IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE
ALVIN HINES, §
§
Defendant Below, § No. 203, 2022
Appellant, §
§
v. §
§ Court Below: Superior Court
STATE OF DELAWARE, § of the State of Delaware
§
Appellee. § I.D. No. 2001014339 (N)
Submitted: January 25, 2023
Decided: February 6, 2023
Before VALIHURA, VAUGHN, and TRAYNOR, Justices.
Upon appeal from the Superior Court. AFFIRMED.
James O. Turner, Esquire, Office of the Public Defender, Wilmington, Delaware for
Appellant.
Julie M. Donoghue, Esquire, Delaware Department of Justice, Wilmington, Delaware for
Appellee.
VALIHURA, Justice:
This is an appeal of an August 12, 2021 oral bench ruling by the Superior Court
denying a motion for judgment of acquittal by Alvin Hines (“Hines”). A grand jury
indicted Hines on three counts: (1) Possession of a Weapon with a Removed, Obliterated
or Altered Serial Number (the “Serial Number Charge”), (2) Possession of a Firearm While
Under the Influence (the “Drug Charge”), and (3) Discharging a Firearm on a Street.
Following a two-day jury trial, the jury returned guilty verdicts on the first two counts.1
Hines was sentenced to three years at Level 5, suspended for one year at Level 2 for
the Serial Number Charge and to one year at Level 5, suspended for one year at Level 2
for the Drug Charge. During his trial, Hines moved for judgment of acquittal on the Serial
Number Charge following the State’s case-in-chief. The trial court denied Hines’ motion.
Hines appeals the denial of his motion for judgment of acquittal. Hines argues that
the Superior Court erred because the evidence was insufficient to show that he knew that
the firearm at issue had an obliterated serial number.
We find Hines’ appeal to be without merit. Trial testimony put forward by the State
demonstrated that Hines was found holding a high point nine-millimeter firearm in the
exact area where shots were fired. Three nine-millimeter shell casings were found in that
same area, matching the ammunition compatible with that firearm. At least two police
officers testified that someone holding that firearm would know its serial number had been
removed. Because we conclude that sufficient evidence existed for the jury to infer that
1
The State dismissed count three before trial.
2
Hines knew about the obliterated serial number, we AFFIRM the Superior Court’s denial
of Hines’ motion for judgment of acquittal.
I. RELEVANT FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND2
The Wilmington Police Department (“WPD”) makes use of what is known as a
“shot-spotter” system.3 The shot-spotter system is deployed throughout Wilmington and
is used to detect gunfire. When shots are detected, the system geo-locates the sound and
alerts WPD officers. Those officers are then able to respond to the area where gunfire was
recorded. On the evening of January 21, 2020, the shot-spotter system detected gunfire
near the 500 block of West 27th Street in Wilmington. Two shots were detected on the
system. WPD officer Akquil Williams (“Patrolman Williams”) responded. He located a
man standing in the same area and approached him. As Patrolman Williams approached,
he asked the man if he had heard any gunshots. The man responded that he had.
Patrolman Williams then noticed a black firearm in the man’s right hand. Upon
seeing the firearm, Patrolman Williams pulled out his WPD-issued weapon and ordered
the man — later identified as Hines — to drop the firearm. Patrolman Williams gave this
order several times before Hines complied. Fellow WPD officer, Corporal Daniel
Humphrey (“Corporal Humphrey”), was also on duty that night and responded to the same
shot-spotter notification. As Corporal Humphrey approached, he heard Patrolman
2
The facts, except as otherwise noted, are taken from the trial transcript and the court’s oral ruling
denying the motion for judgment of acquittal. See A008–282 (Trial Tran.).
3
A036 (Akquil Williams Trial Test. at 29:8–12) (stating that “Shot Spotter is a system that the city
uses to detect gunfire” and that “[i]t pops up on our computer when they detect shots fired in a
certain area and it pin drops exactly where the gunfire is coming from.”) [hereinafter Williams
Test. at _].
3
Williams ordering Hines to drop his weapon, and Corporal Humphrey pulled out his
firearm and also ordered Hines to drop the weapon.
