Legal Research AI

Workman v. Com.

Court: Supreme Court of Virginia
Date filed: 2006-11-03
Citations: 636 S.E.2d 368
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37 Citing Cases

Present: Hassell, C.J., Lacy, Keenan, Kinser, Lemons, and
Agee, JJ., and Stephenson, S.J.

TIMOTHY GLEN WORKMAN

v.   Record No. 052411        OPINION BY JUSTICE DONALD W. LEMONS
                                       November 3, 2006
COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA

              FROM THE COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA

      In this appeal, we consider whether evidence discovered

by the defendant after trial and before sentencing was

exculpatory in nature and should have been disclosed to

Timothy Glen Workman (“Workman”) by the Commonwealth prior to

trial.

                 I.    FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS BELOW

      Workman was an agent for the United States Drug

Enforcement Administration ("DEA") on temporary assignment in

Roanoke, Virginia.    While off-duty, he was involved in an

altercation with Keith E. Bailey ("Bailey") and James A.

Bumbry, II (“Bumbry”).    Workman shot and killed Bailey.

Although he claimed that he acted in self-defense, Workman was

charged with first-degree murder and use of a firearm in the

commission of murder.    A jury acquitted him of murder and use

of a firearm in the commission of murder; however, the jury

found Workman guilty of voluntary manslaughter.      The trial

court sentenced Workman to six years and nine months in prison
in accordance with the jury's verdict; however, the trial

court suspended one year and nine months of the sentence.

     On the evening preceding the early morning shooting,

Workman had been drinking alcoholic beverages at the bar of a

restaurant.   When the restaurant closed in the early morning

hours, Workman accompanied a woman he had met at the bar,

Melissa Booth (“Booth”), to her car in the parking lot.   While

they were sitting in Booth's car, another car came beside them

facing the same direction.   Bailey and Bumbry, who had been in

the restaurant that evening, were in the adjacent car.    They

motioned for Booth to roll down her window.   Workman testified

that Booth "seemed kind of alarmed or confused, who are these

guys, why are they pulling up beside me."   Nonetheless, Booth

rolled down her window.   Bailey and Bumbry questioned why

Booth was with Workman.   The verbal exchange escalated when

Workman "flipped the finger" to Bailey and Bumbry in response

to their comments.   Both Bailey and Bumbry left their car.

Workman testified that he heard Bailey say, "I'll fucking kill

you, you bitch."   At that time, Workman retrieved a pistol

from his ankle holster and put it in his right rear pocket.

     Booth saw Workman transfer the gun at which time Workman

identified himself to Booth as "a cop."   When Workman opened

the passenger side door of Booth's car, he saw Bailey "at the

end of the trunk coming straight at [him] yelling" that he


                                2
knew Booth and that Workman did not have "any business in

[Booth's] vehicle."

     Workman responded by telling Bailey to "get [his] ass

back in the car."    According to Workman, Bailey was undeterred

and grabbed Workman by the throat and pinned him against the

open passenger side door.   Workman testified that as he was

being assaulted by Bailey, he saw Bumbry coming toward the two

men from the front of the car.    Workman said that Bumbry was

"draw[ing] a small frame automatic [weapon] from his pocket"

and that the weapon was "coming towards the back of

[Workman's] head."

     According to Workman, at this point in the struggle, he

drew his own weapon and "began to raise it" hoping that Bailey

would step back and Workman could confront Bumbry.      But Bailey

grabbed Workman's gun and the two men struggled for the weapon

while falling toward the passenger seat of the car.      Workman

testified that he told Bailey that he was "a cop" but the

struggle for the gun continued.       Workman stated that "[w]ith

one man coming behind [him] with a gun, at that time [he]

figured [he] had nothing else to do.      So [he] tried pulling

the trigger."   The first shot missed Bailey.     As they fell

into Booth's car, Workman shot two more times because Bailey

was "kind of on top of [him]" and "pull[ed] the trigger one

more time" as the fight continued.      When Bailey finally fell


                                  3
to the pavement, Workman saw Bumbry and Booth drive away in

their cars.

