Lejeezan Toudle v. United States

187 A.3d 1269
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 5, 2018
Docket15-CF-1350
StatusPublished

This text of 187 A.3d 1269 (Lejeezan Toudle 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
Lejeezan Toudle v. United States, 187 A.3d 1269 (D.C. 2018).

Opinion

Thompson, Associate Judge:

A jury convicted appellant Lejeezan Toudle of unlawful possession of a firearm (felon in possession); carrying a pistol without a license outside a home or business ("CPWL"); and possession of an unregistered firearm. In this direct appeal, appellant challenges the trial court's denial of his motion to suppress statements he made during his post-arrest custodial interrogation. He primarily argues that statements his interrogators made during his interview subverted the advice they had earlier given him about his Miranda rights, 1 invalidated the waiver he had made of those rights, and resulted in a confession that was inadmissible. He also contends that the investigators' tactics rendered his confession involuntary. Although we agree that improper statements by an interrogator after a suspect has heard, understood, and waived his Miranda rights may, in the totality of circumstances, invalidate the waiver prospectively, we are persuaded that this is not what occurred in this case. 2 We are also satisfied that appellant's confession was voluntary. Accordingly, we affirm.

I. Background

The relevant facts are as follows. In the afternoon of June 9, 2014, Metropolitan Police Department ("MPD") officers responded to a "look[-]out for an individual who was possibly carrying a firearm" at 16th Street and Kalorama Road, N.W. Upon arriving at a location in the 2400 block of 16th Street, N.W., one of the officers observed appellant, who fit the look-out description, walking northbound on 16th Street. As the officers, who were in uniform and driving a scout car, parked and began to exit the car, appellant noticed them, and he fled before they had a chance to speak with him. The officers followed on foot.

During the chase, appellant turned into a parking lot and stopped at the rear of a vehicle, where an officer who had caught up with him saw appellant "ducking down almost to conceal himself ...." The officer testified to seeing appellant "move his arm ... away from [his] body and towards the [vehicle]" and then hearing "the sound of a metal object hitting the ground." 3 Appellant fled again, this time tripping and falling shortly upon taking flight. The officers apprehended and detained appellant and, upon returning to where the vehicle was parked, found a firearm beneath the vehicle. The officers then arrested appellant for possession of the firearm.

At the police station, Investigators Elias Danho 4 and James Gamble interviewed appellant. The video recording of that interview, which we have reviewed, shows appellant arriving into a small room, where the investigators undo his handcuffs and chain his feet to the floor. The substantive interview began with Investigator Gamble telling appellant:

[D]on't say anything yet, but you're looking at a felon in possession of a firearm charge .... So today, because you're a felon, it's a felon in possession of a firearm. It's a little more serious .... So this is your chance to kind of roll me through what's going, what happened out there .... So let me read you your rights, you think about ... what we gonna talk about and then you let me know what we're gonna do[,] okay?

Appellant nodded.

Thereafter, Investigator Gamble read appellant his Miranda rights from a form as appellant, looking at the form, followed along. Once he finished reading, Gamble asked appellant whether he had any questions (a question appellant answered by "shak[ing his] head no") and whether he understood his rights. Appellant responded that he did. When Investigator Gamble then asked appellant whether he "wish[ed] to answer any questions," and appellant responded, "No," Gamble stated, "All right. That's it then."

As the investigators begin gathering their materials to leave the room, appellant inquired, "How I got charged with a gun?" Gamble responded, "Well[,] I'm not gonna answer your questions if you're not gonna answer mine[ ]." Appellant replied, "I mean I'll answer questions. I ain't got no problems answering no questions." Gamble then retrieved a new Miranda form, reread appellant his rights, and asked the required questions again. This time, appellant agreed to answer questions outside the presence of an attorney.

The investigators then questioned appellant over a period of about an hour and fifteen minutes (interrupting the interview at one point after appellant said that he needed to use the restroom). The investigators began by asking appellant to explain "why [he] started running" when officers arrived. Appellant first said that he did not know that the men who approached him were officers, even though they were in uniform. When Investigator Gamble again asked why appellant had run, appellant eventually explained that he and the man he was with when officers arrived were in the area because that man, whom he did not really know, had asked appellant to give him a ride to an apartment building there. Appellant said that he had no idea what the other man was planning to do at the building. Appellant continued, "So then-so we couldn't get in the building .... So when we start walking back off[,] he was just like, man run. I don't know what he had did. When the police had pulled up[,] and he was like run, I just ran. That was it."

When Investigator Gamble told appellant that the other officers had reported that appellant had a gun on him, appellant denied that he had a gun (saying instead, "I had a knife on me, man."). In response, the investigators told appellant that his denials were "not gonna cut it." Appellant responded, "I already know it ain't gonna cut it right here." Investigator Gamble urged appellant to provide "a reason" why he had the gun, such as "someone's out for me," suggesting that "maybe they can work with that." Gamble told appellant that if he were to go "in front of th[e] judge and say, I didn't have a gun on me, ... they're gonna look at [appellant's prior convictions for] armed robbery, previous arrest with the gun, [and the] officer saying [appellant] had the gun," and appellant would be "done. Right?" Appellant agreed, saying "Um hmm." Appellant also agreed with Gamble's observation that the gun made it look like he was "there about to rob somebody again" and acknowledged that "[w]ith my background[,] [the judge or jury] gonna believe [what the officers have to say]."

Throughout the interview, Gamble suggested that appellant's possession of the gun had already been established, stating at one point, "[W]e don't really need to talk. Because from what they're telling me[,] they got you." Gamble further told appellant, "I'm not even trying to get you to say, yeah[,] I had a gun, because we know you had a gun. I'm trying to figure out why you had a gun." Gamble told appellant that the investigators "need[ed] to hear a reason," such as that appellant had "an ex-girlfriend ... who [had] threatened" him, or that appellant's friend "handed [him] a gun" and "said hold this for a second," or that appellant "needed a gun [be]cause he thought [other people] were gonna kill him .... [or that] [t]hey might even go kill his grandma ...."

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Bluebook (online)
187 A.3d 1269, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lejeezan-toudle-v-united-states-dc-2018.