Supreme Court
No. 2011-389-Appeal.
(PM 07-2755)
Rocco D’Alessio :
v. :
State of Rhode Island. :
NOTICE: This opinion is subject to formal revision before publication in
the Rhode Island Reporter. Readers are requested to notify the Opinion
Analyst, Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 250 Benefit Street, Providence,
Rhode Island 02903, at Tel. 222-3258 of any typographical or other
formal errors in order that corrections may be made before the opinion is
published.
Supreme Court
No. 2011-389-Appeal.
(PM 07-2755)
Rocco D’Alessio :
v. :
State of Rhode Island. :
Present: Suttell, C.J., Goldberg, Flaherty, Robinson, and Indeglia, JJ.
OPINION
Justice Flaherty, for the Court. The applicant, Rocco D’Alessio, appeals from the
denial of his application for postconviction relief. This case first came before the Supreme Court
for oral argument on December 5, 2012, pursuant to an order directing the parties to appear and
show cause why the issues raised in this appeal should not be summarily decided. After hearing
the arguments and examining the memoranda filed by the parties, we concluded that cause in fact
had been shown, and we assigned the case to the regular calendar for full briefing and argument.
Thereafter, the matter was argued on September 30, 2014. For the reasons set forth in this
opinion, we affirm the judgment of the Superior Court.
I
Facts and Travel
On May 29, 2007, Rocco D’Alessio filed an application for postconviction relief in
Providence County Superior Court. The applicant argued that newly discovered evidence
required that his April 16, 2002, conviction for the second-degree murder of his infant daughter,
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Gianna D’Alessio, be vacated. At a hearing conducted before a justice of the Superior Court,
applicant presented the testimony of Dr. Richard T. Callery, who, while he was employed on a
contract basis with Rhode Island’s Office of State Medical Examiners (OSME), had reviewed the
file of Gianna D’Alessio.
Briefly, the facts leading to applicant’s conviction are as follows. 1 On the evening of
January 13, 2000, applicant was caring for his infant daughter at the Providence home that he
shared with Gianna’s mother, Jennifer Greenhalgh. The couple had resided there for little over a
month. Ms. Greenhalgh left Gianna in applicant’s care while she returned to work, her first shift
back at her job since Gianna’s birth. Before Ms. Greenhalgh left for work, the two had become
involved in an argument about why applicant was late in arriving home, causing her to be late in
leaving for work. Their argument continued when Ms. Greenhalgh informed applicant that she
had hidden a stash of cocaine so that he would not be able to use the drug while he was
babysitting Gianna. The applicant became upset and persisted, and Ms. Greenhalgh eventually
revealed to him where the cocaine was located so that she could leave for work. Before she left
the home, Ms. Greenhalgh made sure applicant had calmed down and, once he did so, she
departed for work at about 4 p.m., leaving Gianna in his care.
Approximately an hour later, a Rescue Company of the Providence Fire Department,
commanded by Lt. Alan Fortes, responded to the home of applicant’s neighbor because of a
report that a child was having difficulty breathing. Lieutenant Fortes and other rescue personnel
arrived to find applicant holding a sleeping Gianna. He told them that the child was having
trouble breathing and was not acting right. The child was examined and appeared to be generally
healthy, perhaps simply colicky, or constipated. Lieutenant Fortes asked applicant if he wished
1
A more extensive recitation of the facts of Gianna’s death and the subsequent trial is
articulated in this Court’s opinion at State v. D’Alessio, 848 A.2d 1118, 1120-23 (R.I. 2004).
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that Gianna be brought to the hospital, but deferred to applicant’s decision not to do so. 2
Lieutenant Fortes and his colleagues then departed the residence and left Gianna with applicant.
Lieutenant Fortes and his company received a second call for an unresponsive baby
around 8 p.m., this time to applicant’s residence. The first responders arrived at the address and,
alerted by a light, proceeded around to its source at the back of the house. The applicant
emerged from the house holding Gianna out towards Lt. Fortes, who could immediately see that
the child was not breathing. Gianna was transported to Hasbro Children’s Hospital in
Providence, where she was pronounced dead soon after arriving.
