Jackson v. United States

66 F.2d 280, 62 App. D.C. 250, 1933 U.S. App. LEXIS 2621
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedJune 26, 1933
DocketNo. 5914
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 66 F.2d 280 (Jackson v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jackson v. United States, 66 F.2d 280, 62 App. D.C. 250, 1933 U.S. App. LEXIS 2621 (D.C. Cir. 1933).

Opinion

GRONER, Associate Justice.

Appellants were indicted, tried, and convicted of murder in the lirst degree. Their motion for a new trial was denied by the lower court, and the case is here on appeal.

The killing occurred on the 7th of August, 1932, in one of the parks in the colored section of the city of Washing-ton. The victim was a police officer; Earlier that evening he had arrested two colored boys for disorderly conduct, and they had been taken in a patrol wagon to jail. Jackson, one of appellants, was incensed because of these arrests and also because the policeman ordered him off the sidewalk when he protested. A little later in the evening Jackson suggested to several of his friends, including the other two appellants, that they should get together and attack the policeman, and accordingly, after fortifying themselves with whisky, they remained around the park until about midnight, when one of them, said by one of the witnesses to be Jackson, though he himself denied it, threw a rock at the policeman, causing the latter to leave Ms automobile and come back into the park to arrest the person who had thrown the rock. The officer, after a brief conversation with another colored man, walked up to Jackson and asked if he had thrown the rock. Jackson replied he had not. The ])oliceman said that he knew he had, and thereupon placed him under arrest. The story of what followed is told by one of the government’s witnesses as follows:

After placing Jackson under arrest, the officer carried Mm across the concrete to the other side of the park; the officer had Jackson by the belt, and Jackson said: “I am not going to stand for being locked up.” When the officer persisted, Jackson said: “Come on, gang, get him.” Whereupon the defendant Irvin Murray (another of the appellants) came from behind a bush and hit the officer in the back of the head with a brick, causing the officer to be knocked to the ground; Murray then reached down and took the officer’s gun, and Holmes (another of the appellants) reached down and took Ms billy and hit the officer five or six times over the face and head, after which Jackson, Murray, and Holmes ran away.

Substantially the same account of the arrest of Jackson and the assault on the officer is told by other witnesses, and in its main parts was not denied by the defendants in their testimony. Tn the confessions they made to the police and which were read to the jury there is little if any variation.

In his confession Jackson stated he said to the officer when he undertook to arrest him: “You ain’t going to take me nowhere unless it is over my dead body.” “Not paying attention to that, he continued to pull me, and I was pushing him, cause I knew tv hat would happen. We then go between a bush and a tree whore Irvin Murray steals from behind it, and just as he turns Ms face towards Murray, Murray hits the police a powerful blow with a half-brick, which caused the officer to release me.”

Murray in Ms confession, speaking of the time immediately after the arrest, said: “Just as the officer went to look around I threw the brick and struck the officer in the head with it. Joe Jackson then shoved the officer down. The officer moaned like and I ran in and grabbed the officer’s gun out of the holster. Ralph Holmes grabbed the officer’s stick and started beating him in the face with the stick.”

Holmes, speaking to the same point of time, said: “The officer then grabbed Joe Jackson in the front of Ms shirt near the collar and raised Ms nightstick, but did not hit Joe. Joe also grabbed the officer. They was tusselling, and I said, ‘Come on, boys; let’s gang him.’ The officer says to Joe, ‘I’m going to lock you up.’ Joe says, ‘You’re not going to lock me up, cause the only way you’ll lock me up is if I am dead.’ I saw ‘Shorty’ Murray go up behind the officer and hit him with something, and the officer fell to the ground. I went over and picked up the officer’s nightstick and hit the officer with it five times, while he was on the ground, in the face, and once in the chest.”

Jackson, in describing the events preliminary to the assault, stated that he gathered “the park bunch” and “plotted to get the police.” Holmes said that all three appellants, together with a number of others, got together and. determined to “gang” the policeman whenever he should come up and grab one of them. Murray said he was told of the plan to attack the policeman and was asked to join and agreed.

Among the witnesses for the government was Dr. Murphy, a physician and deputy coroner for the District of Columbia. He had performed the autopsy upon the body of the slain officer. His testimony was that deceased was 29 years of age, 5 feet 9 inches tall, and weighed 1891 pounds; that after the assault he had a blac-k eye, and a lacerated, ragged wound running from the bridge of the nose on the left side down to and into the left [282]*282angle of the mouth; also a lacerated wound of the right upper lip running from midline to the right, 2 inches long; that he had a lacerated wound of the right lower lip, running from midline three-quarters of an inch to the right; also a lacerated wound of the chin on the right side; that he had a com-minuted fracture of the bridge of the nose, that is, a multiple or splintered fracture; that he had a fracture of the base of the skull, extending from the right temporal bone; and that his death was due to a fractured skull, with associated hemorrhage and shock.

Each of the appellants testified in his own behalf, but all that appears in the record is that they admitted having signed confessions but denied certain of the incriminating statements contained in them and insisted they had been previously beaten and abused by the police. These questions were fairly submitted to the jury without objection. The appellant Murray testified he did not know whether he had hit the officer on the back of the head with a brick, though he may have done so, that he was very drunk at the time and did not remember what he did.

The errors assigned on appeal are as follows:

First. The court erred in permitting the assistant prosecutor to comment upon the defendants’ failure to produce bystanders to prove their innocence.

Second. The court erred in admitting Government Exhibit No. 4 without proper preliminary proof.

Third. The court erred in denying defendants’ counsel the right to cross-examine Lieutenant Cox with reference to matters brought out on direct examination.

Fourth. The misconduct of the prosecuting attorney in referring to the statement of one Leroy Robinson.

Fifth. The misconduct of the prosecuting attorney in introducing certain testimony under a promise to connect up the same, without having any such connecting evidence at his disposal.

Sixth. The misconduct of the prosecuting attorney in bringing into court and leaving in sight of the jury a. package of bricks and in failing to offer them in evidence.

. Seventh. In admitting in evidence brass knueks found on Irvin Murray at the time of his arrest in Virginia.

Eighth and ninth. For error by the court in its instruction to the jury with relation to Jackson’s right to resist an illegal arrest, and likewise in refusing to tell the jury that they should acquit Jackson in the event they were in doubt whether he had delivered a blow at the officer in the struggle.

We have read the entire record with painstaking care and have examined the brief of counsel for appellants with equal care.

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Related

Brooks v. District of Columbia
48 A.2d 339 (District of Columbia Court of Appeals, 1946)
Penwell v. District of Columbia
31 A.2d 891 (District of Columbia Court of Appeals, 1943)

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Bluebook (online)
66 F.2d 280, 62 App. D.C. 250, 1933 U.S. App. LEXIS 2621, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jackson-v-united-states-cadc-1933.