, while referring to his report, he stated that the time of injury was 12:45 p.m.
Mr. Kopera, an employee of the Baltimore City Police Department Ballistics Unit,
testified as an expert in ballistics.3 Mr. Kopera testified that he held a degree in mechanical
engineering from the University of Maryland in College Park, as well as a mechanical
engineering degree in photo-science from Rochester Institute of Technology in New York.
Mr. Kopera opined that the bullet found in the floor of Mr. Bey’s home was a .38 caliber
special or a .357 semi-jacketed bullet, which could have been fired from “Smith and Wesson,
I.N.A.[] Tiger, and Ruger revolvers.”
Mr. Kopera also analyzed the victim’s clothing to ascertain the distance between the
victim and the muzzle of the weapon. Based on the residue on Mr. Bey’s clothing,
Mr. Kopera determined that the gun used to shoot Mr. Bey was fired from a range of three
to four feet. After comparing the bullet fragments from the floor and Mr. Bey’s body, he
concluded that the bullets were fired from the same weapon.
Appellant testified that, on the morning of December 20, 1986, he went to Mr. Bey’s
apartment between 4:00 and 4:30 a.m., and left between 9:30 and 10:00 a.m. He smoked
3
He was admitted as an expert without objection by defense counsel.
-5-
cocaine with Ms. Robinson and Mr. Bey, and while Mr. Bey was out of the house purchasing
more cocaine, appellant pulled his pants down and asked Ms. Robinson to perform oral sex.
When Mr. Bey returned and saw appellant and Ms. Robinson, Mr. Bey struck
Ms. Robinson and appellant. Mr. Bey backed Ms. Robinson into a corner, at which point she
pulled a gun from her pocket, and shot Mr. Bey.4 Appellant then left Mr. Bey’s apartment,
went home, got some money, and went to his brother’s house, where he stayed until he turned
himself in on January 5, 1987.
Appellant called his girlfriend, Maria Ayala, as a witness for the defense.5 She
testified that she had never told anyone that appellant wanted to hurt Mr. Bey, nor had she
said that he wanted to sleep with Ms. Robinson. To her knowledge, Ms. Robinson did not
have a sexual interest in appellant, and Ms. Robinson and appellant were not seeing each
other. On cross-examination, she acknowledged telling the police that, the night before
Mr. Bey was shot, she saw appellant and Mr. Bey talking in front of a club late in the
evening, that she had seen a gun at a store appellant owned, and that appellant was jealous
4
Appellant believed that Mr. Bey was angry, not because appellant and Ms. Robinson
engaged in a sexual act, but because Ms. Robinson and appellant had used cocaine without
Mr. Bey.
5
The State initially summoned Ms. Ayala as a State’s witness. After learning that
Ms. Ayala denied making statements attributed to her, the State requested that Ms. Ayala be
declared a court’s witness, enabling the State to call witnesses to rebut or refute her
testimony. Appellant objected. He then informed the court that he intended to call
Ms. Ayala as a witness, proffering that she would testify that she was aware of sexual
activities between appellant and Ms. Robinson, as well as sexual activity between appellant,
Mr. Bey, and Ms. Robinson. Defense counsel further proffered that Ms. Ayala would testify
that appellant did not leave her residence on the day in question with a bag, rope, or gun.
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of Mr. Bey. Ms. Ayala acknowledged that, the morning of the shooting, appellant had been
at her apartment, but she denied telling Christine McCormick and Aimin Bey (“Aimin”) that
appellant left in a jealous rage, with a brown paper bag and a rope.
To rebut Ms. Ayala’s testimony, the State called several witnesses. Prior to allowing
the rebuttal witnesses to testify, the court advised that it would instruct the jury “not to regard
this for the truth of what is being said, only to rebut the testimony of [Ms.] Ayala.” The court
then gave the following instruction:
I am permitting this testimony . . . not to prove the truth of what was testified,
but to give you enough information so you can make your mind up as to
whether Ms. Ayala was telling the truth or not. I am not admitting it for truth,
but rather as well, we will call it, for the matter of believability or credibility.
The court subsequently instructed the jury that, with respect to the testimony of the rebuttal
witnesses, “you may again not consider it for truth, but rather how it affects you, do you
believe these witnesses? Do you believe Ms. Ayala?”
Christina McCormick testified that, on December 20, 1986, after learning that
Mr. Bey, the father of her son, had been shot, she went to Ms. Ayala’s home. Ms. Ayala told
her that appellant had been using drugs for several days, and he was acting “crazy and
paranoid.” Appellant believed that Ms. Ayala and Mr. Bey were having sex, and appellant
“said he was going to do it to [Ms. Robinson] for spite.” The morning of December 20,
appellant had been pacing back and forth, and he left Ms. Ayala’s house with a bag under his
arm.
