In re D.P.

122 A.3d 903, 2015 D.C. App. LEXIS 367, 2015 WL 4772648
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedAugust 13, 2015
DocketNo. 13-FS-1347
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 122 A.3d 903 (In re D.P.) 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
In re D.P., 122 A.3d 903, 2015 D.C. App. LEXIS 367, 2015 WL 4772648 (D.C. 2015).

Opinion

EASTERLY, Associate Judge:

As sixteen-year-old D.P. was traveling home from school on a crowded Metrobus, she and two girlfriends started a fight with M.G., another girl from a different high school. The entire incident was captured on video by the Metrobus camera. From start to finish, the fight lasted approximately fourteen seconds. D.P. and her friends pushed through other passengers standing in the aisle to get at M.G., exchanged blows with M.G., and then got off the bus. M.G. stood her ground for most of the incident but, at the very end, disappeared from view. Apparently, she hit her head on a pole, and she was knocked unconscious. A friend of M.G.’s helped her into a seat, where she quickly revived. Minutes later, M.G. walked off the bus and declined to go to the hospital.

One of D.P.’s friends pled out to simple assault, a misdemeanor, and the other friend’s case was apparently never adjudicated. But D.P. went to trial. The trial court adjudicated her delinquent after finding her involved in the most severe form of assault in the District, aggravated assault, as well as its lesser included offense, assault with significant bodily injury, both felonies. D.P. now appeals, arguing that the evidence was insufficient to support a finding of her guilt of (or involvement in) either crime. We agree.

Fights on public transit are unquestionably a cause for concern, and D.P.’s actions cannot be condoned, but D.P. did not engage in felonious conduct in this case. As to aggravated assault, the evidence is at the very least inadequate to demonstrate that D.P. possessed the requisite mens rea under the government’s theory of the case: extreme indifference to human life, equivalent to the mental state required for second-degree murder. As to assault with significant bodily injury (“felony assault”), M.G.’s minimal bruising and brief unconsciousness do not, under this court’s binding precedent, amount to the kind of “significant” injury that would take this incident out of the realm of simple assault. Thus, we reverse and remand.

I. Facts1

Around 3:35 p.m. on September 27, 2012, sixteen-year-old D.P. boarded a Metrobus along with several other teenage companions, including codefendants M.P. and I.C. The group, identifiable as students from the same school by their matching school uniforms, filed onto the bus and seated themselves in the rearmost several rows. [906]*906There, the schoolmates engaged in typical teenage socializing and horsing around. One student shared his snacks with M.P. and I.C.; another young man perched briefly on M.P.’s lap; and a third student showed off a dance move. D.P. and her schoolmates chatted and laughed, gestured across the aisle, and stood frequently to switch seats.

Then, around 3:45 p.m., fifteen-year-old M.G. boarded the bus with H.A. and another group of teenagers; they were also wearing school uniforms, but theirs were different from those of D.P. and her companions. M.G. and her schoolmates moved to the center area of the articulated (double-length) bus. By this time, the bus was quite crowded, and there were no more seats available. M.G. and H.A. squeezed in alongside other standing passengers, holding onto the bus railings.

M.G. noticed D.P. and her friends in the back of the bus; she testified that they were being “loud,” and were shouting for the students from M.G.’s school to come to the back of the bus. H.A. additionally testified that teenagers at the back of the bus were “yelling” that students from his and M.G.’s school were “bitches.” Neither M.G. nor H.A. knew D.P. or her friends.

After about two minutes of this, at about 3:47 p.m., D.P. and her friends stood up and, moving single file — with M.P. in the lead, followed by D.P. and then I.C.— pushed their way to the center of the bus where M.G. stood. Seemingly without warning, M.P. punched M.G. in the face.

A brief scuffle ensued. M.P. continued to hit M.G., who tried to fight back M.G., but initially hit only air (or each other) until they were able to push past two women who were standing in the aisle and partially blocking their path. For the next several seconds, D.P. and her friends swung at M.G., but because of the crowded conditions it is difficult to see on the video where their blows landed. M.G. described that “we were just going back and forth,” that she was “getting multiple hits,” and that she “was hitting back,” though she did not know whether any of her punches connected. Meanwhile, nearby passengers attempted to pull the girls apart or at least push them away.

After approximately fourteen seconds,2 the fight ended just as quickly as it had begun. D.P. and the other girls turned around and made their way through the crowd to the rear door and exited the bus, which had come to a stop. About the same time, M.G. disappeared from the view of the camera. M.G. testified that she fell, hit her head on a pole, and briefly blacked out.3 H.A. picked her up and placed her, sitting upright, in an available seat. According to H.A., M.G. was unconscious for “maybe a minute, maybe less.” M.G. testified that she came to “on the chair.” A woman unbuttoned her shirt to help her breathe and directed the other passengers to give her some space. The [907]*907crowd of passengers quickly thinned, bringing M.G. back into full view of the security camera.

About two minutes later, M.G. stood up and walked unassisted to the front of the bus where she sat down again, with H.A. beside her. The bus driver told M.G. that an ambulance had been called to take her to the hospital, but M.G. told the driver that she did not want to go. Two emergency medical technicians (“EMTs”) subsequently entered the bus and spoke briefly to M.G. and H.A. before escorting them out the front door. M.G. testified that she went with the EMTs to their ambulance, where they “checked [her] blood pressure,” “checked [her] head,” and asked whether she was okay. From this examination, the EMTs apparently determined that M.G. did not need to go to the hospital, but they “made” her call her father.

The government presented no medical evidence regarding the nature of M.G.’s injuries, and M.G. provided no testimony that she had received any medical care after this incident. M.G. testified that “[t]he day after [she] had a headache,” and that “for like two, two/three days” after-wards she experienced “minor headaches,” but she did not go to the hospital. When asked if she had “any injuries, any swelling, anything at all” as a result of the incident,'the only injury she identified was “the one when I first got hit, that’s the only one I had,” referring to the right side of her face where she had first been punched by M.P.

The government charged M.P., I.C. and D.P. with aggravated assault and assault with significant bodily injury. M.P. pled out to simple assault. There is no indication in the Superior Court docket that delinquency proceedings against I.C. were ever pursued. D.P. alone went to trial.4

The government’s theory at trial was that D.P. was involved in both crimes as an aider and abettor, and the government and the court correctly understood that the government was required to establish the same mens rea for D.P. as it would if she were the principal actor committing the offense.5 The defense vigorously contested the sufficiency of the evidence with respect to D.P.’s mental state and the gravity of the injury M.G.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
122 A.3d 903, 2015 D.C. App. LEXIS 367, 2015 WL 4772648, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-dp-dc-2015.