IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF
DELAWARE
CHRISTOPHER DESMOND )
)
Plaintiff, )
) LD. No.: 91009844DI
V. )
)
STATE OF DELAWWARE, )
)
Defendant. )
ORDER
On this Jr sax ok February, 2021, the Court has considered Defendant
Christopher Desmond’s Motion for Reconsideration of its December 21, 2020
Order in his case and related case law. It appears to the Court that:
1. Defendant was arrested in 1991 by Delaware State Police for
allegedly committing a series of robberies in and around New Castle
County, Delaware. After a full trial, Defendant was convicted of ten
counts of Robbery First Degree, ten counts of Possession of a Deadly
Weapon During Commission of a Felony, three counts of Possession
of a Deadly Weapon by a Prohibited Person, three counts of Felony
Theft, two counts of Second Degree Conspiracy, and one count of
Third Degree Escape. In January of 1993, Defendant was sentenced
to 78 years of Level V incarceration for these convictions.
2. Defendant’s direct appeal to the Supreme Court of Delaware was
denied on November 16, 1994.' Defendant has also filed a large body
of appeals in the Superior Court, the Supreme Court of Delaware, the
United States District Court for the District of Delaware, the Third
Circuit Court of Appeals, and the United States Supreme Court. All
of these additional appeals as well as all related motions and petitions
by Defendant have been unsuccessful at every level. Most recently,
the Superior Court denied Defendant’s fifteenth Motion for
Postconviction Relief under Delaware Rule of Criminal Procedure 61
on December 21, 2020. This Court has previously noted that this
Defendant has displayed “a pattern of reasserting past claims by
couching the claims in slightly different language in an attempt to
preserve the appearance that the claim has not been previously
adjudicated and is not procedurally barred by Rule 61.””
3. Defendant has now submitted a self-styled Motion for
Reconsideration of the Superior Court’s denial of his fifteenth motion
1 Desmond v. State, 654 A.2d 821 (Del. 1994).
2 State v. Desmond, 2011 WL 91984, at *3 (Del. Super. 2011)(internal citations omitted.)
for postconviction relief on December 21, 2020 (“Motion to
Reconsider”). For the following reasons, Defendant’s Motion to
Reconsider will be DENIED.
4. Defendant’s Motion to Reconsider asks this Court to reverse its
December 21, 2020 Order (“December 21% Order”)? which denied
Defendant’s fifteenth Motion for Postconviction Relief (“Fifteenth
Motion.”)
5. Defendant’s Motion to Reconsider claims that this Court committed
an abuse of discretion by denying his Fifteenth Motion. Defendant’s
Fifteenth Motion argued that his ten convictions for First Degree
Robbery should be reduced based on the Supreme Court of
Delaware’s decision in Parker v. State.4
6. First, before addressing the substance of Defendant’s Motion, it is
necessary to note that Defendant’s Motion has failed to meet the
standard for this Court to grant a motion for reargument. Under
Superior Court Rule 59(e), a motion for re-argument (including a
motion urging the Court to reconsider a motion which did not involve
an oral argument or other in-person hearing) will only be granted if
3 Desmond v. State (Del. Super. 2020).
4 Parker v. State, 201 A.3d 1181 (Del. 2019)
the Court has overlooked controlling precedent or legal principles, or
if the Court has misapprehended the law or the facts in a manner that
would effect the outcome of the case.’ A motion for re-argument is
not an opportunity for a party to rehash arguments that it has made
previously or to raise entirely new arguments.° Additionally, a motion
for reargument must be filed within five days after the Court files the
order or decision for which the moving party seeks reargument.’
. Defendant’s motion fails to meet the standard on a motion for re-
argument. First, Defendant’s motion was not filed within the five-day
window for a motion for reargument contemplated by Rule 59(e). The
Court issued its denial of Desmond’s Fifteenth Motion for
Postconviction Relief on December 21, 2020. Defendant filed the
instant Motion on January 6, 2021. This falls outside of the five-day
window for filing a motion for reargument. Defendant’s Motion must
therefore be barred as untimely.® Second, for the reasons described
below, Defendant’s motion does not indicate that the Court
5 Strong v. Wells Fargo Bank, 2013 WL 1228028 (Del. Super. 2013)
° Id.
7 Supr. Ct. Civ. R. 59(e).
8 Furthermore, the Superior Court lacks discretion to extend the timeframe in which a Motion for
Reargument can be filed outside of the five-day window contemplated by the text of the Rules. See
Strong, at *1.
misapplied over overlooked any controlling law or misapprehended
any material facts in its December 21*, 2020 Order.
. The substance of Defendant’s Motion is also unpersuasive. Defendant
claims that his ten convictions for First Degree Robbery are invalid
because he was only convicted of three counts of Theft. In
Defendant’s reckoning, he would need to be convicted of a count of
theft on each individual whom he robbed in order for his robbery
convictions to stand, because theft is an essential element of robbery.
. Defendant’s contention is not correct. Defendant correctly points out
that theft is an essential element of robbery. Defendant’s
understanding of what an “essential element” means, however, is
incorrect. The phrase “essential element” means that the State has to
prove all of the elements of one crime in order to prove that a related
offense with an additional element or elements took place. Theft is an
essential element of robbery; this means that in order for the state to
prove that a robbery has taken place, it must prove all of the elements
required for theft plus the additional elements of a robbery that make
it a unique offense (namely the use or threat of physical force.) Stated
differently, all robberies are thefts, but not all thefts are robberies.
