Elbert Briggs v. State of Indiana (mem. dec.) ( 2020 )


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  • MEMORANDUM DECISION
    Pursuant to Ind. Appellate Rule 65(D),
    this Memorandum Decision shall not be                                        FILED
    regarded as precedent or cited before any                                Jun 23 2020, 9:21 am
    court except for the purpose of establishing                                 CLERK
    the defense of res judicata, collateral                                  Indiana Supreme Court
    Court of Appeals
    estoppel, or the law of the case.                                             and Tax Court
    ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT                                   ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEE
    Mark S. Lenyo                                            Curtis T. Hill, Jr.
    South Bend, Indiana                                      Attorney General
    Benjamin J. Shoptaw
    Deputy Attorney General
    Indianapolis, Indiana
    IN THE
    COURT OF APPEALS OF INDIANA
    Elbert Briggs,                                           June 23, 2020
    Appellant-Defendant,                                     Court of Appeals Case No.
    19A-CR-1884
    v.                                               Appeal from the
    St. Joseph Superior Court
    State of Indiana,                                        The Honorable
    Appellee-Plaintiff                                       Elizabeth C. Hurley, Judge
    Trial Court Cause No.
    71D08-1811-MR-08
    Vaidik, Judge.
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 19A-CR-1884 | June 23, 2020                    Page 1 of 13
    Case Summary
    [1]   Elbert Briggs appeals his conviction for murder, arguing that the trial court
    erred by denying his motion for mistrial and by admitting certain evidence. We
    disagree and affirm.
    Facts and Procedural History
    [2]   Around 3:40 a.m. on June 23, 2018, Eric Phillips pulled into the parking lot of
    the Notre Dame boathouse on the St. Joseph River in South Bend. He was
    accompanied by Tastacia Parker—Briggs’s on-again/off-again girlfriend.
    Shortly after Phillips and Parker arrived, two men approached on foot. After a
    brief interaction, one of those two men drew a gun and shot Phillips twice—
    once in the chest and once in the arm. Phillips fell in the parking lot and died.
    Parker and the other men ran off.
    [3]   Several months later, the State charged Briggs and Parker with murder. The
    State’s theory was that Briggs and Parker wanted to rob Phillips, that Parker got
    Phillips to the river for that purpose, and that Briggs was the shooter. Briggs’s
    case proceeded to a jury trial in June 2019.1 The State’s evidence was largely
    circumstantial but substantial.
    1
    Parker was charged and prosecuted separately from Briggs. After Briggs was convicted and sentenced, the
    State dropped the murder charge against Parker in exchange for her plea of guilty to Level 5 felony assisting a
    criminal and Level 6 felony perjury. She was sentenced to four years in prison and two years of community
    corrections. See State v. Parker, No. 71D01-1901-MR-1.
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 19A-CR-1884 | June 23, 2020                     Page 2 of 13
    [4]   A little over two months before the shooting, on April 12, 2018, Phillips
    contacted Parker on Facebook. A few hours later, Parker was messaging with
    Briggs and said, “we could poke dude[.]” Ex. 87c. According to Parker, “poke”
    means rob. Tr. Vol. II p. 167. Briggs asked, “Who[?]” Ex. 87c. Parker
    answered, “He pulled up on me ima drop top and super thirsty he old too . . .
    Like 35 I think he said[.]”
    Id. (Phillips was
    37, and Parker testified that “thirsty”
    means gullible. Tr. Vol. II p. 166.) Briggs responded, “Ok do that[.]” Ex. 87c.
    Parker then asked, “You with me on it[?]”
    Id. Briggs answered,
    “Yeah[.]”
    Id. [5] Then,
    on the night of June 22—about eight hours before the shooting—Parker
    received the following Facebook message from a friend:
    You a grown woman... and you have two kids. We do alot of
    stupid sh*t but we are NOT RATCHET… that’s bummy af. You
    22 years old, if you have to rob anybody while you have a whole
    ni**a you OBVIOUSLY need to reevaluate your life and the
    people in it. And any real ni**a would NEVER out his bi*ch in
    that predicament. He is using you. Kaylin and butter slid in SO
    MANY ni**as. He never even let me know his moves cause he
    said that’s not my place period!! You got babies you need to be
    around for. And you talented af and finished Ross. You can be
    doing so much more. That’s why I be saying f*** these ni**as.
