McGrier v. United States

597 A.2d 36, 1991 D.C. App. LEXIS 262, 1991 WL 188795
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 24, 1991
Docket89-1519
StatusPublished
Cited by88 cases

This text of 597 A.2d 36 (McGrier 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
McGrier v. United States, 597 A.2d 36, 1991 D.C. App. LEXIS 262, 1991 WL 188795 (D.C. 1991).

Opinion

TERRY, Associate Judge:

Appellant McGrier was charged with kidnapping, 1 threats to injure another person, 2 second-degree burglary, 3 and assault with intent to commit rape while armed. 4 At the close of the government’s case, the trial court granted McGrier’s motion for judgment of acquittal on the burglary charge, and at the end of the trial the jury found him guilty of kidnapping, threats, and simple assault. 5 McGrier brings this appeal, claiming numerous improprieties by the prosecutor. We affirm.

I. The Evidence at TRIAL

A. The government’s case in chief

In December 1987 Monica Fenner, a fifteen-year-old high school student, held an after-school job at the Payne Recreation Center (“the Center”). She testified that she first met McGrier while she was working at the Center on December 16. He asked her for her telephone number, which she gave to him. He called her at home later that evening and asked if he could be her boy friend. Fenner declined the invitation, telling him that she already had a boy friend, and then ended the conversation when McGrier threatened her.

Two days later, on December 18, Fenner was getting ready to leave the Center at the end of the day with her friend and coworker, Nina Stevenson, when McGrier, who had been playing basketball inside the Center, approached the two of them and asked where they were going. Fenner replied that she was going home. She and Stevenson left the building, but McGrier and another young man followed them out of the Center and into the street, where McGrier called out to Fenner to come and talk to him. Fenner told him that she had to go home, but McGrier began to complain about their phone conversation. Stevenson urged Fenner to “come on,” but McGrier threatened to “slam [Fenner’s] face against the railing” if she tried to leave. When McGrier was briefly distracted, the two girls tried to flee, but McGrier ordered Fenner to stop. He then told Stevenson to leave, threatening to push her through a plate glass window if she stayed. Fenner told Stevenson to go and tell Frank Crawford, their supervisor at the Center, what was happening.

Stevenson went home and called Mr. Crawford to tell him about Fenner’s plight. Crawford said that McGrier was “just playing” with Fenner, but when Stevenson said he would not let Fenner go home, Crawford agreed to “go out there and look.” *39 The conversation ended at that point. Crawford did not call the police. 6

McGrier took the weeping and frightened Fenner to an apartment on D Street, S.E., a few blocks away. Fenner testified that she went with him because she was afraid and because he had threatened to kill her if she tried to run. After they were inside, McGrier locked the door and then, after complaining that “girls neglected him,” ordered Fenner to “[m]ake love to [him].” Fenner refused, claiming that she was a virgin. McGrier then became angry and picked up a steak knife from under a table. He threatened to stab Fenner and throw her body in the alley, but then he put the knife down and began to choke her until she grew dizzy. McGrier then told Fenner that he was going to the bathroom and that she should “have [her] pants off” by the time he returned. McGrier left the room as Fenner began to unfasten her clothing.

As soon as McGrier was out of sight, however, Fenner unlocked the door and fled. She ran to a neighboring house and hid under the porch. The occupants of the house found her there and took her inside, where she described what had happened to her. 7 Eventually they took her home, and her parents called the police.

B. The defense case

McGrier’s defense was that Fenner voluntarily accompanied him back to the apartment on D Street. His assertion was that the two of them had been involved in an on-going relationship and on December 18 had gotten into an argument over McGrier's alleged involvement with another woman.

McGrier testified, contrary to what Fen-ner had said, that he first met Fenner about a week after Thanksgiving. 8 A few days after they met, he said, Fenner agreed to be his girl friend. Thereafter the two of them would meet three to five times a week, either during lunch, at a bus stop after school, or at the Center. McGrier said that Fenner frequently pressured him to spend time with her.

On December 18, McGrier testified, he met Fenner at lunchtime outside Eastern High School and reluctantly agreed to see her again later that afternoon at the Center. His reluctance, he said, was due to his desire to avoid Fenner’s complaints about his relationship with another woman.

When they met at the Center that afternoon, Fenner chastised him about the fact that he had been seen with another woman. McGrier testified that Stevenson was with them initially, but then became angry that Fenner would not go with her and went away. McGrier and Fenner then went to the apartment on D Street. When they got there, he began to watch television, but Fenner started an argument with him. When he ignored her, she left. McGrier denied having a knife and denied trying to force Fenner to have sex with him.

Frank Crawford testified on McGrier’s behalf. He said that he had seen McGrier and Fenner together at the Center some time before December 18 “playing like two young people would play.” On direct examination he stated that he saw this on several occasions, “a week or two” before December 18. He expanded his testimony on cross-examination, recalling that he had seen McGrier and Fenner together “almost every day,” more than thirty times during the two months prior to December 18. Crawford later testified, somewhat incon *40 sistently, that McGrier had been absent from the Center for a period of ten to twenty days in late November or early December.

C. The government’s rebuttal

The government began its rebuttal case with a stipulation that McGrier was “not at or near the Payne Recreation Center or Eastern High School” from November 25 through December 13,1987. 9 The effect of this stipulation was to rebut McGrier’s testimony that he had been seeing Fenner regularly during that period, and also to rebut Crawford’s testimony that he had seen McGrier and Fenner together more than thirty times prior to December 18. The government also presented three other witnesses from the Payne Center who testified that they had seen McGrier and Fen-ner together on only one or two occasions, as well as evidence that Fenner began work at the Center on November 23 — only two days before McGrier’s absence from the area.

II. A WORD ON NOMENCLATURE

McGrier seeks reversal of his conviction on the ground that the prosecutor engaged in several instances of “misconduct” in his argument to the jury.

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Bluebook (online)
597 A.2d 36, 1991 D.C. App. LEXIS 262, 1991 WL 188795, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcgrier-v-united-states-dc-1991.