Ingram v. United States

976 A.2d 180, 2009 D.C. App. LEXIS 263, 2009 WL 2175769
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 23, 2009
Docket06-CF-668
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 976 A.2d 180 (Ingram 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
Ingram v. United States, 976 A.2d 180, 2009 D.C. App. LEXIS 263, 2009 WL 2175769 (D.C. 2009).

Opinion

REID, Associate Judge:

We previously remanded this case for further proceedings regarding a contention by appellant, Darion J. Ingram, that the trial court erred by failing to admit into evidence an alleged statement against penal interest made by a third party, Jameel Aleem. See Ingram v. United States, 885 A.2d 257 (D.C.2005) (Ingram I). Following an evidentiary hearing on remand, the trial court made findings of fact and conclusions of law, and again excluded Mr. Aleem’s statement to Mr. Ingram’s trial counsel confessing that he shot the victim. Mr. Ingram once again challenges the trial court’s exclusion of Mr. Aleem’s statement. We affirm the judgment of the trial court.

FACTUAL SUMMARY

We need not repeat the entire factual summary of the events surrounding the shooting and wounding of Maurice E. McKay on November 5, 2001, and Mr. Ingram’s July 2002 trial. See Ingram I, 885 A.2d at 261-63. The critical aspect of the trial centered on the trial judge’s ruling that Mr. Aleem’s confession to the shooting of Mr. McKay could not be admitted into evidence because Mr. Aleem “was an unreliable witness whose account [of the shooting] should not be received in evidence unless [Mr.] Aleem was subject to cross-examination by the government”; and that Mr. Aleem’s statement, as proffered by defense counsel, did not “have sufficient indicia of reliability to be allowed to come into evidence as a statement of penal interest under Laumer v. United States[, 409 A.2d 190 (D.C.1979) (en banc)]....” Id. at 261. Prior to our decision in Ingram I, we “remanded the record to the trial court for additional findings relating to [Mr.] Aleem’s grand jury *183 testimony and for any clarification of [the court’s] rulings ... that the trial judge wished to make.” Id. at 262. After receiving the trial court’s April 12, 2005 supplemental findings, we subsequently issued our decision in Ingram I.

In Ingram I, we ultimately concluded “that the question of whether [Mr.] Aleem’s confession satisfies the standard of trustworthiness adopted by this court in Laumer is a close one and is difficult to resolve on the present record.” 1 Id. at 268. We further stated that the “proper disposition may turn on the existence vel non of a motive for [Mr.] Aleem to shoot or kill [Mr.] McKay and on the application to the record of the legal principles set forth [in Ingram I ].” Id. Consequently, we remanded the case to the trial court so that it could hear the testimony of defense counsel concerning Mr. Aleem’s alleged statement against penal interest, and any other evidence relevant to that issue. We indicated that following the evidentiary hearing, the trial court should decide whether to allow the jury to hear Mr. Aleem’s statement, and if so, to order a new trial. See also id. at 268 n. 26.

During the remand hearing, Jane Norman, Mr. Ingram’s trial counsel, testified for the defense. The trial judge summarized her testimony in his factual findings on remand. Ms. Norman “had five meetings with Mr. Aleem and, in a sixth meeting, which she did not attend, her investigator took a signed statement from Mr. Aleem, given ‘under penalty of perjury.’ ” However, Ms. Norman “cannot locate her file, there are no extant notes of her conversations with Mr. Aleem, and she cannot produce a copy of Mr. Aleem’s signed statement taken by her investigator.” In all but one of the conversations with Ms. Norman, and in his signed statement to the investigator, Mr. Aleem stated that Mr. McKay was “shot by a rival group from the neighborhood and not by [Mr.] Ingram.” In that one conversation, Mr. Aleem maintained that Mr. McKay was shot by a rival group, but he “used different names for the persons in the rival group who supposedly shot [Mr.] McKay,” and he “dismissed [Ms. Norman’s] misgivings ... and told her to ‘just use those [the original] names then.’ ” Because of Mr. Aleem’s “eager[ness] to testify to help [Mr. Ingram],” Ms. Norman “became suspicious and accused [Mr.] Aleem of being some sort of ‘all purpose witness,’ which he denied.” When Ms. Norman “asked [Mr.] Aleem directly whether he was the one who shot [Mr. McKay] ..., [he] responded: ‘Are you kidding? If I had shot [Mr. McKay], he wouldn’t still be alive.... Some fool shot him at point blank range and missed. I would never miss.”

Ultimately, Ms. Norman decided not to call Mr. Aleem as a defense witness during Mr. Ingram’s trial. When she relayed this decision to Mr. Aleem when she visited the jail to prepare Mr. Ingram for trial, Mr. Aleem “put his head in his hands, made a sigh that sounded like crying, and said, as Ms. Norman recalls it from memory: ‘I’m the one who wasted Moe [Mr. McKay], and my only regret is I didn’t finish him off, but I’m going to take care of that when I get out.’ ” Mr. Aleem added: “And don’t worry about the trial. I’m going to have anyone who testifies against [Mr. Ingram] ... killed and their families.” When Ms. Norman inquired about Mr. Aleem’s motive for allegedly shooting Mr. McKay, “he *184 explained that he (Aleem) was the leader of a gang of ‘youngins’ whose members did what he said and that [Mr.] McKay was a member who had been causing him trouble by not doing what he was told and by committing a daytime robbery, which brought the group unwanted attention.” Ms. Norman believed that Mr. Aleem was telling the truth when he confessed to the shooting of Mr. McKay because “[h]e looked her in the eye when he said it, and he seemed more serious than he had appeared in any prior conversation.” But Ms. Norman became “frightened” by his threats and “never spoke to Mr. Aleem again.” She thought Mr. Aleem “trusted” her because they “had a good rapport” and “got along real well”; and he didn’t think she “would tell anybody” about his confession. Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law on Remand, May 16, 2006, at 3-5 (“Findings on Remand”).

Detective Ray Anthony Crawford of the Metropolitan Police Department, testified for the government. The trial judge found that he was one of the lead detectives in the case involving the shooting of Mr. McKay. According to him, Mr. McKay identified Mr. Aleem as a person who was on the scene at the time of the shooting and “who witnessed [Mr.] Ingram shoot him[, that is, Mr. McKay].” During Detective Crawford’s investigation, Mr. Aleem was incarcerated in connection with another case. Detective Crawford attempted to interview him about Mr. McKay’s shooting on two occasions, and on the third time, he decided to put Mr. Aleem before the grand jury because of his hostility. 2 The trial judge described Mr. Aleem’s grand jury testimony as “evasive” and “flatly at odds with his final unsworn version, in which he claimed to Ms. Norman that he was the one who shot [Mr.] McKay.” Furthermore, the trial judge determined that a summer 2002 mental health evaluation of Mr. Aleem revealed that although he was “competent,” he had “an extreme personality disorder, including, among other features, ‘deceitfulness, or conning others for personal profit or pleasure.’ ” Moreover, Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
976 A.2d 180, 2009 D.C. App. LEXIS 263, 2009 WL 2175769, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ingram-v-united-states-dc-2009.