Gethers v. United States

556 A.2d 201, 1989 D.C. App. LEXIS 45, 1989 WL 24706
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 21, 1989
Docket87-51
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 556 A.2d 201 (Gethers 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
Gethers v. United States, 556 A.2d 201, 1989 D.C. App. LEXIS 45, 1989 WL 24706 (D.C. 1989).

Opinion

SCHWELB, Associate Judge:

Gethers was convicted of one count of distribution of cocaine and one count of possession of cocaine with intent to distribute (PWID), both in violation of D.C.Code § 33-541(a)(1). On appeal, he contends, among other things, 1 that the trial judge committed reversible error in failing to instruct the jury with respect to alibi, as requested by the defense. In light of Gray v. United States, 549 A.2d 347 (D.C.1988), we conclude that Gethers had a right to the requested instruction, but with respect to the distribution charge only. Accordingly, we must reverse his conviction for distribution. Finding no prejudicial “spillover” to the PWID charge, however, we affirm Gethers’ conviction of that offense.

I

The facts pertinent to this appeal are disarmingly simple. The government’s evidence showed that on the evening of October 8, 1985, a police officer acting under cover approached Gethers in the 400 block of 0 Street, N.W. and asked him for a “half” of cocaine. Gethers directed him to a playground area approximately thirty-five to fifty feet south of O Street known as the “cut.” Shortly thereafter, Gethers joined the officer at a bench in the “cut.” After some discussion of the manner in which the cocaine was to be ingested, Geth-ers took a single plastic packet of white powder from a brown paper bag containing other similar packets and handed the packet to the officer. In return, the officer gave Gethers $50 in prerecorded funds.

The two men then walked back to 0 Street and the officer observed Gethers toss the paper bag containing the packets of white powder into a bush which was “right there on O Street.” The officer promptly advised members of the “arrest team” of what had transpired. He provided them with a description of Gethers, and told them where they could find the discarded bag.

Shortly thereafter, officers arrested Gethers. In a search incident to the arrest, they found the prerecorded money with which the undercover officer had purchased the single packet — two $20 bills and one $10 bill — in Gethers’ left front pants pocket. The officers also recovered the brown paper bag, which contained thirteen additional plastic packets of white powder. Chemical tests conducted by the Drug Enforcement Administration disclosed that the single packet sold to the undercover officer contained 656 milligrams of 37% pure cocaine. The thirteen packets in the paper bag contained 8,250 milligrams of 34% pure cocaine. 2

*203 Gethers testified in his own defense and denied committing the offenses. He claimed that he had come into possession of the prerecorded funds by making change for someone on the street shortly before his arrest. He and two defense witnesses, Allen Snead 3 and Ella Wilson, testified that they had been talking and drinking with Gethers on 0 Street for two hours (Snead) and twenty-five minutes (Ms. Wilson) and did not see him leave 0 Street or go to the “cut” or possess or distribute cocaine.

After both parties had rested, defense counsel requested the judge to give an alibi instruction. In support of his request, he stated that “there has been evidence introduced in this case that Mr. Gethers was standing and conversing with other individuals when these alleged offenses — in a different place from where these offenses— separated spatially from where these offenses occurred.” The judge disagreed:

Sir, that’s the most strained explanation [of a] request I’ve heard in years. That request is denied. The defendant was clearly at the scene since 4:20. By his own admission, he was at the scene.... That’s not an alibi defense. This is a misidentification defense, that’s what he is saying in effect. “I didn’t do it, therefore the policeman has misidentified me_” So I’m going to deny that because alibi is not a defense in this case. There is no evidence to support the instruction is the technical reason for the denial.

Gethers was convicted of both charges. The judge sentenced him to serve two concurrent terms of three to ten years, consecutive to any other sentence. This appeal followed.

ll

In Greenhow v. United States, 490 A.2d 1130, 1134 (D.C.1985), this court defined the defense of alibi as follows:

[Alibi] involves the impossibility of accused's presence at the scene of the offense at the time of its commission.... The defense of alibi is designed to prove that the accused, dining the whole time that the crime was being committed, was so far from the place where the crime occurred that he could not have participated in it, or that he was so far away that he could not, with ordinary exertion, have reached the place in time to have so participated in the crime; and in order to be legally effective it must cover the entire time during which the crime is alleged to have been committed. 22 C.J. S. Criminal Law § 40, at 130-131 (1961).

More recently, in Gray v. United States, supra, the court elaborated on the Green-how definition, and particularly on the words “so far away,” in language which has considerable import for the distribution charge here:

“So far away” conjures an image of great distance, but actually it means only so removed as to be not precisely at the scene of the crime. Thus it matters not whether the defendant was in the house next door or halfway across town; if he or she was not at the exact scene of the crime, the defendant has an alibi.

549 A.2d at 349 (emphasis added). 4

In the present case, the entire distribution offense — the exchange of cocaine for cash — was committed in the “cut.” The defense case was that Gethers was never in the “cut” at the time the crime *204 was committed. Under these circumstances, Gray and to some extent Fay hold that an alibi instruction must be given upon request.

Although the evidence against Gethers was compelling — the police identification was corroborated by the recovery of the prerecorded purchase money on his person — the failure to give the requested instruction cannot be dismissed as harmless error. It is true, as the Supreme Court of Kansas has stated, that “a jury may be supposed to know without being told that, where the commission of a crime depends upon the personal presence of the defendant at a given time or place, he cannot be guilty if he [was] then somewhere else.” State v. Nichols, 117 Kan. 630, 632-33, 232 P. 1058, 1059 (1925).

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Bluebook (online)
556 A.2d 201, 1989 D.C. App. LEXIS 45, 1989 WL 24706, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gethers-v-united-states-dc-1989.