Bates v. United States

51 A.3d 501, 2012 WL 3854612, 2012 D.C. App. LEXIS 464
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 6, 2012
DocketNo. 08-CF-913
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 51 A.3d 501 (Bates 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
Bates v. United States, 51 A.3d 501, 2012 WL 3854612, 2012 D.C. App. LEXIS 464 (D.C. 2012).

Opinion

GLICKMAN, Associate Judge:

A jury convicted appellant, Donald Bates, of three counts of robbery and one count of credit card fraud. Two of the robberies, both of them purse snatchings, were committed on consecutive days in March 2006. The third robbery, also a purse snatching, and the fraudulent use of the victim’s credit card occurred on the same day in September 2007.

On appeal, though appellant does not challenge his conviction for the 2007 robbery, he seeks reversal of his convictions for the 2006 robberies and for credit card fraud. He makes two principal claims. First, appellant contends, the trial court abused its discretion in denying his severance motion, in which he sought a separate trial on the 2006 charges. The court found that severance was unwarranted because the evidence of appellant’s participation in the 2007 robbery would help prove his identity as one of the perpetrators of the prior offenses. Second, appellant asserts, the court erred in denying his motion to suppress incriminating admissions he made when police interrogated him about the 2006 robberies without giving him Miranda warnings. The court denied the motion because appellant was not in police custody when the interrogation took place. In addition to the foregoing claims, appellant also challenges the sufficiency of the evidence, the aiding and abetting instruction, and the court’s response to an inquiry from the deliberating jury.

We uphold the trial court’s rulings on appellant’s motions, and we conclude that appellant’s remaining claims lack merit. Accordingly, we affirm appellant’s convictions.

I. Factual Background

A. The 2006 Robberies

The first robbery occurred on the evening of March 10, 2006. As Bibi Doobay was walking home, a man passed her on the sidewalk and then turned around and grabbed the purse off her shoulder from behind. Doobay described the robber as African-American and relatively short. After he snatched her purse, she saw him enter the passenger side of a large, older-model Buick or similar vehicle, which drove away. Two witnesses to the robbery called 911 and reported that the car [505]*505had a D.C. license plate with the number BX-5228. One of those witnesses described the purse snatcher at trial as a young African-American man, around five feet ten inches tall, and the getaway car as an old, large, boxy vehicle being driven by an African-American male. Shortly after the robbery, a stolen credit card in Doc-bay’s purse was used to purchase gasoline at a gas station.

The second robbery occurred the next day. As Andrea Gudeon walked home from a Safeway grocery store, someone ran up behind her, grabbed her tote bag off her shoulder, and then jumped into the passenger side of an older-model car. As the car sped off, Gudeon saw that its license plate number was BX-5228. Gu-deon described the robber as a non-Caucasian man, about five feet nine inches tall, who was wearing a hat or a hood. She could not provide a description of the driver of the getaway vehicle. The stolen bag contained some groceries, Gudeoris cell phone, and her wallet, which held cash, credit cards, grocery store discount cards, and the security card to Gudeon’s office building. Later on the day of the robbery, Gudeoris stolen credit cards were used at two different gas stations.

Through the license plate number, the police identified the getaway car in the two purse snatchings as a 1986 Buick Regal belonging to Margaret Bates, appellant’s mother. On the night of March 11, 2006, police found the vehicle parked on the street. They put it under surveillance, and at around 4:30 the following morning, they saw appellant approach the car. Detective Neil Jones, accompanied by other officers, stopped him and informed him that they believed the car had been used in connection with criminal activity in the last few days. Appellant responded that the “vehicle couldn’t have been involved in anything illegal because it was in his possession the whole time.... he[ was] the only one that had possession of this vehicle-his mother’s vehicle.” (At trial, appellant’s mother testified that appellant had primary use of the car, that she had not given anyone else permission to drive it, and that her son did not have any other ear.)

The police seized the Buick and had it towed to an evidence bay to be searched. Before they moved the car, appellant asked if he could retrieve his jacket from the passenger compartment. Detective Jones did not allow him to do so. Upon searching the car, the police recovered Bibi Doobay’s cell phone from the pocket of the jacket, along with a piece of paper bearing appellant’s name. They also recovered Andrea Gudeon’s security card from the front passenger floor board, and a tote bag containing two bags of Safeway groceries. Appellant was arrested when he subsequently visited the police station to retrieve the car. In a search of his person incident to his arrest, the police found Gudeoris grocery store discount cards.

B. The 2007 Robbery and Credit Card Fraud

The third purse snatching was on September 22, 2007. As Loren Bausell was walking down the street alone, she noticed a car — which she identified as an older Buick or Oldsmobile — stop in the middle of the street. A man exited the car from the passenger side. When Bausell made eye contact with him, the man bent over to inspect the car’s tire. She kept walking, but then heard the car pull up behind her. The man she had just seen jumped out of the passenger side of the car, ran at her while screaming obscenities, threw her to the ground, and grabbed her purse. He then reentered the car on the passenger side. As the vehicle drove off, Bausell [506]*506took note of its licence plate number: BX-5228. She also saw that the driver was a woman. Several hours after the robbery, Bausell identified appellant from a police photo array as the man who had knocked her down and stolen her purse. (At trial, she identified appellant in person.)

One of Bausell’s stolen credit cards was used at.a gas station on the day of the robbery. A detective visited the station that afternoon and viewed a video which showed a car pulling into the station and parking at a pump at the same time Bau-sell’s card was used. The station attendant told the detective that she recalled the car vividly because she saw a man and woman kissing inside it.

That same day, the police, having obtained a warrant for appellant’s arrest, went to his house. Appellant’s mother told them he was not there, and that he had her car.1

II. Denial of Severance

Appellant claims the trial court abused its discretion in denying his motion for severance because the evidence that he committed the 2007 purse snatching unfairly prejudiced his ability to defend against the 2006 robbery charges. The trial court acknowledged the possibility that the jury might engage in improper propensity reasoning and find that, because appellant committed a purse snatching in 2007, he was likely to have done it in 2006 as well. However, the court concluded, because the same car was used as the getaway vehicle in all three robberies (as shown by its license plate and other indications), the evidence that appellant used it to commit the 2007 purse snatching would be admissible to prove his identity as the perpetrator of the 2006 purse snatchings even if the charges were tried separately.

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Bluebook (online)
51 A.3d 501, 2012 WL 3854612, 2012 D.C. App. LEXIS 464, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bates-v-united-states-dc-2012.