Ransom v. United States

932 A.2d 510, 2007 D.C. App. LEXIS 573, 2007 WL 2725965
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 20, 2007
Docket04-CF-316
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 932 A.2d 510 (Ransom 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
Ransom v. United States, 932 A.2d 510, 2007 D.C. App. LEXIS 573, 2007 WL 2725965 (D.C. 2007).

Opinion

RUIZ, Associate Judge:

This appeal arises out of appellant’s conviction of heroin distribution within one thousand feet of a school, in violation of D.C.Code §§ 48 — 904.01(a)(1), -904.07a (2001). The question before us is whether the trial court erred in refusing to grant a mistrial after it was alerted to the presence of a piece of paper found in the jury room containing information about the times the sun set around the date of the crime, which occurred at 5:45 p.m. on'February 25, 2003. Appellant argues that the trial court failed to conduct an adequate inquiry into potential juror bias resulting from their contact with the extraneous information and that a mistrial should have *513 been granted because the information— which was not admitted or tested at trial— prejudiced him. We conclude that the trial court conducted a sufficient inquiry and did not abuse its discretion in denying appellant’s request for a mistrial. We affirm.

I.

FACTS

A. The Evidence at THal

On February 25, 2003, at approximately 5:45 p.m., three officers of the Metropolitan Police Department (MPD) were at the 3800 block of 9th Street, Southeast, Washington D.C., as part of a planned undercover drug operation. Officer Alfred Myers was driving an unmarked police car, while the other two, Investigators Anthony Greene and Anthony Commodore, were walking in the neighborhood dressed in civilian clothing and attempting to buy illegal drugs as a part of the “buy-bust” operation.

On that evening, Investigator Greene testified, he approached a person, whom he later identified as appellant, and asked him for heroin using the street term “blow.” Investigator Greene paid $30.00 in prerecorded bills and in exchange received three small bags containing heroin, 1 which he testified came from the seller’s front, right coat pocket. According to Investigator Greene, the purchase took approximately two minutes and he stood “face-to-face” with the seller at a distance of approximately three feet during the transaction. 2

After he purchased the drugs, Investigator Greene walked away and gave a prearranged signal to Officer Myers, who had been monitoring the transaction from an unmarked police car, to convey that the purchase had been completed. Officer Myers then broadcast over an unrecorded police channel a “lookout” for the seller, providing a description of his clothes and other defining features to the arresting officers. Officer Leroy Rollins and other members of the arrest team in the neighborhood spotted a man matching the description provided by Officer Myers and apprehended appellant within minutes on the same block. 3

Officer Myers met up with Investigator Greene approximately one minute after the transaction. After learning that the arresting officers had apprehended a suspect, Officer Myers drove his vehicle past the police car where appellant was being detained. Investigator Greene identified appellant as the seller, 4 and he was placed *514 under arrest. In a search incident to arrest, Officer Rollins recovered $32.00 from appellant’s front, right pocket, $30.00 of which were found to be the MPD prerecorded bills used by Investigator Greene to purchase the drugs.

Contradicting the officers, appellant testified that on February 25, 2003, upon leaving his friend Tasha’s house between 4:30 and 5:00 p.m. to pick up his children, the police stopped and arrested him. Appellant testified that the police searched him and took between $30 and $40 from him, which he had earned working. Appellant denied possessing or selling heroin that day.

B. Discovery of Extraneous Information in Jury Room

At trial, shortly after the alternates were dismissed and approximately five minutes after the jury had retired to deliberate, the trial court received a note from the jury foreperson about a piece of paper that had been found in the jury room. In the note, which enclosed the piece of paper, 5 the foreperson asserted that no juror had read what was on the paper, but that one juror “saw [it].” 6 The trial court convened the parties to alert them to the situation. 7 The trial court examined the piece of paper and informed the parties that the piece of paper “is ... essentially a list of the times of sunset — the rise and set for the sun for 2003. And one time is circled ... it is the time of sunset for February 23, 2003.” Judge Leibovitz also described the print on the paper as “minute.” The court then began a hearing process to discern where the piece of paper had come from and what, if anything, each juror had heard about or seen directly from the piece of paper.

Judge Leibovitz first questioned, separately, the foreperson and Juror 367 (who found the piece of paper) in the presence of counsel and permitted counsel to question them directly. The foreperson testified that “two to three minutes” after the jurors had returned to the jury room to begin their deliberations, Juror 367 brought to everyone’s attention the existence of a piece of paper that she described to the other jurors as “an astrologer’s table.” See note 10, infra. The foreperson explained that she did not look at the contents of the piece of paper herself. Rather, after Juror 367 suggested that it was likely they should not be in possession of this paper, 8 the foreperson led the effort to draft a note to the judge informing her of what they had found and enclosed the piece of paper with the note.

Juror 367’s testimony was similar to the foreperson’s, but she added that she read only the title of the paper, and that, while she noticed some numbers circled on it, she did not “know what the numbers were” and looked at it for “only seconds.” She corroborated the foreperson’s testimony that the jurors’ discussion about the paper was limited to her comment that it “was a timetable of some sort” and to how to draft the note to the judge. Juror 367 *515 also told the other jurors that the paper could “amount to jury tampering,- or something.”

Upon a request from the parties, Judge Leibovitz agreed to question each of the other jurors separately to determine if there was any possibility of juror bias. After conferring with the parties, the judge developed a series of questions which she asked each of the jurors: whether the juror had seen the contents of the paper, whether the juror knew where it came from, and whether the juror could continue to be fair and impartial and not speculate about the contents of the paper. 9 In response to these questions, every juror responded that he or she could decide the case in a fair and impartial manner based solely on the evidence introduced at trial.

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Bluebook (online)
932 A.2d 510, 2007 D.C. App. LEXIS 573, 2007 WL 2725965, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ransom-v-united-states-dc-2007.