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Date: 08-17-2016

Case Style: Raymond D. Tempest, Jr. v. State of Rhode Island

Case Number: 15-257

Judge: Gilbert Indeglia

Court: Rhode Island Supreme Court.

Plaintiff's Attorney:

Aaron L. Weisman
Department of Attorney General

Defendant's Attorney:









Michael Kendall






Matthew Turnell






Katherine Dyson






Betty Ann Waters, Esq

Description: The facts of this case are altogether tragic, and the travel is anything but lackluster. We
recite only those facts that are relevant to the instant appeal, and so invite the reader to consult
our opinion in State v. Tempest, 651 A.2d 1198 (R.I. 1995) for a more detailed discussion. On February 19, 1982, at approximately 3:20 p.m., fifteen-year-old Lisa LaDue (LaDue)2
came home to the triple-decker apartment at 409 Providence Street in Woonsocket, Rhode
Island, which she lived in with her mother and step-father, Douglas Heath (Heath). LaDue
testified that, upon arriving home, she walked around to the back of the house, where she noticed
a “big maroon car” parked adjacent to the bulkhead leading into the cellar. When she entered
through the back door of the house, she saw three-year-old Nicole Laferte (Nicole) crying,
“saying her mother was downstairs sick.” LaDue disregarded Nicole’s behavior as simply a cry
for attention because LaDue heard “some moving around downstairs[,]” so she went upstairs to
wait for Heath to come home. Within a few minutes, she saw Heath pull into the driveway.
Shortly thereafter, she heard Heath frantically call for her.
Heath testified that he arrived home approximately ten minutes after LaDue. When he
walked into the back hallway on the first floor of the multifamily home, he also encountered
young Nicole, who was standing at the cellar door crying. Heath asked Nicole what was wrong,
and Nicole replied that her mother was downstairs “lying down.” Heath went down to the cellar,
unprepared for the gruesome scene he was about to encounter—a body “basically sitting”
between the washer and dryer, and a second body lying face down in a “puddle of blood.” Both
bodies had been beaten beyond recognition. The bodies would later be identified as those of
2 LaDue’s maiden name is Wells.
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Picard and Nicole’s mother, Susan Laferte (Laferte). Picard was pronounced dead at
approximately 4:30 p.m. the same day. Laferte miraculously survived the brutal attack; but, due
to the injuries she sustained, her memory was significantly impaired.
Following what even the state described as a “chao[tic],” “disorder[ly],” and
“disast[rous]” nine-year investigation by the Woonsocket Police Department, on June 5, 1991, a grand jury indicted Tempest for Picard’s murder.3 The case went to trial in April 1992, during
which Heath, LaDue, and a number of other witnesses testified. Of these witnesses, four
testified that Tempest had confessed to killing Picard.
Two such witnesses were John Guarino (Guarino) and his former girlfriend, Donna Carrier (Carrier).4 Tempest and Guarino ran in the same circle of friends, and at one time they
lived in the same apartment complex on Winter Street in Woonsocket. Guarino testified that,
while they were out one night having drinks in late 1982 or early 1983, Tempest confessed to
killing Picard. Although Guarino testified that at the time he did not take Tempest’s confession
“seriously,” he nevertheless went home and told Carrier what Tempest had said. Guarino further
testified that, several weeks later, Tempest—who Guarino said appeared “very, very nervous”—
came to his apartment and told him he “better keep [his] mouth shut and not say anything to
anybody.” Tempest again told Guarino “that he did it” but that “they don’t have any proof that
he did it.”
Carrier testified that she overheard this exchange between Guarino and Tempest. She
stated that Tempest said that Picard “came down the stairs at the wrong time, saw him hitting
[Laferte]” and that “[h]e couldn’t let her get away and had to do her, too.” Carrier also testified
3 No charges were ever filed against Tempest in connection with the attack on Laferte. The statute of limitations has long since run with regard to this assault. 4 Carrier’s maiden name was Bousquet. By the time of Tempest’s trial, Guarino and Carrier had separated and were no longer in contact with one another. Both have since passed away.
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that Tempest said he was “very upset because [Laferte] was going to tell [his wife] something
and that he and [his wife] had just gotten back together.” Prior to trial, Carrier had been adamant
that, at the time of the murder, the Tempest family lived in the same apartment complex on
Winter Street as she and Guarino.
Two other witnesses testified that Tempest had confessed to killing Picard. The first was
Ronald Vaz (Vaz), an acquaintance of Tempest, who had a long criminal record and who occasionally “snorted” cocaine with him.5 Loretta Rivard, a prostitute with whom Tempest
“part[ied]” one night in January 1988, also testified that Tempest took responsibility for the
murder. To be sure, many of the state’s witnesses were not model citizens. Indeed, the trial
justice said the following about them:
“We didn’t have a parade of MDs or [s]umma [c]um [l]audes here. We had people who deal in drugs, we have people who snort drugs and matters of that nature. * * * So we don’t expect total intelligence here.” Tempest, 651 A.2d at 1218.
Yet, the trial justice also noted that the court “must take the witnesses as they come.” Id.
On April 22, 1992, a jury found Tempest guilty of murder in the second degree, and he was subsequently sentenced to eighty-five years in prison.6 This Court affirmed his conviction
on January 11, 1995. Tempest, 651 A.2d at 1220.
Nearly a decade later, on April 8, 2004, Tempest filed an application for postconviction
relief pursuant to Rhode Island’s Innocence Protection Act, G.L. 1956 §§ 10-9.1-11 and 10-9.1127 and sought the release of certain physical evidence (including, among other items, hair
recovered from both victims of the attack, as well as fingernail clippings from Picard) for
5 Carrier also testified that Vaz sold her and Guarino cocaine. 6 Tempest filed a motion for a new trial, which the trial justice denied. 7 The Innocence Protection Act was enacted in 2002. General Laws 1956 § 10-9.1-11 governs the mandatory preservation of biological evidence, while § 10-9.1-12 governs the DNA testing of evidence.
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forensic testing. Over the next eleven years, many motions and memoranda were filed, various
orders were entered, and discovery ensued. Finally, in April 2015, Tempest filed a second
amended application for postconviction relief, which is the operative application in the present
appeal.
Following a lengthy hearing spanning the course of several weeks, the hearing justice
issued a seventy-eight-page decision, in which he granted Tempest’s application for
postconviction relief and vacated his conviction. The hearing justice identified three grounds
upon which Tempest was entitled to postconviction relief: two Brady violations based on the
state’s suppression of favorable evidence and a due process violation resulting from the Woonsocket Police Department’s “unduly suggestive interviewing of witnesses[.]”8 The state then petitioned this Court for a writ of certiorari, which was granted on September 22, 2015.9
II
Standard of Review
“[P]ost[]conviction relief is available to a defendant convicted of a crime who contends
that his original conviction * * * violated rights that the state or federal constitutions secured to
him.” Torres v. State, 19 A.3d 71, 77 (R.I. 2011) (quoting Otero v. State, 996 A.2d 667, 670
(R.I. 2010)). “An applicant who files an application for postconviction relief bears the burden of
8 Tempest’s application also included claims for relief based on newly discovered evidence, the state’s failure to disclose statements made by Vaz to police pertaining to unrelated crimes, the former prosecutor’s presentation of allegedly perjured testimony, the state’s failure to disclose exculpatory evidence pertaining to the ownership of Vaz’s farm at the time of the murder, ineffective assistance of counsel, and actual innocence. The hearing justice did not find any merit to these claims, and Tempest did not file a cross-petition for writ of certiorari asking this Court to review those findings. 9 In 2015, the General Assembly amended § 10-9.1-9, as amended by P.L. 2015, ch. 92, § 1, such that an aggrieved party may seek review of an order denying postconviction relief “by filing a petition for writ of certiorari in accordance with the [S]upreme [C]ourt [R]ules of [A]ppellate [P]rocedure within sixty (60) days of the entry of the final judgment.”
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proving, by a preponderance of the evidence, that such relief is warranted.” Rivera v. State, 58
A.3d 171, 179 (R.I. 2013) (quoting Anderson v. State, 45 A.3d 594, 601 (R.I. 2012)).
“In reviewing an application for postconviction relief, ‘[t]his Court will not impinge upon
the fact-finding function of a hearing justice * * * absent clear error or a showing that the
[hearing] justice overlooked or misconceived material evidence in arriving at those findings.’”
State v. Thornton, 68 A.3d 533, 539 (R.I. 2013) (quoting Anderson, 45 A.3d at 601). However,
“[w]e employ a de novo standard of review with regard to ‘questions of fact or mixed questions
of law and fact pertaining to an alleged violation of an applicant’s constitutional rights * * *.’”
Id. (quoting Anderson, 45 A.3d at 601). Nevertheless, even when conducting such a de novo
review, “we still accord a hearing justice’s findings of historical fact, and inferences drawn from
those facts, great deference * * *.” Id. at 540 (quoting Anderson, 45 A.3d at 601).
III
Analysis
On appeal, the state attacks each of the three grounds the Superior Court relied on in
vacating Tempest’s conviction. First, the state contends that the hearing justice erred in granting
relief on Tempest’s “maroon car” Brady claim because his claim was barred by laches and the
evidence was not material. Next, the state argues that the hearing justice erred in vacating
Tempest’s conviction on the basis of the former prosecutor’s failure to disclose pretrial
statements made by Carrier. Last, the state asserts that the hearing justice erred in determining
that Tempest’s due process rights were violated as a result of improper police practices. Because
we can affirm the Superior Court’s decision on any or all of these grounds, we start with the
state’s second claim of error, which we conclude is dispositive of the state’s appeal.
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A. Carrier’s Pretrial Statements10 Seventeen days before trial, Carrier provided the state’s former prosecutor with two novel
statements: (1) that Tempest’s brother, Gordon Tempest (Gordon)—who was a detective with
the Woonsocket Police Department at the time of the murder—hid the murder weapon (a pipe) in
a closet on the first floor at 409 Providence Street in an effort to conceal it so as to protect his
brother; and (2) that, on the day of the murder, Tempest’s children were “excited” about getting a puppy.11 In response to receiving these statements from Carrier, the former prosecutor wrote in
his notes: “more new info re: [Gordon Tempest] putting pipe in closet + dog for the kids—too
late—don’t volunteer new info—will cause big problems.” Tempest argues that the former
prosecutor deliberately failed to disclose this favorable evidence, and that such a deliberate
nondisclosure automatically entitles him to a new trial.
“In accordance with Brady, if a prosecutor has suppressed evidence that would be
favorable to the accused and the evidence is material to guilt or punishment, the defendant’s due
process rights have been violated and a new trial must be granted.” DeCiantis v. State, 24 A.3d
557, 570 (R.I. 2011) (quoting State v. McManus, 941 A.2d 222, 229-30 (R.I. 2008)). With
respect to such a failure to disclose, our jurisprudence “provides even greater protection to
criminal defendants than the one articulated [by the United States Supreme Court].” State v.
Chalk, 816 A.2d 413, 419 (R.I. 2002) (quoting Cronan ex rel. State v. Cronan, 774 A.2d 866,
880 (R.I. 2001)). “When the failure to disclose is deliberate, this [C]ourt will not concern itself
with the degree of harm caused to the defendant by the prosecution’s misconduct; we shall
10 The Superior Court analyzed the state’s laches defense as a complete bar to Tempest’s postconviction relief action and ultimately rejected its argument. Before this Court, the state only argues laches as it applies to Tempest’s “maroon car” Brady claim; because we do not reach the “maroon car” issue, we need not address laches as it applies to that particular claim. 11 Although seemingly benign, the latter statement is relevant because Tempest and Laferte had agreed to mate their dogs and Tempest was to receive the pick of the litter.
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simply grant the defendant a new trial.” State v. Wyche, 518 A.2d 907, 910 (R.I. 1986). Thus,
instances of deliberate nondisclosure are “[t]he easy cases[.]” Lerner v. Moran, 542 A.2d 1089,
1092 (R.I. 1988) (quoting United States v. Keogh, 391 F.2d 138, 146 (2d Cir. 1968) (Friendly,
J.)). We have said that “[t]he prosecution acts deliberately when it makes ‘a considered decision
to suppress * * * for the purpose of obstructing’ or where it fails ‘to disclose evidence whose
high value to the defense could not have escaped * * * [its] attention.’” Wyche, 518 A.2d at 910
(quoting Keogh, 391 F.2d at 146-47).
To begin, we are not troubled by the terseness with which the hearing justice determined
that the former prosecutor acted deliberately when he failed to disclose Carrier’s pretrial
statements. In our opinion, he covered all of the necessary bases in his analysis. First, he
appropriately articulated our jurisprudence surrounding this issue. He even noted the former
prosecutor’s purported reason for not offering the information to the defense: because he felt “it
would lead to a continuance and to headaches.” The hearing justice then cited caselaw to
support his contention that “[c]onstitutional rights cannot be tossed aside whenever they present
the smallest inconvenience[,]” and concluded that the former prosecutor’s “‘considered decision
to suppress’ [the statements] automatically necessitates relief.” (Quoting DeCiantis, 24 A.3d at
570.) Furthermore, the former prosecutor’s own words—“don’t volunteer”—indicate a considered decision not to offer the new information to the defense.12 While the hearing
12 The dissent accuses the majority of making improper factual determinations, especially as it pertains to the meaning and intent of the former prosecutor’s words “more new info re: [Gordon Tempest] putting pipe in closet + dog for the kids—too late—don’t volunteer new info—will cause big problems.” In doing so, the dissent makes its own factual determination that the former prosecutor was only referring to the fact that the new statements could be cause for a continuance, which was nothing more than the former prosecutor’s effort to avoid his prosecutorial dilemma. Furthermore, in finding that the former prosecutor deliberately failed to disclose the information, the hearing justice clearly rejected the former prosecutor’s proffered
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justice’s analysis of this particular issue was admittedly brief—it spanned only two-and-one-half
pages of a seventy-eight-page opinion—the length of the analysis is not a factor when
determining the merits of his ruling. The hearing justice succinctly analyzed the issue, and we
discern no clear error in his finding that the former prosecutor deliberately suppressed Carrier’s
new statements. See Thornton, 68 A.3d at 539.
Moreover, it is our opinion that the “high value” of Carrier’s new statements to the
defense could not have escaped the former prosecutor’s attention; thus, for this reason as well,
his failure to disclose the statements constitutes a deliberate nondisclosure. See Wyche, 518
A.2d at 910 (“The prosecution acts deliberately when it makes ‘a considered decision to suppress
* * * for the purpose of obstructing’ or where it fails ‘to disclose evidence whose high value to
the defense could not have escaped * * * [its] attention.’” (emphasis added) quoting Keogh, 391
F.2d at 146-47). Specifically, when Carrier made the statements in question, the former
prosecutor was at least aware that there was an issue (albeit perhaps unresolved) with regard to
Carrier’s assertion that Tempest lived in the same apartment complex as she and Guarino at the
time of the murder. Three months prior to receiving the statements at issue, in December 1991,
Pamela Miclette (Miclette), the Tempests’ babysitter, indicated that the Tempest family was
living on Phoebe Street at the time of the murder, not on Winter Street where Carrier and Guarino lived.13 At some point just before trial, the former prosecutor definitively found out that
Carrier was in fact mistaken as to where Tempest lived at the time of the murder. Having
realized that it was of high value to the defense because it seriously discredited much, if not all,
of Carrier’s testimony about seeing Tempest on the day of the murder, the former prosecutor
reason for failing to disclose the information. Such a factual finding is entitled to deference from this Court on appeal. See State v. Thornton, 68 A.3d 533, 539-40 (R.I. 2013). 13 There is no dispute as to whether Miclette’s statement was timely and appropriately disclosed to the defense.
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disclosed Carrier’s mistake to the defense. However, in doing so, he failed to also disclose
Carrier’s new statements recorded in his March 10, 1992 note about Gordon and about the
children being excited over the puppy on the morning of the murder.
The state argues that Carrier’s statement with regard to Gordon concealing the murder
weapon was not new, but rather was cumulative of other statements Carrier made that had
already been disclosed to the defense. This argument is not persuasive. At the outset, we note
that the former prosecutor twice identified Carrier’s statements as “new.” The hearing justice
also found that the statements were new, and we do not think he clearly erred in so determining.
See Thornton, 68 A.3d at 539. Indeed, our own review of the evolution of Carrier’s statements
leads us to this same conclusion.
From her initial statement to police in February 1987 through her testimony at trial,
Carrier maintained that Tempest had said that Gordon was unaware of his involvement in
Picard’s murder. Carrier first spoke to the police in February 1987, at which time she said that
Tempest told her that Gordon knew nothing about his involvement in the murder and that, if
Gordon did find out, he would turn Tempest in. She confirmed her statement during the grand
jury hearing on November 30, 1990. While Carrier did indicate that Tempest told her that
“everything ha[d] been taken care of[,]” she went on to say that Tempest told her that “my father
is an important man” and that “it cost a lot of money for my father to make sure my name didn’t
get brought up in this.” She also again confirmed that Tempest told her: “If my brother
Gord[on] knew, he would turn me in.”
Similarly, at Tempest’s bail hearing in June 1991, in response to the former prosecutor’s
question as to whether Tempest had ever said anything about “whether he expected to be
prosecuted” for Picard’s murder, Carrier replied:
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“[Tempest] said he didn’t think anything would come of it because his father was the High Sherriff [sic] of Providence and his brother was the Detective on the Woonsocket Police Force. He said if he told his brother Gord[on], Gord[on] would go to the police and tell them what they knew, and that the murder weapon was not there, it wasn’t available, and that all fingerprints were taken care of.” (Emphasis added.)
Thus, Carrier still maintained that Tempest had told her that Gordon was not aware of his
involvement in Picard’s murder.
Carrier’s witness statement on August 26, 1991, was a bit more vague, but it still did not
specifically indicate that Gordon knew about Tempest’s involvement in the murder or that he
participated in a cover-up. She stated that “[Tempest] said, ‘I won’t get caught, my father and
brother won’t let me get caught. The weapon’s been all taken care of, he said.’” At trial, Carrier
continued to maintain that Tempest said that “his brother didn’t know [about his involvement in
Picard’s murder], but his father did” and that “[h]is father had paid off a large sum of money to
make sure that [Tempest’s] name was never mentioned * * *.” She then testified that Tempest
told her that “[t]he murder weapon would never be found [and that] it had been wiped clean of
fingerprints and gotten rid of.”
Now turning to the statement in question, it is clear that Carrier dramatically changed her
story both as it pertained to her understanding of Gordon’s knowledge of Tempest’s involvement
in Picard’s murder as well as any involvement Gordon may have had in concealing the murder
weapon. At Tempest’s postconviction-relief hearing, the former prosecutor testified that Carrier
told him in March 1992—mere days before trial—that “Gordon Tempest had put the pipe in the
closet” at 409 Providence Street, where it was ultimately found by police. We deem this a
significant modification from Carrier’s previous statements and trial testimony, in which she
stated not only that Tempest told her that Gordon was unaware of his involvement in Picard’s
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murder, but which also seemed to indicate that it was Tempest’s father who helped him cover up
his involvement in the crime.
The state pushes back and argues that Carrier’s statement regarding Gordon’s knowledge
and involvement was not exculpatory, but rather was inculpatory, inasmuch as it lent itself to the
theory that Tempest committed the murder and Gordon helped him cover it up. While the
substance of Carrier’s statement regarding Gordon hiding the pipe may have been inculpatory,
the statement nonetheless could have been used to impeach her credibility. The United States
Supreme Court has unequivocally stated that “[i]mpeachment evidence * * * as well as
exculpatory evidence, falls within the Brady rule,” United States v. Bagley, 473 U.S. 667, 676
(1985), and that facially inculpatory evidence can be used to impeach a witness. See Strickler v.
Greene, 527 U.S. 263, 282 n.21 (1999) (“We reject [the] respondent’s contention that these
documents do not fall under Brady because they were ‘inculpatory.’ Our cases make clear that
Brady’s disclosure requirements extend to materials that, whatever their other characteristics,
may be used to impeach a witness.”). “Such evidence is ‘evidence favorable to an accused,’ * *
* so that, if disclosed and used effectively, it may make the difference between conviction and
acquittal.” Bagley, 473 U.S. at 676. Here, Carrier’s new statement about Gordon’s involvement
in a cover-up, though perhaps inculpatory on its face, certainly could have been used by the
defense to undermine her already shaky credibility.
Carrier’s statement with regard to Tempest’s children being excited about getting a puppy
was also novel, and the state does little to belie this assertion. In her grand jury testimony,
Carrier did mention that Tempest was “supposed to pick up a pitbull puppy from * * * either
Doreen Picard or Sue Laferte” on the day of the murder. Yet, Carrier had never before offered
that, on the morning of Picard’s murder, Tempest’s children were excited about getting a puppy.
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Her statement that Tempest’s children were excited about the prospect of getting a puppy
on the morning of Picard’s murder also clearly had impeachment value. It had already been
established that Carrier’s recollection was mistaken as to when Tempest and his family moved
into the apartment complex where she and Guarino lived—the Tempests did not move into their
apartment complex on Winter Street until 1983, the year after the murder—meaning that it was
unlikely, if not altogether impossible, that Carrier could have seen Tempest’s children on Winter
Street on the morning of the murder. Yet, mere days before trial, Carrier still continued to assert
that she saw Tempest and his family on that day. Moreover, it was undisputed that John Allard, a friend of Tempest, was to be the recipient of the puppy in question.14
Given that the evidence in the state’s case was nearly entirely circumstantial, “[t]he
outcome * * * hinged on whom the jury believed[.]” State v. Haslam, 663 A.2d 902, 909 (R.I.
1995). Thus, had Carrier’s newly offered, inconsistent, and factually very dubious statements
been disclosed to the defense, and had they been used effectively to further undermine Carrier’s
already questionable credibility, they “may [have made] the difference between conviction and
acquittal.” Bagley, 473 U.S. at 676.
Last, the state argues that the statements were not material. However, the materiality of
the evidence is not germane when the prosecution’s failure to disclose the evidence is deemed to
be deliberate. McManus, 941 A.2d at 230. Yet, even if a showing of materiality were required,
Tempest could satisfy this burden. See DeCiantis, 24 A.3d at 571 (“[T]he applicant ‘bears the
burden of establishing * * * that the nondisclosed evidence was material * * *.’” quoting Chalk,
816 A.2d at 419).
14 Notably, in his testimony at Tempest’s postconviction-relief hearing, in response to petitioner’s question asking whether he knew that the statements could be used to “cross[examine] Carrier[,]” the former prosecutor admitted: “If you look at it that way, it was inculpatory—exculpatory.”
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“Under the Bagley standard of materiality, ‘[t]he evidence is material only if there is a
reasonable probability that, had the evidence been disclosed to the defense, the result of the
proceeding would have been different.’” Lerner, 542 A.2d at 1091 (quoting Bagley, 473 U.S. at
682). To be clear, Tempest “need not show that he ‘more likely than not’ would have been
acquitted had the new evidence been admitted.” Wearry v. Cain, 136 S. Ct. 1002, 1006 (2016)
(quoting Smith v. Cain, 132 S. Ct. 627, 630 (2012)). Rather, “[a] ‘reasonable probability’ is a
probability sufficient to undermine confidence in the outcome.” Lerner, 542 A.2d at 1091
(quoting Bagley, 473 U.S. at 682).
As we have already pointed out, the suppressed statements could have been used to
impeach Carrier’s testimony even further. Carrier was one of four less-than-stellar witnesses
(and arguably the most credible of the four) who testified that Tempest confessed to the murder.
Had her testimony been further undermined, and her credibility perhaps crushed altogether,
certainly there is, at the very least, a reasonable probability—one “sufficient to undermine
confidence in the outcome”—that the verdict against Tempest would have been different. See
Wearry, 136 S. Ct. at 1006 (holding that “[b]eyond doubt, the newly revealed evidence suffices
to undermine confidence in [the] conviction” when a witness’s credibility, “already impugned by
his many inconsistent stories, would have been further diminished” by the revelation). Contrary
to what the dissent suggests, whether the defense would have actually used the statements is not
