GORDON C. CARPENTER and TYRONE P. JONES v. UNITED STATES

144 A.3d 1141, 2016 D.C. App. LEXIS 304
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedAugust 11, 2016
Docket15-CF-126, 15-CF-279
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 144 A.3d 1141 (GORDON C. CARPENTER and TYRONE P. JONES 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
GORDON C. CARPENTER and TYRONE P. JONES v. UNITED STATES, 144 A.3d 1141, 2016 D.C. App. LEXIS 304 (D.C. 2016).

Opinion

THOMPSON, Associate Judge:

On October 8, 2013, Tyrone Jones and Gordon Carpenter were arrested in connection with a narcotics buy/bust operation. Mr. Jones filed (and Mr. Carpenter joined) a motion to suppress tangible evidence, which was denied. A jury thereafter convicted each of them of one count of unlawful distribution of a controlled substance (heroin), having heard an undercover officer testify that she gave a $20 bill to Jones, who gave the money to Carpenter, received from Carpenter in return a zi-plock bag of heroin, and gave the ziplock bag to the officer. A few months after the jury verdict, but before a scheduled sentencing proceeding, the government made the following disclosure: that, near the end of trial, after hearing testimony from both Carpenter and Jones during the defense case, the courtroom clerk sent to the prosecutor an email asserting that Carpenter and Jones were “not telling the truth” when they claimed that the money Jones paid Carpenter was for losing a bet on the outcome of a professional football game the previous week. In response to that disclosure, Jones filed a motion for a mistrial, which the court denied.

In this appeal, Carpenter challenges the denial of the motion to suppress and also argues that the trial court erred in failing to strike, or to give a curative instruction with respect to, a government witness’s “unfairly] prejudicial]” trial testimony regarding a concern about officer safety. Jones contends that he is entitled to reversal of his conviction, or at least to resen- *1144 fencing, because of the courtroom clerk’s email. For the reasons that follow, we affirm.

I.

A. The suppression hearing

Jones moved to suppress the evidence, including six ziplock baggies of crack cocaine, found on his person. 1 In (orally) joining Jones’s motion, Carpenter did not clarify what evidence he sought suppressed, but we understand from his appellate brief that he challenged the admissibility of a prerecorded $20 bill found on his person. At the suppression hearing, the court (the Honorable Patricia A. Bro-derick) heard from Metropolitan Police Department (“MPD”) Detectivé Phillip Robinson, who testified that, on October 8, 2013, MPD was conducting a buy/bust operation in the vicinity of the 600 block of Division Avenue, N.E. Detective Robinson explained that he was on the arrest team that day when undercover officers went into the 600 block to try to buy narcotics and were positioned near the wall of a “short” stone bridge that begins at Division Avenue and Foote Street and “then keeps going into the 60Ó block.” Upon receiving a lookout for “two African American males” “in the 600 block of Division Avenue, around that bridge” from whom the officers had received heroin in exchange for MPD funds, Detective Robinson responded to the location, arriving in “less than a minute.” According to the lookout, “[b]oth [men] had hats on, one [with] a gray hoody and white shirt and one [with] a blue hoody and a dane[.]” 2 When Detective Robinson arrived' at the scene, he saw two individuals fitting the lookout description. 3 The two individuals, appellants Jones and Carpenter, were standing seven or eight feet apart from each other at, close to, or by the bridge. Detective Robinson testified that there were “[m]aybe ten other people” “[i]n the immediate area” (“but not by the bridge”), 4 but “[t]here was no one else on that bridge ... that would fit the description that the undercovers gave” for either individual. 5 Detective Robinson did not see Jones and Carpenter talking or otherwise communicating.

Approximately five to ten or ten to fifteen minutes after Detective Robinson had stopped appellants, the undercover officers who had conducted the transaction returned to the scene and positively identified Jones and Carpenter as the men with whom they had engaged in the narcotics transaction. After the undercover officers identified them, appellants were arrested.

Neither of the defendants presented evidence at the motion hearing. Without elaborate explanation, the judge denied the *1145 motion to suppress, finding her decision “pretty easy.”

B. Trial

At trial, Detective Lavinia Quigley testified that, on October 8, 2013, she and Officer Courtney Clark were undercover and were standing on the comer in the 600 block of Division Avenue, N.E., when a man. approached and asked them what they wanted. Detective Quigley responded that they wanted “blow[,]” a “street name for heroin.” The man, whom the detective identified in court as Carpenter, told them to wait, and he walked away. Approximately a minuté and a half later, another man, identified, in court as Jones, approached them and asked what they were looking'for, and Officer Clark responded they wanted “scramble” (heroin that has been cut up with a cutting agent). The officers walked with' Jones to the nearby bridge, Detective Quigley handed Jones a prerecorded $20 bill, and Jones dropped the money off the side of the bridge to Carpenter, who the detective could see was standing in the gully about six or seven feet immediately below the bridge. Carpenter then passed up a zi-.plock bag containing a tannish powder. 6 After leaving the location, the detective and officer gave a prearrangéd signal to another undercover officer. After the arrest team moved in and stopped the defendants, the undercover officers returned three to four minutes later and positively identified them as those involved in the transaction.

Detective Steven Manley testified that he provided surveillance and security approximately two blocks away from the. area of the “buy” operation, and once he received the lookout, he moved in “to detain the two subjects who matched the description[.]” He testified that, after the undercover officers returned and positively identified the individuals, he arrested the men, whom he identified in court as Jones and Carpenter. After arresting. Carpenter, Detective Manley searched Carpenter’s pockets. and found the prerecorded $20. bill. Asked about whether his job was to observe the actual transaction, Detective Manley explained:

[A]s an arrest team member, you don’t want to be too close because then you’re putting yoür undercover officer’s life in danger. When you go into areas like Division Avenué, if they see something that sticks out like a sore thumb, they know you’re either the police or ... you’re from not around [this] area. So the whole thing is[,3 I don’t want to be too close to the undercover officers, because, again, I’m putting their life in danger.

Counsel for Carpenter objected and moved to strike because “[t]here’s nothing in this record that suggested anybody’s life was in danger.” Judge Broderick did not strike the answer but responded, “Well, there’s certainly no suggestion that life was endangered by these defendants.”

Both Jones and Carpenter testified during the defense case.

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Bluebook (online)
144 A.3d 1141, 2016 D.C. App. LEXIS 304, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gordon-c-carpenter-and-tyrone-p-jones-v-united-states-dc-2016.