IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE
CHAUNCEY S. STARLING, §
§ No. 533, 2014
Defendant Below, §
Appellant, § Court Below – Superior Court
§ of the State of Delaware
v. § in and for New Castle County
§
STATE OF DELAWARE, § Cr. ID No. 0104015882
§
Plaintiff Below, §
Appellee. §
Submitted: October 7, 2015
Decided: December 14, 2015
Before STRINE, Chief Justice; HOLLAND, VALIHURA, VAUGHN, and
SEITZ, Justices, constituting the Court en Banc.
Upon appeal from the Superior Court. REVERSED.
James J. Haley, Jr., Esquire, Wilmington, Delaware, Steven H. Brose, Esquire,
David M. Fragale (Argued), Esquire, Jeremy D. Engle, Esquire (Argued), Steptoe
& Johnson LLP, Washington, D.C., for Defendant Below, Appellant.
Elizabeth R. McFarlan, Esquire, Maria T. Knoll (Argued), Esquire, Karen V.
Sullivan, Esquire, Department of Justice, Wilmington, Delaware, for Plaintiff
Below, Appellee.
SEITZ, Justice, for the majority:
I. INTRODUCTION
A masked gunman entered a Wilmington, Delaware barbershop, shot to
death his intended victim, and also shot and killed a five-year-old boy. The police
arrested Chauncey Starling one month after the shooting, when the State’s key
witness, Alfred Gaines, identified Starling as the shooter after Starling allegedly
shot Gaines in a separate incident in Chester, Pennsylvania.
In 2003, the State tried Starling for first degree murder, conspiracy, and
related weapons charges. No physical evidence linked Starling to the crime.
Instead, the State relied primarily on Gaines’ testimony and statements made to
police by Starling’s brother and girlfriend. The State also relied on testimony from
the victim’s girlfriend, who identified Starling as the shooter based on his eyes. A
Superior Court jury convicted Starling of all charges, and the judge sentenced him
to death. On direct appeal, this Court affirmed the conviction but remanded the
case for resentencing. After remand, the Superior Court again sentenced Starling
to death. We then affirmed the death sentences.
Starling then moved for postconviction relief in the Superior Court. Starling
claimed that his counsel during trial (“Trial Counsel”) was ineffective, that the
State failed to disclose exculpatory evidence under Brady v. Maryland, 1 and that
1
373 U.S. 83 (1963).
2
the prosecution engaged in misconduct at trial. Following years of discovery,
evidentiary hearings, and briefing, the Superior Court on September 5, 2014,
denied Starling’s motion and this appeal followed. Starling renews the same
constitutional arguments on appeal.
With no physical evidence to link Starling to the crimes, it was essential to a
fair trial that Trial Counsel use all available impeachment evidence, and make
timely and appropriate objections to the admission of evidence going to the heart
of the State’s case. It was also incumbent on the State to provide Trial Counsel
with accurate information about exculpatory evidence relevant to the credibility of
the State’s central witness. Our review of the record leads us to conclude that
mistakes were made that undermine confidence in the fairness of the trial.
First, Starling’s Trial Counsel intended to but forgot to examine an
eyewitness to the shooting about statements the witness made to an investigator
shortly after the shooting. That eyewitness stated that he recalled seeing
photographs in the newspaper of the two barbershop shooting suspects, one of
which was Starling, and told the investigator that “none of those individuals had
the same appearance as the shooter.” Second, Trial Counsel failed to object to the
State’s admission of Starling’s brother’s statement to police, where after several
hours of interrogation the twenty-three year old told police that Starling said he
3
was sorry for what he did to the boy. A substantial argument could have been
made that the statement was involuntary and therefore inadmissible.
Finally, before trial the State dismissed a capias and violation of probation
(“VOP”) charges against Gaines, the State’s central witness at trial, but at the time
of trial the State represented to Trial Counsel that the charges remained “pending.”
We have long held that whenever the State reduces pending charges against any
State witness, whether the charges are related to the crime at trial or not, disclosure
to the defense is mandatory. 2 Instead of providing accurate information, the State
misinformed Trial Counsel about the status of Gaines’ charges. This mistake,
unintentional as it was, deprived the defense of important evidence that might have
been used to attack the credibility of the State’s main witness.
The cumulative effect of each of these errors leads us to conclude that there
is a reasonable probability that the outcome of the trial would have been different
without the errors. Therefore we reverse Starling’s conviction and remand for a
new trial.
2
See, e.g., Michael v. State, 529 A.2d 752, 756 (Del. 1987).
4
II. BACKGROUND 3
A. The Shooting
On March 9, 2001, at about 8:30 p.m., several patrons were in the Made 4
Men Barbershop in Wilmington. A masked gunman wearing a black hooded
sweatshirt entered the barbershop and opened fire on Darnell Evans, who was
sitting in a barber’s chair near the entrance. Evans ran to the back of the
barbershop, and the shooter followed him. After Evans fell to the ground, the
shooter stood over Evans and shot him twice in the head. Evans suffered “five
gunshot wounds to the head, chest, abdomen, and groin.” 4 At some point, five-
year-old Damon Gist, Jr., who was there with his father, was shot in the jaw. Both
Evans and Gist died from their wounds.
The barbershop’s owner, Lawrence Moore, initially pursued the shooter, but
ultimately abandoned the chase. Although Moore and the barbershop patrons
witnessed the shooting, none of them could identify the shooter by name. The
police did not recover any DNA, fingerprints, or the murder weapon.
On April 7, 2001, Pennsylvania police discovered Alfred Gaines in Chester,
Pennsylvania. Gaines had been shot multiple times around 11:18 p.m. and was in
possession of crack cocaine. He was also in violation of his probation in
3
Unless otherwise noted, the following facts are taken from the Superior Court’s opinion, State
v. Starling, 2014 WL 4386127 (Del. Super. Sept. 5, 2014).
4
Id. at *1.
5
Delaware, which, among other things, forbade him from leaving the State of
Delaware, possessing controlled substances, or being out after 10:00 p.m. After
police arrested him for violation of his probation and possession of crack cocaine,
Gaines told detectives that Starling was the person who shot him, and that Starling
had also committed the barbershop shooting. Starling had allegedly been pursuing
Gaines because Gaines had shot an acquaintance of Starling’s the day before in
Wilmington.
In November 2001, a grand jury indicted Starling for the barbershop
shooting. Starling was charged with two counts of first degree murder, two counts
of possession of a firearm during the commission of a felony, and one count of first
degree conspiracy.
B. Starling’s Trial
The State’s primary witness was Gaines, who testified that he was with
Starling and Richard Frink on the evening of the shooting. He testified that the
three men were driving around Wilmington and that when they passed the
barbershop, Frink saw Evans through the window. According to Gaines, Starling
then exited the car, tucked a gun into his pants, and said he was going to “put in
some work,” which Gaines interpreted to mean that Starling would shoot or fight
6
someone.5 Gaines testified that Starling was dressed in all dark clothing and
wearing a black hooded sweatshirt. According to Gaines, after fifteen minutes,
Starling came back to the car where Gaines and Frink had remained and said, “I
got him. I got him. I think I got a little boy, too.” 6 Gaines testified that Frink then
drove Gaines home.
Gaines also testified that Starling called him the evening of the shooting,
because Starling was upset and wanted to talk. Gaines apparently took a taxi to
meet Starling at the home of Vicki Miller, Starling’s girlfriend. Gaines testified
that Starling “was a wreck” and mentioned shooting “a little boy.” 7 Starling’s
brother Michael was present, and Gaines alleged that both he and Michael heard
Starling say he was sorry for what he did to the boy. Michael drove Gaines home.
