Jonathan F. Dawkins v. United States

108 A.3d 1241, 2015 D.C. App. LEXIS 26, 2015 WL 543123
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 5, 2015
Docket12-CO-1648
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 108 A.3d 1241 (Jonathan F. Dawkins 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
Jonathan F. Dawkins v. United States, 108 A.3d 1241, 2015 D.C. App. LEXIS 26, 2015 WL 543123 (D.C. 2015).

Opinion

FERREN, Senior Judge:

This is Jonathan F. Dawkins’ second appeal from the denial of his motion to suppress evidence of a gun and ammunition proffered by the government pursuant to an indictment for carrying a pistol without a license 1 and two related charges. 2 Dawkins now alleges that during a remand proceeding ordered by this court, the trial court improperly relied upon a government proffer in ruling on the suppression motion. We affirm.

I.

Dawkins entered a guilty plea to all charges, subject, however, to the right to appeal denial of his suppression motion. On Dawkins’ first appeal, this court vacated the trial court’s order denying the motion, as well as the judgment of conviction (but not the guilty plea). 3 We remanded *1242 the case for the trial court (i) to hear a proffer from Dawkins on the relevance of his proposed cross-examination of the arresting officer for bias, allegedly derived from a lawsuit by a third party against the officer for false arrest; 4 and (ii) to exercise the court’s discretion, either by denying the motion to suppress once more, or by granting it to allow vacation of the guilty plea. 5

In this appeal, however, Dawkins contends, more broadly, that the purpose of the remand was to “make a complete record,” and thus that the appeal before us is not limited to alleged bias derived from the third party false arrest suit (indeed, Dawkins does not appeal the trial court’s ruling for the government on that issue). 6 In addition, contends Dawkins, the trial court was obliged to reopen a second line of questioning justified by an earlier encounter that Dawkins had experienced with the same Officer Solgat who arrested him in this case. That encounter, in 2007, had led to Dawkins’ arrest and conviction for assaulting a police officer (APO) 7 — an encounter, says Dawkins, that not only generated Officer Solgat’s bias against him but also undermined the government’s contention that Dawkins had voluntarily consented to the search that yielded the gun and ammunition at issue here.

At the hearing on remand, the trial court permitted some inquiry into the 2007, incident, after which defense counsel confirmed that she had asked all her questions of Officer Solgat about bias. When counsel tried to ask the officer questions pertaining to the voluntariness of Dawkins’ consent, however, the court prohibited further cross-examination of Officer Solgat about the 2007 arrest. The court observed that this incident had “no relevance” because it failed to indicate that Dawkins “was less likely to consent later [in this case] or that the officer was more likely to fabricate today.” Nonetheless, the court offered counsel an additional opportunity to proffer “what I would have heard about 2007 and how it would have been relevant to the issues before me.” Counsel made the following proffer:

The 2007 incident, it’s an incident where Officer Solgat approached Mr. Dawkins where Mr. Dawkins hadn’t done anything wrong and Officer Solgat wasn’t claiming [Mr. Dawkins] was doing anything wrong. He ordered Mr. Dawkins to remove his hands from his pockets, according to the officer’s prior testimony [ 8 ] dealing with this incident. Mr. Daw- *1243 kins told him no. In that particular incident after Mr. Dawkins told him no, the officer approached Mr. Dawkins and physically attempted to remove his hands from his pockets. And then he was arrested for resisting arrest and assaulting the officer.

After the proffer, the trial court agreed with counsel that the 2007 incident was relevant to bias, but the court then reaffirmed, as to voluntariness, its initial conclusion that the proffered incident

would not lead to a reasonable inference in this case that either the defendant was less likely to have consented on this date than previously or that the officer was more likely to have overridden [defendant’s] failure to consent on this date.... [T]here is insufficient connection between the two events.

Thereafter, the trial court again denied Dawkins’ motion to suppress. The court concluded that, considering all the evidence of bias — drawn from both the third party lawsuit and the 2007 incident (testimony and proffer) — Officer Solgat was more credible than Dawkins. “[I]t’s clear to me,” said the court, that Dawkins “has bias against [Officer Solgat] because the [officer] had been the cause of his APO conviction a couple of years earlier.” In contrast, noted the court, the officer did not recognize Dawkins “until after he had gotten [Dawkins’] ID” in this case — a fact, in the court’s mind, that eliminated any bias inferable from the arrest itself. Nor, in the trial court’s judgment, did Officer Solgat, after learning that Dawkins had been the APO culprit, exhibit a bias that undermined his credibility at the suppression hearing.

Finally, the trial court addressed the defense proffer (quoted above) regarding the 2007 incident for its bearing on volun-tariness. The court concluded that even on the assumption that Dawkins had resisted arrest in 2007, as counsel claimed, there was no reason to believe, from that recalcitrant behavior, that Dawkins “would not consent [to a search] when encountering an officer ... who had gotten him locked up before.... [Dawkins] would just as likely attempt to cooperate to try not to get arrested this time.”

II.

Dawkins seeks a second remand, arguing that — as to both bias and voluntariness — the trial court erred in relying on counsel’s proffer about the 2007 arrest rather than allowing, at the remand hearing, additional cross-examination of Officer Solgat about the details of that 2007 encounter. In making this argument, counsel relies on cases holding that a “mere proffer is not evidence.” 9 We review the trial court’s ruling on the proffer for abuse of discretion. 10 For the reasons that follow, Dawkins’ argument must fail. 11

*1244 A.

First, Dawkins seeks another remand to explore his alleged consent to the search in light of the likely bias against him generated by his assault on Officer Solgat in 2007. In the hearing on remand in this case, Officer Solgat acknowledged that he had arrested Dawkins for assault in 2007, but he reaffirmed his testimony from the earlier 2009 suppression hearing that he had not recognized Dawkins at the time he arrested him in this case. 12 Counsel then asked: “In that prior encounter when you arrested Mr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
108 A.3d 1241, 2015 D.C. App. LEXIS 26, 2015 WL 543123, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jonathan-f-dawkins-v-united-states-dc-2015.