Shawn Smith v. United States

180 A.3d 45
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 8, 2018
Docket15-CF-677
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 180 A.3d 45 (Shawn Smith 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
Shawn Smith v. United States, 180 A.3d 45 (D.C. 2018).

Opinions

Opinion concurring in the judgment by Associate Judge Thompson, at page 67-68.

Dissenting opinion by Associate Judge McLeese, at page 69.

Ferren, Senior Judge:

*48Appellant, Shawn Smith, was convicted of carrying a pistol outside of his home or place of business,1 unlawful possession of a firearm by a former felon,2 possession of an unregistered firearm,3 and possession of a large capacity ammunition feeding device.4 He appeals his convictions, arguing for reversal on several grounds:

(1) The trial court violated his Sixth Amendment right to cross-examine the arresting police officer on a theory of "corruption bias."

(2) The trial court erred by precluding impeachment of the officer after he "falsely and repeatedly" testified that he had been "attacked and acted in self-defense" when striking a crime scene observer.

(3) The government's delayed and incomplete mid-trial disclosure of the officer's pending excessive force investigation in another case violated appellant's due process rights under Brady v. Maryland ,5 warranting reversal.

For the reasons that follow, we affirm.

I. Facts and Proceedings

A. Events at Issue

According to the government's evidence, at approximately 1:00 a.m. on May 11, 2014, officers of the Seventh District Metropolitan Police Department ("MPD") observed a dozen or so individuals walking along 13th Street, S.E. toward Alabama Avenue. As Officers Damien Williams and Terry Couch left their vehicle "to see what was going on," a man later identified as appellant Smith turned and began to run down the street into an alley near Savannah Street, S.E. The officers ran after Smith, who was holding his waistband while running. As Smith passed a wooden fence enclosing a yard near the alley, he pulled what "clearly" appeared to be a black semiautomatic handgun from his waistband and tossed it over the wooden fence into the yard. At the time Smith discarded the handgun, Officer Couch was approximately five to six feet behind him, followed closely by Officer Williams. Both officers described the area as "dimly lit" with streetlights.

As Officer Couch continued to pursue Smith, Officer Williams stopped to search for the discarded handgun. Upon entering the yard, Williams located a handgun lying in the grass approximately six feet from the fence. He observed a small indentation in the ground where the handgun appeared to have landed, as well as dirt on the handgun's barrel. The handgun was also dry compared to the surrounding area, which was wet from recent rain.

*49Rather than contact crime-scene personnel to process the area, Officer Williams photographed the handgun using his cellular phone. He then put on gloves to recover it, placed it in an evidence bag, and transported it to the police station. The parties stipulated that no fingerprints were discovered on the handgun and that DNA testing was inconclusive.

While Officer Williams was recovering the handgun, Officer Couch continued to pursue Smith on foot and caught up to him about a block from where the handgun was discovered. Officer Couch explained that as they crossed over 13th Street, S.E. in a sprint, Smith "tripped, fell, [or] stopped," causing them both to fall. The officer then handcuffed Smith and transported him to the hospital. Eventually, Smith was charged.

B. The Trial

Before swearing in the jury on December 17, 2014, the trial judge asked the parties whether there were any preliminary matters that warranted the court's attention. Both responded that there were none, whereupon each made opening statements to the jury. The government then requested a bench conference. At the bench, the government disclosed that its key witness, Officer Williams, was under investigation by the United States Attorney's Office for using "excessive force" against a bystander, Antwann Barkley, in an unrelated incident ("Barkley incident") that took place on December 1, 2014, almost seven months after the incident at issue here. The judge ordered the government to present its second witness (Officer Couch) first and held over discussion of the issues derived from the government's delayed disclosure until after Couch had testified. During a break in testimony, the prosecutor indicated that she had learned of the pending investigation a day or two earlier; that there was "no report" because the investigation was still "open"; and that there were "no documents" related to the investigation.

After a second break in Couch's testimony, however, the prosecutor discovered a preliminary Internal Affairs Division ("IAD") report about the pending investigation, which she produced. It was dated eight days earlier, December 9, 2014, based on a referral to the U.S. Attorney's office on the day it happened, December 1. This "preliminary" document (hereafter the "IAD report") summarized the Barkley incident, as follows: On December 1, 2014, Officer Williams responded to a radio run for a homicide in the 2400 block of Elvans Road, S.E. While responding, Officer Williams and another officer saw a Chevrolet Impala collide with a lamp post near the scene of the homicide. After Williams and a colleague removed the occupants from the Impala, the officers began to secure the perimeter with crime scene tape. While doing so, the officers asked a group of bystanders, including Barkley, to leave the area. The group responded by shouting obscenities at the officers and advising the officers that they had their hands up "like Michael Brown."6 Eventually the bystanders, except for Barkley, moved away from the scene.

Officer Williams continued to order Barkley to move back, but Barkley instead placed his cell phone in Officer Williams's face. In the words of the report, "Officer Williams then tried to physically push Mr. Barkley back." Barkley responded, the report continued, "by jumping back and trying to strike Officer Williams with his fist."

*50But Officer Williams "delivered a single, straight strike to Mr. Barkley's face, causing him to fall over backwards and strike his head on the ground." Barkley was then transported to the hospital, discharged with a broken jaw, and charged with two counts of assault on a police officer (one for assaulting Officer Williams, the other for assaulting another officer at the scene, Michael Johnson). Officer Williams's excessive force case was then transferred to the United States Attorney's Office.

Attached to the IAD report were statements from three police officers, a civilian witness, and Barkley. These statements, in a few respects, were inconsistent with each other and with the IAD report itself concerning who had initiated physical contact, Barkley or Williams, and, in particular, whether Barkley had made threatening gestures to Officer Williams before the officer's "straight strike."

Based on the IAD report, defense counsel moved for "a dismissal-a mistrial. ... [T]his is Brady. "7

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Bluebook (online)
180 A.3d 45, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shawn-smith-v-united-states-dc-2018.