     Booth testified that she did not know Bailey or Bumbry

but had seen them earlier that night in the bar.   She stated

that she saw Workman with a gun but did not see Bailey with a

weapon.    Further, she testified that she did not know whether

Bumbry had a gun.   Two bystanders each testified that they

witnessed an argument between Bailey and Workman and that

Bailey was choking Workman by his throat.   They heard shots

and saw both Bumbry and Booth drive away.

     Forensic evidence revealed that four shots were fired

from Workman's gun with one lodging in the car seat and three

others making close-range "contact" wounds to Bailey's body.

Bailey's hands tested positive for the presence of gunpowder

residue.   Furthermore, DNA testing revealed the presence of

Workman's flesh under Bailey's fingernails.   Blood alcohol

analysis revealed that both Workman and Bailey were

intoxicated at the time of the altercation.

     Workman was indicted for first-degree murder and use of a

firearm in the commission of murder.   Workman’s counsel filed

a motion for discovery and inspection and for exculpatory

evidence and a motion for a bill of particulars.   The trial

court entered an order requiring the Commonwealth to provide

all information to which the defendant was entitled pursuant


                                 4
to Brady v. Maryland, 373 U.S. 83 (1963).   Following the

discovery order and in exchange for the defendant’s

withdrawing his motion for a bill of particulars, the

Commonwealth’s Attorney "opened" the entire file to the

defendant and his counsel for review.

     At trial, the central issue was whether Workman acted in

self-defense, which depended in part upon whether Bumbry

possessed a weapon as he approached Workman and Bailey.

Workman testified that Bumbry was armed; Bumbry testified that

he was not.

     After the trial but prior to sentencing, Workman learned

for the first time of previously undisclosed evidence that he

maintains could have been used to impeach the credibility of

Bumbry and that supports the contention that Workman acted in

self-defense.   The undisclosed evidence was a pre-trial

statement made by Jerry Lee Mackey, Jr. (“Mackey”) to

Detective M. E. Meador ("Meador") of the Roanoke City Police

Department and Officer Kenneth Garrett ("Garrett") of the

Roanoke City Police Department who was also cross-designated

as a DEA agent.   Mackey stated that a man, later identified as

George T. Fitzgerald (“Fitzgerald”), told him that Bumbry

tried to pass a gun to Bailey during the altercation in the

parking lot and that Bumbry "fled the scene with the weapon."

After learning of Mackey’s pre-trial statement, Workman’s


                                5
private investigator, Peter W. Sullivan (“Sullivan”),

interviewed Mackey and learned of two recent incidents

witnessed by Mackey when Bumbry had used a firearm in

altercations with others.     One incident took place at a

nightclub called "Ghost of Hollywood."    Mackey reported that

he saw Bumbry shooting at people with a .40 caliber Desert

Eagle pistol.    Mackey personally witnessed another recent

shooting incident at "Iris' Barbershop" where Bumbry had

"several guns" and was shooting at a man named J. D. Kasey.

Additionally, Mackey’s statements led to the discovery of a

pre-trial statement by Fitzgerald that Bumbry recently fired a

gun at Fitzgerald.    Workman filed a motion for a new trial

based upon the discovery of this undisclosed exculpatory

information.

        The trial court denied Workman’s request for a new trial.

The trial court characterized Mackey’s first statement as

inadmissible hearsay that did not meet the Brady materiality

test.    Nonetheless, the trial court stated that it was

exculpatory evidence that should have been disclosed because

it reasonably would have led to Mackey’s subsequent

statements.    However, the trial court held that Mackey’s other

statements were cumulative evidence that were not material

under Brady.     Finally, the trial court concluded that

Fitzgerald’s statement would have resulted in "a separate


                                  6
trial within a trial" and noted that it was Fitzgerald who was

found guilty of maliciously wounding Bumbry.      For these

reasons, the trial court concluded that Workman’s claims did

“not rise to a reasonable probability that the result of the

proceeding would have been different.”

     The Court of Appeals of Virginia affirmed Workman's

conviction in an unpublished opinion.    After a petition for

rehearing and petition for rehearing en banc were denied,

Workman filed a notice of appeal to this Court.     We granted

the appeal on the sole issue of whether the Commonwealth’s

failure to provide Workman with exculpatory evidence about

Bumbry deprived Workman of a fair trial under Brady v.

