IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE
STATE OF DELAWARE,
MICHAEL JACKSON,
Cr. A. NO. 1608013519
Defendant.
Date Decided: June 19, 2017
OPINION
Timothy Maguire, Esquire, Deputy Attorney General, Department Of Justice,
Wilmington, Delaware, Attorney for the State Of Delaware.
Dean C. DelCollo, Esquire, Assistant Public Defender, Wilmington, Delaware,
Attorney for Defendant Michael Jackson.
SCOTT, J.
Before the Court is Defendant Michael Jackson’s (“Defendant”) Motion for
Sanctions Pursuant to Deberrjy v. State and Lolly v. State. The following
summarizes the Court’s holding and analysis on Defendant’s Motion.
Background
On August l7, 2016, Wilmington Police Department officer Matthew
Rosaio (“Detective Rosaio”) and SPO Scioli were in the area of the 1200 block of
E. 26th Street, approaching the intersection of E. 26th Street and Northeast
Boulevard. As Detective Rosaio approached the intersection, his lane of traffic
had a green light. As he approached the intersection, he observed a green Mercury
Marquis, traveling southbound on the 2600 block of Northeast Boulevard,
disregard the red light. The vehicle proceeded through the intersection and
obstructed the Westbound flow of traffic. Detective Rosaio applied his brakes to
avoid colliding with the green Mercury Marquis. Through the open passenger
Window, Detective Rosaio observed a black male With a beard, Wearing a baseball
cap and a black t-shirt. Detective Rosaio also observed a female in the front
passenger seat. The driver reversed his vehicle out of the intersection Detective
Rosaio proceeded through the intersection and pulled to the curb on E. 26th Street.
Detective Rosaio observed the vehicle turn Westbound on E. 26th Street
approximately 15 seconds later, and drive past the officers The vehicle then turned
northbound onto N. Thatcher Street, and subsequently traveled Westbound on E.
28th Street. Detective Rosaio activated all emergency equipment to attempt a
vehicle stop for the driver’s red light violation. Detective Rosaio observed the
vehicle pull over, but before stopping, accelerated at a high rate of speed
westbound on E. 28th Street. Detective Rosaio deactivated his lights due to the
amount of vehicle and pedestrian traffic in the area, and did not pursue the vehicle.
Detective Rosaio relayed the vehicle information and direction of travel to
Operation Safe Streets members in the area. Detective Rosaio observed the vehicle
travel westbound on E. 28th Street, southbound on N. Jessup Street, and then turn
westbound on E. 27th Street against the flow of traffic, and then turn southbound on
Lamotte Street. The vehicle then turned westbound on 26th Street and continued
across N. Market Street. The vehicle was out of the officer’s sight for
approximately 15 seconds. After Detective Rosaio crossed N. Market Street and
continued westbound on W. 26th Street, he noticed the vehicle stopped in the 200
block of W. 26th Street at the intersection of N. Washington Street. The front
passenger door of the vehicle was open, and the vehicle was running with the keys
in the ignition.
As Detective Rosaio approached the vehicle, he observed, in plain view, a
firearm with a strap on the front driver side floorboard.l Detective Rosaio used
1 The firearm was a black Masterpiece Arms, Tech 9mm, serial #B322l. A DELJIS search
revealed the serial number was negative
latex gloves to remove the magazine and one live round of ammunition.2 In the
same area as the firearm was a black Samsung cell phone, Model SM-G550TI,
FCC ID: A3LSMG550T. Detective Rosaio avers that he picked up the cell phone
and observed the driver’s face on the front screen of the phone. Detective Rosaio
found a pill bottle with 28 pills of alprazolam tucked between the seat cushion, and
a subpoena in the front passenger seat pocket in the name of Shonda L. Darby of
114 W. 38th Street, Wilmington, DE 19802. Detective Rosaio transported the
vehicle to Wilmington Police Department and the evidence was photographed and
collected. Detective Rosaio learned that the owner of the vehicle, Thomas Helm,
called Wilmington Police Department stating that his son, Defendant Michael
Jackson, told him to call police and report the vehicle stolen. Mr. Thomas told the
police that Defendant was last seen using the vehicle several hours prior, and that
Defendant uses the car to pick up his girlfriend named Shonda. Detective Rosaio
retrieved a DELJIS photo of Defendant and confirmed that Defenadnt was the
individual he saw driving the green Mercury Marquis. Eventually the firearm and
cell phone were both swabbed for DNA. Two swabs were collected from each.
The DNA swabs were sent to BODE Laboratory (“BODE”) for DNA comparison.
Detective Rosaio gave BODE permission to consume the entire sample, if
2 Detective Rosaio later discovered that the firearm was loaded with 31 live rounds of PPU 9M
Luger rounds in the magazine, and one in the chamber.
necessary, by checking this option on the intake sheet.3 Subsequently Defendant’s
DNA was found on both the firearm handle and the magazine. Defendant was
arrested by the New Castle County Police Department.