    He either gone build you or be yo downfall …aint no in between.
    Ex. 87a (emphasis added). Apparently unpersuaded by that message, Parker
    started a Facebook conversation with Phillips shortly after midnight. Phillips
    said that he was on his way to South Bend, and Parker said, “Let me know
    when u make it we can link I’m bored[.]” Ex. 87b. Around 1:00 a.m., Parker
    asked Phillips if he wanted to walk by the river and “Smoke n sip[.]”
    Id. Court of
    Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 19A-CR-1884 | June 23, 2020   Page 3 of 13
    [6]   At some point Phillips picked Parker up in his car. Cell-phone location records
    show that Phillips’s phone, Parker’s phone, and Briggs’s phone were near each
    other in the Edison Park area, east of the boathouse, around 3:35 a.m. As
    Phillips’s phone approached the boathouse around 3:40 a.m., so did Briggs’s
    phone (the location information for Parker’s phone is more limited, but there is
    no dispute that she was with Phillips). Phillips was shot just before 3:45 a.m.
    Within thirty minutes of the shooting, Briggs’s phone and Parker’s phone were
    traveling southeast out of South Bend, toward Fort Wayne. The phones arrived
    in Fort Wayne around 6:00 a.m. and were in close proximity to each other at
    several points between 6:30 a.m. and 8:00 a.m. Both phones were active in Fort
    Wayne for the rest of the day. In the days that followed, the phones traveled
    together to West Palm Beach, Florida, where Parker’s father lives. Late on June
    24, Briggs sent the following Facebook messages to someone named Quan
    Briggs: “I’m gone bro to Florida don’t say sh*t but all I can say is remember the
    last place we seen tay bd right hand mans at look that up”; “I love you gone call
    when I can”; “That’s why I didn’t come back”; “Bruh real sh*t u got to come
    this way when sh*t get right I’m gone be gone until a week[.]” Ex. 203B.
    [7]   In addition to the Facebook and phone records, the State collected some
    physical evidence. Most relevant here, surveillance video from the boathouse
    showed the shooting (from a distance—the faces of the participants are not
    identifiable), a footprint was found in the mud near Phillips’s car, and a bullet
    was lodged in Phillips’s arm.
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 19A-CR-1884 | June 23, 2020   Page 4 of 13
    [8]    Detective Timothy Wiley, the lead investigator, testified about the surveillance
    video and three photographs that Parker sent to Briggs via Facebook
    approximately nine hours before the shooting. Two of the photographs show
    Briggs by himself, wearing a white shirt, dark jeans, and white shoes with
    orange or brown soles. See Exs. 88d, 88e. The third photograph show Briggs,
    wearing the same outfit, with Parker. See Ex. 88f. Detective Wiley believed the
    outfit Briggs was wearing in the photographs “seemed to be the same” as the
    outfit the shooter was wearing in the surveillance video. Tr. Vol. III p. 80.
    [9]    Detective Wiley also testified that after seeing the footprint at the scene and the
    Facebook photographs that show Briggs wearing white shoes with orange or
    brown soles, he did internet research and found a Fila F-13 shoe, which was
    white with an orange sole. Photographs of the Fila shoe and its sole, along with
    photographs of the footprint at the scene, were admitted into evidence. Exs. 25,
    25a, 25b, 25c, 25d. Detective Wiley testified that he saw “similarities between
    the Fila and the footprint,” specifically, a “scalloped edge,” a circle “very close
    to that scalloped edge,” another circle on the “other side,” and a “waffle”
    pattern “in the middle[.]” Tr. Vol. III pp. 158-59.
    [10]   Ray Wolfenbarger, a firearm and tool-mark examiner, testified about the
    markings on the bullet found in Phillips’s arm. He said that SCCY Industries is
    the only firearm manufacturer he knew that could have made the gun that left
    those markings. The State also presented a photograph posted on Facebook on
    June 8, 2018—fifteen days before the shooting—showing Briggs with a
    handgun tucked into his pants. See Ex. 88a. Part of the gun, including the grip,
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 19A-CR-1884 | June 23, 2020   Page 5 of 13
    is visible in the photograph. Detective Wiley testified that he is familiar with
    SCCY firearms, that he zoomed in on the handgun in the photograph, and that
    he saw “characteristics” of an SCCY. Tr. Vol. III p. 161. Specifically, he said
    that he could see the “finger grooves” on the front of the grip, “at least
    shadows” of holes on the back of the grip, a silver “slide,” and a black
    “extractor.”