relevant to our analysis—the bottom line is that it should have been defense counsel’s choice to
make.
B. The State’s Remaining Claims
Because we find the former prosecutor’s deliberate failure to disclose Carrier’s pretrial
statements to be dispositive of the state’s appeal, it is the only issue that warrants addressing in
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our opinion.15 See Grady v. Narragansett Electric Co., 962 A.2d 34, 42 n.4 (R.I. 2009)
(reiterating our “usual policy of not opining with respect to issues about which we need not
opine”).
IV
Conclusion
In coming to our decision today, we are cognizant of the fact that, thirty-four years ago,
two young women were brutally beaten, and we remain mindful of the impact that this ordeal has
had on the victims and their families. Yet, our justice system requires that the state bear the
burden of proving every element of a crime beyond a reasonable doubt, see, e.g., State v.
O’Brien, 774 A.2d 89, 100 (R.I. 2001), and it must do so within the confines of the law. When
the state exceeds those confines, it must suffer the consequences.
Tempest has met his burden of proving by a preponderance of the evidence that
postconviction relief is warranted. See Rivera, 58 A.3d at 179. Accordingly, we affirm the
Superior Court’s judgment vacating Tempest’s conviction and quash the writ of certiorari
heretofore issued. The materials associated with this case may be remanded to the Superior
Court.
15 The dissent and concurrence admonish the majority for not taking the opportunity to provide “guidance” to the Superior Court regarding Tempest’s due process claim. However, doing so would be fruitless. First, if we were to decide Tempest’s due process claim on the basis of res judicata, such a determination would only be applicable to this particular postconviction relief action, and thus would have no effect on retrial. Further, were we to opine on the merits of the claim, our discussion would amount to nothing more than dicta. As Chief Justice Roberts has aptly stated, “the cardinal principle of judicial restraint” is that “if it is not necessary to decide more, it is necessary not to decide more[.]” PDK Labs., Inc. v. Drug Enforcement Administration, 362 F.3d 786, 799 (C.A.D.C. 2004) (Roberts, J., concurring in part and concurring in judgment). In recognition of this “cardinal principle,” we decline to address the issue.
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Chief Justice Suttell, concurring in the result and dissenting in part. I concur with
the majority’s holding that the Superior Court order vacating Tempest’s judgment of conviction
should be affirmed, however, I depart from its reasoning. Rather, I agree with the conclusion of
my dissenting colleague that the hearing justice failed to make the necessary findings of fact to
support his ruling that the state made a deliberate decision not to disclose the statements of
Donna Carrier.
It is my opinion that the hearing justice did not make a clear finding that the state’s
failure to disclose statements made by Carrier was “deliberate” in line with Brady v. Maryland,
373 U.S. 83 (1963), and its progeny, nor can such a finding be inferred. Although the hearing
justice properly cited Lerner v. Moran, 542 A.2d 1089, 1092 (R.I. 1988), when he defined
“deliberate [non-disclosure]” as “a considered decision to suppress[,]” he completely omitted the
second half of that definition. “Deliberate,” in the Brady context and in Lerner, is defined as “a
considered decision to suppress, taken for the very purpose of obstructing.” Id. (quoting United
States v. Keogh, 391 F.2d 138, 146-47 (2nd Cir. 1968) (emphasis added). There was testimony
from the former prosecutor at the postconviction-relief hearing that tended to negate the
contention that his purpose was to obstruct and there was nothing in the hearing justice’s
decision to support any inference that he discredited the former prosecutor’s testimony in this
respect. To the contrary, as the majority points out, the hearing justice “even noted the former
prosecutor’s purported reason for not offering the information to the defense: because he felt ‘it
would lead to a continuance and to headaches.’” Lacking credibility determinations, therefore,
the hearing justice’s decision does not adequately support the proposition that the former
prosecutor’s failure to disclose the Carrier statements was “a considered decision to suppress,
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taken for the very purpose of obstructing,” or that the high value of the statements to the defense “could not have escaped the [state’s] attention.”1 Lerner, 542 A.2d at 1092 (quoting Keogh, 391
F.2d at 146-47) (emphasis added); see DeCiantis v. State, 24 A.3d 557, 572 (R.I. 2011) (“we are
satisfied that we can infer from the hearing justice’s credibility determination that he did not find
any deliberate nondisclosure on the part of the prosecution”). The equivocal nature of the former
prosecutor’s testimony in this regard is emphasized in the hearing justice’s conclusion that “[b]y
deciding not to disclose the newly arisen variations in [Carrier’s] story, [the former prosecutor]
evidently sought to protect * * * [her] from additional impeachment.”
Accordingly, in my opinion, the majority at the very least should remand with
instructions for the hearing justice to apply the proper standard and make credibility findings as it relates to the former prosecutor’s testimony.2 See Butterfly Realty v. James Romanella &
Sons, Inc., 45 A.3d 584, 591 (R.I. 2012) (case remanded for factual findings due to
inconsistencies within the Superior Court decision). I do not advocate for such a remand,
however, as I concur with the majority’s holding affirming the hearing justice’s decision to set
aside Tempest’s conviction. I do so in reliance on the hearing justice’s ruling that the state’s failure to disclose certain evidence relating to the “maroon car” constituted a Brady violation.3
1 A “suppression” is also “deliberate” when there is “a failure to disclose evidence whose high value to the defense could not have escaped the prosecutor’s attention.” Lerner v. Moran, 542 A.2d 1089, 1092 (R.I. 1988) (quoting United States v. Keogh, 391 F.2d 138, 147 (2nd Cir. 1968)). However, because the hearing justice did not consider this second definition provided in Lerner when discussing the statements of Donna Carrier—by completely failing to articulate it in his written decision and by failing to make findings relative thereto—it is my opinion that neither should this Court. 2 In my judgment the dissenting opinion suffers from the same malady as the majority by making credibility determinations. 3 I am also of the opinion that this Court should address the issue of improper police procedures and hold that the hearing justice erred in granting postconviction relief based upon this ground.
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I
Facts and Travel Relating to the Maroon Car
I begin by summarizing the facts relating to the maroon car Brady claim. John McMann
owned a maroon Buick at the time of the February 19, 1982 murder. The maroon car was
registered at that time to Lee’s Pharmacy, a store of which John McMann was part-owner. In
1983, John McMann sold the maroon car to Robert Monteiro. At the time of the sale, Lee’s
Pharmacy purchased a blue Buick to replace the maroon Buick that Monteiro had purchased.
At Tempest’s criminal trial, the state presented a witness, Lisa LaDue, who resided in the
second-floor apartment of 409 Providence Street. LaDue testified that on the day of the murder
she observed a maroon car parked in the driveway of 409 Providence Street when she arrived home at approximately 3:20 p.m.4 She also testified that upon entering the triple-decker
apartment, she had “heard some moving around downstairs,” but that she had proceeded up the
stairs to her apartment. Moreover, LaDue’s stepfather, Douglas Heath, testified that there was no
vehicle in the driveway of 409 Providence Street when he arrived around 3:30 p.m. that day.
Significantly, Sherri Richards, Tempest’s sister-in-law, testified at trial that she observed
Tempest between 4:30 and 4:45 p.m. in front of her house on the day of the murder standing next
to the maroon car with Monteiro. She testified that Monteiro “used to borrow” the car from Kevin McMann and that “[h]e would later on purchase the car but not at that time.”5 This
portion of Richards’ testimony—that Monteiro borrowed the car from Kevin McMann—went
4 On cross-examination, LaDue testified that the first time she ever told anybody that she had seen a maroon car was “a couple of weeks” before the commencement of trial, more than ten years after the murder. She indicated that that was the first time she remembered a maroon car. 5 Richards had originally claimed that Monteiro owned the maroon car. However, prior to trial, Richards gave a witness statement where she stated: “I know the car I saw [Monteiro] in was the one that [Monteiro] bought from Lee’s and that I had seen him driving around in that car several times at that time and that is why I thought he already owned it.”
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uncontested at trial. The defense sought to impeach the witnesses who linked Tempest to
“Monteiro’s” maroon car on the day of the murder by presenting Martin Leyden, an employee of
the Rhode Island Division of Motor Vehicles (DMV), who testified that Monteiro did not yet
own the maroon vehicle at the time of the murder and that neither Monteiro nor his wife had any
vehicle registered in their names until 1983. Additionally, the state presented Ronald Vaz, who
testified that Tempest had confessed to fleeing the crime scene in “Monteiro’s car.”
In 2000 or 2001, a private investigator hired to work on Tempest’s case discovered a
hand-written letter from John McMann in defense counsel’s case file. The letter read:
“To whom it may concern: “Enclosed, find a copy of a Bill of sale, for a 1983 Buick, purchased for Lee’s Pharmacy Inc. on May 27, 1983. “The sale of my red Buick to the Monteiro’s [sic] took place after I received my new car. “There is no way, I was without a car, before I picked up my new one. “Respectfully, “John J. McMann Jr.”
Then, in December 2012, the law firm of McDermott Will & Emery, LLP, which had
agreed to assist the New England Innocence Project (the NEIP) in preparing Tempest’s
application for postconviction relief, hired an investigator, John Cinotti, to work on Tempest’s
case. Cinotti met with John McMann’s adult children, Kevin McMann and Sharon McMann
Morelli. Kevin McMann provided an affidavit to the investigator attesting that “[p]rior to the
sale in 1983, [John McMann] never lent his car to * * * Monteiro, nor did [Kevin McMann] ever
lend [his] father’s car, or any other car, to * * * Monteiro.” At the postconviction-relief hearing,
McMann-Morelli testified that she never observed John or Kevin McMann lend the maroon
Buick to Monteiro at any time before Monteiro purchased it in 1983. McMann-Morelli testified
that her father, John McMann, had told her that he had gone to the Woonsocket Police
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Department to inform the police that he had never lent the maroon car to anyone. John McMann
had done so at some point during the trial after reading in the newspaper that his car had been
referenced in testimony. Kevin McMann also testified that he had never lent the maroon car to
anyone and that he had also gone to the Woonsocket Police Department during Tempest’s trial
with this information.
In his amended application for postconviction relief, Tempest claimed that his due
process rights were violated by the state’s failure to disclose to the defense that John McMann
and Kevin McMann had informed the Woonsocket Police Department that neither had ever lent
the maroon Buick to Monteiro. Tempest claimed that this failure to disclose constituted a
constitutional due process violation because the McManns’ statements were exculpatory
evidence that the defense could have used to impeach Richards’ trial testimony that Monteiro
would borrow the maroon car from Kevin McMann. Tempest argued that the evidence was also
material as the maroon car was “the only thing” that tied Tempest to the crime scene during the
time of the murder.
In response, the state raised the affirmative defense of laches, claiming that Tempest
failed to timely pursue postconviction relief. Alternatively, the state maintained that there was
no Brady violation because there was no direct evidence that the conversation between the
McManns and the Woonsocket Police Department ever occurred. The hearing justice disagreed.
He found that the state had failed to establish the affirmative defense of laches because
Tempest’s delay in seeking postconviction relief was “reasonable—not ‘inexcusable’ or ‘unexplained,’” and the hearing justice also found that a Brady violation had in fact occurred.6
6 More specific findings made by the hearing justice are discussed as they become pertinent to my analysis of the Brady claim.
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Accordingly, as noted by the majority, the hearing justice entered an order vacating Tempest’s
conviction relying in part on the maroon car Brady violation.
On appeal, the state’s argument that the hearing justice erred in vacating Tempest’s
conviction based on the maroon car Brady claim is two-fold. First, the state argues that the
doctrine of laches should have prevented Tempest from litigating the maroon car Brady claim
altogether because his delay in seeking postconviction relief was unreasonable and prejudicial to
the state. Second, the state argues that, even if the laches defense does not apply, any evidence
that the McManns did not lend the maroon car to Monteiro was not “material” pursuant to Brady.
I address these arguments separately herein.
II
Laches
To establish a laches defense, “the state has the burden of proving by a preponderance of
the evidence that [(1)] the applicant [was] unreasonably delayed in seeking relief and [(2)] that
the state is prejudiced by the delay.” Raso v. Wall, 884 A.2d 391, 395, 396 (R.I. 2005). These
issues are questions of fact dependent on the circumstances of a particular case, id. at 396, and a
reviewing court has discretion to weigh the equitable laches defense. Hazard v. East Hills, Inc.,
45 A.3d 1262, 1270 (R.I. 2012). It is well settled that “time lapse alone does not constitute
laches.” Rodriques v. Santos, 466 A.2d 306, 311 (R.I. 1983). Because “the application of the
defense of laches is generally committed to the discretion of the trial justice,” School Committee
of Cranston v. Bergin-Andrews, 984 A.2d 629, 644 (R.I. 2009) (quoting O’Reilly v. Town of
Glocester, 621 A.2d 697, 703 (R.I. 1993)), this Court “will not reverse the trial justice’s decision
on what constitutes laches on appeal ‘unless it is clearly wrong.’” Id. (quoting Arcand v. Haley,
95 R.I. 357, 364, 187 A.2d 142, 146 (1963)).
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A
Reasonableness of the Delay
Beginning with the first prong of the laches defense, the hearing justice found that the
state had failed to prove that Tempest’s delay in seeking postconviction relief was unreasonable.
Given the “myriad issues developed as potential claims * * * as well as the scope and complexity
of the case as a whole,” the hearing justice determined that “the most balanced and equitable
approach” to determining whether the laches defense applied was “to examine * * * Tempest’s
general course of conduct over the past twenty years.” Although not bearing the burden of proof,7 Tempest presented evidence at the postconviction-relief hearing to establish that his
delay in pursuing postconviction relief was reasonable, including his own testimony and that of
Martin Yant, Evelyn G. Munschy, Betty Anne Waters, Esq., and Gretchen Bennett, as well as an
affidavit from Michael Kendall, Esq., a partner at McDermott Will & Emery. Based on the
evidence presented at the postconviction-relief hearing, the hearing justice made extensive
findings of fact concerning Tempest’s conduct throughout the twenty years between his criminal conviction and the latest amendment to his application for postconviction relief.8
The hearing justice found that, following Tempest’s conviction, Tempest lacked the
funds to hire a postconviction-relief attorney. He found that, as a result, Tempest wrote several
letters to James McCloskey, a minister who directed an innocence project in New Jersey, seeking
his assistance. The hearing justice found that Minister McCloskey informed Tempest that he
7 The state has the burden of proof to invoke its laches defense, however, in Hazard v. East Hills Inc., 45 A.3d 1262, 1271 (R.I. 2012), we held that “it was incumbent upon [the] plaintiff to come forth with a fair explanation of the reason for the delay” where the plaintiff had waited nearly a century before filing her claim and the defendant sought to invoke a laches defense. 8 Over twenty years had passed since Tempest’s conviction was affirmed by this Court in January 1995 and his second amended complaint seeking postconviction relief was filed in April 2015, which added several claims, including the maroon car Brady claim. See State v. Tempest, 651 A.2d 1198 (R.I. 1995).
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could not assist in his application for postconviction relief because his case was “too much of a
case for [McCloskey] to handle.” He found that Tempest also worked alongside Munschy, who
was a second-mother figure to Tempest, and who, despite not being an attorney, had expended a
significant amount of time examining Tempest’s case files and looking into issues surrounding
his case. Furthermore, the hearing justice found that Munschy and Tempest’s sister, Barbara
Small, had each spent substantial sums of their personal money to hire a private investigator,
Martin Yant, to investigate Tempest’s case beginning in 2000. The hearing justice found that
Yant worked extensively on the case, billing over two hundred hours, but that the investigation ceased eighteen months later when Munschy could no longer afford to pay for Yant’s services.9
Moreover, he found that Munschy wrote to Attorney Waters in 2001 and to the NEIP
repeatedly from 2001 to 2004 seeking representation for Tempest. He found that Attorney
Waters was volunteering at the NEIP when the NEIP agreed to review Tempest’s case and that
Attorney Waters did “the ground work looking for evidence, talking to people in Rhode Island
[while the NEIP] w[as] in charge of all the paperwork” and filings. He further found that
Attorney Waters filed a petition for deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) testing on behalf of Tempest
in 2004 and that the last DNA result came in 2015 and “form[ed] the body of a core claim within
[Tempest’s] petition—newly discovered evidence.” Additionally, the hearing justice found that
2009 was the first time “the NEIP expanded its case review to include evaluation of non-DNA
postconviction issues.”
Furthermore, the hearing justice found that the “substantial costs and attorney hours
expended by McDermott Will & Emery as well as the NEIP demonstrate[d] the expanse of
9 The hearing justice also found that, although Yant was no longer officially working on Tempest’s case, Munschy stayed in contact with Yant and he would assist when possible.
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resources necessary to properly delve into such an investigation.”10 He found that the state had
contributed to the delay in Tempest’s application by seeking continuances and objecting to
Tempest’s request for DNA testing, and that the state had failed to present any evidence that, had
Tempest previously sought a public defender to file his postconviction-relief application, the
Office of the Public Defender would have been able to litigate these claims faster than Tempest’s
attorneys at McDermott Will & Emery and at the NEIP. Only “[a]fter consideration of the
testimony and exhibits outlining the efforts of * * * Tempest to develop a comprehensive, multi
claim postconviction[-]relief petition,” did the hearing justice find that “Tempest’s delay was not
unreasonable, and, as a result, [that] the [s]tate’s defense of laches fail[ed].” The hearing justice
considered the “overriding interests of justice” and concluded that the state had failed to show
that it would be inequitable to allow Tempest to enforce his legal rights, especially in light of
Tempest’s allegations that the state had “manipulate[d] witness statements and physical
evidence” in his criminal case.
All of the findings of fact made by the hearing justice are clearly supported by the evidence presented at the postconviction-relief hearing.11 Notably, the state does not challenge
any of these findings—put differently, there is no allegation that any of the specific findings of
Tempest’s conduct are clearly erroneous or not supported by the record. Instead, the state argues
that the trial justice’s ultimate denial of its laches defense was erroneous because Tempest’s
delay was unreasonable as he had been on notice since 1992 that McMann could not have lent
10 An affidavit was submitted by Attorney Kendall outlining the work performed by his firm in Tempest’s case. He attested that McDermott Will & Emery, LLP, worked on a pro bono basis alongside the NEIP beginning in 2012. He estimated that roughly 6,000 hours were spent working on this case. 11 I agree, however, with the dissent that the state’s failure to present evidence that Tempest sought the assistance of the Office of the Public Defender or appointed counsel was an inappropriate consideration in a laches analysis. If Tempest were financially eligible, he would have been entitled to such representation.
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Monteiro the maroon car. The state argues that Tempest “took absolutely no legal or other
action with respect to uncovering [this claim] and bringing it as a basis for post[]conviction
relief.” The state’s argument fails in my opinion for several reasons.
First, the state’s position ignores the lens through which the hearing justice considered
the laches issues—he examined Tempest’s overall conduct and did not undertake a claim-by
claim laches analysis. Although the state suggests in a footnote that the hearing justice’s laches
determination should have parsed out the complex claims from the “uncomplicated” claims such
as the maroon car Brady claim, the hearing justice was in the best position to determine how to
address the laches defense based on the circumstances of this particular case, and I see no error
in his approach. Indeed, his method in addressing the laches defense was especially appropriate
given that the state had originally sought to invoke the laches defense against all the claims in
Tempest’s application for postconviction relief.
Nevertheless, even when reviewing the proposed laches defense specifically as it relates
to the maroon car Brady claim, there is ample evidence in the record before this Court and
findings made by the hearing justice to support his denial of such defense. There was testimony
at the postconviction-relief hearing that Tempest became aware of the McManns’ statements to
the Woonsocket Police Department regarding the maroon car in late 2013 when his private
investigator approached Kevin McMann. At that time, Kevin McMann signed an affidavit
attesting that neither he nor his father had ever lent the maroon car to Monteiro, and that they
communicated this to the Woonsocket Police Department. Moreover, Kevin McMann testified
at the postconviction-relief hearing that he never discussed what he disclosed to the police
(regarding the maroon car) with Tempest or with any attorneys or investigators prior to meeting
with Tempest’s investigator in 2013.
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The evidence the state relies on and claims was available to Tempest prior to this 2013
interview with Kevin McMann and McMann-Morelli is unavailing. The handwritten letter from
John McMann contained in defense counsel’s file, which the state relies on for its assertion that
Tempest was on notice, could, at best, have informed Tempest that John McMann would not
have sold his vehicle to Monteiro and been “without a car” prior to 1983. This letter does not,
however, indicate, let alone set forth, that neither John McMann nor Kevin McMann ever lent
the maroon car to Monteiro in 1982. The letter also made no indication that John McMann or
Kevin McMann actually had gone to the Woonsocket Police Department with this information.
Accordingly, when this letter was discovered in Tempest’s file in 2001, it could not have placed
Tempest on notice of a possible Brady claim.
Additionally, there was evidence before the hearing justice that Tempest has always
maintained his innocence and that he, with the assistance of family and friends, has always
actively sought some form of postconviction relief. Munschy testified that she and Small
initially hired a private investigator in 2000 because they both felt that they needed to uncover
more material to present to an attorney. Bennett, a volunteer at the NEIP, testified, and the
hearing justice found her testimony credible, that cases of this magnitude can take many years to
properly litigate postconviction-relief issues. Moreover, Rhode Island law, as codified
in G.L. 1956 § 10-9.1-8, provides that:
“All grounds for relief available to an applicant at the time he or she commences a proceeding under this chapter must be raised in his or her original, or a supplemental or amended, application. Any ground finally adjudicated or not so raised, or knowingly, voluntarily and intelligently waived in the proceeding that resulted in the conviction or sentence or in any other proceeding the applicant has taken to secure relief, may not be the basis for a subsequent application, unless the court finds that in the interest of justice the applicant should be permitted to assert such a ground for relief.”
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Therefore, it is my opinion that the hearing justice was not clearly wrong in finding that
Tempest’s delay was not unreasonable where there is ample evidence to support a finding that
Tempest actively sought additional grounds for relief and that a premature filing of a
postconviction-relief application could have barred future claims. See Ramirez v. State, 933 A.2d
1110, 1112 (R.I. 2007) (the defendant was precluded from raising new issues in his third
application for postconviction relief, where § 10-9.1-8 requires that all grounds for relief be
raised in the initial postconviction-relief application, and the defendant failed to establish a
reason why his claims could not have been raised in his first application).
In my opinion, the hearing justice’s findings as they relate to the reasonableness of
Tempest’s delay were all supported by the evidence presented at the postconviction-relief
hearing. His ultimate conclusion that “the twenty-year period associated with the pursuit of this
petition for postconviction relief was * * * reasonable—not ‘inexcusable’ nor ‘unexplained’”
was also supported by the record, well within his discretion, and not otherwise clearly wrong.
B
Prejudice to the State
The state also argues that the hearing justice erred in finding that it was not prejudiced by
Tempest’s delay. Notably, however, the laches defense is a two-prong analysis necessitating that
the hearing justice find both that the applicant’s delay was unreasonable and that the state was
prejudiced by the delay. Raso, 884 A.2d at 395. Because, as previously noted, there is ample
evidence to support the hearing justice’s finding that Tempest’s delay was not unreasonable—