Parties’ Contentions
Defendant filed this Motion on May 4, 2017. Defendant contends that
because he was not afforded the right to test the DNA samples using his own
expert, or given the opportunity to have his own expert present during DNA testing
barring that it was necessary to consume the entire sample, he is entitled to a Lolly
instruction at trial. Specifically, Defendant claims that this procedure used by
BODE Lab differs from the typical procedure used by the State lab, where one
swab is left for Defense testing or notice is given to the Defense when testing
requires consumption of the entire sample, Defense argues that the facts of this
case meet all three prongs of the Deberry test, and the Court should give a Lolly
“missing evidence” instruction to the jury. On the other hand, the State argues that
the “issue of full consumption appears to be one of first impression in Delaware,”
and the Defendant’s claims do not meet the Deberry test. The State argues that the
Lolly/Deberry analysis focuses on the lost and/or non-preservation of evidence,
and that the evidence Was not lost nor destroyed. Further, the State contends that
3 The State admits in its Response that Detective Rosaio was the one to check this “consume all”
option on the intake sheet. Defense states that Detective Rosaio instructed BODE to use both
DNA swabs during testing and to not give Defense notice that this was going to occur.
Regardless of the recitation of facts, it is undisputed that Defense did not have notice that the
testing would consume entire sample, and the testing did in fact consume the entire sample.
Defendant has not alleged bad faith and/or negligence on the part of the State _ a
factor to consider under a Deberry analysis _ because it was BODE’s policy to
consume the entire sample of “Touch DNA,” With permission, in order to obtain
results with the highest likelihood of success.
Discussion
Generally, the State has a duty to disclose exculpatory evidence to a
defendant in a criminal case.4 This Court’s rules also provide that the State, upon
request, disclose certain evidence to a defendant5 Under both Brady and Superior
Court Rule 16, the Supreme Court determined in Deberry,6 that the “State’s duty
to disclose evidence . . . includes a duty to preserve it.”7 In the seminal case Lolly
v. State,‘? Delaware extended this duty “to mandate that the State ‘ gather evidence
ab initio”’,9 and “[w]here evidence is not case dispositive, a consequence for the
State’s failure to collect or preserve material evidence is a Lolly instruction,
entitling the defendant to the inference that such evidence would have been
4 See Braa'y v. Marylana’, 373 U.S. 83 (1963); see also State v. Reyes, 155 A.3d 331, 354 (Del.
2017)(“A defendant seeking to establish a Brady violation must show (1) that the evidence at
issue must be favorable to the accused, either because it is exculpatory, or because it is
impeaching, (2) that the evidence must have been suppressed by the State, either willfully or
inadvertently, and (3) prejudice must have ensued.”)(citing Starling v. State, 882 A.2d 747, 756
(Del. 2005)).
5 See Super. Ct. Crim. R. 16.
6Deber,y v. szaze, 457 A.2d 744 (Dei. 1983).
7 Bazley v. Sza¢e, 521 A.zd 1069, 1090 (Del. 1987)(citing Debewy, 457 A.2d 744); see also
Baynum v. State, 133 A.3d 963, 967 (Del. 2016)(“In Deberry this Court imposed a duty upon the
State to preserve evidence which is material to a defendant’s guilt or innocence.”).
8 611 A.zd 956 (Del. 1992).
9 Baynum, 133 A.3d at 967 (citing Johnson v. State, 27 A.3d 541, 545 (Del. 2001)).
exculpatory.”lo Essentially, this “missing evidence instruction” informs the jury
“in a case where the State failed to collect or preserve evidence which is material
to the defense, to assume that the missing evidence would have tended to prove the
defendant not guilty.”l] The State’s duty to preserve evidence is “derived from the
Delaware Constitution, article l, section 7, on a basis independent of and
alternative to the due process provisions of the Fourteenth Amendment.”12
Furthermore, “fundamental fairness, as an element of due process, requires the
State’s failure to preserve evidence that could be favorable to the defendant ‘[to] be
evaluated in the context of the entire record’.”]3 The Court applies following three
prong analysis proffered in Deberry:
1. Would the requested material, if extant in the possession of the
State at the time of the defense request have been subject to
disclosure under Superior Court Criminal Rule 16 or Brady v.
Maryland?
2. If so, did the government have a duty to preserve the material?
3. If there was a duty to preserve was the duty breached, and what
consequences should flow from the breach?14
If the Court determines the State breached its duty to preserve evidence the Court
examines the following factors:
10 Id. (citing Johnson, 27 A.3d at 548-549); see also Lolly, 611 A.2d at 960.
ll Baynum, 133 A.3d at 967 (citing McNaz`r v. State, 990 A.2d 397, 400 n.l (Del. 2010)).
