IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE
DAMIAN THOMAS, §
§ No. 521, 2017
Defendant Below, §
Appellant, § Court Below—Superior Court
v. § of the State of Delaware
§
STATE OF DELAWARE, § Cr. ID No. N1505012411
§
Plaintiff Below, §
Appellee. §
Submitted: January 9, 2019
Decided: March 26, 2019
Before STRINE, Chief Justice; SEITZ and TRAYNOR, Justices.
ORDER
This 26th day of March, 2019, after careful consideration of the parties’ briefs
and the record on appeal, it appears to the Court that:
(1) Following a Superior Court jury trial, Damian Thomas was convicted
of first-degree murder, possession of a firearm during the commission of a felony,
and carrying a concealed deadly weapon. At a later bench trial,1 Thomas was also
found guilty of possession of a firearm by a person prohibited. The Superior Court
sentenced him to life in prison for the first-degree murder charge plus twenty years’
incarceration for the remaining offenses.
1
At the request of the parties, the Superior Court ordered a separate trial of the person-prohibited
count.
(2) The charges and convictions arose out of the following events. On a
mid-April evening in 2015, Etta Reid and her son, Deshannon Reid, were sitting on
the front porch of their home on West 27th Street in Wilmington. Shortly thereafter,
Damian Thomas joined the Reids, sitting in a porch chair beside Deshannon. After
a brief conversation, Thomas left and walked toward Market Street.
(3) About five minutes later, Thomas returned to the porch, sat in the same
chair next to Deshannon, and whispered in Deshannon’s ear. Deshannon stood up
and said, “Man, I told you I don’t have anything for you.” 2 Arguing, the two men
left the porch and walked two houses down towards Moore Street. It appeared to
Etta that the two men were arguing about drugs or money.
(4) Etta observed the two men walk towards the corner across Moore
Street. Because there was a large group of people talking on the corner, Etta could
not hear everything that was said. As Deshannon turned to cross the street opposite
Thomas, Etta overheard people exclaiming, “No, [m]an, no.”3 Thomas pulled out a
gun and shot Deshannon. After Deshannon fell, Thomas stood over him and shot
him twice more before he fled through the parking lot of Pete’s Pizzeria, located on
the corner of 27th and Market Streets. According to the chief investigating officer,
2
App. to Op. Br. A16 (“A__” hereafter).
3
A17.
2
Detective Thomas Curley of the Wilmington Police Department, the shooting
occurred at 9:44 p.m.
(5) Deshannon died three days later as a result of the gunshot wounds he
sustained that evening.
(6) Police recovered several surveillance videos recorded near the scene,
four of which are of particular relevance to Thomas’s appeal. Three of the videos
from Pete’s Pizzeria depict arguably relevant events: (i) an individual in dark
clothing walking along the north side sidewalk on 27th Street at 9:33 p.m., heading
westbound from Market Street toward the scene of the shooting; (ii) an individual—
also in dark clothing—walking on the north side sidewalk with two other individuals
coming through the parking lot at 9:44 p.m., also heading in the direction of the
crime scene; and (iii) an individual who was in front of the pizzeria at 9:44 p.m. and
“react[ed]” as if he was “startled” as the incident occurred. 4
(7) The fourth video from Crestview Apartments—where Thomas’s
girlfriend lived—shows Thomas entering the apartment building at 9:36 p.m. and
signing in with the security guard. He then walked past the elevator doors and
entered his girlfriend’s apartment. He left her room after about thirty seconds,
walked past the elevator doors and the security guard, and left the building at 9:38
4
A40; see also Trial Tr. 86 (Sept. 13, 2017).
3
p.m. At trial, Thomas did not contest that he arrived at and departed from Crestview
Apartments in this manner and at these times.5
(8) Approximately six minutes after Thomas left Crestview Apartments,
police received a report of shots fired.
(9) Another Wilmington police officer, Detective Puit, testified that the
distance between the Crestview Apartments and the crime scene was approximately
350 feet. Detective Puit walked the route at what he considered to be a normal pace,
and it took him approximately a minute and a half.
