Jacqueline Frey v. United States (decided May 5, 2016).
Players: Associate
Judges Thompson and McLeese, and Senior Judge King. Opinion by McLeese. Trial
Judge: Ann O’Regan Keary. Jeffrey Light for Ms. Frey.
Facts: At about
6:30 a.m. on June 24, 2014, Ms. Frey was found asleep at an employee’s desk in
a restricted area of the Library of Congress’s Adams Building, which though
open to the public during the day was closed at that time. Also, in order to
get to the desk where she was sleeping, Ms. Frey had to pass through areas that
are not at any time open to the public. Ms. Frey testified she had entered the
building at 3:30 p.m. the day before, when it was open, and fell asleep in the
reading room. When she woke up, the building was closed and she began walking
around until she made her way to the office where she was later arrested. After
a bench trial, she was convicted of unlawful entry in violation of D.C. Code
§22-3302.
Issue: Did the trial court err in deciding that
Ms. Frey was not entitled to a jury trial?
Holding: Yes. The
unlawful entry statute is divided into two parts. Subsection (a) prohibits
unlawful entry into “any private dwelling, building, or other property,” and
violations of this subsection are punishable by a fine, imprisonment for not
more than 180 days, or both. Subsection (b) prohibits unlawful entry into “any
public building, or other property, or part of such building, or other
property,” and violations of this subsection are punishable by a fine,
imprisonment for not more than six months, or both. Thus, since someone charged
with an offense punishable by more than 180 days’ imprisonment has a statutory
right to a jury trial, anyone charged under subsection (b) has a right to a
jury trial.
In this case, the information filed did not specify which
subsection Ms. Frey was accused of violating. The government conceded that the
Adams Building of the Library of Congress is a public building, but argued Ms.
Frey was subject to subsection (a) because she was found inside the building at
a time when it was not open to the public and in a room that is never open to
the public.
The Court disagreed with the government’s argument. The
Court reasoned that “[i]n light of the United States’s acknowledgment that the
Adams Building is a public building rather than a private building, it seems to
follow that Ms. Frey entered a public building, as well as various parts of a
public building, and did not enter a private building or any part of a private
building. Ms. Frey’s conduct therefore appears to have violated subsection (b),
rather than subsection (a).” The focus is on where the person entered, in this
case a public building, and not specifically where inside that building or when
the person was found.
In 2009, the unlawful entry statute had been divided into
two parts, as the D.C. Council wished to draw a distinction between private and
public buildings, and buildings where someone would have First Amendment
protections. The government claimed this meant the building must be considered
“private” because the Council only wanted to give more protections to people
who entered private buildings due to their First Amendment rights but that no
one has a First Amendment right to be in a building when it is closed. The
Court disagreed: “By preserving a jury-trial right in all prosecutions for
unlawfully entering public buildings, the Council apparently chose instead to
draw a more easily administrable line [than the one the government was asking
the court to draw]. In such circumstances, we must adhere to the broader
language the Council chose, and we may not artificially limit the statute to
the particular circumstances that gave rise to the Council’s concern.”
Also, the Court noted that legislative history indicated the
Council understood the jury-trial right would be “tied to the public character
of the building as a whole, not to specific areas within a building.” The Court
concluded that a defendant charged with unlawful entry has a right to a jury
trial if the building itself is a public building, even if the defendant is
found at a time when the building is closed or in an area within the building
not open to the public. BM
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