Host v. United States

178 A.3d 1156
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 15, 2018
DocketNos. 12-CF-1589, 12-CF-1590, 15-CO-1005, 12-CF-1641, 12-CF-1675, and 12-CF-1699
StatusPublished

This text of 178 A.3d 1156 (Host 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
Host v. United States, 178 A.3d 1156 (D.C. 2018).

Opinion

Blackburne-Rigsby, Chief Judge:

Following an extended months-long joint jury trial, appellants Robert Bost, Jeffrey Best, Sanquan Carter, Orlando Carter,1 and Lamar Williams were each convicted of participating in at least orie of two separate, but related conspiracies to commit murder that in total left five dead and eight injured. Specifically, Best, Sanquan, and Orlando were found guilty of murdering Jordan Howe and injuring two others orí March 22, 2010, in retaliation for the theft of Sanquan’s bracelet (“first conspiracy”)-2 On .March. 23, 2010, to avenge Howe’s murder, Howe’s half-brother, Marquis Hicks, along with three friends, shot Orlando. In retaliation for Orlando’s shooting, Bost, Orlando, Best, and Williams conspired to murder Howe’s friends (“second conspiracy”).3 On March' 30, 2010, Bost, Orlando, and Best murdered Tavon Nelson for his firearip and then the three co-conspirators, with assistance , from Williams, conducted a drive-by shooting on the 4000 block of South Capitol Street, Washington, D.C., where some of Howe’s friends had gathered in Howe’s remembrance. The shooting left three dead and six wounded.4

In their consolidated appeals, appellants — both jointly and individually — allege that several errors occurred during the course of their joint jury trial. For the forthcoming reasons, we affirm the judgments of the Superior Court. In light of the length of this opinion, we set forth below the following table of contents as an aid to the reader.

Table of Contents

I. Factual'Background.. ,1170

A. First Conspiracy: Alabama Avenue Shooting.. .1170

B. Retaliatory Shooting of Orlando..-.1171

C. Second Conspiracy: Murder of Ta-von Nelson and South Capitol Street Shooting.. .1172

D. Government’s Evidence of the Crimes... 1173
E. Convictions and Sentences... 1175

II. Pretrial Issues... 1175

A. Change of Venue... 1175

B. Joinder and Severance... 1178

III. Issues Arising During Trial... 1188

A. Prosecutor’s Statements During Opening and Closing... 1188

B. Technical Issues with Hush-er...1192

C. Statements Against Penal Interest... 1195

D. Withdrawal From Conspiracy Jury Instruction... 1200

E. Other Issues... 1201

IV. Juror’s Note... 1203

V. Best’s Ineffective Assistance of Counsel Claim... 1205

VI. Conclusion... 1213

I. Factual Background

A. First Conspiracy: Alabama Avenue Shooting5

On the night of March 21, 2010, Sanquan was at a party with a group of acquaintances, including Andre Morgan and Jordan Howe, who were godbrothers, in the basement apartment of Jam’ya Wilkins, located at 1333 Alabama Avenue, Southeast, Washington, D.C. At the party, San-quan showed off his fake diamond bracelet to numerous individuals, including Howe. After the party, Sanquan realized that his bracelet had been stolen. He became upset and rampaged through Wilkins’s apartment looking for the bracelet, which he suspected that one of the men at the party had stolen. Sanquan, with assistance from Morgan, then went to find Howe at Howe’s apartment, where Sanquan confronted Howe about the bracelet. In response, Howe told Sanquan, “[M]an, nobody got that fake bracelet, not nobody,” and San-quan responded, “[Yj’all motherfu**ers playing. Y’all need to come up with the bracelet.” Morgan and Sanquan then attempted to find and confront the other men at the party, but were unable to locate them. Undeterred, on his way back to the apartment building on Alabama Avenue, Sanquan called his older brother Orlando and told him that he had been robbed and to “bring everything.”

When Sanquan called, Orlando was with his friend, Nathaniel Simms, in a silver Kia Spectra, which belonged to Simms’s girlfriend, Brittany Young. Orlando told San-quan on the phone, “[W]e about to be on our way up there” and he then told Simms that Sanquan had just been robbed and that they needed to pick up their other friend, Best, to ride with them to meet Sanquan. Simms and Orlando first went to the home of Orlando’s godmother, Shiree Little, where Orlando picked up his AK-47 rifle, and afterwards, they picked up Best from his home, The three men then went to Williams’s home, where Williams gave them Simms’s .380 pistol and Williams’s shotgun. Orlando told the group, “[Mjoth-erfu**ers robbed my little brother[;j they going to see.” Best replied, “[Ojh, yeah, I love this sh**. I love this sh**.” Williams then showed Best how to use the shotgun. In preparation for the encounter, Orlando switched from his bright red jacket into a black jacket that was in the Kia’s trunk and Best also switched into another jacket. Williams got out of the car before the men drove off toward 1333 Alabama Avenue, Southeast.

When Simms, Orlando, and Best arrived at Aabama Avenue, Sanquan approached the car and Orlando told him to “come on.” Sanquan replied, ‘You think I brought [you] all the way over here for nothing?” Sanquan then took the .380 - pistol from Simms. Sanquan, Orlando, and Best approached the apartment -building where the party had occurred earlier and where numerous individuals who had attended the party were still standing outside. San-quan brandished the .380 pistol, Orlando brandished the AK-47, and Best held the shotgun, while Simms remained in the car.

Sanquan held the individuals in front of the apartment at gunpoint while he patted them down and demanded the return of his bracelet. After one of the individuals refused to be patted down, Sanquan turned to Orlando and Orlando asked San-quan if he should, “Go ham?”, i.e., whether they should start shooting, to which San-quan replied, “Go ham.” The three men then started shooting at the group indiscriminately. Sanquan fired all five rounds that had been in the .380 pistol, Orlando fired all twenty-eight rounds from the AK-47, and Best fired the shotgun three times. During the shooting, Howe, who was in a car nearby, was hit by a stray bullet and died, while two others, juvenile V.K.M. and Tavon Lambert, were injured by the gunfire.

After seeing Howe’s body and realizing that Howe was ■ dead, Morgan, who had supported Sanquan up. to that point but who was Howe’s godbrother, left the scene vowing revenge on the Carter brothers. He immediately went to meet with other friends and told them what had occurred, and they all formed an agreement to murder Sanquan and Orlando in retaliation.

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Bluebook (online)
178 A.3d 1156, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/host-v-united-states-dc-2018.