(10) In an effort to corroborate Etta Reid’s testimony that Thomas left her
porch after a short visit and conversation, the State—over Thomas’s objection—
asked Detective Curley whether, in his opinion, the persons seen in dark clothing in
two of the pizzeria videos was Thomas. Detective Curley opined that the person in
one of the video clips, who was dressed in a dark jacket, blue jeans, and tan boots—
just as Thomas was dressed in the Crestview video—was in fact Thomas. And when
the State asked about the person in one of the other pizzeria video clips, 6 Detective
5
The State also introduced the Crestview sign-in logs from the Crestview Apartments lobby, which
recorded that Thomas signed in at 9:36 p.m. and signed out at 9:38 p.m.
6
We note that in certain instances it is difficult to discern which trial exhibits and video clips are
the subject of certain witness’s testimony from the record before us. For instance, when defense
counsel was cross-examining Detective Puit about the individual who appeared to “react to the
incident” at 9:44 p.m., the record does not identify the exhibit under discussion, although we might
infer that it is State’s Exhibit 35. Similarly, in the testimony at the heart of this appeal—Detective
Curley’s opinion that one individual is Thomas and another is not—the record does not indicate
which portion of Exhibit 35 (the 9:33, the 9:40, or the 9:44 clip) is relevant for each opinion. While
4
Curley noted that he was wearing “dark or black pants, and . . . a knit hat or his hair’s
a little bit longer on top, but definitely the pants are not blue jeans.” 7 Detective
Curley then opined that this person was not Thomas.
(11) In response to Thomas’s objection to Detective Curley’s identification
testimony, the prosecutor downplayed the materiality of Curley’s opinion.
Nevertheless, in closing argument, the State highlighted the video evidence in
service of its theory that Thomas used his brief absence from Etta Reid’s porch to
retrieve a gun from his girlfriend’s apartment.
(12) On appeal, Thomas argues that the Superior Court abused its discretion
by allowing Detective Curley to offer his lay opinion identifying Thomas as the
person depicted in one of the pizzeria surveillance videos. Additionally, Thomas
argues that the State did not present sufficient evidence to establish that he concealed
a deadly weapon from the ordinary sight of another person.
(13) We review the Superior Court’s evidentiary rulings for abuse of
discretion. “A decision to admit testimony as relevant is within the sound discretion
of the trial judge and will not be reversed absent a clear abuse of that discretion.” 8
An abuse of discretion occurs when the trial judge “has exceeded the bounds of
this deficiency impairs our ability to provide a coherent statement of this case’s factual
background, it does not affect our legal analysis and conclusion.
7
A52.
8
Stickel v. State, 975 A.2d 780, 782 (Del. 2009).
5
reason in view of the circumstances or so ignored recognized rules of law or practice
so as to produce injustice.”9
(14) Under Delaware Rule of Evidence 701, if a witness is not testifying as
an expert, testimony in the form of an opinion is limited to one that is (i) rationally
based on the witness’s perception, (ii) helpful to clearly understanding the witness’s
testimony or to determining a fact in issue, and (iii) is not based on scientific,
technical, or other specialized knowledge within the scope of Rule 702. 10 Rule 701
“permits a lay witness to testify about his own impressions when they are based on
personal observation.” 11 “The ultimate question of the identity . . . remains one for
the jury to decide, and lay opinion testimony will not be helpful to the jury ‘when
the jury can readily draw the necessary inferences and conclusions without the aid
of the opinion.’”12
(15) Thomas argues that the detective’s opinion was not based on his own
perceptions but rather on his review of the same videos and evidence available to the
jury. Admission of this opinion, according to Thomas, led to a violation of his right
to a fair trial “as it invaded the province of the jury and implicitly bolstered the
credibility of the State’s discredited witnesses.”13
9
Id.
10
D.R.E. 701.
11
Cooke v. State, 97 A.3d 513, 547 (Del. 2014).
12
Id.
13
Op. Br. 9.
6
(16) The State counters that the challenged testimony was based on
Detective Curley’s perception and helpful to the jury because he reviewed the video
several times and had also met Thomas prior to trial.