Maryland, 373 U.S. 83 (1963) and its progeny so as to require

reversal of Workman’s conviction.

                     II.   EXCULPATORY EVIDENCE

     Workman alleges that the Commonwealth erroneously denied

him the exculpatory evidence we will refer to as "Mackey I"

wherein Mackey told Detective Meador and Officer Garrett on

February 15, 2002, that Bumbry tried to pass Bailey a gun in

the restaurant's parking lot.    As Meador and Garrett

interviewed Mackey on a homicide unrelated to the Workman

case, Mackey said:

     “So uh also on a DEA matter, at the Ole Charley’s
     Restaurant, uh, JAMES, JAMES II BUMBRY, JAMES
     BUMBRY, II, uh was with KEITH, what’s his last


                                  7
     name. He’s the one . . . tried to pass KEITH a
     gun and the officer, DEA had to respond, whatever
     happened and JAY II, . . . all that JAY II fled
     the scene with the weapon. . . . I got that
     information over the phone from several uh people
     that’s been out there in the streets, just
     calling friends, reliable friends, . . . said.”

     Meador told the lead investigator on the Workman case,

Detective Shawn Lukacs (“Lukacs”) of the Roanoke City Police

Department, about Mackey’s statement.    Meador told Lukacs that

Mackey refused to provide the source of the information.

Garrett indicated that the interview was tape-recorded.

Mackey, however, told Workman’s private investigator,

Sullivan, that he told the police that Fitzgerald was his

source.

     Lukacs interviewed Mackey in mid-March 2002 on a separate

case; however, Mackey did not provide Lukacs with additional

information on the Workman case.     Significantly, Lukacs’

testimony does not indicate if he asked Mackey questions

regarding the Workman case.    In fact, Mackey told Sullivan

that no one from the police department or the prosecutor’s

office followed up with him to learn more information

regarding Bailey's shooting.

     Lukacs knew the contents of Mackey I, however, it did not

become a part of Workman’s investigative case folder.    After

the defense received the DEA’s permission to interview

Garrett, Garrett did not disclose Mackey I to the defense.


                                 8
Garrett was only permitted by the DEA to answer questions that

were asked in writing.    There is no indication in the

transcripts that Garrett was asked any questions about

exculpatory evidence.    In fact, the first time Garrett

mentioned Mackey I to anyone was when he spoke with Sullivan

after Workman’s trial.

        In summary, the evidence shows that Meador, Lukacs and

Garrett all had knowledge of Mackey I, however, it was not

disclosed to Workman prior to trial.    Additionally, there is

no indication that the prosecutor had actual knowledge of

Mackey I.    In fact, the Commonwealth emphasized in its closing

argument before the jury that there was “no corroboration for”

Workman’s claim that Bumbry was coming at him with a gun

during the incident.    Workman asserts that if the Commonwealth

had properly turned over the exculpatory statement of Mackey

I, it would have led to additional exculpatory statements

including "Mackey II," "Mackey III," and "Fitzgerald I."

        Mackey II includes two statements that Mackey made to

Sullivan on November 20, 2002.    First, Mackey stated that

Bumbry always carried a gun and that he had access to several

guns.    In fact, Mackey saw Bumbry with guns “very often, all

the time, in clubs and just on the block hanging.”    Second,

Mackey personally observed James Bumbry with a gun shooting at

individuals on two separate occasions.    Mackey was at the


                                  9
"Ghost of Hollywood" where Bumbry pulled out a .40 caliber

firearm and began shooting at Mackey and his friends. Mackey

was also at "Iris’ Barbershop" when Bumbry and J.D. Kasey

began arguing.    After leaving Iris’, Bumbry returned with

several guns and with his friend Timmy Cunningham.    Mackey was

getting his hair cut at Iris’ when Bumbry ran out of Iris’ and

started shooting at Kasey.