-7-
Aimin testified that, on December 20, 1986, after learning of Mr. Bey’s death, he went
to Mr. Bey’s mother’s home. When he arrived, he saw Ms. Ayala leaving the house across
the street. She told him that appellant’s behavior that morning “was bizarre and incoherent,”
he was on cocaine, and he was very jealous and preoccupied with the idea that Ms. Ayala
was having sex with other people. Appellant told Ms. Ayala that “he would kill Musa and
sexually assault” Ms. Robinson. Ms. Ayala told Aimin that appellant left carrying a bag.
As indicated, the jury convicted appellant of first-degree murder, first-degree sexual
offense, and use of a handgun in the commission of a crime of violence. On June 10, 1987,
appellant filed a Notice of Appeal with this Court. We dismissed the appeal on August 14,
1987, due to appellant’s failure to file a record.
On February 26, 1988, appellant filed a Petition for Post Conviction Relief. On
January 12, 1989, the circuit court granted appellant’s motion, in part, allowing him to file
a belated appeal. In a per curiam opinion, we affirmed appellant’s conviction. Jackson v.
State, No. 14, Sept. Term 1989 (Sept. 19, 1989).
On January 23, 1996, appellant filed an Amended Petition for Post Conviction Relief,
which the circuit court denied on January 21, 2003. On September 14, 2006, appellant filed
a Motion to Reopen Post Conviction Proceedings. The circuit court granted appellant’s
motion with respect to his request to file a belated modification of sentence and a belated
review of sentence, but it otherwise denied his request to reopen the post conviction
-8-
proceedings. On September 17, 2007, the circuit court denied appellant’s motion to reduce
his sentence.
On December 12, 2011, appellant filed a Petition for Writ of Actual Innocence and
Request for Hearing, arguing that he “discovered evidence that the State’s ballistic expert,
[Mr.] Kopera, intentionally misrepresented himself at [appellant’s] trial,” and “this evidence
could not have been discovered in time to move for a new trial under Maryland Rule 4-331.”
He argued that this newly discovered evidence created “a substantial or significant possibility
that the result [of his trial] would have been different,” asserting that the State’s case against
him was based on the credibility of his testimony against Ms. Robinson’s, and Mr. Kopera’s
testimony was “important because it purported to bolster Ms. Robinson’s version of events.”
On January 11, 2013, the court held a hearing on appellant’s petition.6 Appellant
introduced into evidence the complete transcript of his 1987 trial, a news release dated
March 8, 2007, from the Maryland State Police Department detailing the issues with
Mr. Kopera’s credentials, a newspaper article from The Baltimore Sun entitled “Police Expert
Lied About Credentials,” and a USA Today article entitled “Expert’s Ruse Raises Legal
Questions.”7 The evidence indicated that, contrary to Mr. Kopera’s testimony at trial, he did
not graduate from either the University of Maryland or Rochester Institute of Technology.
6
At the outset of the hearing, the court noted that a hearing initially was scheduled for
September 2012, but the court granted appellant’s request for a continuance to recover a
missing transcript page.
7
The three newspaper articles introduced at the hearing on appellant’s petition were
not submitted as part of the record on appeal.
-9-
Appellant and the State stipulated that appellant had no knowledge of Mr. Kopera’s perjury
during his trial, and “[h]e did not learn of those facts until 2010 when he was advised by a
fellow inmate at the Department of Corrections.”
Appellant argued that the evidence of Mr. Kopera’s perjury was newly discovered
evidence that created a substantial possibility that the result of his trial would have been
different. He contended that it was not mere impeaching evidence because the court
instructed the jury that “you must take into account the qualifications of the expert” and
weigh his testimony. Thus, he argued, Mr. Kopera’s qualifications became a material point
of his testimony. He further contended that appellant’s case hinged on credibility due to the
two versions of events: his and Ms. Robinson’s. He argued that, because Mr. Kopera’s
testimony bolstered Ms. Robinson’s version of events, it was material to the case, as opposed
to merely impeaching.
Appellant also argued that, at the time of trial, he could not have discovered
Mr. Kopera’s perjury with reasonable due diligence. He asserted that due diligence, as that
term is known, “does not contemplate that defense attorneys or a defendant should perceive
or conclude that a State witness” would testify falsely about his credentials, and the State’s
lack of knowledge regarding Mr. Kopera’s false credentials demonstrates the difficulty in
placing the burden on a defendant “to know and to then look for his perjury and his false
statements.”
With respect to the import of Mr. Kopera’s testimony, appellant argued as follows:
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What Mr. Kopera testified to is [] with respect to a shell casing that – or a –
spent bullet that was found in the floor and the bullet that was in Mr. [Bey]
that those matched. And that was consistent with Ms. Robinson’s testimony.
Also with respect to the positioning of where people were when Mr. [Bey] was
shot based on powder residue analysis that was done by Mr. Kopera suggested
that it was within three-to-four feet and so that would have been again, that is
consistent with what Ms. Robinson had testified to. And in fact, the State
makes that argument to the jury that the evidence, that the forensic evidence,
the evidence from the ballistics expert are consistent with Ms. Robinson’s
testimony in the case. And because of that you should believe Ms. Robinson’s
version. I mean, that’s the argument that has been made to the jury.
