State v. Walters, 87-503-CA

Decision Date09 December 1988
Docket NumberNo. 87-503-CA,87-503-CA
Citation551 A.2d 15
CourtRhode Island Supreme Court
PartiesSTATE v. David L. WALTERS.
OPINION

WEISBERGER, Justice.

This case comes before us on an appeal by the defendant, David L. Walters, from a judgment of conviction following a jury trial in Superior Court for second degree murder in the shooting death of Cornelius A. Riess, Jr. The defendant urges several grounds in support of his appeal. We need consider only one.

The defendant argues that the trial justice committed error by permitting the state to introduce evidence of a "trajectory check" conducted by Detective Sergeant Lawrence Campion of the East Greenwich police department. Detective Sergeant Campion testified that through the use of this so-called trajectory check he was able to determine the path of the bullet and, ultimately, where Walters was standing when the fatal shot was fired. Because the trajectory check lacks any scientific basis or indicia of reliability, we reverse. The facts of the case that are substantially undisputed are as follows.

At about 7:30 p.m. on November 28, 1984, Dennis St. Lawrence and Cornelius A. Riess, Jr., met at St. Lawrence's home. They had a beer before leaving for a liquor store where they cashed a small check and bought a six-pack of beer and a bottle of Schnapps. After consuming a couple of beers en route to the Rhode Island Mall, they went to Sears to buy a battery for Riess's car. From there, they went to Shenanigan's, a bar in East Greenwich, where they had a few more drinks and met Walters. St. Lawrence and Walters had been previously acquainted, and St. Lawrence introduced Walters to Riess. As they drank and conversed, Riess stated that he was carrying a check in the amount of more than $460 that he wanted to convert to cash. Walters informed Riess that the bartender at Shenanigan's probably would not cash a check that large and offered to cash the check for him. Walters explained that he could deposit the check into his account through an automatic teller, withdraw $300 in cash, and give Riess his personal check, less a $10 fee, for the balance. The trio proceeded to a nearby automatic teller at the Old Stone Bank.

Unable to retrieve more than $150 in cash, Walters then offered to pay Riess the balance of the value of his pay check by writing a check from his own account. Riess was reluctant, and Walters was somewhat agitated by Riess's apparent lack of trust in him. In any event they all agreed to go to Walters' house at 40 Power Street, East Greenwich, to continue the negotiations. Soon after their arrival and as they continued their beer drinking, the discussion escalated into a more heated exchange, and Walters momentarily left the dining area, only to return shortly thereafter with a loaded .357 caliber magnum that he either handed to or placed on the table in front of St. Lawrence. Not believing that Walters would bring a loaded gun into the already charged atmosphere, St. Lawrence decided to test the gun by firing it into the floor. St. Lawrence testified that after the gun actually fired, he removed the bullets and returned the gun to Walters.

At this point the evidence diverges. According to St. Lawrence, he and Riess made a hasty exit from the dwelling. They got into Riess's car. After a slight delay Riess located his keys and began to back the car out of the driveway. At this point Walters emerged from the house, assumed a combat position in the driveway, carefully aimed his pistol, and fired a shot through the windshield of the car. The shot struck Riess in the chest, and after driving a short distance, he collapsed at the wheel and died thereafter.

Walters, who testified in his own behalf, recited a different version of these events. He testified that Riess left the dwelling and returned with a pair of combat devices known as nunchucks. Walters testified that Riess beat him with the nunchucks and knocked him to the floor. Thereafter, according to Walters, Riess and St. Lawrence left the house and got into Walters' vehicle. Walters took his gun 1 and went out into the driveway to remonstrate with St. Lawrence and Riess for being in his car. Thereupon Riess and St. Lawrence moved to the Riess car and began to back out of the driveway. At this point, when Walters was beside the car, attempting to communicate with Riess, he was struck by the side of the car in such fashion that not only did the car run over his foot but the gun accidentally discharged as he fell.

Thus a major factual issue in this case was whether Walters assumed a combat position to improve his aim and purposefully and deliberately fired at the Riess automobile, as St. Lawrence testified, or whether, as Walters testified, the gun accidentally discharged when he was struck by the automobile from a position beside the car as it pulled out of the driveway.

During the trial the prosecutor was permitted over objection to elicit testimony from Detective Sergeant Campion regarding the trajectory check he performed. He testified that he took a piece of string or rope and started it at the point in the driver's seat at approximately the height of the chest wound. He carried the string across the seat, passed it through the bullet hole near the inspection sticker on the passenger's side of the windshield, and drew it out beyond the passenger side fender of the car. Campion testified that by extending the rope out eight feet beyond the windshield, the rope would reach the approximate shoulder height of a man five-foot-eleven-inches tall. His testimony supported that of St. Lawrence, that is, that Walters was standing in front of and some distance away from the car when the shot was fired.

Over defendant's objection the trial justice allowed Campion to describe his "test" procedure and results. The trial justice indicated that Campion was not testifying about his expertise in firearms but was merely indicating "the flight of the projectile." Because this trajectory check lacked any scientific basis and because a jury might be inclined to give weight to the apparent opinion testimony of a seasoned and experienced police officer describing his investigative methods, we hold that its admission constituted reversible error.

This evidence would have no probative value whatever unless the jurors were allowed to infer that (1) the trajectory check was scientifically adequate to indicate the location from which the shot was fired and (2) Campion had special qualifications to conduct such an experiment and to base an opinion thereon. The state did not establish either of these threshold requirements of relevance and competence. Although the state argues that the trajectory check constituted neither a scientific demonstration nor an expert conclusion, it is manifest that if it fit into neither of these categories, it would be totally irrelevant. It would then not tend to prove or disprove the existence of a fact in issue in the case. See, e.g., Abbey Medical/Abbey Rents, Inc. v. Mignacca, 471 A.2d 189 (R....

To continue reading

Request your trial
4 cases
  • Prince v. State
    • United States
    • Court of Special Appeals of Maryland
    • February 26, 2014
    ...not require expertise or analysis grounded on an officer's particular training or experience. We also are not persuaded by State v. Walters, 551 A.2d 15 (R.I.1988), or by the other cases Mr. Prince cites for the proposition that trajectory analysis can only be the subject of expert testimon......
  • State v. Chiellini, 88-83-C
    • United States
    • United States State Supreme Court of Rhode Island
    • April 24, 1989
    ...this court will reject "efforts to utilize testimony concerning unreliable tests lacking in true probative value * * *." State v. Walters, 551 A.2d 15, 18 (R.I.1988). However, the reliability or general acceptance in the scientific community of geometric blood-stain interpretation was not a......
  • State v. Damiano, 89-453-C
    • United States
    • United States State Supreme Court of Rhode Island
    • February 18, 1991
    ...struck it with a cautionary instruction to the jury was an adequate response to testimony that was inadmissible pursuant to State v. Walters, 551 A.2d 15 (R.I.1988). The furnishing of a magnifying glass to jurors in order for them better to discern small print that might be encountered in a......
  • People v. Caldwell
    • United States
    • Court of Appeals of Colorado
    • September 13, 2001
    ...See, e.g., State v. Mincey, 130 Ariz. 389, 636 P.2d 637 (1981); State v. Saunders, 317 N.C. 308, 345 S.E.2d 212 (1986); State v. Walters, 551 A.2d 15 (R.I.1988). Here, however, the witness' testimony included only his observations about the entry locations of the bullets and the path they t......

VLEX uses login cookies to provide you with a better browsing experience. If you click on 'Accept' or continue browsing this site we consider that you accept our cookie policy. ACCEPT