Jessica A. Lihlakha v. United States

89 A.3d 479, 2014 WL 1640647, 2014 D.C. App. LEXIS 107
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 24, 2014
Docket12-CM-606
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 89 A.3d 479 (Jessica A. Lihlakha 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
Jessica A. Lihlakha v. United States, 89 A.3d 479, 2014 WL 1640647, 2014 D.C. App. LEXIS 107 (D.C. 2014).

Opinions

FERREN, Senior Judge:

Following a bench trial, appellant Jessica Lihlakha was convicted of misdemeanor receiving stolen property (RSP)1 and unlawful entry.2 On appeal, Lihlakha challenges the sufficiency of the evidence to support her convictions. We affirm her conviction for unlawful entry but remand the record for further findings on the RSP charge.3

I.

Lauren Banks testified that on August 13, 2011, she returned to her dorm room at Howard University and, upon entering, left her book bag in the hallway. During [482]*482the minute or so that she left the bag unattended, her laptop inside it, a Mac-book Pro, disappeared. After reporting what happened to campus police, Banks placed signs around her dorm building announcing a “missing Mac laptop,” providing her phone number, and stating that the “[fjinder will be graciously compensated.” The next evening, Banks received a phone call from a woman who asked Banks whether she was missing an HP laptop and what the reward would be for returning it. Banks answered that hers was not an HP but added that the reward was $1,000. The caller then told Banks that she had “just gotten this HP for the low,” and that she would “keep an ear out and see if ... your laptop comes up.”

The woman called Banks the next day to say that she had found two Macbook Pros with the name “Lauren” on them after going to see “the guy she said she got the HP from.” She told Banks that she had found two Mac laptops “at the same place” in “the room where the other computers were.” The woman asked Banks for her full name to determine which of the Mac laptops belonged to her. Banks complied and learned that the caller apparently had her laptop. The caller then contacted Banks again to set up a meeting to exchange the money for the laptop that evening. At that point, Banks contacted the Howard University police, who suggested that Banks either meet the caller herself or have a police officer go in Banks’s place. Banks agreed to have an officer pose as Banks to meet the caller. Per police instructions, Banks told the caller that she needed another day for her parents to wire her the reward money, and she continued to communicate with the caller until they arranged a time and place to meet. At the meeting on August 17, 2011, a police officer posing as Banks met the caller, and the officer thereupon recovered the laptop and brought Lihlakha to the police department for questioning. The police showed Banks a photo of the person who, an officer said, had delivered Banks’s computer. (From the photo, Banks eventually identified that person in court as Lihlakha.) Not long thereafter, Banks heard knocking on her dorm room door. After looking through the peephole, she recognized Lih-lakha (from the photo) as the person standing outside her door with a man who was trying to put a key into it that did not fit. The two then left, and Banks reported the incident to campus police.

The next witness for the government was Investigator Elizabeth Neville, the police officer who met the caller while posing as Banks. Officer Neville testified that Lihlakha had approached her at the place where Banks and the caller had arranged to meet. Neville asked Lihlakha if she had the laptop and told Lihlakha to sit down next to her. Neville testified that she saw a laptop inside Lihlakha’s bag and asked about it, whereupon Lihlakha pulled the laptop out of her bag, opened it, turned it on, and passed it to Neville. Immediately thereafter, other police officers arrived and took Lihlakha away.

The government also presented the testimony of Investigator Ronald Tarpley of the Howard University Police, who testified that he had questioned Lihlakha about how she obtained Banks’s laptop. According to Tarpley, Lihlakha replied that a local drug dealer named “Kool-Aid” had told her “he had a stolen laptop” for which a reward had been offered, and that if “she returned [the laptop] she [could] keep 700 and give him 300 of the $1,000 reward.”

Finally for the government, Investigator William Brown of the Howard University Police testified that he had told Lihlakha on August 18, 2011, that she was prohibited from coming “on Howard University property.” He added that he gave her a [483]*483copy of the barring notice at that time, that he explained it to her, and that she refused to sign it.