On May 19, 2000, applicant was indicted for first-degree murder. At trial in April, 2002,
the state medical examiner, Dr. Elizabeth Laposata, testified that the case was one of Shaken
Baby Syndrome. 3 Doctor Laposata testified that Gianna’s injuries resulted from “absolutely
violent trauma” and not from any accidental means. She went on to say that death would have
resulted “within a few minutes” from the infliction of the injuries. Doctor Laposata stated she
had no doubt that the injuries were caused by a violent shaking of the infant. 4 Further, she
testified that she had arrived at her conclusion from the very moment she witnessed the autopsy.
Several months later, but before she testified, Dr. Laposata confirmed her opinion with Dr.
Selina Cortez, a neuropathologist at Rhode Island Hospital. The evidence at trial revealed that
the infant had been in applicant’s sole custody throughout the evening. On April 16, 2002, the
2
Lieutenant Fortes testified that he asked applicant if he wished his daughter to be transported
to the hospital three times, which was Lt. Fortes’ standard practice when he did not believe that
transport was required.
3
Doctor Laposata testified that Shaken Baby Syndrome is characterized by the types of injuries
that result from “violent, forceful shaking of a baby.” These injuries include tears in blood
vessels in the brain and nerve damage that ultimately cause death.
4
At a hearing on a motion for a new trial, the trial justice made a point to note that Dr.
Laposata’s testimony was particularly credible.
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jury returned a guilty verdict for second-degree murder; the trial justice sentenced applicant to a
term of sixty years, forty years to serve, with the balance suspended, with probation.
On May 29, 2007, D’Alessio filed an application for postconviction relief in which he
alleged that newly discovered evidence required that he be granted a new trial. To support his
application, D’Alessio offered the testimony of Dr. Richard T. Callery, who was, at the time of
his testimony, the chief medical examiner for the State of Delaware. In the past, Dr. Callery had
done contract work for Rhode Island’s Office of State Medical Examiners. Several years after
D’Alessio’s conviction, Dr. Callery was approached at a medical conference by Georgia
Pasqualone, a forensic nurse who had been retained by applicant’s attorney. Ms. Pasqualone
asked Dr. Callery if he would assist her by reviewing a file she had been given by applicant’s
attorney. Doctor Callery immediately remembered Gianna D’Alessio’s file as one that he had
worked on while in Rhode Island. Doctor Callery was put in touch with applicant’s attorney,
who determined that Dr. Callery’s testimony would be relevant to the postconviction-relief
application. 5 Eventually, Dr. Callery testified at an evidentiary hearing that was held on July 8,
2011, before the original trial justice. Doctor Callery was qualified as an expert witness in
forensic sciences. At the hearing, the state did not contest whether Dr. Callery’s testimony was
indeed newly discovered, but did argue that it was not material. The differences between the
testimony of Dr. Laposata and Dr. Callery became the main issue in applicant’s postconviction-
relief proceedings.
In his testimony, Dr. Callery related how he was tasked by Dr. Laposata with reviewing
and finalizing incomplete reports for several autopsies that had been performed by Dr. Samuel A.
Livingstone, a medical examiner who was no longer with the office. As part of this process, Dr.
5
D’Alessio was represented by several attorneys before his present attorney began to represent
him on this appeal on January 16, 2013.
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Callery had reviewed the file of Gianna D’Alessio in 2000, shortly after the infant’s death and
well before D’Alessio’s trial. The practice of reviewing such files was routine for Dr. Callery,
who had worked for OSME on a contract basis since 1988. When he first reviewed the
D’Alessio file, it contained preliminary findings and conclusions that had been made by Dr.
Livingstone.
Doctor Callery testified that, at the time he first saw the D’Alessio file, the manner of
death had been determined to be homicide and the matter had been considered a “Shaken Baby
Syndrome type case.” It was Dr. Callery’s duty to go through the police report, hospital records,
and autopsy notes and provide his opinion on whether the initial conclusion was correct.
However, Dr. Callery testified that he could not “fix the case,” because of the poor quality of the
notes and photographs that were in the file. Doctor Callery said that he told Dr. Laposata, “[he
could not] sign off on this as a shaken baby, and [he could not] determine it’s a homicide.”
Doctor Callery then gave the file back to Dr. Laposata and had no further contact with it.
