Purnell v. State

827 A.2d 68, 375 Md. 678, 2003 Md. LEXIS 336
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 18, 2003
Docket46, Sept. Term, 2000
StatusPublished
Cited by59 cases

This text of 827 A.2d 68 (Purnell v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Purnell v. State, 827 A.2d 68, 375 Md. 678, 2003 Md. LEXIS 336 (Md. 2003).

Opinion

BELL, C.J.

The sole issue presented by this appeal is whether the appropriate unit of prosecution for the common law crime of resisting arrest is determined by the number of police officers a criminal defendant resists during an arrest or, more simply, by the arrest itself. 1

During one episode of attempting to elude police custody, Charles Purnell, the petitioner, was charged with two counts of resisting arrest: one count for each of the two officers attempting to arrest him. The petitioner was also charged, inter alia, with two counts of second degree assault, 2 again *682 one count for each police officer. Following a bench trial, the Circuit Court for Baltimore City convicted the petitioner of both counts of resisting arrest and both counts of assault and, subsequently, imposed, as to each conviction, a ten-year term of incarceration, with all but two years suspended, to be served concurrently. In an unreported opinion, the Court of Special Appeals affirmed those judgments. This Court granted the petitioner’s Petition for Writ of Certiorari. Purnell v. State, 359 Md. 668, 755 A.2d 1139 (2000). Because we conclude that it is inappropriate to determine the unit of prosecution for the crime of resisting arrest by reference to the number of law enforcement officers resisted, or by the number of officers put at risk by the resistance, we shall reverse the judgment of the intermediate appellate court and order that one of the petitioner’s convictions for resisting arrest be vacated.

I.

Although not married, the petitioner had a long term relationship with Ms. Terry Washington, the mother of the petitioner’s four children. Despite not having shared a domicile with Ms. Washington for more than two years, the petitioner paid the mortgage on the home that she and the children shared, as well as the gas and electric bills. This case arose out of events occurring on August 12, 1998. As to those events, the petitioner and Ms. Washington tell widely differing stories. Because the court acquitted the petitioner of all of the charges related to Ms. Washington, 3 we shall rely on the *683 petitioner’s version of the events leading up to his arrest for assault and resisting arrest.

In the late afternoon of August 12, 1998, the petitioner drove to Ms. Washington’s place of employment in Baltimore City, arriving as she was leaving work for the day. According to the petitioner, he did so in response to a page from Ms. Washington, in which she used a code that they had devised, indicating that Ms. Washington needed the petitioner to give her a ride home. 4 He said that he informed his co-workers that he was leaving work to pick up Ms. Washington and that he would return later. The petitioner testified that, while he was taking Ms. Washington home, they had an argument about Ms. Washington’s relationship with one of her coworkers. During the argument, Ms. Washington informed the petitioner that she was having pains in her chest and that he should take her to the emergency room, whereupon he drove her to the emergency room of the University of Maryland Hospital.

At the hospital, Ms. Washington, unaccompanied, checked in with the triage nurse while the petitioner searched for a parking spot. Telling the nurse that she was the victim of *684 domestic violence and that the perpetrator would be sitting in the waiting room, Ms. Washington asked the nurse to call the police. After Ms. Washington had returned to her seat in the waiting room and while sitting next to the petitioner, Officer Wayne’Early, who was responding to a call for a “problem” at the University of Maryland Hospital emergency room, arrived. A member of the hospital staff pointed out Ms. Washington and she stood up and identified herself, saying, “[i]t was me.” When Officer Early asked the petitioner for identification, the petitioner stood up and handed him his driver’s license, thus complying. He refused Officer Early’s request to sit down, prompted by Officer Early’s perception that the petitioner was getting “fidgety” and concern “for [his] safety,” however, and, after the second request, the petitioner pushed Officer Early into a wall and ran toward the hospital door, where he was met by Officer John Vogelpohl, a University of Maryland campus police officer. The petitioner and Officer Vogelpohl “went to the ground” as the petitioner attempted to flee from the emergency room waiting area. When he fled, the petitioner had not been placed under arrest or told that he was.

The petitioner managed to get out of the hospital with a “fifteen yard head start,” but with the two officers in pursuit. As a result of the confrontation with, or chase of, the petitioner, Officer Early suffered a pulled muscle in his leg and Officer Vogelpohl suffered a cut on his right forearm. Having been directed there by by-standers, the officers found the petitioner in a parking lot, hiding under a pick-up truck. Concerned that the petitioner may have been armed, the officers drew their weapons and ordered the petitioner to “come out.” Although he did not do so initially, after “a few commands” and with the aid of Baltimore City police officers, the petitioner did come from under the truck.

After the petitioner emerged from under the truck, the officers attempted to place the petitioner under arrest, directing him “several times ... to place his hands behind his back.” The petitioner resisted their attempts to handcuff him, by “attempt[ing] to push up,” which then required the officers to push “him back down to actually get him handcuffed.”

*685 The petitioner was charged, with regard to Ms. Washington, with false imprisonment, assault and stalking. He also was charged with two counts each of assault and resisting arrest, one count of each for Officer Early and Officer Vogelpohl. After a bench trial, the petitioner was acquitted of the charges relating to Ms. Washington, but convicted of all of the charges relating to the police officers. The trial court’s findings of fact supporting the guilty verdicts were summarized as follows:

“[CJount one, resisting arrest [to Officer Early], I find that there was resisting arrest, but not at the hospital, but at the parking lot. This was a warrantless arrest and, therefore, I find the defendant guilty beyond a reasonable doubt where the evidence indicated he certainly knew that the police officers intended to place him under arrest when he was in the parking lot and under the car and that there was a scuffle whereby he clearly resisted arrest.
H*
“In respect to case number 598273006, the events regarding Officer John Vogelpohl, I find in respect to count one that there was a resisting arrest. I find that beyond a reasonable doubt and these, again, are events at the parking lot and not the hospital.”

The petitioner unsuccessfully appealed his conviction as to Officer Vogelpohl to the Court of Special Appeals. On his direct appeal to that court, the petitioner’s argued,

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Bluebook (online)
827 A.2d 68, 375 Md. 678, 2003 Md. LEXIS 336, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/purnell-v-state-md-2003.