State v. Kevin Corleto , 161 A.3d 504 ( 2017 )


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  • June 8, 2017
    Supreme Court
    No. 2015-267-C.A.
    (N2/13-68A)
    State                            :
    v.                              :
    Kevin Corleto.                       :
    NOTICE: This opinion is subject to formal revision before
    publication in the Rhode Island Reporter. Readers are requested to
    notify the Opinion Analyst, Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 250
    Benefit Street, Providence, Rhode Island 02903, at Telephone 222-
    3258 of any typographical or other formal errors in order that
    corrections may be made before the opinion is published.
    Supreme Court
    No. 2015-267-C.A.
    (N2/13-68A)
    State                             :
    v.                               :
    Kevin Corleto.                        :
    Present: Suttell, C.J., Goldberg, Flaherty, Robinson, and Indeglia, JJ.
    OPINION
    Justice Robinson, for the Court. The defendant, Kevin Corleto, appeals from an order
    of the Superior Court denying his motion to dismiss on double jeopardy grounds1 a criminal
    information charging him with breaking and entering a dwelling, in violation of G.L. 1956 § 11-
    8-2. Specifically, the defendant’s motion to dismiss was predicated on alleged prosecutorial
    goading that resulted in the declaration of a mistrial. This case came before the Supreme Court
    for oral argument on April 5, 2017, pursuant to an order directing the parties to appear and show
    cause why the issues raised in this appeal should not be summarily decided. After a close review
    of the record and careful consideration of the parties’ arguments (both written and oral), we are
    satisfied that cause has not been shown and that this appeal may be decided at this time.
    For the reasons set forth below, we affirm the order of the Superior Court.
    1
    This Court has held that the denial of a motion to dismiss on double jeopardy grounds is
    immediately appealable, even though such an appeal is interlocutory. See State v. O’Connor,
    
    936 A.2d 216
    , 217 (R.I. 2007); see also State v. Casas, 
    792 A.2d 737
    , 739 (R.I. 2002).
    -1-
    I
    Facts and Travel
    On January 3, 2013, defendant was charged with for breaking and entering the dwelling
    of one Elizabeth Murphy, in violation of § 11-8-2.2 His jury trial commenced on May 13, 2014.
    At trial, the state presented Ms. Murphy as its only witness. Ms. Murphy testified that
    she then owned and had resided in a “one-family home” in Newport for the past seventy-three
    years. She proceeded to testify that, on what she characterized as the “unforgettable” day of
    September 22, 2012, at around 2:30 in the afternoon, she was working on her computer in the
    den, which is located in the back portion of her house and outside of which is a deck. She stated
    that, at some point during that afternoon, she “heard somebody climbing over the railing on the
    deck.” Ms. Murphy testified that she looked out and saw dark brown hair on a person’s head—
    which hair color “was about the same color” as that of her grandson; she added that, for that
    reason, she “assumed” that the person was her grandson. Ms. Murphy stated that she went to the
    back door “to give him the devil” for having climbed over the railing. She further testified that,
    without “look[ing] out the curtain,” she then unlocked and opened the door. She added that she
    noticed that “the screen door had already been opened” and that she saw defendant “crouched
    down.” She said that he suddenly “jumped into the foyer” of her home. Ms. Murphy testified
    that defendant held up both of his hands in the form of “two fists” and said: “I got medicine for
    the lady next door.” (She noted that there was “nothing” actually in his hands at that time.) Ms.
    2
    It bears noting that defendant was also charged with a similar count of breaking and
    entering the dwelling of Sean Reilly (a neighbor of Ms. Murphy), also in violation of G.L. 1956
    § 11-8-2; however, that count was in due course dismissed by the trial justice. The defendant
    was additionally charged with one count of disorderly conduct while in the dwelling of Mr.
    Reilly, in violation of G.L. 1956 § 11-45-1, as to which defendant eventually entered a plea of
    nolo contendere. Accordingly, for the purpose of the present appeal, we are concerned solely
    with the count referenced in the text—viz., breaking and entering into the dwelling of Ms.
    Murphy, in violation of § 11-8-2.
    -2-
    Murphy testified that, at that juncture, she told defendant that “the lady next door,” who
    happened to have been her sister-in-law, “had gone back to Georgia.” She added that, in reaction
    to that revelation by her, defendant “looked at [her] and he said ‘Fuck. Oh, fuck.’” She replied,
    “Watch the language,” but defendant “looked right at [her]” and responded: “‘Fuck you.’” Ms.