12 Sza¢e v. Bazley, 2016 WL 6941256, ar *2 (1)61. super. Nov. 2, 2015)(6ning hammond v. sze,
569 A.2d 81, 85 (Del. 1989)).
13 Hammond, 569 A.2d at 87. “The obligation to preserve evidence is rooted in the due process
provisions of the fourteenth amendment to the United States Constitution and the Delaware
Constitution, article I, section 7. The duty of preservation extends not only to the Attorney
General’s office, but all investigative agencies, local, county, and state.” Deberry, 457 A.2d at
752-53.
“‘ See Debewy, 457 A.zd 744(1)@1. 1983); Baynum, 133 A.3d at 968.
»._a
. The degree of negligence or bad faith involved;
2. The importance of the missing evidence considering the probative
value and reliability of secondary or substitute evidence that
remains available; and
3. The sufficiency of the other evidence produced at the trial to
sustain the conviction.15
A. The DNA Samples Were (1) Subiect to Disclosure Under Criminal Rule
16; and (2) the State Had a Dutv to Preserve the Samples.
Under Deberry, the Court must first determine whether the swabs from the cell
phone and the firearm that Detective Rosaio found in the green Mercury Marquis
would be subject to disclosure under Braa’y or Superior Court Criminal Rule 16.
At the onset, the State argues that this case is an issue of first impression in
Delaware. That is, that a “total consumption’l issue under Deberry has never been
before this Court. However, in 1990, this Court in State v. Gillis encountered a
similar scenario. In Gillis, police seized the defendant’s vehicle, pursuant to a
search warrant16 The search resulted in the discovery of a blood stain on the
interior crevice of the passenger door handle or arm rest.17 The blood sample was
turned over the F.B.I., and the F.B.I consumed the entire sample during the
8
analysis.l Defense received a copy of the serology report, but police did not take
any photos of the blood stain in the car before sending the sample out to the
15 Baynum, 133 A.3d at 968 (citing Hendric/¢s v_ S¢aze, 871 A.2<1 1118, 1124).
16 stale v. Gzllzs, 1990 WL 35454, ar *1 (Dei. super. Mar. 19, 1990).
11 Id.
111 1a
F.B.I.19 In applying the Deberry analysis, the Gillz`s court determined that because
the blood sample was “no longer available for examination or testing, a
determination of whether it would have been discoverable under Braa'y would be
an artificial exercise.”20 Similarly, this Court finds that a Braa'y analysis is moot,
because the DNA is no longer available for independent Defense testing. The
evidence would have been subject to disclosure under Criminal Rule 16. Under
Superior Court Criminal Rule 16(a)(1)(C), a defendant may inspect “tangible
objects” in the State’s possession, custody, or control, that is “material to the
preparation of the defendant’s defense or are intended for use by the state as
evidence in chief at the trial, or were obtained from or belong to the defendant.”Z'
Here, the examination of the DNA evidence taken from the firearm and the cell
phone are material to the preparation of Defendant’s defense because it relates to
elements of the crimes charged, and material factual issues in the case.
The second prong of Deberry questions whether the State had a duty to preserve
the evidence. lt seems that under Hammona’, Lolly, and Deberry, the State had a
duty to preserve this DNA evidence. The State has a general duty to preserve, and
this court held that the State had a duty to preserve blood evidence in Gillis. In
Gz'llis, the court found that the State had a duty to preserve a blood sample, where
19
1a
211 Id. (oitations omirtod); soo ozso Humor v. szozo, 55 A.3d 360, 368 (Dol. 2012)(staring that
when the evidence is no longer available, “a discussion of Braa'y is a fruitless exercise.”).
21 super. Cr. Crim. R. 16(3)(1)(€).
the F.B.I’s blood test consumed the entire blood sample from the crime scene, and
the officer’s failed the take photographs of the blood evidence at the scene of the
crime.22 The court noted that it was
unclear from the facts whether the gathered blood evidence was
inevitably and, therefore, necessarily destroyed by the F.B.I
serologist’s testing. If such destruction was not inevitably necessary,
the State, in effecting its duty to preserve, may be required to contact
the F.B.I to assure a portion of the submitted sample will be retained
for examination through discovery by any Subsequent defendant to
criminal charges or to provide for photographic records of test results
which may be subject to independent interpretation23
The Gillis court emphasized that:
lf destruction of the entire blood sample was not necessary for testing
purposes, then the State, in order to meet its duty of presenting the
evidence, could have preserved the remaining blood sample for
defendant’s independent test purposes By not doing so, the State risks
an attack on admissibility of the evidence as the only means by Which
the Court can enforce defendant’s due process rights.24
It is important to note that this is not a case where the State collected evidence, but
decided against testing. The Delaware Supreme Court has unequivocally held that
the “[t]esting of physical evidence seized by the police is not required.”25
Defendant’s case differs because he did not have the opportunity to test the DNA
22 Szozo v. Gillis, 1990 WL 35454, ar *2-3.
23 Id.
24 1a
25 Soo an”in v. Szoio, 131 A.3d 295, 308 (Dei. 2015)(Dofondani’s motion for a Lolly instruction
properly denied for State’S “failure to conduct DNA testing of the seized gun”); Anderson v.
