Ewing v. United States

36 A.3d 839, 2012 WL 398621, 2012 D.C. App. LEXIS 23
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 9, 2012
DocketNos. 06-CF-951, 06-CF-1100
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 36 A.3d 839 (Ewing 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
Ewing v. United States, 36 A.3d 839, 2012 WL 398621, 2012 D.C. App. LEXIS 23 (D.C. 2012).

Opinion

GLICKMAN, Associate Judge:

Appellants David Ewing and Gloria Dunn were convicted after a jury trial of first-degree premeditated murder while armed, second-degree murder (as a lesser-included offense of felony murder), arson (two counts), and tampering with physical evidence.1 They primarily challenge their first-degree murder convictions. Dunn argues there was insufficient evidence of premeditation and deliberation, and claims the aiding-and-abetting instruction allowed the jury to convict her of first-degree murder without finding those elements present in her case. Ewing asserts the trial court responded erroneously to a jury note asking whether the premeditation and deliberation necessary for first-degree murder could have occurred during (rather than before) the altercation that resulted in the homicide. We reject appellants’ several claims and affirm their convictions.

I.

Ewing and Dunn were accused of murdering 52-year-old Dorothy Evans. Her body, partially buried under a paint-spattered pile of trash, clothes, and other debris, was discovered by firefighters in the kitchen of her apartment early on the morning of April 17, 2003. The apartment was filled with smoke when the firefighters arrived, and it appeared to have been ransacked. An arson investigator found evidence that two separate fires had been set — one in the pile of debris covering the decedent’s body, and the other in the hallway of the apartment. Empty paint cans were found on the scene, and the investigator inferred that whoever set the fires had tried to use the paint as an accelerant. In a subsequent search of the apartment for the weapon used to kill Evans, police recovered a small, heavy, metal barbell.

Evans was five feet, seven inches tall and weighed 102 pounds at the time of her death. In the opinion of the medical examiner who testified at trial, Evans died from multiple blunt impact injuries to her head, neck, and torso: She sustained a fractured skull, numerous lacerations, contusions, and abrasions, internal hemorrhaging, ten fractured ribs, and a punctured lung. Evans’s head injuries were caused by at least six and perhaps as many as twelve blows. A heavy object of some kind must have been used to fracture her skull. Most, if not all, of these injuries preceded her death. There also were burns, some of them severe, on Evans’s body, but the lack of any vital reaction to them implied that they occurred at or after the time of death.

The prosecution relied on incriminating statements and behavior on the part of appellants to connect them to Evans’s murder and the fires in her apartment. In the interest of brevity, we may summarize the heart of that evidence as follows. Angela Jenkins testified that, on the night of the homicide, she was with Ewing and Dunn in “Ms. Tula’s” apartment, which was two floors below Evans’s apartment. The three of them were getting “high” when Evans knocked on the door. Dunn reacted, saying “I’ll get it. I told that bitch not to knock.” She and Ewing went to the door together and left the apartment with Evans. Afterward, Jenkins heard thumping and banging coming from Evans’s apartment on the third floor. Jenkins said it sounded like a fight. The banging lasted for some ten to twenty minutes.2 After it ended, Jenkins testified, Dunn and Ewing returned to Tula’s [843]*843apartment and went into the kitchen, where they smoked cigarettes and engaged in a conversation.

Thereafter, Jenkins saw Dunn and Ewing leave and return to Tula’s apartment several times in the next few hours, once with some sort of plastic covering on their feet and hands. Sometimes they were in the company of two other men, Michael Smith and Michael Young.3 Jenkins noticed that Dunn had a bloody scratch on her face, and that Ewing was bleeding from his stomach. At one point, Dunn removed a rusty ice pick from her pants. The ice pick appeared to have blood on it. Jenkins previously had seen the ice pick in Tula’s kitchen. At that time, there was no blood on it. (Evans’s body bore no puncture wounds or other signs that she had been stabbed with the ice pick.) Ewing washed the blood off the ice pick with some bleach. He also used the bleach to clean up blood that had dripped onto the floor from his stomach injury.

Later, Jenkins saw Ewing and Smith carry a gallon of paint out of Tula’s apartment. Ewing returned with black soot on his forehead. Young, who was with him at that time, had blood and paint on his clothes. Dunn had paint on her hands, which she tried to clean off with fingernail polish remover. After the fire alarm went off, Ewing stripped off his outer clothes and put them in a bag he obtained from Tula. Ewing also tried to convince Jenkins to ignore the fire, telling her that the smell of burning was coming from Tula’s stove and that the fire alarm was coming from an ice cream truck. When Jenkins continued to wonder about the smell of fire in Tula’s apartment, Ewing told her she asked too many questions.

After the firefighters arrived, Ewing and Dunn went to the nearby apartment of Wanda Crawford. Crawford testified that she observed blood on Ewing’s hands and pants and an apparently fresh scratch on Dunn’s face. She asked Dunn what had happened. Dunn responded by saying, “Damn Ms. Dot. She swung on me, and I had to hit her ass back. I had to beat her ass down, and I knocked her on the floor.”4 Dunn asked Crawford to hold a bag of her clothing; Crawford saw the clothing was stained with blood and paint.5 A little later, when Ewing heard Crawford say she had learned from the firefighters that Evans was dead, he responded, “Fuck that bitch. Everybody got to die.” Ewing subsequently told Crawford that Evans had owed him money.

Two other witnesses testified to admissions by Dunn and Ewing. According to Denise Brown-Robinson, Dunn tearfully told her that “they” had not meant to kill Evans, but that Evans had “fought back,” and that her death was an accident.6 And Diego Pryor recounted a jailhouse conversation in which Ewing asked him whether he had “hear[d] about the lady that got killed around Lincoln Heights.” Ewing described her to Pryor as a “strong” old lady in her fifties or sixties and said she had some checks and money orders. Ewing told Pryor that a “dumbbell” was used to kill the old lady.7

Neither appellant presented evidence at trial. Their defense was a general denial [844]*844of any involvement in the murder of Evans; in closing arguments, defense counsel attacked the credibility of the prosecution witnesses and argued reasonable doubt.

II. Sufficiency of the Evidence of Premeditation and Deliberation

In evaluating the sufficiency of the evidence to support a conviction, “we must view it in the light most favorable to the government, giving full play to the jury’s right to determine credibility, weigh the evidence, and draw justifiable inferences of fact. The prosecution need not negate every possible inference of innocence. The key point is that the verdict cannot rest on mere speculation; we must be satisfied that there was some evidence on which a reasonable jury really could find the essential elements of the offense, including the essential mens rea, beyond a reasonable doubt.”8 The evidence “must be sufficient to persuade, not compel, a reasonable juror to a finding of guilty.”9

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
36 A.3d 839, 2012 WL 398621, 2012 D.C. App. LEXIS 23, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ewing-v-united-states-dc-2012.