The State argued that the “false testimony regarding qualifications” was “merely
impeaching.” Moreover, contrary to appellant’s contention, the case against him was not
close: “We have an eye witness [sic] who knew the victim and who testified clearly and
without hesitation that it was [appellant] that . . . committed the crime.”
With respect to appellant’s argument that Mr. Kopera’s perjury bolstered
Ms. Robinson’s testimony, the State argued that this contention was without merit and merely
an “attempt to retry the case.” It argued that, at trial, “almost all of the time was spent talking
about everybody else’s testimony but Mr. Kopera.” It stated that, even if Mr. Kopera’s
testimony that the bullet in the floor was consistent with having been fired from the same gun
that killed the victim corroborated Ms. Robinson’s version of what happened, this “small
amount of corroboration” did not directly implicate appellant, nor did it call the verdict into
question. The State contended that, even with the evidence of Mr. Kopera’s perjury, the
outcome of trial would not have been different, and accordingly, the court should deny
appellant’s petition.
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On February 6, 2013, the circuit court issued a Memorandum and Opinion denying
appellant’s petition. The court first addressed whether the evidence was “newly discovered,”
noting that it must determine: (1) whether the petitioner exercised due diligence in seeking
to discover the evidence; and (2) whether the evidence was material rather than “merely
cumulative or impeaching.” In this regard, the court found as follows:
[T]he [c]ourt concludes that the expert’s falsification of his academic
credentials is mere impeachment evidence. The evidence impeaches the
ballistics expert’s educational background, not the accuracy or reliability of his
examination of the bullets. Additionally, the expert’s educational
embellishments are collateral details that do not go to the core question of
[appellant’s] guilt or innocence. . . . The evidence is consequently “merely
impeaching” and not newly discovered.
Given that another attorney was able to discover the misstatements, one
may also conclude that [appellant] did not exercise due diligence in obtaining
this readily available evidence at the time of his trial.
The court noted that, even if the evidence was newly discovered, the petition could
be granted only if it created “a substantial or significant possibility” that the result may have
been different. In finding that this showing had not been made, the court stated as follows:
[Appellant] argues that the evidence presented at his trial was far from
overwhelming and that the [c]ourt’s jury instructions rendered the expert’s
educational qualifications material to the jury’s ultimate verdict. The [c]ourt
does not agree. At [appellant’s] trial, the jury heard ample evidence
independent from the expert’s testimony that would support a conviction for
first-degree murder, first-degree sexual offense, and use of a handgun in the
commission of a crime of violence. The victim’s girlfriend in this case
provided key eyewitness testimony. Specifically, the girlfriend testified that
[appellant] had locked the victim in the closet while he sexually assaulted her
and then shot the victim when he eventually broke free. She further testified
that after the shooting, she broke the front door’s chain lock and window, fled
the house in the nude, and then shouted for help from the neighbors. This
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testimony was corroborated at trial. The police also found rope wrapped
around a chair in the closet and the extension cord that was used to restrain the
victim’s girlfriend.
The court also noted that the jury heard testimony from appellant’s girlfriend, “who
testified that on the day of the incident, [appellant] was drugged and in a highly agitated state
when he left for the victim’s house,” and that appellant “said he was going to sexually assault
the victim’s girlfriend.”
Ultimately, the court concluded that the evidence regarding Mr. Kopera’s credentials
“does not create a substantial or significant possibility that a jury may not have convicted
[appellant] at his 1987 trial.” Accordingly, it denied his Petition for Writ of Actual
Innocence.
This timely appeal followed.
DISCUSSION
Appellant argues that the circuit court erred in denying his Petition for Writ of Actual
Innocence, asserting that it was undisputed that “(i) the State presented perjured testimony
of a State expert witness employed by the Baltimore City Police Department as to his expert
qualifications, (ii) the jury was explicitly instructed that it must take into account the expert’s
qualifications and (iii) the question of [appellant’s] guilt was highly contested.” Specifically,
he contends that Mr. Kopera’s perjury was newly discovered evidence, as opposed to “merely
impeaching” evidence, and he acted “with reasonable diligence in discovering Mr. Kopera’s
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perjury.” He argues that the evidence of Mr. Kopera’s perjury “raises a substantial or
significant possibility that the trial result may have been different.”
The State contends that the circuit court properly denied appellant’s petition. It asserts
that: (1) the evidence was not “‘newly discovered’ because it could have been discovered
through the exercise of due diligence prior to trial”; (2) the evidence was “merely impeaching
and not exculpatory”; and (3) the evidence “does not give rise to a possibility of a different
result in [appellant’s] trial.”
A.
Petition for Writ of Actual Innocence
In 2009, the General Assembly enacted C.P. § 8-301, which permits a defendant to
file a Petition for Writ of Actual Innocence. It provides, in pertinent part, as follows:
Newly Discovered Evidence
§ 8-301. Petition for writ of actual innocence.
