People of Michigan v. Terrance Anthony Furline ( 2020 )


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  •                                                                                       Michigan Supreme Court
    Lansing, Michigan
    Syllabus
    Chief Justice:               Justices:
    Bridget M. McCormack        Stephen J. Markman
    Brian K. Zahra
    Chief Justice Pro Tem:
    Richard H. Bernstein
    David F. Viviano            Elizabeth T. Clement
    Megan K. Cavanagh
    This syllabus constitutes no part of the opinion of the Court but has been                Reporter of Decisions:
    prepared by the Reporter of Decisions for the convenience of the reader.                  Kathryn L. Loomis
    PEOPLE v FURLINE
    PEOPLE v JENKINS
    Docket Nos. 158296 and 158298. Argued on application for leave to appeal October 3,
    2019. Decided March 12, 2020.
    Terrance A. Furline and Alvin B. Jenkins, Sr., were convicted, after a joint jury trial in the
    Saginaw Circuit Court, of criminal enterprise, arson, retail fraud, and related crimes under an
    aiding-and-abetting theory in connection with a fire and subsequent attempted theft at a home-
    improvement store in Saginaw. Furline moved to be tried separately from Jenkins, arguing that a
    joint trial would prejudice his substantial rights because Jenkins had stated, in a videotaped
    interview with detectives from the Saginaw County Sheriff’s Department, that Furline had told
    Jenkins he planned to set the fire and encouraged Jenkins to steal items during the ensuing
    commotion. Furline further argued that, because he planned to defend against the charges on the
    grounds that he was presumed innocent and that Jenkins had acted alone in setting the fire and
    attempting to commit retail fraud, their defenses were antagonistic and mutually exclusive and
    Furline would be denied his right to cross-examine Jenkins about his statements in the interview.
    The court, James T. Borchard, J., denied the motion for severance, and, after defendants were tried
    jointly and convicted, they appealed their convictions. The Court of Appeals, O’BRIEN, P.J., and
    CAVANAGH and STEPHENS, JJ., consolidated the appeals and held that the trial court had abused its
    discretion by denying the motion for severance. Accordingly, the Court of Appeals vacated
    defendants’ convictions and sentences and remanded the cases for new trials. People v Furline,
    unpublished per curiam opinion of the Court of Appeals, issued July 3, 2018 (Docket No. 335906).
    The prosecution sought leave to appeal in the Supreme Court, which ordered and heard oral
    argument on whether to grant the application or take other action. 
    503 Mich. 942
    (2019).
    In a per curiam opinion signed by Chief Justice MCCORMACK and Justices MARKMAN,
    ZAHRA, VIVIANO, and CLEMENT, in lieu of granting leave to appeal, the Supreme Court held:
    The Court of Appeals erred by vacating defendants’ convictions and sentences and
    remanding for a new trial. Severance is mandated only when a defendant provides the court with
    a supporting affidavit, or makes an offer of proof, that clearly, affirmatively, and fully
    demonstrates that the defendant’s substantial rights will be prejudiced by a joint trial and that
    severance is the necessary means of rectifying the potential prejudice. The trial court correctly
    ruled that Furline failed to show that he was entitled to severance in his motion and supporting
    affidavit, and this decision must be upheld because there was no significant indication on appeal
    that the requisite prejudice actually occurred at trial.
    1. MCR 6.121(C) requires a trial court to sever the trial of defendants on related offenses
    on a showing that severance is necessary to avoid prejudice to a defendant’s substantial rights.
    Under People v Hana, 
    447 Mich. 325
    (1994), severance is mandated only when a defendant
    provides the court with a supporting affidavit, or makes an offer of proof, that clearly,
    affirmatively, and fully demonstrates that the defendant’s substantial rights will be prejudiced and
    that severance is the necessary means of rectifying the potential prejudice. The failure to show
    that the requisite prejudice to substantial rights in fact occurred at trial precludes the reversal of a
    joinder decision. While severance may be warranted when defendants’ mutually exclusive or
    antagonistic defenses create a serious risk of prejudice, the defenses must be irreconcilable and
    create such great tension that a jury would have to believe one defendant at the expense of the
    other. Prejudice requiring reversal occurs only when the competing defenses are so antagonistic
    at their cores that both cannot be believed. Incidental spillover prejudice, which is almost
    inevitable in a multidefendant trial, does not suffice for reversal.
