Hassan Christopher Atkins v. Commonwealth of Virginia

800 S.E.2d 827, 68 Va. App. 1, 2017 WL 2853486, 2017 Va. App. LEXIS 160
CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedJuly 5, 2017
Docket1542162
StatusPublished
Cited by47 cases

This text of 800 S.E.2d 827 (Hassan Christopher Atkins v. Commonwealth of Virginia) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hassan Christopher Atkins v. Commonwealth of Virginia, 800 S.E.2d 827, 68 Va. App. 1, 2017 WL 2853486, 2017 Va. App. LEXIS 160 (Va. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA

Present: Judges Humphreys, Decker and O’Brien PUBLISHED

Argued at Richmond, Virginia

HASSAN CHRISTOPHER ATKINS OPINION BY v. Record No. 1542-16-2 JUDGE MARLA GRAFF DECKER JULY 5, 2017 COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF POWHATAN COUNTY Paul W. Cella, Judge

B. Thomas Bledsoe (The Law Office of B. Thomas Bledsoe, P.C., on briefs), for appellant.

Virginia B. Theisen, Senior Assistant Attorney General (Mark R. Herring, Attorney General, on brief), for appellee.

Hassan Christopher Atkins appeals his convictions for three counts of breaking and

entering and three counts of grand larceny, in violation of Code §§ 18.2-89 and 18.2-95.1 The

appellant argues that the evidence of the text messages and tweet recovered from his cellular

telephone were inadmissible because the Commonwealth failed to prove that he was the person

who sent those messages. We conclude that the Commonwealth sufficiently established that the

appellant was the person who authored the challenged messages and therefore adequately

authenticated the evidence. Consequently, the convictions are affirmed.

I. BACKGROUND

This case involves a short string of burglaries and thefts from three businesses. On

August 23, 2015, Deputy Michael Fiedler, with the Powhatan County Sheriff’s Office, responded

1 The appellant also was convicted of possession of burglarious tools and failure to appear, in violation of Code §§ 18.2-94 and 19.2-128, but those convictions are not subjects of this appeal. to Quality Data Systems, which sells and services banking equipment, after a break-in was

reported. When Fiedler arrived, the glass in the side entry door was completely shattered. On

the ground among the glass he found a “ceramic portion” and conducting rod that appeared to be

pieces of a spark plug.2 Cash in the amount of $1,100 had been stolen. As a result of the

damage to the property, the owner secured the door with plywood and pressboard before leaving

for the night.

Later that night, or in the early morning hours, the door was broken again. More items

were stolen, including three money counter machines and a digital camera.

On August 23 or 24, 2015, another burglary was discovered, this time at SMG Imports, a

car dealership. The glass front door was shattered, and the office doors were broken. A laptop

computer was missing. Additionally, keys to a “BMW coupe” were taken from inside the office,

and the car was stolen.

Around “the 23[r]d or 25th” of that same month, a burglary also was discovered at a third

location, Arborscapes, a tree care company.3 The door was “kicked in,” and two laptop

computers were missing. One of the stolen computers was an “Apple MacBook” with the serial

number C02P1HBXG3QH. A cellular phone and checks made payable to Arborscapes also were

taken.

Approximately a week later, Lieutenant Danny Smith, with the Powhatan County

Sheriff’s Office, was on routine patrol. Near the burglarized businesses, he saw a car being

driven erratically, so he stopped the vehicle. The appellant was the front seat passenger. Smith

2 Another deputy sheriff explained that spark plugs can be used to break windows. 3 The three businesses were in very close proximity to each other. Arborscapes and SMG Imports shared the same front door, but had separate locked office doors.

-2- saw a ski mask and rubber gloves in the car on the floor of the rear passenger compartment.

Additionally, Lieutenant Smith found a drill and two other masks.

A backpack found at the appellant’s feet contained school papers bearing his name,

checks payable to Arborscapes, cameras, and three spark plugs.4 One of the cameras was the one

stolen from Quality Data Systems.

During the traffic stop, Detective Mike Wentworth noticed that the appellant wore “Nike

flip-flops” that looked like the shoes of one of the individuals who appeared in the surveillance

footage of the break-in at Arborscapes.5 Wentworth also found a cellular telephone. The

appellant identified the phone as his and provided law enforcement with the passcode.

In connection with the investigation, law enforcement officers searched the appellant’s

home. They found one of the stolen money counters in the appellant’s bedroom.

At trial, Detective Wentworth identified the cell phone that the appellant had

acknowledged as belonging to him. Robert Brown, a special agent with the High Technology

Crimes Division of the Virginia Department of State Police, analyzed the appellant’s phone. He

testified that a social media application (“app”) installed on the phone had been created with an

email address containing the appellant’s name. The phone contained stored photos of an Apple

laptop computer. Also stored on the phone was a “screen shot” of a single Twitter message, or

tweet.6 The tweet included a photograph of the money counter that was found in the appellant’s

4 The checks were specifically identified as the ones stolen from the company. 5 The DVD with the surveillance recording was admitted into evidence. 6 Twitter is a “social media forum[].” Hunter v. State Bar, ex rel. Third Dist. Comm., 285 Va. 485, 496, 744 S.E.2d 611, 616 (2013). “A [t]weet is any message posted to Twitter which may contain photos, videos, links . . . and text.” Sublet v. State, 113 A.3d 695, 698 n.9 (Md. 2015) (quoting New User FAQs, Twitter, https://support.twitter.com/articles/13920-new-user- faqs (last visited Apr. 20, 2015)). -3- room and text advertising a money counter for sale. Agent Brown verified that the tweet was

sent from the appellant’s phone.

Additionally, Agent Brown testified that he recovered some text messages that were sent

from the phone. The text messages admitted into evidence included messages sent from the

appellant’s phone between August 24 and 27, 2015. The messages communicated that the

sender was selling money counters and a “mack book . . . pro” with the serial number

“c02p1hbxg3qh.” The sender also noted that he “got a new bmw” the previous night that he

“shoulda kept.”

The appellant objected to the admission of the tweet and the text messages, arguing that

the identity of the sender was not proved. The Commonwealth countered that the appellant had

sent the messages from his own phone and that they were admissible because they were not

hearsay or, alternatively, they were party admissions, a recognized exception to the rule against

hearsay. The trial court overruled the objection, noting that the tweet and text messages were

sent from “his phone, the phone he used.”

The jury found the appellant guilty of three counts of breaking and entering and three

counts of grand larceny. On these convictions, the court sentenced the appellant to a total of

ninety years of incarceration, with seventy-five of those years suspended. The fifteen years

remaining consisted of three sets of five years each to be served concurrently, leaving the

appellant with five years of active incarceration.

II. ANALYSIS

The appellant challenges his convictions for breaking and entering and grand larceny. He

argues that the trial court erred by admitting the evidence of the twenty text messages and the

written message portion of the single tweet found on his cellular telephone. He contends that the

evidence lacked an adequate foundation because the Commonwealth did not prove that he was

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Bluebook (online)
800 S.E.2d 827, 68 Va. App. 1, 2017 WL 2853486, 2017 Va. App. LEXIS 160, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hassan-christopher-atkins-v-commonwealth-of-virginia-vactapp-2017.