(a) Grounds. — A person charged by indictment or criminal information
with a crime triable in circuit court and convicted of that crime may, at any
time, file a petition for writ of actual innocence in the circuit court for the
county in which the conviction was imposed if the person claims that there is
newly discovered evidence that:
(1) creates a substantial or significant possibility that the result may
have been different, as that standard has been judicially determined; and
(2) could not have been discovered in time to move for a new trial
under Maryland Rule 4-331.[8]
8
Maryland Rule 4-331(c) provides, in relevant part, that a court may grant a new trial
on the ground of newly discovered evidence if the motion is “filed within one year after the
later of (A) the date the court imposed sentence or (B) the date the court received a mandate
(continued...)
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***
(g) Burden of proof. A petitioner in a proceeding under this section has the
burden of proof.
There have been only three appellate opinions addressing a petition filed pursuant to
this statute. See Douglas v. State, 423 Md. 156, 163 (2011); State v. Matthews, 415 Md. 286,
290 (2010); Keyes v. State, ___ Md. App. ___, No. 2552 Sept. Term 2011, slip op. at 5 (filed
Jan. 28, 2014). None, however, has addressed the merits of the petition.
In Matthews, 415 Md. at 297-98, the Court of Appeals held that, given the enactment
of the statute during the pendency of the case, and the lack “of rules of procedure to guide
the process,” Matthews’ untimely motion for a new trial should be treated as a Petition for
Writ of Actual Innocence.9 Whether the petition satisfied the requirements of the statute was
left for the circuit court to address. Id. at 312-13.
In Douglas, 423 Md. at 163-64, the Court addressed whether the denial of a Petition
for Writ of Actual Innocence is a final judgment. It held that it was, and therefore, it was an
immediately appealable order. Id. at 177.
8
(...continued)
issued by the final appellate court to consider a direct appeal from the judgment or a belated
appeal permitted as post conviction relief,” and the evidence could not have been discovered
by due diligence earlier.
9
Maryland Rule 4-332, which became effective on October 1, 2011, now addresses
the procedure to follow in filing a Petition for Writ of Actual Innocence. Douglas v. State,
423 Md. 156, 182 n.14 (2011); Keyes v. State, ___ Md. App. ___, No. 2552 Sept. Term 2011,
slip op. at 6 n.3 (filed Jan. 28, 2014).
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In addressing this issue, as well as whether Douglas satisfied the pleading
requirements and was entitled to a hearing, the Court discussed the purpose of C.P. § 8-301.
It noted that the statute “provides a defendant an opportunity to seek a new trial based on
newly discovered evidence that speaks to his or her actual innocence, as evident from the title
of the statute.” Id. at 176. The Court explained that the legislative history of § 8-301
“reflects a legislative purpose that the statute extend the right to seek a new trial on the basis
of newly discovered evidence beyond that afforded a convicted defendant under Maryland
Rule 4–331(c).” Id.
In Douglas, the alleged newly discovered evidence similarly involved Mr. Kopera’s
falsified credentials. Id. at 185-86. The Court noted that the newspaper article submitted as
an exhibit stated that “the chief attorney with the . . . Innocence Project . . . became
concerned about [Mr.] Kopera’s qualifications while reviewing transcripts and noting
inconsistencies regarding the credentials he testified he had earned.” Id. at 185. The Court
held, as a procedural matter, that “viewing inferences in the light most favorable to Douglas,
it could be that the evidence could not have been discovered within time to move for a new
trial under Rule 4–331.” Id. at 186 (emphasis added). The Court noted, however, that
although Douglas satisfied the pleading requirement, and therefore, was entitled to a hearing
on his petition, “it does not follow automatically that he can prove his claim.” Id. Rather,
the ultimate decision on the merits of a request for a new trial based on newly discovered
evidence, “whether filed pursuant to Rule 4-331 or C.P. § 8-301,” was a matter “committed
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to the hearing court’s sound discretion.” Id. at 188. Accord Miller v. State, 380 Md. 1, 28
(2004) (denial of motion for a new trial based on newly discovered evidence reviewed for
abuse of discretion).
In this case, unlike in Douglas, Matthews, and Keyes, the merits of the petition are
before us. Thus, we will address whether the circuit court properly exercised its discretion
in denying the petition. In this regard, we note that a ruling generally will not be deemed to
be an abuse of discretion unless it is “‘well removed from any center mark imagined by the
reviewing court and beyond the fringe of what that court deems minimally acceptable.’”
Moreland v. State, 207 Md. App. 563, 569 (2012) (quoting Gray v. State, 388 Md. 366, 383
(2005)). Accord Morris v. State, 204 Md. App. 487, 492 (2012) (This Court will find an
abuse of discretion only “‘where no reasonable person would take the view adopted by the
[trial] court.’”) (quoting King v. State, 407 Md. 682, 697 (2009)).
The statute, by its terms, requires a defendant to show two things to prevail on a
Petition for Writ of Actual Innocence: (1) newly discovered evidence that “could not have
been discovered in time to move for a new trial under Maryland Rule 4-331”; and (2) that the
evidence “creates a substantial or significant possibility that the result may have been
different, as that standard has been judicially determined.” We will address each of these
requirements in turn.