and consequently that the state failed to meet the first prong of the laches defense—a discussion
of the second prong is not necessary.
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It is my opinion that the hearing justice’s thorough analysis of the laches defense does not
warrant a reversal. As this Court has previously noted, “‘[t]he standard of abuse of discretion is
one that gives extreme deference to the [hearing] justice’s determination’” and “we may uphold a
[hearing] justice’s ruling even if we would have ruled differently had we been in the [hearing]
justice’s position.” State v. Gillespie, 960 A.2d 969, 980 (R.I. 2008) (quoting State v. Remy, 910
A.2d 793, 797 (R.I. 2006)). Accordingly, it was within the hearing justice’s discretion to weigh
the evidence presented by both the state and Tempest, and to reach the outcome that he did; I
discern no clear error in his conclusion that the state failed to prove the requisite elements of the
laches defense.
Finally, I note that Tempest was convicted of murder in the second degree and sentenced
to eighty-five years in prison. After rejecting the state’s defense of laches, the hearing justice
presided over a postconviction-relief hearing that spanned twenty-four days, and he then
determined, in a thoughtful and conscientious decision, that Tempest’s due process rights were
violated and that Tempest was denied a fair trial. A fundamental principle animating our
criminal justice system was articulated by Sir William Blackstone in his seminal work,
Commentaries on the Laws of England: “[I]t is better that ten guilty persons escape, than that
one innocent suffer.” 4 William Blackstone, Commentaries *352. In the circumstances of this
case, I believe it to be in the interest of justice that the issues raised on appeal, which were fully
vetted in the Superior Court, be decided on their merits.
III Brady Claim
The state argues that, even if the laches defense does not bar Tempest’s application for
postconviction relief, his Brady claim relating to the maroon car should fail because any
evidence, if indeed withheld from the defense, was not material pursuant to Brady and was
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discoverable with the exercise of due diligence. Specifically, the state argues that Tempest could
have discovered that the McManns would not have lent the maroon vehicle to Monteiro prior to
trial, and that, accordingly, this evidence was not Brady material. The state also argues that
while Kevin McMann’s testimony, as credited by the hearing justice, contradicted Richards’
testimony that Monteiro borrowed the maroon car in 1982, that did not mean that Richards did
not see Tempest standing beside a maroon car (although not necessarily John McMann’s maroon
car). The state further suggests that, because there was already trial testimony from the DMV
employee that Monteiro did not own any vehicle at the time of the murder, thus contradicting
Richards’ account of seeing Tempest next to “Monteiro’s” maroon car on the day of the murder,
this new evidence—that the McManns would not have lent the car to Monteiro in 1982—does
not create a probability that the result of Tempest’s trial would have been different had this
statement been available to the defense.
The state violates a defendant’s due process rights under Brady when it suppresses
evidence favorable to the accused that is “material either to guilt or to punishment.” Brady, 373
U.S. at 87. “[W]here a nondisclosure is not deliberate, [an] applicant [is] required to make a
showing of materiality * * *.” DeCiantis, 24 A.3d at 571. Evidence is “material” for purposes of
Brady when a “reasonable probability” exists that “the result of the proceeding would have been
different” if the suppressed evidence had been disclosed. Lerner, 542 A.2d at 1092 (quoting
United States v. Bagley, 473 U.S. 667, 682 (1985)). Reasonable probability does not require that
“the defendant ‘would more likely than not have received a different verdict with the evidence,’
only that the likelihood of a different result is great enough to ‘undermine[] confidence in the
outcome of the trial.’” Smith v. Cain, 132 S.Ct. 627, 630 (2012) (quoting Kyles v. Whitley, 514
U.S. 419, 434 (1995)). “Impeachment evidence * * * as well as exculpatory evidence, falls
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within the Brady rule.” Bagley, 473 U.S. at 676. Brady has also been expanded to impose a duty
on the prosecutor to learn of any favorable evidence “known to the others acting on the
government’s behalf,” D’Alessio v. State, 101 A.3d 1270, 1278 (R.I. 2014) (quoting Kyles, 514
U.S. at 437), “including the police.” Kyles, 514 U.S. at 437 (emphasis added).
This Court has previously stated that we “will not disturb a trial justice’s factual findings
made on an application for post[]conviction relief absent clear error or a showing that the trial
justice overlooked or misconceived material evidence in arriving at those findings.” Chapdelaine
v. State, 32 A.3d 937, 941 (R.I. 2011) (quoting Gordon v. State, 18 A.3d 467, 473 (R.I. 2011)).
We will, nonetheless, “review de novo any post[]conviction[-]relief decision involving questions
of fact or mixed questions of law and fact pertaining to an alleged violation of an applicant’s
constitutional rights.” Id. (quoting Gordon, 18 A.3d at 473).
After hearing extensive testimony, the hearing justice found that “John McMann told the
[Woonsocket Police Department] he did not loan his maroon car to * * * Monteiro” when the
Tempest criminal trial was ongoing. The hearing justice found as fact that Kevin McMann “also
informed law enforcement that he never loaned [the maroon car] out.” The hearing justice found
that “there [wa]s no indication that [the former prosecutor] ever learned of these statements, and,
as such, this evidence was never disclosed to defense counsel.” The hearing justice held that
“although any nondisclosure by the [s]tate appear[ed] to be wholly inadvertent, it still failed to
fulfill its duty to disclose.” The hearing justice noted that, here—where the state’s case against
Tempest “was based entirely on circumstantial evidence,” and where “[t]he statement by * * *
LaDue that she saw a maroon car upon returning home the afternoon of the murder, and the
corresponding testimony from * * * Richards that she saw * * * Tempest standing by a maroon
car driven by * * * Monteiro that same afternoon, constitute[d] the only piece of evidence
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linking * * * Tempest to the crime scene at the appropriate time”—any “evidence tending to
suggest that * * * Tempest was not in a maroon car that day [was] enough to ‘undermine[]
confidence in the outcome of the trial.’”
The state’s argument that Kevin McMann’s statement was not “suppressed” under Brady because Tempest, through the exercise of reasonable diligence,12 could readily have learned
whether Kevin McMann loaned the maroon vehicle to Monteiro, was not raised before the
Superior Court, nor was it raised before this Court in the state’s petition for writ of certiorari.
Accordingly, it has been waived. See Town of Burrillville v. Rhode Island State Labor Relations
Board, 921 A.2d 113, 119 (R.I. 2007) (“[W]e will not consider any issue that is not included in a
petitioner’s initial petition for issuance of a writ of certiorari.”); see also State v. Bido, 941 A.2d
822, 828-29 (R.I. 2008) (“It is well settled that a litigant cannot raise an objection or advance a
new theory on appeal if it was not raised before the trial court.”).
Moreover, Tempest testified at the postconviction-relief hearing that he was unaware of
Monteiro borrowing the maroon car before Monteiro purchased it in 1983—not that he knew for
a fact that Monteiro never borrowed the car. He also testified that, prior to being represented by
12 In State v. Clark, 754 A.2d 73, 78 n.1 (R.I. 2000), this Court “issue[d] the caveat that to qualify for postconviction relief in respect to [a Brady] issue, it [would] be necessary for [the] defendant to establish that evidence to be presented is newly discovered and was not known, or, in the exercise of reasonable diligence, would not have been known in time to raise the issue fully at trial or in a motion for new trial * * *.” However, the United States Supreme Court, four years later, held in Banks v. Dretke, 540 U.S. 668 (2004), that its “decisions len[t] no support to the notion that defendants must scavenge for hints of undisclosed Brady material * * *.” Id. at 695. “A rule thus declaring ‘prosecutor may hide, defendant must seek,’ is not tenable in a system constitutionally bound to accord defendants due process.” Id. at 696. Since Clark, this Court has never articulated a “due diligence” requirement on the part of a defendant who claims a Brady violation. Following Banks, several courts have expressly declined to adopt a due diligence requirement. See Amado v. Gonzalez, 758 F.3d 1119, 1137 (9th Cir. 2014); United States v. Tavera, 719 F.3d 705, 712 (6th Cir. 2013); People v. Chenault, 845 N.W.2d 731, 737 (Mich. 2014).
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McDermott Will & Emery, he did not have any knowledge that anybody from the McMann
family had gone to the police. William Dimitri, who sat second-chair in Tempest’s criminal trial,
also testified that the state never disclosed to him that Kevin McMann had denied lending the car
to Monteiro. Even with John McMann’s handwritten letter in Tempest’s file stating that he
would not have been without a car prior to selling, there is no indication from the evidence
presented at the postconviction-relief hearing that Tempest also knew that the McManns would
not have lent the maroon car to Monteiro in 1992, as the state suggests.
This evidence, if properly disclosed to the defense, would have directly contradicted
Richards’ trial testimony that Monteiro “used to borrow” the maroon car. The state presented no
physical or eyewitness evidence against Tempest at trial. As the trial justice who presided over
the criminal case noted, “there[] [was] no doubt in the [c]ourt’s mind that the connection [of]
[Tempest] to the crime was all furnished by his own words * * * [a]ccording to the [s]tate’s case.”13 (Emphasis added.) In the state’s closing argument at the criminal trial, the state
acknowledged that it had “brought out many of the failures or the deficiencies of the crime scene
to explain to [the jury] why there [was] not [sic] physical evidence connecting [Tempest] to the
crime.” The state in its closing also highlighted the importance of the maroon car, by noting
that:
“[Richards] ha[d] * * * told [the jury] about the maroon car [Tempest] * * * was getting out of on February 19th outside of her place at about quarter to five in the afternoon. The maroon car should [have] sound[ed] familiar to [the jury] because the maroon
13 Four witnesses testified at the criminal trial that Tempest had confessed to them his involvement in the murder: Donna Carrier and John Guarino, whose trial credibility was significantly compromised; Ronald Vaz, whose trial testimony the hearing justice characterized as “mortared with a hastily-made blend of inconsistencies and half-truths” and whose credibility was “thoroughly demolish[ed]”; and Loretta Rivard, a witness who testified that Tempest confessed to her during an evening of drinking beer and snorting cocaine. Consequently, it may be a low threshold to undermine confidence in the outcome of the trial.
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car * * * that [LaDue] [had] described in the driveway outside 409 Providence Street. And once again, she has told you that that maroon car belonged to someone named Kevin McMann.”
Because, as the hearing justice noted, the maroon car was the only physical evidence
linking Tempest to the murder scene during the time of the murder, any evidence tending to
negate the credibility of the witness who testified that she observed Tempest in the maroon car
that day tends to undermine confidence in the outcome of the trial. I see no clear error in the
hearing justice’s findings of fact as they relate to the maroon car, and I agree that the evidence of
the maroon car was material. Accordingly, I would affirm the order vacating Tempest’s
conviction, albeit on different grounds than the majority.
Justice Goldberg, dissenting. The 1982 brutal murder of Doreen Picard (Picard)—not
unlike the attempted murder of Martha “Sunny” von Bulow, see State v. von Bulow, 475 A.2d
995 (R.I. 1984)—ranks as one of the most infamous crimes committed in this state during the
last century. The fact that no arrest was made for several years was a festering sore in the
community, compounded by a cover-up by sworn police officers. The majority affirms the
hearing justice’s grant of postconviction relief—which vacates a twenty-four-year-old conviction
for this murder—solely on the basis of the prosecution’s deliberate nondisclosure of two
statements (the Carrier statements) of Donna Carrier (Carrier), one of four trial witnesses to
whom Raymond Tempest Jr. (Tempest) confessed. In his seventy-eight-page decision, the
hearing justice devoted a grand total of two-and-a-half pages to this issue, including the factual
background, the governing legal standard, and his analysis relating to this evidence. This issue
demanded more than the cursory treatment it received in the Superior Court and by the justices
of this Court on appeal, such that I can only conclude that this decision is a manifest injustice.
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After conducting a thorough examination of the relevant factual background and analysis
of the issue within this Court’s deliberate-nondisclosure framework, I am convinced that the
hearing justice clearly erred in finding that the nondisclosure of the Carrier statements was a
deliberate nondisclosure as that concept is defined under our law. Moreover, I am of the opinion
that the majority, in reaching a contrary conclusion, improperly supplements the inadequate
factual findings of the hearing justice with findings of its own in order to reach a result that is not
supported by our jurisprudence and is a marked departure from well-settled law. It is not the
business of this Court to make factual findings in a nonjury case. Therefore, I respectfully
dissent. I would vacate the hearing justice’s grant of postconviction relief because (1) the
nondisclosure of the Carrier statements was not a deliberate nondisclosure and the Carrier statements are not material; (2) Tempest’s Brady claim1 with respect to the McMann evidence2
not only is barred by the doctrine of laches, but it also is without merit under Brady; and (3)
Tempest’s witness-coaching claim is barred by res judicata, and, additionally, the hearing
justice’s inventive standard for judging this claim is erroneous and has no basis under this
nation’s constitutional framework. I also take issue with the majority’s refusal to address this
witness-coaching issue because this case is being remanded for a new trial, and, in order to
provide guidance to the trial justice upon remand, this issue should be resolved by this Court.
1 Brady v. Maryland, 373 U.S. 83 (1963). 2 I use the term “McMann evidence” to refer to the evidence that John and Kevin McMann allegedly told officers of the Woonsocket Police Department that Robert Monteiro did not borrow the McManns’ maroon car before purchasing it from John in 1983.
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I
The Carrier Statements
In my opinion, the hearing justice clearly erred in concluding that the state’s
nondisclosure of the Carrier statements qualified as “deliberate” under the deliberatenondisclosure doctrine of State v. Wyche, 518 A.2d 907, 910 (R.I. 1986).3 Rather than
acknowledging the fatal flaws in the hearing justice’s decision, the majority compounds them by
making its own factual findings—which are also erroneous—in an effort to bolster the decision.
Because the hearing justice’s finding of deliberateness is clearly erroneous, Tempest is entitled to
postconviction relief as a result of the nondisclosure of the Carrier statements if, and only if, this
evidence is material under United States v. Bagley, 473 U.S. 667, 682 (1985), and its progeny.
And, as explained below, the Carrier statements amount to mere cumulative impeachment
evidence and do not constitute material evidence under Bagley.
A. Background A thorough analysis of the prosecution’s nondisclosure of the Carrier statements must
include a full explication of the relevant facts. Prior to February 19, 1982, the date on which
Picard was brutally beaten to death in the basement of her apartment building at 409 Providence
Street in Woonsocket, Susan Laferte (Laferte), who also lived at 409 Providence Street, agreed
to mate her pit-bull terrier with Tempest’s pit bull. The evidence disclosed that, hours before the
murder, Tempest had been at 409 Providence Street to select a puppy from the resulting litter,
3 Although this Court first adopted the deliberate-nondisclosure standard in In re Ouimette, 115 R.I. 169, 177, 342 A.2d 250, 254 (1975), I refer to it as the Wyche doctrine because State v. Wyche, 518 A.2d 907, 910 (R.I. 1986), was the first of only two occasions that this Court employed the doctrine in a Brady case to vacate a conviction.
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which Laferte had promised him in exchange for the use of his pit bull. Tempest intended to give the puppy to John Allard (Allard). On that fateful afternoon, Sherri Richards (Richards)4
saw Tempest leave her apartment between 1:20 and 1:30 p.m. with Allard to pick out the puppy,
return alone between 2 and 2:30 p.m., depart once more soon thereafter, and return once again
between 4:30 and 4:45 p.m. When Tempest returned the second time, Richards noticed that he
had changed his boots and was sporting a new bite mark or scratch on his wrist. Meanwhile, at
409 Providence Street, the severely beaten bodies of Picard and Laferte were discovered in the
basement at approximately 3:30 p.m. Picard was pronounced dead at the scene at 4:30 p.m. Laferte was grievously injured. There were no eyewitnesses to this crime.5
For several years, the homicide remained unsolved, which was unsurprising in light of
the ongoing cover-up that was perpetrated by members of the Woonsocket Police Department,
including Tempest’s brother, Det. Gordon Tempest (Gordon). In February 1987, Carrier gave a
statement to police. In this statement, Carrier stated that, at the time of the murder in 1982, she
and her then-boyfriend, John Guarino (Guarino), lived on the third floor at 448 Winter Street in
Woonsocket and that Tempest and his family lived at the same address on the floor below. As it
turns out, however, Tempest and his family did not move to that address until 1983. But Carrier
explained in her February 1987 statement that, in March 1982, Tempest confessed to the murder
4 Both the trial transcript and our opinion affirming Tempest’s conviction, State v. Tempest, 651 A.2d 1198, 1204 (R.I. 1995), list Richards’ first name as “Sherri.” However, her November 1991 police statement and her death certificate list it as “Sheri.” 5 Laferte’s daughter Nicole—who was three years old on the day of the murder—remembered a man arriving at her house that day; the man either proceeded into the basement at a time when Laferte was also in the basement or Laferte and the man went to the basement together, and Nicole heard her mother yell and a dog bark, followed by a “boom boom” noise and “a[ ]lot of banging in the cell[a]r.” Nicole was unable to identify this man, however. Nicole did not testify at Tempest’s trial.
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in her and Guarino’s presence at their apartment located at 448 Winter Street. According to
Carrier, Guarino
“asked [Tempest] if he thought the [p]olice kn[e]w and [Tempest] said[,] ‘[N]o[,] my father would take care of it.’ * * * He said that [t]hey can’t do anything because there is no evidence. [Guarino] then asked if [Tempest] used his hands and [Tempest] said no, and something about a hammer or pipe and said that they would never find anything, there are no fingerprints and everything has been taken care of. * * * [Tempest] continued[,] saying[,] ‘My father is * * * an important man, High Sheriff of Providence[.] It cost a[ ]lot of money for my father to make sure my name didn’t get brought up in this. If my brother Gordie knew he would turn me in.’”
Tempest was in possession of Carrier’s February 1987 statement at the time of his trial.
Carrier testified before the grand jury on November 30, 1990. Carrier first reviewed her
February 1987 statement before the grand jurors. She also testified that, although she knew
Tempest before the two became neighbors, she did not know Tempest’s then-wife, Jane Tempest
(Jane), until after the Tempests moved into the Winter Street building. Additionally, she
testified, in detail, about certain observations she made of Tempest on the day of the murder:
“A: Johnny Allard was with [Tempest] that afternoon that they came home, they were supposed to pick up a pit[ ]bull puppy from um, either Doreen Picard or Sue La[f]erte, one or the other, because they had had a pit[ ]bull dog that mated with their dog and they were going to get the pick of the litter. Well this was the afternoon supposedly that he went over to pick the dog up and the puppy up from these people, that was his excuse for going over there and the puppy wasn’t shown up [sic] until maybe about a week after the murder.
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“Q: Okay, but what, how do you know that, that * * *
“A: Because they were, um, talking about it earlier in the day that they were going to pick up their puppy.
“Q: Were you, did you hear them talking about it earlier?
“A: In the kitchen, they were in the kitchen in Jane’s apartment and [Tempest]’s apartment.
“Q: Okay, and you were there?
“A: Yes.
“Q: That’s the day of the murder?
“A: That was the day of the murder.
“Q: And this is before they went to pick up the pit[ ]bull?
“A: Before they went to pick up the pit[ ]bull.
“Q: Okay. Did they say anything else about that?
“A: No, just that they had the pick of the litter of the puppies and that they were going.
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“* * *
“A: Because the afternoon of the murder, um, I had come out into the hallway * * *. I had, I was looking out the window and I was, my son was outside playing in the backyard and um, John [Allard] and [Tempest] were together and [Tempest]’s truck and they pulled up, the both of them had paint hat, painter’s hats on and um, [Tempest] had a habit of wearing his painter’s hat backwards. * * * [T]hey got out of the car and it was like 4:00 in the afternoon, 4:30, 5:00, somewhere around in that area and he had gotten out of the car and came upstairs and I know I didn’t think that the clothes were the same as what he went out with, [be]cause he went out wore [sic] jeans all the time, and [T]-shirts and when he came back, he had on [a] flannel shirt and a pair of jeans and sneakers and with a painter’s [redacted].”
Tempest was in possession of Carrier’s grand-jury testimony at the time of his trial.
Carrier also testified at Tempest’s bail hearing in June 1991. Carrier’s testimony was
consistent with the information she relayed in her February 1987 statement. At that hearing, Carrier was cross-examined by one of Tempest’s attorneys, William C. Dimitri (co-counsel).6
In August 1991, Carrier gave another statement to police. Although this statement was
generally consistent with Carrier’s February 1987 statement regarding the specifics of Tempest’s
confession to her and Guarino in Carrier’s apartment, it diverged somewhat from the earlier
6 At trial, Tempest was represented by the late William A. Dimitri Jr. and his son, William C. Dimitri. To distinguish between the similarly named members of the defense team, I shall refer to the elder Dimitri as “defense counsel” and to his son as “co-counsel.”
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statement with respect to Tempest’s explanation about the cover-up efforts of his father and
brother. In the August 1991 statement, Carrier stated:
“[Tempest] used to say [that] nothing would happen to him because of who his father and brother were. At the beginning of the conversation, he said, ‘[M]y father and brother don’t know anything about this.’ Then in the course of the conversation, [Guarino] was asking questions, ‘What happens if you get caught?’ [Tempest] said, ‘I won’t get caught[;] my father and brother won’t let me get caught.’ ‘The weapon’s been all taken care of,’ he said.” (Emphases added.) Thus, unlike Carrier’s February 1987 statement—which disclosed that Tempest stated that “[i]f
my brother Gordie knew he would turn me in”—Carrier’s August 1991 disclosure implicated
Gordon by stating that he would not let Tempest get caught and that the weapon had been taken
care of. This statement clearly implied that Gordon was involved in cover-up activity. Like
Carrier’s February 1987 statement, Tempest was in possession of this statement at the time of his
trial.
On March 10, 1992, the lead prosecutor in Tempest’s criminal case (the former prosecutor), a well-respected member of the bar, learned of the Carrier statements.7 The Carrier
statements, which are reflected in the former prosecutor’s handwritten notes from that date,
conveyed two discrete pieces of information. First, the former prosecutor’s handwritten notes
from this date reveal that, according to Carrier, Tempest’s children were excited on the day of
the murder because they were getting a puppy. Second, the former prosecutor’s notes also
7 At the postconviction-relief hearing, the former prosecutor could not remember whether he received this information directly from Carrier or through Sgt. Ronald Pennington (Pennington).
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reflect that Carrier informed him that Gordon put the pipe—the murder weapon—in the closet.
The notes contain the following notation:
“More new [i]nfo re: GT [Gordon Tempest] putting pipe in closet + dog for the kids – too late – don’t volunteer new info – will cause big problems[.]”
The former prosecutor did not disclose the Carrier statements to the defense. The reasons for his
decision not to do so lie at the heart of this case.
The fact that Carrier was mistaken about the date that the Tempests became her neighbors
at 448 Winter Street is clear. Precisely when the former prosecutor learned about this
discrepancy is not as clear, but it cannot be denied that defense counsel was aware of Carrier’s
mistake before trial and that the former prosecutor nonetheless called her as a witness knowing
full well that she would be severely impeached by the defense. Long before Carrier gave her
police statement in 1987, the police were in possession of statements that Tempest gave shortly
after the murder in 1982; in these statements, Tempest indicated that he lived at 42 Phoebe Street
in Woonsocket. Additionally, the former prosecutor was aware in late December 1991 that
Pamela Miclette told police earlier that month that she babysat Tempest’s children on the day of
the murder and that the Tempests were living on Phoebe Street at that time. However, the
former prosecutor testified at the postconviction-relief (PCR) hearing that, when Carrier made
these disclosures, he was not certain whether he knew that she was mistaken about when the
Tempests became her neighbors. In any event, it is evident that, by the start of trial on March 27,
1992—seventeen days after the former prosecutor received the Carrier statements—he knew that