(17) We have serious reservations about the admission of this type of
identification testimony. It is unclear to us how the testimony of a police officer—
or any other witness without a particular expertise in comparing a videographic
representation of a person with a suspect or defendant—would be helpful to the
factfinder in resolving an identification issue. And here, neither the Superior Court
in its evidentiary ruling nor the State in its briefing offered a satisfactory answer to
that question.14 Nevertheless, under the particular facts of this case, we stop short
of finding an abuse of discretion in the Superior Court’s evidentiary ruling.
(18) First, it was the defense that initially elicited testimony touching upon
the investigating officers’ ability to identify individuals depicted in the different
videos retrieved from the pizzeria. Particularly, defense counsel asked Detective
Puit questions that were designed to show that a viewer of three of the relevant video
clips— the clips at 9:33 and 9:40 showing the person in dark clothing walking
toward the crime scene and the 9:44 clip showing a person reacting to the shooting—
14
It also seems to us that condoning identification testimony of this sort could have untoward
consequences. If the prosecution is permitted to sponsor such testimony, then it would only be
fair to allow defendants to do the same. We envision a train of “identification” witnesses offering
personal opinions untethered to any expertise whenever a trial involves the consideration of
videographic, photographic, or other images that are not crystal clear.
7
might conclude that the persons appearing on each was the same individual and,
presumably, not Thomas. This line of questioning called for the detective’s opinion
regarding the identity, though not the name, of the individuals appearing in the video
clips. It therefore would not have been outside the bounds of reason for the trial
judge to conclude that this line of questioning opened the door for the introduction
of Curley’s opinion that the 9:33 and 9:40 clips depicted two different subjects and
that one of them was Thomas.15
(19) Second, we are not persuaded that Detective Curley’s testimony
constituted improper vouching for the other prosecution witnesses’ credibility as
Thomas argues. That the testimony, if accepted, supported the prosecution’s theory
of what Thomas did after he first left Etta Reid’s porch, i.e., he went to his
girlfriend’s nearby apartment and retrieved a gun, does not transform it into
improper vouching, which typically “occurs when the prosecutor implies personal
superior knowledge beyond what is logically inferred from the evidence at trial.” 16
Here, Detective Curley’s opinion was explicitly linked to evidence that the jury
15
Smith v. State, 913 A.2d 1197, 1239 (Del. 2006) (“Generally, when a party opens up a subject,
he cannot object if the opposing party introduces evidence on the same subject. This is true even
though the evidence developed on cross-examination would have been inadmissible if the cross-
examiner had offered it directly into evidence. The rule operates to prevent a defendant from
successfully excluding inadmissible prosecution evidence and then selectively introducing pieces
of this evidence for his own advantage. Yet, the doctrine of opening the door is limited to testimony
that might explain or contradict the testimony offered by the opposing party on direct examination;
it cannot be ‘subverted into a rule for injection of prejudice.’”) (quoting Tucker v. State, 515 A.2d
398, 1986 WL 17446 (Del. 1986) (Table)).
16
Kirkley v. State, 41 A.3d 372, 377 (Del. 2012).
8
viewed during the trial—the video clips. Moreover, he did not offer any opinions
on the credibility of other prosecution witnesses. Whatever one might say about the
helpfulness of Detective Curley’s lay opinion that Thomas was the person depicted
on one of the videos he watched, that opinion was not vouching as we have used that
term.
(20) But even if the detective’s opinion should not have come in, the
admission of his testimony was harmless and therefore does not warrant reversal.
“An error in admitting evidence may be deemed to be ‘harmless’ when ‘the evidence
exclusive of the improperly admitted evidence is sufficient to sustain a
conviction.’”17
(21) The evidence against Thomas was considerable and, even without
Detective Curley’s opinion testimony, more than sufficient to support Thomas’s
conviction. Two other eyewitnesses—Etta Reid and Leantaye Cassidy—testified
that they saw Thomas shoot Deshannon Reid before he fled through the parking lot. 18
Moreover, Thomas’s former cellmate, testified that Thomas told him that he
retrieved a gun and shot Deshannon following a drug-related argument. Lastly, the
jury had the ability to review on its own the content of the surveillance videos and
17
Cooke, 97 A.3d at 547.