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B.
Due Diligence
As indicated, a defendant filing a petition for writ of actual innocence must first show
newly discovered evidence that “could not have been discovered in time to move for a new
trial under Maryland Rule 4-331.” C.P. § 8-301(a)(2). This is “a threshold question,” and
until there is a finding of newly discovered evidence that could not have been discovered by
due diligence, no relief is available, “‘no matter how compelling the cry of outraged justice
may be.’” Argyrou v. State, 349 Md. 587, 604 (1998) (quoting Love v. State, 95 Md. App.
420, 432 (1993)). Due diligence has been defined as acting “reasonably and in good faith.”
Id. at 605.
Here, appellant must show that evidence regarding Mr. Kopera’s education could not
have been discovered through the exercise of due diligence prior to October 1990. That date
is based on the requirement of Rule 4-331, now and in 1987, that a motion for new trial due
to newly discovered evidence be filed within one year after the later of sentencing or the
issuance of a mandate issued by the appellate court, and that this Court issued the mandate
in October 1989.
The circuit court ruled against appellant on the issue of due diligence, finding it
significant that an assistant public defender had discovered that Mr. Kopera did not earn
degrees in engineering or attend the University of Maryland or Rochester Institute of
Technology. The court found:
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Given that another attorney was able to discover the misstatements, one may
also conclude that [appellant] did not exercise due diligence in obtaining this
readily available evidence at the time of his trial.
As discussed below, we perceive no abuse of discretion in this finding.
This Court addressed a similar issue, albeit in a different context, in Kulbicki v. State,
207 Md. App. 412, cert. granted, 430 Md. 344 (2012).10 In that case, which involved an
appeal from a denial of post-conviction relief pursuant to C.P. § 7-101, we held that Kulbicki
waived his contention relating to Mr. Kopera’s false testimony because the accuracy of his
alleged credentials could have been discovered prior to trial, and therefore, it could have been
raised on appeal. Id. at 437.
In this case, we agree that Mr. Kopera’s educational background could have been
discovered prior to appellant’s trial. That is shown by the fact that another attorney
discovered it. Indeed, checking an expert’s credentials is reasonable trial preparation. See
Hilary Sheard, Capital Cases, C HAMPION , January/February 2000, at 52, 56 (“Taking any
expert’s curriculum vitae at face value is ill advised — allow time to call each institution
where the expert has studied . . . and every professional organization of which he is a
member. . . . Use data bases such as Westlaw and Lexis-Nexis, use the Internet, conduct
courthouse searches.”).
Although there may have been reasons that counsel did not pursue an investigation
into Mr. Kopera’s credentials, the circuit court did not abuse its discretion in finding that
10
Oral argument in the Court of Appeals was held on October 3, 2013.
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appellant failed to show that the evidence could not have been discovered in the exercise of
due diligence. See Jackson v. State, 164 Md. App. 679, 690 (2005) (In analyzing whether
newly discovered evidence could have been found using due diligence, “[t]he test, of course,
is whether the evidence was, in fact, discoverable and not whether the appellant or
appellant’s counsel was at fault in not discovering it.”), cert. denied, 390 Md. 501 (2006).
Appellant’s Petition for Writ of Actual Innocence was properly denied on this ground alone.
C.
Impact of the Evidence
Even if we agreed with appellant that the evidence could not have been discovered
with due diligence, appellant still would have to show the next requirement, that the evidence
created “a substantial or significant possibility that the result may have been different, as that
standard has been judicially determined.” C.P. § 8-301(a)(1). This prong of the analysis
involves a determination regarding the impact of the evidence.
With respect to this prong of the analysis, the Court of Appeals has explained, in the
context of determining whether newly discovered evidence warrants a new trial under Rule
4-331, that courts should undertake a two-part inquiry. First, the court should assess whether
the evidence is material to the result. Stevenson v. State, 299 Md. 297, 302 (1984). If that
question is answered in the affirmative, the court inquires “into the possible impact the newly
discovered evidence would have on the outcome of the trial.” Id. Accord Campbell v. State,
373 Md. 637, 666-67 (2003) (“In order for the newly discovered evidence to warrant a new
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trial, the trial judge must find it to be both material and persuasive such that ‘[t]he newly
discovered evidence may well have produced a different result, that is, there was a substantial
or significant possibility that the verdict of the trier of fact would have been affected.’”)
(quoting Yorke v. State, 315 Md. 578, 588 (1989)).11
1.
Materiality
Thus, we assess first whether the evidence here was material. To be material,
evidence must be more than “merely cumulative or impeaching.” Argyrou, 349 Md. at 601;
Love v. State, 95 Md. App. 420, 432, cert. denied, 331 Md. 480 (1993). In Jackson, 164 Md.