State, 1999 WL 504332, at *3 (Del. Super. Mar. 18, 1999)(State’s duty to preserve evidence
“does not require any specific testing on that physical evidence”).
collected at the scene of the crime.26 Detective Rosaio, either by mistake or by
intention, gave permission to BODE to consume the entire DNA sample. F rom the
facts before the Court, there is no evidence that consumption of the entire sample
was necessary. Rather, as the State claims “Rosaio checked on the intake sheet
that BODE was given permission to consume the entire sample should it be
necessary.” Later in its Response, the State claims that it “submitted the sample
and BODE fully consumed the sample. BODE consumed the sample because their
policy, concerning Touch DNA, is to fully consume, with permission, for the
highest likelihood of success in completing a comparison.”27 Defendant’s Motion
states that the normal procedure used by the State lab follows that one swab is
“always left for the defense testing” or in the case where all of the DNA sample
has to be used, “notice would go to the defense so they could be present with their
own expert at the time of testing.” The Court is not persuaded by the State’s
argument that this is not a case about lost or destroyed evidence. Although the
results of the DNA analysis exist, the evidence Subject to the motion, the DNA
evidence from the firearm and the cell phone, were fully consumed by BODE
Lab’s test. ln light of the discussion above, the Court finds that the State had a
26 soo oonzro, State v. Rn]j”in, 131 A.3d 295, 308 (Dol. 2015)(“T1io stoto’s affirmative duty ends
with the collection and preservation of evidence. [Defendant] could have requested pretrial DNA
testing of the seized handgun, but he did not do so); Ana'erson v. State, 1999 WL 504332, at *3
(Del. Super. Mar. 18, 1999)(“lf [defendant] felt that the RFLP testing was inadequate, he could
have conducted any other tests that he wanted on the items seized at the time of arrest.”).
27 State’s Response, at 5. (emphasis added by the Court).
duty to preserve the DNA evidence taken from the cell phone and firearm found in
the vehicle.
B. If there was a duty to preserve, was the duty breached, and what
consequences should flow from the loss?
The “final step in a Deberry evaluation requires a three-part analysis to
determine the consequences that should flow from a breach of the duty” to
preserve evidence.28 In the proper situation, “[w]here missing evidence is not case
dispositive, a consequence for the State’s failure to collect or preserve material
evidence is a Lolly instruction, entitling the defendant to the inference that such
evidence would have been exculpatory.”29 The three factors the Court must
analyze under the third Deberry prong are (1) the degree of negligence or bad faith
involved; (2) the importance of the missing evidence considering the probative
value and reliability of secondary substitute evidence that remains available; and
(3) the sufficiency of the other evidence produced at trial to sustain the conviction.
The Delaware Supreme Court has held that “fundamental faimess, as an element of
due process, requires the State’s failure to preserve evidence that could be
favorable to defendant ‘[to] be evaluated in the context of the entire record’.”30 The
Court’s decision on whether consequences, i.e. Defendant’s request for a Lolly
28 Johnson v. Stoto, 27 A.3d 541, 547 (Doi 2011).
22 Boynnm v. Stoto, 133 A.3d 963, 967 (Dol. 2016)(oitations omittod).
20 Hnntor v. Stoto, 55 A.3d 360, 370 (Doi. 2012)(oiting Hominond v. Stote, 569 A.2d 81, 87 (Dol.
1989)).
instruction, should flow from the State’s failure to preserve the DNA swabs, will
be assessed after the close of evidence at trial.31 Therefore, the Court’s decision on
Defendant’s request for a Lolly instruction is reserved and the Opinion will be
supplemented
IT IS SO ORDERED.
-%///¢j%
The Honorable Cafvin L. Scott, Jr.
21 Soo e.g. State v. Cothoort, 2001 wL 1482867 at *6 (Dei. supor. May 25, 2001)(“At the
conclusion of the evidence, if the Court determines that the defense has been impaired by the
absence of the intoxilizer card, or if the other evidence at trial is insufficient to sustain a
conviction, the Court will then consider giving an instruction to the jury consistent with Lolly
and Deberry.”); State v. Benson, 2017 WL 2378007 (Del. Super. May 31, 2017)(“The decision
as to what consequences, if any, should flow from the destruction of [the evidence] must await
the evidence at trial.”).