    2. The trial court correctly ruled that Furline failed to show that he was entitled to
    severance in his motion and supporting affidavit. Furline offered two theories of prejudice. First,
    Furline anticipated that the prosecutor would offer into evidence a video in which Jenkins denied
    setting the fire in the Saginaw store and stated that Furline admitted setting that fire. Furline argued
    that he would be prejudiced by the inability to confront and to cross-examine Jenkins about these
    statements. Second, believing that Jenkins would claim that Furline acted alone, Furline argued
    that he would be prejudiced by the need to defend not only against the prosecutor’s case but also
    against Jenkins’s defense theory. But at the hearing on Furline’s motion, the prosecutor expressed
    his intent not to offer the video into evidence. The allegations in Furline’s affidavit did not
    demonstrate that his substantial rights would be prejudiced at trial without severance because these
    allegations were either irrelevant, involved legal conclusions rather than facts, or involved the
    contents of the video that the prosecutor agreed not to offer into evidence.
    3. The trial court’s decision must be upheld because there was not a significant indication
    on appeal that the requisite prejudice actually occurred at trial. Furline feared that he would have
    to defend against Jenkins’s theory that Furline set the fire and that, in light of Jenkins’s theory, he
    would struggle to show that Jenkins acted alone. Neither fear came to pass because Jenkins offered
    no evidence that Furline started the fire at the Saginaw store and Furline offered no evidence that
    Jenkins acted alone. The record did not support the proposition that either defendant sought to
    convict the other or that either had to defend in turn against the other’s antagonistic defense. Each
    defendant experienced, at most, incidental spillover prejudice rather than the degree of prejudice
    required to reverse the trial court’s joinder decision.
    Court of Appeals judgment reversed; defendants’ convictions and sentences reinstated;
    Furline’s cross-application for leave to appeal denied.
    Justice CAVANAGH, joined by Justice BERNSTEIN, concurred but wrote separately to avoid
    possible misinterpretations. She stated that review of the trial court’s decision to deny pretrial
    severance is accomplished by reference to the pretrial motion and affidavit, while review of
    prejudice that might have occurred at trial is a separate inquiry. Review of the trial court’s pretrial
    decision to deny severance in this case was simple, given that the only pretrial prejudice theory
    advanced by either defendant was addressed when the prosecution agreed to forgo the use of
    Jenkins’s recorded statement. With respect to whether there was any significant indication on
    appeal that the requisite prejudice in fact occurred at trial, she noted that the defenses actually
    presented at trial were neither mutually exclusive nor irreconcilable; rather, each defendant argued
    that the prosecution had not met its burden against either of them. Justice CAVANAGH further
    stated that she did not understand the Court’s opinion to hold that the prosecution can avoid
    severance simply by charging codefendants under an aiding-and-abetting theory because the
    relevant inquiry is not the prosecution’s theory but the defenses offered by the defendants.
    ©2020 State of Michigan
    Michigan Supreme Court
    Lansing, Michigan
    OPINION
    Chief Justice:                 Justices:
    Bridget M. McCormack          Stephen J. Markman
    Brian K. Zahra
    Chief Justice Pro Tem:         Richard H. Bernstein
    David F. Viviano              Elizabeth T. Clement
    Megan K. Cavanagh
    FILED March 12, 2020
    STATE OF MICHIGAN
    SUPREME COURT
    PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF MICHIGAN,
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    v                                                              No. 158296
    TERRANCE ANTHONY FURLINE,
    Defendant-Appellee.
    PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF MICHIGAN,
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    v                                                              No. 158298
    ALVIN BERNARD JENKINS, SR.,
    Defendant-Appellee.
    BEFORE THE ENTIRE BENCH
    PER CURIAM.
    In October 2015, a fire broke out at the Home Depot in Flint Township and, in the
    ensuing commotion, merchandise was stolen. The next day, a fire broke out at the Home
    Depot in Saginaw, but an attentive employee, tipped off that morning by the Flint store’s
    loss-prevention staff, foiled a theft attempt by grabbing a cart full of big-ticket items before
    a man, who turned out to be Alvin Jenkins, could make off with it. After a police
    investigation, Jenkins and Terrance Furline were arrested and charged in Saginaw County
    with criminal enterprise, arson, retail fraud, and related crimes, under an aiding-and-
    abetting theory. Furline moved to be tried separately from Jenkins. The trial court denied
    Furline’s motion. After a joint trial, a jury convicted each defendant on all charges. Furline
    appealed the severance issue in the Court of Appeals, which vacated and remanded for
    proceedings “with some device of severance.” The prosecutor then sought this Court’s
    leave to appeal.1 Rather than grant leave, we reverse the Court of Appeals’ judgment and
    reinstate defendants’ convictions and sentences.
