BURKE, Judge.
Marqueze Taron Smith was convicted of two counts of murder made capital because the murder was committed during a kidnapping in the first degree or an attempt thereof, see § 13A-5-40(a)(1), Ala.Code 1975, and because the murder was committed during a robbery in the first degree or an attempt thereof, see § 13A-5-40(a)(2), Ala.Code 1975. The jury, by a vote of 11 to 1, recommended that Smith be sentenced to death. The trial court followed the jury's recommendation and sentenced Smith to death. Smith appeals his convictions and his sentences.
At trial, the State set forth evidence indicating the following.
Around 6 a.m. on August 12, 2003, a few employees of Interstate Steel discovered the body of a deceased person lying across a dirt road near the business. That deceased person was later identified as Jeremy Black. When Black's body was discovered, he was wearing multiple T-shirts, a pair of boxer shorts, and one sock that had been partially pulled off his right foot. He did not have a sock on his left foot, and he did not have on any shoes. Several bullets and shell casings were found near Black's body. Black's vehicle was discovered about a mile from where his body was discovered. When his vehicle was discovered, the glove compartment was open, and investigators determined that several items were missing from the vehicle, including the radio and license plate.
An autopsy performed by a forensic pathologist with the Alabama Department of Forensic Sciences revealed that Black died from multiple gunshot wounds. Two gunshots had entered Black's back and exited his chest, and seven gunshots had entered Black's chest and exited his back. One of the gunshot entry wounds in Black's back was described as a "near contact" wound and the other entry wound in Black's back was described as a "contact" wound. The exit wounds in Black's back were "shored," which indicated that Black's back was in
A firearms examiner with the Alabama Department of Forensic Sciences examined a .45 caliber Colt brand handgun, a.45 caliber Ruger brand handgun, and 9 bullets or bullet fragments recovered during the investigation into Black's murder. The firearms examiner determined that two of those bullets had been fired from the Ruger handgun and that five of those bullets had been fired from the Colt handgun. One bullet could not be conclusively matched to either handgun because the bullet was damaged, but it had the same rifling series as the Colt handgun. One bullet fragment did not have any rifling that could be examined; thus, it could not be matched to either handgun.
During the morning of August 11, 2003, Smith, Christopher Smiley, and Smith's uncle, Patrick Smith ("Patrick"), were hanging out and drinking alcohol at a house that belonged to Smith's grandmother, Novella Smith ("Novella"). They parted ways around 11 a.m., but they reunited that night. Early during the night of August 11, 2003, Smith, Smiley, and Patrick were hanging out with other people at Smiley's cousin's house. They were drinking alcohol and smoking marijuana. Smith borrowed Smiley's phone and used it to call Black. Following the phone call, Black came to Smith's location and sold marijuana to him. Around midnight, after moving to a different location, Smith again used Smiley's phone to call Black. Then, Smiley, Smith, and Patrick went to Maggie Mae Johnson's apartment. Johnson was Patrick's girlfriend. Smiley asked Patrick and Smith whether they wanted him to give them a ride to Novella's house. Patrick responded: "No, I'm going to stay here. I got to get me somebody. I need some money." (R. 1064.) Shortly thereafter, Smiley left and went to the parking lot of the local Wal-Mart discount store to talk to a woman he had met a couple of days earlier.
According to Smiley's trial testimony, after he finished talking to the woman and was leaving the Wal-Mart parking lot, he received a telephone call from Patrick, but the call was quickly disconnected. Then, around 1:30 a.m., Smiley received a phone call from Smith. Smith asked Smiley to pick him and Patrick up at a particular gas station. When Smiley arrived at that gas station, he saw Patrick and Patrick got in Smiley's vehicle. Patrick then instructed Smiley to go to another location. Pursuant to Patrick's instructions, Smiley turned down a dirt road and parked his vehicle. Black's vehicle and Smith were there. Patrick and Smith then began taking items from Black's vehicle and putting them into Smiley's vehicle. After Patrick, Smith, and Smiley left that location in Smiley's vehicle, Patrick instructed Smiley to go to another location. As they drove by that location, Patrick pointed to a body lying on the ground.