At trial, the State introduced Michael’s statement to police detectives
obtained during his interrogation on April 27, 2001.8 Several days earlier,
Michael, who was twenty-three years old at the time, had been arrested and held in
custody for six or seven hours before being released. 9 Then, on April 27, police
came to Michael’s workplace and drove him to the station for questioning. The
detectives took Michael’s cell phone, would not let him make phone calls, and
5
App. to Opening Br. at 532-33 (Trial Test. of A. Gaines, Oct. 16, 2003).
6
Id. at 535.
7
Id. at 536.
8
Id. at 582 (Trial Tr., Oct. 17, 2003).
9
Id. at 574-75 (Trial Test. of M. Starling, Oct. 17, 2003).
7
ignored his repeated requests for his mother. 10 Michael at first denied that his
brother was involved in the shooting. The Detectives then threatened Michael with
criminal charges and suggested that he could spend the rest of his life in jail for
crimes he did not commit, 11 or in the alternative, obstruction of justice. 12 The
police told Michael that his brother had confessed. They questioned Michael
extensively, reiterating that everyone else’s story was the same, and told Michael
repeatedly what they wanted him to say—that Starling said the night of the
shooting he was sorry for what he did to the boy. 13 After being told he could see
his mother and the questioning would end when he repeated the statement back,
Michael finally told the detectives that Starling had said he was sorry for what he
did to the boy. 14 The State introduced Michael’s statement at trial without
10
Id. at 574; id. at 313 (Interview of M. Starling, Apr. 27, 2001) (“Where’s my mom?”); id. at
326 (“Can I see my mom?”).
11
Id. at 284 (“[D]on’t get dragged into something [i.e. the barbershop shooting] that you weren’t
there for [because] that’s what’s gonna happen.”); id. at 289, 291 (“The bottom line is don’t drag
yourself down the sewer when you weren’t even there! Unless you want to get charged? I don’t
think you’re that you know, you’re not that stupid are you? You don’t have to take a charge for
something you didn’t do? Particularly when you don’t have to.”); id. at 294 (“Mike, you are a
smart man, don’t throw your life away for something you weren’t involved in.”); id. at 1590
(Evidentiary Hr’g Tr., Test. of Det. Mullins, Nov. 29, 2012) (“Q. Did you or did Detective
Sullivan threaten Michael with being criminally charged in connection with something he didn’t
do? . . . A. Yeah I guess.”).
12
Id. at 285 (“You ever heard of obstruction of justice?”).
13
Id. at 289 (“I know what was said . . . but the bottom line is I need to hear it from you.”); id. at
294 (“It’s over with, . . . your brother made a very big mistake, he knows it, he’s sorry for it, no
one intended for the little kid to get killed but it happened.”); id. at 302, 310, 317, 319, 320-21,
325, 326, 327, 332, 344.
14
App. to Opening Br. at 305, 332, 348-49.
8
objection and without a determination by the trial judge that the statement was
voluntary.
Shaylynn Flonnory, Evans’ girlfriend, made an in-court identification of
Starling. She claimed that she was standing outside the barbershop right before the
shooting and that she saw the shooter dressed in all black, including a black
hooded sweatshirt, holding a gun. Flonnory testified that she saw the shooter’s
eyes through the openings in the shooter’s mask. At trial, she identified Starling as
the shooter based on his eyes.
The jury convicted Starling on each count of the indictment on October 22,
2003. 15 On November 4, 2003, the jury concluded that the aggravating factors
outweighed the mitigating factors and unanimously recommended the death
penalty. The Superior Court agreed with this recommendation and sentenced
Starling to death on June 10, 2004.16
C. Starling’s Direct Appeal
In his direct appeal, Starling raised a number of arguments relating to the
jury venire, use of peremptory challenges, and denial of his Fifth Amendment right
against self-incrimination. He also challenged the constitutionality of Delaware’s
death-penalty statute under the Sixth Amendment, as well as the Superior Court’s
15
Starling v. State, 882 A.2d 747, 752 (Del. 2005).
16
State v. Starling, Cr. ID No. 0104015882 (Del. Super. June 10, 2004).
9
sentencing decision. Further, Starling argued that the prosecution failed to disclose
Miller’s statement to police, “den[ying] that Starling admitted anything to her or
that she saw Starling on the night of the shootings.”17
This Court affirmed the convictions but vacated the death sentences because
the Superior Court judge “erred as a matter of law by stating that he was ‘directed’
to give the recommendation great weight.” 18 This Court then remanded the case to
the Superior Court for resentencing. The Superior Court resentenced Starling to
two death sentences on October 2, 2005. We affirmed those sentences on appeal. 19
D. Starling’s Motion For Postconviction Relief
In April 2007, Starling filed three pro se Rule 61 motions for postconviction
relief. 20 The Superior Court appointed counsel, who filed an Amended Petition for
Postconviction Relief on April 1, 2008. During the next six years, the Superior
Court held numerous hearings on various petitions and responses.
At the postconviction relief hearings, Starling’s post-conviction counsel
examined various individuals involved in his prosecution between 2001 and 2004.
On November 26, 2012, one of the prosecutors testified about her recollections of
dealing with the potential extradition of Gaines after he was shot in Chester, and of
17
Starling, 882 A.2d at 751.
18
Id. at 759.
19
Starling v. State, 903 A.2d 758, 767 (Del. 2006).
20
Starling, 2014 WL 4386127, at *2.
10
a possible cooperation agreement with Gaines.21 The prosecutor was not able to
recall many details about her work on the case. She did, however, testify that she
requested that the Superior Court withdraw a pending capias and VOP charges
against Gaines such that he would not be extradited to Delaware. 22 The lead
prosecutor also testified. He testified that he believed and told Trial Counsel
before trial that Gaines’ VOP was “pending” and “we weren’t doing anything or
that nothing was being done with them, they were being held in abeyance until
after his trial . . . .” 23
Trial Counsel also testified and submitted an affidavit. Trial Counsel
testified that he was not aware that the State had asked the Superior Court to
withdraw the capias and Gaines’ VOP charges. Trial Counsel said that the State
provided him with a summary of Gaines’ prior criminal history just before trial,
which listed Gaines’ VOP charges as pending. Trial Counsel also testified that he
forgot to ask Moore about the statements Moore made to an investigator—that
neither of the photographs in the newspaper of suspects in the barbershop shooting,
one of which was Starling, looked like the shooter. Moore had also described the
shooter as substantially taller than Starling. According to Trial Counsel, Moore’s
opinion that Starling did not look like the shooter “was something that obviously
21
App. to Opening Br. at 1178-273.
22
Id. at 1229.
23
Id. at 1333.
11
was favorable to the defense.”24 Additionally, Trial Counsel admitted that his
failure to cross-examine Moore about it “certainly wasn’t strategic or tactical.” 25
Finally, Trial Counsel testified that he believed Michael’s statement was coerced
and involuntary, but that rather than object to its admission, he sought to let the
jury decide whether to believe it by playing them the recording of the entire
interview.
Starling based his Rule 61 motion on various grounds. We discuss only
those necessary to resolve this appeal. First, Starling argued that Trial Counsel
was ineffective for failing to examine Moore on his statements to an investigator.
The Superior Court concluded that Trial Counsel was not ineffective for failing to
do so because Starling failed to establish how “Moore’s testimony would have
altered the outcome of Starling’s trial.” 26 The Court noted that various
eyewitnesses testified regarding the shooter’s height and weight, and Starling made
no showing that Moore’s additional testimony “would have altered the jury’s
perception of the shooter’s body type in a way that would have produced a
different trial outcome.” 27
24
Id. at 1840.
