Jermyl Moody v. United States

82 A.3d 769, 2013 WL 6570780, 2013 D.C. App. LEXIS 797
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 13, 2013
Docket10-CF-181
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 82 A.3d 769 (Jermyl Moody 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
Jermyl Moody v. United States, 82 A.3d 769, 2013 WL 6570780, 2013 D.C. App. LEXIS 797 (D.C. 2013).

Opinion

*771 FISHER, Associate Judge:

Appellant Jermyl Moody was convicted by a jury of two counts of possession of a controlled substance (ecstasy and marijuana), 1 unlawful possession of a firearm by a convicted felon, 2 carrying a pistol without a license (CPWL), 3 unlawful possession of ammunition, 4 and possession of an unregistered firearm. 5 Two months later, appellant filed a motion for a new trial based on newly discovered evidence. Appellant had located a potentially exculpatory witness who claimed a Fifth Amendment privilege, and he requested that the trial court apply the procedure endorsed by this court in Carter v. United States, 684 A.2d 331 (D.C. 1996) (en banc), in considering his motion for a new trial. The court held evidentiary hearings on October 23 and December 11, 2009, but the witness proffered by the defense did not testify. After the trial judge denied the new trial motion, this appeal followed. Appellant’s counsel confirmed at oral argument that his client is not seeking a new trial on the drug charges.

We conclude that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in denying the motion for a new trial. The court carefully applied Carter, declining to override the government’s decision that it would not grant the witness testimonial immunity. This was not an abuse of discretion. We further conclude that the trial court properly denied the motion on the ground that the proffered testimony would not likely produce an acquittal at a new trial.

I. Facts

On January 5, 2008, Metropolitan Police Department (MPD) Officers Amy Oliva and Mark Nassar conducted a traffic stop of a black Cadillac CTS with heavily tinted windows. Upon request, appellant, the driver, lowered all four windows. The officers saw a female passenger in the front passenger seat and noticed “a strong odor ... of an alcoholic beverage.” Officer Oli-va found an opened bottle of vodka and two plastic cups, and appellant and the female passenger were placed under arrest. During a search of the car incident to arrest, the officers found several items that were later introduced at trial, including a black briefcase on the rear floorboard. Appellant admitted that the briefcase was his, but he declined to open it, asserting that it contained nude photographs of his wife. (No such photographs were found.) 6

The briefcase contained a loaded Sig Sauer semiautomatic handgun, approximately fourteen-hundred pills, marijuana, some loose powder, and a pipe used to smoke marijuana. Police also found a bullet on the driver’s side floorboard between the seat and the transmission hump, a single bag of marijuana in the trunk of the car, and a red Ziploc bag in appellant’s left front pants pocket containing twelve pills. *772 A government expert testified that the bullet found on the driver’s side floorboard was not “any different” in appearance than the bullets recovered from inside the magazine and chamber of the handgun found in the briefcase. The government’s chemist testified that although a few of the pills in the red Ziploc bag in appellant’s pants pocket and in the briefcase contained ecstasy, most were “fake” ecstasy.

Thus, in brief summary, appellant admitted the briefcase was his. A bullet found on the driver’s side floorboard was not “any different” than the bullets found in the handgun inside the briefcase. The Ziploc bag in appellant’s pocket contained green and yellow ecstasy pills and some fake ecstasy pills, and the briefcase contained some green and yellow ecstasy pills and hundreds of fake ecstasy pills. There was marijuana in the briefcase and in the trunk of appellant’s car.

At trial, the defense called the passenger, Nicole Smith. Smith testified that she did not see the briefcase when she entered the car, and that another passenger, who entered the car at approximately the same time as Smith, had sat in the back seat of the car and exited the vehicle at the Metro station off of 5th and K Streets just before they were pulled over by the officers. The defense also played portions of recorded phone calls made while appellant was in jail in which he stated that he dropped “Leroy” off at the Metro, and “that Leroy left his stuff in the car.” The defense did not call Leroy as a witness or seek a continuance to locate him. At the conclusion of the trial, appellant was found guilty of all charges.

II. The Rule 33 Motion

In his motion for a new trial, appellant announced that he had located the backseat passenger and wanted to present him at a new trial as an exculpating witness. Appellant attached a handwritten statement signed by Leroy Odom in which Odom admits to leaving in appellant’s car a briefcase that contained a handgun and over 1500 pills. The statement was not notarized, but it was signed by Odom “under the penalty of perjury” and witnessed by James Glenn, Odom’s brother. At a hearing on the new trial motion, appellant, his friend Gregory Daniels, and Odom’s brother, James Glenn, each testified that they had spent a significant amount of time searching for Odom before appellant’s trial, but that they had been unable to find him. Odom’s counsel informed the court that Odom would not testify at a new trial (or at the motion hearing) unless the government granted him immunity, and both Odom’s counsel and appellant’s counsel asked the court to follow the procedure this court set out in Carter.

At the trial court’s request, the government debriefed Odom. Odom’s counsel was present at the debriefing, which lasted more than two hours. The prosecutor announced at a subsequent hearing that the government would not provide immunity to Odom to facilitate his testimony at a Rule 33 hearing because she believed “that by putting this witness on the stand [the government] would be sponsoring perjury.” The prosecutor and Odom’s counsel provided oral descriptions of Odom’s statements at the debriefing, and the trial court gave defense counsel an opportunity to address the issue of immunity. Counsel argued that without the testimony of Odom, he would not be able to “put on the evidence that [would] allow [appellant] to get a new trial.”

The prosecutor gave an extensive proffer of the debriefing with Mr. Odom, only part of which we will summarize here. For long periods of time, Odom was in a “crack haze” and lived on the streets. Although he claimed to have lived with his *773 wife for a couple of months in 2008, “[h]e couldn’t remember what the time period was.” Odom said he sometimes lived with family, but he couldn’t provide details. Suspiciously, however, he claimed, in the words of the prosecutor, to remember the night of appellant’s arrest “in startling detail.” On the other hand, “[h]e forgot his Burberry coat in the trunk [of Mr. Moody’s car] because he was so drunk he couldn’t remember.” Moreover, Odom couldn’t remember anything else being in the briefcase apart from fake ecstasy pills and the pistol.

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Bluebook (online)
82 A.3d 769, 2013 WL 6570780, 2013 D.C. App. LEXIS 797, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jermyl-moody-v-united-states-dc-2013.