Doctor Callery testified that he had come to “no conclusion whatsoever” with respect to
the file and instead returned it to Dr. Laposata to correct and finalize. Doctor Callery repeated
his lack of a conclusion later in his testimony, saying he could not determine any cause of the
child’s death and he could not, at the time he reviewed the file, confirm the preliminary findings
of Dr. Livingstone and Dr. Laposata. 6 Under cross-examination by the state, and a later lengthy
questioning by the hearing justice, Dr. Callery said that he did not remember specifically what
the file contained, but that it “should have included” materials like retinal slides and standard
tissue samples of organs, including the brain. It is significant that, at the time Dr. Callery
6
Under direct examination from D’Alessio’s lawyer:
“Q: And it’s your opinion at that time that there could not be determined a cause of death
as a homicide or that it was Shaken Baby Syndrome?
“A: My testimony is I could not do it.”
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reviewed the file, it did not contain the supplemental neuropathology report by Dr. Cortez, which
had been referred to in Dr. Laposata’s trial testimony. Doctor Callery testified that it would have
been possible to improve the file to such a degree that a conclusion could be made that the
infant’s death was a homicide caused by the violent shaking of a baby, but that in the file’s then
condition, “[he] didn’t feel comfortable doing it.” 7 In response to questioning by the hearing
justice, Dr. Callery listed the possible manners of death that the medical examiner routinely cites:
suicide, accident, undetermined, natural, and homicide. Doctor Callery finally said that in his
estimation the manner of death was “[b]etween homicide and undetermined.”
On September 19, 2011, the hearing justice issued a ruling from the bench on D’Alessio’s
application. The hearing justice found the evidence provided by Dr. Callery to be newly
discovered and assumed, arguendo, that the evidence could not have been discovered in the
exercise of trial counsel’s due diligence. However, the hearing justice also found Dr. Callery’s
testimony to be “valueless,” in that “such testimony would in no way have altered this jury’s
verdict.” Further, the justice found that Dr. Callery’s testimony lacked substantial weight and
credibility and that it appeared to him to have been motivated by personal animus towards Dr.
Livingstone, the original medical examiner who prepared the infant D’Alessio’s file. 8 For those
reasons, the hearing justice denied the application for postconviction relief. Judgment denying
7
Doctor Callery testified, “[i]f new material had been generated and different things happened
afterwards that allowed somebody else to [form the opinion Gianna’s death was caused by
homicide], so be it. I’m not here to criticize them.”
8
Additionally, and somewhat inopportunely, the hearing justice, sua sponte, raised the issue of
ineffective assistance of counsel and proceeded to rule on it saying, “I could stop right there, but
I shall not, because there is more to be said that supports the denial of the [application]. The
[applicant] was represented by able, experienced counsel * * *. In sum, there is no place in this
case for a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel.”
-6-
postconviction relief was formally entered on September 21, 2011. The applicant filed a timely
appeal with this Court. 9
II
Standard of Review
Pursuant to G.L. 1956 § 10-9.1-1, a person may file an application for postconviction
relief if he or she contends that “the conviction violated [his or her] constitutional rights or that
newly discovered facts require vacation of the conviction in the interest of justice.” Bleau v.
Wall, 808 A.2d 637, 641 (R.I. 2002) (quoting Powers v. State, 734 A.2d 508, 513-14 (R.I.
1999)). A postconviction-relief proceeding is civil in nature, and the burden of proof lies with
the applicant to show by a preponderance of the evidence that relief should be granted. Lyons v.
State, 43 A.3d 62, 64-65 (R.I. 2012) (citing Brown v. State, 32 A.3d 901, 907 (R.I. 2011)). In
applications for postconviction relief based on newly discovered evidence, we use the same
standard of review as in a motion for new trial based on newly discovered evidence. Brennan v.
Vose, 764 A.2d 168, 173 (R.I. 2001) (citing McMaugh v. State, 612 A.2d 725, 731 (R.I. 1992)).
This standard is a two-pronged test; to satisfy the threshold prong the evidence must be (1) newly
discovered and not available at the time of trial; (2) it must not have been discoverable by due
diligence; (3) it must be material, not simply cumulative or impeaching; and (4) it must be of the
type that would likely change the verdict at trial. Id. If the evidence meets the four-part
threshold prong, it then must meet the second prong, which is an assessment of whether it is
“credible enough to warrant relief.” Ferrell v. Wall, 889 A.2d 177, 184 (R.I. 2005) (quoting
9
During the pendency of his appeal, applicant made a motion for a limited remand to the
Superior Court to litigate claims that the state violated applicant’s constitutional rights by failure
to disclose evidence because, “[t]he appeal now before this Court concerns a claim of newly
discovered evidence, and does not raise any constitutional claims.” On September 12, 2013, we
denied that motion.
