Michael Ray Boone v. Commonwealth ( 2005 )


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  •                                COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA
    Present: Judges Frank, Kelsey and Haley
    Argued at Chesapeake, Virginia
    MICHAEL RAY BOONE
    MEMORANDUM OPINION* BY
    v.     Record No. 2105-04-1                                     JUDGE JAMES W. HALEY, JR.
    NOVEMBER 15, 2005
    COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA
    FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE CITY OF NORFOLK
    Everett A. Martin, Jr., Judge
    Joseph R. Winston, Special Appellate Counsel (Virginia Indigent
    Defense Commission, on briefs), for appellant.
    Karri B. Atwood, Assistant Attorney General (Judith Williams
    Jagdmann, Attorney General, on brief), for appellee.
    Michael Ray Boone appeals from his conviction by jury of abduction, use of a firearm in
    commission of the abduction, robbery, and use of a firearm in commission of the robbery. Boone
    contends the trial court should have granted his motion for mistrial based on the following reasons:
    1) the Commonwealth’s failure to make discovery and disclose exculpatory evidence, and 2) the
    insufficiency of the curative instruction provided to the jury. We disagree and affirm.
    I.
    Initially, we note the following with respect to a motion for mistrial:
    A trial court exercises its discretion when it determines whether it
    should grant a motion for mistrial. Whether improper evidence is
    so prejudicial as to require a mistrial is a question of fact to be
    resolved by the trial court in each particular case. Unless this
    Court can say that the trial court’s resolution of that question was
    wrong as a matter of law, it will not disturb the trial court’s
    decision on appeal. A judgment will not be reversed for the
    *
    Pursuant to Code § 17.1-413, this opinion is not designated for publication.
    improper admission of evidence that a court subsequently directs a
    jury to disregard because juries are presumed to follow prompt,
    explicit, and curative instructions.
    Elliott v. Commonwealth, 
    267 Va. 396
    , 418, 
    593 S.E.2d 270
    , 284 (2004). See also Lewis v.
    Commonwealth, 
    269 Va. 209
    , 213-14, 
    608 S.E.2d 907
    , 909-10 (2005).
    II.
    On July 26, 2002, Orimolade Ogunjimi was driving in downtown Norfolk near the
    intersection of Granby and 31st Streets. While stopped at this intersection, Ogunjimi noticed two
    young men walking beside his car. Ogunjimi described one of the men as tall with an oversized
    green t-shirt with braided hair and the other as shorter wearing a white tank top with a two to three
    inch afro. Ogunjimi identified the shorter individual as Michael Ray Boone.
    Ogunjimi heard the two men say something. Ogunjimi turned and saw Boone pointing a
    pistol into the car’s window. Ogunjimi, after quickly stepping on the gas and driving off, heard two
    shots fired. Ogunjimi later noticed a bullet hole in his steering wheel. Ogunjimi pulled into a
    convenience store parking lot where he noticed a marked police car. Ogunjimi approached Officer
    Robert E. Chambers and gave him a description of the assailants.
    That same evening, Quinn Beers visited the Tabbs Family Restaurant in downtown Norfolk.
    While walking toward the restaurant, Beers heard something and turned to see two men, one with a
    pistol pointed in his face. Beers described the individual holding the gun as approximately 5 feet 7
    inches wearing a white tank top and long dark pants. Beers identified Boone as that individual.
    The assailants ordered Beers to turn and face the restaurant with his back toward them. The
    men ordered Beers to the ground and asked “where the money was.” The men removed the
    contents of Beers’ pockets and the items he held in his hand, including his keys and cell phone. The
    men ordered Beers to his feet, whereupon one of them struck him with a blunt object. Beers fell to
    the ground, laid there for a couple of minutes, and watched the individuals walk off. After getting
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    up, Beers noticed the glove compartment to his car was opened and the contents scattered
    throughout his car. A customer of the restaurant assisted Beers inside whereupon someone dialed
    911.
    Officer Chambers began to search for the suspects described by Ogunjimi. Chambers
    testified that a third victim approached and described two men who had just robbed him at
    gunpoint.1 Chambers then noticed two men running through the city park toward the Norfolk Zoo,
    one of whom was dressed in a white tank top. Chambers pursued the men with his K-9 partner.
    Shortly thereafter, with the assistance of other officers and two additional K-9 units, officers took
    two suspects into custody. Officer Chambers recovered a white tank top from a fence in the search
    area.