        Mackey III includes two additional statements that Mackey

made to Sullivan on November 20, 2002.    First, Mackey stated

that Bumbry shot Fitzgerald.    Mackey did not have personal

knowledge of this shooting because he was in jail at the time

of the incident.    According to Mackey, Bumbry and Fitzgerald

“had words” and were “supposed to had got in a fist fight,”

without guns.    After picking up Timmy Cunningham and Shawn

Hogney and on his way to fight Fitzgerald at Melrose Park,

Bumbry stopped at a stoplight.    Mackey said that Bumbry

“pulled out a gun and somebody out of the car with, umm,

[Fitzgerald] started shooting” and Bumbry was shot in the

head.    Second, Mackey directly identified Fitzgerald as his

source of Mackey I.    Mackey said that Fitzgerald told him

that:    Bumbry “pulled out a gun, tried to pass Keith [Bailey]

the gun, and the [DEA] agent shot [Bailey], and [Bumbry] sped

off and left, left the scene.”    Mackey also indicated that




                                 10
Fitzgerald was at the restaurant the night Bailey was killed

and thought Bumbry was carrying a gun.

     Mackey III led Workman's investigator to interview

Fitzgerald.   On November 30, 2002, Sullivan visited Fitzgerald

in the Roanoke City Jail to verify that Fitzgerald had a

conversation with Mackey regarding the Workman case.

Fitzgerald refused to identify someone present at the

restaurant who could testify that Bumbry had a gun.    Then, on

April 9, 2003, Sullivan visited Fitzgerald at the Bland

Correctional Facility trying to again find out who called

Fitzgerald from the restaurant stating that Bumbry had a gun.

While Fitzgerald did not disclose his source, Fitzgerald did

tell Sullivan that Bumbry had previously threatened and shot

at Fitzgerald.   Sullivan subsequently learned that Officer J.

W. Michael with the Roanoke City Police Department had taken

Fitzgerald’s written statement ("Fitzgerald I") with respect

to the shooting between Fitzgerald and Bumbry.

     Fitzgerald stated in Fitzgerald I that on November 9,

2001, Bumbry had an altercation with Fitzgerald’s associate at

the Z-Mart on Melrose Avenue, in Roanoke.   Later that day,

Fitzgerald and some friends were in a car stopped at a red

light.   A vehicle occupied by Bumbry, Tim Cunningham, and

others came beside Fitzgerald’s vehicle.    Fitzgerald saw

“Bumbry stick his arm out the window thats when I ducked and I


                               11
heard some 7 shots.” Officer Michael stated Fitzgerald’s

videotaped statement could not be found, however, a written

transcription admitted as Defendant’s Exhibit 4 in post-trial

motions provides:   “[Bumbry] rolled down the rear window and

shot out of that, as well.    Fitzgerald admitted that there

were shots fired from his car, but did not know who fired

them.”   Officer Michael testified that Fitzgerald’s videotaped

statement and his written statement would have gone to the

records division at the police department.    Fitzgerald was

later tried and convicted of maliciously wounding Bumbry in

Roanoke City Circuit Court.     At Workman’s trial, Bumbry

testified that he was involved in a shooting incident in which

he was shot in the head, however, he did not identify

Fitzgerald as the shooter.

                         III.    ANALYSIS

     Our analysis must begin with consideration of the

evidence we have identified herein as "Mackey I."    Workman

maintains that the Commonwealth was required under Brady v.

Maryland, 373 U.S. 83 (1963) and its progeny to disclose this

statement and further that disclosure would have led to the

evidence we have identified herein as Mackey II, Mackey III,

and Fitzgerald I.