App. at 697-98, Judge Moylan, writing for this Court, explained the distinction between
evidence that is impeaching and evidence that is “merely impeaching,” a distinction that,
“albeit nuanced, is pivotally important”:
Newly discovered evidence that a State's witness had a number of convictions
for crimes involving truth and veracity or had lied on a number of occasions
about other matters might have a bearing on that witness's testimonial
credibility, but would not have a direct bearing on the merits of the trial under
11
Appellant suggests that the standard for granting a new trial based on a Petition for
Writ of Actual Innocence is broader than that pursuant to Rule 4-331, noting that the Court
of Appeals in Douglas, 423 Md. at 177, stated that the remedy pursuant to Rule 4-331 was
“more restrictive.” We construe this language to refer to the more restrictive time frame
provided in Rule 4-331. Indeed, we recently held that, when interpreting Md. Code (2011
Supp.) § 8-301 of the Criminal Procedure Article, we should look to cases “interpreting and
applying Maryland Rule 4-331.” Keyes, slip op. at 19-20. See also L ETTER FROM THE
O FFICE OF THE P UB. D EF. TO S EN. D ELORES G OODWIN K ELLEY at 1 (S.B. 486 (2009 Sess.))
(stating that the standard for a Petition for Writ of Actual Innocence is the same as that
pursuant to Rule 4-331(c)).
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review. Such evidence would constitute collateral impeachment and would,
therefore, be “merely impeaching.” If the newly discovered evidence was that
the State's witness had been mistaken, or even deliberately false, about
inconsequential details that did to go to the core question of guilt or innocence,
such evidence would offer peripheral contradiction and would, therefore, be
“merely impeaching.” If the newly discovered evidence, on the other hand,
was that the State's witness had actually testified falsely on the core merits of
the case under review, that evidence, albeit coincidentally impeaching, would
be directly exculpatory evidence on the merits and could not, therefore, be
dismissed as “merely impeaching.”
This Court held that evidence that is merely impeaching does not permit “an appellate court
to hold that a trial judge abused his discretion in denying a new trial motion resting on such
a predicate.” Id. at 699.
Here, as indicated, the circuit court determined that the falsification of Mr. Kopera’s
academic credentials impeached “his educational background, not the accuracy or reliability
of his testimony.” It stated that Mr. Kopera’s “educational embellishments are collateral
details that do not go to the core question of [appellant’s] guilt or innocence,” and “[t]he
evidence is consequently ‘merely impeaching.’”
As appellant notes, in support of this finding, the court relied on this Court’s decision
in Kulbicki, 207 Md. App. at 427, where Mr. Kopera testified that a bullet fragment in
Kulbicki’s truck was consistent with a .38 caliber gun or larger, that the damage to his truck
was caused by a bullet fragment, and that Kulbicki’s gun had been cleaned. Kulbicki, who
was convicted of murder, filed a post-conviction petition alleging that Mr. Kopera committed
perjury in testifying that he attended the University of Maryland and Rochester Institute of
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Technology, and he falsified documents to conceal his false statements regarding his
educational background. Id. at 429.
At the hearing on Kulbicki’s post-conviction petition, the State stipulated that
Mr. Kopera had lied about his credentials at trial. Id. at 430. Kulbicki then presented the
testimony of John Nixon, an expert in firearms and ballistics, to discredit the substance of
Mr. Kopera’s testimony. Id. Mr. Nixon testified that, contrary to Mr. Kopera’s opinion, it
was not possible to determine what damaged Kulbicki’s truck. He further opined that
Kulbicki’s gun did not fire the bullet fragment, which most likely came from a .32 caliber
weapon. Id.
This Court determined, after finding that Kulbicki’s post-conviction claim regarding
Mr. Kopera’s testimony was waived because “a background investigation would have
revealed that [Mr.] Kopera lacked the claimed college degrees,” that Kulbicki’s claim failed
on the merits because the falsity of the testimony was not material. Id. at 446. Specifically,
we agreed with the circuit court that “‘there simply is no likelihood that the jury’s
determination would have been influenced by the fact that Mr. Kopera did not have the
academic credentials he claimed.’” Id. at 447. We agreed with the State that the record
reflected that “‘ballistics is a field for which no college degree is offered, and the expertise
for the field is usually based on experience, which [Mr.] Kopera had in copious amounts.’”
Id.
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We similarly hold here that the newly discovered evidence of Mr. Kopera’s false
testimony regarding his credentials was not material, but merely impeaching. There is no
contention that Mr. Kopera’s testimony regarding his ballistics analysis was false or
incorrect. Rather, the newly discovered evidence alleged in the petition was limited solely
to evidence that Mr. Kopera did not attend the University of Maryland or Rochester Institute
of Technology. Thus, pursuant to this Court’s analysis in Jackson, this evidence constitutes
collateral impeachment and is not material. See Jackson, 164 Md. App. at 697 (“Newly
discovered evidence that a State’s witness . . . lied . . . on matters [that] might have a bearing
on that witness’s testimonial credibility, but would not have a direct bearing on the merits
of the trial under review. Such evidence would constitute collateral impeachment and would,
therefore, be ‘merely impeaching.’”).
