Broadie v. United States

925 A.2d 605, 2007 D.C. App. LEXIS 329, 2007 WL 1624363
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 7, 2007
Docket00-CF-906
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 925 A.2d 605 (Broadie 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
Broadie v. United States, 925 A.2d 605, 2007 D.C. App. LEXIS 329, 2007 WL 1624363 (D.C. 2007).

Opinion

TERRY, Senior Judge:

Appellant Broadie was charged in an indictment with one count of first-degree murder while armed and one count of carrying a dangerous weapon (“CDW”). After a jury trial, he was convicted of the lesser included offense of voluntary manslaughter while armed (“VMWA”). The jury acquitted him of first-degree murder while armed, the lesser included offense of second-degree murder while armed, and CDW. On appeal he presents two claims of error. First, appellant contends, for three separate and independent reasons, that the trial court erred when it refused to instruct the jury on the lesser included offense of unarmed voluntary manslaughter. He also maintains that the trial court erred by giving the jury a “no duty to retreat” instruction because there was no evidentiary basis for it. We reject all of these arguments and sub-arguments and affirm the conviction.

I

A. The Government’s Evidence

On the morning of July 27, 1998, nineteen-year-old Shanita Baylor and her friend Anika Cooper were drinking beer outside the home of Cooper’s mother at 4006 Eighth Street, S.E. At the same time, Morkina Broadie, who is appellant’s cousin, was visiting her grandmother in the same block of Eighth Street. After Baylor made a remark to Morkina’s boy friend, Baylor and Morkina argued “off and on” throughout the afternoon. At one point, Morkina asked her friend Charvelle Fernandez to find help; Fernandez left and returned to the scene of the argument with appellant. Appellant discussed the situation with Cooper’s boy friend, Donnie Bar-no, and everyone agreed to “squash” the argument. After appellant left, however, the argument did not end.

Later in the afternoon, as Morkina was about to get into Fernandez’s car to drive home, Baylor approached Morkina and asked her if she wanted to fight. Cooper then displayed a small “kitchen knife,” 1 *609 and Morkina’s sister, Marsha Broadie, retrieved a knife from her car. 2 Donnie Barno, with the assistance of a neighbor, broke up the argument and brought Baylor and Cooper back across the street to Cooper’s mother’s house before any fighting occurred. Morkina again told Fernandez to go for help, and she returned shortly thereafter with appellant.

When appellant arrived this time, Baylor, Cooper, and Barno were all standing near 4006 Eighth Street. Appellant walked over to them and asked who had a “problem” with Morkina. 3 Morkina and Fernandez also came across the street to where Baylor, Cooper, and Barno were standing. 4 While appellant was speaking to the group, Cooper pulled out a knife, and Baylor took out a can of mace. 5 According to Cooper’s testimony, appellant told Baylor, “Go ahead and mace me.... I got something for you,” adding that he was “going to put five of them up in her.” 6 At that point Baylor sprayed the mace in appellant’s face, but some of the mace also landed on Morkina and on Cooper’s mother. Baylor then turned around and ran away from appellant, toward the rear of the house where they had all been standing. Others who were present also began running, but they went in different directions. Appellant was the only one who chased after Baylor. 7

Cooper’s eleven-year-old brother, Benjamin Minkins, was the only witness who saw what happened next. From the corner of 4000 Eighth Street, Minkins saw appellant approach Baylor and “grab [] her by the arm and hit her in the chest.” 8 Although he saw blood on Baylor’s chest, he did not see anything in appellant’s hand. Appellant then kicked Baylor in the head after she fell over some steps. Baylor, who had blood on both the front and back of her shirt, managed to stand up and run away, but eventually she collapsed in the middle of Eighth Street. As appellant left the scene, he passed fourteen-year-old Rodney Posey, who testified that he saw a knife in appellant’s hand. 9 The police later *610 recovered the can of mace that Baylor used, but they did not find a knife anywhere in the vicinity.

The court also admitted into evidence Baylor’s autopsy report, which stated that Baylor died from two stab wounds. The government then called Deputy Chief Medical Examiner Dr. Jacqueline Lee, an expert in the field of forensic pathology, to explain the autopsy report and Baylor’s wounds. 10 Dr. Lee stated that Baylor had a one-and-a-quarter-inch stab wound in the left side of her back (which we shall call the “back wound” or “first stabbing”) 11 that was five to six inches deep. That wound passed through the muscles beneath the skin, between two ribs, through the left lung, and into the left chest cavity. The back wound ran from left to right at an upward angle. According to Dr. Lee, this wound was consistent with a person pulling Baylor by her left arm with one hand and inserting a knife with the other hand in an upward fashion toward the right. In addition, Dr. Lee said, “The irregularity in the wound noted by both the scrape and by the irregularity or tear at the wound indicate[d] that there was movement of the knife or movement of the body.”

The other wound (the “chest wound” or “second stabbing”), on the right side of the chest, was five to six inches deep. It went through the breastbone, two major arteries at the top of the heart, and then into the left lung. Dr. Lee explained that it would take “a great deal of force for the knife to actually pass through bone,” and that this wound was made in “a downward thrust passing from the right side to the left side and downward,” consistent with someone raising the knife and coming down at the person being stabbed. Both wounds, the doctor said, were likely made by “a single edged knife,” such as “a table knife or a steak knife.” 12 She also stated that the autopsy reported listed the cause of death as “stab wounds to chest and back.” However, when asked by the pros *611 ecutor if either stab wound by itself could have caused Baylor’s death, Dr. Lee answered, “Yes.”

Finally, the government offered into evidence a letter that appellant wrote to Morkina Broadie on October 6, 1998, in which he asked whether her boy friend, Tony Monroe, would be a witness and “say ... that I didn’t have a knife ... and that ... [Baylor] had a knife and mace and that she had been smoking and drinking.” The defense sought to exclude this letter as prejudicial, but the trial court allowed it to be admitted. Appellant later testified that he wrote the letter to find witnesses, because he was worried that a letter that his grandmother had received from “some sniper guy” would scare away potential defense witnesses.

B. The Defense Evidence

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Bluebook (online)
925 A.2d 605, 2007 D.C. App. LEXIS 329, 2007 WL 1624363, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/broadie-v-united-states-dc-2007.