-7-
Fontaine v. State, 602 A.2d 521, 524 (R.I. 1992)). This Court will not overturn a trial justice’s
findings regarding an application for postconviction relief absent clear error or a determination
by this Court that the trial justice neglected or misconceived material evidence. Reise v. State,
913 A.2d 1052, 1055 (R.I. 2007) (citing State v. Thomas, 794 A.2d 990, 993 (R.I. 2002)).
III
Discussion
On appeal, applicant advances three arguments. First, applicant contends the hearing
justice clearly erred when he ruled that the newly discovered evidence was not material and
would not change the verdict at trial. Second, he alleges the court further erred by raising and
denying, sua sponte, a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel. Third, applicant argues that his
right to due process was violated when the state withheld evidence from the defense in violation
of applicant’s constitutional rights as set forth in Brady v. Maryland, 373 U.S. 83, 87 (1963).
See also State v. Nickerson, 94 A.3d 1116, 1125 (R.I. 2014); DeCiantis v. State, 24 A.3d 557,
570 (R.I. 2011); State v. Chalk, 816 A.2d 413, 419 (R.I. 2002) (noting that this Court, “provides
even greater protection to criminal defendants than the one articulated [by the United States
Supreme Court]”). We conclude that the first argument is without merit and that the second and
third arguments are not properly before this Court because they were not raised in the
postconviction-relief proceedings below. We will address each argument in detail.
A. Newly Discovered Evidence
The applicant claims that the newly discovered evidence, namely Dr. Callery’s testimony,
demands the vacating of his conviction for second-degree murder and the granting of a new trial.
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Specifically, D’Alessio contends that, in the absence of Dr. Callery’s testimony at trial, he was
deprived of the right to a fair trial and a verdict that is worthy of confidence.
At the hearing, there was no serious dispute that this evidence cleared the hurdle of being
newly discovered. The hearing justice assumed that applicant had been diligent in his search for
evidence before his 2002 trial. However, the hearing justice found that the evidence was not
material and that it would “in no way have altered” the verdict. We conclude that the hearing
justice’s determination was not clearly erroneous.
When he determines the weight of newly discovered evidence, a hearing justice must
decide whether the evidence is material and not simply cumulative or impeaching. Brennan, 764
A.2d at 173. Cumulative evidence is that which tends to prove the same point as that of the other
evidence offered. State v. Lynch, 854 A.2d 1022, 1032 (R.I. 2004). Impeaching evidence, on
the other hand, is “information that is not related to [the] defendant's guilt or innocence and
serves only to destroy the credibility of the [witness].” Bleau, 808 A.2d at 644. In short,
material evidence is that which creates a “reasonable probability of a different result.” Id. at 643
(quoting Powers v. State, 734 A.2d 508, 514 (R.I. 1999)). The question is whether, without the
proffered evidence, the defendant received a fair trial resulting in a “verdict worthy of
confidence.” Kyles v. Whitley, 514 U.S. 419, 434 (1995). In order to undermine the confidence
in the verdict, there must exist a nexus between the new evidence and the outcome of the trial.
Bleau, 808 A.2d at 644.
In our opinion, Dr. Callery’s testimony was not material, as this Court has defined that
term. 10 Taken as a whole, the testimony is not of the type that would undermine the confidence
10
While Dr. Callery’s testimony was not ultimately material, we question if it was, as the state
argues, simply cumulative or impeaching. It is applicant’s argument that, had he testified at trial,
Dr. Callery would have testified that he was not able to arrive at a conclusion on the file.
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in the verdict. See Brennan, 764 A.2d at 173. Even if we were to characterize Dr. Callery’s
testimony as probative on D’Alessio’s guilt or innocence and not simply as undermining Dr.