     In Strickler v. Greene, 527 U.S. 263, 280-81 (1999), the

Supreme Court of the United States stated:


                                 12
          In Brady, this Court held "that the
     suppression by the prosecution of evidence
     favorable to an accused upon request violates due
     process where the evidence is material either to
     guilt or to punishment, irrespective of the good
     faith or bad faith of the prosecution." 373 U.S.
     at 87. We have since held that the duty to
     disclose such evidence is applicable even though
     there has been no request by the accused, United
     States v. Agurs, 427 U.S. 97, 107 (1976), and
     that the duty encompasses impeachment evidence as
     well as exculpatory evidence, United States v.
     Bagley, 473 U.S. 667, 676 (1985). Such evidence
     is material "if there is a reasonable probability
     that, had the evidence been disclosed to the
     defense, the result of the proceeding would have
     been different." Id., at 682; see also Kyles v.
     Whitley, 514 U.S. 419, 433-434 (1995). Moreover,
     the rule encompasses evidence "known only to
     police investigators and not to the prosecutor."
     Id. at 438. In order to comply with Brady,
     therefore, "the individual prosecutor has a duty
     to learn of any favorable evidence known to the
     others acting on the government's behalf in this
     case, including the police." Kyles, 514 U.S. at
     437.

     There are three components of a violation of the rule of

disclosure first enunciated in Brady:   a) The evidence not

disclosed to the accused "must be favorable to the accused,

either because it is exculpatory," or because it may be used

for impeachment; b) the evidence not disclosed must have been

withheld by the Commonwealth either willfully or

inadvertently; and c) the accused must have been prejudiced.

Id. at 281-82.   Stated differently, "[t]he question is not

whether the defendant would more likely than not have received

a different verdict with the evidence, but whether in its



                               13
absence he received a fair trial, understood as a trial

resulting in a verdict worthy of confidence."     Kyles v.

Whitley, 514 U.S. 419, 434 (1995).   "[A] constitutional error

occurs, and the conviction must be reversed, only if the

evidence is material in the sense that its suppression

undermines confidence in the outcome of the trial."     United

States v. Bagley, 473 U.S. 667, 678 (1985).

     Clearly, the withheld evidence including that which

Workman maintains the Mackey I statement would have led to

must be considered to be favorable to him for impeachment of

Bumbry and contradiction of one of the Commonwealth's primary

themes in the case, namely, that Bumbry was unarmed.

Additionally, it is not contested that the evidence was not

disclosed to Workman.   Therefore, materiality of the evidence

in question becomes an issue for consideration.

     In Kyles, the Supreme Court of the United States made

several holdings concerning the test of materiality.    First,

"a showing of materiality does not require demonstration by a

preponderance that disclosure of the suppressed evidence would

have resulted ultimately in the defendant's acquittal (whether

based on the presence of reasonable doubt or acceptance of an

explanation for the crime that does not inculpate the

defendant.)”   Kyles, 514 U.S. at 434.    Second, materiality is

not a sufficiency of the evidence test.    "A defendant need not


                               14
demonstrate that after discounting the inculpatory evidence in

light of the undisclosed evidence, there would not have been

enough left to convict."    Id., at 434-45.   Third, a harmless

error analysis is unnecessary once materiality has been

determined.   Id. at 435.   Fourth, suppressed evidence must be

"considered collectively, not item by item."     Id. at 436.

Upon consideration of these factors, a reviewing court is

charged with the responsibility of determining if the

suppression of evidence "undermines confidence in the outcome

of the trial."   Bagley, 473 U.S. at 678.

     The trial court held that Mackey I did not meet the

materiality test because it was "mired in hearsay, opinion and

conjecture" and inadmissible.   The trial court further held

that the statement should have been disclosed to Workman and

that its disclosure would have led to Mackey's statement about

Fitzgerald.   However, the trial court held that the Fitzgerald

statement "does not rise to a reasonable probability that the

result of the proceeding would have been different."

     On appeal, the Court of Appeals held that both the Mackey

I and the Fitzgerald I statements were inadmissible.    Although

the Court of Appeals did not mention Mackey II and III, it

further held that "[n]o evidence tended to show that the

prosecutor or the police had undisclosed information about

Bumbry's specific acts of violence and propensity toward


                                15
violence."    As a consequence, the Court of Appeals affirmed

the conviction stating, "We hold that the record supports the

trial judge's finding that the evidence failed to establish

materiality in the constitutional sense."

     We disagree with the trial court and the Court of

Appeals.    First, while Mackey I may not have been admissible

for the truth of the matter asserted, it was admissible for a

different reason.    See Winston v. Commonwealth, 268 Va. 564,

591, 604 S.E.2d 21, 36 (2004).    In particular, pursuant to

Kyles, Mackey I was admissible to discredit the police

investigation.

