COURT OF APPEALS DECISION DATED AND FILED August 4, 2010 A.
John Voelker Acting Clerk of Court of Appeals |
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NOTICE |
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This opinion is subject to further editing. If published, the official version will appear in the bound volume of the Official Reports. A party may file with the Supreme Court a petition to review an adverse decision by the Court of Appeals. See Wis. Stat. § 808.10 and Rule 809.62. |
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Appeal No. |
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STATE OF |
IN COURT OF APPEALS |
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DISTRICT II |
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State of
Plaintiff-Respondent, v. Marvel L. Willingham,
Defendant-Appellant. |
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APPEAL
from a judgment of the circuit court for
Before
Brown, C.J., Neubauer, P.J.,
and
¶1 PER CURIAM. Marvel Willingham appeals from a judgment of conviction of party to a crime of first-degree intentional homicide by use of a dangerous weapon. He challenges the admission of a security videotape and identification based on the videotape and the sufficiency of the evidence. We conclude that the admission of the videotape and identification was a proper exercise of discretion and the evidence supports the conviction. We affirm the judgment.
¶2 George Mitchell was shot and killed at a gas station. Witnesses saw two men running from Mitchell’s car. Officers reviewed the security videotape from inside the gas station just before the shooting. A police detective identified Willingham inside the gas station just before the shooting.
¶3 Willingham twice moved in limine to exclude admission of a slow-downed version of the security videotape and still photos made from the videotape.[1] He argued that the prosecution could not adequately authenticate the videotape without testimony from the person who set up the security camera system, a person familiar with its operation, and the person who recovered the videotape after the shooting and that the prosecution could not establish the change of custody of the original videotape. He claimed that the videotape was not reliable in the reconstruction of what occurred immediately before the shooting since it had two different time stamps that had a three minute time difference.[2] He also challenged the admission of any identification made from viewing the videotape because the image was grainy, noncontinuous, and the individual identified was only seen for a few seconds. The altered version of the videotape, still photographs from the videotape, and the identification of Willingham from the videotape were admitted at trial.[3]
¶4 On appeal, we will affirm the trial court’s admission of
evidence if it is a proper exercise of discretion. State v. Sorenson, 143
¶5 To the extent Willingham challenges the authenticity or
foundation for admission of the videotape shown to the jury, we reject that
challenge. Testimony about the technical
details of how the videotape came into existence is not necessary where a
witness can testify based on personal knowledge that the videotape is a fair
and accurate representation of what is depicted. State v. Peterson, 222
¶6 Willingham argues the videotape should not have been admitted
because it was a duplicate and not the original. As observed in Curtis, 218
¶7 Exclusion of the identification of Willingham from the videotape because the image was grainy was not required. The State acknowledged that due to quality of the image, Willingham could not be identified by most people by his face alone. The State presented the testimony of a police detective familiar with Willingham in appearance and mannerisms. In laying a pretrial foundation for admission of the identification, the detective testified that he identified Willingham on the videotape by his walk and sculpted appearance of his cheekbones. Willingham inaccurately states that he was only identified by his walk. At trial, the detective testified he had known Willingham a little more than ten years but he was not asked the basis of his identification. The quality of the videotape does not go to admissibility but only the weight of the evidence. Whether the detective could make an accurate identification of Willingham on the videotape was a question for the jury to resolve in determining the detective’s credibility in light of the quality of the tape. See id. The trial court properly exercised its discretion recognizing that the quality of the tape only presented a question for the jury.
¶8 Willingham sets forth what he believes to be the critical
evidence: the detective’s identification
from the grainy videotape that Willingham was inside the gas station just
before the shooting, an eyewitness who could not identify the two men who
approached and shot the victim, a license plate number which was close to, but
not exactly, the license plate number of the car belonging to Willingham’s
girlfriend, and testimony of a co-actor who was given a deal dismissing the
homicide charge against him. Willingham
characterizes the evidence as “sketchy at best.” We do not look for evidence that sustains
Willingham’s claim that the evidence as insufficient. Rather, our standard of review requires that
we view the evidence most favorably to the State and the conviction. State v. Forster, 2003 WI App 29,
¶2, 260
¶9 Willingham focuses on the testimony of Bernard Bush because
it is the only evidence not presented at the first trial that resulted in a
hung jury. He claims Bush’s testimony
was inherently and patently incredible.
Bush testified that he was in the car at the gas station with Willingham
and Jerrod Patterson. He said only
Willingham approached and got into the victim’s car, that Willingham was
holding a firearm after the shot was fired, and that Willingham fled the
victim’s car. Willingham characterizes
Bush’s testimony as patently incredible because it conflicts with a citizen
witness’s account that two men approached the victim’s car. He also suggests Bush’s entire testimony is
suspect since he originally denied any knowledge of the shooting when first
questioned by police. Evidence is
inherently or patently incredible when it conflicts with the laws of nature or
with fully established or conceded facts.
Tarantino, 157
¶10 The jury was free to believe Bush’s testimony that Willingham
was the shooter. That alone is
sufficient to support the verdict. In
addition, there was evidence that three weeks before the shooting Willingham
made a controlled drug buy from the victim at the same gas station. On the day of the shooting, Willingham called
the victim six times over two hours with the last call made at 3:09 p.m. The security videotape showed Willingham
going inside the gas station at 3:10 p.m. and both Willingham and the victim
are absent from the inside the station about two minutes before the
shooting. Willingham purchased a bottle
of soda in a green bottle. An unopened
bottle of 7-Up, a green bottle, was found in the cup holder of the victim’s
car. A witness indicated that the
license plate of the car in which the two men fled after the shooting was “552
VET.” The license plate on the car
registered to Willingham’s girlfriend was “552 FET.” Willingham was known to drive his
girlfriend’s car on previous occasions.
An acquaintance of Willingham’s testified that five days after the
shooting, Willingham admitted his mistake in shooting the victim. Willingham contacted police when he
discovered they were looking for him, indicated that he would come in, never
showed up, was found two weeks later in
By the Court.—Judgment affirmed.
This opinion will not be published. See Wis. Stat. Rule 809.23(1)(b)5.
[1] Willingham’s first trial in December 2006 resulted in a hung jury. His second trial commenced May 21, 2007.
[2] The videotape contained three different views from cameras located in different locations in the store. There were two military time clocks showing elapsed time, one using 14:00 and the other 15:00. The one hour difference between the time stamps was not problematic.
[3] The original videotape was admitted into evidence but not shown to the jury. The original videotape was a time-lapse recording that, when played back in a standard VCR, displays images too quickly to be viewable without pausing the tape. The version shown to the jury was prepared by the state crime laboratory. The copy was recorded at a slower speed.
[4] All references to the Wisconsin Statutes are to the 2007-08 version unless otherwise noted.
[5] A police investigator testified that by comparing the time clocks to the police call logs, which indicated that the shooting was reported at 3:18 p.m., the clock running at 14:00 hours appeared to display the correct time.