    Murphy stated that she thereafter “shoved [defendant] out the door” with “[t]wo hands.” And
    she said that, as a result, “[h]e went back and he hit the screen door * * * and he fell out the
    step.” Ms. Murphy concluded her direct testimony by stating that, about fifteen minutes after the
    just-described incident, her son arrived, to whom she related what had happened—resulting in
    his advising her to call the police.
    During the course of cross-examination, defense counsel pointed out several details in
    Ms. Murphy’s testimony that had been omitted from her two prior witness statements to the
    police (dated September 22, 2012 and November 25, 2012, respectively). Specifically, Ms.
    Murphy conceded that, in those two prior statements, she never mentioned: “the screen door” or
    that defendant was “crouched down” or that he had held “his hands out in close[d] fist[s].” Ms.
    Murphy explained to the cross-examiner that, at the time she wrote her first statement, which
    occurred on the day of the above-described incident, she was “very upset.”
    Before the presentation of closing arguments, the trial justice, outside the presence of the
    jury, posed the following question to both the prosecutor and defense counsel: “Based upon their
    assessment of the evidence, are the parties at a different place than they were at the beginning of
    this trial, vis-à-vis a resolution, without having a jury verdict?” After the parties responded that
    their respective positions remained the same, the trial justice engaged in the following dialogue
    with both of them:
    “[THE COURT]: If my recollection is correct then, * * * the place
    where the defendant was was a willingness to plea to an amended
    -3-
    charge of trespassing, with a sentence, a recommendation for --
    hopefully a recommendation from the State of a sentence of home
    confinement for a time frame of 364 days.
    “[DEFENSE COUNSEL]: That’s correct, your Honor.
    “[THE COURT]: * * * [T]hat was what the defendant sought * * *
    before we commenced jury empanelment; am I correct?
    “[PROSECUTOR]: That is correct, your Honor.
    “[THE COURT]: But the State is still of the opinion that the
    evidence offered is sufficient to allow this jury to convict the
    defendant of the charge of breaking and entering?
    “[PROSECUTOR]: Yes, your Honor.”
    On May 15, 2014, in the course of her closing argument to the jury, the prosecutor made
    the following comment: “There is no testimony, no evidence before us that explains why Mr.
    Corleto was climbing over a back deck railing, somebody’s back yard.” Defense counsel
    immediately objected and moved to pass the case.3 Counsel argued that the “comment * * *
    seem[s] to suggest that because Mr. Corleto did not testify, did not explain or justify why he
    leaped over the railing,” it constituted a “substantial abridgement of Mr. Corleto’s Fifth
    Amendment privilege against self-incrimination.”4 In response, the prosecutor argued “that the
    statement during the closing at issue was * * * relatively innocuous * * * [and was] not intended
    to suggest that there must be evidence * * * as to why Mr. Corleto was climbing over a railing.”
    The prosecutor added that her intention “was merely to point out that [defendant] was climbing
    3
    “In Rhode Island, the terms ‘motion to pass the case’ and ‘motion for a mistrial’ are
    synonymous.” 
    O’Connor, 936 A.2d at 218
    n.2; see also State v. Fortes, 
    922 A.2d 143
    , 148 n.3
    (R.I. 2007); State v. Disla, 
    874 A.2d 190
    , 198 (R.I. 2005).
    4
    We note that, in a commendable display of professionalism and candor, defense counsel
    made the following comment in the course of his motion to pass the case: “I certainly am not
    arguing to this Court that [the prosecutor] intentionally has tried to create this problem.
    Sometimes it happens.” In view of that remark, we could arguably decide this case on the basis
    of that concession. However, after due consideration, we deem it to be fairer and more
    appropriate to base our decision on the objective findings made by the seasoned trial justice who
    presided over this case.
    -4-
    over the railing in furtherance of going to the back door of Mrs. Murphy’s house.” And the
    prosecutor suggested that the statement at issue “could be cured with a cautionary instruction.”
    After listening to argument from the parties, the trial justice preliminarily observed that
    the prosecutor’s comment during closing argument “was not directed specifically to the
    defendant’s failure to take the stand;” he nonetheless ruled that the comment at issue “indirectly
    address[ed] the defendant’s failure to take the witness stand.” He noted that, in the instant case,
    only Ms. Murphy had testified; and he added that, notably, her “testimony [had] not [been]
    attacked or impeached by the [d]efendant.” As such, the trial justice reasoned that “the only
    person who could refute the evidence would be Mr. Corleto.” Eventually, he determined that a
    curative instruction could not cure the “unintentional but unfortunate reference, obliquely, to the
    defendant’s failure to testify.” And the trial justice then granted defendant’s motion to pass the
    case.
