Ahmer Shaikh v. Commonwealth

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedJanuary 25, 2005
Docket2614034
StatusUnpublished

This text of Ahmer Shaikh v. Commonwealth (Ahmer Shaikh v. Commonwealth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ahmer Shaikh v. Commonwealth, (Va. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA

Present: Judges Benton, Bumgardner and Kelsey Argued at Alexandria, Virginia

AHMER SHAIKH MEMORANDUM OPINION* BY v. Record No. 2614-03-4 JUDGE D. ARTHUR KELSEY JANUARY 25, 2005 COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF FAIRFAX COUNTY David T. Stitt, Judge

James G. Connell, III (Devine & Connell, P.L.C., on briefs), for appellant.

Virginia B. Theisen, Assistant Attorney General (Jerry W. Kilgore, Attorney General, on brief), for appellee.

A jury convicted the appellant, Ahmer Shaikh, of second-degree murder for participating

with another in the beating and stabbing death of Zahid Ali. On appeal, Shaikh claims the trial

court erred by (a) dismissing two veniremen from the jury panel, and (b) failing to give the jury a

separate definitional instruction to amplify the standard concert of action instruction. We find

neither ground sufficient to warrant a reversal of Shaikh’s conviction.

I.

Zahid Ali died of injuries received during an attack by Shaikh and Faisal Rehman,

Shaikh’s brother-in-law. Zahid had been having an affair with Humaira, Rehman’s wife and

Shaikh’s sister. The family found out about the adulterous relationship and expressed their angry

disapproval. Zahid went to the family’s apartment (where Shaikh, his younger brother, and his

sister and husband, all lived with Shaikh’s father) to discuss the situation with Humaira’s father.

* Pursuant to Code § 17.1-413, this opinion is not designated for publication. When Zahid arrived, the younger brother called Shaikh on his cell phone. Minutes later,

Shaikh arrived at the house to find Zahid sitting on the couch. Family members had to restrain

Shaikh. Rehman then came into the room with a knife and began stabbing Zahid. Breaking free

from his relatives, Shaikh joined in the attack by hitting Zahid in the head with a stick. Humaira

returned to the living room and found Zahid against a wall covered in blood. Humaira tried to

cover Zahid’s head wounds with a scarf as Shaikh and Rehman continued to attack him. Zahid

dove off a second-story balcony to escape his attackers. Shaikh then grabbed the knife, threw it

in a pot of water, and then called 911 with a false report of an unknown intruder who “came into

our house and attacked us with a knife.” Zahid died later from the multiple stab wounds to his

head, neck, and upper body.

Shaikh was tried by a jury for Zahid’s murder. During the jury selection process, the trial

court began with a panel of twenty-three prospective jurors. In its preliminary questions, the

court asked whether anyone was “a party to a case that’s set for trial during this jury term?”

Panel member Steven Mastric said he was scheduled to be in court the next morning for the

disposition of a marijuana possession charge to which he previously pled guilty. Mastric was

unsure what to expect, as he had failed a urine test but was contesting the results. The last

hearing, Mastric recalled, lasted about an hour and a half. Given this “logistical problem” and

that Mastric was “contesting something with the prosecutor’s office,” the trial court excused

Mastric from the venire.

The court also asked whether any panel member had a problem “understanding the

English language . . . that might impair your ability to sit on the trial of this case.” Ahmad Siam

indicated that he can “understand like ninety percent. Some heavy words, I don’t understand.”

There had already been words used by the counsel and the judge, Siam said, that he did not fully

understand. Though he used English in daily life, Siam relied on his children to translate

-2- unfamiliar words. The court accepted Siam’s responses as “candid” and dismissed him from the

venire due to his lack of proficiency in English.

At the conclusion of voir dire, the court empanelled twelve jurors and one alternate.

“This panel is acceptable, Judge,” Shaikh’s counsel noted. The Commonwealth then put on its

evidence. Prior to the commencement of the defense case in chief, the trial judge asked counsel

if they had agreed on a final set of jury instructions. They advised the court that they had agreed

on all but one, the instruction on “concert of action.” The Commonwealth proposed the model

jury instruction, which stated:

The court instructs the jury that if there is concert of action with the resulting crime one of its incidental probable consequences, then whether such crime was originally contemplated or not, all who participate in any way in bringing it about are equally answerable and bound by the acts of every other person connected with the consummation of such resulting crime.

1 Virginia Model Jury Instructions, Criminal, No. 3.160, at I-75 (1998).

Shaikh claimed the model instruction was accurate, but incomplete. He proposed that the

court use Instruction R, which relied upon specific definitions of the concert of action concept

used in Virginia appellate opinions. The prosecutor objected to Instruction R because “it leaves

out some relevant language . . . some pretty important things too, and that’s the problem with

this.” “If we are going to start putting in the language,” the prosecutor added, “I guess we’ve got

to put in all of it.”

The trial court record, however, does not include Instruction R. The only mention of its

text appears in counsel’s oral argument: “And you can see the words there, ‘Concert of action is

an action that’s been planned, arranged, adjusted, agreed on or settled between the parties acting

together . . .’ etcetera.” The remainder of the Instruction R ⎯ the etcetera portion ⎯ does not

appear in the record.

-3- The trial judge rejected Instruction R, noting that “in case after case, the appellate courts

have cautioned against pulling language out of particular cases.” The judge also found

Instruction R was itself incomplete given the absence of the caveat noted by the prosecutor.

After the court ruled, Shaikh’s counsel asked to be reheard on the subject. In response, the

prosecutor said he would withdraw his objection to Instruction R if he and Shaikh could agree on

including additional language addressing his caveat. The trial court agreed, in principle, to give

the proposed instruction with an agreed-upon edit. Later, when counsel could not agree with the

final text of the proposed instruction, the trial judge directed counsel to provide him with case

authorities in support of their respective positions.

After the close of all the evidence, the court again heard arguments concerning the

concert of action issue. Shaikh’s counsel requested that the court issue a “compromise” version

of Instruction R, arguing that it had been rewritten to balance both sides’ views of the

definitional limits of the concert of action concept. The prosecutor objected because Shaikh’s

counsel “culled” from appellate court opinions language that might “mislead this jury to think

that there has to be some level of concrete agreement or settling -- and I don’t even know what

settling is supposed to mean really -- that is not required.” The trial court rejected the

“compromise” version of Instruction R. Like the original proposal, the “compromise” version

nowhere appears in the trial court record.

After the jurors retired to deliberate, they passed to the court a written question asking

whether the concert of action instruction should be read in conjunction with the instruction

defining a principal in the second degree.

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