Samba v. State

49 A.3d 841, 206 Md. App. 508, 2012 WL 2463939, 2012 Md. App. LEXIS 81
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 28, 2012
DocketNo. 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 49 A.3d 841 (Samba v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Special Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Samba v. State, 49 A.3d 841, 206 Md. App. 508, 2012 WL 2463939, 2012 Md. App. LEXIS 81 (Md. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

WOODWARD, J.

Following a jury trial in the Circuit Court for Prince George’s County, Kasedaa Samba, appellant, was convicted of transporting a handgun on a roadway, possessing a regulated firearm after conviction of a disqualifying crime, driving an unregistered vehicle, failing to display two registration plates, driving without a license, and driving an uninsured vehicle. Appellant was sentenced to three years, with all but eighteen months suspended, plus three years of supervised probation, [511]*511for transporting a handgun on a roadway. Appellant was also sentenced to five years, with all but eighteen months suspended, plus three years of supervised probation, for possessing a regulated firearm after conviction of a disqualifying crime, to be served concurrently with the first sentence. Sentences on the vehicle offenses were suspended generally.

In this appeal, appellant challenges his handgun convictions, raising the following two questions for our review:

I. Did the court err in instructing the jury that there is no legal requirement that the State utilize any specific investigative technique or scientific test to prove its case?
II. Is the evidence sufficient to sustain appellant’s convictions for transporting a handgun on a roadway and possession of a regulated firearm after conviction of a disqualifying crime?

Applying lessons from the Court of Appeals’ recent decisions in Atkins v. State, 421 Md. 434, 26 A.3d 979 (2011), and Stabb v. State, 423 Md. 454, 31 A.3d 922 (2011), we shall hold that in the circumstances presented here, the trial court erred in giving a so-called “anti-CSI effect” jury instruction. Because (1) there was no defense “overreaching” warranting such an instruction as a curative measure, (2) the trial court failed to instruct the jury to consider the lack of forensic evidence in evaluating reasonable doubt, and (3) the State used the instruction to undermine appellant’s legitimate “failure to fingerprint” defense, appellant’s weapons convictions must be reversed.

FACTS AND LEGAL PROCEEDINGS

At trial, it was undisputed that a loaded and operable revolver was found underneath the seat of the car that appellant was driving when he was arrested on November 12, 2009. The State presented testimony by Prince George’s County Police Officer Phillip Martin that, while patrolling the parking lot of a Forestville apartment complex that evening, he stopped appellant’s Mitsubishi 3000 GT because it did not have [512]*512a front license plate. Appellant was driving and had a passenger in the front seat. The officer obtained Maryland identification cards from appellant and his passenger, then asked appellant to move his vehicle into a parking space. As appellant was backing his car into a spot next to a larger vehicle, Officer Martin lost sight of appellant’s vehicle for approximately fifteen seconds. The officer then discovered that the passenger had left the scene.

Because appellant did not have a driver’s license, proper vehicle tags, current vehicle registration, or proof of vehicle insurance, his vehicle was impounded. During an inventory search, Officer Martin reached underneath the driver’s seat from the back seat and found a silver revolver “jammed up towards the middle toward the front of the seat.” The handgun was loaded with five bullets, and test-firing later established that it was operable.

Appellant’s defense to the weapons charges was that his passenger was merely a “neighborhood” acquaintance to whom he was giving a ride in exchange for gas money, and that it was the passenger who, “unbeknownst” to appellant, put the handgun under the driver’s seat before he “bailed out.” Appellant asserted that, because he did not know about the gun, he did not have the mens rea necessary to convict him of either possessing the weapon after conviction for a disqualifying crime or knowingly transporting the gun on a public roadway.

In his opening statement, defense counsel asked the jury to “please consider not only what evidence the State shows you, but what evidence is missing. I think there’s going to be quite a bit missing in this case.” During Officer Martin’s cross-examination, defense counsel elicited testimony that, although the police department has technicians who can recover and analyze fingerprint and DNA evidence and appellant’s fingerprints were available following his arrest, Officer Martin did not conduct or request any such testing on the gun or bullets. On re-direct, Officer Martin explained that police policy did [513]*513not require fingerprinting or DNA sampling of firearms and that it was not his “common practice” to do so.

At the State’s request and over appellant’s objection, the trial court, in its instructions to the jury before closing arguments, advised the jury as follows:

During this trial you have heard testimony of witnesses and may hear arguments of counsel that the State did not utilize a specific investigative technique or scientific test. However, I instruct you that there is no legal requirement that the State utilize any specific investigative technique or scientific test to prove this case. Your responsibility as jurors is to determine whether the State has proven based solely on the evidence presented the defendant’s guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.

(Emphasis added).

In closing argument, the State repeatedly invoked this jury instruction. The prosecutor, after emphasizing the significance of the evidence that the gun was found in appellant’s vehicle under his seat, addressed the lack of fingerprint or DNA evidence to connect appellant to the gun. The prosecutor stated:

You heard in the defendant’s cross examination of the State’s witness this business about fingerprints. You take fingerprints? Did you recover DNA? Well, the Officer told you and you also heard from the Judge telling you that the State is not required to use any specific scientific investigative technique. The Officer doesn’t have to. He’s not required by law or his police department policy to fingerprint the gun.
He’s not required to recover DNA. That’s something that you watch on TV, but on the date today, it’s not required and it’s not done. He said I never recovered DNA or fingerprints from the gun. He doesn’t do that. Nor in the instructions that you heard from the Judge, you don’t hear one of those instructions that says we have to produce any fingerprint evidence in order for [514]*514you to find him guilty. There’s no element of the offense that says that that’s something that we have to do.

Defense counsel, at the end of appellant’s closing argument, acknowledged the jury instruction but asked the jury to conclude that the State should have performed fingerprint tests on the weapon as a matter of “fairness.”

Now, the fingerprints, the DNA. Let’s think about that for a minute. The Judge has said that as a matter of law the State is not required to show you fingerprints, but I think it’s just as an element of fairness you ought to require the State to show you fingerprints. The State is saying to you in effect [appellant] knew that gun was there. [Appellant] put that gun there by inference.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
49 A.3d 841, 206 Md. App. 508, 2012 WL 2463939, 2012 Md. App. LEXIS 81, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/samba-v-state-mdctspecapp-2012.