25
Id. (“I recall filling out the affidavit, shaking my head, I missed it, how did I miss it, I have no
clue.”). Despite Trial Counsel’s attempts to recall Moore to the stand after realizing the mistake,
he was unable to locate Moore. Id. at 1840-42; id. at 921.
26
Starling, 2014 WL 4386127, at *10.
27
Id. The record indicates that Starling had only one attorney representing him at trial.
12
Second, Starling asserted that Trial Counsel was ineffective for failing to
object to the State’s admission of Michael’s statement to detectives into evidence.
The Superior Court also rejected this argument. It observed that the tape’s
introduction “permitted the jury to consider the credibility of Michael’s confession,
thus providing potentially exculpatory evidence for Starling.” 28 Third, Starling
argued that the State violated its obligation under Brady v. Maryland by
withholding information useful to impeach Gaines’ testimony. At the
recommendation of Gaines’ probation officer and the request of the Delaware
Attorney General’s office, the State withdrew Gaines’ capias and VOP charges on
October 17, 2001. 29 The Superior Court first concluded that Rule 61(i)(3) barred
this claim. 30 On the merits, the Superior Court accepted the State’s assertion that it
made no deal with Gaines, and concluded that the State allowed Gaines to remain
in Pennsylvania because of safety concerns related to Starling’s alleged shooting of
Gaines in Chester. 31 The Superior Court also explained that “disclosure was not
28
Id. at *11.
29
App. to Opening Br. at 358 (Probation Progress Report, Oct. 16, 2001).
30
Starling, 2014 WL 4386127, at *3.
31
See id. at *5 (“According to the State, there was no deal between the State and Gaines. The
Court accepts the representations of the prosecutors who emphatically disclaimed that there was
any deal with Gaines and stated firmly that no promises had been made to Gaines in exchange
for his testimony.”).
13
mandated because Trial Counsel . . . knew that Gaines’ probation had been
discharged.” 32
The Superior Court rejected these arguments for postconviction relief and
his other claims. Starling renews the same claims on appeal.33
III. ANALYSIS
We review the Superior Court’s denial of a motion for postconviction relief
for abuse of discretion. 34 We review ineffective assistance of counsel claims and
alleged Brady violations de novo. 35
A. The Strickland Standard
In Strickland v. Washington, the United States Supreme Court established a
two-pronged test for ineffective assistance of counsel claims:
First, the defendant must show that counsel’s performance was
deficient. This requires showing that counsel made errors so serious
that counsel was not functioning as the “counsel” guaranteed the
defendant by the Sixth Amendment. Second, the defendant must
show that the deficient performance prejudiced the defense. This
32
Id.
33
Starling raises a host of other claims that we need not and do not reach. These include: (i) that
Trial Counsel was ineffective for failing to object to the in-court identification of Starling by a
witness, Shaylynn Flonnory; (ii) that the State violated Brady by failing to disclose Frink’s cell
phone records, which Starling claimed he could have used to impeach Gaines; (iii) that the State
engaged in prosecutorial misconduct by arguing in its rebuttal closing argument that Starling
ignored incoming calls on his cell phone around the time of the barbershop shooting; and (iv)
that the State violated Brady by failing to disclose a statement Vicki Miller made to police on
April 19, 2001.
34
Ploof v. State, 75 A.3d 811, 820 (Del. 2013).
35
Id.
14
requires showing that counsel’s errors were so serious as to deprive
the defendant of a fair trial, a trial whose result is reliable. 36
We evaluate Starling’s ineffective assistance of counsel claims using this
approach, determining whether Trial Counsel was deficient and, if so, whether
Starling suffered prejudice from the ineffectiveness. Defense counsel is deficient
where counsel’s representation falls below an objective standard of
reasonableness.37 To demonstrate prejudice caused by counsel’s ineffectiveness, a
defendant “must show that there is a reasonable probability that, but for counsel’s
unprofessional errors, the result of the proceeding would have been different.” 38 A
reasonable probability of a different result means a “probability sufficient to
undermine confidence in the outcome,” a standard lower than “more likely than
not.”39 “The likelihood of a different result must be substantial, not just
conceivable.”40
B. Starling’s Trial Counsel Was Ineffective For Failing To Elicit
Exculpatory Evidence From Moore
Starling argues that Trial Counsel was ineffective for failing to cross-
examine Moore about his exculpatory statements. As the only person who saw the
shooter during the shooting and chased him afterward, Moore had the best
36
Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668, 687 (1984).
37
Gattis v. State, 697 A.2d 1174, 1178 (Del. 1997).
38
Strickland, 466 U.S. at 694.
39
Id. at 693-94.
40
Harrington v. Richter, 562 U.S. 86, 112 (2011) (citing Strickland, 466 U.S. at 693, 697).
15
opportunity to identify him. 41 According to an investigator’s report, Moore stated
during an interview, after seeing the newspaper photographs of two suspects in the
barbershop shooting, one of which was Starling, that neither of the photographs
looked like the shooter, and that the shooter was substantially taller than Starling.42
Trial Counsel forgot to ask Moore about these exculpatory statements during cross-
examination. In his testimony during postconviction proceedings, Trial Counsel
testified that Moore’s opinion that Starling did not look like the shooter “was
something that obviously was favorable to the defense.”43 Additionally, Trial
Counsel testified that his failure to cross-examine Moore about it “certainly wasn’t
strategic or tactical.” 44 The Superior Court nonetheless determined that Trial
Counsel’s representation was effective because “[t]here is no requirement that
Trial Counsel elicit all possible evidence at trial.”45
41
Moore stated to an investigator that “he believes that he was the only person in the shop at the
time who stood and watched the entire incident unfold.” App. to Opening Br. at 361 (Memo re
L. Moore).
42
Id. (“Mr. Moore states that he recalls seeing photographs of individuals . . . who were
suspected of the crime and/or charged . . . [and] none of those individuals had the same
appearance as the shooter.”). Moore stated that the shooter was approximately 6’1” or 6’2”
when he was interviewed on December 20, 2001, id. at 360, and testified at trial that the shooter
was about 5’11”, id. at 496 (Trial Test. of L. Moore, Oct. 15, 2003). Starling is 5’6”. Id. at 630
(Trial Test. of K. Taylor, Oct. 21, 2003).
43
App. to Opening Br. at 1840.
44
Id. (“I recall filling out the affidavit, shaking my head, I missed it, how did I miss it, I have no
clue.”).
45
Starling, 2014 WL 4386127, at *10.
16
It is correct, as a general matter, that trial counsel does not have to elicit all
possible evidence at trial. But where eyewitness testimony played a central role in
the State’s case, and no physical evidence linked Starling to the crime, Trial
Counsel’s failure to use important exculpatory evidence fell below any objective
standard of reasonableness and was ineffective representation. Trial Counsel had
in hand a private investigator’s report where eyewitness Moore, who claimed to be
the only witness to view the entire incident, recounted to the investigator that he
saw two photographs of the shooting suspects, one of which was Starling, and said
that “none of those individuals had the same appearance as the shooter.”46
Despite attempts by Trial Counsel to recall Moore to the stand after realizing the
mistake, Trial Counsel could not locate Moore. 47 Forgetting to examine a witness
on critical exculpatory eyewitness testimony was ineffective assistance of counsel.
