Morgan v. United States

47 A.3d 532, 2012 D.C. App. LEXIS 141, 2012 WL 1207423
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 12, 2012
DocketNo. 09-CO-635
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 47 A.3d 532 (Morgan 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
Morgan v. United States, 47 A.3d 532, 2012 D.C. App. LEXIS 141, 2012 WL 1207423 (D.C. 2012).

Opinion

RUIZ, Associate Judge,

Retired:

While on probation for a manslaughter conviction, appellant was arrested, charged with and prosecuted for possession of marijuana with intent to distribute.1 He was subsequently acquitted after a criminal trial in Superior Court; however, following a show-cause hearing, the trial court revoked his probation based on the same offense. Appellant contends that his due process rights were violated because, at the show-cause hearing, the government’s case was inconsistent with the one it presented at the criminal trial in which he was acquitted. We conclude that appellant’s due process rights were not violated, and affirm the trial court’s revocation of appellant’s probation and ordered execution of the previously imposed sentence.

I.

In July of 2000, appellant pled guilty to one count of unarmed manslaughter.2 On September 29, 2000, Judge Keary sentenced appellant to “[n]ot less than six years nor more than eighteen years” incarceration, with the execution of the sentence suspended as to all but five years’ incarceration, five years of probation, and a $500 fine to be paid to the Victims of Violent Crimes Compensation Fund. At some point thereafter, appellant was released on probation.

On May 24, 2007, appellant was arrested and charged with possession of marijuana with intent to distribute (PWID). On October 1, 2008, appellant was acquitted of the PWID charge in a bench trial before Judge Rafael Diaz. After appellant’s acquittal for PWID, Judge Keary ordered that appellant show cause why his probation should not be revoked.

At the show-cause hearing, the government presented the testimony of Metropolitan Police Department (MPD) Sergeant Robert Chagnon and MPD Lieutenant Brian Murphy. The officers testified that they were driving in an unmarked police cruiser when they noticed a Honda Accord parked at the curb, with a man, later identified as appellant, sitting in the driver’s seat, and another man, later identified as William Truesdale, standing at the driver’s side door. As the officers neared the Honda, they saw Truesdale “reposition his [534]*534body[,] conceal[ ] his right side and ... his right hand extend[ed] into the driver’s side window.” Neither officer could see any object in Truesdale’s hand.

Sergeant Chagnon and Lieutenant Murphy parked their vehicle and approached the Honda “to investigate.” The officers noticed a twelve-pack of beer on the front passenger floorboard, accessible to appellant, with several open bottles inside. The officers arrested appellant for possessing an open container of alcohol3 and “sat [him] down on the curb.” Lieutenant Murphy then searched the interior of the Honda. He testified that as he began the search, he smelled the odor of “unburned, fresh marijuana.” He then discovered a blue Ziploc bag containing “grass substance which later field-tested positive for marijuana” in the “center console area.” At the show-cause hearing, Lieutenant Murphy was asked about the location of the bag in the center console area:

PROSECUTOR: Can you describe this console area?
LT. MURPHY: My recollection is the center console runs between the two front seats of the vehicle, it has like a little dip in it, a little well, and there’s like an emergency brake on top of there that you pull up. I remember further back, there’s a second part of the console.
PROSECUTOR: When you say “further back,” in what direction of the car? LT. MURPHY: Towards the rear of the car, there’s a second compartment of the center console that actually has a lid on it that you could lift up. PROSECUTOR: Where did you find this single bag of marijuana?
LT. MURPHY: In the center compartment of the car, the well. PROSECUTOR: The open area, then?
LT. MURPHY: The open area.

Upon discovering the marijuana, Lieutenant Murphy notified Sergeant Chagnon, who also then saw the Ziploc bag in the center console area and smelled the odor of fresh marijuana.

Sergeant Chagnon informed appellant that the officers had discovered marijuana inside the vehicle. As Lieutenant Murphy began to search the Honda’s trunk, appellant told Sergeant Chagnon that “there [were] ten more zips in a backpack inside the trunk.” Sergeant Chagnon relayed this information to Lieutenant Murphy, who replied, “Ten, my ass”; he had found 104 blue Ziploc bags containing marijuana inside the backpack.

At the show-cause hearing, appellant’s counsel sought to introduce Lieutenant Murphy’s testimony from the PWID trial as a prior inconsistent statement. At the PWID trial, Lieutenant Murphy had described his discovery of marijuana in the center console as follows:

PROSECUTOR: What did you find or see?
LT. MURPHY: [I] located a blue Ziploc bag containing a dark green substance that later field tested positive for THC and that was in the center console area of the vehicle.
PROSECUTOR: Please describe in detail where that was and how you found it?
LT. MURPHY: I recall it being in the center console in between the seats, there’s a center console and it was inside of that.
PROSECUTOR: Lieutenant, I see you gesturing to, making a gesture with your right hand please describe in words what you’re referring to.
[535]*535LT. MURPHY: It’s on the right hand side. There’s actually] a console that has a lid, that you could have stuff inside the vehicle.

The court admitted a redacted copy of Lieutenant Murphy’s trial testimony “as a prior inconsistent statement ... subject to the argument that it’s not clearly inconsistent, it’s capable of more than one interpretation.”4 The court also allowed defense counsel to introduce part of the prosecutor’s closing argument in the PWID trial “which served to rebut” the government’s argument at the revocation hearing that the marijuana was found in the open part of the center console of the Honda.

Appellant filed a motion to dismiss the probation show-cause order, arguing that the government should be precluded from proceeding on a theory that contradicted its theory in the PWID criminal trial. Judge Keary denied appellant’s motion and found, by a preponderance of the evidence, that appellant had possessed, with the intent to distribute, the marijuana found inside the car and in the trunk. Judge Keary found this was cause to revoke appellant’s probation, and sentenced him to his original term of incarceration in the manslaughter case with credit for time served. Appellant filed a timely appeal.

II.

Appellant argues that his due process rights were violated at the show-cause hearing “because the government switched theories” by arguing “that the marijuana was in a closed container” at the PWID trial, while saying at the show-cause hearing that it had been in plain view. The government responds that appellant’s due process rights were not violated because the government had the same legal theory, albeit under slightly different factual scenarios, at both proceedings.

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Related

ROBERT M. ALEXANDER v. UNITED STATES
116 A.3d 444 (District of Columbia Court of Appeals, 2015)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
47 A.3d 532, 2012 D.C. App. LEXIS 141, 2012 WL 1207423, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morgan-v-united-states-dc-2012.