Hines eventually dropped the firearm from his right hand. During his interaction
with Hines, Patrolman Williams observed that Hines “seemed like he wasn’t really picking
up on my commands at first[.]”4 This led Patrolman Williams to suspect that Hines was
under the influence of alcohol or drugs. Corporal Humphrey thought the same thing,
testifying that Hines “was just zoned out, [and] that’s a sign that you could be under the
influence of some type of narcotic or drug.”5
Once Hines dropped the firearm, Patrolman Williams and Corporal Humphrey took
him into custody. A fellow WPD officer, Patrolman Markees Gordon (“Patrolman
Gordon”), responded to the scene as well, and assisted in taking Hines into custody.
Patrolman Gordon conducted a pat down of Hines, placed him into a police car, and noticed
that Hines appeared to be under the influence. He then transported Hines to Wilmington
Hospital. At Wilmington Hospital, Hines was examined by Dr. Jonathan McGhee (“Dr.
McGhee”), an emergency medicine physician. Hines told Dr. McGhee that earlier that day,
he saw a movie with his girlfriend and then took phencyclidine (“PCP”) after the movie
4
A044 (Williams Test. at 37:2–3). As Patrolman Williams explained, “[i]t was like -- when I was
standing there, it seemed like it was just going in one ear and out the other ear.” Id. at 37:8–10.
He further explained that he did not want to use force on Hines if he did not have to and that he
“wanted [Hines] to comply so we could resolve this issue in a peaceful manner.” Id. at 37:15–17.
5
A069 (Daniel Humphrey Trial Test. at 62:15–17) [hereinafter Humphrey Test. at _].
4
ended.6 Patrolman Gordon testified that he was with Hines the entire time Hines was in
the hospital and that he heard Hines tell Dr. McGhee that Hines had “an argument with a
female friend earlier” and that “[h]e took PCP and he had a gun.”7 Patrolman Gordon also
testified that Hines had said that he took PCP around 6:30 p.m. — about an hour before the
shot-spotter detected the shots fired.8 Dr. McGhee examined Hines and determined that,
by 9:30 p.m., Hines was no longer under the influence of PCP and was fit to be released
back into WPD’s custody. No one at Wilmington Hospital ran a chemical or blood test on
Hines to see if he had PCP in his system. According to Dr. McGhee, such testing was not
necessary because Hines’ demeanor was calm, and several hours had passed since Hines
had taken PCP. Thus, in Dr. McGhee’s medical judgment, there was “no further need for
medical treatment” of Hines.9 Once Dr. McGhee cleared Hines, Patrolman Gordon
transported him to WPD for booking and fingerprinting.
After Hines was taken into custody, WPD secured the scene. Patrolman Andrew
Bonvetti (“Patrolman Bonvetti”) taped off the scene and began inspecting for any physical
evidence. Patrolman Bonvetti located three nine-millimeter shell casings in the same area
as the shot-spotter notification. Master Corporal Samuel Smith (“Corporal Smith”) took
6
See A141–42 (Jonathan McGhee Trial Test. at 134:19–135:3) [hereinafter McGhee Test. at _].
The shot-spotter notification came in at 7:30 p.m. See A96 (Markees Gordon Trial Test. at 89:5)
[hereinafter Gordon Test. at _].
7
See A096 (Gordon Test. at 89:12–14).
8
See also A096 (Gordon Test. at 89:1–7).
9
See A143–44 (McGhee Test. at 136:23–137:1).
5
photographs of the three shell casings and collected them in accordance with WPD
protocol. Corporal Smith took photographs of the firearm and collected it, as well.
Multiple WPD officers recounted that the firearm retrieved from the scene was in a
“locked-back” position.10 As Corporal Humphrey testified, a firearm in a locked-back
position indicates that “there is no more ammunition in there and the magazine is empty.”11
A firearm in a locked-back position also indicates that the gun was recently fired. The high
point nine-millimeter firearm retrieved from the scene had a single magazine. Once the
firearm made its way to WPD, Detective Hugh Stephey (“Detective Stephey”) of the
forensic services unit’s ballistics section took over the investigation.
Detective Stephey test-fired the firearm and determined that it was operable. He did
not test for gunshot residue. His focus next turned to the firearm’s serial number. He
testified that since 1968, all firearms in the United States are required to have a serial
number, which allows for them to be traced. With this particular firearm, the serial number
was located underneath the gun’s barrel.12 But the serial number was obliterated — a fact
that at least two WPD officers indicated was immediately obvious.13 Detective Stephey
10
See A073 (Humphrey Test. at 66:13); A–164 (Samuel Smith Trial Test. at 157:2) [hereinafter
Smith Test. at _].