The Superior Court determined that Starling failed to demonstrate actual
prejudice from the mistake because “the jury heard various pieces of testimony on
the height and stature of the shooter” and Moore’s testimony would not have
“altered the jury’s perception of the shooter’s body type in a way that would have
produced a different trial outcome.” 48 We disagree. Moore arguably had the best
view of the shooter. The jury could have found Moore’s description of the
46
App. to Opening Br. at 360-62 (Memo re L. Moore).
47
Id. at 1840-42; id. at 921.
48
Starling, 2014 WL 4386127, at *10.
17
shooter’s physical characteristics the most reliable, which would have been
favorable to Starling. The jury could have also used Moore’s testimony to aid in
its evaluation of other eyewitness testimony offered by the State.
For instance, Moore’s initial recollection of the shooter’s height was 6’1” or
6’2.” Starling is 5’6.” 49 Charrod Ali Batts and Damon Gist, Sr., also
eyewitnesses, gave conflicting testimony about the shooter’s appearance. Batts
testified that the shooter “wasn’t too tall” and “wasn’t too short,” but rather was
“probably the same size as me if not a little bit shorter.” 50 Batts testified that he is
5’8” or 5’9.”51 Gist, on the other hand, testified closer to Moore that the shooter
was 5’11” or 6’0.”52 Moore also believed the shooter was “about 200, 205”
pounds, which differed from Gist’s recollection of “around 170.” 53
Given the serious conflict among the eyewitnesses about the shooter’s
appearance, and the lack of any physical evidence connecting Starling to the crime,
Trial Counsel’s failure to elicit important exculpatory testimony from the witness
with perhaps the best vantage point to view the shooter caused serious prejudice to
Starling’s defense.
49
App. to Opening Br. at 630 (Trial Test. of K. Taylor, Oct. 21, 2003).
50
Id. at 488 (Trial Test. of A. Batts, Oct. 15, 2003).
51
Id.
52
Id. at 506 (Trial Test. of D. Gist, Oct. 15, 2003); App. to Answering Br. at 1 (Transcribed
Statement of D. Gist).
53
App. to Opening Br. at 506 (Trial Test. of D. Gist, Oct. 15, 2003). Batts testified that the
shooter had a “medium build.” Id. at 490, 506 (Trial Test. of A. Batts, Oct. 15, 2003).
18
C. Starling’s Trial Counsel Was Ineffective For Not Objecting
To Michael Starling’s Statement
Starling asserts that Trial Counsel was ineffective for failing to object to the
State’s admission into evidence of Michael’s pre-trial statement. As explained
previously, during interrogation by two detectives two months after the shooting,
Michael told police that he heard Starling say that he was sorry for what he did to
the boy. Without objection, the State entered the statement into evidence at the
conclusion of a detective’s examination, not during Michael’s examination as
required by the statute. Trial Counsel never asked the court to make a threshold
voluntariness determination, and none was made by the trial court. 54
Under § 3507 of the Delaware Criminal Code, “[i]n a criminal prosecution,
the voluntary out-of-court prior statement of a witness who is present and subject
to cross-examination may be used as affirmative evidence with substantive
independent testimonial value.”55 The General Assembly enacted the statute to
allow the statements of turncoat witnesses to be admitted into evidence.56 The
statement must be voluntary to be admissible. 57 The voluntariness requirement
54
There is some confusion in the briefs and in the record regarding which party actually
introduced the tapes, but Trial Counsel made the decision to play the tapes for the jury. Id. at
613-15 (Trial Tr., Oct. 21, 2003).
55
11 Del. C. § 3507(a).
56
Collins v. State, 56 A.3d 1012, 1019 (Del. 2012).
57
Taylor v. State, 23 A.3d 851, 853 (Del. 2011).
19
ensures that coercion by improper conduct does not taint the reliability of these
statements.58
There are certain threshold requirements to admissibility that must be met
before the statement can be heard by the jury:
A statement offered under Section 3507 must be offered before the
conclusion of the direct examination of the declarant. The prosecutor
must inquire about the voluntariness of the statement during the direct
examination of the declarant, and the judge must make a ruling on
whether the declarant made the statement voluntarily before the
statement may be submitted to the jury for consideration.59
“Determining whether a statement was voluntary requires a ‘careful evaluation of
all the circumstances of the interrogation.’” 60 For a statement to be involuntary, it
must have been obtained by tactics that are so coercive as to “overbear the person’s
will and rational thinking processes.” 61 A statement obtained by threats can be
involuntary. 62
The Superior Court ruled that Starling essentially waived this claim because
“Trial Counsel introduced the tape himself,” and in any event introduction of the
58
See State v. Rooks, 401 A.2d 943, 946 (Del. 1979) (“[T]he possibility of coercion by improper
conduct is no less present in out-of-court statements of witnesses than it is in out-of-court
confessions by defendants . . . .”); Hatcher v. State, 337 A.2d 30, 32 (Del. 1975).
59
Dunn v. State, 2014 WL 4698488, at *2 (Del. Sept. 22, 2014); Woodlin v. State, 3 A.3d 1084,
1087 (Del. 2010) (“[T]he trial judge ‘must be satisfied that the offering party has shown by a
preponderance of the evidence that the statement was voluntarily made, and must render an
explicit determination on the issue before admitting it for the jury’s consideration.’”) (quoting
Hatcher, 337 A.2d at 32).
60
Flowers v. State, 858 A.2d 328, 330 (Del. 2004) (quoting Rooks, 401 A.2d at 948).
61
Rooks, 401 A.2d at 948.
62
Id. at 947 (citing State v. Winsett, 205 A.2d 510, 521 (Del. Super. 1964)).
20
tape “was not objectively unreasonable because Michael’s taped interview
permitted the jury to consider the credibility of Michael’s confession, thus
providing potentially exculpatory evidence for Starling.” 63 We disagree with the
Superior Court and determine that counsel’s failure to object to Michael’s
statement was ineffective and caused material prejudice to Starling’s defense.
As an initial matter, the record contradicts the finding of waiver. The State
moved the admission of Michael’s statement, not Starling.64 Trial Counsel did
thereafter play the full interview for the jury, but only after the statement was in
evidence.65 Trial Counsel’s decision to play the entire interrogation for the jury,
rather than being a tactical decision, is better described as damage control after
failing to object. It is also no answer to say, as the State claims and as the Superior
Court held, that Starling delegated to the jury the voluntariness determination.
Under § 3507 the voluntariness determination is the exclusive province of the trial
judge, not the jury. 66 Although we need not determine at this juncture whether
Michael’s statement was voluntary, serious doubt existed about the voluntariness
of Michael’s statement such that Trial Counsel should have objected and insisted
63
Starling, 2014 WL 4386127, at *11.
64
The State introduced the tapes without objection from Trial Counsel. App. to Opening Br. at
582 (Trial Tr., Oct. 17, 2003).
65
Id. at 615 (Trial Tr., Oct. 21, 2003).
66
Woodlin, 3 A.3d at 1087.
21
that the statute’s requirements be satisfied, including a voluntariness determination
by the trial court.
If there had been an objection, the trial judge would have had to determine,
under the totality of the circumstances, whether Michael’s “will was so overborne
that the statements produced were not the product of a rational intellect and free
will.” 67 This is a fact-specific inquiry where the trial judge “consider[s] the
specific tactics utilized by the police in eliciting the admissions, the details of the
interrogation, and the characteristics of the defendant.” 68
In this case, Michael found himself surprised by a “hallway full of cops” at
his workplace who took him away for interrogation.69 He was then held at the
police station for approximately five or six hours and interrogated by two
detectives. 70 Michael was not read his Miranda rights. Michael was not allowed
to make any phone calls.71 While in custody, Michael repeatedly asked to speak to
67
Roth v. State, 788 A.2d 101, 108 (Del. 2001) (quoting Martin v. State, 433 A.2d 1025, 1032
(Del. 1981)); see also Collins, 56 A.3d at 1018.
