Tuesday, December 29, 2015

A handcuffed arrestee's statement that he would "fuck up" police if they were not police cannot be taken as a threat


Milon C. High, Jr.  v. United States (decided December 24, 2015)

Players:  Judges Fisher and Easterly, and Senior Judge Ruiz.  Opinion by Judge Ruiz.  Paul J. Riley for Mr. High.

Facts:  As Mr. High sat handcuffed on a curb, surrounded by three or four police officers, he "glared" at one officer and said, "take that gun and badge off and I'll fuck you up."  He then made a second statement, "something to the effect of, too bad it's not like the old days where fucking up an officer is a misdemeanor."  For making these statements, Mr. High was convicted of attempted threats.

Issue:  Was there sufficient evidence that the statements would cause an ordinary hearer to believe that the threatened harm would occur?

Holding:  No.  The statements "are most aptly described as an expression of exasperation or resignation over the fact that appellant had just been arrested by police officers."  On their face, the statements expressed only that if the officer was someone other than a police officer, or if  the penalties for assaulting an officer were not so severe, then Mr. High might want to "fuck up" the officer.  In other words, Mr. High was expressing his displeasure with the way he was being treated, but he did so by stating the reasons why he would not assault the officer despite Mr. High's desire to do so.  The context of the statements confirms they were not threatening:  Mr. High was handcuffed, surrounded by three or four police officers, and spoke in a "conversational tone."  There was also no suggestion that the officer at whom the statements were directed felt threatened.  DG

Read full opinion here.

Wednesday, December 23, 2015

A court should grant a motion to sever if a co-defendant would provide “officially exculpatory” testimony.


Omar Rollerson and Rolita Burns v. United States (decided December 17, 2015).

Players: Chief Judge Washington, Judge Easterly, Senior Judge Belson. Opinion by Chief Judge Washington. PDS for Mr. Rollerson. Mindy A. Daniels for Ms. Burns.

Facts: Omar Rollerson and Rolita Burns were prosecuted together for two separate events that the government contended stemmed from Ms. Burns’ attempt to determine who had slashed the tires on her car. The first incident, which the Court labeled, “The Elvans Road Incident,” began in the early hours of June 18, 2012. Stefanie Harrington got into an argument with Ms. Burns when Ms. Harrington believed Ms. Burns had accused her of slashing the tires. They continued arguing until Mr. Rollerson intervened, but then the group left the apartment and went outside to the parking lot. When Mr. Rollerson saw that Ms. Harrington had a knife, he retreated and then Ms. Harrington tossed it. But Mr. Rollerson picked it up and approached Ms. Harrington. An unidentified man stopped Mr. Rollerson from getting closer to Ms. Harrington, so he threw the knife at her, hitting her arm. Ms. Burns and Ms. Harrington continued yelling at each other, and Robert Teamer heard Mr. Rollerson say, “[F]orget this, I’m about to go get that,” which he believed to be a reference to a gun that Mr. Rollerson had mentioned earlier. Ms. Harrington and Mr. Teamer then returned to Ms. Harrington’s apartment.

Shortly thereafter, a man “busted inside the door” and said, “I’m going to blow a hole in you guys.” Mr. Teamer said that this man then hit him in the nose with the gun and left. At trial, Ms. Harrington identified Mr. Rollerson as the person who hit Mr. Teamer, but Mr. Teamer testified that Mr. Rollerson, as he appeared at trial, did not look like the man who came to Ms. Harrington’s door the night of the burglary.

The second incident, which the Court identified as “The Bowen Road Incident,” occurred later that same day, around 2:00 p.m. Ms. Burns got into a verbal altercation with Jasmine Patterson over whether Ms. Patterson had slashed Ms. Burns’s tires. As the argument continued, Mr. Rollerson said to Ms. Burns, “F that, we’re going to get Nellie and them,” which Ms. Patterson believed meant they were going to go get a group of people to fight them. Mr. Rollerson and Ms. Burns left and drove away in a van. Ms. Patterson, with several other people, walked towards Ms. Patterson’s grandmother’s house. Along the way, Ms. Patterson saw the van return and Mr. Rollerson and Ms. Burns exit with a group of five girls, whom Mr. Rollerson referred to as his nieces. They caught up to Ms. Patterson, threw her to the ground, and began to beat her, including hitting her with a log. Ms. Patterson’s boyfriend attempted to approach, but Mr. Rollerson warned him to not to get involved or else he was going to “get that out of the car and smoke [him].” Ms. Burns, Mr. Rollerson and the five other girls left and Ms. Patterson got up and went to her grandmother’s house, where her grandmother called the police. After speaking with police, Ms. Patterson went to the hospital by ambulance to receive treatment for a cut over her right eye that required nine stitches.