     In a criminal case, the prosecutor must “ ‘make timely

disclosure to the defense of all evidence or information known

to the prosecutor that tends to negate the guilt of the

accused or mitigates the offense.’ ”    Kyles, 514 U.S. at 437

(1984) (citations omitted).    In fact, "the prosecutor remains

responsible for gauging [the] effect [of undisclosed evidence]

regardless of any failure by the police to bring favorable

evidence to the prosecutor’s attention.”    Id. at 421.   More

specifically, "the individual prosecutor has a duty to learn

of any favorable evidence known to the others acting on the

government’s behalf in the case, including the police.”       Id.

at 437.    In this case, the Commonwealth concedes that the

investigators’ knowledge of Mackey I was chargeable to the


                                 16
Commonwealth.   Furthermore, the trial court’s discovery order

plainly mandated disclosure of such information.

     In Kyles, the Supreme Court held that evidence concerning

the reliability of police investigations may be admissible.

Kyles, 514 U.S. at 446.   The Court favorably cited Bowen v.

Maynard, 799 F.2d 593, 613 (10th Cir. 1986) ("A common trial

tactic of defense lawyers is to discredit the caliber of the

investigation or the decision to charge the defendant, and we

may consider such use in assessing a possible Brady

violation.").   The Court also favorably cited Lindsey v. King,

769 F.2d 1034, 1042 (5th Cir. 1985) (awarding new trial of

prisoner convicted in Louisiana state court because withheld

Brady evidence "carried within it the potential . . . for the

. . . discrediting . . . of the police methods employed in

assembling the case.").

     Workman could have used Mackey I to discredit the police

investigation by attacking the “thoroughness and even the good

faith of the investigation” by failing to adequately follow up

on Mackey I.    Kyles, 514 U.S. at 445. Detective Meador was

interviewing Mackey on an unrelated crime when he learned of

Mackey I.   Officer Garrett was present as well.   Meador

subsequently shared the contents of Mackey I with Detective

Lukacs, the lead investigator on Workman’s case.   Neither




                                17
Lukacs, Meador, nor Garrett further investigated Mackey's

statement.

     Additionally, the police officers did not inform the

prosecutor of Mackey I and the transcript of Mackey I was not

in the investigative file on Workman.   Had this information

been known to Workman, he could “have attacked the reliability

of the investigation in failing even to consider” Mackey I’s

import.   Kyles, 514 U.S. at 446.   Mackey I would have been a

powerful tool for the defense not for its truth but rather to

support its contention that police investigation was

inadequate because it failed to further investigate

conflicting evidence regarding Bumbry’s contention that he did

not have a gun at the scene of the shooting.

     Having determined that Mackey I was admissible and was

material in every sense under Brady and its progeny, we must

consider what would have reasonably been discovered from

proper disclosure.   It is quite clear that Workman's

investigator, Sullivan, when apprised of Mackey I after jury

verdict but before sentencing, interviewed Mackey and

discovered Mackey's personal knowledge of two recent "shoot

outs" involving Bumbry (Mackey II).   Clearly, there was

nothing inadmissible about Mackey's firsthand observations of

Bumbry discharging firearms in Mackey's presence.

Additionally, Sullivan was led to Fitzgerald, who recounted


                               18
another recent shooting incident, which he personally

observed, where Bumbry discharged a firearm.   There was

nothing inadmissible about Fitzgerald recounting his personal

knowledge of Bumbry's use and discharge of a firearm.

     As we have stated, Mackey I was admissible to attack the

reliability of the police investigation.   But even if not

admissible, admissibility at trial is not the final arbiter of

any Brady violation.

          Evidence may be material under Brady even
     though it is inadmissible. When assessing the
     materiality of inadmissible evidence, we apply
     the general Brady test and "ask only . . .
     whether the disclosure of the evidence would have
     created a reasonable probability that the result
     of the proceeding would have been different."
     Because of the requirement that the outcome of
     the proceeding be affected, we often consider
     whether the suppressed, inadmissible evidence
     would have led to admissible evidence.