11
See A073 (Humphrey Test. at 66:14–16); see also A164 (Smith Test. at 157:4–5) (stating that
the locked-back position “means when the chamber is empty [and] it’s out of rounds or bullets[.]”).
12
See A109 (Gordon Test. at 102:20–22).
13
See A111 (Gordon Test. at 104:2–10) (agreeing that based upon his experience, the area beneath
the barrel would be visibly apparent to him if he were loading or holding the gun); A184 (Hugh
Stephey Trial Test. at 177:14–17) (when asked if he viewed the firearm when it came into his
possession and whether it was “immediately obvious” that the serial number had been obliterated,
he responded, “[y]es.”) [hereinafter Stephey Test. at _]. Corporal Smith also noticed the “scratched
off” serial number. See A165 (Smith Test. at 158:11–12).
6
testified that the firearm’s serial number “was scraped up with some type of tool[,]” and
“the polymer plastic is all chewed up, so this was deliberately done.”14
A. The Proceedings in Superior Court
1. The Jury Trial
A New Castle County grand jury indicted Hines on three charges: (1) the Serial
Number Charge, (2) the Drug Charge, and (3) Discharging a Firearm on a Street.15 A two-
day jury trial followed on August 12 and 13, 2021.16 The State called six witnesses
associated with Hines’ arrest and the subsequent investigation of the firearm. Hines
himself did not testify, and the Superior Court conducted an on-the-record colloquy into
his decision to not take the stand.
Following the State’s case-in-chief, Hines’ counsel moved for a motion for
judgment of acquittal on the Serial Number Charge. As counsel told the Superior Court:
The concern is Mr. Hines being found guilty just based on speculation when
the evidence is not really there that he ever looked at the firearm from an
angle that would allow him to see that the serial number was obliterated.17
The State responded and pointed to the evidence proffered during the trial and
argued that “the issue of Mr. Hines’ knowledge is a fact at issue within the province of the
jury to decide.”18 The State acknowledged that this was “not a situation by which there is
14
A186 (Stephey Test. at 179:14–16).
15
A006–7 (Indictment).
16
The State dropped the third charge.
17
A196–97 (Trial Tran. at 189:20–190:2).
18
A197 (Trial Tran. at 190:11–13).
7
surveillance showing Mr. Hines, for example, loading the gun, holding the gun, waving it
in the air or something like that[.]”19 However, according to the State, “there has been
testimony regarding -- from a number of officers that when they looked at it or looked at
photographs of it here today in court, they believed that it was something that was
immediately apparent.”20
The court denied Hines’ motion. It first noted that, on a motion for judgment of
acquittal, the court views the evidence in the light most favorable to the State. Hines’
motion, as the court aptly noted, rested on the “knowing” requirement of the Serial Number
Charge, namely, whether he knew that the serial number was obliterated. The Superior
Court found that the jury had a rational basis to infer that Hines knew that the serial number
had been altered. In ruling from the bench, the trial judge reasoned:
But the firearm in and of itself generally has a black appearance. When we
look at the photographs, for example, the one lying on the ground, you see
that kind of silver on the bottom of it. When you get closer up photographs
of that in State’s Exhibit-18, for instance, that silver is shown with scratches
throughout and obliterates the number that was there, but it’s very clear as
you look at it more from the angle or from a way that one who was actually
handling the weapon, obviously the rational inference is this didn’t just
automatically appear in Mr. Hines’ hand there on the street, that he had had
dealings with it before Officer Williams came across him.21
Certainly the rational inference, as I said, [the firearm] did not just all of a
sudden appear in Mr. Hines’ hand right there, but that he had some dealings
with it before and as some of the testimony has been perhaps loading it and
things like that. But that it is not that he’s always looking at it from the top
or the side or whatever, but that he has some possessory interest that is much
greater than that and would, as people who own firearms or deal with
19
Id. (Trial Tran. at 190:15–18).
20
Id. (Trial Tran. at 190:19–23).
21
A202–03 (Trial Tran. at 195:20–196:12).
