Curry v. United States

520 A.2d 255
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 31, 1987
Docket84-610, 84-661 and 84-867
StatusPublished
Cited by211 cases

This text of 520 A.2d 255 (Curry 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
Curry v. United States, 520 A.2d 255 (D.C. 1987).

Opinion

MACK, Associate Judge:

Three police officers, armed with a search warrant, seized heroin, cocaine and a loaded pistol from an apartment in Northeast Washington. Appellants Patricia Curry, James Jones and Wayne Washington were each charged with possession of heroin with intent to distribute, 1 possession of cocaine with intent to distribute, 2 possession of an unregistered firearm, 3 and unlawful possession of ammunition. 4 The jury found Jones and Washington guilty as charged. They were sentenced to identical terms of imprisonment, totalling from six *259 years and eight months to twenty years, and Jones was fined an additional $75,000 for his drug convictions. The jury acquitted Curry of the drug charges, but returned a guilty verdict on the firearm and ammunition charges. She was sentenced to 180 days imprisonment, all but 30 days to be suspended, with two years of probation to follow her release.

A number of contentions are raised on appeal. We are persuaded by one — that the evidence was insufficient to convict on the firearm and ammunition charges. On those counts, the convictions of all three defendants must be reversed. Curry, having been acquitted by the jury on the drug charges, therefore has no convictions remaining. As for Jones and Washington, the several challenges raised against their drug convictions, while some have merit, do not constitute reversible error.

We reverse all convictions for unlawful possession of the firearm and ammunition; we affirm the convictions of Jones and Washington for possession of heroin and cocaine with intent to distribute.

I

The Government’s Evidence

At about 11:45 p.m. on October 16, 1981, three officers of the Metropolitan Police Department executed a search warrant at Apartment Four of a building in Northeast Washington. On their arrival, the officers noticed a red ribbon on the door of the apartment. At trial, a narcotics expert testified that a distinctive item of that nature is commonly used to signal that a large-scale drug distribution operation is open for business. The officers knocked, announced initially that they were there to investigate a traffic complaint, and entered when Washington opened the door. The officers did not need to use the battering ram they had brought with them.

Jones and Washington were inside the apartment with two women and another man. Curry was not present. The men were searched and the women patted down. All five were then kept in the living room while the police officers conducted their search of the premises. Large quantities of heroin and cocaine were discovered.

Upon their entry, the officers observed Washington seated on a couch in the living room and ordered him to show his hands. Washington refused. Turning his back to the officers, Washington made furtive hand movements. From the couch on which he sat the officers immediately retrieved 3 packets of heroin and a straw. On the coffee table in the same room was a wallet containing numerous credit cards and a money order in the name of Jones. In that wallet were 2 packets of heroin. Heroin was found in two locations in the bedroom. On top of the dresser was 1 foil packet of the drug. In a drawer of the same dresser, the officers found 40 packets of heroin. These packets were contained in 6 “strips,” a form of packaging which the government’s narcotics expert testified made the heroin easily separable into many smaller “decks” of 20 or “bundles” of 5 suitable for street distribution by a retailer known as a “runner.” In a trash receptacle by the rear door, the officers found an envelope containing 9 packets of heroin and $75 in cash.

Cocaine was also seized in abundance. A bag of rice in the bedroom dresser drawer (where the 40 packets of heroin were found) contained 8 packets of cocaine. In the refrigerator was another bag of rice, this one containing 31 packets of cocaine. Detective Dwight Rawls of the Heroin Task Force, the government's narcotics expert, testified that cocaine can be mixed with rice to keep it dry and that its purity can be preserved by refrigeration.

In all, 10,011 milligrams of heroin and 10,496 milligrams of cocaine were found in the apartment.

Two large bags of quinine and manitol were retrieved from the bedroom closet. *260 Detective Rawls told the court that quinine and manitol are used to dilute heroin and cocaine to their normal street strength. Manitol also relieves the constipation suffered by heroin users. The Drug Enforcement Agency’s laboratory analysis of the heroin and cocaine seized from the apartment showed that the drugs had been mixed with quinine or manitol, or both.

A loaded nine-millimeter handgun was found amongst women’s clothing in a nightstand in the bedroom. This pistol did not carry the fingerprints of any of the appellants. None of the three was registered to carry a pistol on the date of their arrest.

In addition to the heroin, cocaine, handgun and ammunition, the officers seized several other items. In the wallet on the living room coffee table, together with two packets of heroin and credit cards in the name of Jones, was a money order receipt dated about a month before the raid took place. The money order was written by Jones in payment of $122 rent for the apartment where the search took place. Other personal belongings identifying Jones as their owner were found on the floor. In the dining area was an envelope containing various papers, including several items of identification in the name of Washington. On top of the dresser in the bedroom, the search team found a change of address card for Curry, in her handwriting, directing the postal service to forward her mail to Apartment Four. Also on top of the dresser was a pouch containing several items of identification in Curry’s name, an address book with her name on the front page, and an envelope mailed to her at another address.

A radio scanner, in plain view, was receiving police broadcasts when the search team entered the apartment. Also in plain view was a “Seal-a-Meal” device which, according to the government’s narcotics expert, could be used to seal the “decks” of narcotics for street sales. This appliance carried the thumbprint of Jones. A total of $1,171 in cash was seized, including $266 from the third man who was present during the search and who unsuccessfully attempted to escape through the back door when the police arrived.

During the raid, Washington identified as his own a set of keys that fit Apartment Four. Another set of apartment keys was found in a jacket in the living room; this jacket fitted Jones and, although he never claimed it as his own, Jones was given it to wear to the police station.

Various papers, notebooks, memo pads and calendar books were recovered from a satchel in the dinette area, and a calendar book was taken from the top of the bedroom dresser where it lay amongst various items belonging to Curry. The government’s handwriting expert, James Miller, studied authentic handwriting samples and, on that basis, attributed the handwriting on the seized documents to the three appellants.

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Bluebook (online)
520 A.2d 255, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/curry-v-united-states-dc-1987.