Comford v. United States

947 A.2d 1181, 2008 D.C. App. LEXIS 236, 2008 WL 2048005
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 15, 2008
Docket04-CF-123
StatusPublished
Cited by93 cases

This text of 947 A.2d 1181 (Comford 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
Comford v. United States, 947 A.2d 1181, 2008 D.C. App. LEXIS 236, 2008 WL 2048005 (D.C. 2008).

Opinion

GLICKMAN, Associate Judge:

Appellant Rahveed Comford was convicted after a jury trial of carrying a pistol without a license, possession of an unregistered firearm, and unlawful possession of ammunition. He claims the trial judge erred by allowing the government to introduce evidence of his purported admission *1183 that he possessed the weapon. We hold that appellant failed to preserve his objection to this evidence, and that its introduction was not plain error.

I.

On the evening of March 21, 2008, Sharif Holt borrowed his mother’s car and picked up appellant and a second passenger, Gregory Stratford, to go to a party in Southeast Washington. At approximately 1:80 the following morning, a Metropolitan Police Officer stopped the car for running a stop sign and not having its headlights on. The officer called for police backup after appellant, who was sitting alone in the back seat, opened the rear door and began to throw up. All three occupants of the vehicle appeared to be intoxicated. Upon seeing an open bottle of vodka, the police arrested them for underage possession of alcohol.

In a search of the car incident to the arrests, the police found a handgun underneath appellant’s sweatshirt on the backseat. There were seven bullets in the weapon. When an officer picked up the sweatshirt, an eighth, matching bullet fell out of it to the ground. According to one of the arresting officers who testified at trial, Holt became “extremely upset, crying on the scene,” after the gun was discovered, while Stratford (the front passenger seat) was “nonchalant.” Appellant, who remained “noncooperative with any information,” 1 was the only person charged with possessing the firearm and ammunition.

Before the government called Holt to the stand at trial, defense counsel raised a “preliminary matter” regarding his testimony. Counsel explained that Holt’s grand jury testimony, which the prosecutor had just turned over to the defense, indicated appellant had made statements to Holt that, arguably, should have been disclosed earlier under Criminal Rule 16. 2 The prosecutor denied the existence of any “custodial statements” by appellant. Rather, the prosecutor proffered, “Sharif Holt, the driver of the car, asked Mr. Comford how the gun got in his car, several times, and Mr. Comford refused to answer.” Thus, the prosecutor concluded, appellant made no statement at all. Defense counsel disagreed and represented that Holt told the grand jury appellant “dodged the question,” implying “something was said and we don’t know what.” No further information was provided to the trial judge during this colloquy regarding the circumstances under which Holt questioned appellant about the gun or how appellant responded.

Defense counsel suggested the government be sanctioned for not fulfilling its discovery obligations under Criminal Rule 16. In addition, counsel asked for an in limine ruling precluding the government from eliciting any testimony about appellant’s failure to answer Holt as evidence of consciousness of guilt. Citing Federal Rule of Evidence 403, counsel asserted without explanation that such testimony would be irrelevant and “highly” prejudicial.

The trial judge commented that Holt’s question was not a statement “submitted for the truth of the matter asserted,” and appellant’s ensuing silence was merely his conduct — it was “just what happened.” Further, the judge stated, appellant’s silence was “relevant” and “probative in the context of the case,” and appellant had identified no specific danger of unfair prejudice. Consequently, the judge rejected appellant’s requests for discovery sanc *1184 tions and exclusion of Holt’s anticipated testimony pursuant to Rule 403.

When Holt later took the stand, additional facts emerged regarding his inquiry of appellant. The relevant portion of the prosecutor’s direct examination of Holt proceeded as follows:

Q. Do you know how that gun got in the car that night?
A. I do not have a clue.
Q. Did you ever have occasion to ask Mr. Comford how that gun got in the car?
A. After I was sitting on the curb in handcuffs, I did have occasion to ask him.
Q. Did you ask him any other times as well?
A. I asked him, but there wasn’t any response.
Q. Did he answer your question?
A. No, sir.
Q. You said that Mr. Comford was hurling or throwing up. Just how intoxicated was he?
A. Well, he seemed pretty messed up to me.
Q. Was he able to answer questions?
A. To the cops?
Q. To the police officers.
A. I don’t remember him answering any questions. I don’t know if he was able to answer questions or not.
Q. Was he able to stand?
A. Not really, sir.
Q. How much alcohol had you seen him consume?
A. I don’t know the amount of cups, but the bottle was almost gone between the three of us.

On cross-examination, Holt confirmed appellant had been vomiting and said he was lying supine on the pavement in handcuffs following his arrest.

Contrary to the earlier proffers, Holt did not say appellant “refused” to answer him or “dodged” his inquiry. If anything, Holt indicated appellant was so drunk his silence might not have been volitional. The other new information Holt revealed was that he and appellant were in police custody when Holt interrogated appellant about the gun. Despite these new facts, defense counsel did not renew his objection to Holt’s testimony.

In his closing and rebuttal arguments, the prosecutor exhorted the jury to consider appellant’s silence as compelling proof of his guilt:

Finally, the most crucial piece of evidence of all. His friend asked him where that gun — how that gun got there.... Now, what we know is that Mr. Holt asked him several times, how did this gun get there? This is not the police asking him this. This is a friend. This is — they’re not best friends, but this is a person that picked him up, a person who drove him to the party and said, where did this gun come from? Where did this gun come from? Where did this gun come from?
Did Mr. Comford deny it? Did he say no, it’s not my gun? I don’t know how it got there? Did he say that gun was there the whole night? I’ve been back there that night. I’ve seen it, I just forgot to say to you. He didn’t say anything. And by not saying anything, he spoke far louder than I could ever speak, far louder than any other testimony could ever speak.

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Bluebook (online)
947 A.2d 1181, 2008 D.C. App. LEXIS 236, 2008 WL 2048005, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/comford-v-united-states-dc-2008.