68
Baynard v. State, 518 A.2d 682, 690 (Del. 1986); see also id. (“Factors which bear on these
circumstances include the following: ‘the youth of the [declarant]; his lack of education or his
low intelligence; the lack of any advice to the [declarant] of his constitutional rights; the length
of detention; the repeated and prolonged nature of the questioning; and the use of physical
punishment such as the deprivation of food or sleep.’”) (quoting Schneckloth v. Bustamonte, 412
U.S. 218, 226 (1973)).
69
App. to Opening Br. at 620 (Trial Test. of M. Starling, Oct. 21, 2003).
70
Id. at 575 (Trial Test. of M. Starling, Oct. 17, 2003).
71
Id. at 574.
22
his mother, 72 who the police promised would be arriving shortly (though she did
not).73 The police also told Michael exactly what they wanted to hear him say:
“[W]e already know what happened, we know the story, but we know that he told
you [sic] that he was sorry for I just need to hear it from you! And we’re done!” 74
The police then repeatedly threatened to charge Michael with crimes if he
did not say what they wanted to hear.75 Specifically, the police told him that he
could be charged with the barbershop murders, telling him: “The bottom line is
don’t drag yourself down the sewer when you weren’t even there! Unless you
want to get charged? . . . You don’t want to take a charge for something you didn’t
do? Particularly when you don’t have to.”76 The police also threatened to charge
72
Id. at 574; id. at 313 (Interview of M. Starling, Apr. 27, 2001) (“Where’s my mom?”); id. at
326 (“Can I see my mom?”).
73
Id. at 183 (“[S]he’s on her way in here, alright . . . .”).
74
Id. at 310.
75
See, e.g., App. to Opening Br. at 267 (Interview of M. Starling, Apr. 27, 2001) (“I don’t think
you want to get caught up in it. Trust me on this one.”); id. at 268 (“Bottom line is you don’t
want to get dragged in on this man, okay? Alright?”); id. at 269 (“What I’m telling you is, don’t
lie because you don’t want to get caught up in this, alright?”); id. at 282 (“Because we know the
answer Michael and I don’t want to see you get jammed up. . . . Michael, we know the answer
but I don’t want to see you get jammed up on this.”); id. at 284 (“You are not a suspect in
anything, but don’t get dragged into something that you weren’t there for cause that’s what’s
gonna happen”); id. at 288 (“Nobody wants to go to jail for something they didn’t do Michael,
and I hope you’re on the same page.”); id. at 290 (“I know, but the thing is don’t involve yourself
in a double murder investigation.”); id. at 336 (“[A]nd I explained it to you from the beginning,
don’t get jammed up in this.”).
76
Id. at 291.
23
Michael with obstruction of justice.77 The police admitted to making these threats:
“Q. Did you or did Detective Sullivan threaten Michael with being criminally
charged in connection with something he didn’t do? . . . A. Yeah I guess.”78
Michael testified at trial that “[he] just told them what they wanted to hear, or [he
believed he] was going to . . . jail.” 79 In the face of substantial evidence pointing to
the involuntariness of Michael’s statement, Trial Counsel did not object and did
not invoke the procedural requirements of § 3507.
Finally, the State argues that Trial Counsel’s testimony reflects that the
failure to object was a tactical decision, and should not be second-guessed by this
Court. Trial Counsel stated that, because he believed that the statement was
admissible under § 3507, he “sought to suggest to the jury that it had been the
product of coercion by the interviewing detectives.” 80 Some judgments made by
trial counsel, however, are so far out of the realm of reasonable trial strategy that
they qualify as ineffective assistance.81 Trial Counsel recognized that Michael’s
statement “was the biggest problem for the defense case [and] was the best part of
77
See id. at 285 (“You ever heard of obstruction of justice?”); id. at 281 (“Now don’t be pretty
sure cause a lot of that’s gonna depend on whether or not you’re hindering okay a police
investigation and that’s not good Michael . . . .”).
78
Id. at 1590 (Evidentiary Hr’g Tr., Test. of Det. Mullins, Nov. 29, 2012).
79
Id. at 623 (Trial Test. of M. Starling, Oct. 21, 2003).
80
Id. at 921-22.
81
Trial Counsel harbored doubts about the voluntariness of Michael’s statement. See id. at 1806
(interrogation was “very, very suggestive, very coercive”); see also id. (Trial Counsel agreed
Michael’s statement “wasn’t a voluntary and intelligent description of the alleged events”).
24
the prosecution case.” 82 Trial Counsel would have risked nothing by objecting to
Michael’s statement and forcing the State to follow the requirements of § 3507 and
prove voluntariness. Even if the trial court overruled Starling’s objection, Trial
Counsel would still have been able to play the full tape for the jury and argue
involuntariness. As such, Trial Counsel’s performance fell below the standard of
objectively reasonable performance and prejudiced Starling’s right to a fair trial. 83
D. The State Violated Brady By Telling Trial Counsel That Gaines’
Capias And VOP Were Pending During Trial
Starling argues that the State violated its obligation to provide accurate
information to the defense and to disclose exculpatory information under Brady
about the disposition of Gaines’ capias and VOP charge. The State argues in
response, and the Superior Court agreed, that the claim was procedurally barred,
and also without merit because Trial Counsel was allegedly aware of the dismissal
82
App. to Opening Br. at 1800-01.
83
Other courts have held that Trial counsel’s unjustified failure to object to the admission of
evidence or testimony that is highly detrimental to the defense prejudices the defendant, and does
not satisfy the minimum requirements of Strickland. See, e.g., Thomas v. Varner, 428 F.3d 491,
501 (3d Cir. 2005) (“[F]ailure to move to suppress or otherwise object to an in-court
identification by the prosecution’s central witness, when there are compelling grounds to do so,
is not objectively reasonable representation . . . .”); Henry v. Scully, 78 F.3d 51, 53 (2d Cir.
1996) (finding ineffective assistance of counsel arising from several unjustified “instances of
inaction” by trial counsel where he failed to object to a co-defendant’s testimony against the
defendant and to hearsay testimony that “explained away” defendant’s strongest argument at
trial); Tomlin v. Myers, 30 F.3d 1235 (9th Cir. 1994) (finding ineffective assistance of counsel
where trial counsel failed to object to an in-court identification of the defendant that was based
on an earlier unconstitutional and illegal live line-up); Commonwealth v. Costa, 742 A.2d 1076,
1077 (Pa. 1999) (“Trial counsel failed to object to [an] impermissible reference to appellant’s
post-arrest silence. No reasonable basis exists for that failure.”).
25
before trial. The Superior Court also found that Trial Counsel would not have used
the impeachment evidence to avoid opening the door to other evidence unhelpful
to Starling’s case. After our review of the record, we hold that the claim was not
procedurally barred. We also find that the State violated Brady by inaccurately
describing the status of Gaines’ criminal charges, and the error caused material
prejudice to the defense.