United States v. Sipe, 388 F.3d 471, 485 (5th Cir. 2004)

(citing Felder v. Johnson, 180 F.3d 206, 212 (5th Cir. 1999));

see also United States v. Gil, 297 F.3d 93, 104 (2nd Cir.

2002) (" '[I]nadmissible evidence may be material under

Brady.' ") (quoting Spence v. Johnson, 80 F.3d 989, 1005 n.14

(5th Cir. 1996); Wright v. Hopper, 169 F.3d 695, 703 (11th

Cir. 1999) (“Inadmissible evidence may be material if the

evidence would have led to admissible evidence.”); Coleman v.

Calderon, 150 F.3d 1105, 1116 (9th Cir. 1998) (“To be

material, evidence must be admissible or must lead to


                              19
admissible evidence.”); United States v. Phillip, 948 F.2d

241, 249 (6th Cir. 1991) ("Certainly, information withheld by

the prosecution is not material unless the information

consists of, or would lead directly to, evidence admissible at

trial for either substantive or impeachment purposes.").

        The reliance of the trial court and the Court of Appeals

on Wood v. Bartholomew, 516 U.S. 1 (1995) and Soering v.

Deeds, 255 Va. 457, 499 S.E.2d 514 (1998) is misplaced.       In

Wood, the habeas corpus petitioner maintained that the

prosecution improperly withheld the results of a polygraph

exam.    516 U.S. at 2.   The polygraph exam was not admissible

under state law.     Id. at 6.   The petitioner could point to no

admissible evidence that knowledge of the polygraph testing

results would have revealed.      Id. at 6-7.   The Supreme Court

labeled as "speculation" that the disclosure of inadmissible

evidence would have led to admissible evidence.      Similarly, in

Soering, the inadmissible evidence in question raised no more

than an abstract, "'mere possibility that an item of

undisclosed information might have helped the defense.'"      255

Va. at 465, 499 S.E.2d at 518 (quoting United States v. Agurs,

427 U.S. 97, 109-10 (1976).      Here, by contrast, Workman

proffers admissible evidence that would have been discovered

if he had known of Mackey I.




                                  20
     The Commonwealth maintains that its agents are only

required to disclose what they knew at the time and that they

did not know of Mackey II and III and Fitzgerald I.   The

evidence is not contested that Meador, Garrett, and Lukacs

knew of Mackey I even if the prosecutor did not.   As the

previously cited cases demonstrate, it is not necessary that

the Commonwealth know what would have been discovered if

proper disclosure of Mackey I had been made.

     Additionally, the Commonwealth maintains that Workman's

Brady claims fail because if Workman had exercised reasonable

diligence, Workman could have discovered Mackey I on his own.

The Commonwealth notes that Garrett interviewed Mackey,

Workman interviewed Garrett and Garrett testified at trial.

Based on these factors, the Commonwealth submits that if

Workman "exercised reasonable diligence" in interviewing

Garrett, Workman "could have located" Mackey I,

"notwithstanding the absence of the information in the

Commonwealth's file."   This argument ignores Workman's

reasonable reliance upon the Commonwealth's "open file"

response to his discovery motion.   In Strickler, the Supreme

Court stated that "if a prosecutor asserts that he complies

with Brady through an open file policy, defense counsel may

reasonably rely on that file to contain all materials the

State is constitutionally obligated to disclose under Brady."


                               21
527 U.S. at 283.   Consequently, under Strickler, Workman

cannot be faulted for relying on the Commonwealth's open file

policy and cannot, on these facts, be found to have failed to

exercise reasonable diligence.

     Workman's claim of self-defense would have been

significantly aided by knowledge of Mackey I, II, and III and

Fitzgerald I.   We have very recently held:

     In Virginia, the rule in criminal cases is that,
     when a defendant adduces evidence of self-
     defense, proof of specific acts is admissible to
     show the character of the victim for turbulence
     and violence, even when the defendant is unaware
     of such character. Barnes v. Commonwealth, 214
     Va. 24, 25-26, 197 S.E.2d 189, 190 (1973); Stover
     v. Commonwealth, 211 Va. 789, 794, 180 S.E.2d
     504, 508 (1971). When admissible, such evidence
     bears upon the questions of who was the aggressor
     or what was the reasonable apprehension of the
     defendant for his safety.