At trial, Smiley identified the Colt brand handgun used in Black's murder as a gun that he had previously owned. Smiley testified that, before Black's murder, he had given that gun to Patrick to clean. However, Smiley testified that, after he and Smith left Johnson's apartment on the night of the murder, he saw Smith with the Colt handgun in his possession. Specifically, Smiley testified that, when Smith got out of Smiley's vehicle, the gun was lying on the seat where Smith had been sitting. Smiley further testified that he grabbed the gun off the seat and took it inside his house.
The morning after the murder, an investigator called Smiley's phone because the investigator had received a copy of the telephone numbers that had recently called Black's cell phone, and one of those numbers belonged to Smiley. The investigator asked Smiley to come to the police station and talk to investigators. Smiley voluntarily complied with that request. At trial, Smiley testified that, before he went to talk to the investigators, he put the Colt handgun in a Wal-Mart bag and gave it to Smith. Smiley then gave Smith a ride to Novella's house. Smiley testified that, when he dropped Smith off at Novella's house, Smith did not go inside the house. Instead, Smith went around the right side of the house.
At trial, Smiley admitted that, on August 12 and 13, 2003, he gave two separate statements to investigators that did not implicate Smith in Black's murder. Those statements implicated only Patrick. In fact, Smiley's August 12 statement did not mention Smith, and the August 13 statement mentioned only that Smiley and Smith had hung out on the night of the murder. However, on August 15, 2003, Smiley gave a statement to investigators that implicated Smith in Black's murder. Also, on November 8, 2011, Smiley gave another statement that implicated Smith. At trial, Smiley testified that he was telling the truth at trial and that, to the extent his trial testimony did not match his previous statements, he had lied in his previous statements.
Based on his participation in the crime, Smiley was originally charged with capital murder. However, in September 2009, a little less than 3 years before Smith's trial, Smiley pleaded guilty to second-degree robbery and was sentenced, as a habitual offender, to 20 years in prison. As part of Smiley's plea, he agreed to testify at Smith's trial and to tell the truth.
In August 2003, Angela Delores Steel Smith ("Angela"), Smith's aunt and Patrick's sister, discovered a handgun in the outside storage room of her apartment. Angela testified that the handgun did not belong to her and that, after discovering the handgun, she immediately telephoned the police to inform them of her discovery. That handgun was later identified as the.45 caliber Colt handgun that was involved in Black's murder. Angela also testified that, in August 2003, her mother, Novella, lived about half of a block away from her.
In August 2003, law-enforcement officers went to Johnson's apartment looking for Patrick. Johnson allowed the officers to come inside the apartment, and they found Patrick hiding in an upstairs bedroom. A .45 caliber Ruger brand handgun and several items of personal property
On August 14, 2003, Smith gave the following statement to law-enforcement officers:
(C. 557-60; R. 1195-1200.)
After Smith was confronted with evidence indicating that two guns were used in Black's murder, Smith gave the following statement to law-enforcement officers:
(R. 1251-52.)
At trial, it was undisputed that Smith was present when Black was murdered.
On appeal, Smith argues, among other things, that his rights were violated at trial when the State presented testimony and argument concerning a polygraph test that was taken by Smiley (hereinafter referred to as the "polygraph evidence"). Specifically, Smith argues that the State improperly used the polygraph evidence to bolster the credibility of its main witness.
During the State's case-in-chief, Smiley testified:
(R. 1091-93.) There was no objection to this testimony.
Later during the State's case, the following exchange occurred during Investigator Terry Kelly's testimony:
(R. 1242-44.)
During the State's rebuttal closing argument, the prosecutor stated:
(R. 1371-72; emphasis added). There was no objection to these statements.
In Ex parte Clements, 447 So.2d 695 (Ala.1984), the defendant, prior to trial, "offered to stipulate to the introduction into evidence of a polygraph examination," and the State refused to stipulate. The Alabama Supreme Court, in holding that the trial court properly denied admission of the results of the polygraph examination, stated:
Ex parte Clements, 447 So.2d at 698.