The jury convicted Mr. Rollerson of the following charges for the Elvans Road incident: first-degree burglary while armed, ADW, two counts of possession of a firearm during a crime of violence, and felony threats. For the Bowen Road incident, the jury convicted Mr. Rollerson of assault with significant bodily injury and felony threats. Though tried together, Ms. Burns only faced charges for the Bowen Road incident and the jury convicted her of assault with significant bodily injury.

Issue 1: Whether the trial court erred in denying Mr. Rollerson’s motion to sever his trial from Ms. Burns’s trial in order to be able to call her as a witness to testify he was not involved in the Elvans Road Incident?

Holding: Yes. While a trial court has discretion whether to grant a motion to sever, a court must grant such a motion if a defendant can show there will be “manifest prejudice” from being tried jointly. Under Jackson v. United States, 329 A.2d 782 (D.C. 1974), when a defendant wants to sever a trial from a co-defendant in order to have that person testify in his defense, the court should grant the motion if it has been established that the co-defendant is 1) likely to testify and 2) the testimony will be “substantially exculpatory.” Here, the proffer was that Ms. Burns would testify that Mr. Rollerson was not present for the Elvans Road Incident. Although the trial court concluded that she was likely to testify and that her testimony would be “officially exculpatory,” it declined to the grant the motion mainly because the government offered to enter into a stipulation with the defense about what her testimony would have been. The Court of Appeals held that was an abuse of discretion. First, a stipulation is not a valid substitute for live testimony because it forecloses the jury’s ability to hear a witness and determine credibility. The Court stated that only in “very limited circumstances” can a party be forced to accept a stipulation in lieu of live testimony or tangible evidence. This was not such a case. Second, the Court emphasized that judicial administration and concerns for judicial efficiency do not outweigh a defendant’s right to a fair trial and are not valid reasons by themselves to deny a motion to sever. And third, the Court of Appeals concluded that when the trial court found that Ms. Burns’s testimony would have been “officially exculpatory,” that was sufficient to meet the requirement from Jackson that her testimony would have been “substantially exculpatory.” Once the court determined that Ms. Burns was likely to testify and that her testimony would have been “officially exculpatory,” the court should have granted the motion. Failure to do so was an abuse of discretion, resulting in reversal of Mr. Rollerson’s convictions from the Elvans Road Incident.

Issue 2: Whether the trial court erred in denying Ms. Burns’s motion to sever the Elvans Road incident from the Bowen Road incident?

Holding: No. Ms. Burns contended the two incidents should have been tried separately because otherwise she would suffer undue prejudice since most of the charged conduct related only to Mr. Rollerson and she was not even charged in the first incident. However, the Court of Appeals determined the trial court did not abuse its discretion. The Court reasoned that though she was not charged for both incidents, she played a central role in both, as the government’s theory was it was her desire to learn who had slashed her tires that led to both incidents. While a trial court should sever charges when one defendant played a “de minimis” role in one incident as compared to another, the Court stated that simply the fact Burns was not charged did not mean her role was “de minimis” in the Elvans Road Incident. Also, the Court said that the trial court “properly protected Burns from manifest prejudice” by giving the jury precise instructions, both during the trial and during jury instructions, on how to use the evidence that had been presented against each defendant and that the evidence from Elvans Road only went to certain counts.

Issue 3: Was the evidence sufficient to convict both Mr. Rollerson and Ms. Burns of assault with significant bodily injury?

Holding: Yes. To establish “significant bodily injury,” there had to be evidence of an injury that would require “hospitalization or immediate medical attention.” The Court determined that Ms. Patterson’s injuries met that definition due to her suffering the injuries in a “violent group attack” where she was pushed to the ground, stomped, punched in the face, and hit in the head with a log. There was evidence she was a “bleeding mess,” and went to the hospital to receive nine stitches. Also, the government presented to the jury photographs of her injuries and her medical records.

