After he was “indicted on one count of Murder in the First
Degree, two counts of Attempted Robbery in the First Degree, one count of
Conspiracy in the Second Degree, and two counts of Possession of a Firearm
during the Commission of a Felony”, all in violation of Delaware law, Jermaine
M. Zachary filed a motion in limine in which he argued that certain evidence
should not be admitted at his trial. State v. Zachary, 2013 WL 3833058
(Superior Court of Delaware 2013). As Wikipedia explains, a motion in limine is
a motion a party to a civil or criminal case files, prior to trial, asking the
judge to admit or exclude certain evidence.
This, according to the opinion, is how the case arose:
On September 25, 2009, at approximately
2:50 p.m., Robert Watkins was shot and killed during an apparent robbery in
Dover, Delaware. Watkins and his girlfriend, Rosita Brady, had agreed to meet Jermaine
Zachary and the shooter at a residence on Jeffrey Drive with the intent to
purchase pit bull puppies from a man named `Jonesy.’
Brady told police they
drove to the residence with $1,800. When they arrived at the residence, [Zachary]
got into the rear passenger seat of the vehicle and asked Brady if her vehicle
was for sale.
At this time, the shooter, who was
standing outside the vehicle, pulled out a handgun and pointed it at the
victim. Watkins was shot once in the torso and later pronounced dead at
Christiana Hospital. Delaware State Police questioned [Zachary] on the day of
the murder. Brady identified [Zachary] as `Jonesy.’
State v. Zachary,
supra. The court also explains that
no arrests were made in the case until
July 2012, when Detective Mark Ryde, who had been recently assigned to the
case, reviewed [Zachary’s] cellular phone records. Ryde discovered a series of
text messages exchanged by [Zachary] and the user of a prepaid cell phone
number with the number 202–236–4884 (hereinafter `the 202 number’) between
12:20 p.m. and 12:48 p.m. on the day of Watkins' death. The State alleges that
these text messages are strong circumstantial evidence that [Zachary] conspired
with the user of the 202 number, which the State purports was the alleged
shooter, to rob Watkins
and Brady.
State v. Zachary,
supra. In a footnote, the court
explains that since the “alleged shooter has not been charged for his role in
Watkins' death”, the court will “abstain from identifying this individual by
name.” State v. Zachary, supra.
In his motion in limine, Zachary argued that “the following
text messages exchanged between [his] cell phone and the 202 number in the
hours preceding the shooting” should not be admitted into evidence at his
trial:
Sent to 202–236–4884 at 12:24 p.m.:
‘Kum Rob Dub $RootOfAllEvil’
Received from 202–236–4884 at 12:24
p.m.: ‘Were u at’
Sent to 202–236–4884 at 12:25 p.m.:
‘Murda im about a shoot dice $RootofAllEvil’
Received from 202–236–4884 at 12:25
p.m.: ‘He shootn now’
Sent to 202–236–4884 at 12:28 p.m.:
‘were u at $RootofAllEvil’
Received from 202–236–4884 at 12:29
p.m.: ‘Felton’
Sent to 202–236–4884 at 12:29 p.m. ‘Oh
I ant even gonna start shootn then $RootofAllEvil’
Received from 202–236–4884 at 12:29
p.m.: ‘Ight’
Sent to 202–236–4884 at 12:48 p.m.: ‘Yo
u still dwn there he got like 1500 on em $RootOfAllEvil’
Received from 202–236–4884 at 12:48
p.m.: ‘Dam yea get em or stay wit him.’
State v. Zachary,
supra.
More precisely, Zachary argued that the text messages should
not be admitted “on the grounds that they cannot be properly authenticated, are
irrelevant, and are unduly prejudicial under Rule 403 of the Delaware Rules of Evidence (hereinafter `D.R.E.’).” State v. Zachary, supra. The prosecution filed a
response to Zachary’s motion, in which it argued that the text messages
both prove the existence of a
conspiracy to rob the victim and his girlfriend, and serve as statements made
in furtherance of that conspiracy. Thus, the State argues that the text
messages are highly relevant, and that their probative value is not outweighed
by their prejudicial effect.
State v. Zachary,
supra.
The court addressed Zachary’s arguments as to why they
should not be introduced into evidence in the order in which he made them,
beginning with the issue of authentication.
State v. Zachary, supra. As to the law on authentication, the judge
explained that it is an
[indispensable condition precedent to
the admissibility of documentary evidence. D.R.E. 901(a). This requirement is
satisfied when the proponent of the writing or document in question produces
evidence `sufficient to support a finding that the matter in question is what
its proponent claims.’ D.R.E.
901(a). Potential methods of authentication are illustrated in Rule 901(b).
The most germane to the present case is
found in D.R.E. 901(b)(4), which provides that a finding of authenticity
may be based entirely on circumstantial evidence, including the document's `[a]ppearance,
contents, substance, internal patterns, or other distinctive characteristics,
taken in conjunction with the circumstances.’ Proof of authorship need not be conclusive, but a prima facie showing
of the author's identity must be established for the writing to be admissible.