Gaines was a probationer when he was shot in Chester, Pennsylvania. The
terms of his probation required him to remain in Delaware, to observe a 10:00 p.m.
curfew, and not to consume or possess controlled substances.84 Gaines’ probation
officer, Jason Garrick, secured a capias for his arrest and instituted a VOP charge
after Gaines was shot because Gaines was out of state, out of his house after his
curfew, and possessed crack cocaine at the time he was shot.85 Garrick
recommended that Gaines be extradited, his probation be revoked, and he be
returned to Delaware to serve out the remainder of his prison sentence. 86 The State
also filed a detainer against Gaines and obtained an extradition order to allow
Gaines to be taken into custody upon his release from prison in Pennsylvania after
being held on charges of possessing crack cocaine. 87
84
App. to Opening Br. at 185 (Capias for A. Gaines Issued Apr. 18, 2001).
85
Id. at 184-89.
86
Id. at 1727.
87
Id. at 1728.
26
After a prosecutor spoke to Officer Garrick about Gaines’ shooting in
Chester, Officer Garrick wrote in Gaines’ October 16, 2001 probation progress
report: “After speaking with [the assistant attorney general], she advised me that
she spoke to Your Honor and requested that [Gaines’] VOP and Capias be
withdrawn. This Officer is respectfully recommending that Your Honor
withdrawal [sic] the VOP and Capias on Mr. Gaines.” 88 The first prosecutor who
made the request was one of the prosecutors in Starling’s case. She testified that
Gaines’ VOP and capias were withdrawn because Gaines was physically unable to
return to Delaware. 89 The court dismissed the capias and the VOP charge,90 and
allowed Gaines to stay in Pennsylvania while he recovered from his injuries.
Gaines was no longer reporting to his probation officer, but was instead allegedly
“being supervised by the Attorney General’s Office.” 91
88
Id. at 358-59 (Probation Progress Report for A. Gaines).
89
The deputy attorney general testified that she did so only because Gaines was not going to be
able to comply with his parole because he had been shot. See id. at 1229 (“I recall that we
contacted the Court and asked the capias and violation of probation be withdrawn because, at
that time, Alfred Gaines was either in the hospital or not able to come to Delaware because he
had been injured.”); id. (“I don’t know how the capias and VOP, what the process was to have it
withdrawn, if it was at a hearing. I don’t recall the specifics of that. I recall only the general
nature of that. That we asked the Court to withdraw the capias and VOP because Gaines was not
able to comply because he’d been shot.”).
90
Id. at 919 (Super. Ct. Crim. Docket, Mar. 13, 2008).
91
Id. at 397-99 (Progress Report Disposition, Mar. 27, 2002). The lead prosecutor’s testimony
suggested that the idea that Gaines was “being supervised by the Attorney General’s Office” may
have been wrong. Id. at 1344 (“[W]e weren’t supervising anybody.”).
27
After the dismissal of charges, but before trial, the first prosecutor did not
inform Trial Counsel of the dismissal of the capias and VOP charges, and the
second prosecutor, who was unaware of the dismissal, incorrectly told Trial
Counsel that Gaines’ VOP was still pending, and would be held in abeyance until
after his trial.92 The prosecution also provided Trial Counsel with a summary of
Gaines’ prior criminal history, which listed Gaines’ VOP as “pending.”93
1. No Procedural Bar To Starling’s Capias/VOP Brady Claim
Superior Court Criminal Rule 61 generally bars claims that were not raised
on direct appeal. Specifically, Rule 61(i)(3) provides that “[a]ny ground for relief
that was not asserted in the proceedings leading to the judgment of conviction . . .
is thereafter barred, unless the movant shows (A) [c]ause for relief from the
procedural default and (B) [p]rejudice from violation of the movant’s rights.” 94
As it stood when Starling filed his claim, Rule 61(i)(5) exempts from this
procedural bar “a colorable claim that there was a miscarriage of justice because of
a constitutional violation that undermined the fundamental legality, reliability,
92
Id. at 1332-33.
93
Id. at 456-59 (A. Gaines’ Rapsheet, Apr. 15, 2002); id. at 1722-23. Gaines’ rapsheet was
generated on October 14, 2003 and provided to the defense some time on or shortly after that
date. Id. at 1723. The guilt phase of Starling’s trial started on October 15, 2003 and the jury
returned a guilty verdict on October 22, 2003.
94
Super. Ct. Crim. R. 61(i)(3).
28
integrity or fairness of the proceedings leading to the judgment of conviction.”95
“To invoke this exception, there must be both a claim of a constitutional violation,
and a showing that the claim is ‘colorable.’” 96 When considering a Brady claim,
which is a constitutional claim, “[a] colorable claim of a [Brady] violation falls
within this exception.” 97 “When the Brady rule is violated, postconviction relief
cannot be barred by Rule 61(i)(3) because a Brady violation undermines the
fairness of the proceeding leading to the judgment of conviction.” 98
Because Starling had alleged a colorable claim of a Brady violation, that
claim was not barred by Rule 61(i)(3) as it existed when the claim was filed.
2. The State Violated Brady By Representing To Trial Counsel That Gaines’
VOP And Capias Were Pending During Trial
In State v. Wright, we recently set forth the proper analysis for evaluating a
Brady claim:
Under Brady . . . , the State’s failure to disclose exculpatory and
impeachment evidence material to the case violates a defendant’s due
process rights. The reviewing court may also consider any adverse
effect from nondisclosure on the preparation or presentation of the
95
Super. Ct. Crim. R. 61(i)(5). Although Rule 61(i)(5) was amended on June 4, 2014, we must
apply the version that existed at the time Starling filed his Rule 61 motion. See Collins v. State,
2014 WL 2609107, at *2 (Del. June 9, 2014) (applying the version of Rule 61(e)(1) “in effect at
the time [the defendant] filed his first postconviction motion”); State v. Jones, 2013 WL
5372415, at *3 (Del. Sept. 24, 2013) (“[T]he recently amended Rule 61 ha[s] no effect after [the
defendant’s] initial Rule 61 petition.”).
96
Taylor v. State, 32 A.3d 374, 388 (Del. 2011) (quoting Super. Ct. Crim. R. 61(i)(5)).
97
State v. Wright, 67 A.3d 319, 324 (Del. 2013).
98
Jackson v. State, 770 A.2d 506, 515 (Del. 2001).
29
defendant’s case. There are three components of a Brady violation:
(1) evidence exists that is favorable to the accused, because it is either
exculpatory or impeaching; (2) that evidence is suppressed by the
State; and (3) its suppression prejudices the defendant. In order for
the State to discharge its responsibility under Brady, the prosecutor
must disclose all relevant information obtained by the police or others
in the Attorney General’s Office to the defense. That entails a duty on
the part of the individual prosecutor to learn of any favorable evidence
known to the others acting on the government’s behalf in the case,
including the police.99
For a Brady violation to be material such that it causes prejudice, the
defendant need not show that “the disclosure of the suppressed evidence would
have resulted in an acquittal.”100 The defendant must show, however, that the
suppressed evidence “creates a reasonable probability that, had the evidence been
disclosed to the defense, the result of the proceeding would have been different.”101
In other words, the suppression of evidence must “undermine[] confidence in the
outcome of the trial.” 102 We will not reverse a conviction based on a Brady
violation if there is “overwhelming evidence establish[ing a defendant’s] guilt.” 103
In Michael v. State, 104 we addressed a Brady violation in circumstances
similar to this case. Defendant John Michael faced charges of attempted murder.
The prosecutor was concurrently prosecuting the victim for driving under the
99
91 A.3d at 987-88 (quotations and citations omitted).
100
Id. at 988.
101
Id. (quotations omitted) (emphasis in original).
102
Id. (quotations omitted) (citing Kyles v. Whitley, 514 U.S. 419, 434 (1995)).
