Azariah Israel & Ronald Marquet Cheadle v. United States

109 A.3d 594, 2014 D.C. App. LEXIS 516
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 26, 2014
Docket09-CF-687+
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 109 A.3d 594 (Azariah Israel & Ronald Marquet Cheadle v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District of Columbia Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Azariah Israel & Ronald Marquet Cheadle v. United States, 109 A.3d 594, 2014 D.C. App. LEXIS 516 (D.C. 2014).

Opinion

THOMPSON, Associate Judge:

Following a seven-week jury trial, appellants Ronald Marquet Cheadle and Azari-ah Israel were convicted of murder, robbery, conspiracy, obstruction of justice, and weapons charges. 1 After the trial court denied their motions for new trials, they filed these consolidated appeals, in which we consider claims that the trial court (1) erred in rejecting appellants’ claim that African Americans were underrepresented in and systematically excluded from jury venires at the time appellants’ petit jury was selected (the “fair cross-section claim”); (2) allowed improper rebuttal argument by the prosecutor; (3) improperly removed a juror during deliberations (the “juror removal claim”); (4) erroneously denied Israel’s motion for a new trial after joinder was shown to have been prejudicial; and (5) erred in denying Cheadle’s new-trial motion premised on a claim that the weight of the evidence did not support the jury’s verdicts.

Following oral arguments before this court in November 2012, we remanded the cases for additional proceedings related to *598 appellants’ fair cross-section and juror removal claims. The Superior Court issued its Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law on Remand in November 2013. Thereafter, the parties filed supplemental briefs as to both claims, completing the briefing on April 1, 2014. Having reviewed the trial court’s supplemental findings and considered the arguments raised in appellants’ initial and supplemental briefs, we now affirm the judgments of conviction and the denial of appellants’ new-trial motions.

I. Background

The charges on which appellants were tried relate to the murders of Asheile George, Elias Atkins, and Pierre Johnson. The government alleged that the Atkins and Johnson murders were committed pursuant to a conspiracy to obstruct justice by silencing witnesses who might provide inculpatory testimony about Cheadle’s role in the murder of George and then of Atkins.

A.The Asheile George Murder

The government presented evidence that, on September 14, 2002, Cheadle, Atkins, and Michael Craig committed an armed robbery and an attempted armed robbery in the 500 block of Kenyon Street, N.W. Government witnesses testified that the three men approached Kenyon Street driving in a van, confronted a group of men (including George) who were playing a game of craps on the street, and “stuck everybody up[,j” and that Atkins and another robber then crossed the street to rob another group of people who were sitting in a car. A gun battle ensued after one of the victims began to defend himself, and six people, including Cheadle and George, were shot. George eventually died of his wounds. Renee Beach, the mother of Cheadle’s child, acknowledged at trial that she testified before the grand jury that Cheadle told her that he had been shot while walking to his car on Kenyon Street. The jury also heard the grand jury testimony of Cheadle’s friend Michael Matthews, who testified that Cheadle told him that the injury occurred when Cheadle “went on a mission to rob somebody[.]”

B.The Elias Atkins Murder

According to Michael Matthews’s grand jury testimony, in the months following the Kenyon Street robbery, Cheadle became concerned about the possibility that Atkins “might tell.” On March 11, 2003, six months after the Kenyon Street incident, Cheadle and Matthews visited Atkins at the apartment of Arlene Morris, where Atkins was staying. During the visit, Cheadle, Matthews, and Atkins conferred in Morris’s son’s bedroom, while Morris was in another room. Morris testified that, shortly thereafter, she heard shots being fired in her son’s room. She looked out into the hallway and saw Matthews fleeing from her son’s room with nothing in his hands. After hearing more gunshots coming from her son’s room, she hid in a closet, emerging later to find Atkins’s body on the floor. Matthews told the grand jury that he saw Cheadle pull out a gun and ran out of the apartment after he heard a shot. Cheadle later told Matthews that he (Cheadle) shot Atkins again after Atkins ran out of the room and that Matthews should “say nothing” about the incident.

C.The Pierre Johnson Murder

On March 14, 2003, Cheadle was arrested for the Atkins murder and thereafter was housed in the same area of the D.C. Jail as his childhood friend Pierre Johnson. Appearing before a grand jury in May 2003, Johnson testified that, while he and Cheadle were incarcerated together, Chea-dle confessed to killing Atkins. At approx *599 imately 1:30 a.m. on October 10, 2004, Johnson was shot and killed near the corner of 14th and V streets, N.W. George Haynes, another childhood friend of Chea-dle, testified that he was standing with some friends outside a gas station nearby when he saw Israel emerge from behind some cars wearing a mask that covered the lower portion of his face. Haynes testified that Johnson started to flee as soon as he spotted Israel, but that Israel fired five or six shots at the fleeing Johnson before running through an alley away from the scene. Haynes testified that he-“understood that [Johnson] was going to get killed because he was telling” about Cheadle’s involvement in the Atkins murder and that Israel had told him he was going to kill Johnson. Haynes further testified that, after Johnson had been killed, Israel approached Haynes and another man and asked them if they had seen “his work” and clarified that he was referring to the Johnson murder. About a week after Johnson was murdered, Israel told Haynes that men known as “Little MoMo” and “Little Clay” were also to be killed because they were “telling on” Cheadle for the Atkins murder.

D. Obstruction of Justice with Respect to Matthews

During the time period between the Atkins murder and the Johnson murder, while Cheadle and Johnson were still in jail together, Michael Matthews began cooperating with the government. On March 15, 2003, he gave a videotaped statement describing the Atkins shooting, and on March 17, 2003, he testified before the grand jury. In May and June of 2004, Matthews visited Cheadle several times at the D.C. Jail and had conversations with Cheadle that were recorded by the jail. After those jail visits, Matthews went missing, failing to appear to testify in Cheadle’s trial, which was scheduled to start in July of 2004 but had to be delayed after Matthews could not be found. At appellants’ trial in 2009, Matthews claimed to have no memory of Atkins’s murder even though he had given details about it to the grand jury.

II. Analysis

A. The Fair Cross-Section Claim

Cheadle filed a pre-trial motion in which he sought an opportunity for discovery on jury selection procedures, arguing that the District’s jury selection process “systematically excludes and underrepresents African Americans in violation of both the United States Constitution and the District of Columbia Jury System Act.” The trial court denied the motion, a ruling that both appellants challenged in their opening briefs on appeal. The government conceded in its brief that the trial court’s summary denial of the motion was improper in light of this court’s opinion in Game v. United States,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
109 A.3d 594, 2014 D.C. App. LEXIS 516, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/azariah-israel-ronald-marquet-cheadle-v-united-states-dc-2014.