Appellant argues, however, that the court’s jury instructions caused the jury to place
more weight on Mr. Kopera’s falsified credentials by directing the jury that it “must take into
account the qualifications of the expert” and give weight to the expert’s testimony in
accordance with the jury’s perception of the expert’s qualifications. At the conclusion of
appellant’s case, the court instructed the jury, in pertinent part, as follows:
Now, there are two things you are to know about with regard to expert
evidence rules, and they are, you must take into account the qualifications of
the expert. If you feel the expert has really good qualifications, you are more
inclined to give more weight to the testimony of the expert. If on the other
hand you do not feel they have such great educational background or
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qualifications, you don’t have to give such weight or indeed any weight to the
testimony of experts.[12]
Secondly, you may and should pay attention to the reasons given by the
experts for the opinion. If the reasons appeal to you, make sense to you, then,
naturally you will give more credence to the opinion of the expert than
otherwise. You should otherwise base your evaluations of expert testimony on
the same credible factors that I have just mentioned.
This instruction could be problematic in a different case. In this case, however,
Mr. Kopera testified to his extensive experience in ballistics. He testified that he completed
a five-year apprenticeship in ballistics and firearm identification, he was a graduate of the
FBI Academy in the same discipline, and he had graduated a week earlier from the FBI
Academy in the field of “specialized techniques” and ballistics. He further testified that
“[t]here are no universities or colleges here in the United States that offer a degree,
specifically, in the field of firearm identification or ballistics.” As this Court noted in
Kulbicki, 207 Md. App. at 447, “ballistics is a field for which no college degree is offered,
and the expertise for the field is usually based on experience, which [Mr.] Kopera had in
copious amounts.”
Accordingly, we are unpersuaded that the court’s jury instructions on expert witness
testimony rendered the newly discovered evidence on Mr. Kopera’s credentials material. We
agree with the State that Mr. Kopera’s claim “to have college degrees that he did not actually
12
Dr. William Zane was admitted, by stipulation of the parties, as an expert in forensic
pathology. Dr. Janice Johnson, who examined Ms. Robinson on December 20, 1986, was
admitted, by stipulation of the parties, as an expert in gynecology.
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possess has nothing whatsoever to do with the accuracy of his conclusion concerning the
distance [Mr.] Bey was from the gun when he was shot,” and that a bullet fragment found
on the first floor was fired from the same gun used in the murder. The circuit court did not
abuse its discretion in finding that the newly discovered evidence was not material. This
finding alone is sufficient to affirm the circuit court’s ruling.
2.
Possibility of Different Result
After finding that the evidence could have been discovered with due diligence and
was merely impeaching, the court went on to consider the last prong of the analysis, whether
there was “a substantial or significant possibility that the result may have been different.”
C.P. § 8-301.13 The Court of Appeals has made clear that a new trial based on newly
discovered evidence will not be granted unless the evidence “may well have created a
different result, that is, there was a substantial or significant possibility that the [decision] of
the trier of fact would have been affected.” Evans v. State, 382 Md. 248, 264 (2004)
(quoting Campbell v. State, 373 Md. 637, 666-67 (2003)).
In that regard, the circuit court stated:
13
Appellant contends that the circuit court erred in concluding that the evidence “does
not create a substantial or significant possibility that the trial result would have been
different.” He asserts, without support, that “[t]here is a significant difference between the
result that would have been different with one that merely may have been different.” We
disagree that the court used the wrong standard. Although the court did use “would have
been different” language in one sentence of its order, it subsequently quoted the “result may
have been different” standard set forth in the statute.
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[Appellant] argues that the evidence presented at his trial was far from
overwhelming and that the [c]ourt’s jury instructions rendered the expert’s
educational qualifications material to the jury’s ultimate verdict. The [c]ourt
does not agree. At [appellant’s] trial, the jury heard ample evidence
independent from the expert’s testimony that would support a conviction for
first-degree murder, first-degree sexual offense, and use of a handgun in the
commission of a crime of violence. The victim’s girlfriend in this case
provided key eyewitness testimony. Specifically, the girlfriend testified that
[appellant] had locked the victim in the closet while he sexually assaulted her
and then shot the victim when he eventually broke free. She further testified
that after the shooting, she broke the front door’s chain lock and window, fled
the house in the nude, and then shouted for help from the neighbors. This
testimony was corroborated at trial. The police also found rope wrapped
around a chair in the closet and the extension cord that was used to restrain the
victim’s girlfriend.
The court also noted that the jury heard testimony from appellant’s girlfriend, “who testified
that, on the day of the incident, [appellant] was drugged and in a highly agitated state when
he left for the victim’s house,” and that appellant “said he was going to sexually assault the
victim’s girlfriend.” 14
Appellant contends that the court erred by applying a sufficiency of the evidence
standard. He asserts that the proper analysis is “the effect that the perjured testimony had on
the outcome of [his] trial.” The State, by contrast, argues that the test “is not ‘what the jury
14
The above testimony referred to by the court was not admitted through Ms. Ayala,
appellant’s girlfriend, but rather, through the State’s rebuttal witnesses, whose testimony was
admitted only to allow the jury to assess Ms. Ayala’s credibility. Although the court
misstated that testimony, as discussed infra, the evidence properly before the jury was more
than sufficient to convict appellant, even without Mr. Kopera’s testimony, and it supported
the court’s finding that there was no substantial or significant possibility that the newly
discovered evidence may have created a different result.