103
Jackson, 770 A.2d at 517.
104
529 A.2d 752 (Del. 1987).
30
influence of alcohol in an unrelated criminal prosecution, and allowed the victim to
plead guilty to the lesser offense of reckless driving. The prosecutor did not
inform the defense of the reduced charge against the victim. The State had not
reduced the charges in exchange for testimony at the defendant’s trial, and the
prosecutor denied any quid pro quo for the reduction of charges. 105
Even in the absence of any quid pro quo arrangement, this Court established
a mandatory disclosure rule, where the failure to disclose a reduction of related or
unrelated charges against a trial witness is a Brady violation:
Whenever the State reduces any pending charges (related or not) or
makes any arrangement with any State witness, disclosure is
mandatory. The State was required to disclose a reduction in [the
victim’s] traffic charges and failed to do so. 106
Our decision in Michael v. State leads us to the conclusion that a Brady
violation occurred here. The first prosecutor secured the dismissal of the capias
and VOP charges against Gaines before trial, and did not provide the information
to Trial Counsel. The second prosecutor, who was unaware of the dismissal,
mistakenly told Trial Counsel before trial that the charges remained pending. The
prosecutor who requested dismissal of the charges denied any quid pro quo for the
105
Id. at 757 n.10.
106
Id. at 756.
31
dismissal, but was one of the prosecutors in Starling’s trial. 107 The evidence would
also have been material to the defense, where Gaines was the main State’s witness
and no physical evidence linked Starling to the murders. 108 As this Court noted in
Michael v. State:
Evidence which the defense can use to impeach a prosecution witness
by showing bias or interest, as well as exculpatory evidence, falls
within the Brady rule. Such evidence is “evidence favorable to an
accused” so that, if disclosed and used effectively, it might make the
difference between conviction and acquittal. The jury’s estimate of
the truthfulness and reliability of a given witness may well be
determinative of guilt or innocence. Indeed, it is upon such subtle
factors as the possible interest of the witness in testifying falsely that a
defendant’s life or liberty may depend.109
The Superior Court ruled that the prosecution was not required to disclose
the dismissal of charges because Trial Counsel allegedly knew after reviewing
Gaines’ records that Gaines was on probation when Starling shot Gaines, and also
knew that Gaines’ probation had been discharged. The court’s ruling, however,
107
Starling, 2014 WL 4386127, at*6. Officer Garrick’s memo is clear that the DDOJ sought
dismissal of the capias and VOP charges: “After speaking with [the assistant attorney general],
she advised me that she spoke to Your Honor and requested that [Gaines’] VOP and Capias be
withdrawn.” App. to Opening Br. at 358-59 (Probation Progress Report).
108
The Superior Court recognized Gaines’ central role in this case:
Mr. Gaines’ role as a witness in this case is very important. His credibility is a
very significant issue in the case. The shooter in the barbershop cannot be
identified, as far as I know. There was no eyewitness identification of the shooter
in the barbershop or any other substance such as a fingerprint or DNA or anything
else linking—that I’m aware of—Mr. Starling to the barbershop, so that puts more
of a central role on Mr. Gaines.
App. to Opening Br. at 449.
109
Michael, 529 A.2d at 756 (quoting United States v. Bagley, 473 U.S. 667, 676 (1985)).
32
misapprehends Starling’s argument. Starling focuses on the State’s failure to
notify Trial Counsel of the withdrawal of the capias and VOP charges, not Gaines’
discharge from probation. Trial Counsel at some time may have seen a report of
the probation discharge, but there is no proof that Trial Counsel knew that the
capias and VOP charges had been dismissed against Gaines.110 Perhaps more
importantly, Trial Counsel was entitled to and did in fact rely on the prosecution’s
representation and the summary of charges provided to the defense just before trial.
The prosecution told Trial Counsel, and the rap sheet confirmed, that the VOP
charges were pending at the time of trial and would remain pending until after
trial.111 In fact, the State argued in closing that it had been completely forthcoming
about Gaines’ criminal history: “When Alfred Gaines . . . took the stand, did we
hide anything about him from you? Was he—did you learn all about his criminal
past?”112 The State also argued that Gaines motive for testifying arose from his
“decision to try and give some peace to a couple of families of murder victims and
110
The Superior Court found that “Trial Counsel . . . was aware of the discharge of the violation
of probation . . . .” Starling, 2014 WL 4386127, at *5. No evidence supports this finding. On
the contrary, Trial Counsel testified that he did not know that the State had asked to Superior
Court to withdraw Gaines’ VOP and capias. App. to Opening Br. at 1729; id. at 922 (“I knew
that Mr. Gaines was on probation and that he was being permitted to reside out of state pending
trial in Mr. Starling’s case.”). Neither the State nor Trial Counsel asked Gaines about any active
capiases or VOPs at trial.
111
See App. to Opening Br. at 1333; id. at 1725; id. at 468-69 (Trial Counsel’s Handwritten
Notes Showing VOP Pending).
112
Id. at 645 (Trial Tr., Oct. 22, 2003).
33
come forward with what he said. You saw Alfred Gaines testify. It is your
judgment on credibility that most matters.”113
The Superior Court also ruled that it was unlikely that Trial Counsel would
have used the information to impeach Gaines, and therefore Starling did not suffer
prejudice from the Brady violation. Specifically, the court found that Trial
Counsel “properly avoided making this presentation to the jury which would have
implicated Starling in another shooting.” 114 The court was referring to the shooting
in Chester, where Starling allegedly shot Gaines while Gaines was on probation.
Starling allegedly shot Gaines in retaliation for Gaines’ shooting of Starling’s
acquaintance in Wilmington the day before.115 According to the court, Trial
Counsel and the State had an agreement not to mention the Chester shooting at
trial. The court inferred from this agreement that raising the Chester shooting at
trial would have abrogated the agreement and opened the door to the State
questioning Gaines about the circumstances of the shooting, including testimony
from Gaines that Starling shot him. We are unconvinced that any of these reasons
would have prevented Trial Counsel from using the Brady material to impeach
Gaines at trial.
113
Id.
114
Starling, 2014 WL 4386127, at *5.
115
App. to Opening Br. at 445, 450 (Trial Tr., Oct. 10, 2003).
34
As an initial matter, the State and Trial Counsel did not have an agreement
not to mention the Chester shooting at trial. A Chester police detective testified at
trial that Gaines was shot in Chester. 116 Gaines also testified that after being shot
in Chester he decided to tell the police about the Wilmington shooting. 117 Instead,
counsel agreed that Gaines could not testify that Starling shot him in Chester. 118
The agreement would not have prevented Trial Counsel from impeaching Gaines
with the dismissal of the capias and the VOP charges.
Further, questioning Gaines about the VOP charge would not necessarily
have opened the door for the prosecution to question Gaines about the Chester
shooting. Both the State and Starling were at risk if either party opened the door to
the Chester shooting details. If the State asked to pursue the details of the Chester
shooting, Gaines, the State’s main witness whose credibility was at stake, would
also be questioned about the Wilmington shooting, where he allegedly shot
Starling’s acquaintance the day before. This standoff in all likelihood led to the
agreement between counsel. In any event, Trial Counsel was never in the position
to make a strategic call on the use of the evidence, because he was unaware of it.
116
App. to Opening Br. at 524-26 (Trial Test. of Officer Hampel, Oct. 16, 2003).
117
Id. at 537 (Trial Test. of A. Gaines, Oct. 16, 2003).
118
Id. at 528 (Trial Tr., Oct. 16, 2003).