Laposata’s credibility, it was nevertheless of such a vague and indefinite nature that it could not
create a “reasonable probability of a different result.” Bleau, 808 A.2d at 643 (quoting Powers,
734 A.2d at 514). Indeed, when asked to state a conclusion, Dr. Callery would only say that it
was “[b]etween homicide and undetermined.” Doctor Callery acknowledged that his testimony
was based on his review of a file that was not yet complete, before the neuropathology reports
were conducted, and that, “[i]f new material had been generated and different things happened
afterwards that allowed somebody else to [form the opinion Gianna’s death was caused by
homicide],” then he would not disagree with that conclusion. 11
In addition, the newly discovered evidence must be likely to change the verdict at a new
trial. Brennan, 764 A.2d at 173. For the reasons stated above, the hearing justice found that the
testimony of Dr. Callery, when considered alongside the state’s evidence, was not of a type that
would likely change the verdict at a new trial. The trial justice found Dr. Laposata's testimony to
be credible. In our review, we agree that Dr. Laposata was compelling and note that she had
consulted with an outside neuropathologist before she testified. In concluding that a trial
Conversely, in her testimony, Dr. Laposata was sure of her opinion. These differing points are
the key quality of noncumulative testimony. State v. Lynch, 854 A.2d 1022, 1032 (R.I. 2004).
Nor is Dr. Callery’s testimony merely impeaching, because he testified that in his experience,
“[t]he symptomatolgy [sic] and the infliction of trauma do not have to be simultaneous.” Given
applicant’s sole custody of the infant prior to her death, the timing between the injury and death
directly relates to applicant’s guilt or innocence. Doctor Callery’s testimony was therefore not
merely impeaching because it contradicted Dr. Laposata factually; it did not simply undermine
her credibility. Bleau v. Wall, 808 A.2d 637, 644 (R.I. 2002).
11
It is noteworthy that in an earlier affidavit, Dr. Callery swore that he had reviewed the
neuropathology report. Cross-examination revealed, however, that that report had not been
completed until after Dr. Callery had completed his review of the file. Therefore, he could not
have reviewed it.
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conducted with the testimony of Dr. Callery would not likely have resulted in a different
outcome, the hearing justice was neither clearly erroneous nor did he misconceive the evidence.
When he ruled on the credibility of Dr. Callery’s testimony, the trial justice said he was,
“well satisfied that Dr. Callery’s testimony lacks substantial weight and credibility.” However,
because it is our opinion that the testimony failed to overcome the threshold prong of the newly
discovered evidence analysis, we need not, and will not, address this issue. 12 Although this
Court’s analysis is not identical to the hearing justice’s, we reach the same conclusion; we agree
that the testimony of Dr. Callery did not warrant postconviction relief.
B. Ineffective Assistance of Counsel
The applicant argues that the hearing justice incorrectly, and sua sponte, passed on the
issue of ineffective assistance of applicant’s trial counsel even though the issue was not raised by
either applicant or the state at the hearing. We agree; this Court has noted “[i]n short, ‘a party
should not be granted relief that it did not request.’” Nye v. Brousseau, 992 A.2d 1002, 1011
(R.I. 2010) (quoting Providence Journal Co. v. Convention Center Authority, 824 A.2d 1246,
1248 (R.I. 2003)). When the hearing justice said, “[i]n sum, there is no place in this case for a
claim of ineffective assistance of counsel,” there was no such claim before him. Because neither
party addressed the competency of applicant’s trial counsel, it is our opinion that the hearing
justice should have refrained from addressing it. Consequently, we see no reason to review it. 13
12
At the hearing, the justice did go on to offer his thoughts on the evidence’s credibility, but
since this Court agrees the evidence is not material, our analysis need not reach the correctness
of the justice’s findings on Dr. Callery’s credibility. See Fontaine v. State, 602 A.2d 521, 524
(R.I. 1992) (once the threshold prong “is satisfied, the trial justice must then determine whether
the evidence presented is credible enough to warrant relief”); see also McMaugh v. State, 612
A.2d 725, 732-33 (R.I. 1992) (reviewing the trial justice’s credibility finding only because the
threshold prong was satisfied).