    Over a month later, on June 20, 2014, defendant filed a motion to dismiss the information
    on grounds of double jeopardy. A hearing on that motion was held on July 16, 2014, at which
    the same trial justice reviewed the record and heard arguments from defense counsel and the
    prosecutor. Then, in ruling on defendant’s motion, the trial justice first recalled his earlier
    observation that the prosecutor’s comment was “unintentional but unfortunate.” He also opined
    that “[t]he misconduct * * * did not occur when the case was unraveling.” The trial justice then
    explained that his inquiry after trial and before closing arguments as to the parties’ “respective
    positions” had not been “a suggestion” or “a hint,” but rather had been “an inquiry as to whether
    or not the parties would be prepared or willing to resolve the matter without closing argument,
    without instructions and without jury deliberations.” In addition, the trial justice expressly stated
    his disagreement with defense counsel’s assertion that the state believed that its case had been
    -5-
    unraveling; he reasoned that, if that had been true, “the [s]tate would have jumped at the
    opportunity to amend the charge to a trespass” and “defendant would have been less likely * * *
    to have stated his willingness to accept an amendment” to the charge. He also found that there
    was no evidence demonstrating that, taking into account the extent of the experience of the
    prosecutor, “she knew or should have known better that she was not permitted to make” such a
    comment; he found “objectively” that the prosecutor’s experience had been “minimal.”
    Ultimately, the trial justice ruled “as a matter of fact or a matter of law that the State’s actions in
    making that unfortunate reference to there being no evidence was * * * not intended to goad the
    defendant into seeking a mistrial;” and he denied defendant’s motion to dismiss. A timely notice
    of appeal ensued.
    II
    Standard of Review
    As this Court has stated on numerous occasions, “where a defendant has moved for a
    mistrial and asserts on appeal that double jeopardy bars his retrial because of prosecutorial
    goading, we defer to the trial court’s findings of fact.” State v. O’Connor, 
    936 A.2d 216
    , 220
    (R.I. 2007); see State v. Hull, 
    754 A.2d 84
    , 87 (R.I. 2000); see also State v. Diaz, 
    521 A.2d 129
    ,
    133 (R.I. 1987); State v. Gordon, 
    508 A.2d 1339
    , 1346 (R.I. 1986). We note that “[a] trial
    court’s finding as to ‘whether prosecutorial misconduct was intended to provoke the defendant
    into seeking a mistrial is a factual question that is appropriately decided by the trial court.’”
    
    O’Connor, 936 A.2d at 220
    (quoting 
    Diaz, 521 A.2d at 133
    ); see also Oregon v. Kennedy, 
    456 U.S. 667
    , 675 (1982). It follows that, “[o]n appeal, we will not disturb the trial [justice]’s
    finding on that factual issue if it is supported by competent evidence.” State v. Rolle, 
    84 A.3d 1149
    , 1154 (R.I. 2014) (internal quotation marks omitted); see 
    O’Connor, 936 A.2d at 220
    .
    -6-
    III
    Analysis
    On appeal to this Court, defendant contends that the Superior Court committed reversible
    error when it declined to grant his motion to dismiss on double jeopardy grounds. In particular,
    he avers that the state’s “egregious behavior” goaded him into requesting a mistrial, thereby
    “implicat[ing] the Double Jeopardy clauses of the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments to the
    United States Constitution[] as well as Article I § 7 of the Rhode Island Constitution.” In stark
    contrast, the state argues that the trial justice’s decision denying defendant’s motion to dismiss
    was “supported by competent evidence [in the record] and should be affirmed.”
    Ordinarily, when a mistrial has been granted at a defendant’s behest, the prohibitions on
    double jeopardy contained in the United States and Rhode Island Constitutions do not preclude
    the retrial of that defendant’s criminal case. 
    Rolle, 84 A.3d at 1154
    ; State v. Casas, 
    792 A.2d 737
    , 739 (R.I. 2002). However, there is a narrow exception for those instances “[w]here a
    prosecutor has engaged in extreme misconduct intended to provoke the defendant into moving to
    pass the case.” 
    Rolle, 84 A.3d at 1155
    ; see 
    Casas, 792 A.2d at 739
    ; State v. Beltre, 
    764 A.2d 190
    , 191 (R.I. 2000) (mem.); State v. McIntyre, 
    671 A.2d 806
    , 807 (R.I. 1996). This Court has
    continued to “steadfastly adhere[] to the rule announced in Oregon v. Kennedy, 
    456 U.S. 667
    ,
    676, * * * (1982), that a second trial is not forbidden unless the prosecutor’s conduct was
    specifically intended to goad the defendant into moving for a mistrial.” 
