Graham v. United States

950 A.2d 717, 2008 D.C. App. LEXIS 270, 2008 WL 2596340
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 19, 2008
Docket04-CF-1015
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 950 A.2d 717 (Graham 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
Graham v. United States, 950 A.2d 717, 2008 D.C. App. LEXIS 270, 2008 WL 2596340 (D.C. 2008).

Opinion

GLICKMAN, Associate Judge:

A jury found appellant Marcus Graham guilty of robbing and killing his next-door neighbor, Lucille Batchelor. 1 Appellant’s two confessions to the police, made four days after the murder, were the centerpiece of the prosecution’s case, and his *721 Fifth Amendment challenges to their admission are the principal focus of this appeal. Appellant asserts that his first confession, in which he admitted stealing from Batchelor but denied killing her, was the product of custodial interrogation not preceded by the required Miranda 2 warnings and a valid waiver of his rights. Appellant contends his second confession, in which he admitted committing the murder, was obtained in violation of Edwards 3 because the police allowed his mother to continue interrogating him after he invoked his right to counsel. Finally, appellant contends that the prolonged interrogation he endured together with other coercive factors operated to overcome his will and rendered his statements to the police involuntary. In addition to advancing these Fifth Amendment claims, appellant asserts the government violated its disclosure obligations under (i) Brady, 4 with respect to evidence supporting his suppression motion, and (ii) Criminal Rule 16, 5 with respect to the introduction of his statements at trial.

We conclude the trial judge did not err by denying appellant’s motion to suppress his statements. Specifically, we hold appellant was not in custody for purposes of Miranda when he made his first confession; the police did not violate appellant’s Fifth Amendment right to counsel by permitting his mother to question him after he asked for an attorney; and his statements to the police were not the product of impermissible governmental coercion. We also reject appellant’s other claims of error and therefore affirm appellant’s convictions.

I.

The trial judge orally denied appellant’s motion to suppress his statements after a pretrial evidentiary hearing at which three witnesses testified. The main witness was Metropolitan Police Department Detective Jeffrey Williams, who was in charge of the investigation of Batchelor’s murder, questioned appellant, and obtained his confessions. The judge also heard brief testimony from Detective Christopher Kauffman, who assisted Williams and made contemporaneous notes during the questioning of appellant, and from appellant himself. In a post-verdict motion for a new trial, appellant asked the judge to reconsider his ruling admitting his confessions in light of all the evidence — including a videotaped interview of appellant’s parents by Detective Williams that had been withheld from appellant until the middle of trial. The judge denied appellant’s request for reconsideration in a written opinion.

The judge specifically credited much of Williams’s testimony, finding it corroborated by Kauffman’s notes and other evidence. The judge did not credit appellant’s testimony. We summarize the evidence relevant to appellant’s Fifth Amendment claims, including the videotape interview turned over after the suppression hearing, in accordance with the trial judge’s credibility determinations and findings of historical fact. 6

*722 A.

On Sunday morning, November 17, 2002, sixty-seven-year-old Lucille Batche-lor was murdered in her apartment in Southeast Washington, D.C. Her body was discovered that afternoon. She had been beaten about her head and stabbed in her chest, and the dresser drawers in her bedroom had been ransacked. Canvassing the neighborhood for witnesses, Detective Williams spoke with appellant, nineteen-year-old Marcus Graham, who lived next door to Batchelor. Appellant told Williams he had taken soup and tea to Batchelor on Saturday afternoon, the day before the murder, at his mother’s request. Pressed for time, Williams said he would meet with appellant at a later time to take a formal statement.

The First Confession

Four days later, on November 21, 2002, Williams returned to appellant’s home with Detective Kauffman. Williams asked appellant “if he would mind coming to my office and talking to me in reference to Ms. Lucille’s death.” Appellant agreed to do so, and he rode with the two detectives in an unmarked police car to the Violent Crime Branch at a police station in Southeast Washington, D.C. Appellant sat in the front passenger seat. He was not frisked or handcuffed.

Upon arriving at the Violent Crime Branch at 2:52 p.m., Williams escorted appellant past some secured doors to a small room used for conducting interrogations and interviews. The door to the room locked automatically; it was necessary to punch in a special code on a keypad to enter or exit the room. Williams propped open the door with a chair to improve ventilation and, as he testified, so that appellant would not feel “closed in.” At some point later in the afternoon, however, Williams allowed the door to close. Unbeknownst to appellant, Kauffman listened in on the interview from an adjacent room equipped with audio and visual equipment.

Williams, who was unarmed, employed a conversational tone when questioning appellant. After inquiring whether appellant wished to use the bathroom or have something to eat, Williams began the interview by asking him about his visit with Batche-lor the day before she was killed. Appellant affirmed his earlier statement and added that on Sunday morning he was at church with his wife, his parents, and other members of his family. After something less than half an hour, at 3:22 p.m., Williams excused himself and left the room to phone Daniel Zachem, the Deputy Chief of the Homicide Section of the United States Attorney’s Office. Williams sought Zachem’s advice as to whether he was required to read appellant his Miranda rights before questioning him further. Za-chem advised Williams that Miranda warnings were unnecessary because appellant had come to the Violent Crime Branch voluntarily and had not been taken into custody. While Williams was talking with Zachem, appellant was left alone in the interview room with the door open.

Williams returned to appellant at 4:10 p.m. In response to the detective’s increasingly focused questions, appellant said he left church on Sunday at 11:15 a.m. and went straight home, making no stops on the way. He denied having gone to a bank after church or at any time that weekend; denied having either an ATM card or a bank account; and denied having received property belonging to someone else. At 4:35 p.m., appellant declined Williams’s renewed offers to let him go to the bathroom and have something to drink or eat.

Williams then momentarily left the room again. He returned five minutes later, at 4:40 p.m., with a bank surveillance photograph showing appellant by a Sun Trust *723 Bank ATM machine at Stanton Road and Alabama Avenue, Southeast. The timestamped photograph had been taken at eleven o’clock on Sunday morning, November 17, 2006.

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Bluebook (online)
950 A.2d 717, 2008 D.C. App. LEXIS 270, 2008 WL 2596340, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/graham-v-united-states-dc-2008.