Carrier was mistaken in her earlier assertion that she and the Tempests lived in the same building
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on the day of the murder. The defense, of course, was well aware of Carrier’s mistake before
trial.
At trial, Carrier testified as a witness for the prosecution. Her testimony on direct
examination was brief, spanning only thirteen pages of transcript. She recounted the details of
Tempest’s confession to her and Guarino that occurred in her apartment at 448 Winter Street.
Consistent with the details she provided in her February 1987 statement, Carrier gave the
following testimony about Tempest’s explanation of cover-up efforts during his confession:
“[Guarino] asked [Tempest] if his father and brother knew about this. He said his brother didn’t know but his father did. His father had paid off a large sum of money to make sure that [Tempest]’s name was never mentioned about this. The murder weapon would never be found[;] it had been wiped clean of fingerprints and gotten rid of.” For the first time, however, Carrier indicated that Tempest’s confession at 448 Winter
Street occurred in 1983—not March 1982 as she had previously maintained. When asked why
she recalled that the confession occurred in 1983, Carrier responded:
“My ex-landlord, his mother is a resident at the facility that I work at. When I saw Mr. Leroux, all of the neighbors had started coming back to me and I realized that after one family moved out[,] another family moved in. And when this other family moved out[, Tempest] and Jane moved in and that was in 1983.”
During her direct examination, Carrier did not mention her claimed day-of-the-murder
observations that she related to the grand jury.
To no one’s surprise, Carrier was subjected to a scathing cross-examination at the hands
of defense counsel. Defense counsel probed in depth whether Carrier had truly coincidentally
realized her mistake about the date on which she heard Tempest confess or whether her memory
had been corrected by the police or the prosecution. Even more strenuously, defense counsel
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sought to establish that, because she and Tempest were not neighbors on the day of the murder,
Carrier could not have made the day-of-the-murder observations that she recounted to the grand
jury. Defense counsel’s cross-examination on this point was so effective that even the trial justice8 pressed Carrier to admit that, contrary to what she told the grand jury, she never
observed those details:
“Q Where did you get these observations that you made [on] the day of the murder? By reading the Woonsocket Call, is that where you got it?
“A No.
“Q Because you would agree with me, you certainly didn’t see it, isn’t that a fact? You could not have seen it, isn’t that a fact?
“A If it was 1982 or 1983, no.
“Q You could not have seen it the day of the murder, am I correct about that?
“A You are correct.
“Q So you were mistaken?
“A With the dates, yes.
“Q You were mistaken as to what you saw; isn’t that a fact?
“[PROSECUTOR]: Objection.
“THE COURT: Overruled. She keeps insisting she saw it. She says the date is wrong. Did you see it or didn’t you? 8 To distinguish between the two, I refer to the Superior Court justice who presided over Tempest’s criminal trial as “the trial justice,” and the Superior Court justice who presided over Tempest’s PCR hearing as “the hearing justice.”
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“THE WITNESS: No.
“THE COURT: You didn’t see it?
“THE WITNESS: No.”
Additionally, defense counsel confirmed with Carrier that she had told the police that
Tempest indicated that his brother Gordon did not know of his involvement. However, although
defense counsel marked Carrier’s August 1991 statement—which referenced Gordon’s
knowledge of Tempest’s culpability and suggested his involvement in a cover-up—as a defense
exhibit for identification, he did not confront Carrier with that inconsistency. Indeed, the defense
steered well clear of any reference to Gordon’s involvement in this cover-up.
At Tempest’s PCR hearing, when the former prosecutor was confronted with his
handwritten notation from March 10, 1992, he explained that it reflected his thoughts that it was
too late to supplement discovery at that juncture and that a supplementary response to use what
he considered to be incriminating evidence would “cause [a] big problem[]” in the form of
continuances and headaches. He did not believe that the evidence itself would have an adverse
impact on the state’s case and said so more than once:
“Q And your response was it was ‘too late,’ you said, ‘don’t volunteer new information,’ correct?
“A It was too late in a discovery sense, yeah. We were not going to supplement discovery regarding that point because we are on the eve of trial.
“Q And you wrote down ‘will cause big problems’?
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“A Well, cause a big problem supplementing at this point and probably end up having to continue the case.
“Q And you thought it would lead to a continuance and to headaches?
“A Headaches.
“* * *
“Q You think, your thought at the time was if you produced new information to [the] defense it might lead to a continuance, correct?
“A Yeah. And I didn’t see it as exculpatory. I wasn’t going to offer that testimony in our direct case and I didn’t do it.
“* * *
“Q That is part of the new information that you thought would cause big problems, correct?
“A Well, supplementing discovery at that point I thought would cause a big problem, not the information itself, * * * but the act of doing it.” (Emphases added.)
Clearly, at the PCR hearing, the former prosecutor viewed the Carrier statements as
inculpatory—which, of course, they were—and not exculpatory. It was only after Tempest’s
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PCR counsel suggested to the former prosecutor that the evidence could be used for
impeachment purposes that he understood its potential as favorable defense evidence.
Co-counsel testified at Tempest’s PCR hearing that, had the Carrier statements been
disclosed to the defense, the evidence would have been used in cross-examination. Critically,
however, the defense had Carrier’s August 1991 statement before trial, in which she explained
that Tempest stated: “‘I won’t get caught[;] my father and brother won’t let me get caught.’ ‘The
weapon’s been all taken care of’ * * *.” Although this statement clearly contradicted the portion
of her February 1987 statement in which she stated that Tempest told her and Guarino that “[i]f
my brother Gordie knew he would turn me in,” and although defense counsel marked Carrier’s
August 1991 statement as a defense exhibit for identification, defense counsel did not impeach
Carrier on the inconsistencies between her February 1987 and August 1991 statements.
The hearing justice granted Tempest postconviction relief on the basis of the former
prosecutor’s nondisclosure of the Carrier statements. Unfortunately, this is the only aspect of the
hearing justice’s decision that the majority is willing to address, a situation that will lead to
future litigation concerning the witness-coaching claim, at least in the Superior Court and,
potentially, in this Court.
Of the seventy-eight pages that comprised his decision, the following is the entirety of the
two-and-a-half pages that the hearing justice devoted to the treatment of the background facts,
controlling legal principles, and analysis of the issue:
“Turning to Mr. Tempest’s second claim, the [c]ourt examines the alleged nondisclosure of statements made by Ms. Carrier to law enforcement shortly before trial. Ms. Carrier testified at trial that Mr. Tempest admitted to carrying out the murder, confessing to her that Doreen Picard ‘came down the stairs at the wrong time [and] saw him hitting [Ms. Laferte]. He couldn’t let her get away and he had to do her, too.’ (Trial Tr. 1112:12-15,
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Apr. 6, 1992.) Part of this confession included statements by Mr. Tempest to the effect that his brother, Gordon Tempest, could not find out about his involvement. While the credibility of her story was brought into question upon cross-examination, her testimony regarding Mr. Tempest’s statements that his brother was unaware of his involvement in the brutal slaying went undisputed. However, a note from the prosecutor’s file reveals that shortly before [the former prosecutor] delivered his opening statement, Ms. Carrier had told the [s]tate that ‘Gordon Tempest had put the pipe in the closet’ in an effort to conceal the murder weapon. (Tr. 35:13-14, Mar. 17, 2015 (Testimony of [the former prosecutor]).) This was the first time in the five years she had spoken with police that she mentioned Gordon Tempest’s involvement in a coverup.[9] Id. at 46:15-17. She also made a second disclosure that Mr. Tempest’s children were excited on the morning of the murder because they were going to get a puppy. Not only was this revelation inconsistent with the undisputed evidence that the dog to be picked up by Mr. Tempest from Ms. Laferte was intended for John Allard, not the Tempest family, her awareness of the children’s excitement would have also been impossible—Ms. Carrier did not live near Mr. Tempest on the day of the murder as she claimed.31[10] Such discrepancies reflect a suspicious malleability in her recollection undercutting the credibility of her testimony. Nevertheless, these statements related to motive and the concealment of evidence were not disclosed to defense counsel. Instead, [the former prosecutor] directed Ms. Carrier not to include such accounts before the jury. After learning these new details to her latest statement, he wrote in his notes, ‘too late, don’t volunteer new info, will cause big problems.’ Id. at 36:20-21.
9 As will be demonstrated below, this statement by the hearing justice was clearly erroneous. 10 Footnote 31 of the hearing justice’s decision read:
“In this statement, Ms. Carrier also mentioned that she saw Mr. Tempest on the day of the murder. However, this discrepancy was disclosed before trial. One focus of her cross-examination was that Ms. Carrier had mixed up when Mr. Tempest lived in the same apartment building as her; she had erroneously believed they were in the same building at the time of the murder when, in actuality, he moved in around a year later.”
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“With respect to disclosure of exculpatory or impeaching evidence, the Rhode Island constitution ‘provides even greater protection to criminal defendants than’ its federal counterpart. [State v. ]Chalk, 816 A.2d [413,] 419 [(R.I. 2002)]. To this effect, our Supreme Court has ‘adopt[ed] a sliding-scale analysis based on the blameworthiness of the prosecution in failing to disclose the evidence.’ State v. Brisson, 619 A.2d 1099, 1102 (R.I. 1993). In expanding a defendant’s constitutional rights beyond the requirements set forth by the United States Supreme Court, our jurisprudence provides that ‘the reason for the nondisclosure can be dispositive concerning the likelihood of a new trial.’ Id. In finding a violation, ‘[t]he easy cases * * * are where the prosecutor’s suppression is deliberate, by which we include * * * a considered decision to suppress[.]’ Lerner v. Moran, 542 A.2d 1089, 1092 (R.I. 1988) (quoting United States v. Keogh, 391 F.2d 138, 146-47 (2d Cir. 1968)). Our Supreme Court has noted that ‘[w]hen the failure to disclose is deliberate, this court will not concern itself with the degree of harm caused to the defendant by the prosecution’s misconduct; we shall simply grant the defendant a new trial.’ Wyche, 518 A.2d at 910. In such cases, the materiality of the evidence to the case is of no moment; rather, the purposeful act of nondisclosure necessitates ‘automatic reversal.’ Lerner, 542 A.2d at 1092.
“Here, the willful nature of such suppression is readily apparent. While [the former prosecutor] noted at [the] hearing that he chose not to make such disclosures because he felt ‘it would lead to a continuance and to headaches[,]’ such concerns did not relieve him of his prosecutorial duty. (Tr. 44:11-12, Mar. 17, 2015). Constitutional rights cannot be tossed aside whenever they present the smallest inconvenience. Okla. Natural Gas Co. v. Russell, 261 U.S. 290, 293 (1923) (stating that ‘convenience must give way to constitutional rights’); see also O’Clair v. United States, 470 F.2d 1199, 1204 (1st Cir. 1972) (holding that ‘administrative convenience cannot justify infringement of constitutional rights’); State v. Slockbower, 397 A.2d 1050, 1055 (N.J. 1979) (stating that ‘constitutional rights * * * cannot be subordinated to mere considerations of convenience’). Furthermore, the protean nature of Ms. Carrier’s testimony was not only a ‘big problem[]’ in the eyes of [the former prosecutor], it was
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necessarily harmful to the [s]tate’s case.32[11] (Tr. 44:8, Mar. 17, 2015.) By deciding not to disclose the newly arisen variations in her story, [the former prosecutor] evidently sought to protect Ms. Carrier from additional impeachment. Such a ‘considered decision to suppress’ automatically necessitates relief. DeCiantis[ v. State], 24 A.3d [557,] 570 [(R.I. 2011)].”
B. Deliberate-Nondisclosure Doctrine A factual finding of a hearing justice “is clearly erroneous when, although there is
evidence to support it, the reviewing court[,] on the basis of the entire evidence[,] is left with the
definite and firm conviction that a mistake has been committed.” State v. Bido, 941 A.2d 822,
835-36 (R.I. 2008) (quoting State v. Perez, 882 A.2d 574, 588 (R.I. 2005)). In this case, after
reviewing the entirety of the record—including the former prosecutor’s testimony at the PCR
hearing and his handwritten notes of March 10, 1992—I am left with the definite and firm
conviction that the hearing justice clearly erred in concluding that the nondisclosure of the
Carrier statements was deliberate under the Wyche doctrine.
The law surrounding this issue is neither complex nor difficult to understand. Under
Wyche, a deliberate nondisclosure is not simply one that is purposeful or intentional, as the
hearing justice erroneously concluded. Instead, to qualify as a deliberate nondisclosure, one of
two specific tests must be met. First, “[t]he prosecution acts deliberately when it makes ‘a
considered decision to suppress * * * for the [very] purpose of obstructing’ * * *.” Wyche, 518
A.2d at 910 (quoting Keogh, 391 F.2d at 146-47) (emphasis added). Alternatively, if the
nondisclosure is not found to be for the very purpose of obstructing the defense, a deliberate
nondisclosure can still be established if the prosecution “fail[ed] ‘to disclose evidence whose
11 Footnote 32 of the hearing justice’s decision reads: “See Sanborn v. Parker, 629 F.3d 554, 572 (6th Cir. 2010) (‘Having heard of [witness’] constantly shifting stories, * * * a rational jury would surely have [ ] seriously doubted [his] credibility[.]’).”
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high value to the defense could not have escaped * * * [its] attention.’” Id. (quoting Keogh, 391
F.2d at 147). Neither test for deliberateness is met in this case.
1. Considered Decision to Suppress for the Very Purpose of Obstructing Notwithstanding the majority’s ipse dixit to the contrary, the hearing justice did not
correctly set forth the test for deliberateness in this context. The closest the hearing justice came
to touching on the test for deliberateness is the following sentence: “In finding a violation, ‘[t]he
easy cases * * * are where the prosecutor’s suppression is deliberate, by which we include * * *
a considered decision to suppress[.]’” (Quoting Lerner, 542 A.2d at 1092.) This selective
snippet from Lerner does not accurately set forth the test for deliberateness. It is not enough that
the nondisclosure constitutes “a considered decision to suppress.” Instead, to constitute a
deliberate nondisclosure under this prong of the Wyche test for deliberateness, the considered
decision to suppress must be made “for the [very] purpose of obstructing”—that is, to impede the
defendant’s case. Wyche, 518 A.2d at 910 (quoting Keogh, 391 F.2d at 146-47) (emphasis added).12 This is our law, and it is strictly applied for a very good reason: A considered decision
to suppress for the very purpose of obstructing leads to the conviction being vacated. This
severe sanction may be imposed only when all components of one of the two tests for
deliberateness are satisfied.
The hearing justice’s clearly erroneous determination that the former prosecutor’s
nondisclosure of the Carrier statements rose to the level of a deliberate nondisclosure flowed
12 This necessary component of the considered-decision-to-suppress prong of the Wyche deliberateness standard is plainly evident from the entire passage of Lerner v. Moran, 542 A.2d 1089 (R.I. 1988), but not from the selective quote from the Superior Court decision. See id. at 1092 (“The easy cases—at least they now seem so—are where the prosecutor’s suppression is ‘deliberate,’ by which we include not merely a considered decision to suppress, taken for the very purpose of obstructing, but also a failure to disclose evidence whose high value to the defense could not have escaped the prosecutor’s attention.” (quoting United States v. Keogh, 391 F.2d 138, 146-47 (2d Cir. 1968) (emphasis added))).
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from his failure to set forth the accurate test for deliberateness under the Wyche doctrine. A
close examination of the hearing justice’s analysis of this issue—which consisted of a single
paragraph—readily reveals his error. The hearing justice began by noting that, “[h]ere, the
willful nature of such suppression is readily apparent.” But, as is plainly obvious from the
Wyche standard of deliberateness, willfulness is not enough; not every intentional failure to
disclose qualifies as a deliberate nondisclosure under Wyche. Instead, there must be evidence
that the nondisclosure was “taken for the very purpose of obstructing” the defense. Lerner, 542
A.2d at 1092 (quoting Keogh, 391 F.2d at 146-47) (emphasis added). The hearing justice next
noted one aspect of the former prosecutor’s testimony at the PCR hearing regarding his failure to
disclose the Carrier statements and emphasized that concerns about disclosure leading to a
continuance “did not relieve [the former prosecutor] of his prosecutorial duty.” I wholeheartedly
agree with this sentiment, but it does not answer the paramount question of whether the former
prosecutor’s nondisclosure was deliberate under Wyche.
The hearing justice next cited three opinions—none of which involved a claimed Brady
violation and one of which was not even a criminal case—for the uncontroversial proposition
that “[c]onstitutional rights cannot be tossed aside whenever they present the smallest
inconvenience”—a proposition that is utterly irrelevant to the question of whether the former
prosecutor made “a considered decision to suppress * * * for the [very] purpose of obstructing”
or “fail[ed] ‘to disclose evidence whose high value to the defense could not have escaped * * * [his] attention.’” Wyche, 518 A.2d at 910 (quoting Keogh, 391 F.2d at 146-47).13 The hearing
justice then noted that “the protean nature of Ms. Carrier’s testimony * * * was necessarily
13 Obviously, if the former prosecutor did not disclose the Carrier statements simply because they presented him with “the smallest inconvenience,” this would not amount to a considered decision to suppress for the very purpose of obstructing.
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harmful to the [s]tate’s case.” Although this may or may not be accurate, it adds little to the
relevant inquiry of whether the former prosecutor made a considered decision to suppress for the
very purpose of obstructing or whether the evidence was of such a high value to the defense that
it could not have escaped the former prosecutor’s attention.
The next sentence in the hearing justice’s decision is the closest thing I can find to a
factual finding, and it unequivocally demonstrates that this case was wrongly decided.
According to the hearing justice, “By deciding not to disclose the newly arisen variations in her
story, [the former prosecutor] evidently sought to protect Ms. Carrier from additional
impeachment.” (Emphases added.) Evidently? This sounds like speculation to me, a concern
that is ignored by the majority. Additional impeachment? This aspect of the decision declares—
perhaps unintentionally—that the value of this evidence rested on its cumulative impeachment
value: that is, to show “variations in [Carrier’s] story.” Under our PCR statutory framework,
“[t]he [Superior C]ourt [hearing justice] shall make specific findings of fact * * * relating to each
issue presented.” General Laws 1956 § 10-9.1-7 (emphasis added). In order to find that the
nondisclosure was deliberate, the hearing justice was obligated by § 10-9.1-7 and the Wyche
doctrine to make specific findings of fact that the former prosecutor made a considered decision
to suppress the Carrier statements for the very purpose of obstructing or a separate finding that
the undisclosed evidence was of such a high value to the defense that the former prosecutor
could not have overlooked it. Rather than make affirmative, specific findings on one of those
two points, the hearing justice merely stated that “[the former prosecutor] evidently sought to
protect Ms. Carrier from additional impeachment.” (Emphases added.) In order to vacate a
twenty-four-year-old murder conviction under Wyche, more was required. Notably, the majority
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does not even address this equivocal finding by the hearing justice, and, by failing to confront
this issue, the majority deviates from our well-settled jurisprudence.
In any event, the evidence does not support the hearing justice’s finding that the former
prosecutor’s nondisclosure was “evidently” for the purpose of protecting Carrier from additional
impeachment. At the PCR hearing, the former prosecutor clearly and consistently explained
what he meant by his handwritten notation “too late – don’t volunteer new info – will cause big
problems”: He believed that it was too late to supplement the state’s discovery with respect to
inculpatory proof it intended to present at trial and that any attempt to do so would lead to a
continuance. The former prosecutor testified that “supplementing discovery at that point I
thought would cause a big problem, not the information itself, but the * * * act of doing it.” He
explained that his note that it was “too late” was similarly in relation to supplementing
discovery: “It was too late in a discovery sense, yeah. We were not going to supplement
discovery regarding that point because we are on the eve of trial.” A factfinder may reject this
testimony but is not permitted to ignore it.
In his scant reference to the former prosecutor’s testimony, the hearing justice
misconceived this material evidence. He noted the former prosecutor’s stated reasons for the
note—which the hearing justice understood to be based on considerations of convenience
(which, of course, would not rise to the level of a deliberate nondisclosure under Wyche)—but
he deemed them to be irrelevant, concluding that the former prosecutor’s “concerns did not
relieve him of his prosecutorial duty.” However, the former prosecutor’s testimony constituted
critical evidence bearing on the important question of whether he failed to disclose the evidence
for the very purpose of obstructing. Notably, the hearing justice made no credibility finding as to
the former prosecutor’s testimony. Instead, the trial justice sidestepped this testimony altogether,
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concluding that the former prosecutor “evidently sought” to protect Carrier from additional
impeachment. In reaching this conclusion, the hearing justice overlooked and misconceived the
former prosecutor’s testimony at the PCR hearing, which was highly relevant and material to the
deliberateness inquiry. This was clear error. See Bido v. State, 56 A.3d 104, 110 (R.I. 2012)
(“When reviewing the grant or denial of postconviction relief, the hearing justice’s factual
findings and credibility determinations will be upheld ‘absent clear error or a determination that
the hearing justice misconceived or overlooked material evidence.’” (quoting Lynch v. State, 13
A.3d 603, 605 (R.I. 2011))).
Finally, the concluding sentence of the hearing justice’s one-paragraph “analysis” of the
issue of whether the nondisclosure was deliberate—“[s]uch a ‘considered decision to suppress’
automatically necessitates relief”—is simply wrong. This is not a rote exercise by the factfinder
or by this Court; a finding of deliberate nondisclosure under Wyche has severe consequences and
warrants careful analysis. A “considered decision to suppress” is not enough to constitute
deliberate nondisclosure unless there is also a finding that the decision has been made for the
very purpose of obstructing. Other than a finding that the former prosecutor “evidently” sought
to protect the witness from additional (cumulative) impeachment, the hearing justice made no
definitive finding of fact regarding the purpose of the nondisclosure and, to the extent that such a
finding was attempted, it was clearly erroneous. It is my opinion that the hearing justice left this
Court with no choice but to vacate his decision on this point.
The majority disagrees and, in doing so, compounds the problem by making its own
findings of fact and substituting its judgment for that of the hearing justice. According to the
majority, “the former prosecutor’s own words—‘don’t volunteer’—indicate a considered
decision not to offer the new information to the defense.” This passage is problematic for two
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reasons. First, the hearing justice never made this factual finding, and the General Assembly has
authorized only lower-court justices—and not the justices of this Court—to make such findings
in the PCR context. See § 10-9.1-7. Second, in making this factual finding, the majority
commits the same legal error as the hearing justice. Even though the former prosecutor’s “don’t
volunteer” notation may indicate a “considered decision” to suppress, a considered decision to
suppress, as a matter of law, does not alone constitute deliberateness under Wyche. There must
be an additional determination that the decision was made for the very purpose of obstructing the
defense. The “don’t volunteer” notation tells us nothing of the reason for the nondisclosure. The
former prosecutor’s reasons are set forth in the record in this case and were ignored by the
hearing justice and the majority in making its own findings—an unwarranted exercise, I
suggest—in such an infamous case. The former prosecutor’s own testimony answers this
question, and there is nothing to suggest that the nondisclosure was for the very purpose of obstructing.14