13
We note such a claim would need to meet a high bar in the event a subsequent post-conviction
relief application is filed. See G.L. 1956 § 10-9.1-8 (stating that claims not raised in the first
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C. Brady Compliance
The applicant also argues that information regarding Dr. Callery’s work on the D’Alessio
autopsy file constituted exculpatory evidence that was not presented to the defense, a violation of
the due-process guarantees of the United States and Rhode Island Constitutions. It is well settled
that it is a violation of a criminal defendant’s right to due process when the prosecution
suppresses favorable evidence material to the defendant’s guilt or innocence. Brady, 373 U.S. at
87; see also Chalk, 816 A.2d at 417-18 (acknowledging Brady’s application and its implication
of both the United States and Rhode Island Constitutions). The obligations under Brady have
been expanded to impose a duty on the prosecutor to learn of any favorable evidence “known to
the others acting on the government’s behalf,” whether or not requested by the defense. Kyles,
514 U.S. at 437; Chalk, 816 A.2d at 418.
However, the time-honored “raise-or-waive” rule that this Court employs imposes upon
litigants a duty to raise all their claims for relief in the trial court and properly articulate them to
a judge for a ruling. State v. Bido, 941 A.2d 822, 828 (R.I. 2008). There is a narrow exception
to this rule, but “the alleged error must be more than harmless, and the exception must implicate
an issue of constitutional dimension derived from a novel rule of law that could not reasonably
have been known to counsel at the time of trial.” State v. Bouffard, 945 A.2d 305, 312 (R.I.
2008) (quoting State v. Breen, 767 A.2d 50, 57 (R.I. 2001)). The bedrock principles of criminal
discovery espoused in Brady and its progeny are hardly new; they have been crafted, considered,
and limned by our nation’s courts for fifty years.
instance “may not be the basis for a subsequent application, unless the court finds that in the
interest of justice the applicant should be permitted to assert such a ground”).
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The applicant points to vague and scattered references in the hearing transcript that he
urges constitute a Brady claim. We do not agree. 14 The applicant did not articulate a Brady
claim in any cogent manner in his application or at the postconviction-relief hearing, and the
hearing justice did not rule on any such claim. “[A] motion upon which a trial justice has not
ruled presents no question for review by this Court.” Bido, 941 A.2d at 829 (quoting State v.
Abreu, 899 A.2d 473, 476 (R.I. 2006)). Lastly, the applicant’s argument on appeal invokes no
novel rule of law that would have been unknown in the year 2000 to the trial counsel, or in 2007
to the applicant’s attorneys on postconviction relief. Accordingly, the issue of a possible
violation of due process was not properly raised below, fails to meet the stricture of our narrow
exception, and we consider it to have been waived.
14
Notably applicant did not litigate the Brady issue during the three-day hearing on
postconviction relief. On appeal, he points to nebulous statements in the record, including
factual allegations that Dr. Laposata “deprived the [d]efendant of the exculpatory evidence,”
when she did not inform the state of Dr. Callery. Not only does this not touch on the
prosecution’s conduct, which Brady addresses, but applicant did not present it clearly as a Brady
claim. The other references cited in applicant’s briefs are similarly unconvincing. Brady was
not raised in such a manner that the hearing justice should have known that he was required to
rule on it. Indeed, this Court previously addressed the Brady issue when it denied applicant’s
motion for a remand because, as applicant stated, “[t]he appeal now before this Court concerns a
claim of newly discovered evidence, and does not directly raise any constitutional claims.”
While we decline to analyze the Brady claim in detail, we note that the merits appear lacking.
The applicant’s attorney conceded that the Attorney General did not possess the information that
Dr. Callery had worked on the file, saying at the hearing, “no one knew Dr. Callery existed; not
even the Attorney General’s Office.” Moreover, this Court has never held that information in the
possession of the Office of State Medical Examiners is within the scope of the prosecutor’s duty
to disclose.
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IV
Conclusion
For the reasons set forth above, the judgment of the Superior Court is affirmed and the
record may be remanded thereto.
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RHODE ISLAND SUPREME COURT CLERK’S OFFICE
Clerk’s Office Order/Opinion Cover Sheet
TITLE OF CASE: Rocco D’Alessio v. State of Rhode Island.
CASE NO: No. 2011-389-Appeal.
(PM 07-2755)
COURT: Supreme Court
DATE OPINION FILED: November 18, 2014
JUSTICES: Suttell, C.J., Goldberg, Flaherty, Robinson, and Indeglia, JJ.
WRITTEN BY: Associate Justice Francis X. Flaherty
SOURCE OF APPEAL: Providence County Superior Court
JUDGE FROM LOWER COURT:
Associate Justice Robert D. Krause
ATTORNEYS ON APPEAL:
For Applicant: Kara J. Maguire
Office of the Public Defender
For State: Lauren S. Zurier
Department of Attorney General