    Id. at 161-62.
    [11]   The jury found Briggs guilty, and the court sentenced him to sixty-five years in
    prison. Briggs now appeals.
    Discussion and Decision
    [12]   Briggs contends that the trial court erred by denying a motion for mistrial he
    made based on a question that the prosecutor asked. He also argues that the
    trial court erred by allowing Detective Wiley to testify about the footprint found
    at the scene and by admitting the photograph of Briggs with a gun.
    I. Denial of Motion for Mistrial
    [13]   Briggs’s motion for a mistrial related back to a recorded interview of Parker by
    Detective Gery Mullins. During that interview, Parker did not say that Briggs
    was involved in the shooting, but she made the following statement: “Whatever
    they had going on it wasn’t, like, intentionally.” Supp. Tr. p. 3; Ex. 204. (The
    record does not disclose the question Parker was responding to or provide any
    other context for her statement.) Parker was asked about that statement at trial,
    where the State called her as a witness under a grant of use immunity. She
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 19A-CR-1884 | June 23, 2020   Page 6 of 13
    testified that she didn’t remember making the statement and that she was “not
    sure” whether the shooting was intentional. Tr. Vol. II p. 156.
    [14]   Later, the prosecutor sought to impeach Parker by asking Detective Mullins the
    following question about the interview: “[W]hen you talked to Ms. Parker, did
    she indicate to you whether or not she thought the shooting by the defendant
    was intentional?” Tr. Vol. III p. 68 (emphasis added). Detective Mullins
    answered, “She indicated that she didn’t think it was intentional.”
    Id. Briggs immediately
    objected and moved for a mistrial, arguing that the prosecutor’s
    reference to “the shooting by the defendant” had “left the jury with the
    impression that [Parker] said something about [Briggs] actually being there.”
    Id. at 69.
    The trial court sustained Briggs’s objection but declined to order a
    mistrial, instead giving the jury the following admonishment:
    I’m striking from the record that question that was asked and the
    answer that was given, and so you are -- if you recall the
    instruction that I gave at the start of the trial, when I strike things
    from the record, you are to treat it as though you had never heard
    it, and it can’t be part of your consideration.
    Id. at 70.
    After the admonishment, the prosecutor asked Detective Mullins the
    same question without the reference to Briggs: “In interviewing Ms. Parker, did
    she indicate she didn’t believe the shooting was intentional?”
    Id. Detective Mullins
    answered, “She did indicate that it wasn’t intentional.”
    Id. The State
    then played a recording of Parker telling Detective Mullins, “Whatever they
    had going on it wasn’t, like, intentionally.”
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 19A-CR-1884 | June 23, 2020   Page 7 of 13
    [15]   Briggs argues that the trial court should have granted his request for a mistrial.2
    As Briggs acknowledges, “a mistrial is an extreme remedy that is only justified
    when other remedial measures are insufficient to rectify the situation.” Mickens
    v. State, 
    742 N.E.2d 927
    (Ind. 2001). Because the trial court is in the best
    position to gauge the circumstances surrounding an event and its impact on the
    jury, we afford great deference to its decision on a motion for mistrial.
    Id. “We therefore
    review the trial court’s decision solely for abuse of discretion.”
    Id. [16] “A
    mistrial is appropriate only when the questioned conduct is so prejudicial
    and inflammatory that the defendant was placed in a position of grave peril to
    which he should not have been subjected.” Pittman v. State, 
    885 N.E.2d 1246
    ,
    1255 (Ind. 2008) (formatting altered). Briggs contends that he was placed in
    grave peril because the prosecutor’s question “improperly suggest[ed] that the
    shooting was actually by the defendant” and “ma[de] the jury think that Parker
    had given a pretrial statement to Mullins where she had admitted that Briggs
    was the shooter but that she didn’t think that it was an intentional shooting.”
