Grimes v. United States

CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 24, 2021
Docket18-CF-132
StatusPublished

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Opinion

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DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA COURT OF APPEALS

No. 18-CF-132

MARK D. GRIMES, APPELLANT,

V.

UNITED STATES, APPELLEE.

Appeal from the Superior Court of the District of Columbia (CF2-8726-16)

(Hon. Marisa Demeo, Trial Judge)

(Submitted May 6, 2020 Decided June 24, 2021)

Anna B. Scanlon was on the briefs for appellant. Sean R. Day has since been appointed to represent him.

Jessie K. Liu, United States Attorney at the time the brief was filed, with whom Elizabeth Trosman, Chrisellen R. Kolb, Jeffrey N. Poulin, and Ethan L. Carroll, Assistant United States Attorneys, were on the brief, for appellee.

Before MCLEESE and DEAHL, Associate Judges, and WASHINGTON, Senior Judge.

DEAHL, Associate Judge: Police recovered a handgun from the backseat of a

car in which Mark Grimes was the front-seat passenger. Following the encounter,

Grimes was charged with various weapons-related offenses. The focus at trial was 2

whether the gun was his or, as he had posited, belonged to the driver, backseat

passenger, or another individual who was not in the car but whose fingerprints—like

Grimes’s fingerprints—were found on the gun’s magazine. The jury acquitted

Grimes of charges related to possessing the gun and ammunition, but convicted him

of possessing the high-capacity magazine that was found inside the gun.

Grimes appeals that conviction, raising three issues. First, he argues the

government violated his Sixth Amendment right to confront the witnesses against

him when it introduced a fingerprint card taken three years before this incident, in

connection with an unrelated 2013 arrest. Grimes argues the fingerprint card’s

identification of him as the fingerprints’ source was testimonial hearsay. We

disagree. While it is true that the fingerprint card contained hearsay—an

out-of-court statement asserting the prints belonged to Grimes and introduced to

establish that fact—that hearsay statement was not made with a “primary purpose

. . . to establish or prove past events potentially relevant to later criminal

prosecution.” Burns v. United States, 235 A.3d 758, 788 (D.C. 2020) (citation

omitted). It is therefore not a testimonial statement subject to the Confrontation

Clause’s strictures. Second and relatedly, Grimes argues that even if the fingerprint

card was not testimonial (as we conclude), it was nonetheless inadmissible hearsay 3

because it did not satisfy the business records exception to the rule against hearsay.

We disagree on this point as well and conclude that it satisfied that exception.

Finally, Grimes challenges the admission of the driver’s statements inviting

officers to “flip the car inside out” over his hearsay objections. We agree that was

error. Contrary to the trial court’s ruling that this was not an “assertion of fact” but

a mere “authorization” to search, the statement was an implied assertion of

innocence and that was the government’s stated reason for admitting it. It was made

in direct response to an inquiry whether there were “any guns or drugs in the car?”,

and it was introduced—in the government’s words—“to show . . . that [the driver]

doesn’t believe there’s a gun in the car.” That implied assertion, introduced to

establish the truth of the implication that any contraband in the car did not belong to

the driver, was inadmissible hearsay and it should have been precluded.

Nonetheless, in light of the jury’s verdict acquitting Grimes of the principal charges

and the cumulative nature of this hearsay evidence, we find the error in admitting

that statement harmless. We affirm.

I.

This case began with a traffic stop. Two officers saw an SUV which they

believed to be speeding, so they pulled it over. Inside the vehicle were Marcus 4

Wallace (driver), Mark Grimes (front-seat passenger), and Angelina Mitchell

(backseat passenger, driver’s side). After directing the occupants to roll down the

car’s heavily tinted windows, one of the officers asked Wallace if there were “any

guns or drugs in the car?” Wallace said there were not and invited the officers to

“flip this thing inside out” if they wanted to see for themselves. The officers took

him up on the offer. While searching the back seat, officers located a black plastic

bag containing men’s clothing, CDs, and a .40 caliber handgun wrapped inside a

shirt. The gun held a magazine containing fourteen rounds of ammunition.

Following the search, the officers placed the car’s three occupants under arrest.

A government forensic scientist, April Jones, checked the gun for prints.

While she did not recover any from the gun itself, she lifted several from the gun’s

magazine. Another government employee, Laura Tierney, then compared those

prints to a set of prints it had taken from Grimes in connection with an unrelated

2013 misdemeanor arrest. 1 She concluded Grimes was the source of one of the

fingerprints on the firearm’s magazine, while noting that an individual who was not

in the car, Lamont Tucker, contributed another of the prints. Based on the

The Metropolitan Police Department stored the prints in Live Scan, an 1

electronic database containing arrestees’ demographic information, fingerprints, and mugshots. 5

investigation, charges against Wallace and Mitchell were dismissed and the

government indicted Grimes on five counts: (1) unlawful possession of a firearm;

(2) carrying a pistol without a license; (3) possession of an unregistered firearm; (4)

unlawful possession of ammunition; and (5) possession of a large capacity

ammunition feeding device. 2

Before trial, the government moved to admit the 2013 fingerprint card under

the business records exception to the rule against hearsay. The card included

Grimes’s photo, his unique personal identification number, the name of the officer

who collected the prints, and the date the prints were taken. The government

explained that Officer Karen Usher, who collected the prints in 2013, was no longer

employed by MPD and that it had been unable to contact her. The defense objected

to the admission of Officer Usher’s out-of-court statements contained on the

fingerprint card, asserting that it would violate Grimes’s Sixth Amendment right to

confront the witnesses against him. The trial court disagreed and admitted the card

into evidence. At trial—as relevant to the fingerprint evidence—the government

called (1) Jones who testified that she recovered fingerprints from the firearm’s

magazine; (2) a custodian of records who introduced the 2013 fingerprint card,

2 See D.C. Code § 22-4503(a)(1) (2012 Repl.), § 22-4504(a)(2), § 7- 2502.01(a) (2018 Repl.), § 7-2506.01(a)(3), and § 7-2506.01(b), respectively. 6

explaining that he pulled it from MPD’s Live Scan database; and (3) Tierney who

testified that one of the fingerprints recovered from the gun’s magazine matched

Grimes’s prints from the 2013 fingerprint card.

The jury found Grimes guilty of possessing the extended magazine while

acquitting him of the remaining charges. The court sentenced him to 180 days of

incarceration.

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