Nathaniel Dennis v. Commonwealth of Virginia

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedMarch 10, 2020
Docket0774171
StatusPublished

This text of Nathaniel Dennis v. Commonwealth of Virginia (Nathaniel Dennis 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.

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Nathaniel Dennis v. Commonwealth of Virginia, (Va. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

VIRGINIA: PUBLISHED

In the Court of Appeals of Virginia on Tuesday the 10th day of March, 2020.

Nathaniel Dennis, Petitioner,

against Record No. 0774-17-1

Commonwealth of Virginia, Respondent.

Upon a Petition for a Writ of Actual Innocence

Before Chief Judge Decker, Judges Humphreys and O’Brien

Andrew George (Noah Mink; Elisa Beneze; Shawn Armbrust; Baker Botts L.L.P.; Mid-Atlantic Innocence Project, on briefs), for petitioner.

Alphonso Simon, Jr., Assistant Attorney General (Mark R. Herring, Attorney General, on brief), for respondent.

Nathaniel Dennis (“Dennis”) petitions this Court for a Writ of Actual Innocence pursuant to Chapter

19.3 of Title 19.2 of the Code of Virginia. Dennis was convicted in the Circuit Court of the City of Newport

News (“circuit court”) on May 20, 1998, of aggravated malicious wounding, attempted murder, and using a

firearm in the commission of a felony.

I. BACKGROUND

On the night of October 8, 1997, Lynwood Harrison (“Harrison”), a supervisor at the Daily Press

newspaper, was working alone in his office at the Daily Press facility in Newport News, Virginia. This

building was kept locked at night, except for a side door near Harrison’s office, which he unlocked later that

night for contractors who arrived in order to update their computers before picking up newspapers for

delivery.

At about 11:45 p.m., the cleaning crew, which Dennis supervised, began cleaning the building.

Harrison did not see or interact with the cleaning crew, but he heard the “normal sound” of their cleaning cart

moving across the floor. After twenty or thirty minutes, Harrison heard the cleaning crew leave the building and lock the side door behind them. Dennis parted company with the other members of the cleaning crew

immediately thereafter.

A few minutes before 12:30 a.m., Harrison unlocked the side door to allow the contractors to enter.

Shortly thereafter, Harrison noticed someone standing at “the doorway coming from the front part of the

building.” Harrison testified that he was “certain” the intruder did not enter through the unlocked side door

because that door “makes a noise” and the intruder did not come from that direction.

Harrison thought he might recognize the person but was unsure. He testified that as he “started to say

something,” the intruder advanced toward him holding a metal pipe in the air. Harrison tried to retreat, but

the intruder hit him in the face with the pipe. The intruder struck him in the arm as they “wrestled out into the

hallway,” where he knocked out one of Harrison’s teeth. At that point, Harrison asked the intruder “why was

he doing this?” The intruder responded by drawing a gun and saying, “If you resist any more, I will kill you.”

He then forced Harrison to the front of the building, where he instructed him to lie down. Even though

Harrison complied, the intruder struck him again, then stated, “[s]tay here and you might just live through

this” before walking toward Harrison’s office. Once the intruder walked away, Harrison saw “the lights dim

in the hallway” and “heard a couple of doors opening and closing.”

The intruder returned four or five minutes later. The intruder retrieved a key from his own pocket,

used it to unlock a set of double doors, and placed the pipe outside the door. He asked Harrison where the

keys to the truck parked outside were located, and Harrison replied that they were on the desk in his office.

The intruder quickly went to Harrison’s office and returned, then grabbed Harrison off the floor and put him

against a counter while pointing the gun at him.

Contractor Jerry Oxenburg arrived around 12:45 a.m. and noticed that the lights were out in the

building, which was unusual. When Oxenburg stuck his head in the unlocked side door to ask “where

somebody was,” he noticed a male figure “ducking out of sight.” Harrison heard Oxenburg call, “Is anyone

here? Is anyone here?” Harrison did not respond because the intruder had the gun pointed at his face. As

soon as Oxenburg left, the intruder shot Harrison in the face three times from a distance of about a foot. -2- Harrison managed to escape through the double doors the intruder had unlocked. Once outside, Harrison

noticed the pipe laying by the door, then continued to the side of the building calling out for Oxenburg.

Meanwhile, Oxenburg had gone to his car to retrieve his own gun because he “knew something wasn’t right.”

Oxenburg returned to the side entrance of the building where he saw a tall figure with a gun pointed at him.

Oxenburg retreated toward the front of the building and found Harrison crawling on the ground. Oxenburg

called the police.

When police arrived, they found that Harrison’s office had been “turned upside down.” Harrison told

police that he had approximately $393 in his office, which was never found, and a bag of coins that contained

approximately $1,200. The bag of coins was recovered from behind the door of Harrison’s office by an

evidence technician while processing the scene.

Harrison’s initial description of his attacker was a tall male, approximately 6’2”, dark skin, shaven,

wearing dark clothes, dark pants, a wide belt, and a knit cap. Although Harrison did not know his attacker, he

told police that he could “re-identify” him and help develop a composite drawing. A police detective saw

Dennis at the Daily Press building and noted that Dennis matched the description given by Harrison of his

attacker. Harrison later picked Dennis’s picture from a six-picture photo array, indicating that he had “no

doubt” that the picture he selected depicted “the person that attacked [him] that night.” Harrison also

positively identified Dennis at trial as his attacker.

Dennis testified in his own defense and denied robbing or assaulting Harrison. A jury convicted

Dennis on all charges.

On May 18, 2017, Dennis filed a petition for a writ of actual innocence based upon non-biological

evidence. As part of his petition, Dennis provided this Court with six affidavits in support of his petition, to

demonstrate that another person committed these offenses. This Court ordered the Attorney General to

respond to the petition, and by order dated October 31, 2017, this Court found that Dennis was not entitled to

relief and dismissed the petition.

-3- On February 21, 2019, the Supreme Court of Virginia reversed and remanded the judgment of this

Court, finding that it was an abuse of discretion to dismiss the petition without ordering the circuit court to

conduct an evidentiary hearing for further development of the facts. Pursuant to the directive of the Supreme

Court of Virginia, on June 6, 2019, this Court remanded the case to the circuit court in order to take the

testimony of five witnesses and make relevant factual findings regarding their testimony.

On June 6, 2019, this Court directed that the circuit court take the testimony of five witnesses, who

had provided affidavits to this Court as a part of the original petition, to determine whether another person

confessed to shooting Harrison at the Daily Press. Specifically, we directed the circuit court to provide

this Court with a transcript of the testimony and factual findings on whether Abdul Al-Musawwir

(“Al-Musawwir”) confessed to (1) Koneta Walker, (2) Andre Wiggins, (3) George Holley, (4) Andre Terry,

and (5) Donald Poindexter that he assaulted and shot Harrison at the Daily Press on October 9, 1997.1 The

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