    The decision to try two defendants jointly or separately lies within the discretion of
    the trial court, and that decision will not be overturned absent an abuse of that discretion.
    People v Hana, 
    447 Mich. 325
    , 331; 524 NW2d 682 (1994); see also MCL 768.5.
    Under MCR 6.121(C), the trial court “must sever the trial of defendants on related
    offenses on a showing that severance is necessary to avoid prejudice to substantial rights
    of the defendant.” According to 
    Hana, 447 Mich. at 346
    , “[s]everance is mandated . . . only
    when a defendant provides the court with a supporting affidavit, or makes an offer of proof,
    that clearly, affirmatively, and fully demonstrates that his substantial rights will be
    1
    Furline cross-applied for leave to appeal. We deny his cross-application because we are
    not persuaded that the questions he presented should be reviewed by this Court.
    2
    prejudiced and that severance is the necessary means of rectifying the potential prejudice.”
    The affidavit or offer of proof must state “facts on which the court might determine
    whether . . . a joint trial might result in prejudice.” 
    Id. at 339
    (cleaned up). A court can
    reject statements that are “conclusory” or that “lack[] sufficient specificity to enable the
    trial court to accurately determine what the [joined defendants’] defenses would be, how
    the defenses would affect each other, and whether the defendants’ respective positions were
    indeed mutually exclusive or merely inconsistent.” 
    Id. at 355.
    A defendant’s claim of
    prejudice must be “substantiated” through “concrete facts.” 
    Id. We stressed
    in Hana that
    the failure to show prejudice to substantial rights, “absent any significant indication on
    appeal that the requisite prejudice in fact occurred at trial, will preclude reversal of a joinder
    decision.” 
    Id. at 347.
    As Hana acknowledged, severance may be warranted when defendants’ “mutually
    exclusive” or “antagonistic” defenses create a “serious risk” of prejudice. 
    Id. at 344-346
    (cleaned up). But we explained that the defenses must be “irreconcilable” and create such
    great tension “that a jury would have to believe one defendant at the expense of the other.”
    
    Id. at 349
    (cleaned up). “Defenses are mutually exclusive within the meaning of this rule
    if the jury, in order to believe the core of the evidence offered on behalf of one defendant,
    must disbelieve the core of the evidence offered on behalf of the co-defendant.” 
    Id. at 350
    (cleaned up). Prejudice requiring reversal occurs “only when the competing defenses are
    so antagonistic at their cores that both cannot be believed.” 
    Id. at 349
    -350 (cleaned up).
    But “incidental spillover prejudice, which is almost inevitable in a multi-defendant trial,
    does not suffice.” 
    Id. at 349
    (cleaned up). When the prosecutor relies on aiding-and-
    abetting liability, finger-pointing—each defendant’s proceeding on a theory that “the other
    3
    guy did it”—“does not create mutually exclusive antagonistic defenses.” 
    Id. at 361.
    Both
    defendants may be found “similarly liable without any prejudice or inconsistency because
    one found guilty of aiding and abetting can also be held liable as a principal.” 
    Id. In his
    trial motion and supporting affidavit, Furline offered two theories of
    prejudice. First, he anticipated that the prosecutor would offer into evidence a video in
    which Jenkins denied setting the fire in the Saginaw store, accused Furline of setting that
    fire, and stated that Furline admitted setting that fire; Furline argued that he would be
    prejudiced by the inability to confront and to cross-examine Jenkins about these statements.
    Cf. Bruton v United States, 
    391 U.S. 123
    ; 
    88 S. Ct. 1620
    ; 
    20 L. Ed. 2d 476
    (1968). Second,
    believing that Jenkins would claim that Furline acted alone, Furline argued that he would
    be prejudiced by the need to defend not only against the prosecutor’s case but also against
    Jenkins’s defense theory. In a hearing on Furline’s motion, Furline’s counsel focused on
    the Jenkins video as a source of prejudice, and the prosecutor expressed his intent not to
    offer the video into evidence. In a written opinion, the trial court denied relief on the basis
    that Furline had shown “merely antagonistic,” but not “irreconcilable,” “claims as to who
    was responsible for setting the fire.”
    We agree with the trial court that Furline failed to show that he was entitled to
    severance in his motion and affidavit. Furline’s affidavit offered the following allegations:
    1. I am charged, along with co-defendant, Alvin Bernard Jenkins, Sr.,
    with Criminal Enterprise, Conspiracy, Arson and Retail Fraud as a result of
    an incident on October 29, 2015, at Home Depot in Kochville Township,
    Saginaw County, MI.