Of Note:
  • This is a good case to use any time the government attempts to foreclose the defense from calling a witness or introducing evidence by offering a stipulation. The Court of Appeals very clearly indicates a defense does not have to accept such an offer, and that a trial court should not use the offer by itself as a reason to deny a defense motion. 
  • A trial court should grant a motion to sever if there has been a showing the co-defendant would be likely to testify, and that the testimony would be “substantially exculpatory.” This case indicates that the trial court does not have to use those exact words so long as it is established that the testimony meets the standard. However, when moving to sever from a co-defendant on the basis of wanting the co-defendant to testify, it is likely a good idea to use the exact language from Jackson in order to avoid any confusion. This Case reinforces that once a trial court determines that the two Jackson factors have been met, a trial court should grant the motion. 
  • Similarly, if trying to sever a trial from a co-defendant when there are separate incidents, just the fact your client was not charged in one of the incidents is not sufficient by itself to establish your client had a “de minimis role.”
  • There was a fourth issue raised – whether the court should have merged Mr. Rollerson’s convictions for PFCV. The Court declined to reach that issue after ruling in his favor on issue one and reversing those convictions.  BM

Thursday, December 17, 2015

Just because there’s a stolen phone in a store you work at doesn’t make you guilty of receiving stolen property



David J. Brown v. United States (decided December 10, 2015)


Players: Associate Judges Blackburne-Rigsby and Thompson, Senior Judge Reid.  Opinion by Judge Reid.  Cecily E. Baskir for Mr. Brown.  Trial Judge: John McCabe.


Facts: Martha Bass was walking down North Capitol Street when someone grabbed her cell phone and ran off.  Using a GPS tracker on the phone, Ms. Bass and the police located the phone at an electronics repair shop.  David Brown opened the door.  After the police told him they had reason to believe a stolen phone was in the store, he went to the back of the store, brought out Ms. Bass’s phone, and asked if that was what they were looking for.  After initially telling the police the phone had arrived earlier that day in the shop and providing an invoice for the phone, he eventually told the police that he had fabricated the invoice in order to protect the store, that he knew who had brought the phone to the store, and would help the police if they did not arrest him.  


When Mr. Brown failed to make good on his promise of assistance, the police obtained a search warrant for the shop and located an additional stolen phone.  This phone belonged to Mary Register, who told the police her phone had been stolen over a month before the search warrant was executed.  The government presented no evidence at trial as to precisely who owned the store, and there was testimony that numerous people worked there and brought various pieces of property on to the premises. 


Issue 1:  Did the trial court abuse its discretion in denying Mr. Brown’s Batson challenge to the prosecution’s use of six of seven preemptory strikes against black venire members?


Holding:  No.  The defense did not meet its burden of persuasion that the race-neutral explanations given by the prosecution were pretextual.  With the exception of one strike, the defense made only the conclusory assertion that most of the strikes (six out of seven) were against black venire members.  With respect to a strike justified on the basis of the venire member’s prior criminal conviction, the trial court did not err in finding that the stricken individual was sufficiently differently situated from other venire members who had been the victim of a crime or who had relatives who had been convicted of a crime.  Finally, the DCCA rejected Mr. Brown’s argument on appeal that the trial court abused its discretion because the prosecution’s race-neutral reasons were primarily based on the body language and demeanor of the stricken venire members.


Issue 2: Was there sufficient evidence that Mr. Brown: (1) knew or had reason to believe Ms. Bass’s phone was stolen, and (2) had knowledge and constructive possession of Ms. Register’s phone.


Holding: As to (1), yes.  There was competent evidence that Mr. Brown admitted knowing Ms. Bass’s phone was stolen to the police when he admitted to producing the fake invoice.  As to (2), no.  The government failed to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that Mr. Brown constructively possessed Ms. Register’s phone or that Mr. Brown knew or had reason to believe the phone was stolen.  The evidence did not establish how the phone came to be in the store, and there was evidence that the items in the store were controlled by multiple people who worked there.


Note: The DCCA also reversed Mr. Brown’s conviction for trafficking in stolen goods because the trafficking statute requires the government to prove two or more instances of receipt of stolen property.  CP


Friday, December 11, 2015

When Petitioner Alleges “Classic” Ineffectiveness Trial Court has Little Discretion to Deny Evidentiary Hearing



Bellingerv. United States (Decided Nov. 25, 2015)

Players: Chief Judge Washington, Associate Judge Glickman, and Senior Judge Farrell. Opinion by Judge Glickman; concurrence by Judge Farrell. Michael J. Anstett and Douglas W. Baruch for Mr. Bellinger. Trial Judge: Russell F. Canan.

Facts: Mr. Bellinger was convicted, after two mistrials in which the jury hung, of assault with intent to kill against Lorraine Jackson. The government’s theory was that Mr. Bellinger had shot Ms. Jackson in retaliation for acting as a police informant. At trial, Mr. Bellinger had presented an alibi defense. After his first trial, counsel for Mr. Bellinger, the Public Defender Service (PDS), moved to withdraw based on a conflict of interest, and Phyllis Baron then represented Mr. Bellinger in the two subsequent trials.