18
A third purported eyewitness was apparently discredited when the defense introduced evidence
that she was incarcerated on the night of the murder. The State countered that the evidence
suggested that the witness could have been on work release at the relevant time, but the Superior
Court, in the absence of evidence supporting this contention, precluded the State from arguing that
point to the jury.
9
determine whether it was Thomas on the tapes. This evidence—coupled with the
facts that Thomas fled from Delaware and his girlfriend of seventeen years,
remained at large for a year, and admitted that he was wanted for murder in Delaware
when police apprehended him in New Jersey in 2016—is sufficient to sustain
Thomas’s conviction. Thus, even if the Superior Court erred in admitting the
detective’s opinion, such error was harmless and does not warrant reversal.
(22) Finally, Thomas contends that the State failed to present sufficient
evidence that Thomas concealed a gun from the ordinary sight of another person
because “none of the videos presented . . . provided any hint that there may be a gun
hidden on Thomas”19 and that “[t]he witnesses . . . did not see a gun but saw/heard
shots.”20
(23) When an appellant has unsuccessfully moved for a judgment of
acquittal in the trial court, we review a claim of insufficient evidence de novo to
determine whether a rational trier of fact, viewing the evidence in the light most
favorable to the State, could find the defendant guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. 21
But Thomas did not move for a judgment of acquittal in this case. Absent such a
motion, the claim is waived. We may excuse waiver if we find that the trial court
19
Op. Br. 23.
20
Reply Br. 7.
21
Neal v. State, 3 A.3d 222, 223 (Del. 2010).
10
committed plain error.22 Plain error is limited to material defects which are apparent
on the face of the record; which are basic, serious and fundamental in their character,
and which clearly deprive an accused of a substantial right, or which clearly show
manifest injustice.”23 We find no such error.
(24) “A conviction under Section 1442 requires proof of concealment.” 24
Section 1442 provides that “a person is guilty of [carrying a concealed deadly
weapon] when the person carries concealed a deadly weapon upon or about the
person without a license to do so. . . .”25 “The key to whether a concealed deadly
weapon may be deemed to be ‘about’ the person should be determined by
considering the immediate availability and accessibility of the weapon to the
person.”26 This Court has adopted the majority rule requiring that “a concealed
weapon be ‘hidden from the ordinary sight of another person . . . [meaning] the
casual and ordinary observation of another in the normal associations of life.’” 27 “A
weapon may be concealed even though easily discoverable through routine police
investigative techniques.”28
22
Monroe v. State, 652 A.2d 560, 563 (Del. 1995).
23
Wainwright v. State, 504 A.2d 1096, 1100 (Del. 1986).
24
Robertson v. State, 704 A.2d 267, 268 (Del. 1997).
25
Gallman v. State, 14 A.3d 502, 504 (Del. 2011) (quoting 11 Del. C. § 1442).
26
Id.
27
Robertson, 704 A.2d at 268.
28
Id.
11
(25) The State may prove its case with direct or circumstantial evidence. 29
Here, the circumstantial evidence suggests that Thomas retrieved a gun from his
girlfriend’s apartment. Given that no gun was visible on the video depicting Thomas
leaving the apartment, it can be fairly inferred that he had concealed the gun. This
inference is buttressed by Cassidy’s testimony that she saw Thomas “reach for his
waistband, reach his arm out . . . and shoot DeShannon.”30 Cassidy further stated
that she knew Thomas shot DeShannon Reid because she “heard the gun [go] off”
and saw “the fire come out.”31 Viewing this testimony in the light most favorable to
the State, a reasonable jury could find beyond a reasonable doubt that the gun had
been concealed from the ordinary sight of another person before Thomas shot
Deshannon. This would suffice to defeat Thomas’s insufficient evidence claim even
had he not waived it. A fortiori, the Superior Court’s failure to enter a judgment of
acquittal sua sponte was not plainly erroneous.
NOW, THEREFORE, IT IS HEREBY ORDERED that the judgment of the
Superior Court is AFFIRMED.
BY THE COURT:
/s/ Gary F. Traynor
Justice
29
Davis v. State, 706 A.2d 523, 525 (Del. 1998).
30
A28.
31
Id.
12