Dwayne Lamont Sample, Jr. v. Commonwealth of Virginia

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedJune 28, 2022
Docket0161211
StatusUnpublished

This text of Dwayne Lamont Sample, Jr. v. Commonwealth of Virginia (Dwayne Lamont Sample, Jr. v. Commonwealth of Virginia) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Dwayne Lamont Sample, Jr. v. Commonwealth of Virginia, (Va. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA

Present: Judges Beales, AtLee and Chaney UNPUBLISHED

Argued at Norfolk, Virginia

DWAYNE LAMONT SAMPLE, JR. MEMORANDUM OPINION* BY v. Record No. 0161-21-1 JUDGE RANDOLPH A. BEALES JUNE 28, 2022 COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF NORTHAMPTON COUNTY W. Revell Lewis III, Judge

Tucker L. Watson for appellant.

Sharon M. Carr, Assistant Attorney General (Mark R. Herring,1 Attorney General, on brief), for appellee.

Dwayne Lamont Sample, Jr., appeals an order of the Circuit Court of Northampton County

convicting him of attempted robbery. On appeal, Sample challenges the trial court’s denial of his

motion to suppress the out-of-court identification of him and the in-court identification of him made

by the victim of the attempted robbery. He also argues that the evidence was insufficient to convict

him of attempted robbery.

I. BACKGROUND

“In accordance with familiar principles of appellate review, the facts will be stated in the

light most favorable to the Commonwealth, [as] the prevailing party at trial.” Gerald v.

Commonwealth, 295 Va. 469, 472 (2018) (quoting Scott v. Commonwealth, 292 Va. 380, 381

(2016)). On September 17, 2019, around 10:00 p.m., Mark Angiulli (“Angiulli”) was loading

* Pursuant to Code § 17.1-413, this opinion is not designated for publication. 1 Jason S. Miyares succeeded Mark R. Herring as Attorney General on January 15, 2022. granite onto a trailer with his son, Domenic Angiulli (“Domenic”), outside of the garage doors of

a warehouse in Exmore in Northampton County when a man approached Angiulli and pointed a

gun at him while Angiulli was sitting on a forklift seat about three or four feet off the ground.

Angiulli testified at trial that the man said, “Give me your wallet!” and then added, “Give me

your effing wallet!” Angiulli stated that the man then “kept coming toward me” and approached

within two or three feet—and that the man turned the gun toward Angiulli’s face in such a position

that Angiulli could easily see the barrel of the gun. He noted that the warehouse had LED lights

shining out of the garage doors. Angiulli then said that he recognized that the weapon was

probably a BB gun, jumped at the man, and twisted it away from the man’s grasp as both men hit

the ground. During this confrontation and struggle, Angiulli testified that he was “face-to-face”

with the perpetrator. He stated that the gun then flew out of their hands as they hit the ground, and

the perpetrator then fled.

Angiulli and his son Domenic immediately called the police, and Domenic picked up the

gun from the ground while they waited. Angiulli testified that Exmore Police Officer Jonathan

Gonzalez arrived “about five or ten minutes after my 911 call.” When Officer Gonzalez arrived,

Angiulli immediately said, “I had some guy try to rob me with his BB gun.” Officer Gonzalez

talked to Angiulli and Domenic outside the garage, recording their conversation with his body

camera. Angiulli and Domenic extended their arms and pointed in the direction in which the

perpetrator ran away from the garage, and they described how he ran through a field and “ran past a

white house” in that direction. Officer Gonzalez asked, “What was he wearing?” Angiulli replied

that the assailant was wearing a “black hoodie, black jeans, and black and white tennis shoes. He

was a skinny white kid about twenty years old, big brown eyes,” “had a black ball cap,” and “had a

bandana” on his face. Angiulli described the bandana as either dark blue or black and white.

Angiulli stated again that the perpetrator had “dark hair and brown eyes” and that he was not

-2- wearing any gloves. He then repeated a third time that the man had “big brown eyes” and was

about his height. Angiulli said that the man was about five feet ten inches tall with a thin build,

weighing around 150 to 160 pounds. On the officer’s body camera footage, Angiulli and Domenic

can be seen pointing toward the area where they said that the assailant ran. Officer Gonzalez

mentioned that he was familiar with several people who lived in the area toward which the

perpetrator ran, including Sample, whose race he described as “mixed” and added that he “looks

almost Hispanic.”

Officer Gonzalez testified that, based upon Angiulli’s description of the perpetrator and the

direction in which the assailant ran, he thought Sample “pretty much fit the description that

Mr. Angiulli had said.” At that time, Sample weighed 162 pounds, was five feet nine inches in

height, had brown eyes, and was twenty-one years old. Officer Gonzalez then retrieved a photo of

Sample and returned within fifteen minutes to show the photo to Angiulli. As recorded on his body

camera, Officer Gonzalez told Angiulli, “I have a picture of somebody that I was thinking about,

but I don’t know if, you said you just saw their eyes.” He then showed Angiulli a photo of Sample

on his phone, and Angiulli immediately said, “Yep.” Officer Gonzalez then asked, “That’s him?”

Angiulli replied, “Yep.” Officer Gonzalez then asked again, “You think that’s definitely him?”

Angiulli reiterated, “Yeah, those big brown eyes, yep.” Angiulli then said that Sample was “light

complected like that.” Officer Gonzalez then asked, “kind of like pale-ish?” Angiulli replied,

“Yeah.”

Before trial, Sample moved to suppress Angiulli’s out-of-court identification and to bar any

in-court identification testimony. Sample argued that Officer Gonzalez created unduly suggestive

circumstances by showing Angiulli only one photograph and stating that he suspected the person in

the photograph of being the assailant. Sample contended that Angiulli’s out-of-court identification

was unreliable and that an in-court identification would lack an independent basis.

-3- At the suppression hearing, Angiulli testified that when Sample stuck the gun in his face, he

was concentrating on Sample’s identity so that he could remember him and remember the gun.

Angiulli described Sample’s “dark, sunken eyes” and “dark eyebrows with distinct marks on them.”

Angiulli then identified Sample in court. When Angiulli identified Sample in court, the

Commonwealth asked, “[W]hat’s the basis for your identification?” Angiulli responded, “I will

never forget those eyes directly above the barrel of the weapon.” He also testified, “His eyes and

his eyebrows is mostly what I saw. The bandana kind of came loose as we were struggling.”

Angiulli also described the path Sample took as he fled and, when shown a satellite image of the

area, pointed out that path on the image. Angiulli also identified the gun that was used in the

attempted robbery.

The trial court denied Sample’s motion to suppress, emphasizing that Angiulli immediately

and confidently identified Sample as the man who had attempted to rob him less than an hour before

at that same location. The trial judge noted that Angiulli “also testified that he observed

something about the assailant’s eyes that were very distinctive.” In addition, the trial court found

that the garage door was open with “bright lights on inside.” The trial court found, “[T]he

assailant was facing the lights and facing the garage opening” and “did not have his back to the

garage door when he came up and pointed the gun” at Angiulli demanding his wallet. All of

these circumstances of the location and lighting were confirmed by video footage from Officer

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