Again, new counsel was appointed for sentencing, and that counsel filed a motion with the trial court alleging that the basis for PDS’s withdrawal was that the defense had learned that the gun used to assault Ms. Jackson matched a gun used a few weeks later in a murder with which another PDS client, Randall Mack, was charged. The trial court ordered that the ballistics evidence from the two incidents be provided to a defense expert, and after years of litigation, a defense expert reported that shell casings recovered in the Jackson shooting matched the gun seized from Mack.

Mr. Bellinger filed a motion for a new trial under D.C. Code §23-110 (five years after receiving the expert report), arguing that Ms. Barron had been ineffective for failing to investigate the ballistics match and use it to present a third-party-perpetrator defense. Mr. Bellinger stated in an affidavit that (1) prior to his second trial, Ms. Barron told him that she had information that a gun connected to the Mack case would be linked to his case; (2) that she would investigate the issue further; (3) that neither Barron nor her investigator pursued any investigation into the issue; and (4) that Barron falsely told him that the prosecutor had refused to turn over any ballistic evidence and the court had denied her requests for ballistics discovery.

Mr. Bellinger also argued that the government had violated its obligations under Brady v. Maryland, 373 U.S. 83 (1963), by failing to turn over information linking the ballistics in the two cases.

Issue 1: Did the trial court abuse its discretion in summarily denying Mr. Bellinger’s ineffective assistance of counsel claim without first holding an evidentiary hearing?

Holding: Yes. A trial court can only deny an evidentiary hearing where a petitioner’s claims are (1) palpably incredible; (2) vague or conclusory; or (3) would not entitle the petitioner to relief. Here, if true, the facts alleged by Mr. Bellinger would be a “classic form of constitutionally deficient performance.”

In so concluding, the DCCA made three important points: First, the trial court erred in finding that a delay of five years between the expert’s report of a match and Mr. Bellinger’s 23-110 filing undercut his credibility such as to render a hearing unnecessary. Second, the trial court erred in concluding that Ms. Barron’s otherwise capable representation in trial would negate a constitutionally deficient failure to investigate exculpatory information. Third, the fact that defense counsel, properly informed by a full investigation into the ballistics evidence, could have made a strategic decision not to present the evidence would not excuse failing to investigate at all.

Additionally, the trial court erred in concluding that because the government, in its proffer in opposition to Mr. Bellinger’s 23-110 claims, alluded to evidence that the gun recovered from Mack was “communal”—meaning others besides Mack had access to it—Mr. Bellinger could not show he was prejudiced by Ms. Barron’s failure to investigate. The DCCA found the record insufficient to support a conclusion of no prejudice. Specifically, the government failed to proffer what, if any, admissible evidence it might have had at the time of Mr. Bellinger’s trial to establish that the gun was “communal” and that Mr. Bellinger would have had access to it.

Issue 2: Did the trial court abuse its discretion in summarily denying Mr. Bellinger’s Brady claim without first holding an evidentiary hearing?

Holding: No, BUT, should Mr. Bellinger be able on remand to develop a proffer that the government in fact possessed exculpatory information about a weapons match, the trial court should revisit Mr. Bellinger’s request for an evidentiary hearing on his Brady claim.

The trial court was not required to hold an evidentiary hearing because Mr. Bellinger did not proffer any evidence that the government actually possessed information that the gun recovered from Mack matched the weapon used against Ms. Jackson. The DCCA rejected Mr. Bellinger’s claim that the government should have possessed this information, even if it, in fact, did not.

Issue 3: Did the trial court abuse its discretion, in denying Mr. Bellinger’s requests for discovery relating to his Brady claim?

Holding: No, BUT, should Mr. Bellinger make more targeted requests relating specifically to what information the Metropolitan Police Department (MPD) had in its possession about the weapons match, such a request should be granted, and may allow Mr. Bellinger to renew his request for an evidentiary hearing on his Brady claim. The DCCA highlighted that starkly missing from the government’s proffers in opposition to Mr. Bellinger’s Brady claim was any information about what was known to MPD, as opposed to the trial prosecutors themselves. CP

"Emergency Aid" Exception Did Not Justify Warantless Entry and No Exception to the Exclusionary Rule Applies, Court Splits on Sufficiency of the Evidence of Possession of Guns Found in Apartment



Jamel Evans v. United States (decided August 6, 2015)

Players: Associate Judges Beckwith and McLeese, Senior Judge Ferren. Opinion by Judge McLeese, concurring opinion by Judge Ferren, opinion concurring in part and dissenting in part by Judge Beckwith.  Murray Kamionski for Mr. Evans.  Trial Judge: John McCabe

Facts: Police responded to Jamel Evans’s 911 call to report an assault and found Mr. Evans, who was bleeding from the head, and Shantay Taylor, who had blood on her clothes, arguing in the parking lot of an apartment building. Ms. Taylor said that Mr. Evans had punched her several times; Mr. Evans said that Ms. Taylor had hit him, scratched him, and assaulted him with an ashtray while in his apartment. Neither indicated that anyone else was involved in the altercation or present in the apartment. As other officers talked to Mr. Evans and Ms. Taylor, Officer Wendt arrived and upon seeing blood outside the open door of Apartment 201, entered and went through each room of the apartment. In one bedroom he saw a gun inside an open closet and .38 caliber ammunition on a dresser; in the second bedroom he saw no contraband.