14 The majority asserts that I “make[ my] own factual determination that the former prosecutor was only referring to the fact that the new statements could be cause for a continuance.” Even if this assertion were accurate—and it is not—the majority does not dispute that it makes a factual finding of its own with respect to the meaning of “the former prosecutor’s own words” (not to mention its findings with respect to the high value of the evidence). Moreover, my colleagues are incorrect that I make any factual findings. I simply recount the former prosecutor’s testimony, which constitutes the only evidence of the reason for nondisclosure, and note that the hearing justice did not explicitly deem this testimony to be not credible. The majority also asserts that, despite his silence on this testimony, “the hearing justice clearly rejected the former prosecutor’s proffered reason for failing to disclose the information”; this credibility determination, the majority reasons, is implicit from the hearing justice’s “finding that the former prosecutor deliberately failed to disclose the information.” This reasoning amounts to an assertion that, by simply stating a conclusion, a hearing justice in the PCR context is relieved of the obligation to state his or her credibility determinations and the reasons for such determinations. In my opinion, this is incorrect. See G.L. 1956 § 10-9.1-7 (“The court shall make specific findings of fact, and state expressly its conclusions of law, relating to each issue presented.”). In this context, implicit does not carry the day.
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2. High Value of the Evidence The majority also sets forth another justification for affirming the hearing justice with
respect to the nondisclosure of the Carrier statements and, in doing so, makes another forbidden
finding of fact in a nonjury case: “[T]he ‘high value’ of Carrier’s new statements to the defense
could not have escaped the former prosecutor’s attention.” I part company with the majority on
this point for two reasons, one procedural and the second substantive.
At the outset, it is readily apparent to me that the hearing justice made no factual finding
that the Carrier statements were of such high value to the defense that they could not have
escaped the former prosecutor’s attention, nor did he make any factual findings to warrant this conclusion.15 This is serious business; convictions should not be vacated unless these critical
findings are actually made and are presented in a posture to be reviewable by this Court. Indeed,
as explained above, the hearing justice did not even mention this alternative prong of the Wyche
deliberateness standard in his decision, and the majority has no business doing so sua sponte.
Under our law, the deliberateness determination is a factual finding reserved for the hearing
justice. See State v. Briggs, 886 A.2d 735, 759 (R.I. 2005). Yet the majority takes it upon itself
to find as fact that the Carrier statements meet Wyche’s high-value prong. The deferential
standard of review through which we examine a lower tribunal’s factual findings does not, in my
15 My conclusion in this regard is unaffected by the hearing justice’s single statement in his decision that “the protean nature of Ms. Carrier’s testimony * * * was necessarily harmful to the [s]tate’s case.” The Wyche standard for deliberateness is not satisfied any time the suppressed evidence is harmful to the state’s case, such as, for example, cases where the evidence is merely cumulative impeachment evidence. Instead, only evidence of such high value to the defense that it could not have escaped the prosecution’s attention qualifies for this ground of deliberateness. Wyche, 518 A.2d at 910. The hearing justice’s finding that the Carrier statements were merely harmful to the state’s case cannot be understood as a factual finding that they had the requisite high value discussed in Wyche, especially since the hearing justice failed to even mention this prong of the Wyche standard in his decision.
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view, grant this Court the creative license to make its own findings on an issue that was not even
mentioned by the hearing justice. Because the hearing justice in this case neglected to make
factual findings with respect to (or to even allude to) Wyche’s high-value prong of the
deliberateness standard, this Court should not fill in the blanks on that prong.
Nonetheless, since the majority has elected to make its own factual determination
regarding the high value of this evidence, I am compelled to state my reasons for concluding that the majority is clearly wrong.16 As far as I can tell, the majority’s position appears to be that,
because the Carrier statements constituted new evidence that was, in light of its impeachment
value, favorable to the accused, the high value of this evidence could not have escaped the former prosecutor’s attention.17 However, the high-value prong of the Wyche standard for
deliberateness is not so summarily satisfied. High-value evidence means powerful proof—so
powerful, in fact, that the prosecution could not have overlooked its value to the defense, see
Wyche, 518 A.2d at 910, as the former prosecutor did in this case with this cumulative
impeachment evidence.
As this Court has recognized, cases involving deliberate suppression—as that concept has
been defined in our case law—“rarely present a problem as to the degree of prejudice [that] must
16 In doing so, I employ the same deferential standard of review that this Court employs when reviewing the factual findings of a hearing justice, even though I am uncertain whether the majority’s findings are entitled to such deference. 17 The majority also seeks to establish the high value of the Carrier statements by contrasting the former prosecutor’s nondisclosure of these statements with his disclosure of the fact that Carrier was mistaken about where Tempest lived on the date of the murder. According to the majority, the former prosecutor disclosed Carrier’s mistake to the defense after “[h]aving realized that [the mistake] was of high value to the defense because it seriously discredited much, if not all, of Carrier’s testimony about seeing Tempest on the day of the murder.” After scouring the record, I can find no support for this assertion about why this disclosure was made. Therefore, it is clear to me that this assertion represents nothing more than an unsupported factual finding by the majority. As such, it is not a legitimate foundation upon which to base a second factual finding of the majority—and not the hearing justice—about the high value of the Carrier statements.
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be shown; almost by definition the evidence is highly material.” Lerner, 542 A.2d at 1092
(quoting Keogh, 391 F.2d at 147) (emphasis added). This language indicates that—while a full
blown inquiry into whether the evidence is material under the Bagley standard is not necessary—
some degree of evaluation of the probative value of the evidence must be undertaken in order to
conclude that the evidence is of the requisite high value. How else can its value be determined?
In making its finding, the majority opinion fails to address this important point. Nor does the
majority offer an opinion on precisely what makes this evidence sufficiently valuable. A
comparison of the Carrier statements to the evidence in Lerner and Wyche—the only two Brady
cases from this Court where a deliberate nondisclosure was found—convinces me that the
Carrier statements do not satisfy Wyche’s high-value prong.
In Wyche, 518 A.2d at 907, 908, a first-degree sexual assault case, the prosecutor
deliberately withheld evidence relating to the victim’s blood-alcohol concentration on the
morning that the offense was allegedly committed. The prosecution first learned of this evidence
the day before the examining physician took the stand, but it did not disclose the evidence until
after the jury returned its guilty verdict. Id. at 908. This Court held that “[t]he prosecutor’s
conduct in this case was unquestionably deliberate,” id. at 910, and that, notwithstanding the
admission of some testimony from the victim about the number of drinks she consumed, id. at
907-08, 909, “[t]he extremely high reading of alcohol in [the victim’s] blood, [.208,] coupled
with the impact that such scientific evidence has on juries, was certainly evidence of such ‘high
value’ to [the defendant] that it could not have eluded the prosecutor,” id. at 910. The Court
went on to conclude that, “[g]iven the strength of the facts in this case, even were we to apply the
Bagley reasonable-probability standard of materiality, [the] defendant would be entitled to a new
trial.” Id.
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Similarly, in Lerner, 542 A.2d at 1089-90, many years after the defendant was convicted
of murder, the chief prosecution witness admitted in a subsequent related trial that, at the
direction of Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) Special Agent Paul Rico (Rico), he committed
perjury while testifying at the defendant’s trial. Among other areas of perjured testimony, the
witness was instructed by Rico to withhold information about the full extent of promises that
Rico made to him in exchange for his testimony against the defendant. Id. at 1090. In particular,
the witness testified at the defendant’s trial that Rico had “promised him only immunity and
‘protection for his family’”; he further testified “that he was not promised income from the
federal government, a new identity, or relocation.” Id. at 1091. In actuality, however, Rico had
promised the witness income for life, a new identity, and relocation in exchange for his
testimony. Id. This Court concluded that “[the witness’s] perjury at [the defendant’s] trial
relating to the extent of promises made to [the witness] by the FBI in exchange for his testimony
and * * * Rico’s corroboration of that perjury were material to [the witness’s] credibility and
therefore to the issue of [the defendant’s] guilt,” id., and that “the perjured testimony by [the
witness] concerning the promises made to him by the FBI agent is the ‘easy case’ that requires
automatic reversal,” id. at 1092. The Court went on to note that “[t]he same result would follow
even if we were to apply the Bagley standard of materiality to [the witness’s] perjury.” Id.; see
also id. at 1093 (“[The witness’s] perjury, elicited by the FBI, constituted material exculpatory
evidence withheld in violation of the applicant’s due[ ]process rights.”).
Thus, the high value of the undisclosed evidence in these two cases was obvious and
substantial and, unlike in this case, was carefully examined by the Court. In Lerner, we
described the witness who gave perjured testimony as “the critical witness in the state’s case”
and deemed his perjury “material exculpatory evidence.” Lerner, 542 A.2d at 1093. Similarly,
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the victim in Wyche was the critical and perhaps the sole witness who testified regarding the
first-degree sexual assault that the defendant allegedly committed against her in an “abandoned
house”; the medical evidence did not tend to indicate that a sexual assault had occurred. Wyche,
518 A.2d at 908. The undisclosed evidence of her profound intoxication at the time of the
alleged crime thus severely undermined the reliability of her recollection of the pertinent events.
Significantly, these are the only cases in which this Court has applied the Wyche deliberate
nondisclosure doctrine, and, in each case, the Court analyzed the undisclosed evidence in light of
its relevance at trial and concluded that it was material under the federal standard and, critically,
not simply impeachment evidence that merely related to “facts that were collateral to the issue of
[the defendant’s] guilt or innocence.” Lerner, 542 A.2d at 1090; see id. at 1093; Wyche, 518
A.2d at 910. None of that careful and considered analysis occurred in this case.
The value of the Carrier statements to Tempest’s case does not approach that of the
deliberately suppressed evidence in Lerner and Wyche. First, Carrier was not the critical witness
against Tempest; she was only one of four witnesses to hear him confess to the murder.
Moreover, as the hearing justice implicitly recognized when he declared that the purpose of the
nondisclosure was “evidently” to protect Carrier from “additional impeachment” (emphasis
added), the Carrier statements were merely cumulative impeachment evidence—which has never
been declared to be high-value evidence. With respect to the statement that Gordon put the pipe
in the closet, Carrier previously disclosed Tempest’s statement that Gordon would not let him get
caught and that the weapon had been “taken care of.” Additionally, the defense already was in
possession of a plethora of discovery relating to Gordon’s involvement in the cover-up of his
brother’s brutal murder of Picard, much of which came before the jury from another witness.
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The defense had the opportunity to impeach Carrier’s testimony on this point, but defense
counsel steered clear of using that information for impeachment purposes at trial.
Turning to the statements about the Tempest children being excited about getting a
puppy, the defense was in possession of Carrier’s grand-jury testimony—in which she testified
about her observations of Tempest on the day of the murder—and Carrier was painfully
impeached with that testimony in the course of a lengthy cross-examination. Indeed, Carrier
admitted before the jury that, contrary to her earlier testimony, she had not seen the things that
she claimed to have observed on the day of the murder, including observations of Tempest’s
movements and the highly incriminating testimony that she saw Tempest return wearing
different clothes. In light of defense counsel’s devastating cross-examination of Carrier, it is a
reach to say that one additional false observation—which concerned Tempest’s children and not
Tempest himself—satisfies the high-value prong of Wyche. Carrier’s credibility was so
effectively destroyed at trial that any additional impeachment based on the Carrier statements would have been merely cumulative.18
Finally, and critically for this prong of Wyche, in making its factual finding that the
Carrier statements were of such high value to the defense that they could not have escaped the
former prosecutor’s attention, the majority overlooks the uncontroverted evidence that the value
of the Carrier statements to Tempest did, in fact, escape the former prosecutor’s attention
because he considered this evidence to be incriminating. As is clear from his testimony at the
PCR hearing, the former prosecutor viewed the Carrier statements as nothing more than belated
inculpatory evidence that he would not offer at trial. It was only after Tempest’s PCR counsel
18 Defense counsel thought so too. At the hearing on Tempest’s motion for a new trial, he called Carrier “[t]otally incredible” and stated, “If anybody can believe Donna Carrier, then I’ll tell you something[,] I’ll sell them the Brooklyn Bridge.”
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explained to him how the evidence could have been used to impeach Carrier that the former
prosecutor appreciated the evidence’s value to the defense. There is no suggestion in this record
that his failure to appreciate that the Carrier statements may have been useful for impeachment
purposes was not the genuine and forthright testimony of an officer of the court. The hearing
justice did not indicate otherwise, and this Court is in no position to assess the credibility of
witnesses testifying before a Superior Court hearing justice. This evidence is uncontroverted. In
my opinion, the fact that the value of the Carrier statements to the defense actually escaped the
former prosecutor’s attention is a relevant consideration in determining whether the evidence
was of such high value to the defense that it could not have escaped the prosecution’s attention.
Yet the majority, in its rush to affirm the hearing justice on this alternative ground for
deliberateness, wholly overlooks this evidence.
For all these reasons, the hearing justice clearly erred in determining that the former
prosecutor’s nondisclosure of the Carrier statements was deliberate, as our law has defined this
term, and the majority perpetuates this error by making its own clearly erroneous factual
findings. The evidence simply does not support a finding that either alternative prong of
Wyche’s standard for deliberateness has been satisfied.
C. Materiality of the Carrier Statements Because this case does not approach a deliberate nondisclosure under Wyche, Tempest is
entitled to postconviction relief only if he can shoulder the burden of establishing that the
undisclosed Carrier statements qualify as material evidence under Bagley. See DeCiantis, 24
A.3d at 571. Evidence is material if “there is a reasonable probability that, had the evidence
been disclosed to the defense, the result of the proceeding would have been different.” State v.
Nickerson, 94 A.3d 1116, 1125 (R.I. 2014) (quoting State v. Burnham, 58 A.3d 889, 900 (R.I.
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2013)). “A ‘reasonable probability’ is a probability sufficient to undermine confidence in the
outcome.” Lerner, 542 A.2d at 1091 (quoting Bagley, 473 U.S. at 682). Although the majority
concludes that the Carrier statements are material, it does so in conclusory fashion.
The materiality of undisclosed evidence must be assessed in light of all of the evidence
adduced at trial. See DeCiantis, 24 A.3d at 573 (“[B]ased upon our review of the evidence
presented at trial, * * * we hold that Mr. DeCiantis has not made the requisite showing of
materiality.”); see also United States v. Paladin, 748 F.3d 438, 444 (1st Cir. 2014) (“The strength
of impeachment evidence and the effect of suppression are evaluated in the context of the entire
record to determine materiality.”); cf. Smith v. Cain, 132 S. Ct. 627, 630 (2012) (“[E]vidence
impeaching an eyewitness may not be material if the [s]tate’s other evidence is strong enough to
sustain confidence in the verdict.”). After conducting the requisite thorough review of the
record, I conclude that the Carrier statements do not give rise to a probability sufficient to
undermine confidence in the guilty verdict. To the contrary, the Carrier statements are merely
cumulative impeachment evidence.
To begin, I note my disagreement with the majority’s assertion that Carrier was “arguably
the most credible of the four” witnesses who testified that Tempest confessed to the murder. For
one thing, this type of credibility assessment is reserved for the hearing justice, not the members
of this Court. The hearing justice made no such credibility determination in the relevant two
and-a-half pages of his decision, and the majority should not have ventured onto this forbidden
terrain. In any event, my reading of the trial transcript convinces me that Carrier was the least
credible witness offered by the state. Carrier admitted during cross-examination that she had not
actually seen the things that she had earlier claimed to have observed on the day of the murder.
After reading the entirety of the transcript of Carrier’s trial testimony, it is my opinion that the
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inference that Carrier simply made up her day-of-the-murder observations out of whole cloth is
inescapable. Of the four witnesses who testified at trial that Tempest confessed to the murder,
only Carrier was demonstrated to have fabricated prior testimony.
It is my opinion that Tempest failed to demonstrate that either of the Carrier statements is
material under Brady. Carrier’s claimed observation of the Tempest children’s excitement on the
day of the murder was, in light of defense counsel’s extremely effective cross-examination as to
her other observations from that day, merely cumulative impeachment evidence demonstrating,
yet again, that she did not see Tempest on Winter Street on that fateful day. Indeed, this was
noted by the hearing justice in his decision, who concluded that the former prosecutor “evidently
sought to protect Ms. Carrier from additional impeachment.” (Emphasis added.) Therefore, it
was not material evidence. This Court has consistently declared that merely cumulative
impeachment evidence is not material. See Briggs, 886 A.2d at 755 n.8 (“Although
impeachment evidence may be found to be material under Brady * * *, our subsequent cases
have held that a due process violation does not occur when the state fails to divulge impeachment
evidence that is merely cumulative.”); id. at 757, 757-58 (“[I]f the high number of [the witness’s]
criminal convictions was insufficient to convince a jury that it should disbelieve his testimony,
then three additional convictions would not have changed the minds of the jurors. Put
differently, this impeachment evidence is merely cumulative. * * * Although [the] defendant
could have impeached [the witness’s] credibility further with the additional convictions, the fact
that [the] defendant did, in fact, impeach [the witness] with the numerous convictions that were
disclosed only warrants the conclusion that the additional convictions would not have resulted in
[the] defendant’s acquittal. Thus, the trial justice properly concluded that they were not material
under Brady.”); Chalk, 816 A.2d at 419, 419-20 (“The defendant’s cross-examination of [the
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witness] delved into his numerous specific acts of misconduct and elicited from [the witness]
multiple admissions of misdeeds and deception. * * * At most, had [the] defendant received the
additional * * * documents earlier, defense counsel may have elicited from [the witness] some
additional impeaching admissions. In our opinion, [the] defendant’s merely raising the
possibility of doing so is not sufficient to establish that, had the evidence been produced sooner,
there is a reasonable probability that [the] defendant would not have been convicted. We
conclude here, as we did in State v. Bassett, 447 A.2d 371, 377 (R.I. 1982), that any additional
impeaching statements ‘would merely have been cumulative for impeachment purposes,’ and
thus they ‘fail[] the test of the likelihood that [they] would have produced a reasonable doubt of
guilt.’”).
Tempest fares no better with respect to Carrier’s statement about Gordon Tempest putting
the pipe in the closet, which is closely akin to the claim in her August 1991 statement that
Tempest stated: “‘[M]y father and brother won’t let me get caught.’ ‘The weapon’s been all
taken care of[]’ * * *.” Clearly, the defense was in possession of evidence having the same sort
of impeachment value as Carrier’s undisclosed statement relating to Gordon: Carrier’s August
1991 statement, the pretrial statements of Danny Shaw (Shaw) and Ronald Vaz (Vaz), and, as
explained in more detail below, see Part II.C, infra, the trial testimony of Vaz, Michael Asselin
(Asselin), and Robert Boisclair (Boisclair), the locksmiths who placed Gordon and another
officer at the scene in possession of the pipe on the day after the murder. Notwithstanding, the
defense wisely elected not to proceed down this avenue of impeachment in the course of defense
counsel’s extensive and lengthy cross-examination of Carrier at trial. Tempest, therefore, cannot
demonstrate a reasonable probability that, had this evidence—which defense counsel likely
would not have used—been disclosed to the defense, the result of the proceeding would have
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been different. Accordingly, the undisclosed Carrier statement relating to Gordon was not
material.
Moreover, Carrier was not the only witness who heard Tempest confess. Guarino, Vaz,
and Loretta Rivard (Rivard) all similarly testified that Tempest confessed to them that he
murdered Picard, and, as I explain in more detail in my cumulative evaluation of the materiality
of the Carrier statements and the McMann evidence, see Part II.C, infra, the state’s evidence at
trial was overwhelming. Therefore, even if Carrier’s credibility had not already been, to use the
majority’s phrase, “crushed altogether” by defense counsel’s cross-examination (as I believe it
was) and even if the impeachment value of the undisclosed Carrier statements was sufficiently
high to create a reasonable likelihood that the jury would have rejected Carrier’s testimony in
total, there were still three other witnesses who told the jury about Tempest’s confessions. In
light of the testimony of these three other witnesses and the other incriminating evidence, see
Part II.C, infra, there is not a probability sufficient to undermine confidence in the outcome of
the jury’s guilty verdict that the result of the proceeding would have been different.
For this reason, this case is nothing like Wearry v. Cain, 136 S. Ct. 1002 (2016), cited by
the majority. In that case, “[t]he [s]tate’s trial evidence resemble[d] a house of cards, built on the
jury crediting Scott’s account rather than [the defendant’s] alibi.” Id. at 1006. Scott, the
prosecution’s “star witness,” gave conflicting statements to the police—with which he was
impeached by defense counsel at trial—but told the jury that he saw the defendant kill the victim.
Id. at 1003. The prosecution failed to disclose, however, the statements of two inmates with
whom Scott was incarcerated that tended to show that Scott had a motive to inculpate the
defendant. Id. at 1004. One inmate “hear[d] Scott say that he wanted to ‘make sure [the
defendant] gets the needle [be]cause he jacked over me.’” Id. The other reported that Scott
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“suggested that lying about having witnessed the murder ‘would help him get out of jail.’” Id.
In my opinion, this evidence—which showed that Scott had a motive to falsely implicate the
defendant—is plainly material, and its nondisclosure alone would have constituted a Brady violation. But there was even more evidence that the prosecution failed to disclose in Wearry.19
In this case, by contrast, Carrier was not the key witness for the state; there were three
more witnesses to whom Tempest confessed, and the state presented additional incriminating
evidence. Moreover, Carrier’s additional inconsistent statements—which, in my view, constitute
merely cumulative impeachment—pale in comparison to the evidence in Wearry that the star
witness who claimed to have witnessed the murder had reasons for falsely implicating the
defendant. The Carrier statements do not reveal any motive to lie; at most, they tend to show
that she was fabricating observations on the day of the murder—a circumstance that defense
counsel unquestionably demonstrated to the jury at trial.
* * *
In sum, the hearing justice failed to set forth or apply the correct legal standard for a
deliberate nondisclosure under Wyche. This is an error of law warranting reversal.
19 In particular, Scott’s tale of the events leading up to the murder indicated that Hutchinson, who was involved in the murder, ran “into the street to flag down the victim, pulled the victim out of his car, shoved him into the cargo space, and crawled into the cargo space himself.” Wearry v. Cain, 136 S. Ct. 1002, 1005 (2016); see also id. at 1003. However, Hutchinson’s medical records—which the prosecution did not disclose to the defendant—revealed that he underwent knee surgery nine days prior to the murder; according to an expert witness who testified at the defendant’s collateral-review hearing, Hutchinson would not have been able to perform the tasks described by Scott so soon after that surgery. Id. at 1005. Additionally, Scott’s testimony was bolstered by another witness, Brown, who testified that, on the night of the murder, he saw the defendant and others with a man who looked like the victim. Id. at 1003. Brown also told the jury that he “agreed to testify against [the defendant], not for any prosecutorial favor, but solely because his sister knew the victim’s sister,” and the prosecutor emphasized Brown’s purely altruistic motives during closing argument. Id. However, “the [s]tate had failed to disclose that, contrary to the prosecution’s assertions at trial, Brown had twice sought a deal to reduce his existing sentence in exchange for testifying against [the defendant].” Id. at 1004.