8
firearms, had someone studied it, dealt with it, turned it, looked at it and what
would be readily apparent to anyone who looked at the bottom of that more
of the angle and the probably distant [sic] that one of those pictures was
taken, particularly in State’s Exhibit-18, that that number plate had been
gouged at the side, had been scraped and scratched to the point that it took
off the numbers. Obviously, rational inference is if he has that firearm, that
he knows something about it as one who deals with firearms if you were in
possession or owning them might do.22
Hines’ knowledge was, as the court put it, a matter for “the jury to make whatever
inferences that it does from the evidence, either direct or circumstantial, and the credibility
of the witnesses in resolving that particular issue.”23
2. The Jury’s Verdict and the Court’s Sentence
The jury returned guilty verdicts on both the Serial Number Charge and the Drug
Charge. The court ordered a presentence investigation and scheduled sentencing for
October 2021, pending the outcome of a different trial involving Hines.24 Hines was
sentenced on May 13, 2022. On the Serial Number Charge, Hines was sentenced to three
years at Level 5, suspended for one year at Level 2. On the Drug Charge, Hines was
sentenced to one year at Level 5, suspended for one year at Level 2.25 Hines then filed a
timely appeal to this Court.
B. Hines’ Contention on Appeal
In contesting the sufficiency of the evidence for the Serial Number Charge, Hines
contends that the trial judge based his decision “on speculation that Hines must have
22
A203–04 (Trial Tran. at 196:22–197:22).
23
A206-07 (Trial Tran. at 199:20–200:1).
24
See A281 (Trial Tran. at 68:2–5).
25
See A283–84 (Sentence Order).
9
possessed the gun for a longer period of time without any evidence, other than a likely
discharge of the weapon, to support that conclusion.”26 The State counters that Delaware
precedent does not require the State to prove possession of a firearm for any specific period
of time to satisfy the knowledge element and that the evidence was sufficient.
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
This court “review[s] the Superior Court’s denial of a motion for judgment of
acquittal de novo to determine whether a rational trier of fact, viewing the evidence in the
light most favorable to the State, could have found the essential elements, beyond a
reasonable doubt.”27 In doing so, “we do not distinguish between direct and circumstantial
evidence.”28
III. ANALYSIS
A. The Trial Court Did Not Err in Denying the Motion for Judgment of Acquittal
The statute under which Hines was charged provides that: “No person shall
knowingly transport, ship, possess or receive any firearm or firearm frame or receiver with
the knowledge that the importer’s or manufacturer’s serial number has been removed,
26
Opening Br. at 10.
27
Howell v. State, 268 A.3d 754, 775 (Del. 2021) (citing Cushner v. State, 214 A.3d 443, 446 (Del.
2019)). See also Ways v. State, 199 A.3d 101, 106–07 (Del. 2018) (stating that, in reviewing an
appeal from the denial of a motion for judgment of acquittal, “we examine whether any rational
trier of fact, viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the State, could find a defendant
guilty beyond a reasonable doubt of all the elements of the crime.”) (internal quotation marks and
citation omitted).
28
Howell, 268 A.3d at 775 (citing Robinson v. State, 953 A.2d 169, 173 (Del. 2008)).
10
obliterated or altered in a manner that has disguised or concealed the identity or origin of
the firearm.”29
We conclude that the evidence put forth by the State was sufficient to support a
finding beyond a reasonable doubt that Hines knew the serial number was obliterated.
When WPD officers arrived on the scene, Hines was holding the firearm in his right hand.
Multiple WPD officers testified that the firearm recovered from Hines was in a “locked-
back” position, indicating it had recently been fired.30 Three shell casings — matching the
same type of firearm held by Hines — were recovered in the same area the WPD officers
had been directed to following the shot-spotter notification. Several WPD officers testified
at trial that the firearm’s obliterated serial number was easily visible or obvious, and this
testimony was consistent with photographs of the firearm, introduced during the State’s
case-in-chief, which clearly depict the obliterated serial number.31
Hines contends that “there was never any evidence put forth as to how long Mr.
Hines possessed the firearm.”32 But this contention ignores Patrolman Gordon’s testimony
that Hines told Dr. McGhee that he had an argument with a female friend earlier and that
he took PCP at 6:30 p.m. and had a firearm. Although it is not clear from the record exactly
when Hines first obtained the firearm, one inference that the jury could draw is that Hines
29
11 Del. C. § 1459(a) (emphases added). As noted above, whether Hines knew that the firearm’s
serial number was obliterated is the only disputed element of the charge.