The results of a polygraph test are inadmissible because they lack any probative value. Ex parte Hinton, 548 So.2d 562, 569 (Ala.1989). As the Alabama Supreme Court has stated: "Polygraph examinations are not probative, because the premise that a machine can reflect whether a person's answers are deceptive has not been sufficiently established, [Ex parte] Dolvin, [391 So.2d 677 (Ala.1980)], and because the admission of the results of polygraph examinations would tend to distort the truth-finding process." Hinton, 548 So.2d at 569. Furthermore, there is a "danger that the jury will be overawed by the polygraph examiner's opinion." Id. This Court has stated that "the uncritical acceptance of polygraph results tends to induce a jury to reject other evidence which is in fact more reliable." Hinton v. State, 548 So.2d 547, 560 (Ala.Crim.App. 1988).
On appeal, Smith argues that the State impermissibly used the polygraph evidence to bolster the credibility of Smiley's statements implicating Smith and to discredit the defense's theory of the case. Specifically, Smith argues that the State improperly bolstered its case by presenting testimony and argument indicating that Smiley gave two statements to the police that placed all the blame for the murder on Patrick, and then, after Smiley took a polygraph test, he gave statements implicating Smith.
At trial, Smith did not make any objections to the polygraph evidence based on the arguments he now makes on appeal. Smith's only objection at trial was to the "characterization" of the polygraph-test results, and that objection was sustained.
Rule 45A, Ala. R.App. P., provides:
In Wilson v. State, 142 So.3d 732, 751 (Ala.Crim.App.2010) (opinion on return to remand), this Court stated:
On appeal, the State does not deny the impropriety of testimony or argument concerning a polygraph test. Instead, the State argues that, in the present case, the polygraph evidence was harmless and did not rise to the level of plain error for six reasons.
Rule 45, Ala. R.App. P., provides:
In Ex parte Crymes, 630 So.2d 125 (Ala. 1993), the Alabama Supreme Court stated:
630 So.2d at 126. See also Ex parte Greathouse, 624 So.2d 208, 210 (Ala.1993) (holding that the proper harmless-error inquiry asks, absent the improperly introduced evidence, "is it clear beyond a reasonable doubt that the jury would have returned a verdict of guilty").
First, the State argues that the polygraph evidence was harmless and did not rise to the level of plain error because the trial court sustained Smith's objection during Investigator Kelly's testimony and thus eradicated any prejudicial effect of the polygraph evidence. However, as mentioned earlier, that objection was explicitly limited to Investigator Kelly's specific characterization of the polygraph-test results. Otherwise, there was no objection, much less a sustained objection, to the prosecutor's questions or Investigator Kelly's testimony concerning the polygraph test. Furthermore, there was no objection to the prosecutor's statement during closing argument concerning the polygraph test or to Smiley's testimony concerning the polygraph test. Thus, we find that the effect on the jury of all the polygraph evidence was not eliminated simply because the trial court sustained a limited objection to one piece of the polygraph evidence.
Next, the State argues that the polygraph evidence was harmless and did not rise to the level of plain error because the actual results of the polygraph test were never admitted into evidence. However, Investigator Kelly testified concerning the results of the polygraph test, and, again, Smith's sustained objection was limited solely to Investigator Kelly's specific characterization of the polygraph test results. The objection did not address other testimony and argument implying that the results of the polygraph test indicated that Smiley was being deceptive up to a certain point in time, which was a crucial question for the jury.