For the defense, Lihlakha testified that a man named Tony, whom she knew as “Kool-Aid,” had shown her a “sign” indicating that a reward was offered for the return of a missing computer. Lihlakha called the phone number on the sign, and the woman who answered told her that she had “left [the computer] out” but did not indicate that it had been stolen. Lihlakha eventually obtained a computer from Tony that she believed belonged to the person with whom she had spoken over the phone. Lihlakha testified that she had wanted to return the computer to the rightful owner the same day, even if the owner did not yet have the reward money, but that the owner had asked Lihlakha to wait until the owner obtained the money from her parents. After arranging a time to meet with the owner, Lihlakha attempted to return the computer but instead met an undercover police officer who was posing as the owner, and “[t]hat’s when the police came out.” Lihlakha acknowledged that after her arrest, a dean ordered her not to go inside the East or West Towers at Howard University, where Banks resided. Lihla-kha further testified that she had never visited Banks’s dorm room inside the West Tower.

On cross-examination, Lihlakha testified that she had asked Tony, whom she was “dating loosely,” for “some money.” He had given her a “flyer” offering a reward for the return of a missing laptop. He then told her that a “computer he received was what he thought was on the flyer” and asked Lihlakha to call the number on the flyer and “find out about it.” Lihlakha further testified that Tony did not tell her the laptop was stolen; he said that he had received it from a Howard University student in “exchange for something.” Lihla-kha added that she had asked no questions and had no further information. She also testified that Tony did not ask her to give him any portion of the reward money, that she did not call the police once she obtained the computer, and that she did not tell Tony to call the police.

The trial court discredited Lihlakha’s testimony, finding that it was inconsistent and appeared to be “fashioned on the fly.” The judge then credited the testimony of Banks and Investigator Tarpley, finding Lihlakha guilty of RSP beyond a reasonable doubt. The judge discredited the portion of Investigator Brown’s testimony that Lihlakha had been barred from coming onto any of Howard University’s property. Howevér, the judge found Lihlakha guilty of unlawful entry nonetheless based on “the terms of the barring notice” given to Lihlakha and, inferentially, on Lihla-kha’s own testimony that a dean at Howard had made it clear to her “not to go to the [dormitory] towers at all.”

II.

At the time of trial, D.C.Code § 22-3232(a) (2001) provided:

A person commits the offense of receiving [1] stolen property if that person [2] buys, receives, possesses, or obtains control of stolen property, [3] knowing or having reason to believe that the property was stolen, [4] with the intent to deprive another of the right to the property or a benefit of the property.4

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

G.W. v. United States
District of Columbia Court of Appeals, 2024
Rayner v. Yale Steam Laundry Condo. Ass'n.
District of Columbia Court of Appeals, 2023
Augustin v. United States
District of Columbia Court of Appeals, 2020
Lee Carrell v. United States
District of Columbia Court of Appeals, 2017
Lee Carrell v. United States (Revised Version)
165 A.3d 314 (District of Columbia Court of Appeals, 2017)
A.C. v. N.W.
District of Columbia Court of Appeals, 2017
KEVIN BYNUM and KEVIN WOMACK v. UNITED STATES.
District of Columbia Court of Appeals, 2016
Bynum v. United States
133 A.3d 983 (District of Columbia Court of Appeals, 2016)
DAVID J. BROWN v. UNITED STATES
128 A.3d 1007 (District of Columbia Court of Appeals, 2015)
MICHAEL J. WARNER v. UNITED STATES
124 A.3d 79 (District of Columbia Court of Appeals, 2015)
Jessica A. Lihlakha v. United States
123 A.3d 167 (District of Columbia Court of Appeals, 2015)
Myron O'Neal Gray v. United States
100 A.3d 129 (District of Columbia Court of Appeals, 2014)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
89 A.3d 479, 2014 WL 1640647, 2014 D.C. App. LEXIS 107, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jessica-a-lihlakha-v-united-states-dc-2014.