    2. That co-defendant Jenkins has given taped statements in which he
    claimed that I started the fire at Home Depot, and that I admitted this to him.
    4
    3. That I deny setting the fire at Home Depot, and deny ever admitting
    this to anyone and Jenkins is lying about this.
    4. That should this case proceed to Trial with two defendants, it is
    anticipated that a [Bruton v United States] situation will arise where
    Defendant Furline may be denied his right to confront the witness against
    him, in the event the videotaped statement of Jenkins is played before the
    jury.
    5. That the defenses of defendant Furline and co-defendant Jenkins
    are antagonistic and mutually exclusive and require severance under [People
    v Hana].
    6. That unless the trials of Furline and Jenkins are separated, my
    substantial rights will be prejudiced and that severance is necessary to rectify
    the possible prejudice. [Cleaned up.]
    These allegations don’t demonstrate that Furline’s substantial rights would be prejudiced
    at trial without severance. Paragraph 1 is contextual and not relevant to the severance
    analysis. Paragraphs 2 and 4 relate directly to prejudice caused by the Jenkins video and
    so are obviated by the prosecutor’s agreement not to offer that video into evidence. While
    Paragraph 3 doesn’t mention the video, its denials correspond to Jenkins’s accusations in
    the video (i.e., the “taped statements” described in Paragraph 2); so, like Paragraphs 2 and
    4, this paragraph is obviated by the prosecutor’s agreement. Paragraphs 5 and 6 contain
    legal conclusions rather than facts and so don’t contribute to Furline’s burden. It is clear
    to us, in light of the prosecutor’s agreement, that Furline’s affidavit lacks the “concrete
    facts” to “fully demonstrate” his claim of prejudice. 
    Hana, 447 Mich. at 355
    .
    In light of the failure of Furline’s affidavit to articulate a prejudice theory that
    materialized at trial, we reject the Court of Appeals’ belief that the trial court “was fully
    apprised of the specifics of the codefendants’ mutually exclusive defenses and the potential
    prejudice from one defendant being pitted against another in order to prove each’s
    5
    innocence.” People v Furline, unpublished per curiam opinion of the Court of Appeals,
    issued July 3, 2018 (Docket Nos. 335906 and 336203), p 7. Even if Furline’s motion “fully
    apprised” the trial court of his defense—he said in his motion that he intended “to defend
    this matter by relying on his presumption of innocence and requiring the People to meet
    their burden of proof”—the prosecution met its burden of demonstrating each individual
    defendant’s guilt without either defendant’s help.
    For these reasons, we see no error in the trial court’s denial of Furline’s motion.
    The trial court’s decision must be upheld absent a “significant indication on appeal
    that the requisite prejudice” actually occurred at trial. 
    Hana, 447 Mich. at 347
    . We believe
    that no such prejudice actually occurred. Furline feared that he would have to defend
    against Jenkins’s theory that Furline set the fire and that, in light of Jenkins’s theory, he
    would struggle to show that Jenkins acted alone. Neither fear came to pass since Jenkins
    offered no evidence that Furline started the fire at the Saginaw store and Furline offered no
    evidence that Jenkins acted alone.
    The Court of Appeals exaggerated the extent to which each defendant contributed
    to proving the other’s culpability. Furline averred in his motion that his and Jenkins’s
    defenses would require Furline to “seek to convict the other, and defend in turn against the
    other’s antagonistic defense, while also defending against the prosecution’s case.” The
    Court of Appeals believed that defendants were prejudiced at trial because each had “to
    prove the other’s culpability through each witness’s testimony.” Furline, unpub op at 8.
    But, as explained below, the record doesn’t support the proposition that either defendant
    “sought to convict the other” or that either had to “defend in turn against the other’s
    antagonistic defense.”
    6
    The Court of Appeals started with whether joinder prejudiced Jenkins—even though
    Jenkins never moved for a separate trial and did not raise the severance issue on appeal.
    The Court of Appeals cited the testimony of Doris Walker-Furline, a witness called by the
    prosecutor. Walker-Furline, Furline’s mother and an accomplice in the Flint incident,
    testified that Furline had known Jenkins only for a week, that Jenkins had set the Flint fire,
    that Furline was present for (but did not participate in) the Flint incident, and that Jenkins
    wished to repeat the scheme at the Saginaw store. As the Court put it, “Without Furline
    having to testify himself, his mother’s testimony was evidence that promoted his defense
    that it was Jenkins [sic] idea to commit arsons and thefts at home improvement stores and
    he had nothing to do with Jenkins’ plan.” 