35
We note that Trial Counsel testified that had he been aware of the Brady
information, he would have used the information to impeach Gaines at trial. 119
The judge at Starling’s trial was keenly focused on issues that would arise if
either the prosecution or the defense opened the door to the details of the Chester
and Wilmington shootings. The main trial could have turned into a “mini-trial” of
the Chester and Wilmington shootings.120 To prevent this, the trial judge had
options for allowing the impeachment to be used by Trial Counsel, while
permitting the State a fair opportunity to respond, without abrogating the
agreement between counsel. For example, the trial judge could have permitted
Trial Counsel to impeach Gaines using the dismissal of the capias and VOP
charge. Consistent with counsel’s agreement, the State would be able to respond
with what it contended was the reason the capias and VOP charges were
dismissed—not for any quid pro quo with Gaines but instead “because Gaines was
not able to comply because he’d been shot.” 121 All of this examination could be
done without referring to the shooter in either alleged shooting.
119
Id. at 1729.
120
Id. at 440-50 (Trial Tr., Oct. 10, 2003).
121
Id. at 1229.
36
E. The Cumulative Effect Of Ineffective Assistance Of Counsel And The
Brady Violation Undermines Our Confidence In The Verdict
Counsel’s ineffective performance under Strickland for failing to object to
Michael’s statement and for failing to effectively examine Moore, combined with
the State’s Brady violation, undermines our confidence in the verdict. The
touchstone of either test, Strickland or Brady, is the fairness of the trial.122 Where
there are multiple material errors in a trial, the Court must weigh their cumulative
effect and determine if, combined, they are “prejudicial to substantial rights [so] as
to jeopardize the fairness and integrity of the trial process.” 123 The relevant inquiry
is, after considering the errors, “whether we can be confident that the jury’s verdict
would have been the same.” 124 We find that the procedural errors in this case
resulted in an unfair trial.
Gaines was the State’s main witness, and his credibility was already at risk
due to his criminal record and the Wilmington shooting. Trial Counsel could have
used the dismissal of the capias and VOP charges to counter Gaines’ testimony that
it was a concern for the victims’ families that brought him to testify. As noted in
122
See Breakiron v. Horn, 642 F.3d 126 (3d Cir. 2011) (cumulative effect of Brady violation and
ineffective assistance of counsel deprived defendant of a fair trial).
123
Hoskins v. State, 102 A.3d 724, 735 (Del. 2014) (quoting Turner v. State, 5 A.3d 612, 615
(Del. 2010)); see also Wright, 91 A.3d at 993-94 (holding that cumulative effect of multiple
Brady violations undermined confidence in the fairness of the proceedings such that a new trial
was warranted).
124
Kyles v. Whitley, 514 U.S. 419, 453 (1995).
37
Michael v. State, impeachment evidence of this kind can make the difference
between conviction and acquittal. Counsel’s ineffectiveness also deprived Starling
of two major avenues of attack on the credibility of the State’s corroborating
witnesses. Substantial issues existed about the voluntariness of Michael’s
statement to police, and Trial Counsel would have risked nothing by objecting to
the statement and demanding a voluntariness hearing. Trial Counsel also forgot to
ask the eyewitness with perhaps the best view of the shooter about his review of
Starling’s photograph and statement that Starling did not look like the shooter.
The cumulative effect of these mistakes, unintentional as they may be, requires
reversal, and a remand for a new trial. Because we have found reversible error on
the foregoing grounds, we do not reach Starling’s other claims.
IV. CONCLUSION
Darnell Evans and Damon Gist, Jr. were the victims of a heinous and violent
crime. Starling stands accused of the murders and must face trial. Like all
citizens, he is entitled to a fair trial that adheres to procedural requirements with
effective representation. Because those procedural requirements were not met, and
counsel defending him was ineffective, we are compelled to reverse and remand
for a new trial and proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
38
The judgment of the Superior Court is reversed and this matter is remanded
for a new trial.
39
VAUGHN, Justice, concurring:
I agree that a Brady violation occurred, and I am satisfied that it warrants a
new trial. I write separately because I do not agree with the Court’s conclusions on
the Moore cross-examination or the Michael Starling statement.
On direct examination at trial, Moore stated that he, himself, was 5’11”, and
that the shooter was “about my height.” 125 When asked whether he was sure that
the shooter was neither taller nor shorter than him, he responded:
I mean, it happened so quick, so it was like, you know, I just
gave my guesstimate. He was either shorter or taller, but I
know he wasn’t taller than me. I know that for a fact. 126
On cross-examination, Moore estimated the shooter’s height at 5’11” or a
little shorter. He testified that his own weight was 175, and that the shooter had a
little smaller build than his.
Trial counsel then confronted Moore with the fact that he had told an
investigator that the shooter’s height was 6’1” or 6’2”. Moore admitted telling the
investigator that the shooter was 6’1” or 6’2”, but explained it this way:
Now that I’m looking at it, I remember saying it. Like I said, it
happened so quick, I mean, just basically threw it out there. 127
125
Appellant’s Op. Br. App. at A496.
126
Id.
127
Id. at A498.
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Thus, trial counsel elicited on cross-examination that Moore had given the
investigator an estimate of the shooter’s height which was substantially at variance
with Starling’s actual height. Moore also admitted that he had reported to the
investigator that the shooter weighed about 200 or 205 pounds. In his closing
argument, trial counsel argued these conflicts to the jury, and argued that 6’1” or
6’2” and 200 or 205 pounds better described Gaines than Starling.
On this record, Starling has failed to establish prejudice from trial counsel’s
failure to ask about the photos of the suspects. A question about the photos would
have informed the jury that Moore had said that neither photo looked like the
shooter, and that the shooter was taller than Starling. But counsel did put before
the jury the fact that Moore had said to an investigator that the shooter was 6’1” or
6’2” and 200 to 205 pounds. It made no difference. Nothing in the record
suggests that repeating it a second time in the context of the photos would have
made any difference. And there is nothing in the record to indicate how Moore
would have handled the question if he had been asked. When asked about his
statement that the shooter was 6’1” or 6’2”, he tried to minimize it, saying that he
had “just basically, threw it out there.” 128 Since Starling has failed to establish
prejudice, I need not consider whether trial counsel’s failure to ask about the
128
Id.
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photos fell below an objective standard of reasonableness. I do think it merits
mention, though, that here we have an instance of human error, the forgetting to
ask a question. In my opinion, when trial counsel’s cross-examination of Moore is
considered as a whole, the Court’s finding that his failure to ask about the photos
fell below an objective standard of reasonableness sets an unfortunate precedent.
Starling has also failed to establish prejudice with regard to Michael
Starling’s statement. Prejudice exists only if the statement is involuntary and thus
inadmissible. The place to make that showing is in this post-conviction
proceeding, where the Strickland analysis is taking place. In the Superior Court,
Starling’s claim of ineffectiveness regarding Michael Starling’s statement included
an assertion that the statement was involuntary. In its post-conviction opinion, the
Superior Court rejected Starling’s claim. The fact that he can make the same
assertion when he goes back to his new trial, with an unknown outcome, does not
establish prejudice under Strickland.
I express no opinion on the voluntariness or lack of voluntariness of Michael
Starling’s statement, as the issue may come back to us on a developed Superior
Court record if Starling is convicted at his new trial. I hope the Superior Court
judge hearing Starling’s case will not be influenced, even slightly, by this Court’s
statement that “serious doubt existed about the voluntariness of Michael’s
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statement.” I hope that the Superior Court judge will render her own, independent
judgment based upon her evaluation of the evidence.
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