FURL J. WILLIAMS, ARTHUR TERENCE BULLOCK, and MARTEESE NORMAN v. UNITED STATES

113 A.3d 554, 2015 D.C. App. LEXIS 149
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 23, 2015
Docket12-CF-1604, 12-CF-1605, 12-CF-1504
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 113 A.3d 554 (FURL J. WILLIAMS, ARTHUR TERENCE BULLOCK, and MARTEESE NORMAN 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
FURL J. WILLIAMS, ARTHUR TERENCE BULLOCK, and MARTEESE NORMAN v. UNITED STATES, 113 A.3d 554, 2015 D.C. App. LEXIS 149 (D.C. 2015).

Opinions

REID, Senior Judge:

In these appeals, appellants Furl J. Williams, Arthur Terence Bullock and Marteese Norman, challenge their convictions of robbery1 on various grounds — (1) insufficiency of the evidence (Mr. Williams and Ms. Norman), (2) erroneous denial of a motion to sever (Mr. Williams and Mr. Bullock), (3) erroneous denial of a motion to suppress (Mr. Williams and Mr. Bullock), and (4) abuse of discretion in dismissing a juror (Ms. Norman). Because of our disposition, we consider only the first issue. We hold that the evidence was insufficient to convict Mr. Williams, Ms. Norman and Mr. Bullock of robbery because the government’s proof failed to establish at least one of the elements of that offense beyond a reasonable doubt. Consequently, we reverse appellants’ robbery conviction.

FACTUAL SUMMARY

The government presented evidence showing that Loi Chau, a forty-nine year-old man, worked the 2:30 p.m. to 11:00 p.m. shift at the Marriott Hotel on Connecticut Avenue, in the Northwest qua[556]*556drant of the District of Columbia.2 Mr. Chau testified as follows. After getting off from work on the night of February 24, 2012, he walked to the nearby Metro Elevator. As he “was pushing the button, waiting for the elevator to come up, [he] saw three people walk to him, and [he] did not know these people. And [he] ke[pt] pushing the button, waiting for the elevator to come up.” The prosecutor asked, “[W]hat did those three people look like?” Mr. Chau responded, “They are three black Americans. I don’t know them, so I keep pushing the button, waiting for the elevator.” The people did not say anything but they “look[ed] back” at him and then approached Mr. Chau. They were about three to four feet from Mr. Chau, and he could “[n]ot quite touch them.” Mr. Chau “was afraid that they had guns or knives,” so he “took out [his] wallet and gave it to them and they left.” Although he did not see any guns or knives, he “was afraid they [had] guns and knives because at that time it was very dark, and [he] was the only one there.” He repeatedly said he was afraid the people had (a) gun(s) and/or (a) knife/knives. But on cross-examination Mr. Chau stated that the three people did not threaten him or make him afraid. See note 5, infra.

When the three people approached him two of them said, “What, what, what.” Mr. Chau interpreted these words to mean, “do I have any money.”3 He did not have any money. His wallet contained his driver’s license, Metro card, bank cards, union cards, and business cards. Initially Mr. Chau saw the faces of the three people when they were by the elevator where there was a light, but when they walked away he could only see their backs. Mr. Chau called 911 and reported that the people “took [his] money and they walked away.” Mr. Chau spoke only “a little bit” of English and another man on the street helped him with the 911 call.4 Mr. Chau followed the people who had his wallet so that he could retrieve his Metro card. He was about three blocks behind the three individuals but never lost sight of them. Another man also followed the three young men. Later, the police stopped the three people and Mr. Chau identified each of them.5

On the night of February 24, 2012, Metropolitan Police Department (“MPD”) Offi[557]*557cer Kenneth Boone, a technician, had completed an assignment and was driving southbound on Connecticut Avenue shortly after 11:00 p.m., in an unmarked car and plain clothes. While he was waiting for the traffic light to turn green, he saw the backs of what appeared to be “three black males ... in front of [another] male.” He thought that the single male was “not free to move forward, he didn’t have his freedom of movement.” Officer Boone saw the three males walk away northbound on Connecticut Avenue, and he proceeded to where the single male was standing, in order to check on him. The man, later identified as Mr. Chau, looked “[k]ind of ... confused, kind of shocked.” Mr. Chau said, “they took everything.” Officer Boone kept his eye on the three males who were walking north on Connecticut Avenue and followed them, and contacted the police dispatcher on his cell phone. He advised the dispatcher that the three men were wearing “black jackets and ... black hats.” He followed the three men until they reached a “7-Eleven” store where they stopped to speak with two men who were seated, before continuing up Connecticut Avenue. One man slowed down at a bus stop and the other two turned off onto and down a walkway near an apartment building. The two men eventually turned around and came back to Connecticut Avenue as the police arrived. Officer Boone introduced himself to the arriving officers and then left the scene.

Samuel Hart testified that he was coming up a Metro escalator on Connecticut Avenue when he “noticed like a Chinese [or] Korean [man] with three suspects standing in front of him.”6 He was about thirty feet away from Mr. Chau -and the three young people. One person had on a black hoodie; one had on red, white and black sneakers; two had dreads; and they had on dark jeans. One of the Asian' man’s legs appeared to be short and the three persons around him “looked suspicious at a certain time on Connecticut Avenue” because “a majority of rich middle class people live” on Connecticut Avenue and people with hoodies and “all dark clothing” are not seen after eleven or twelve o’clock. He saw three black men, one of whom was “light-skinned.” One person was “observing the scenery” or “looking around to see if anybody else can see it.” Two of the men spoke with the Asian man and “one took the wallet.” The three men walked up Connecticut Avenue, and Mr. Hart asked the Asian man whether something was wrong. The man stated that he “just got robbed his wallet,” and Mr. Hart told him to call 911. Mr. Hart also called 911 and then followed the three men. When the men reached the area of a “7-Eleven” store and an apartment building, Mr. Hart saw the one with the red, black and white sneakers, hat and black hoodie veer off through a cut near the apartment building and then “run[ ] out to be with the other two.” Mr. Hart flagged down the police when he saw their cars.

Mr. Hart stated on cross-examination that two of the men had hair in dreadlocks, and one of them wore red, white and black shoes; and that the third person had a shorter haircut and had a hat on.7 He testified before the grand jury that the man with the red, white and black shoes [558]*558took Mr. Chau’s wallet. He “assumed” Mr. Chau was being robbed “[b]eeause he kept yelling ‘help.’ ” He denied that he had a prior possession of cocaine conviction in 1999.8 He also initially denied that he had consumed two 12-ounce cans of beer on the evening of the incident. He noted that since the incident he had had surgery for a brain tumor.

Officer Walter Pankowski testified that he was on duty in an unmarked police car with other officers when he heard “a call for a robbery that had just occurred.” The officers saw an Asian male waving them down as they approached the 3000 block of Connecticut Avenue. Mr. Chau was “excited” and said, “they took my wallet, they took my wallet.” Mr. Chau was walking toward the bus stop saying, “up there, up there, up there.” Officer Barcus had stopped Mr. Bullock; and when Mr. Chau reached the place where Mr. Bullock was standing, he stated, “He took my money, it was him, it’s him.”9 Mr. Williams and Ms.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
113 A.3d 554, 2015 D.C. App. LEXIS 149, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/furl-j-williams-arthur-terence-bullock-and-marteese-norman-v-united-dc-2015.