    Appellant’s Br. p. 19. He also argues that, because Parker testified at trial that
    Briggs was not involved in the shooting, the prosecutor’s question implying that
    2
    The State contends that Briggs waived this issue by failing to renew his request for a mistrial after the trial
    court denied his original request and instead admonished the jury to disregard the question and answer. The
    State argues that to preserve the issue for appeal, Briggs was required to “request a mistrial following the
    admonishment or indicate to the court that the admonishment was not satisfactory.” Appellee’s Br. pp. 10-
    11. We disagree. By immediately moving for a mistrial, Briggs made clear his position that no admonishment
    would adequately remedy the issue.
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 19A-CR-1884 | June 23, 2020                      Page 8 of 13
    Parker said something different before trial “likely had a devastating effect on
    her credibility.”
    Id. at 21.
    [17]   There are two problems with Briggs’s argument. First, he does not acknowledge
    or address the well-established presumption that an admonishment by the court
    cures any harm caused by a prosecutor’s improper statement. Jones v. State, 
    101 N.E.3d 249
    , 258 (Ind. Ct. App. 2018), trans. denied. Here, shortly after the
    prosecutor asked the erroneous question, the trial court told the jury that it was
    striking the question from the record and admonished the jury “to treat it as
    though you had never heard it, and it can’t be part of your consideration.” We
    presume the jury heeded that instruction and disregarded the prosecutor’s
    question.
    [18]   Second, Briggs does not acknowledge or address the fact that after the
    prosecutor’s question and the court’s admonishment, the recording of Parker’s
    statement about the shooting being unintentional was played for the jury. As
    noted by the State, this allowed the jury to “hear for themselves that Parker
    never stated the shooting was by Defendant.” Appellee’s Br. p. 15. Even if the
    prosecutor’s question led any jurors to believe that Parker identified Briggs as
    the shooter, the recording revealed that she did not.
    [19]   For these reasons, we cannot say that the trial court abused its broad discretion
    in denying Briggs’s request for a mistrial.
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 19A-CR-1884 | June 23, 2020   Page 9 of 13
    II. Admission of Evidence
    [20]   When a party challenges a trial court’s discretionary decision to admit evidence,
    we review that decision only for an abuse of discretion. Fairbanks v. State, 
    119 N.E.3d 564
    , 567 (Ind. 2019), cert. denied. The admission of evidence constitutes
    an abuse of discretion when it is clearly against the logic and effect of the facts
    and circumstances.
    Id. at 568.
    A. Detective Wiley’s testimony about the footprint
    [21]   Briggs contends that the trial court abused its discretion by allowing Detective
    Wiley to “give testimony regarding [the] footprint found in the mud in the boat
    house parking lot.” Appellant’s Br. p. 21. He acknowledges that a witness is
    generally allowed to give their opinion that a footprint and the sole of a shoe are
    similar, provided they base their conclusion “‘on measurements or peculiarities
    of the footprints.’” McNary v. State, 
    460 N.E.2d 145
    , 147 (Ind. 1984) (quoting
    Johnson v. State, 
    177 Ind. App. 501
    , 505, 
    380 N.E.2d 566
    , 569 (1978)). However,
    he argues that Detective Wiley “didn’t testify about any measurements which
    he performed nor did he give specifics about peculiarities of the footprints.”
    Appellant’s Br. p. 22. He is right about measurements but wrong about
    peculiarities. As detailed above, Detective Wiley testified that he saw
    “similarities” between the footprint and the sole of the Fila F-13 shoe he found
    on the internet, including a “scalloped edge,” a circle “very close to that
    scalloped edge,” another circle on the “other side,” and a “waffle” pattern “in
    the middle[.]”