30
See supra note 10.
31
See B1–3 (State’s Exs. 16–18).
32
Opening Br. at 9.
11
had the firearm at 6:30 p.m. when he took PCP and when he earlier argued with his female
friend.
Further, the fact that Hines was found holding the gun and had likely fired it supports
a reasonable inference that he had more than incidental contact with it. Thus, Hines’
argument that the trial court denied the motion “based on speculation that Hines must have
possessed the gun for a longer period of time without any evidence, other than a likely
discharge of the weapon”33 misses the mark. The evidence relied upon by the State and by
the trial court in its ruling was not speculation but rather circumstantial evidence.34 “This
Court has consistently held that the State may prove a defendant’s guilt exclusively through
circumstantial evidence, and that a jury may infer intent from the defendant’s conduct.”35
As the trial court ruled, it was “up to the jury to make whatever inferences that it does from
33
Id. at 10.
34
Even in cases where “the affirmative evidence [] is minimal and circumstantial,” this Court has
upheld denials of motions for judgment of acquittal because “our review is strict.” Hoennicke v.
State, 13 A.3d 744, 749 (Del. 2010). A motion for judgment of acquittal “asks whether a rational,
rather than a reasonable, juror could find the defendant guilty [and is thus] a deferential standard,
recognizing the jury’s constitutional role as trier of fact.” Wiggins v. State, 227 A.3d 1062, 1075
(Del. 2020) (Vaughn, J., dissenting).
35
Winer v. State, 950 A.2d 642, 647 (Del. 2008) (internal citations omitted). See also Howell, 268
A.2d at 775 (noting that, when we inquire as to whether a jury could find the essential elements
beyond a reasonable doubt, “we do not distinguish between direct and circumstantial evidence.”);
State v. Newman, 2018 WL 4692446, *5 (Del. Super. Sept. 26, 2018) (denying a motion for
judgment of acquittal and holding that “[a]lthough circumstantial, that evidence was sufficient to
support the jury’s guilty verdict [for violating Section 1459], including on the state of mind element
of the offense” where “the gun was visible and easily accessible in Newman’s home, and the tool
marks that filed off the serial number readily were apparent to anyone who handled the gun, [and]
Newman’s DNA was found in several places on the gun, permitting a reasonable inference that
she had more than incidental contact with it.”).
12
the evidence, either direct or circumstantial, and the credibility of the witness in resolving
that particular issue.”36
Accordingly, and based upon the record before us, we reject Hines’ position that
“[t]here is not enough known about the circumstances of Mr. Hines’ possession of the
firearm to permit these inferences against Mr. Hines.”37 The statute, 11 Del. C. § 1459,
does not require the State prove a set time period for possession of a firearm, and the
evidence offered by the State was sufficient to permit a rational jury, viewing the evidence
in a light most favorable to the State, to find that the State met its burden of proof to show
that Hines knew the serial number was obliterated.38
IV. CONCLUSION
For the reasons set forth above, we AFFIRM the Superior Court’s decision denying
the motion for judgment of acquittal.
36
A206–07 (Trial Tran. at 199:20–200:1).
37
Reply Br. at 1.
38
See, e.g., United States v. Green, 2022 WL 4244275, at *3 (3d Cir. Sept. 15, 2022) (affirming
denial of defendant’s motion for judgment of acquittal on the charge of possession of a weapon
with an obliterated serial number). There, in upholding the denial, the Third Circuit stated:
An ATF agent testified that the serial number of the gun in question, which was
conspicuously located on a silver plate on a black gun, was “directly underneath
the barrel,” and that ATF agent and a state police officer both testified that the
scratches and gouges on the plate were easily visible. On this record, given the
links between Green and the gun, a rational jury easily could have found the
essential element of knowledge was satisfied beyond a reasonable doubt.
Id. (internal citation omitted). See also United States v. Nesmith, 29 F. App’x 681, 685 (2d Cir.
2002) (affirming defendant’s conviction for possession of a firearm with an obliterated serial
number, discussing testimony tending to show “that the extent of the obliterations was such that
an individual could not handle the gun and not notice the obliteration,” and concluding that this
testimony “presented a sufficient basis on which a jury could conclude that Nesmith knew the
serial numbers were obliterated.”).
13