Thursday, May 29, 2014
Friday, May 23, 2014
The DCCA clarifies the mens rea for receiving stolen property and writes a model instruction.
The
Players: Judges Fisher, Easterly and Ferren. Opinion by Judge Fisher. William T. Morrison for appellant.
Trial Judge: Heidi Pasichow.
The
Facts: Two days after a Maxima was stolen, Owens was
stopped by the police while driving it.
The ignition was damaged, a side vent window was broken, and it was
being operated with an altered BMW key.
He was convicted of RSP after the judge responded to a jury note asking
for clarification on the required mens rea – whether the defendant possessed
the car “knowing or having reason to believe that the property was
stolen.” Without objection, the judge
instructed the jury that the “reason to believe … determination should be based
upon what a reasonable person would have believed under the facts and
circumstances as you find them.”
Issue: Did the judge commit plain error by instructing
the jury that “reason to believe the property was stolen,” the mens rea for
RSP, was satisfied by an objective standard, i.e., proof that a reasonable
person would have known the car was stolen?
Holding:
The instruction was error because the standard is a subjective one, but
reversal is not required under plain error review on the facts here. If the government is relying on a theory broader
than actual knowledge, the following instruction is recommended as a correct
legal statement:
Element No. 3 requires that the defendant either
knew or had reason to believe that the property was stolen. This state of mind is a subjective one,
focusing on the defendant’s actual state of mind, and not simply on what a
reasonable person might have thought. In
determining whether the government has met its burden of proving the
defendant’s subjective state of mind, you may consider what a reasonable person
would have believed under the facts and circumstances as you find them. But guilty knowledge cannot be established by
demonstrating mere negligence or even foolishness on the part of the defendant. It may, nonetheless, be satisfied by proof
beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant deliberately closed his eyes to
what otherwise would have been obvious to him.
Monday, May 19, 2014
Picking up a knife to defend yourself from a person hurling household objects at you is not “excessive force.”
Shirley Williams v. United States, No. 12-CM-474 (decided May 15,
2014)
The
Players: Judges Beckwith, Easterly, and Belson. Opinion by Judge Belson. Raymond J. Rigat for appellant. Trial Judge: Brian Holeman.
The
Facts: When Ms. Williams came to pick up her children
from their paternal grandparents, a fight broke out between her and the
children’s grandmother, Jennifer Bragg, in an upstairs bedroom. Ms. Williams testified that she retreated
downstairs, where the front door was locked and she could not get out. The government did not call the alleged
victim, but her husband and Ms. Williams both testified that once the women
were downstairs, objects were flying around and breaking. Ms. Williams testified that the complainant
was hurling the objects at her, while the husband testified that he did not
know who threw them. Ms. Williams
testified that she ran to the kitchen and picked up a knife to defend
herself. The Braggs’ son testified that
at this point he came up from the basement and took the knife from Ms. Williams
without a struggle.
The trial judge acquitted Ms. Williams of assault
because the government failed to establish that Bragg was not the first
aggressor in the bedroom. As for the
events downstairs, the trial judge did not resolve the question of who was
hurling the objects but nonetheless convicted Ms. Williams of attempted possession
of a prohibited weapon (knife), D.C. Code § 22-4514(b) (“PPW(b)”), on the
ground that even if Ms. Williams was the victim downstairs – with the
complaining witness throwing objects at her – it was excessive under the
circumstances to pick up and brandish a knife rather than try to find a way to
escape.
Issue: Did the government adduce evidence sufficient
to establish that the defendant’s brandishing of a knife under the
circumstances was not in self-defense?
Read the full opinion here.
Thursday, May 8, 2014
Friday, May 2, 2014
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