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 19A-CR-1884 | June 23, 2020   Page 10 of 13
    [22]   It is true that the State did not have an actual shoe from Briggs and that
    Detective Wiley was not able to say definitively that Briggs was wearing Fila F-
    13 shoes in the Facebook photographs. However, having reviewed the
    photographs of the F-13 shoe and the Facebook photographs of Briggs, we
    agree with the State that the F-13 shoe is “very similar” to the shoes Briggs was
    wearing in the Facebook photographs. Appellee’s Br. p. 17. And though it
    could not be said with certainty that Briggs was wearing F-13 shoes in the
    Facebook photographs, this was not an issue of the admissibility of Detective
    Wiley’s testimony but rather, as the trial court explained, “a weight issue” that
    “can be cross examined on.” Tr. Vol. III pp. 137-38. Ultimately, the jury had all
    of the photographs—of the footprint at the scene, of the F-13 shoe, and of
    Briggs wearing white shoes with orange or brown soles—and was able to decide
    for itself how much weight, if any, to accord to Detective Wiley’s testimony.
    But the trial court had discretion to decide whether to admit that testimony in
    the first place, and Briggs has not convinced us that the court abused that
    discretion.
    B. Photograph of Briggs with a gun
    [23]   Briggs also argues that the trial court erred by allowing the State to present the
    photograph of him with a handgun tucked into his pants. See Ex. 88a. He
    asserts that “[s]imple examination of the photograph demonstrates the
    weakness [of] the State’s argument that the type of gun can be determined by an
    examination of that photograph.” Appellant’s Br. p. 25. Briggs is correct that
    not much detail is visible on the copy of the photograph in the record. In fact,
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 19A-CR-1884 | June 23, 2020   Page 11 of 13
    Detective Wiley acknowledged as much. Tr. Vol. III p. 161 (“It’s very hard to
    see here in this photograph[.]”). However, he also testified that he zoomed in
    on the photograph and that it was “clear enough” for him to see characteristics
    of an SCCY firearm.
    Id. In light
    of that testimony, the limited detail in the
    handgun photograph goes to the weight of the evidence, not its admissibility.
    As with the footprint photographs, the jury had the handgun photograph and
    could decide how much weight to assign to it.
    [24]   Briggs contends that this case is like Wilson v. State, 
    770 N.E.2d 799
    (Ind. 2002),
    where our Supreme Court held that the trial court erred by admitting into
    evidence a photograph showing the murder defendant with a handgun two
    months before the shooting at issue. In that case, however, the only fact
    supporting the admission of the photograph was that “two shell casings
    recovered from the crime scene were fired from a 9-millimeter handgun, a
    weapon similar to the type of weapon that Wilson was brandishing in the
    photograph.”
    Id. at 801.
    There was “no link between the shell casings recovered
    at the crime scene and the photograph the State introduced at trial.”
    Id. at 802.
    Here, on the other hand, a firearm examiner testified that the bullet found in
    Phillips’s arm was likely fired from an SCCY, and Detective Wiley testified that
    the handgun in the photograph of Briggs had characteristics of an SCCY. That
    testimony established at least some link between the photograph and the
    shooting. Cf. Pickens v. State, 
    764 N.E.2d 295
    , 299 (Ind. Ct. App. 2002)
    (“Evidence that a defendant had access to a weapon of the type used in a crime
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 19A-CR-1884 | June 23, 2020   Page 12 of 13
    is relevant to a matter at issue other than the defendant’s propensity to commit
    the charged act.”), trans. denied.
    [25]   Finally, Briggs asserts that the photograph “was not probative of whether or not
    Briggs was involved in the shooting of Eric Phillips” and that it “should have
    been deemed inadmissible under [Evidence] Rule 403, as its probative value
    was outweighed by undue prejudice, confusion of the issues and misleading the
    jury.” Appellant’s Br. p. 25. We disagree. First, for the reasons already stated,
    evidence that Briggs possessed an SCCY firearm two weeks before the shooting
    was probative of whether he was involved in the shooting. Second, beyond
    simply noting that the photograph shows him “shirtless, flexing his muscles,”
    id., Briggs does
    not offer any reasoning or cite any caselaw in support of his
    claim that there was a danger of “undue prejudice, confusion of the issues and
    misleading the jury.” If there was no evidence linking the gun in the photograph
    to the shooting, we would probably agree with Briggs. But there was such
    evidence, so we fail to see how the jury would have been confused or misled by
    the photograph or how the prejudice was “undue.”
    [26]   The trial court did not abuse its discretion by admitting the photograph.
    [27]   Affirmed.
    May, J., and Robb, J., concur.
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 19A-CR-1884 | June 23, 2020   Page 13 of 13