Next, the State argues that the polygraph evidence was harmless and did not rise to the level of plain error because, the State says, the polygraph evidence "was not intended to bolster Smiley's credibility." (State's brief, at 24.) We disagree. Smiley testified at trial that he lied during his two initial statements to police, which did not implicate Smith in Black's murder, and that he told the truth during his later statements when he did implicate Smith in Black's murder. Evidence indicating that Smiley took a polygraph examination between his initial statements and his later statements bolsters his trial testimony that he was telling the truth in the later statements when he implicated Smith. In fact, during his closing argument, the prosecutor explicitly pointed out to the jury that
Next, the State argues that the polygraph evidence was harmless and did not rise to the level of plain error because it was cumulative of other evidence indicating that Smiley had been deceptive. Specifically, the State argues that "Smiley admitted to lying to the police to cover up Smith's involvement in the murder, so the jury already knew that he had been deceptive." (State's brief, at 24.) However, the State's argument misses the point. The issue for the jury was not whether Smiley ever lied to the police. The nature of inconsistent statements necessitates that Smiley was lying to the police at some point when he gave the statements. Instead, the jury needed to determine when Smiley was lying to the police. Specifically, the jury had to determine whether Smiley was lying in his initial statements when he did not implicate Smith or whether Smiley was lying in his later statements when he did implicate Smith. More specifically, the jury had to determine whether Smiley's trial testimony was credible when he testified that he was lying to the police when he gave his initial statements that did not implicate Smith. The polygraph evidence bolstered that trial testimony. The polygraph evidence was not merely cumulative of Smiley's trial testimony.
Next, the State argues that the polygraph evidence was harmless and did not rise to the level of plain error because, the State says, Smith used the evidence himself. Specifically, the State points out that Smith frequently argued that Smiley was not credible. However, again, the polygraph evidence indicates that Smiley was lying at a particular time. The defense did not elicit the polygraph evidence, and there is no indication in the record that the defense ever specifically relied on the polygraph evidence. Instead, the defense simply argued that Smiley could not be trusted. On the other hand, the State argued that Smiley could be trusted when he made statements implicating Smith in Black's murder, which happened after Smiley took the polygraph test.
Finally, the State argues that the polygraph evidence was harmless and did not rise to the level of plain error because, the State says, there was sufficient evidence to support Smith's capital-murder conviction without Smiley's testimony. We disagree. We agree that there was other evidence that could give some indication of Smith's guilt. Specifically, it was undisputed that Smith and Patrick were the only two people other than the victim who were present when the murder was committed. Furthermore, other evidence indicated that two guns were used in the murder and that those two guns were found at different locations. However, we doubt whether that evidence alone is sufficient to support Smith's conviction. In any event, regardless of whether that evidence in isolation would be sufficient, Smith argued at trial that, consistent with his statement to investigators, Patrick used both guns to murder Black while the State argued at trial that Patrick used one gun and Smith used the other gun to murder Black. It was up to the jury to weigh the evidence, but Smiley's testimony definitely bolstered the State's argument; thus, Smiley's testimony definitely affected that weighing process. We cannot say that if Smiley's testimony was removed, the jury would have reached the same decision. Only Smiley's testimony contradicted the version of events contained in Smith's statement to investigators, and only Smiley's testimony placed the Colt handgun directly in Smith's possession after the murder.
We again note that the State does not deny that testimony or argument concerning a polygraph test is improper, and, based on the foregoing, we hold that the State's arguments are contrary to established precedent of this Court and the Alabama Supreme Court. We further hold that, under Alabama law, presentation of testimony and argument concerning a polygraph test is an obvious, indisputable error. A review of the record in this case leaves little doubt that the jury likely would have used the polygraph evidence to decide that the State's main witness was telling the truth, and, in its closing argument, the State asked the jury to do just that. Alabama courts have not allowed the defendant to use polygraph evidence to show his innocence; thus, we cannot allow the State to use polygraph evidence to prove the defendant's guilt. See Ex parte Clements, supra. In the present case, as explained earlier, the polygraph evidence clearly bolstered Smiley's trial testimony, and Smiley's testimony was crucial to the State's case; thus, the error adversely affected the outcome of the trial. Furthermore, the trial court failed to grant Smith's motion to strike Investigator Kelly's testimony concerning the results of the polygraph test, and the trial court failed to give any curative instruction concerning the polygraph evidence. Therefore, we hold that the polygraph evidence either has or probably has adversely affected Smith's substantial rights; thus, plain error occurred.
Because plain error occurred during the guilt-phase of Smith's trial, we reverse Smith's convictions and sentences, and we remand this case for a new trial.
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
WINDOM, P.J., and WELCH, KELLUM, and JOINER, JJ., concur.