          Upon the question of who was the aggressor,
     the issue is what the victim probably did, and
     evidence of recent acts of violence toward third
     persons ought to be received, if connected in
     time, place, and circumstance with the crime, as
     to likely characterize the victim's conduct
     toward the defendant. Randolph v. Commonwealth,
     190 Va. 256, 265, 56 S.E.2d 226, 230 (1949). See
     Burford v. Commonwealth, 179 Va. 752, 766-67, 20
     S.E.2d 509, 515 (1942); Rasnake v. Commonwealth,
     135 Va. 677, 697-98, 115 S.E. 543, 549-50 (1923).

McMinn v. Rounds, 267 Va. 277, 281, 591 S.E.2d 694, 697

(2004).   Here, Workman was deprived of introducing evidence of

three recent incidents involving Bumbry firing weapons at

others.   Most certainly, such evidence has the potential to be




                                 22
powerful impeachment of Bumbry's statement at trial that he

did not have a gun at the scene and his denial that he "had

been involved with a criminal offense involving firearms . . .

[or had been] [p]ulling a firearm on somebody?   Pointing a gun

at somebody?"   Additionally, it comprised evidence of

Workman's reasonable apprehension for his safety and evidence

of who was the aggressor in this altercation.

     The credibility of Bumbry versus that of Workman was a

significant issue at trial.   The prosecution and the Court of

Appeals in its opinion place great emphasis upon Bumbry's

testimony.    Their emphasis demonstrates how critical

impeachment evidence was to Workman's case.

     The Commonwealth maintains that there was evidence before

the jury that Bumbry had displayed a weapon and even pointed

the weapon at a Deputy Sheriff four years before the incident

in this case.   The Commonwealth argues that further evidence

of Bumbry's possession and use of weapons would have been

cumulative.    However, the Commonwealth discounted the incident

as isolated and not recent.   The more recent incidents

represented by Mackey II and III and Fitzgerald I had the

potential to powerfully contradict the Commonwealth's argument

to the jury.    We do not consider these incidents to be

cumulative in nature.




                                23
     We hold that the Commonwealth breached its duty under

Brady and its progeny to disclose the statement we have

identified as Mackey I.   Furthermore, it was admissible to

attack the reliability of the police investigation especially

considering that no further investigation of the statement was

made by police.   Even if inadmissible, Mackey I would have led

to admissible evidence and consequently, was subject to

disclosure.   The undisclosed evidence and the evidence that

would have been discovered before trial were material.    The

nondisclosure under the circumstances of this case undermines

confidence in the outcome of the trial.

                          IV. CONCLUSION

     The trial court and the Court of Appeals erred in denying

Workman a new trial because of Brady violations.    We will

reverse the judgment of the Court of Appeals and reverse

Workman's voluntary manslaughter conviction, and remand this

case for retrial if the Commonwealth be so advised for an

offense no greater than voluntary manslaughter.

     In Price v. Georgia, the Supreme Court considered whether

the state of Georgia could retry an accused for murder after

an earlier guilty verdict on the lesser included offense of

voluntary manslaughter had been set aside because of an error

at trial.   398 U.S. 323, 324 (1970).   The Supreme Court held

that jeopardy for an offense does not continue after an


                                24
acquittal, "whether that acquittal is express or implied by a

conviction on a lesser included offense when the jury was

given a full opportunity to return a verdict on the greater

charge."   Id. at 329; see Powell v. Commonwealth, 261 Va. 512,

545-46, 552 S.E.2d 344, 363 (2001).   Consequently, having been

placed in jeopardy on the charge of murder and acquitted of

murder by the jury, Workman may be retried only for an offense

not greater than that upon which his conviction was based,

namely, voluntary manslaughter.

     Accordingly, we will remand the case for a new trial on a

charge no greater than voluntary manslaughter for the killing

of Keith E. Bailey, if the Commonwealth be so advised.

                                          Reversed and remanded.




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