Kevin Lamont Lambert v. Commonwealth of Virginia

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedOctober 15, 2019
Docket0773182
StatusPublished

This text of Kevin Lamont Lambert v. Commonwealth of Virginia (Kevin Lamont Lambert v. Commonwealth of Virginia) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kevin Lamont Lambert v. Commonwealth of Virginia, (Va. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA

Present: Chief Judge Decker, Judges Petty and Huff Argued at Richmond, Virginia PUBLISHED

KEVIN LAMONT LAMBERT OPINION BY v. Record No. 0773-18-2 JUDGE GLEN A. HUFF OCTOBER 15, 2019 COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF CHESTERFIELD COUNTY Frederick G. Rockwell, III, Judge

C. David Sands, III (Winslow & McCurry, PLLC, on briefs) for appellant.

Eugene Murphy, Senior Assistant Attorney General (Mark R. Herring, Attorney General, on brief), for appellee.

Kevin L. Lambert (“appellant”) appeals his convictions for two counts of possession of a

controlled substance with intent to distribute, one count of manufacture of a controlled

substance, one count of possession of a firearm while possessing a controlled substance with

intent to distribute, three counts of receiving money from prostitution, and three counts of sex

trafficking.1 After a jury trial, the Circuit Court of Chesterfield County imposed the jury’s

recommended sentences totaling twenty-nine years’ and twelve months’ imprisonment.

Appellant raises three assignments of error. First, he asserts that the trial court erred by

admitting evidence that he was a member of the gang known as the “Bloods.” Second, he claims

the trial court erred in limiting his cross-examination of a key prosecution witness, J.C., the

1 Appellant was indicted for three counts of sex trafficking through “force, intimidation, or deception” in violation of Code § 18.2-357.1(B). The jury only convicted appellant of the lesser-included offences of sex trafficking in violation of Code § 18.2-357.1(A). The jury also hung on an additional charge of enticement or procurement of human trafficking. woman he allegedly forced into prostitution. Finally, he argues the evidence was insufficient to

sustain his convictions because J.C.’s testimony was incredible and the police did not attempt to

forensically corroborate her story.

This Court disagrees. First, appellant’s communication to J.C. that he was in the Bloods

gang was relevant and probative on the issue of intimidation in the sex trafficking charges.

Second, evidence that J.C. had previously engaged in prostitution was irrelevant. Moreover,

evidence she had previously engaged in dealing drugs had minimal probative value yet

significant potential for confusion and undue prejudice. Thus, the trial court did not abuse its

discretion in excluding it. Third, J.C.’s testimony was not so contrary to human experience that

it was inherently incredible and forensic corroboration was not required.

I. BACKGROUND

“This Court considers ‘the evidence presented at trial in the light most favorable to the

Commonwealth, the prevailing party below.’” Hawkins v. Commonwealth, 64 Va. App. 650,

652 (2015) (quoting Bolden v. Commonwealth, 275 Va. 144, 148 (2008)). So viewed the

evidence is as follows:

J.C. was convicted of heroin possession in 2015, and testified at trial she was still

struggling with heroin addiction. She met appellant in January of 2016. She had no funds, and

he offered to let her stay in his hotel room. He supplied her with drugs for several days. He then

sent her to have sex for money. J.C. complied, and when she returned, appellant collected the

money. He then provided her with more heroin. Over several weeks—until appellant was

arrested—appellant and J.C. moved among several hotels.

While J.C. was with appellant, he posted an ad for J.C.’s prostitution services on

Backpage.com. During those several weeks, appellant instructed J.C. to prostitute herself

multiple times. Each time she gave all the money to appellant, and appellant continued to supply

-2- her with heroin. Although J.C. was unclear on precisely how many times overall she had

prostituted herself at appellant’s instruction, she specifically stated that on three separate days

before appellant was arrested, she had sex for money with one to three men each day.

J.C. complied with appellant’s instructions and never left or sought help because she was

afraid of appellant, even though he never explicitly threatened her. She thought that he would

beat or kill her if she crossed him, in part because appellant had told her he was a “general” in a

gang, the Bloods. She did not know much about the Bloods but knew them to be violent and

understood appellant to mean he had people under him who would do his bidding. He also told

her that he had been in either prison or jail and, while imprisoned, threw hot water and baby oil

on an individual, badly burning them. She also saw appellant carry a firearm throughout the day.

Finally, one time when J.C. was sick and unable to engage in prostitution, appellant became

angry and withheld drugs until she resumed prostitution.

While she was staying with appellant, J.C. also saw him and several other men attempt to

make crack cocaine in the hotel room. She saw him selling both heroin and cocaine during her

stay in his hotel room.

On February 12, 2016, J.C. and appellant were staying in Room 309 of a Super 8 motel.

J.C. had rented the room in her name at appellant’s direction and using funds he provided.

Police began knocking on the door. Appellant hid the drugs while J.C. was “freaking out.” He

attempted to get her to take his firearm, but when she threw it on the bed, he retrieved it and hid

it in the toilet.

Police watching the motel from the outside then observed a man “hanging outside of the

third floor window by one arm being held by a female.” When an officer arrived at the ground

under the window, the man was gone. Nevertheless, people at a restaurant next door directed the

officer toward appellant. Police then found appellant, but he denied being at the hotel. After

-3- police arrested him on an outstanding warrant, the phone they retrieved from him received a text

message, which displayed on the screen: “Just letting you know the police were knocking on

your door.” Appellant also had a room key card for the Super 8 motel and over six hundred

dollars in cash.

When police returned to the room several minutes later to search it, they found J.C. just

outside the room. She gave consent to search the room. The police found the firearm, loaded, in

the back of the toilet, wrapped in a sock. Crack cocaine and heroin were hidden beneath an

artificial plant in a pot on the television stand. Police also found marijuana, a digital scale, bullet

cartridges, and a shoebox full of papers with handwritten copies of the “Blood’s” history and

rules. A second digital scale, identical to the one in the hotel room, was on the ground outside

the window through which appellant had exited the hotel.

Appellant later admitted to police he had jumped out of the hotel room window, but

claimed he fled because of the outstanding warrant.

At appellant’s jury trial, in addition to J.C.’s testimony about appellant’s gang

involvement, the Commonwealth also offered—and the trial court admitted, over appellant’s

objection—expert testimony about gangs, including the Bloods. He explained that the Bloods in

the Richmond area engaged in narcotics distribution, robberies, witness intimidation, and

prostitution. He identified the documents found in the shoebox in the hotel room as a

handwritten history of the Bloods which “Blood members are supposed to know” and “also the

31 rules, the gang rules.” He also explained how the Bloods used intimidation and violence to

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