Police subsequently obtained a search warrant based on information about the altercation, the discovery of the firearm and ammunition, and Ms. Taylor’s statement that Mr. Evans had bagged up marijuana in the apartment that morning. In the first bedroom (described as messy with an unmade bed), police found a shotgun in a closet containing men’s clothing and found .38-caliber ammunition and a pill bottle labeled “Yvette Murray” on top of a dresser. In the second bedroom, on top of an animal cage, they found a rifle, 9-mm ammunition, and an XL men’s jacket with six ziplocks of marijuana in the pocket. Somewhere in the apartment was a judicial summons for “Christina Brunson” with the apartment’s address. Mr. Evans was convicted of attempted possession of both guns and the .38-caliber ammunition.

Issue 1: Did Officer Wendt’s initial warrantless search fit within the “emergency aid” exception to the warrant requirement?

Holding 1: The warrantless entry violated the Fourth Amendment and the “emergency aid” exception did not apply. Without deciding whether police needed probable cause or only a reasonable basis to believe that entry was necessary to provide emergency aid to an injured occupant or to protect an occupant from immediate injury, the Court held that even under the “reasonable basis” standard, the police lacked adequate reason to believe that immediate entry was necessary to provide emergency aid. Officer Wendt did not have a specific reason to believe that an unknown third party was in the apartment and needed immediate help because the accounts of Mr. Evans and Ms. Taylor did not suggest that anyone else was inside and Mr. Evans’s bleeding head accounted for the blood outside the apartment.

Issue 2: Was the evidence nonetheless admissible under the “independent source” doctrine because the items were seized pursuant to a subsequent search warrant?

Holding 2: No. The Court held that “procedural unfairness” precluded affirmance based on the “independent source” theory because the government had not argued it at trial and the trial court therefore had not made the factual findings relevant to the theory. The Court also declined to conclude in the first instance that the officers would have gotten a warrant independent of the initial entry because the record was not clear and the Court could not decide an issue of fact, particularly where Mr. Evans had not had the opportunity to develop a record on the issue. Finally, the Court concluded that a remand would be inappropriate because the government bore the burden to prove admissibility and did not deserve a second bite at the apple.

Issue 3: Was the evidence nonetheless admissible under the “good faith” exception?

Holding 3: No. The Court held that the “good faith” exception was inapplicable under Smith v. United States, 111 A.3d 1 (D.C. 2014), because the search warrant was based on information obtained in the unlawful entry and did not operate to attentuate that illegality.

Issue 4: Was the evidence sufficient to find beyond a reasonable doubt that Mr. Evans constructively possessed the guns and ammunition?

Holding 4: Yes. Judge McLeese concluded for the Court that the evidence was sufficient to find that Mr. Evans possessed the items because he described the apartment as his, he and Ms. Taylor (but no one else) had been in the apartment shortly before police arrived, the items were in plain view inside the bedrooms, both bedrooms contained men’s clothing, there was no evidence that any other man had control over the apartment, there were no women’s clothes in the apartment, and a reasonable factfinder could conclude that Mr. Evans lived in the first bedroom and that the clothes in the closet were his. Judge Ferren, in a concurring opinion, offered a more simple path to the same conclusion: a factfinder generally may infer that a person constructively possesses items in his home, and here, no facts diluted that inference.

Concurring/Dissenting Opinion: Judge Beckwith joined the majority’s Fourth Amendment rulings and also agreed that the evidence was sufficient to support Mr. Evans’s conviction for possession of the firearm and ammunition in the first bedroom, but disagreed that it was sufficient to show that he constructively possessed the gun in the second bedroom. Judge Beckwith pointed out that the second gun was not in Mr. Evans’s bedroom, was not in plain view, and was not recovered in proximity to Mr. Evans’s personal items, and she noted that evidence linking Mr. Evans to the first gun was insufficient to surmount the circumstances casting doubt upon his possession of the second gun.

Of Note: The decision has useful language about the procedural unfairness of affirming on alternative grounds not asserted in the trial court.  SS