    Rolle, 84 A.3d at 1155
    ;
    see 
    McIntyre, 671 A.2d at 807
    .
    It is well settled that “[t]o infer the existence or nonexistence of intentional goading,” the
    trial justice must scrutinize “the objective facts and circumstances surrounding the prosecutor’s
    misconduct.” 
    Rolle, 84 A.3d at 1155
    . The pertinent factors in that context “include the timing
    -7-
    of the misconduct, the experience of the prosecutor, and whether there was a legitimate reason
    for the misconduct.” Id.; see 
    O’Connor, 936 A.2d at 222-23
    n.6.; 
    Casas, 792 A.2d at 740
    ;
    
    McIntyre, 671 A.2d at 807
    . Especially relevant to the instant case is the principle that mere error
    on the part of the prosecutor will not preclude retrial, even if “it may incite a mistrial.”
    
    O’Connor, 936 A.2d at 222
    . We remain cognizant in this context of the importance of striking
    “a careful balance between the right of a defendant to obtain a completion of his trial by the first
    tribunal assembled to pass in judgment upon him and the societal interest in apprehending and
    punishing those who are guilty of serious crimes.” 
    Diaz, 521 A.2d at 133
    ; see also 
    Rolle, 84 A.3d at 1155
    .
    In the case at bar, it is our opinion that the trial justice did not err in determining that the
    prosecutor did not goad defendant into moving for a mistrial. When the trial justice declared the
    mistrial, he tersely expressed his view that the prosecutor’s comment during closing argument
    was an “unintentional but unfortunate reference, obliquely, to the defendant’s failure to testify.”
    It is noteworthy that he repeated that same observation several weeks later at the hearing on
    defendant’s motion to dismiss the information on double jeopardy grounds. In denying that
    motion, the trial justice set forth several findings, of which the following are particularly relevant
    to the issue raised on appeal: the prosecutor’s “misconduct * * * did not occur when the case was
    unraveling;” the experience of the prosecutor was “minimal;” and, notably, there was “no
    evidence” in the record demonstrating that the prosecutor’s comment during closing argument
    was intended “to goad defendant into seeking a mistrial.” It is clear to us that the trial justice’s
    findings were amply supported by competent evidence. The trial justice considered all of the
    arguments presented by the parties and “performed a balanced and conscientious analysis of the
    objective facts and circumstances in” the case before him. 
    Rolle, 84 A.3d at 1156
    . The record
    -8-
    supports the view that the prosecutor’s comment during closing argument was likely “the result
    of a mistake”—and it must be borne in mind that “a prosecutorial mistake does not, in and of
    itself, constitute goading.” 
    O’Connor, 936 A.2d at 223
    . And, it should also be recalled that, with
    respect to the issue of intentional goading vel non, “[t]his Court gives deference to the trial
    court’s findings on this issue; the question of whether or not prosecutorial misconduct was
    intended to provoke a defendant into moving for a mistrial is a factual question for the trial
    court.” Id.; see also 
    Rolle, 84 A.3d at 1154
    .
    After thoroughly reviewing the entire record, we perceive no basis for concluding that the
    trial justice erred in determining that the prosecutor did not intentionally goad the defendant into
    moving for a mistrial. “Because we, like the Superior Court [in the instant case], perceive no
    evidence of intent on behalf of the prosecutor to goad [the defendant] into moving for a mistrial,
    we affirm the order denying [his] motion to dismiss.” 
    O’Connor, 936 A.2d at 223
    .
    IV
    Conclusion
    For the reasons set forth in this opinion, the defendant’s appeal is denied and dismissed.
    The order appealed from is affirmed, and the papers in the case may be returned to the Superior
    Court for further proceedings.
    -9-
    STATE OF RHODE ISLAND AND                                  PROVIDENCE PLANTATIONS
    SUPREME COURT – CLERK’S OFFICE
    OPINION COVER SHEET
    Title of Case                        State v. Kevin Corleto.
    No. 2015-267-C.A.
    Case Number
    (N2/13-68A)
    Date Opinion Filed                   June 8, 2017
    Suttell, C.J., Goldberg, Flaherty, Robinson, and
    Justices
    Indeglia, JJ.
    Written By                           Associate Justice William P. Robinson, III
    Source of Appeal                     Newport County Superior Court
    Judicial Officer From Lower Court    Associate Justice Edward C. Clifton
    For State:
    Lauren S. Zurier
    Department of Attorney General
    Attorney(s) on Appeal
    For Defendant:
    Gary G. Pelletier, Esq.
    Maria Caley, Esq.
    SU-CMS-02A (revised June 2016)