    Id. But Walker-Furline
    lacked direct knowledge
    of the Saginaw incident, and her testimony placed Furline at the Flint store—hardly
    exonerating. Nothing in the Court of Appeals’ characterization of Walker-Furline’s
    testimony suggested that Furline “sought to convict” Jenkins. Nor did it cause Jenkins to
    have to “defend against [Furline’s] antagonistic defense.”
    As to the prejudice to Furline, the Court of Appeals identified Jenkins’s counsel’s
    cross-examinations of Walker-Furline and of Joy Royal, another witness called by the
    prosecutor. Jenkins’s counsel tried and failed to elicit Walker-Furline’s acknowledgment
    that Furline was involved in the Flint incident. From Royal, he got testimony that Furline
    had been involved in a “no receipt” return at a Lowe’s store. While Jenkins’s counsel
    perhaps wished to highlight Furline’s involvement, that involvement already had been
    shown by the prosecutor.
    The Court of Appeals characterized “[t]his situation” as creating “a subtle effect of
    joining defendants who have asserted mutually exclusive defenses.” Furline, unpub op at
    7
    8. It then offered this curious quotation, from United States v Tootick, 952 F2d 1078, 1083
    (CA 9, 1991): “ ‘All evidence having the effect of exonerating one defendant implicitly
    indicts the other. The defendant must not only contend with the effects of the government’s
    case against him, but he must also confront the negative effects of the codefendant’s
    case.’ ” Furline, unpub op at 8. But contrary to the Court of Appeals’ implication,
    defendants here weren’t forced into a zero-sum contest. And, as we’ve noted, neither
    defendant contributed meaningfully to the prosecutor’s case. Even if the circumstances of
    this case created a “subtle effect” of joining defendants, that effect was dwarfed by the
    palpable effect of the prosecutor’s joining defendants—intentionally and appropriately—
    under an aiding-and-abetting theory. Cf. People v Pipes, 
    475 Mich. 267
    , 280; 715 NW2d
    290 (2006) (“The Court of Appeals failed to give sufficient weight to the evidence that was
    properly admitted against each defendant.”); Zafiro v United States, 
    506 U.S. 534
    , 543; 
    113 S. Ct. 933
    ; 
    122 L. Ed. 2d 317
    (1993) (Stevens, J., concurring in the judgment) (“[Where
    mutually exclusive defenses transform a trial into a contest between the defendants],
    joinder may well be highly prejudicial, particularly when the prosecutor’s own case in chief
    is marginal and the decisive evidence of guilt is left to be provided by a codefendant.”).
    While the Court of Appeals characterized this case as asking the jury to choose
    “which of the two was guilty,” Furline, unpub op at 8, we emphasize that the prosecutor’s
    case gave the jury a third option: “both.” See 
    Hana, 447 Mich. at 361
    (“[The] jury could
    have found both defendants similarly liable without any prejudice or inconsistency because
    one found guilty of aiding and abetting can also be held liable as a principal.”).
    Since Furline failed to articulate a prejudice theory that materialized at trial, we
    reject the Court of Appeals’ belief that the trial court “was fully apprised of the specifics
    8
    of the codefendants’ mutually exclusive defenses and the potential prejudice from one
    defendant being pitted against another in order to prove each’s innocence.” Furline, unpub
    op at 7. As explained above, Furline’s motion did not “fully demonstrate” potential
    prejudice. And any prejudice arguably conveyed by the motion and affidavit did not occur
    at trial. Each defendant experienced, at most, “incidental spillover prejudice” rather than
    the degree of prejudice required to reverse the trial court’s joinder decision. 
    Hana, 447 Mich. at 347
    , 349. For these reasons, we conclude that the Court of Appeals erred. We
    reverse.
    Bridget M. McCormack
    Stephen J. Markman
    Brian K. Zahra
    David F. Viviano
    Elizabeth T. Clement
    9
    STATE OF MICHIGAN
    SUPREME COURT
    PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF MICHIGAN,
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    v                                                           No. 158296
    TERRANCE ANTHONY FURLINE,
    Defendant-Appellee.
    PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF MICHIGAN,
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    v                                                           No. 158298
    ALVIN BERNARD JENKINS, SR.,
    Defendant-Appellee.
    CAVANAGH, J. (concurring).