10. The fact that theft is an essential element of robbery does not
require the State to obtain a separate conviction for theft before it can
obtain a conviction for a robbery based on a specific instance of
conduct, as Defendant seems to suggest.” In other words, a Robbery
conviction does not require a separate theft conviction, because the
State has to prove all of the elements of a Theft to obtain a conviction
for a Robbery.
11. Defendant next argues that this Court improperly denied his claim
based on the Supreme Court of Delaware’s decision in Parker v.
State.
12. In Parker, defendant Justin Parker was convicted of two separate
theft charges based upon a single incident in which he stole a
Kawasaki motorcycle and several other vehicles from a shipping
company called Port-to-Port located in Wilmington, Delaware."
Parker was convicted of Theft of a Motor Vehicle for stealing the
Kawasaki motorcycle and was separately convicted of Felony Theft
for stealing the other vehicles. Parker appealed his separate theft
convictions to the Supreme Court of Delaware, and the Supreme
® See Def's. Mot. To Reconsider at *2 (“Therefore, Desmond would need to be convicted of ten counts of
theft on each individual robbed in order to be convicted of Robbery First Degree under 11 Del. C. §
832(a) given [that an] essential element of Robbery is “Theft.”) (internal citations omitted.)
10 Parker v. State, 201 A.3d 1181 (Del. 2019).
Court overturned Parker’s sentence on grounds that multiple theft
charges based on “one heist” violated the constitutional prohibition
against double jeopardy.
13. Defendant in this case asserts that he did not raise a double
jeopardy claim but nevertheless that his sentence should be modified
based on Parker.’! Defendant argues that each of the specific
incidents for which he was convicted should be considered “one
heist” under Parker, and thus that several counts of Robbery should
be vacated because some of these counts occurred based on “single
heists.”!* However, as this Court noted in its December 21 Order,
there is a key difference between the facts of Parker and the facts of
Defendant’s case: the theft charges in Parker represented offenses
against only a single victim (Port-to-Port shipping company), whereas
several of the robberies which Defendant committed had more than
one victim.'? Defendant has not pleaded with particularity which
11 See Def.’s Mot. For Reconsideration, J 3 (‘Desmond did not raise of Double Jeopardy claim, however,
Parker supports Desmond's ‘one heist/single theft claim under Delaware law given that he only
committed ‘one heist’ at Shop-Rite, at Thriftway, and Acme, not ten counts of robbery first degree [during
those incidents.]’) Defendant's Motion fails to account for the fact that Parker's “one heist’ analysis is
based on the prohibition against double jeopardy; it is not relevant if Defendant has chosen to
characterize his Parker argument as a double jeopardy claim, because double jeopardy is the legal
principle that Parker's “one heist” analysis addresses.
12 Desmond’s Motion to Reconsider does not plainly indicate which counts of Robbery he wishes the
Court to vacate. As far as the Court can tell, Desmond appears to argue that each of the armed robberies
at Shop-Rite, Thriftway, and Acme should constitute “one heist” and therefore that he should have gotten
no more than three convictions for Robbery as a result of his crime spree. See n. 7, supra.
13 See also State v. Desmond, 1992 WL 390600, at n. 1 (“some of the robberies had more than one
victim’).
specific Counts of First Degree Robbery were redundant or
duplicative in his case. Thus the Court cannot determine that any of
the specific Counts of First Degree Robbery in Defendant’s case were
in fact duplicative or part of “one heist.”
14. The only contention within Defendnat’s Motion for
Reconsideration that comes close to pleading his “one heist” theory
with particularity is contained in § 4 of his Motion, and this too falls
short of the mark. Citing State v. Owens, Defendant states that he
“could not be convicted of First Degree Robbery [for] the September
7, 1991 robbery of [an] ACME Market given [that] no robbery victim
testified to ‘delivering up property to the robber’ and the state
presented [only] ‘by-standers’ to the robbery.”
15. This Court’s decision in Owens does not support Defendant’s
contention. In Owens, defendant Rashan Owens was convicted of
multiple criminal charges based on two bank robberies which took
place in Newark, Delaware. Owens’ convictions included one count
of First Degree Robbery perpetrated on one of the bank’s employees,
Sarah Amold. The State agreed with Owens’ claim that he did not
take any property from Arnold, and that since he did not take any
property from her, Owens could not be convicted for perpetrating a
First Degree Robbery upon Arnold.'* Judge Toliver therefore granted
an acquittal for Owens’ First Degree Robbery conviction.
16. In his Motion for Reconsideration, Defendant states that “no
robbery victim testified to delivering up property to [him]” but
Defendant does not indicate what the witnesses presented by the State
testified about. The victim of a crime does not need to provide
testimony regarding the crime in order for the State to obtain a
conviction — the testimony of a third-party witness, including a “by-
stander” who was not implicated in the crime, may suffice.
Defendant’s argument is unpersuasive, and Owens does not support
his position.
17. For the foregoing reasons, Defendant’s Motion for
Reconsideration is DENIED.
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14 State v. Owens, 2010 WL 2892701, at *10 (Del. Super. 2010).