Davis v. United States

735 A.2d 467, 1999 D.C. App. LEXIS 165, 1999 WL 604076
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedAugust 12, 1999
Docket97-CF-567, 97-CF-761
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 735 A.2d 467 (Davis 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
Davis v. United States, 735 A.2d 467, 1999 D.C. App. LEXIS 165, 1999 WL 604076 (D.C. 1999).

Opinion

SCHWELB, Associate Judge.

This is a case in which an apparent dispute over turf between two groups of very young men had fatal consequences, ending one life and ruining two more. On February 12, 1997, a jury found Marvin A. Sanders, Jr. guilty of first-degree murder while armed 1 and related weapons offenses 2 in connection with the shooting death on June 30, 1995 of Nathaniel Brown. Faouly Davis was found not guilty of first-degree murder, but he was convicted of the lesser included offense of second-degree murder. Both defendants filed timely appeals on various grounds. We affirm.

I.

THE EVIDENCE PRESENTED AT TRIAL

The government’s theory at trial was that Brown was murdered as a result of animosities between certain residents of Florida Park, where Sanders and Davis *470 lived, and young men from Sursum Corda, which was Brown’s neighborhood. These animosities apparently grew out of rivalries between high school cliques. Sanders and Davis, both of them still in their late teens, evidently did not like guys from Sursum Corda “hanging around” Florida Park. In spite of his residence in Sursum Corda, Brown had friends in the rival neighborhood. To visit these friends, Brown would have to intrude upon the defendants’ turf. It was just such an intrusion that is alleged to have led to Brown’s death at the age of eighteen.

David Kinard was a key witness for the government. Kinard testified that on June 30, 1995, Nathaniel Brown rode his bicycle into a park located near the corner of Florida Avenue and First Street in northwest Washington, D.C. Upon arrival, Brown was surrounded by a group of five or six young men, including both of the defendants. According to Kinard, the men boxed Brown in from all sides, inhibiting his movements. Davis stood behind the rear wheel of Brown’s bicycle and helped to prevent Brown from escaping in that direction. According to Kinard, Sanders then shot Brown six times in cold blood. Upon completing his deadly task, Sanders immediately ran off further into the park. Kinard testified that Davis remained on the scene and stood over Brown’s body, gloating and uttering “little slurs,” e.g., “[w]e carry big shit up here. Don’t come up here with that bullshit.”

Kinard, a recent graduate of a Salvation Army drug treatment program, admitted on cross-examination that he had been stabbed and seriously wounded by Sanders a few years earlier, and that his evidence against Sanders had provided him with an “opportunity” 1 for revenge. 3 Kinard was also confronted with his grand jury testimony, which differed in some respects from his evidence at trial with respect to where he was standing when the shooting occurred and as to his ability to observe the events that he was describing. Kinard acknowledged that he did not contact the police immediately after the murder to reveal the identity of the killer. Further, Kinard was impeached with several prior convictions, and he testified that he had agreed to cooperate with the prosecutors in this case in the hope that he would receive some assistance from them with respect to charges then pending against him in Virginia. 4

Kinard’s identification of Sanders as the shooter was corroborated in some measure by several other witnesses. Annette Terry, a woman who lived nearby, testified that after hearing shots ring out in the park, she had seen a person whom she believed to be Sanders run past her home; Ms. Terry did not, however, witness the shooting. 5 Alvin Tapp, an elderly man who admitted that he was consuming alcohol at the time, claimed that he was sitting in the park, four feet from the location of the shooting, and that he saw Sanders fire at Brown; Tapp, too, was heavily impeached. 6 Danny Duncan placed both Davis and Sanders in the park on the evening of June 30, 1995, and he identified Sanders as the shooter, but Duncan’s cred *471 ibility came under heavy defense fire. 7

There was also purported “motive” testimony against both defendants. Duncan claimed that approximately a month and a half before the shooting, he and Davis and other Florida Park residents were shooting dice in a parking lot when Brown came on the scene. According to Duncan, Davis was displeased by Brown’s intrusion and remarked that “if we [got] caught in their neighborhood we wouldn’t get out alive.” Mitchell Johnson testified that, earlier in the summer, Sanders had instructed him to “tell them niggers down there that it’s whatever and stuff like that.” Johnson testified that he understood this perplexing phrase as a coded threat against the residents of Sursum Corda.

Neither defendant took the -witness stand. Davis did not present a defense. Corley King, an intern at the Public Defender Service, was the principal witness for Sanders. According to Ms. King, Ki-nard informed her during an interview that he was testifying against Sanders because Sanders had stabbed him a year earlier and because this was “an easy way to get back at him.” Kinard also allegedly told Ms. King that he did not intend to testify in this case until the prosecutors “cleared up” his charges in Virginia. A police firearms examiner called by Sanders acknowledged that investigating officers had not recovered the murder weapon.

II.

SANDERS’ MOTION TO REOPEN HIS DEFENSE

Of the numerous claims presented by the defendants on this appeal, the only question that merits plenary discussion is whether the trial judge abused his discretion by denying Sanders’ motion to reopen his case after the attorneys had presented their closing arguments and after the judge had instructed the jury. At this belated stage of the trial, Sanders’ counsel sought for the first time to call an additional defense witness, and Sanders now claims that the judge abused his discretion by denying this request. In order to place this issue in its proper context, we must set forth in some detail the unusual series of events that led to the defense motion.

A. The trial court proceedings.

On Thursday, February 5, 1997, the second day of the trial, Kinard testified that his friend Linda Hawkins was with him near the intersection of First Street and Florida Avenue when he saw Sanders shoot Nathaniel Brown in the park. On February 10, 1997, Sanders’ attorney informed the court that she had attempted to subpoena Ms. Hawkins, but that Ms. Hawkins had refused to come to court. According to counsel’s proffer, Ms. Hawkins was expected to testify that she was not with Kinard at the location described by Kinard at the time the shooting occurred. At counsel’s request, the judge issued a bench warrant and gave Sanders’ attorney until the following morning, February 11, to produce Ms. Hawkins as a witness. The judge declined to give the defense additional time because “[t]he defense had the entire weekend to try to subpoena this witness or talk to the witness” and had unduly delayed its attempt to secure her presence.

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Bluebook (online)
735 A.2d 467, 1999 D.C. App. LEXIS 165, 1999 WL 604076, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davis-v-united-states-dc-1999.