    Officer Mark Railing, while assisting in the search, found Michael Boone lying against a
    fence in the park. Railing ordered Boone into the open and placed him under arrest. Railing
    testified that Boone was wearing dark pants and no shirt at the time of the arrest. An assisting
    officer recovered a business card holder from Boone and discovered Beers’ driver’s license inside.
    A police investigator later found Beers’ check card inside the card holder.
    Shortly thereafter, officers took the suspects back to the convenience store where Ogunjimi
    and Beers waited. Officers conducted a show-up with the two suspects. Both Ogunjimi and Beers
    identified the men as their assailants.
    During the testimony of Officer J.P. Flengas, the Commonwealth offered into evidence
    pictures of trash bins located in the city park. One of these photos showed a pistol lying in the trash
    bin. Boone objected to this photo on the ground of relevance. The Commonwealth responded, “at
    this point [the photo of the trash bin with the pistol is] offered for the purpose of this officer
    conducting a search of this area and what he found in this particular area and the thoroughness of
    1
    This third victim was not identified at trial.
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    the police search in this particular effort.”2 Moreover, the Commonwealth had previously made the
    following representation regarding this evidence in opening statement:
    [Police officers] found a gun nearby in a trash can. It was not the
    same gun that had been used to shoot at Mr. Ogunjimi. That gun
    was not recovered nor was Mr. Beers’ cell phone nor was Mr. Beers’
    car keys.
    (Emphasis added). The trial judge overruled Boone’s objection and admitted the photos.
    After the close of the Commonwealth’s case-in-chief, Boone reiterated his objection to the
    photograph of the pistol. Boone’s counsel noted,
    Judge . . . the firearm, the picture we just introduced, I was speaking
    to Ms. Diaz [the Assistant Commonwealth’s Attorney] and she tells
    me there were ballistics done on that based on the bullet that was
    pulled out of the steering wheel and also on the firearm and they did
    not match. I was never given any reports of that. That goes along
    with the stuff in discovery which has all caught me by surprise. I
    want to bring it to the Court’s attention. I think it’s exculpatory.
    The Commonwealth responded that the photograph was not exculpatory and, therefore, was not
    subject to discovery. The Commonwealth reiterated,
    The Commonwealth is offering it for the fact the police conducted a
    thorough search of this particular area and they did not recover the
    cell phone. . . . Those are the reasons, but this gun was not found
    near the defendant. The Commonwealth made no allegations
    through any of its witnesses that it was found near the defendant.
    The trial court noted the following in response to Boone’s objection:
    That was the basis upon which I admitted it was there was a gun
    found in the near vicinity of where the defendant had been arrested
    after having been identified as being in the commission of two
    offenses involving a firearm. Had I known positively this gun was
    not involved, I wouldn’t have admitted the photograph. When the
    jury comes back out, I am going to tell them the photograph of the
    gun is removed from evidence and they should not consider it.
    2
    The Commonwealth introduced this evidence in direct response to appellant’s questions
    concerning the thoroughness of the officers’ search.
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    Boone’s counsel thereafter made a motion for mistrial and stated, “I don’t think the jury is
    simply going to forget it’s there.” The trial court denied the motion. After the jury returned, the
    trial judge gave the following curative instruction:
    Ladies and gentlemen, during the recess I was advised that a
    ballistics test was done that excluded the gun which is shown in
    one of the photographs as having been the gun that fired the bullet
    that ended up in Mr. Ogunjimi’s car. Therefore, I am going to
    order that photograph be withdrawn from evidence and instruct
    you to disregard the photograph and any mention of it. It appears
    to me it’s not relevant.
    At no time during the trial did Boone ask the trial court for a ruling on whether or not the
    ballistics report was exculpatory and thus included in his discovery request.
    The jury found Boone guilty of abduction, robbery, and two counts of use of a firearm in
    commission of a felony. The jury acquitted Boone of the attempted carjacking of Ogunjimi’s car
    and use of a firearm in commission of that attempt, the bullet recovered from that incident being
    the subject of the ballistics test upon the gun found in the trash bin.
    III.
    This Court addressed the issue of exculpatory evidence in Waters v. Commonwealth, 
    43 Va. App. 636
    , 
    600 S.E.2d 918
    (2004). There, this Court held,
    Where an appellant alleges exculpatory information was not given
    him by the Commonwealth, he must establish that the information
    would have aided in his defense and he “must show that a
    reasonable probability exists that the . . . disclosure would have
    resulted in a different outcome.”