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Additionally, he failed to make factual findings that the former prosecutor made a considered
decision to suppress for the very purpose of obstructing or that the Carrier statements were of
such a high value to the defense that they could not have escaped the former prosecutor’s
attention. To the extent that the hearing justice made a factual finding regarding the reason for
the former prosecutor’s nondisclosure—“evidently” to protect Carrier from additional
impeachment—it was clearly erroneous. Compounding these errors, the majority makes its own
clearly erroneous findings of fact to substantiate the hearing justice’s erroneous finding of a
deliberate nondisclosure. On this record, the evidence does not support the conclusion that either
prong of the Wyche standard was met. Additionally, the Carrier statements do not constitute
material evidence; instead, this is merely cumulative impeachment evidence.
For all of these reasons, I would hold that the nondisclosure of the Carrier statements was
not deliberate under Wyche and that the evidence was not material. Accordingly, the hearing
justice’s grant of postconviction relief on this ground should be vacated.
II
The McMann Evidence
The majority’s affirmance of the hearing justice with respect to the nondisclosure of the
Carrier statements entitles Tempest to a new trial. For this reason, the majority quite correctly
declines to address Tempest’s other Brady claim relating to the McMann evidence. (For reasons
discussed below, see Part III, infra, the same cannot be said for the majority’s refusal to address
Tempest’s witness-coaching claim.) Even if it is assumed that the McMann evidence claim has
merit, saying so would serve no useful purpose because Tempest will have the benefit of this
evidence in his retrial. See United States v. Halloran, 821 F.3d 321, 342 n.14 (2d Cir. 2016)
(“[T]he remedy for a Brady violation is vacatur of the judgment of conviction and a new trial in
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which the defendant now has the Brady material available to her.” (quoting Poventud v. City of
New York, 750 F.3d 121, 133 (2d Cir. 2014) (en banc))).
Because I would vacate the hearing justice’s grant of postconviction relief with respect to
the Carrier statements, however, I am compelled to state my views on Tempest’s other Brady
claim. In my opinion, the hearing justice abused his discretion in rejecting the state’s laches
defense to this claim. As explained in more detail herein, my careful and conscientious review
of the record below leads me to conclude that, notwithstanding the nondisclosure of the McMann
evidence, Tempest has failed to establish that the defense did not know that Robert Monteiro
(Monteiro) did not own the maroon car (McMann car) in 1982 or borrow it from Kevin McMann
before he purchased it in 1983. And yet, despite this knowledge—which could have been further
confirmed by a simple conversation with his friends and family—Tempest waited until 2013 to
begin to develop this claim. If ever there was a case calling out for invocation of the doctrine of
laches, this is that case. In addition, and completely apart from the alternative ground of laches,
the claim fails on its merits because the McMann evidence does not qualify as material evidence.
A. Background Before addressing the legal issues with respect to this claim, I first briefly sketch the
relevant background. At Tempest’s trial, Lisa LaDue (LaDue) testified that, on the day of the
murder, she returned to her apartment on 409 Providence Street at approximately 3:20 p.m.
LaDue testified that, when she arrived home, she observed a “big,” “older” “maroon car” that she
did not recognize in the driveway of 409 Providence Street. Upon entering the building, LaDue
“heard some moving around [in the basement] downstairs.” Douglas Heath (Heath), LaDue’s
stepfather, arrived at 409 Providence Street at 3:30 p.m. Heath testified that there were no
vehicles in the driveway when he parked his truck there that afternoon.
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Richards testified that, between approximately 4:30 and 4:45 p.m. on the day of the
murder, she observed Tempest in front of her house, “standing on the outside of Bobby
Monteiro’s car with the door partly open[,] talking to him.” Richards then testified as follows:
“Q Would you describe Bobby Monteiro’s car?
“A It’s maroon, four door, and I’m not sure about the type of car. It was a huge car, maybe a Chevrolet or Oldsmobile.
“Q Was that his car or was it a car that he just drove?
“A No, he used to borrow Kevin McMann’s car. He would later on purchase the car but not at that time.” (Emphasis added.)
Vaz also testified that Tempest told him that, after the murder, he, Shaw, and Monteiro left the
crime scene in “Bobby Monteiro’s car.”
It is undisputed that the expected testimony of LaDue and Richards concerning the
maroon car was disclosed to the defense before trial. In fact, in her police statement, Richards
stated the following:
“Corky[, Tempest’s sister and Monteiro’s wife,] was telling me about how the car I said [Monteiro] had on the day of the murder was not sold to them as of that time. She tried to tell me that the car was his brother[’]s which was the same color but different make. I know the car I saw him in was the one that he bought from Lee’s [Pharmacy20] and that I had seen him driving around in that car several times at that time and that is why I thought he already owned it.”
20 John McMann was a part owner of Lee’s Pharmacy, Inc.
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During the defense case, Martin Leyden (Leyden), an employee of the Rhode Island
Registry of Motor Vehicles (DMV), testified. Leyden’s testimony established that neither
Monteiro nor his wife owned a vehicle—maroon or otherwise—registered with the DMV until
1983. In 1983, “a ’75 Buick, two[-]door, red” automobile was registered to the Monteiros.
There is no dispute that this car is the McMann maroon car. Therefore, although Richards
described the McMann car as a four-door model, it had two doors. Despite knowing about this
inconsistency, defense counsel did not cross-examine Richards on this point. During closing
argument, the former prosecutor twice mentioned that the maroon car observed by Richards and LaDue was the one that Monteiro borrowed from Kevin McMann (Kevin).21
At the hearing on Tempest’s motion for a new trial, defense counsel argued that the
evidence at trial showed that “[Monteiro] didn’t own a vehicle, nor did his wife own a vehicle” at
the time of the murder. The following exchange then occurred:
“THE COURT: The fact [that] he doesn’t have a vehicle registered to him doesn’t mean he didn’t have the use of a [maroon] vehicle.
“[Defense counsel]: You can infer that.”
When defense counsel continued his argument that the state’s evidence connecting Tempest to
the crime was rather weak, the trial justice responded: “[T]here’s no doubt in the [c]ourt’s mind
that the connection [of] the [d]efendant to the crime was all furnished by his own words.”
Time marched on, and, in the intervening years, several of the important actors in this
saga passed away. Carrier died in 2004. Defense counsel and Guarino died in 2006. Richards
21 To distinguish Kevin McMann from his father, John, and his sister, Susan, I refer to the McManns by their first names.
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passed away in 2007. Additionally, Colleen “Corky” Monteiro (Corky), Tempest’s sister and
Monteiro’s wife, has died as well.
The issue about the McMann car was not unknown to the defense. In 2001, a private
investigator working on Tempest’s case located a letter from John McMann Jr. (John), Kevin’s
father, in the defense team’s files that read:
“To [w]hom it may concern:
“Enclosed, find a copy of a [b]ill of sale, for a 1983 Buick, purchased for Lee’s Pharmacy[,] Inc., on May 27, 1983.
“The sale of my red Buick [i.e. the McMann car] to the Monteiro[s] took place after I received my new car.
“There is no way[] I was without a car[] before I picked up my new one.” The investigator believes that he turned the letter over to Tempest’s sister Barbara. Nothing was
done.
Twelve years would elapse before any action was taken with respect to this letter. Then,
in 2013, another investigator working on Tempest’s case interviewed Kevin. It was at this point
that Kevin told the investigator that he never loaned the McMann car to Monteiro in 1982 and
that he had relayed this information to officers of the Woonsocket Police Department before
trial. Kevin also executed an affidavit stating that his father, John, provided a bill of sale to the
Woonsocket Police Department to establish when he sold the maroon car to Monteiro.
Sharon McMann-Morrelli (Sharon)—John’s daughter and Kevin’s sister—testified that
John informed police during Tempest’s trial that he did not lend the maroon car to Monteiro
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before he sold it to him in 1983.22 John’s disclosure allegedly was prompted by a Woonsocket
Call article discussing the trial that mentioned that Monteiro borrowed the McMann car on the
day of the murder. Sharon testified that John allegedly spoke with then-Chief Rodney Remblad
(Remblad). Similarly, Kevin testified at the PCR hearing that, at his father’s request, he too told
police during the trial that he never loaned out the car. Kevin testified that he recalled speaking
with two officers, and he believed, but was not certain, that one of those officers was Remblad.
Inexplicably, however, Kevin never discussed the McMann car with Tempest’s defense team.
The McMann evidence—that John and Kevin allegedly went to the police during Tempest’s trial
and what they told the officers—was not conveyed to the former prosecutor or the defense.
Remblad testified at the PCR hearing and flatly denied discussing this issue with John or
Kevin. There was no police report reflecting a conversation between either John or Kevin and
any officer. The Woonsocket Police Department’s case file contained a bill of sale for the 1983
blue Buick Regal that had been purchased by John’s business before the sale of the maroon car
to Monteiro in 1983—the same bill of sale referenced in the letter from John, addressed “[t]o
[w]hom it may concern,” that was found in the defense team’s files in 2001.
Co-counsel testified at the PCR hearing that he and defense counsel reviewed John’s
letter that related his purchase of a new vehicle, his sale of the maroon car to Monteiro in 1983,
and the fact that John was not without a vehicle before he bought the 1983 Buick. Co-counsel
also testified that he spoke with Corky on several occasions before trial, but he does not
remember whether any of these conversations involved the McMann car. Nor could co-counsel
recall whether he or defense counsel ever spoke with Kevin about the McMann car. Finally, co
counsel testified that, although he is “sure” that he spoke with Tempest about the McMann car
22 John was unable to testify at the PCR hearing because he had been suffering from the effects of Alzheimer’s disease.
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and believes that defense counsel did so as well, he could not recall the specifics of these
discussions. This understandable failure of memory of events occurring more than twenty years
ago is problematic and leaves many unanswered questions about the McMann evidence,
particularly in light of Tempest’s testimony at the PCR hearing. Tempest testified that he was friendly with Monteiro, his sister’s husband.23 In fact,
Tempest testified that he was indeed in Monteiro’s car on the day of the murder; however,
instead of the McMann car, Tempest insisted that Monteiro was driving a green Mercury Comet
that day. Additionally, Tempest testified that he and Monteiro did not drive to 409 Providence
Street but instead went on a so-called “buzz ride” in which the two smoked marijuana. Tempest
further testified that, to his knowledge, Monteiro had not borrowed the McMann car in 1982 and
did not purchase it until 1983. Tempest could not recall, however, whether he shared this
information with his defense team. This failure of memory is equally problematic. Additionally,
although he was released on bail pending trial, he does not recall asking his sister Corky whether
her husband borrowed the McMann car in 1982, notwithstanding that Corky was discussing the
issue with Richards, a witness for the state.
On the basis of this record, I am not satisfied—and it is impossible to conclude—that the
substance of the McMann evidence was new information or that the defense team did not, before
trial, explore, discuss, or ask their client, Kevin, John, Corky, or Monteiro himself whether
Monteiro borrowed the McMann car. Because defense counsel was in possession of Richards’
police statement in which she claimed to have seen Monteiro driving the vehicle “several times”
around the time of the murder, including on the day of the murder, and because Tempest’s
23 Monteiro was convicted of four counts of perjury based on his testimony before the grand jury, which purported to establish an alibi for Tempest. See State v. Monteiro, 632 A.2d 340, 340-41 (R.I. 1993) (affirming this conviction).
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attorneys spoke with John, Corky, and their client before trial, it is inconceivable to me that this
subject was not examined by the defense. Of course, we will never know what defense counsel
did in relation to this issue before trial because Tempest waited until after defense counsel died
before seeking to develop this claim. Based on this delay, the state cannot defend against this
claim twenty-two years later.
The hearing justice, on the other hand, rejected the state’s laches defense and found a
Brady violation with respect to the McMann evidence. First, the hearing justice found that both
John and Kevin told police that they did not lend the maroon car to Monteiro before John sold it
to him in 1983. Although the hearing justice determined—notwithstanding Tempest’s argument
to the contrary—that the nondisclosure was not deliberate under the Wyche doctrine, he
concluded that Tempest was entitled to postconviction relief because the McMann evidence was
material.
B. Laches An action for postconviction relief is a civil proceeding, Campbell v. State, 56 A.3d 448,
454 (R.I. 2012), subject to the same rules and statutes applicable in civil proceedings and
affirmative defenses available in the civil context, see § 10-9.1-7, including the affirmative
defense of laches, see Santos v. State, 91 A.3d 341, 344 (R.I. 2014); Raso v. Wall, 884 A.2d 391,
394 (R.I. 2005). “[L]aches is an equitable defense that precludes a lawsuit by a plaintiff who has
negligently sat on his or her rights to the detriment of a defendant.” Santos, 91 A.3d at 344
(quoting School Committee of Cranston v. Bergin-Andrews, 984 A.2d 629, 644 (R.I. 2009)). To
prevail on a laches defense, the state must prove by a preponderance of the evidence that (1) the
PCR “applicant unreasonably delayed in seeking relief” and (2) the state was “prejudiced by the
delay.” Id. (quoting Heon v. State, 19 A.3d 1225, 1225 (R.I. 2010) (mem.)).
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It is incumbent upon this Court to review the hearing justice’s laches determination in a
deferential manner. “Whether or not there has been unreasonable delay, and whether the state
has been prejudiced by the delay, are both questions of fact, which require that specific
determination[s] * * * be made in light of the circumstances of the particular case.” Santos, 91
A.3d at 345 (quoting Heon, 19 A.3d at 1225). Consequently,
“[f]or the purposes of appellate review, the application of the defense of laches is generally committed to the discretion of the [hearing] justice. * * * [This Court] will not reverse the [hearing] justice’s decision on what constitutes laches on appeal unless it is clearly wrong.” Id. at 344 (quoting Bergin-Andrews, 984 A.2d at 644).
Our deferential review, however, must not be confused with rubber-stamp approval of a
hearing justice’s treatment of a laches issue. As this Court has explained:
“Judicial discretion is necessarily broad—but it is not absolute. Abuse occurs when a material factor deserving significant weight is ignored, when an improper factor is relied upon, or when all proper and no improper factors are assessed, but the court makes a serious mistake in weighing them.” Hogan v. McAndrew, 131 A.3d 717, 722 (R.I. 2016) (quoting Independent Oil and Chemical Workers of Quincy, Inc. v. Procter & Gamble Manufacturing Co., 864 F.2d 927, 929 (1st Cir. 1988)).
Along similar lines, clear error exists when “the reviewing court[,] on the basis of the entire
evidence[,] is left with the definite and firm conviction that a mistake has been committed.”
Bido, 941 A.2d at 835-36 (quoting Perez, 882 A.2d at 588). This Court can, in appropriate
circumstances, hold that a lower-court justice abused his or her discretion in rejecting a laches
defense. See, e.g., Pukas v. Pukas, 104 R.I. 542, 548, 247 A.2d 427, 430 (1968). In my opinion,
this is such a case. In this case, there has been an egregiously unreasonable delay that has
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resulted in such prejudice to amount to a manifest injustice, all of which is compounded by the
hearing justice’s erroneous findings.
In rejecting the state’s laches defense in this case, the hearing justice focused exclusively
on the unreasonable-delay prong. First, the hearing justice explained that, because Tempest
“lacked the funds with which to retain a postconviction attorney,” Tempest “took it upon himself
to repeatedly write letters to a minister * * * who ran an innocence project * * * whom he had
heard about from fellow inmates.” The hearing justice also emphasized that the state had put
forth no evidence demonstrating that the Office of the Public Defender (Public Defender) would
have been able to take the case, dedicate sufficient resources to developing Tempest’s claims,
and bring the PCR application faster than Tempest’s counsel. The hearing justice characterized
the necessary investigation of Tempest’s case as a “Herculean task,” and he emphasized the
complexity of the case. Additionally, the hearing justice noted the efforts of Evelyn G. Munschy
(Munschy), which involved “hunt[ing] through the case file of [the defense team]” and
“spen[ding] approximately thirty to forty thousand dollars of her own personal money to hire a
private investigator * * * to look into Mr. Tempest’s case.” The hearing justice also chronicled the efforts of Betty Anne Waters to obtain DNA testing on Tempest’s behalf.24 Finally, the
hearing justice noted the substantial attorney hours expended by Tempest’s PCR attorneys.
None of these observations address the issue of whether there was unreasonable delay with
respect to the McMann evidence claim.
Before the hearing justice, the state sought to invoke the doctrine of laches as a complete
bar to all of Tempest’s claims. On appeal, the state has narrowed the focus of its laches
24 Although Tempest asserted PCR claims based on the evidence of DNA testing, the hearing justice rejected those claims because the DNA evidence “[did] not import ‘a reasonable probability of a different result.’” (Quoting Powers v. State, 734 A.2d 508, 514 (R.I. 1999).)
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argument; it now invokes the doctrine only with respect to Tempest’s Brady claim relating to the
McMann evidence. The hearing justice erroneously failed to address whether laches should bar
discrete claims, as he was required to do. Instead, he made sweeping—and, in my view, flatly
incorrect—assessments on such matters as the complexity of the case, Tempest’s statutory right
to counsel, and the institutional capacity and ability of the Public Defender. These
generalizations are simply inapplicable to the Brady claim involving the McMann evidence.
Complexity, for example, clearly does not weigh in Tempest’s favor with respect to this
claim. Whatever may be said for the other PCR claims he asserted, Tempest’s Brady claim
relating to the McMann evidence was anything but complex; it was straightforward. Tempest
knew before trial that Richards would testify that the maroon car that she saw Monteiro with on
the day of the murder was the vehicle that he later purchased from the McManns. Tempest also
testified that, to his knowledge, his brother-in-law did not borrow the McMann car before the
Monteiros purchased it in 1983. Despite actual knowledge and the fact that Tempest and his
attorneys could have asked Monteiro, Corky, John, or Kevin about Richards’ expected
testimony, Tempest did nothing to investigate the claim until 2013. Instead, he sat silent for
many years. At the PCR hearing, Tempest could not even recall whether he told his attorneys
about what he knew about the McMann car or the vehicle—a green Mercury Comet—that he
claimed Monteiro was driving on the day of the murder. This is not reasonable diligence.
Moreover, even though defense counsel was in possession of a letter from John that indicated
that he was not without a car before he sold the maroon car to the Monteiros in 1983—i.e. he
never loaned it to anyone—and, even though that letter was unearthed by a private investigator in
2001, no effort was made to contact Kevin until 2013—twelve years later. During that time
period, three trial witnesses, another potential witness regarding the McMann car, and defense
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counsel all died, and John became unavailable to testify because of disease. The hearing justice
overlooked all of this evidence and failed to consider this lengthy period of delay. In this regard,
the hearing justice ignored material factors deserving significant weight. See Hogan, 131 A.3d
at 722.
The hearing justice’s reliance on Tempest’s lack of resources was erroneous as a matter
of law. In accordance with § 10-9.1-5, an indigent applicant for postconviction relief is entitled
to be represented by the Public Defender, or appointed counsel when there is a conflict, in
connection with a PCR application. Therefore, regardless of Tempest’s financial circumstances,
he was guaranteed the right to counsel. The state does not shoulder a burden to establish that an
applicant is entitled to appointed counsel or that the Public Defender is up to the job. There is
not a scintilla of evidence in this record suggesting that the Public Defender was not capable of
pursuing this claim. The hearing justice improperly faulted the state for “present[ing] no
evidence that the Public Defender’s [o]ffice would have been able to a) take the case; b) dedicate
sufficient resources to developing the present claims; or c) bring the petition faster than Mr.
Tempest’s counsel.” With respect to the McMann evidence claim, the prejudicial delay was not
the time that was spent actually investigating and developing the claim after an investigator
interviewed Kevin in 2013. Instead, the pertinent delay was the inordinate amount of time from
Tempest’s trial in 1992 until 2013—a period of time when virtually nothing was done with
respect to this claim, and during which Tempest knew that Richards’ testimony did not comport
with his understanding of Monteiro’s use of the McMann car and knew the identity of the
potential witnesses—Monteiro, Corky, and Kevin—that could have rebutted that testimony. Did
a member of the defense team approach Kevin or John about this issue before trial? There is no
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way of knowing.25 In those twenty-one years, the McMann evidence, to the extent it existed,
could have been discovered and verified or debunked with reasonable diligence.
In fact, the presence of John’s letter in the defense team’s files suggests that defense
counsel met with at least one member of the McMann family about the McMann car. How else
could that letter have been prepared and delivered? It seems wholly unreasonable to suggest
that, despite knowledge of Richards’ expected testimony about Monteiro’s use of the car,
defense counsel made no inquiry of Monteiro, Tempest, Corky, or the McManns. And, because
there was nothing complex about the McMann evidence or its discovery, there is nothing to
suggest that the Public Defender was not capable of developing the claim. Tempest simply could
have filed a PCR application, obtained appointed counsel, and told counsel of the issue with
respect to Monteiro’s use of the McMann car.
The hearing justice clearly erred in basing his decision that the delay was not
unreasonable on his assessment of the capabilities of the Public Defender. The constraints under
which the members of the Public Defender’s office perform their responsibilities—with stunning
success, I believe—would not have prevented an investigator of that office from speaking with
Kevin, or with John before his illness, about the McMann evidence. Relying on the complexity
of Tempest’s failed DNA claims to justify the delay—twenty-one years from the date of his
conviction and twelve years from the discovery of John’s letter in the defense team’s files—on
the remainder of Tempest’s other claims is reversible error. From this faulty premise and in the
absence of any proof, the hearing justice assumed that the Public Defender was across-the-board
unable to develop Tempest’s claims in an expeditious manner. In doing so, he constructed an
improper factor and then heavily relied on it, to the exclusion of a material factor deserving
25 Although Kevin testified at the PCR hearing that he did not discuss the McMann car with the defense team, defense counsel was unavailable to provide his side of the story.
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significant weight: Tempest’s unexplained failure to develop this claim, in the face of actual
knowledge at the time of trial of Monteiro’s use of the car and the several individuals who could
have contradicted Richards’ testimony that Monteiro borrowed the car from Kevin in 1982, for
twenty-plus years. See Hogan, 131 A.3d at 722.
For these reasons, I am of the opinion that the hearing justice’s assessment of the
unreasonable-delay prong of the laches inquiry was clearly wrong and that he abused his
discretion in concluding that the state failed to shoulder its burden on this prong.
The second prong of the laches inquiry—prejudice to the state—was not addressed by the
hearing justice, save for his fleeting characterization of the state’s effort to carry its burden as
“fall[ing] woefully short” because the state “rest[ed] entirely on its cross-examination of
witnesses and the offer of nine death certificates into evidence” and the penultimate sentence of
his laches analysis: “A thorough rummaging for truth ought not prejudice the [s]tate.” Of course,
it is not the “rummaging for truth” that prejudices the state, but Tempest’s unreasonable delay in
bringing the McMann evidence claim and the death of material witnesses during that period of
delay. The evidence adduced by the state amply carries its burden to show two types of
prejudice: (1) an inability to defend against the claim; and, (2) in the event that the claim
succeeds, the difficulties that would accompany a retrial in the circumstances of this case.
For starters, Tempest’s unreasonable delay in bringing the McMann evidence claim has
prejudiced the state in its ability to defend against the claim itself. This is the essence of laches.
Most glaringly, defense counsel’s death in 2006 has irrevocably foreclosed any inquiry into