State v. Zachary,
supra (quoting U.S. v. Sinclair,
433 F.Supp. 1180 (U.S. District Court for the District of Delaware 1997)).
The judge then took up the issue of whether the text
messages at issue in this case had been or could be properly authenticated:
Whether text messages are subject to
the same authentication requirements under D.R.E. 901 as other
electronic documents appears to be a somewhat novel question of law in this
jurisdiction. Thus, I find it
helpful to consider the decisions of other courts that have addressed this
issue.
For example, in Commonwealth v. Koch, 39 A.3d 996
(2011), the Superior Court of Pennsylvania considered the authentication of
text messages transcribed from the defendant's cellular phone. The court held
that the police detective's description of how he transcribed the text messages
from the defendant's cell phone, together with his representation that the
transcription was an accurate representation of the text messages on the phone,
was insufficient to authenticate the identity of the author as the defendant.
The court observed that, as with
non-electronic documents generally, the identity of the sender is critical to
the authentication of text messages,
and that `the difficulty that frequently arises in . . . text message
cases is establishing authorship.’ A
person cannot be identified as the author of a text message based solely on
evidence that [it] was sent from a cellular phone bearing the telephone number
assigned to that person because `cellular telephones are not always exclusively
used by the person to whom the phone number is assigned.’
Thus, some additional evidence, `which
tends to corroborate the identity of the sender, is required.’ Circumstantial evidence corroborating the author's
identity may include the context or content of the messages themselves, such as
where the messages `contain[ ] factual information or references unique to the
parties involved.’ Other
jurisdictions have also looked to the context and content of the messages for
sufficient circumstantial evidence of their authorship.
State v. Zachary,
supra (quoting Commonwealth v. Koch,
supra).
The judge found the reasoning of Koch persuasive, noting that “[e]stablishing the identity of the
author of text messages through the use of corroborating evidence is critical
to satisfying the authentication requirements of D.R.E. 901.” State v. Zachary, supra. He therefore found that to have the messages
admitted at Zachary’s trial, the prosecution, “as the proponent of the
text-message evidence, must explain the purpose for which the text messages are
being offered and provide sufficient direct or circumstantial evidence
corroborating their authorship to satisfy the requirements of D.R.E. 901.” State
v. Zachary, supra.
The judge explained that in this case, the prosecution
intends to offer the text messages both
as evidence that [Zachary] conspired with the alleged shooter to rob Watkins
and Brady, and as statements of co-conspirators. As such, the messages are only
relevant to the extent that the State can authenticate that [he] authored all
of the outgoing messages and that the alleged shooter authored the incoming
messages.
The parties agree that [Zachary] authored all of the outgoing
messages. Indeed, the State is prepared to corroborate that [he] was the author
of the outgoing messages with testimony from various witnesses with knowledge
of [Zachary’s] cell phone number and use of the signature `$RootOfAllEvil.’
Glaringly absent in this case is any
evidence tending to substantiate that the alleged shooter wrote the 202
messages. In the present case, authentication requires more than mere
confirmation that the 202 number belongs to a particular person. Indeed,
the 202 number was issued to a prepaid cell phone, and, therefore, had no
registered owner or user associated with it. Thus, the State must rely on
circumstantial evidence to corroborate that the alleged shooter authored the
202 messages.
At the evidentiary hearing [on the
motion in limine], the State announced its intentions to authenticate the text
messages by the content of the exchange. The State argued that only the alleged
shooter would be inquiring into [Zachary’s] whereabouts in the hours preceding
the shooting, and that a jury could reasonably infer from the messages
themselves that the alleged shooter was speaking of Watkins and Brady when he
told [Zachary] to `kum rob dub’ and `get em and stay wit him.’
State v. Zachary,
supra. (In a footnote, the judge points out that at the evidentiary hearing on the motion in limine, "counsel informed the Court that the payment records that the State could have used to determine the identity of the prepaid phone user were no longer available from the provider." State v. Zachary,
supra.)
The judge did not buy the prosecution’s argument, explaining
that the content of
this conversation is somewhat cryptic.
It's equally plausible to infer that [Zachary] was merely discussing his
gambling activities with an unknown individual in this exchange.
There are no
contextual clues in the text messages themselves that tend to corroborate that
the alleged shooter authored the incoming text messages. In other cases in
which a message has been held to be authenticated by its content, the
identifying characteristics have been much more distinctive of the purported
author and often have been corroborated by other events or with forensic
computer evidence.
Without additional evidence from which
the jury could infer that the alleged shooter authored the incoming messages,
the State cannot authenticate the 202 messages. Without proper authentication,
this text message exchange is simply not relevant to this case; as it does not
have the tendency `to make the existence of any fact that is of consequence to
the determination of the action more or less probable’ than it would be without
it. D.R.E. 401. Because the State
cannot satisfy the requirements of D.R.E. 901, I need not reach the
additional bases for exclusion argued by [Zachary].
State v. Zachary,
supra.
The judge therefore granted Zachary’s motion in limine. State
v. Zachary, supra.
1 comment:
As his niece this was hard to read. I haven't attended the trial because hearing about his last moments I couldn't handle. Reading this just makes me more angry.
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