    
    Id. at 648,
    600 S.E.2d at 924 (quoting Lemons v. Commonwealth, 
    18 Va. App. 617
    , 620, 
    446 S.E.2d 158
    , 160 (1994)). Additionally, in Elliott, the Virginia Supreme Court held,
    [T]here does not appear to be any point in the record w[h]ere
    Elliott requested the trial court to rule that the Commonwealth had
    failed to disclose exculpatory evidence . . . or sought a mistrial on
    that ground. Thus, even if argued on brief, these assignments of
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    error would be barred in any case by the lack of preservation in the
    trial court.
    
    Elliott, 267 Va. at 422
    , 593 S.E.2d at 286-87.
    Here, on three distinct occasions, the Commonwealth articulated the reasoning and
    purpose for introducing the photograph at issue. Each time, the Commonwealth stated Boone
    did not use this pistol, and the photograph was being used solely to illustrate the thoroughness of
    the police search. Nevertheless, while discussing the ballistics report, appellant’s counsel
    asserted, “I think it’s exculpatory.” Appellant offered no other evidence or argument to the trial
    court on this issue. Furthermore, appellant never asked for a ruling on the issue, nor did the trial
    court rule sua sponte. By failing to ask the court for a ruling, appellant denied the trial court the
    opportunity to rule intelligently on the issue. That denial waives consideration of that issue upon
    appeal. Riner v. Commonwealth, 
    268 Va. 296
    , 325, 
    601 S.E.2d 555
    , 571-72 (2004). See also
    Fisher v. Commonwealth, 
    16 Va. App. 447
    , 455, 
    431 S.E.2d 886
    , 890 (1993). “It is axiomatic
    that an appellant cannot establish reversible error by the trial court based on nothing more than
    speculation or conjecture.” Reeves v. Commonwealth, 
    42 Va. App. 650
    , 663, 
    593 S.E.2d 827
    ,
    833 (2004). Accordingly, the statement “I think it’s exculpatory” alone falls short of the burden
    necessary to establish a discovery violation.
    Additionally, appellant bases his motion for mistrial solely on the relevance and
    prejudicial effect of the photograph. Appellant’s counsel, in response to the trial judge removing
    the photograph from evidence, argued, “I don’t think the jury is simply going to forget [the pistol
    in the photograph is] there.” Appellant does not raise any other ground for mistrial until appeal.
    Thus, not only did appellant fail to ask the trial court for a ruling on the exculpatory evidence
    issue, but appellant also did not seek a motion for mistrial on the Commonwealth’s failure to
    disclose the alleged exculpatory evidence. Even assuming arguendo that appellant met his
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    burden on this issue, his argument is barred by Rule 5A:18, consistent with the Virginia Supreme
    Court’s holding in Elliott.
    IV.
    Likewise, even assuming arguendo the Commonwealth violated the discovery process by
    failing to timely provide the ballistics report, that violation was cured by the trial court’s
    subsequent instruction explaining the contents of the report to the jury. The ballistics report
    showed the gun depicted in the photograph was “excluded . . . as having been the gun that fired
    the bullet that ended up in Mr. Ogunjimi’s car.” Thus, appellant received the benefit of the
    ballistics report without it even being offered into evidence, and any error, if present at all, was
    harmless.
    Nevertheless, appellant asserts that the trial court’s curative instruction was insufficient.
    However, as the Virginia Supreme Court has held on numerous occasions, “[u]nless the record
    shows that a jury has disregarded such a curative instruction, we will presume that the jury
    followed it.” Yarbrough v. Commonwealth, 
    262 Va. 388
    , 397, 
    551 S.E.2d 306
    , 311 (2001).
    There is no evidence in the record to suggest the jury disregarded the cautionary
    instruction. In fact, the jury acquitted Boone of the charge involving the bullet fired during the
    incident involving Ogunjimi. Therefore, not only is there no evidence of disregard, the acquittal
    is further evidence that the jury indeed followed the curative instruction.
    On brief, appellant asserts that the curative instruction “addressed the carjacking incident
    and not the robbery incident.” However, while that instruction does mention the ballistics test as
    it related to the carjacking incident, it goes further: “I am going to order that photograph be
    withdrawn from evidence and instruct you to disregard the photograph and any mention of it.”
    Moreover, Beers, the robbery victim, identified the appellant as the person who “had a gun
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    pointed at me.” That evidence provided the jury with a basis for conviction independent of any
    consideration of the successfully challenged photograph.
    In accordance with the holding in Yarbrough and the jury’s verdict, we presume the jury
    followed the curative instruction, and the judge did not abuse his discretion in denying the
    motion for mistrial.
    V.
    For the foregoing reasons, we affirm.
    Affirmed.
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