whether defense counsel discussed Monteiro’s use of the McMann car on the day of the murder
with Kevin, John, Monteiro, Corky, or his client. How did John’s letter find its way into the
defense team’s files? We know from John’s letter, found in 2001, and the DMV evidence at trial
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that defense counsel knew that Monteiro did not buy the McMann car until 1983, that the car was
a two-door model, and that John would not have been without a car before that sale. We know
that the defense was in possession of Richards’ statement, in which she stated that she saw
Monteiro driving the car several times before he purchased it and that she saw him with it on the
day of the murder. Additionally, defense counsel and co-counsel spoke with Tempest about the
McMann car, and the defense team also spoke with Corky, Monteiro’s wife.
When these established facts—awareness of Richards’ knowledge of Monteiro’s use of
the car, the defense team’s discussions with Tempest and individuals who could have evaluated
the accuracy of Richards’ knowledge, and the trial defense, supported by the DMV evidence,
that Monteiro did not own the car until 1983—are considered together, I am not convinced that
defense counsel overlooked the question of whether Monteiro borrowed the car in 1982. John’s
letter establishes that defense counsel was aware of this issue and broached the subject of the
McMann car with at least one member of the McMann family.
Unfortunately, because defense counsel died while Tempest delayed bringing the claim,
the state was denied an opportunity to pursue this line of inquiry in its effort to defend against the
McMann evidence claim. Moreover, defense counsel’s death did not follow closely on the heels
of Tempest’s trial; instead, fourteen years elapsed between these two events. During that time
frame, Tempest made no effort whatsoever to raise this claim.
In addition, the state’s ability to defend against this claim has been compromised in other
respects. During the long period in which Tempest failed to assert this claim, John developed
Alzheimer’s disease, which rendered him unable to testify and, consequently, be cross-examined,
and Kevin has forgotten precisely when he allegedly went to the police and with whom he spoke.
The prejudice resulting from the inability to cross-examine John to test his assertion that he met
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with police about the McMann car is self-evident. This prejudice is compounded by the
questions surrounding John’s letter, which was found in the defense team’s files in 2001. With
respect to Kevin’s lapses of memory, if only Tempest had asserted his claim in a timely fashion,
perhaps Kevin would have been able to accurately identify the police officers with whom he
allegedly spoke, such that the officers could verify whether the alleged conversation actually
took place. Additionally, if the alleged conversations between the McManns and Remblad and
Remblad’s testimony at the PCR hearing were closer in time, perhaps Remblad’s unequivocal
denial that these conversations occurred would have been given more weight. To the extent that
any of these lines of defense were viable at some earlier time, Tempest’s delay prevented the
state from utilizing them.
Finally, apart from any prejudice in defending against the McMann evidence claim, the
delay in its assertion clearly will prejudice the state upon remand. For example, Richards is now
deceased. On retrial, her former testimony will be admissible. See Rule 804(b)(1) of the Rhode
Island Rules of Evidence. But see Part III, infra. However, Tempest may call Kevin as a witness
to rebut Richards’ testimony that he loaned his car to Monteiro in 1982 generally and on the day
of the murder, in particular. Although this option was available to the defense during Tempest’s
first trial, the balance on this score has shifted decidedly in Tempest’s favor in the intervening
decades. Kevin’s testimony on this point may be unrebutted because of Richards’ death.
Notably, in her November 19, 1991 police statement, Richards explained how Corky tried to
convince her that she had not seen Monteiro driving the McMann car on the day of the murder;
in response, Richards was emphatic about the car that she observed:
“Corky was telling me about how the car I said [Monteiro] had on the day of the murder was not sold to them as of that time. She tried to tell me that the car was his brother[’]s which was the same color but different make. I know the car I saw him in was the one
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that he bought from Lee’s [Pharmacy] and that I had seen him driving around in that car several times at that time and that is why I thought he already owned it.”
If she were still living, Richards would be able to explain to the jury the basis of her knowledge and contradict Kevin’s testimony in this fashion.26
For these reasons, I conclude that the hearing justice’s assessment of the unreasonable
delay prong of the laches inquiry was clearly wrong and that his rejection of the state’s laches
defense—which was based on the failure to consider relevant factors and the improper
consideration of other factors—constituted an abuse of discretion. In my opinion, the state
carried its burden of demonstrating that Tempest unreasonably delayed in asserting his McMann
evidence claim and that it has been prejudiced by that delay. Accordingly, I would hold that this
claim is barred by laches. Notwithstanding this conclusion, however, I am also of the opinion
that the claim fails on its merits.
C. Materiality As previously explained, see Part I.C, supra, evidence is material for Brady purposes if
“there is a reasonable probability that, had the evidence been disclosed to the defense, the result
of the proceeding would have been different.” Nickerson, 94 A.3d at 1125 (quoting Burnham,
58 A.3d at 900). “A ‘reasonable probability’ is a probability sufficient to undermine confidence
in the outcome.” Lerner, 542 A.2d at 1091 (quoting Bagley, 473 U.S. at 682). This Court
reviews the question of whether evidence is material under Brady in a de novo manner.
26 Tempest asserts that a court cannot consider prejudice to the state in retrying a defendant in the laches inquiry. This assertion seems inconsistent with this Court’s case law on laches in this context. See Raso v. Wall, 884 A.2d 391, 396 n.14 (R.I. 2005) (suggesting that “[t]here may well be much merit in” the state’s argument that it was prejudiced for purposes of laches because “[i]t might [have been] virtually impossible at [that] point in time, 20 some years later to try” the defendant).
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DeCiantis, 24 A.3d at 573. In reviewing the materiality question de novo, and even when the
McMann evidence is analyzed cumulatively with the Carrier statements as Wearry, 136 S. Ct. at 1007, requires, I am convinced that the McMann evidence was not material.27
The hearing justice reached the opposite conclusion. In the hearing justice’s opinion,
“the assertion that Mr. Tempest was a passenger in a maroon car on February 19, 1982 was
integral to the [s]tate’s case.” He further reasoned that “[t]he statement by Ms. La[D]ue that she
saw a maroon car upon returning home the afternoon of the murder, and the corresponding
testimony from Ms. Richards that she saw Mr. Tempest standing by a maroon car driven by Mr.
Monteiro that same afternoon, constitute the only piece of evidence linking Mr. Tempest to the
crime scene at the appropriate time.” As was true for the hearing justice’s treatment of the
Carrier statements, this cursory analysis of the materiality of the McMann evidence is flawed.
For starters, the finding that the maroon-car testimony of LaDue and Richards was the
only piece of evidence linking Tempest to the crime scene at the appropriate time is erroneous.
As our late colleague Justice Bourcier, who presided over Tempest’s trial, stated at the hearing
on the motion for a new trial: “[T]here’s no doubt in the [c]ourt’s mind that the connection [of]
27 Tempest claims that, because the state failed to argue to the hearing justice that the McMann evidence was not material, the state’s materiality argument has been waived. I am unpersuaded by this contention. First, materiality of the McMann evidence was treated as little more than an afterthought by Tempest below. The clear thrust of Tempest’s argument below was that the nondisclosure of the McMann evidence was deliberate under the Wyche doctrine; materiality of the evidence was addressed only briefly in one paragraph of Tempest’s proposed findings of fact, which were filed on the same day as the state’s proposed findings. Thus, it is hardly surprising that the state similarly focused on the Wyche doctrine for this evidence. Moreover, materiality is an essential element of a Brady claim, see Strickler v. Greene, 527 U.S. 263, 281-82 (1999), and this Court reviews the materiality determination de novo, see DeCiantis v. State, 24 A.3d 557, 573 (R.I. 2011). This Court is therefore obligated to consider whether this essential element is met. Finally, Tempest himself raised the issue of materiality of the McMann evidence, and the hearing justice considered that issue, as he was required to do in order to find a Brady violation. See Strickler, 527 U.S. at 281-82. Accordingly, the purposes of this Court’s raise-or-waive rule are simply not implicated here. See State v. Isom, 135 A.3d 1210, 1218 n.10 (R.I. 2016).
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the [d]efendant to the crime was all furnished by his own words.” (Emphases added.) In my
opinion, the trial justice hit the nail on the head.
As mentioned above, see Part I.C, supra, the materiality of undisclosed evidence must be
assessed in light of all of the evidence adduced at trial. See DeCiantis, 24 A.3d at 573; see also
Paladin, 748 F.3d at 444. And, as this Court has recognized:
“A confession is like no other evidence. Indeed, the defendant’s own confession is probably the most probative and damaging evidence that can be admitted against him * * *. * * * Certainly, confessions have profound impact on the jury * * *.” State v. Oliveira, 961 A.2d 299, 313 (R.I. 2008) (quoting State v. Bettencourt, 763 A.2d 636, 639 (R.I. 2000)). In this case, three28 separate witnesses—who had little, if any, connection with one another29—testified that Tempest confessed to the murder in their presence. Rivard testified that
Tempest told her: “Do you remember the girl that was killed in the basement in Woonsocket?
* * * I killed her * * * [b]ut I’ll get away with it[.] I’m a Tempest[.] I’ll slide.” Neither the
Carrier statements nor the McMann evidence would have had any effect on Rivard’s testimony.
Additionally, Guarino testified that, when he and Tempest went to a bar in Providence, he
asked Tempest whether he committed the murder. Guarino further testified that Tempest:
28 I focus only on Vaz, Guarino, and Rivard because, in my opinion, Carrier’s credibility was eviscerated by defense counsel’s vigorous cross-examination. See Part I, infra. When assessing materiality under Brady, undisclosed evidence must be viewed cumulatively and not in isolation. See Wearry, 136 S. Ct. at 1007; Kyles v. Whitley, 514 U.S. 419, 436, 441 (1995). Therefore, favorably to Tempest, I completely disregard Carrier’s trial testimony in assessing the materiality of the McMann evidence on the assumption that the undisclosed Carrier statements would have caused the jury to completely reject her testimony: a circumstance I am convinced transpired even without the Carrier statements. 29 Rivard did not know Vaz or Guarino. Vaz and Gaurino knew each other through Tempest, although it is clear from the record that the two had met each other on only a handful of occasions.
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“told me he went into the basement of the house where the Picard girl lived and he said that he had--his right hand was moving up and down when he was talking to me and he told me that he hit one of them over the head and another woman came down [into the basement] and he had to beat her up, too.”
Guarino also told the jury about the confession that occurred in his and Carrier’s apartment at
448 Winter Street a few weeks later. The McMann evidence would have in no way undermined
Guarino’s testimony. His testimony would have been similarly unaffected by the Carrier
statements. Although, like Carrier, Guarino was a little unclear on the precise date that Tempest
confessed to him, first at a Providence bar and again at his 448 Winter Street apartment, there
was no other inconsistency between Guarino’s police statement and his trial testimony, and no
aspect of the Carrier statements contradicted Guarino’s trial testimony. This is hardly surprising,
since Guarino and Carrier had long since separated before speaking with police.
Additionally, Tempest made numerous incriminating statements to Vaz. Two days after
the murder, Vaz saw Tempest jogging in Woonsocket. Vaz pulled his vehicle over to the side of
the road, and Tempest approached Vaz. Tempest asked, “Danny [Shaw] told you everything
[about it]?” Vaz responded in the affirmative, and Tempest told Vaz that he was in serious
trouble and that “‘[t]hey’ll get me for this one’[;] * * * ‘[m]y father won’t get me out of this
one.’” Vaz testified that, on another occasion, Tempest admitted that he and Laferte got into an
argument in the basement of 409 Providence Street on the day of the murder. Tempest told him
that the argument escalated when Laferte hit Tempest. On yet another occasion, Tempest
showed Vaz pictures of the severely beaten bodies of Picard and Laferte and boastfully stated:
“‘They said I did a bad job’[;] * * * ‘I don't think I did a bad job, do you?’”
Vaz’s testimony would not have been impacted by the Carrier statements. Similarly, the
McMann evidence would not have affected Vaz’s testimony. To be sure, with respect to one of
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the several independent occasions when Tempest discussed the events surrounding the murder
with Vaz, Vaz testified that Tempest explained how he left the murder scene with Monteiro and
Shaw in “Monteiro’s car.” However, Vaz did not testify that Monteiro’s car was maroon or otherwise indicate that it was the McMann car.30 Additionally, unlike Richards, who saw the
car, Vaz did not claim that Tempest told him that Monteiro had borrowed the car from Kevin but
instead that Tempest referred to the car simply as “Monteiro’s car.” The jury was also made
aware that Monteiro did not have registered ownership of the McMann car or any other vehicle
on the day of the murder. In any event, Vaz testified about several other instances in which
Tempest made inculpatory statements about this horrific crime, and none of these statements
involved Monteiro’s car.
Finally, the evidence in this case placed Tempest at 409 Providence Street earlier on the
afternoon of the murder. Carol Rivet, Laferte’s sister, testified that she was present at 409
Providence Street when Tempest and Allard arrived to pick out a puppy and when they left
shortly thereafter. Therefore, the state put forth overwhelming evidence—even when the
maroon-car testimony of Richards and LaDue is completely disregarded—connecting Tempest to
this homicide.
Additionally, there was a plethora of evidence—both from the confession witnesses and
from others—that established Tempest’s guilty conscience. Vaz, for example, testified that
Tempest told him that he was in “some serious trouble.” He also recounted an instance when
Tempest told Vaz of his fear that Monteiro was “the weak link in [the] case” and that Monteiro
would say something about the murder to the wrong person. Vaz further testified that, on yet
30 In our opinion affirming Tempest’s conviction, this Court stated that “Vaz testified that [Tempest] stated that he had left the crime scene with Shaw and Monteiro in Monteiro’s big maroon car.” Tempest, 651 A.2d at 1205. However, a careful reading of Vaz’s trial testimony reveals that he nowhere refers to Monteiro’s car as “big” or “maroon.”
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another occasion, Tempest told him of the fear he experienced when Laferte, who by then had
been released from the hospital, arrived at his house. Tempest told Vaz that “he literally shit in
his pants” when, in response to a knock on his door, he opened the door and saw Laferte standing
there. Tempest also told Vaz “that he thought that the cops were right behind her and that she was going to point the finger to him and say, ‘You did this to me.’”31 Tempest described that
event as “the scariest thing that had ever happened to him.” Similarly, Guarino testified that,
when Tempest discussed the murder at 448 Winter Street a few weeks after confessing to
Guarino at a bar in Providence, he appeared “very, very nervous.” He told Guarino that the
police were watching his house.
Along similar lines, evidence was admitted that there was a cover-up afoot and,
importantly, that Tempest was aware of it. Vaz testified that Tempest gave him the following
account of the cover-up. On the day of the murder, Tempest attempted to call his father. When
this attempt was unsuccessful, Tempest then called his brother Gordon. Gordon was able to
reach their father, along with then-Captain (later Chief) Francis J. Lynch (Lynch) of the
Woonsocket Police Department, at the Gridiron Club. Tempest called Gordon again, and
Gordon related that their father and Lynch were en route to the crime scene. When they got to
409 Providence Street, Tempest’s father parked across the street, and Lynch went into the
building and ordered everyone out so that Gordon could wipe the pipe clean. When Gordon was
unable to locate the pipe, he told his father, who, in turn, called Tempest for information about
where the pipe could be found. After the information was related to Gordon, he went back into
the basement, located the pipe, wiped it clean, and changed its location. When police were later
unable to find the murder weapon, Gordon and other officers returned to the crime scene to
31 As it turns out, Laferte, who had no memory of the attack, simply intended to visit Tempest’s wife.
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locate the pipe. According to Vaz, when relating this detail, Tempest laughed at the
incompetence of the police. On another occasion, Tempest told Vaz that his father had
instructed him to get some “strong” alibis. Significantly, many of the details that Tempest
disclosed in his confessions to others were corroborated at trial.
Although Lynch, Gordon, and Tempest’s father all denied that they participated in any cover-up,32 testimony from other witnesses supported what Tempest told Vaz. For example,
Terrence Gelinas (Gelinas), who, at the time of the murder, lived on Providence Street not far
from the crime scene, testified that he ran to 409 Providence Street when he heard rescue
personnel respond to the scene. Gelinas saw Tempest’s father parked in his car across the street
from the crime scene. Additionally, the testimony of the two locksmiths who installed deadbolt
locks at 409 Providence Street on the morning after the murder further supports Vaz’s testimony
about Gordon’s involvement in the cover-up and concealment of the murder weapon. One of the
locksmiths, Asselin, testified that two police officers were present during their work and that
Gordon was one of these officers. The second locksmith, Boisclair, testified that he saw the
officers holding a pipe wrapped in a piece of cloth. According to Sgt. Richard Flood (Flood) of
the Woonsocket Police Department, he and Gordon returned to the crime scene days later, and it
was Gordon who found the concealed pipe and showed it to Flood.
Tempest’s knowledge of the cover-up effort was similarly established by the testimony of
several witnesses and, in many cases, by his own words. For example, Rivard—a virtual
stranger Tempest met in a bar one evening—testified that Tempest not only confessed to her, but
also boastfully stated: “I’ll get away with it[.] I’m a Tempest[.] I’ll slide.” Similarly, Tempest
32 Gordon was convicted of seven counts of perjury based on the testimony he gave before the grand jury and at Tempest’s trial. See State v. Tempest, 660 A.2d 278, 279 (R.I. 1995) (affirming this conviction).
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related to Vaz the information concerning the cover-up efforts of his father and brother, Lynch,
and Maurice Jallette (Jallette) of the Woonsocket Police Department.
Moreover, Tempest’s threats to multiple witnesses revealed his knowledge of a cover-up
and his guilty conscience. Tempest warned Guarino that he “better keep [his] mouth shut.”
Likewise, when, many years later, the investigation focused in on Tempest as the prime suspect,
he threatened Gelinas in no uncertain terms. Tempest told Gelinas that “[y]ou are going to wish
you never got involved in this.” He further informed Gelinas that he was going to kill
Pennington and that his father was going to “take care of other people,” including the former
prosecutor. Tempest continued: “I wouldn’t want to be you. * * * I wouldn’t want anybody to
talk. [Jallette] and [Gordon] are just waiting. * * * If I get convicted, my father is taking care of
you.”
For these reasons, my de novo review of the entire record convinces me that the state
presented overwhelming trial evidence against Tempest. Viewing the Carrier statements and the
McMann evidence against this backdrop, I am satisfied that this evidence does not undermine
confidence in the jury verdict. There is no reasonable probability that the result of the
proceeding would have been different had this evidence been disclosed to the defense.
Therefore, I would vacate the hearing justice’s grant of postconviction relief with respect to
Tempest’s two Brady claims.
III
Witness Coaching
Although the majority correctly concludes that its decision affirming the hearing justice’s
grant of postconviction relief based on the nondisclosure of the Carrier statements renders a
consideration of Tempest’s other Brady claim unnecessary, this reasoning does not extend to the
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ruling on Tempest’s witness-coaching claim because, if this aspect of the decision is not vacated,
it may lead to confusion and unnecessary further litigation. In refusing to address this claim, the
majority leaves a gaping hole rather than a clear mandate on remand. I believe that it is
incumbent upon the majority to consider this issue because it is not clear what remedy, if any,
lies in the face of this ill-conceived due process violation.
The hearing justice employed the eyewitness-identification standard of Manson v.
Brathwaite, 432 U.S. 98 (1977), and its progeny to Tempest’s witness-coaching claim. As I
explain below, the hearing justice erred in doing so. Separate and apart from this erroneous
aspect of the hearing justice’s analysis of the witness-coaching claim, however, another
problematic piece of the decision needs to be addressed by members of this Court. As it stands
now, the majority has affirmed the vacatur of Tempest’s conviction, and he faces a new trial.
What is the remedy, if any, upon remand for the witness-coaching due process violation found
by the hearing justice?
The hearing justice does not say in his decision, nor could he have fashioned a remedy;
that is not within the parameters of an application for postconviction relief. In the course of
finding a due process violation, the hearing justice determined that the testimony of LaDue and
Richards relating to the maroon car was “faulty” because it was fostered in an unnecessarily suggestive “environment.”33 He also determined that this testimony “evince[s] an inherent
unreliability that undercuts any confidence in such testimony and the resultant verdict.” He then
33 As far as I can tell, the hearing justice concluded that the admission of only those portions of LaDue’s and Richards’ testimony that dealt with the maroon car violated due process. I do not read his decision as declaring that the totality of these witnesses’ testimony is unconstitutionally unreliable.
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suggested that this evidence was “constitutionally inadmissible as a matter of law.” (Quoting
State v. Porraro, 121 R.I. 882, 887, 404 A.2d 465, 469 (1979).)
These rather extraordinary findings—which have no jurisprudential support in this state
(or anywhere else, for that matter)—must be understood as limited to the context in which they
were made. In the PCR context, the hearing justice’s task was limited to determining whether
Tempest’s “conviction or the sentence was in violation of the constitution of the United States or
the constitution or laws of this state.” Section 10-9.1-1(a)(1). A PCR hearing justice has no
authority to address the admissibility of evidence in a retrial, and nothing the hearing justice
stated in his decision should be interpreted as deciding that question.
In fairness to the next Superior Court justice who may be confronted with this issue at the
new trial, the majority should have decided this question in order to provide guidance to the
parties and the trial justice or to declare it erroneous as a matter of law. The majority’s refusal to
address this issue will create more litigation in the Superior Court and, quite possibly, again
before this Court. However, notwithstanding the majority’s unfortunate failure to address this
issue, it is clear to me that the trial justice on remand is not bound by law-of-the-case principles
or any other doctrine to exclude the testimony of trial witnesses or the use of former testimony of those witnesses who are no longer with us.34 Furthermore, should this testimony be excluded
34 The majority claims that it “would be fruitless” to address the witness-coaching claim because a conclusion that the claim is barred under principles of res judicata “would have no effect on retrial.” In my opinion, this reasoning is flawed. As it stands today, the hearing justice’s decision on the witness-coaching claim remains undisturbed. On remand, Tempest may argue, and a Superior Court justice might agree, that the hearing justice’s determination that the evidence is “constitutionally inadmissible as a matter of law” applies to Tempest’s retrial. (Quoting State v. Porraro, 121 R.I. 882, 887, 404 A.2d 465, 469 (1979).) Vacating the hearing justice’s decision on res judicata grounds would eliminate any such danger. Moreover, if the majority simply recognized that the witness-coaching claim fails on its merits, the issue would not even come up at the retrial. Cf. Harvard Pilgrim Health Care of New England, Inc. v. Gelati,
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after a pretrial hearing in Superior Court, the state has a statutory right of review of that decision
in this Court prior to the commencement of Tempest’s retrial. See G.L. 1956 § 9-24-32 (“In any
criminal proceeding, the attorney general shall have the right to object to any finding, ruling,
decision, order, or judgment of the [S]uperior [C]ourt or [F]amily [C]ourt, and the attorney
general may appeal the findings, rulings, decisions, orders, or judgments to the [S]upreme
[C]ourt at any time before the defendant has been placed in jeopardy * * *.”); see, e.g.. State v.
Morris, 92 A.3d 920, 923-24 (R.I. 2014) (appeal by state under § 9-24-32 from trial justice’s
grant of the defendant’s pretrial motion to suppress). Should such an appeal come before us, the
Superior Court proceedings will be stayed and the Court will confront the issue that it avoids
today.
