Marquet Bryant and Robert B. Hagood v. United States

93 A.3d 210
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 19, 2014
Docket12-CF-148 & 12-CF-389
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 93 A.3d 210 (Marquet Bryant and Robert B. Hagood 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
Marquet Bryant and Robert B. Hagood v. United States, 93 A.3d 210 (D.C. 2014).

Opinion

RUIZ, Senior Judge:

Robert Hagood 1 and Marquet Bryant 2 were convicted after a jury trial of attempted first degree burglary while armed, 3 assault with a dangerous weapon (“ADW”), 4 and related weapons charges: two counts each of possession of a firearm during the commission of a crime of violence (“PFCV”) 5 — one related to the attempted burglary and one to the ADW — as well as one count each of unlawful possession of a firearm 6 and carrying a pistol without a license (“CPWL”). 7 Hagood was also convicted of malicious destruction of property, 8 but Bryant was acquitted of that charge. Both appellants appeal their convictions alleging that the trial court erred in failing to sua sponte give the jury a special unanimity instruction and that their PFCV convictions merge. Bryant raises additional trial-related claims and challenges the legality of his CPWL conviction. We agree with appellants that a special unanimity instruction should have been given, but conclude that, under plain error review, reversal is not warranted on the facts of their cases. We further conclude that appellants’ PFCV convictions merge, and remand the cases so that the trial court may vacate one of those convictions and resentence appellants as the court, in its discretion, may find appropriate. We otherwise affirm the convictions.

I.

The government presented evidence that on November 24, 2010, Tiffany Bostic, her children, her boyfriend Jerome Ed-monds, her mother Lawana Mays, her sister Taneil Mays, and her stepfather David Marshall, were gathered at Bostic’s house in preparation to go to her aunt’s house for a Thanksgiving celebration. Edmonds left the apartment to purchase cigarettes. On the way to his car, he passed appellants Bryant and Hagood who were standing with others on the sidewalk outside the apartment building. As Edmonds passed, Hagood said, “Look at this suck ass nigger right here.” Edmonds ignored the comment and continued on his way to purchase cigarettes. On his return to the apartment, Edmonds again passed by the group and heard Hagood say, “Look at this bitch ass thing right here.” Edmonds confronted Hagood and told him, “If you have something to say to me, you can say it to me; we grown, we’re men.” At this point, Edmonds testified, he saw Bryant pull a silver revolver from his waistband and *215 hand it to Hagood. 9

Seeing the gun, Edmonds began to back up the steps toward the door to Bostic’s apartment saying “everything cool, you got it” as a manner of offering a “truce.” As Edmonds backed through the door, he and Bostic attempted to close it, but Hagood rushed to the door, threw his shoulder into it to keep it open, and forced his head, arm, and the gun through the open portion. The occupants of the apartment were able to push Hagood out and close the door. They heard a couple of kicks delivered to the door and then a gunshot seconds later. The bullet traveled through the bottom portion of the door and grazed Edmonds’s ankle. None of the witnesses saw Bryant at the door. The occupants called 911, but because the call was labeled as a destruction of property complaint, it was not given priority.

Marshall went to shut the blinds on the windows at the back of the apartment soon after the altercation at the front door and saw Hagood, Bryant, and other men standing on the patio below the apartment’s balcony. Hagood raised his arm above his head and made a beckoning motion. Marshall responded by drawing his flat right hand from left to right under his chin and around his neck to indicate to Hagood that any chance to explain “was dead, it’s too late to explain,” and shut the blinds.

A few minutes after this exchange, while the occupants were calling 911 again, appellants returned to the front of the apartment. At that point, Hagood walked in through the front door and said, “What’s up?” to Edmonds. 10 Edmonds immediately rushed forward and pinned Hagood against the wall. Meanwhile, Bryant stood at the doorway with the revolver in his hand. 11 Marshall and Lawana Mays pushed Bryant back into the hallway. Bryant then raised the gun above his head and fired once into the ceiling. The occupants retreated inside and Hagood and Bryant departed. When Metropolitan Police Department officers arrived a few minutes later, they encountered a scene where everyone was “very upset.” The police recovered a bullet from inside the apartment, but could not recover a bullet from the hall ceiling. They also recovered a blue hat with a green bill from the hallway in front of the apartment door. Edmonds and Taneil Mays identified the hat at trial as belonging to Hagood.

The police detained Bryant and Hagood a few days later. They were identified by Bostic and Edmonds, and were placed under arrest. The revolver was recovered later from a third party. 12

*216 At trial, Hagood presented one witness, Michelle Burrell — also known as “Shel-lie” — who testified that she witnessed Edmonds say something to Hagood in passing, but she denied seeing a gun or restraining Hagood. 13 She stated that she left the apartment complex and while walking to a friend’s house heard “like one or two shots, and everybody just ran,” including Hagood and Bryant. Bryant did not put on any evidence.

Appellants argued in closing that the complaining witnesses had fabricated the entire event. Pointing to inconsistencies in the witnesses’ testimony, background conversations on the 911 calls, and the fact that Edmonds was on probation and “can go back to prison if he’s found to be involved in gunplay,” Bryant argued that the occupants had “a lot of time to sit there and decide what happened, to concoct a story of what they’re going to tell the police.... ” Likewise, Hagood argued that because Edmonds was on probation and did not like Hagood, 14 Edmonds “put whatever happened that night” on Hagood. Neither appellant offered an alternative version of exactly what happened that night, but noted that “something happened” and that the occupants were placing the blame on Hagood and Bryant.

In its final charge before releasing the jury to deliberate, the trial court gave the jury a general unanimity instruction: “In order to return a verdict, each juror must agree on the verdict. In other words, your verdicts must be unanimous.” The court did not give a special unanimity instruction that calls the jury’s attention to the requirement that they must also be in unanimous agreement with respect to the underlying acts on which their verdict is based. 15

During deliberations, the trial court received multiple notes from the jury.

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Bluebook (online)
93 A.3d 210, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marquet-bryant-and-robert-b-hagood-v-united-states-dc-2014.