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would have done if it knew that a witness testified falsely,’ but rather, ‘what would the jury
have done if it had not heard the false evidence.’” (Quoting Stevenson, 299 Md. at 304-05).
In Kulbicki, 207 Md. App. at 447, this Court looked to the weight of the evidence
after subtracting the perjured testimony. We held, in the context of a post-conviction
petition, that there was “no likelihood that the jury’s determination would have been
influenced by the fact that Mr. Kopera did not have the academic credentials he claimed,”
noting that the expertise for ballistics is usually based on experience, “which [Mr.] Kopera
had in copious amounts.”
In this case, applying that analysis, there is not a significant or substantial possibility
that a jury may have reached a different result without the false testimony regarding
Mr. Kopera’s college degrees. As indicated, there is no college degree in ballistics, and
Mr. Kopera’s relevant experience was his experience in the field and with the FBI Academy,
none of which is disputed. His college degrees were not particularly relevant to ballistics,
the focus of his testimony, and therefore, a correct statement of Mr. Kopera’s qualifications
would not have altered the result of the trial.
Even assuming that the test is as appellant asserts, and we assume that the jury, having
knowledge of Mr. Kopera’s false testimony, would have discounted Mr. Kopera’s testimony
entirely, appellant still would not prevail. Mr. Kopera’s substantive testimony in this case
was limited. His testimony as an expert in ballistics was that the gun used to shoot Mr. Bey
was fired from a range of three to four feet, and the bullet in the floor matched the one found
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in Mr. Bey. Although the prosecution cited this testimony,15 defense counsel did as well.
During defense counsel’s closing argument, he cited Mr. Kopera’s testimony in support of
appellant’s version of events, arguing that there was evidence “that the shot took place within
a three to four feet radius,” but appellant was “across the room, not three to four feet from
[Bey].” Thus, Mr. Kopera’s substantive testimony did not weigh heavily in favor of either
the State or the defense.16
15
In its closing, the State made the following arguments regarding Mr. Kopera’s
testimony:
The ballistics expert, Mr. Kopera, told you that the bullet that was fired
in that floor, and the bullet that was fired into Musa Bey’s chest was a perfect
match. The first shot that [appellant] fired from that gun terrorized two
people. The last shot that he fired from that gun, before leaving, killed one
person. That one person was Musa Bey. Now, Mr. Kopera also told you that
based upon his examinations, and his tests that it was very close range, within
three to four feet. When this shot was fired into Musa’s chest, he was about
three or four feet from [appellant], and with every effort he had, he was still
fighting for his life and for [Ms. Robinson’s].
During rebuttal, the prosecutor noted that the room where Mr. Bey was killed was “a fairly
small room,” that was “ten by ten or eight by ten,” so appellant would have been within the
requisite distance when he fired the gun.
16
Appellant cites several cases holding that, where expert testimony is critical, false
testimony about the expert’s credentials requires a new trial. See United States v. Jones, 84
F. Supp. 2d 124, 126 (D.D.C. 1999) (testimony of expert witness who lied about his
education and qualification was material as it “filled in all of the gaps of the government’s
case,” and without his testimony, “the independent evidence against Jones is highly
circumstantial,” such that a new trial was warranted); People v. Cornille, 448 N.E.2d 857,
859, 866 (Ill. 1983) (expert’s false testimony regarding his credentials, where expert’s
testimony was “crucial” in light of evenly balanced evidence, constituted a violation of
Cornille’s due process rights and warranted a new trial). As indicated, Mr. Kopera’s
testimony was not critical in this case.
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We agree with the circuit court that the evidence of appellant’s guilt, without Mr.
Kopera’s testimony, was compelling. As the circuit court noted, Ms. Robinson provided
“key eyewitness testimony” that appellant tied up and locked Mr. Bey in a closet, sexually
assaulted her, and then killed Mr. Bey when he broke free. Ms. Robinson then fled the house
naked, shouting for help from the neighbors. This testimony, as well as other details of Ms.
Robinson’s testimony, was corroborated by other witnesses. Several police officers who
responded to the scene observed a chair and rope, as well as a bowl on the room of the floor
where Mr. Bey’s body was found that smelled of urine. There also was testimony that
neighbors were shouting that they saw a naked woman run out of the house.
Given the totality of the evidence against appellant, and the limited scope of
Mr. Kopera’s testimony, the circuit court did not abuse its discretion in finding that the newly
discovered evidence did not “create[] a substantial or significant possibility that the result
may have been different.” C.P. § 8-301. The circuit court properly denied the Petition for
Writ of Actual Innocence.
JUDGMENT AFFIRMED. COSTS TO
BE PAID BY APPELLANT.
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