However, there is no basis to employ the reasoning utilized by the hearing justice in this
case because, as I explain herein, it is simply wrong. Moreover, it is my opinion that the hearing
justice should not have even considered the witness-coaching claim in the first place because that
claim was raised and waived at trial, and defense counsel repeatedly emphasized to the jury and
865 A.2d 1028, 1039 (R.I. 2004) (“[W]e address several of the city’s arguments that are likely to arise in conjunction with our remand of the 1999 assessments.” (emphasis added)). Finally, the majority cannot justify its failure to address this issue by invoking then-Judge (now Chief Justice) Roberts’ pithy phrase that “if it is not necessary to decide more, it is necessary not to decide more.” (Quoting PDK Laboratories, Inc. v. United States Drug Enforcement Administration, 362 F.3d 786, 799 (D.C. Cir. 2004) (Roberts, J., concurring in part and concurring in the judgment)). As the Chief Justice has since explained:
“It should go without saying * * * that we cannot embrace a narrow ground of decision simply because it is narrow; it must also be right. Thus while it is true that ‘[i]f it is not necessary to decide more, it is necessary not to decide more,’ * * *, sometimes it is necessary to decide more. There is a difference between judicial restraint and judicial abdication. When constitutional questions are ‘indispensably necessary’ to resolving the case at hand, ‘the court must meet and decide them.’” Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission, 558 U.S. 310, 375 (2010) (Roberts, C.J., concurring) (quoting Ex parte Randolph, 20 F. Cas. 242, 254 (C.C. Va. 1833) (No. 11,558) (Marshall, C.J.)).
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the trial justice that the state’s witnesses were unworthy of belief because their testimony had
been influenced by Sgt. Ronald Pennington (Pennington) and other officers. Thus, that claim is
now barred by principles of res judicata. For either or both of these reasons, Tempest was not
entitled to postconviction relief on this claim.
A. Background A brief background of the relevant portions of the record is necessary to put this issue in
proper context. Before trial, defense counsel took the position that, due to the manner in which
the police interviewed witnesses in this case, much of the testimony offered against Tempest was
suspect. Defense counsel filed a pretrial motion to dismiss the indictment on due process
grounds, alleging that the police had suborned witness perjury and “intimidated witnesses to give
false statements and testimony.” Before the jury was empaneled, the motion was, at defense
counsel’s request, held, and there is no indication that defense counsel pressed this motion any
further. This amounts to waiver.
Defense counsel did, however, raise the same issue to the jury throughout trial. A review
of his cross-examinations of Richards and LaDue—the two witnesses of concern to the hearing
justice—as well as Pennington demonstrates that defense counsel consistently sounded this
theme. Indeed, Richards admitted on cross-examination that she had been questioned by
police—and by Pennington in particular—on several occasions. Richards testified that
Pennington “kept asking me the same questions over and over and over and over going again
hour after hour until I could give him an answer.” She also stated that Pennington “kept * * *
getting upset with me when I told him I couldn’t remember because at the time I could not
remember. He told me that is no answer, that I could not give that answer that I can’t
remember.” Critically, Richards even acknowledged that Pennington “[s]ometimes” “put words
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in [her] mouth,” and she further testified that “[h]e started the statements and I would finish
them.”
LaDue similarly was subjected to vigorous cross-examination at the hands of defense
counsel. In particular, defense counsel focused on her sudden recollection of seeing the maroon
car in the driveway of 409 Providence Street ten years earlier. Although LaDue claimed that she
simply did not disclose this recollection because her interviewers did not ask whether she saw
this vehicle, cross-examination suggested that she had been encouraged by Pennington to give
testimony about a maroon car. When asked whether Pennington “remind[ed] [her] that [she] saw
a maroon car,” LaDue answered: “Yes. He asked me if I seen [sic] any cars.”
Defense counsel also subjected Pennington to a lengthy and forceful cross-examination.
Defense counsel elicited testimony from Pennington that he interviewed all of the key state’s
witnesses and that he spoke with many of them shortly before trial. During questioning, defense
counsel referred to Pennington as “the common denominator” with respect to the statements of
the various witnesses.
During closing argument, defense counsel once again stressed his theme that the
testimony of the state’s witnesses was unworthy of belief because of the suggestive manner of
the police’s investigation. He described for the jury “a consistent pattern in this case where
everybody is struck by lightning in 1991 and 1992 and remember[s] things that they never told
the police before.” Defense counsel argued that Pennington persuaded “people to lie in 1991 and
1992” and “fabricate[d] and manufacture[d] a case against [Tempest].” Pennington, defense
counsel told them, simply “[made] the pieces fit into the puzzle.” He suggested that LaDue had
fabricated her recollection of the maroon car after Pennington had suggested that she do so.
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Similarly, he argued that Richards’ testimony was the product of Pennington’s repeated
questioning of Richards until she gave him the answer that he wanted to hear. The jury rejected
this defense.
At the motion for a new trial, defense counsel reiterated these arguments to the trial
justice. With respect to Richards, defense counsel argued:
“[Richards] testified that words were put into her mouth. She testified, your Honor, that * * * Pennington would start a sentence of her statement and she would have to complete it. Again, the implication, your Honor, [is] that the testimony was coerced and the testimony is untrue, and I ask the [c]ourt to consider that, considering the course and nature of the methods of interrogation of Miss Richards, and I respectfully submit to the [c]ourt, your Honor, that that testimony should be discounted.”
Defense counsel also emphasized that Vaz suspiciously claimed to have additional detailed
recollections shortly before trial. Additionally, defense counsel unsuccessfully pressed similar
arguments regarding the credibility of the witnesses in his brief before this Court on the direct
appeal from Tempest’s conviction. In particular, he argued that:
“It was * * * painfully obvious that the Woonsocket Police Department, particularly * * * Pennington, influenced [Richards’] testimony. The heavy[-]handed and coercive nature inherent in the handling of this witness should have disparaged her testimony on many levels.” At the PCR hearing, Pennington testified that, at times during the Picard investigation, he
would “suggest[] facts the witness had not raised to prod [the witness’s] memory.” He also
testified that he interviewed Richards more than ten times.
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Edward F. Davis (Davis), the former police commissioner of the City of Boston, also
testified at the PCR hearing as an expert witness on proper police practices and procedures
during the period from 1982 to 1992. Davis testified that Pennington’s technique of suggesting
facts when interviewing witnesses was not a proper police practice and is “extremely
problematic in any investigation” because it can lead “a witness [to] craft a statement that is not
true [but, at the same time, is] very believable.” Davis explained that this practice creates “a
danger of planting information in [the witness’s] mind that will eventually be regurgitated * * *
as if the witness knows it.” Davis also testified that the preferable police practice when
interviewing a witness is to conduct “one long interview that is very thorough” as opposed to
several interviews.
After hearing this testimony—which, in my opinion, closely resembled inadmissible
expert testimony on witness credibility—the hearing justice considered Tempest’s witness
coaching claim, but he declined to “discuss each piece of allegedly tainted evidence.” Instead,
the hearing justice elected to examine “the more propitious of Mr. Tempest’s claims.” The
hearing justice thus limited his analysis of Tempest’s witness-coaching claim to two witnesses
who testified at trial—Richards and LaDue—and a third individual—Shaw—who did not testify
at trial (and is, therefore, wholly irrelevant to this claim).
The hearing justice, noting that Pennington interviewed Richards more than ten times,
found that “her story shifted in lockstep with the [s]tate’s theory of the case.” He explained that:
first, Richards claimed to have not seen Tempest arrive at her house after the murder; then she
“suddenly remember[ed] Mr. Tempest’s return and vividly recall[ed] the sight of him standing
by Mr. Monteiro’s car on the day of the murder”; and, finally, “[w]hen the police discovered Mr.
Monteiro did not own the car at this time, her narrative changed once again—the maroon car
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transmogrified into one that Mr. Monteiro ‘used to borrow[.]’” Relying on Davis’s opinion
testimony, the hearing justice concluded:
“With regard to the evolving statements by Ms. Richards, * * * Davis opined that she was ‘attempting to correct the record’ in matching her account to police theorizing—‘an indication of coaching by the detectives.’ * * * As such, it is clear that Ms. Richards, after being subjected to a barrage of recurrent suggestive questioning, was led to conform her statements to the prosecution’s case theory.”
The hearing justice also offered the following assessment of LaDue’s testimony:
“In three interviews following the murder, she never mentions seeing an unfamiliar car in the driveway at the house. * * * Then, ten years later, Ms. La[D]ue has a revelation. Following a phone conversation with * * * Pennington, her memory is conveniently jogged. Just in time for trial, she miraculously recalls seeing a strange car parked outside 409 Providence Street on that fated day ten years prior. The color of this car? Maroon. After a decadelong amnesia, Ms. La[D]ue is now able to provide police with exactly what they want—eyewitness testimony linking Mr. Tempest to the scene.” The hearing justice concluded his discussion of these witnesses by stating that “the dramatic shift
in the statements of Ms. Richards and Ms. La[D]ue self-evidently would not have occurred
without police prompting.”
Finally, the hearing justice deemed a recording of a conversation between Remblad and
Shaw to be “the most telling example of police coaching.” Because Shaw was not called as a
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witness at Tempest’s trial,35 the hearing justice conceded that “[Shaw’s] improper questioning
[by police] cannot serve as a basis for a due process violation.” Nonetheless, he proceeded to
consider this evidence from an institutional standpoint and reasoned that the recording of the
Shaw conversation “provide[d] invaluable insight into the interrogation techniques of the
Woonsocket Police Department at the time and how [Shaw’s] statements were shaped prior to
his testimony before the [g]rand [j]ury that would indict Mr. Tempest.” The hearing justice
noted that, during this conversation (which occurred outside a Woonsocket bar), Shaw, who may
have been an eyewitness to this murder, was “very intoxicated”—so much so that he “struggled
to string together a coherent sentence.” He further explained that, in what he characterized as
“apparent” “manipulation of Mr. Shaw by police,” Remblad “pushed Mr. Shaw to implicate Mr.
Tempest,” “fed a motive to Mr. Shaw,” and “coached Shaw on how the murder took place.” The
hearing justice then relied on Davis’s opinion about the conversation to conclude that it was
improper:
“As * * * Davis testified, ‘a commander of the Police Department who is four ranks above a detective * * * just bump[ing] into * * * somebody at 11:00 at night outside of a barroom’ is ‘really problematic.’ * * * He noted that * * * Remblad ‘crossed the line into coaching’ in ‘offering a smorgasbord of facts that the witness c[ould] pick from[.]’ * * * Additionally, he found that ‘planting reasons for motive in the case to the witness’ that the witness can then adopt within his or her own narrative, as * * * Remblad did with Mr. Shaw, ‘is a huge problem.’ * * * The same holds true for * * * Remblad’s provision of facts relative to the manner of 35 The former prosecutor testified at the PCR hearing that Shaw was “a witness from hell.” He explained that Shaw “came with a lot of baggage” and “was really mentally unstable.” He also testified that Shaw lied to him. The final straw was when, in January 1992, Shaw recanted his statements inculpating Tempest and claimed that Remblad had forced him to say he was present for the murder; then, “immediately” thereafter, Shaw “reversed completely 180 degrees and said he was kidding” about his recantation. The former prosecutor explained that “that [was] about the time that we decided we had about enough of [Shaw],” and he was not called as a witness.
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attack—‘The role is to find out what that * * * witness knows, not to tell them what happened at the crime scene.’” In finding a due process violation in the actions of the police, the hearing justice
concluded: “[C]onfidence in the verdict rested on a faulty record; due process strictures
necessitate vacation of Mr. Tempest’s conviction.”
B. Res Judicata The doctrine of res judicata is codified in § 10-9.1-8, see Campbell, 56 A.3d at 457,
which provides that:
“All grounds for relief available to an applicant at the time he or she commences a proceeding under this chapter must be raised in his or her original, or a supplemental or amended, application. Any ground finally adjudicated or not so raised, or knowingly, voluntarily and intelligently waived in the proceeding that resulted in the conviction or sentence or in any other proceeding the applicant has taken to secure relief, may not be the basis for a subsequent application, unless the court finds that in the interest of justice the applicant should be permitted to assert such a ground for relief.” Section 10-9.1-8 (emphases added).
In this case, defense counsel raised this due process witness-coaching ground in a pretrial
motion and consistently emphasized—to the jury, the trial justice, and this Court—the effects of
the investigation on the credibility of the state’s witnesses. The question presented is whether,
“in the interest of justice[, Tempest] should be permitted to assert,” § 10-9.1-8, this argument—
which otherwise would unquestionably be barred by res judicata—in this PCR action. This
Court has explained that, although the applicability of the interest-of-justice exception is case
specific, “there nevertheless must be some sufficient finding, articulation, or explanation by the
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motion justice that an issue barred by the doctrine of res judicata merits consideration in the
interest of justice.” Ferrell v. Wall, 971 A.2d 615, 621 (R.I. 2009).
The hearing justice erroneously determined that the res judicata principles enshrined in
§ 10-9.1-8 did not bar Tempest’s witness-coaching claim because of the interest-of-justice
exception. This conclusion was premised on the hearing justice’s determination that
Pennington’s testimony at the PCR hearing that he would “suggest[] facts the witness had not
raised to prod [the witness’s] memory” constituted newly discovered evidence that “confirmed”
“Tempest’s past conjecture regarding the possibility of such witness coaching.” It was the
hearing justice’s opinion that this testimony established “that the police fed witnesses
information in an effort to move the case against Mr. Tempest forward.” The hearing justice
thus concluded that, “[i]n light of this new evidence, the [c]ourt finds that justice requires a
second look at Mr. Tempest’s claims of police-tainted witness testimony.” (Emphasis added.)
In my view, the hearing justice erred in invoking the interest-of-justice exception to the
§ 10-9.1-8 res judicata bar because Pennington’s testimony at the PCR hearing did not amount to
new evidence. Contrary to the hearing justice’s conclusion, defense counsel already knew that
the police conducted numerous witness interviews and suggested facts “in an effort to move the
case against Mr. Tempest forward” because Richards had admitted as much at trial. According
to Richards, Pennington told her that “I don’t remember” was not an acceptable answer and
continually pressed her for an answer when she stated that she could not recall. Additionally,
Richards testified that Pennington “[s]ometimes” “put words in [her] mouth” and “started the
statements and I would finish them.”
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This testimony clearly conveys the same message as that related by Pennington at the
PCR hearing: In an effort to prod a witness’s memory, he suggested facts known to the police at
the time. The hearing justice overlooked Richards’ trial testimony in his haste to avoid the res
judicata bar of § 10-9.1-8. Had he not done so, he would have concluded that Pennington’s
testimony cannot be considered “new” evidence that warrants invocation of the interest-of
justice exception. Because this decision does not set forth a “sufficient finding, articulation, or
explanation by the [hearing] justice that an issue barred by the doctrine of res judicata merits
consideration in the interest of justice,” Ferrell, 971 A.2d at 621 (emphasis added), the exception
does not apply. That alone is reason to vacate the hearing justice’s decision on this point. But
there is an additional reason to do so: The decision is wrong as a matter of law.
C. Merits In selecting the legal standard to apply to Tempest’s witness-coaching claim, the hearing
justice noted that Tempest’s claim was “analogous to the due process concerns surrounding
impermissibly suggestive eyewitness identifications.” For this reason, the hearing justice
adopted the two-part inquiry employed in analyzing unduly suggestive eyewitness
identifications:
“Under this doctrine, a trial justice ‘must consider whether the procedure used * * * was unnecessarily suggestive.’ State v. Brown, 42 A.3d 1239, 1242 (R.I. 2012). If this consideration is answered affirmatively, a second inquiry is engaged, examining whether the ‘totality of the circumstances’ indicate that—despite police misconduct—the elicited statement is ‘nonetheless reliable.’ State v. Gallop, 89 A.3d 795, 801 (R.I. 2014) * * *.”
Applying this standard to witness interviews, the hearing justice declared: “When interviews rise
to the level of being impermissibly suggestive, information derived therefrom becomes ‘so
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defective as to make the [evidence] constitutionally inadmissible as a matter of law.’” (Quoting
Porraro, 121 R.I. at 887, 404 A.2d at 469.)
None of the cases cited by the hearing justice fit the square peg that is a witness-coaching
claim into the round hole of the eyewitness-identification standard. When asked at oral
argument before this Court, Tempest conceded that he was unaware of a single case in which this
mishmash was attempted. As far as I can tell, this is the first time a judge in this country has
sought to engraft the eyewitness-identification due process rubric to claims that the police
improperly coached witnesses. This dearth of authority is understandable, because to do so
would turn a criminal trial into an endless pretrial hearing about the manner in which the police
investigated the offense and whether the officers’ conduct crossed an amorphous divide drawn
by the hearing justice. In braving this new terrain, the hearing justice strayed far afield.
As an initial (and, in my view, dispositive) matter, the hearing justice’s inventive
approach ignores principles of stare decisis. The hearing justice was not writing on a clean slate.
In State v. Garcia, 743 A.2d 1038 (R.I. 2000), the defendant claimed that, because “the police
statements and trial testimony given by two of the witnesses against him were coerced” (not
merely coached), “his federal constitutional right to due process of law was violated” by the
admission of the witnesses’ testimony. Id. at 1043 (emphasis added). This Court explained:
“[E]ven when a witness has been coerced into providing the police with a pretrial statement that implicates the accused, the mere fact that a witness has given the police such a statement during the investigation of a crime does not necessarily prevent the witness from testifying voluntarily at trial in a manner consistent with the pretrial statement. As we said in State v. Damiano, 587 A.2d 396, 399 (R.I. 1991): ‘We know of no precedent from the Supreme Court of the United States that would require a jury to ignore the testimony of a live witness on the basis of having a reasonable
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doubt concerning whether a prior statement containing the substance of such testimony had been produced by coercion.’” Garcia, 743 A.2d at 1043-44. The hearing justice was bound (as am I) to follow this Court’s decision in Garcia. Had he
done so, he would have been obliged to reject Tempest’s witness-coaching claim. If the Due
Process Clause is not offended when police coerce a statement from a witness, I cannot fathom
how it would be offended when police coach, but do not go so far as to coerce, a witness.
Under Garcia, a criminal defendant is not powerless to combat the effects of the manner
in which police interview witnesses. Instead, “[c]ross-examination and [closing] argument are
the primary tools for addressing improper witness coaching.” United States v. Sayakhom, 186
F.3d 928, 945 (9th Cir. 1999); cf. Perry v. New Hampshire, 132 S. Ct. 716, 723 (2012) (“The
Constitution * * * protects a defendant against a conviction based on evidence of questionable
reliability, not by prohibiting introduction of the evidence, but by affording the defendant means
to persuade the jury that the evidence should be discounted as unworthy of credit.”). Defense
counsel wielded those tools with precision in this case, subjecting witnesses to devastating cross
examination on whether their testimony was simply the product of Pennington’s suggestion and
asserting in closing argument that Pennington shaped witness testimony to make the puzzle
pieces fit. This is the nature of our adversary system of justice.
Additionally, an effort to combat witness coaching need not end when a guilty verdict is
returned. As occurred in this case, a defendant can file a motion for a new trial, asking the trial
justice to “sit[] as the legendary thirteenth juror” and independently weigh the evidence and
assess witness credibility. State v. Covington, 69 A.3d 855, 862 (R.I. 2013) (quoting State v.
Smith, 39 A.3d 669, 673 (R.I. 2012)). In the event that a trial justice agrees that improper police
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conduct sufficiently mars the credibility of an important witness or several witnesses, he or she is
empowered to grant the motion. The trial justice’s grant or denial of such a motion is reviewable
by this Court, thereby providing yet another opportunity to subject alleged police misconduct to
judicial scrutiny. This is the heart of our system’s check on witness credibility and where the
question of witness coaching rests. Credibility decisions should not be susceptible to a “second
look” by a different justice.
To the extent that a standard has emerged elsewhere for evaluating due process claims of
witness coaching by police, it bears no resemblance to the hearing justice’s decision. For
example, in Wilcox v. Ford, 813 F.2d 1140, 1147-48 (11th Cir. 1987), the Eleventh Circuit held
that, to the extent that a due process claim that the police engaged in improper conduct in order
to secure incriminating statements from witnesses is even cognizable, it must meet the test of
United States v. Russell, 411 U.S. 423, 431-32 (1973), which requires a showing that the conduct
“is so outrageous that it violates ‘fundamental fairness, shocking to the universal sense of
justice.’” Wilcox, 813 F.2d at 1147 (quoting Russell, 411 U.S. at 432). This is a substantive due
process violation. The court explained that the standard is met only “in the ‘rarest and most
outrageous circumstances.’” Id. (quoting United States v. Tobias, 662 F.2d 381, 387 (5th Cir.
1981)). This case does not come close to meeting this standard.
Finally, at the risk of gilding the lily, I remain troubled by the manner in which the
hearing justice addressed Tempest’s witness-coaching claim. In my opinion, the hearing justice
approached the question of whether Tempest’s conviction must be vacated on due process
grounds as if it were a garden-variety negligence claim. He allowed expert testimony on the
standard of care (proper police practices and procedures), and he relied on Davis’s testimony to
establish that the police breached that standard with respect to Richards, LaDue, and Shaw. In
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what can only be characterized as an extraordinarily irregular proceeding, the hearing justice
went so far as to fault the state for not putting on its own expert testimony: “[T]he [s]tate put
forth no expert of its own to rebut the opinions offered by * * * Davis.” Since when does the
constitutional question of whether the Due Process Clause was violated require a battle of the
experts? This is not a negligence case, and, when determining whether the Due Process Clause
has been violated, “we must never forget, that it is a constitution we are expounding.” Daniels v.
Williams, 474 U.S. 327, 332 (1986) (quoting McCulloch v. Maryland, 17 U.S. (4 Wheat.) 316,
407 (1819) (Marshall, C.J.)).
For these reasons, I am of the opinion that the hearing justice erred when he granted
Tempest postconviction relief on his witness-coaching claim. It is my belief that, on remand, the
trial justice to whom this case is assigned should not exclude the testimony of Richards or LaDue
on this basis.

Outcome:

Tempest is not entitled to postconviction relief. The hearing justice failed to follow the appropriate legal standard and clearly erred in determining that the former prosecutor’s nondisclosure of the Carrier statements constituted a deliberate nondisclosure under the Wyche
doctrine. Rather than acknowledge this error, the majority improperly makes its own findings of fact—which are also clearly erroneous—to support the hearing justice’s conclusion. The record, however, simply does not support the conclusion that there was a deliberate nondisclosure of the Carrier statements. Additionally, Tempest’s McMann evidence Brady claim is barred by the doctrine of laches and also must fail on the merits because the McMann evidence is not material. Finally, Tempest’s witness-coaching claim must be rejected because it is barred by principles of res judicata and fails on the merits under the controlling legal standard.
Tempest received a fair trial. His conviction should not be disturbed. The Picard family has been deprived of what little justice they received in 1992, ten years after they buried their young, innocent daughter.

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