Sweet v. United States

449 A.2d 315, 1982 D.C. App. LEXIS 407
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedAugust 3, 1982
Docket80-463
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 449 A.2d 315 (Sweet 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
Sweet v. United States, 449 A.2d 315, 1982 D.C. App. LEXIS 407 (D.C. 1982).

Opinion

*317 BELSON, Associate Judge:

Appellant was found guilty by a jury of rape while armed, D.C. Code 1973, §§ 22-2801, -3202, kidnapping while armed, id. §§ 22-2101, -3202, assault with intent to commit sodomy while armed, id. §§ 22-503, -3202, -3502, armed robbery, id. §§ 22-2901, -3202, assault with a dangerous weapon, id. § 22-502, and unauthorized use of a vehicle, id. § 22-2204. He seeks reversal of his convictions on the grounds that: (1) the trial court committed plain error by not giving the jury, sua sponte, a limiting instruction on “other crimes” evidence; (2) the trial court erred in refusing to instruct the jury that corroboration of the complainant’s testimony is a prerequisite to conviction for assault with intent to commit sodomy; and (3) the plan under which grand and petit jurors are selected to serve in Superior Court denied him his Fifth Amendment and Sixth Amendment rights to be indicted and tried by jurors chosen from a fair cross-section of the community, and does not comply with the requirements and intent of the Jury Selection and Service Act of 1968. D.C. Code 1973, § 11-1902. 1

We affirm the convictions.

I

This case involved crimes committed against a 26-year-old woman, who was a full-time student and part-time computer operator. In the late evening of September 14, 1977, the complainant left her apartment in Mount Rainier, Maryland in order to run an errand. As she walked to her car, she noticed two men, neither of whom she had ever seen before, sitting between her apartment building and an adjacent building. She then got into her car, but before she had closed the door, one of the men pointed a silver handgun at her and said, “This is it.” Both men forcibly entered her car.

Over the course of the next several hours, the men ordered the complainant to drive them to various points in the District of Columbia and suburban Maryland as they looked for someone to rob. At some time in the early morning hours, the men directed her to drive to Perry Street, Northeast. The men discussed whether they should kill her. She was then forced to commit oral sodomy upon the gunman and to have sexual intercourse with both the gunman and the other assailant. After the men had completed their sexual assaults, the gunman told the complainant that his brothers, who were known to the police, could get her anything that she needed, and that his father lived nearby. Both men took some money for bus fare from her purse and from the interior of the ear. Then they left the car.

The complainant returned to her apartment where she told her waiting father what had happened to her. It was 6:30 a. m. She was taken to a hospital for examination and the police were notified. During her interview with a police officer, she mentioned that the second assailant had called the gunman “Skip” or “Swift.” The police officer asked her if the name could *318 have been “Sweet.” That name “rang a bell” and she responded that she believed that that was the name she had heard. She also told the police that the gunman had been wearing a blue “Yale” T-shirt and that he had a large scar on one of his forearms. She believed it was the left arm.

Appellant Sweet was arrested five days later. He was wearing a blue-gray “Yale” T-shirt. The complainant subsequently was shown a photograph array and immediately identified appellant’s photograph as the gunman. She said, “That’s him. No question. This is the one known as Sweet or Swift.” At a lineup two weeks later, she identified appellant as the gunman. Appellant had a large scar on his right forearm. The Sweet family lived within two blocks of Perry Street, Northeast, the location of the sexual assault. The second assailant was never identified.

Appellant’s defense at trial was misiden-tification.

II

At trial the complainant testified that during her abduction in her car, the gunman told her that he had killed a white girl the day before and that he had been in prison. As they drove past Saint Ann’s Infant Home in Northeast Washington, he said that at that place he had “got [a] bitch” who had a child with her and that he had “tore this bitch’s ass up.” The gunman also mentioned that he wanted to kill a woman who had caused his brother to go to jail. The second assailant told her that he had gone to prison for murder, kidnapping, and rape. The complainant further testified that when she heard these statements by the assailants, she became fearful that the assailants would harm her in the same manner as they claimed they had harmed others in the past.

Her testimony about the assailants’ statements was admitted by the trial court for the limited purpose of showing the complainant’s state of mind during her abduction. Since a necessary element of the charge of rape is that the act was committed forcibly or that the complainant had a reasonable belief that she would face death or serious bodily harm if she resisted, 2 the government was permitted to adduce this testimony regarding the assailants’ statements in order to prove that the complainant submitted to the assailants’ sexual advances only because she reasonably feared that, if she did not submit, they would physically harm her.

On appeal, appellant does not contest that the evidence of the assailants’ statements about their other criminal activity was properly admitted for the limited purpose of proving the complainant’s state of mind during her abduction. Rather, relying on Drew v. United States, 118 U.S.App.D.C. 11, 331 F.2d 85 (1964), and its progeny, he argues that when the trial court admitted evidence of the gunman’s statements, the court committed plain error by not instructing the jury as to the limited purpose for which this evidence was admitted and was to be considered. 3

The Drew line of cases establishes two pertinent principles. First, evidence that the defendant has committed other crimes is inadmissible to prove that the defendant has a disposition to commit crime, from which the jury might infer that the defendant committed the crime charged, but such evidence may be admitted for the limited purpose of proving some aspect of the charged offense. E.g., Miles v. United States, D.C.App., 374 A.2d 278, 282 (1977); Smith v. United States, D.C.App., 312 A.2d 781, 784-85 (1973); Bradley *319 v. United States, 140 U.S.App.D.C. 7, 11-13, 433 F.2d 1113, 1117-19 (1969); Drew v. United States, supra 118 U.S.App.D.C. at 15-16, 331 F.2d at 89-90. Second, when evidence of the defendant’s other crimes is admitted for a limited purpose, there is the danger that the jury nevertheless will misuse the evidence and infer improperly that the defendant committed the charged offense because he had committed other crimes in the past.

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Bluebook (online)
449 A.2d 315, 1982 D.C. App. LEXIS 407, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sweet-v-united-states-dc-1982.