Frasher v. State

260 A.2d 656, 8 Md. App. 439, 1970 Md. App. LEXIS 367
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 14, 1970
Docket189, September Term, 1969
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 260 A.2d 656 (Frasher v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Special Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Frasher v. State, 260 A.2d 656, 8 Md. App. 439, 1970 Md. App. LEXIS 367 (Md. Ct. App. 1970).

Opinion

Orth, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

James Martin Frasher (appellant) was found guilty by a jury in the Circuit Court for Prince George’s County of control of heroin for which a sentence of 3 years was imposed to run consecutively with a sentence he was then serving and of possession of narcotic paraphernalia for which a concurrent sentence of 3 years was imposed.

FACTS

Appellant was charged with shoplifting in the Prince George’s County Peoples’ Court and released pending trial in October 1968 upon the posting of a $500 bond by Charles D. Ayers, a professional bondsman. Appellant failed to appear as required and the bond was forfeited. Ayers “obtained a bailpiece” and attempted to locate appellant. He received information that appellant had been seen in the Mount Pleasant section of the District of Columbia and drove to that area on 28 January 1969 to apprehend him. Ayers was armed with a revolver and a can of mace and had a pair of handcuffs. He saw appellant walking in the 700 block of Park Road, stopped the car and approached appellant. “I said, ‘Mr. Frasher?’ *442 He said, ‘No, no, you have got the wrong man.’ I said, ‘You are not James Martin Frasher?’ He said, ‘No, my name is Charles Curtis.’ I said, ‘Well, I could be making a mistake, but,’ I said, ‘if I am, I apologize to you, but I think you are James Frasher.’ ” Ayers asked appellant if he would get in the front seat of the car so a positive identification could be made and appellant did so. Ayers received information which convinced him that the man was in fact Frasher and told him that he was taking him back to stand trial. Appellant said, “Well, Mr. Ayers, I was going to turn myself in.” Ayers placed a handcuff on appellant’s left wrist and appellant tried to leave the car. “I was trying to hold him in there, in my car, and I had one hand on the cuff that I had — the left hand was cuffed; I had ahold of the handcuff trying to hold him in; and I put my other hand around his waist. He reached down and twisted my finger at the time,” breaking it. During the scuffle, Ayers unsuccessfully tried to use the mace. He succeeded in keeping appellant in the car — “I was using this one cuff that I had on him and I was giving him heck with that one arm.” Appellant gave him no more trouble. On the way back to Maryland appellant asked to be taken to St. Elizabeth Hospital. “I asked him what was wrong with Prince George’s County Hospital. I wanted to get him out of the District.” 1 Ayers said:

“After I got him into Maryland, I informed him that we were already in Maryland; that I was taking him to jail and if he didn’t allow me to put the other handcuff on him that I would have to use my sidearm to do so. We came on out to 34th and Bunker Hill Road there in Mount Ranier, and I stopped at a stop light. He reached over and pushed the button to lower the window and went in his pocket. I asked him, *443 ‘What are you doing?’ He pulled this package out of his pocket. T have got a package I have got to get rid of before I go into jail.’ I took the package from him and told him he wasn’t going to throw anything out of my car. I laid it up on the dashboard. We got out to the Hyattsville station, and I had some cigarettes up on the dash along with this package he gave me, or I took from him, and he asked if he could have a pack of cigarettes since he was going to jail and he was broke. So I took the package of cigarettes and the package that I took from him and put them back in his pocket. I got on down to the police station, took him down in front of the Justice of the Peace, told him to sit down and asked the Justice of the Peace to watch him. In the package that I took from him I noticed a spoon — end of a spoon sticking out of the package. I went back into the squad room, called the narcotics squad in Seat Pleasant * *

The police arrived and found the package on appellant’s person contained “a complete hypodermic needle and syringe, disposal insulin type; a spoon with a small piece of cotton in the bowl of the spoon; and a lady’s stocking, a silk stocking, wrapped around the outside of the package.” There were also 48 clear gelatin capsules 2 with “a white substance inside, residue inside,” in a small plastic bag. The officer gave appellant the Miranda warnings, appellant waived his rights and the officer asked him what narcotic he was using. Appellant stated he was using heroin, about “50 capsules of heroin per day to take care of his habit.” Appellant’s arm “revealed extensive tracks along the veins.” 3 The officer made a Mar *444 quis Reagent test 4 on the residue. The test was positive as to the presence of opium. The evidence was submitted to an analytical chemist with the Internal Revenue Service, qualified as an expert in the field of narcotics. He testified that the capsules and spoon, upon analysis, gave positive tests for opium derivative and said that heroin was an opium derivative The narcotic drug found was “not enough to weigh quantity.”

Appellant testified that he was approached by Ayers on 28 January about 10:30 A.M. At the time he had not had the regular dosage of narcotics “that I was addicted to at the time * * *, approximately eight capsules at one time,” which he took every six hours. His last injection had been about 9:30 P.M. the day before. His testimony differed from that' of Ayers in some material aspects. Pie said it was upon Ayers refusing to take him to St. Elizabeth Hospital that he attempted to get out of the car; that it was in the District of Columbia that he attempted to throw out of the car window the package containing the narcotic paraphernalia, which he admitted was in his possession at the time he was apprehended; and that he was just standing in the police station when Ayers put the package in his jacket pocket. He amplified Ayers’ recounting of what occurred immediately after they crossed the line into Maryland:

“[He] just stopped the car and he said, ‘Now we are in Maryland,’ and he handcuffed my right hand. * * * He had a small holster that was attached to the front side of the car inside in which he had his handgun, and he took his handgun out of the holster and put it in his lap and said, ‘Now, don’t try to make a move or I’ll —I’ll blow your brains out. I will, I will.’ I wasn’t about to make an attempt to get away, that is for sure.”

*445 THE APPREHENSION

The apprehension of appellant by the bondsman was legal. The purpose of an appearance bond is to secure a trial, its object being to combine the administration of justice with the convenience of a person accused, but not proved, to be guilty. If the accused does not appear the bail may be forfeited, not as punishment to the surety or to enrich the Treasury of the State, but an incentive to the surety on the bail bond to pursue the accused and return him to the jurisdiction of the court. See Allegheny Mutual v. State, 234 Md. 278; Harding v. State, 250 Md. 188. So under certain conditions remission of the forfeiture is permitted. Md. Code, Art.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
260 A.2d 656, 8 Md. App. 439, 1970 Md. App. LEXIS 367, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/frasher-v-state-mdctspecapp-1970.