    I concur with the majority opinion but write separately to avoid possible
    misinterpretations. Review of the trial court’s decision to deny pretrial severance is
    accomplished by reference to the pretrial motion and affidavit, while review of prejudice
    that might have occurred at trial is a separate inquiry.
    Review of the trial court’s pretrial decision to deny severance here is simple. As
    the majority notes, the only pretrial prejudice theory advanced by either defendant was
    contained in Paragraphs 2 through 4 of the affidavit attached to defendant Furline’s motion
    for severance. That concern was addressed when the prosecution agreed to forgo use of
    defendant Jenkins’s recorded statement. That issue resolved, there was no offer of proof
    before the court as to how joinder would result in prejudice to either defendant. See People
    v Hana, 
    447 Mich. 325
    , 346; 524 NW2d 682 (1994) (“Severance is mandated under MCR
    6.121(C) only when a defendant provides the court with a supporting affidavit, or makes
    an offer of proof, that clearly, affirmatively, and fully demonstrates that his substantial
    rights will be prejudiced and that severance is the necessary means of rectifying the
    potential prejudice.”). On that basis alone, the trial court’s pretrial decision to deny
    severance should be affirmed.
    However, there is also a second inquiry: whether there is “any significant indication
    on appeal that the requisite prejudice in fact occurred at trial . . . .” 
    Id. at 347.
    To answer
    that question, we ask whether the defenses which were actually presented at trial were
    “ ‘mutually exclusive’ ” or “ ‘irreconcilable.’ ” 
    Id. at 349
    (citations omitted). That
    happens when the “ ‘tension between defenses [was] so great that a jury would have to
    believe one defendant at the expense of the other.’ ” 
    Id., quoting United
    States v Yefsky,
    994 F2d 885, 896 (CA 1, 1993). Said another way, “ ‘defenses are mutually exclusive
    within the meaning of this rule if the jury, in order to believe the core of the evidence
    offered on behalf of one defendant, must disbelieve the core of the evidence offered on
    behalf of the co-defendant.’ ” 
    Hana, 447 Mich. at 350
    , quoting State v Kinkade, 140 Ariz
    91, 93; 680 P2d 801 (1984). That was not the case here.
    This is best illustrated by reference to defense counsels’ closing arguments, where
    defendants’ defenses were summarized.          Defendant Furline’s defense was not that
    defendant Jenkins committed the crimes in question alone, but simply that the prosecution
    had generally not proven its case beyond a reasonable doubt. For example, defendant
    2
    Furline’s counsel did not specifically argue that defendant Jenkins set the fire, but that “100
    other people perhaps” were in the store also. Similarly, defendant Jenkins’s counsel did
    not argue that defendant Furline set the fire, but to the contrary said “[t]here is nothing that
    says that Mr. Furline was going back to set a fire. There is no evidence of that as [defendant
    Furline’s counsel] pointed out.” Rather than presenting the “mutually exclusive” or
    “irreconcilable” defenses that the other defendant did everything, each defendant argued
    the prosecution had not met its burden against either of them.
    Also, I do not understand the Court’s opinion to hold that the prosecution can avoid
    severance simply by charging codefendants under an aiding-and-abetting theory. As
    described above and in Hana, the relevant inquiry is not the prosecution’s theory but the
    defenses offered by the defendants. We did say in Hana that “[f]inger pointing by the
    defendants when such a prosecution theory is pursued does not create mutually exclusive
    antagonistic defenses.” 
    Hana, 447 Mich. at 360-361
    . However, that was in relation to the
    companion cases of People v Rode and People v Gallina. In those cases, the defendants
    took turns firing a gun at an occupied car, each with the apparent encouragement of the
    other. 
    Id. at 335-336.
    At one point, Rode reloaded the gun with bullets supplied by Gallina.
    
    Id. at 335.
    A fatal shot was fired at the second car after the collaborative reload. 
    Id. at 336.
    Each defendant testified, and the core of their defenses was that “ ‘each claimed that the
    other defendant fired the gun.’ ” 
    Id. (citation omitted).
    In that context, it made no
    difference who fired the gun. But other defense theories in other aiding-and-abetting cases
    may be antagonistic enough to require severance.
    3
    Because neither defendant made a pretrial offer of proof alerting the trial court that
    defendants would present mutually exclusive defenses, and because no prejudice occurred
    at trial, I concur.
    Megan K. Cavanagh
    Richard H. Bernstein
    4
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 158296

Filed Date: 3/12/2020

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 3/14/2020