Weems v. United States

Decision Date09 August 2018
Docket NumberNo. 15-CM-234,15-CM-234
Citation191 A.3d 296
Parties Andrew L. WEEMS, Appellant, v. UNITED STATES, Appellee.
CourtD.C. Court of Appeals

Ariel Roytenberg, Student Attorney (No. 14465), and Moses Cook, Supervising Attorney, were on the initial brief for appellant. Samantha Montalbano, Student Attorney (No. 15869), and Michael Barfield, Supervising Attorney, were on the supplemental brief for appellant.

Channing D. Phillips, United States Attorney at the time, and Elizabeth Trosman, Elizabeth H. Danello, and Marco A. Palmieri, Assistant United States Attorneys, were on the initial brief for appellee. Jessie K. Liu, United States Attorney, and Elizabeth Trosman, Nicholas P. Coleman, and Eric Hansford, Assistant United States Attorneys, were on the supplemental brief for appellee.

Before Glickman and Easterly, Associate Judges, and Pryor, Senior Judge.

Concurring opinion by Associate Judge Easterly at page 308.

Glickman, Associate Judge:

Andrew Weems appeals his convictions after a bench trial of shoplifting and attempted threats to do bodily harm. He contends the trial judge erred by (1) not sanctioning the government for its failure to preserve and produce discoverable evidence; and (2) permitting the government to amend the information before trial to reduce the threats charges against him and thereby eliminate his statutory entitlement to a trial by jury. We reject appellant's claims of error and affirm his convictions.

I.

Appellant was arrested inside a Wal-Mart store in Northwest Washington, D.C., on the evening of October 6, 2014. Reginald Bryant, a Wal-Mart employee and a manager in the store's Asset Protection section, testified at trial that he was "walking the floor" at around 6:30 p.m. when he observed appellant collect four watches from their display shelves in the jewelry department and take them over to the bedding department. Bryant followed appellant there and saw him kneel down in the aisle and remove the security sensor tags attached to each watch by biting them off with his teeth. Appellant put the tags and watch packaging on a shelf, pocketed the watches, and returned to the jewelry aisle to take five more watches. Bryant contacted Danielle Davis, another Wal-Mart employee working in Asset Protection, who was monitoring the store's video camera surveillance system. He also contacted Medgar Webster, a Metropolitan Police Officer who was off-duty but in the store providing uniformed security for Wal-Mart at the time.

Officer Webster testified that he went to the Asset Protection office. There, with Bryant and Davis, he viewed appellant on a video monitor. Officer Webster then went back to the floor with Bryant to confront appellant in person. They found appellant back in the bedding aisle biting the security tags off the additional watches he had taken and concealing the watches in his pants pocket. Officer Webster arrested appellant for shoplifting, escorted him to the Asset Protection office, and confiscated the watches from him.

While sitting handcuffed in the office, appellant became visibly agitated and angry. Addressing Bryant and Davis, he declared, "If I go to jail for this [expletive deleted] misdemeanor I'm going to come back up here and ... I'm going to bring the noise.... I know your faces, ... you too, [expletive deleted].... [O]nce I get out of jail I'm going to come back up [expletive deleted] and get both of you [expletive deleted]." These remarks were the basis for the threats charges against appellant.

Officer Webster did not retain custody of the watches after taking them from appellant. Instead, he handed the watches over to Wal-Mart's Asset Protection personnel. The record does not reveal what happened to the watches after that.1 Nor did Officer Webster collect the security tags or attempt to obtain or preserve a copy of the video surveillance footage showing appellant's actions.2 It is not clear whether the security tags ever were recovered,3 and Wal-Mart later advised the government and appellant's counsel that any recorded footage of the incident had been lost in a hard drive crash in December 2014. Consequently, the government did not produce the watches, security tags, or video footage to appellant in pretrial discovery, and it did not introduce any of that evidence at trial.

Contending that the government had violated its obligations under Superior Court Criminal Rule 16 by failing to preserve the watches, tags, and video surveillance footage for pretrial discovery, appellant moved for dismissal of the information or an appropriate lesser sanction.4 The trial judge denied this motion, ruling that (1) the government had not violated Rule 16 because Officer Webster never took possession of the evidence, and that (2) it would be inappropriate to sanction the government for its failure to secure the watches, tags, and surveillance footage because (a) there was no showing of bad faith but only, at worst, negligence on Officer Webster's part, and (b) appellant was not prejudiced by the absence of the evidence.

II.

We review the judge's discovery rulings for abuse of discretion, subject to the qualification that the proper construction of Criminal Rule 16 is a legal question as to which our review is de novo .5 Because Rule 16 derives from and mirrors the corresponding rule in the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure, we may look for guidance to cases construing that rule.6

Rule 16 imposes disclosure obligations on "the government." We have said that these duties apply "not only to the prosecutor's office, but also to all other investigative agencies of the government" in whose name the prosecution is brought – in other words, to the entire "prosecution team."7 The present case involves what is now Rule 16 (a)(1)(E),8 which entitles a criminal defendant to inspect and copy evidence "within the government's possession, custody, or control" if the item is material to the preparation of the defense, if the government intends to use the item in its case-in-chief at trial, or if the item was obtained from or belongs to the defendant. This Rule 16 duty to permit pretrial discovery entails an antecedent duty to preserve material that the government has obtained and knows or should know is discoverable.9 However, these duties of preservation and disclosure extend only to evidence that actually is within the possession, custody, or control of the government; they do not presuppose any duty on the part of the government to acquire evidence it does not have from private parties or other outside sources.10 If the evidence at issue was never within the government's possession, custody, or control, "there can be no Rule 16 violation" in the government's failure to preserve and produce it.11

Thus the threshold and, as it turns out, largely dispositive issue in this case is whether the government acquired "possession, custody, or control" of the watches, security tags, or surveillance video footage. As used in Rule 16, the words "possession," "custody," and "control" have overlapping but different meanings. We agree with appellant that the terms refer to three "forms of dominion."12

The first term in the triad is "possession." For the sake of clarity, and to distinguish it from the other two terms, we may understand "possession" in Rule 16 cases to refer to "actual possession""direct physical control over a thing."13

The second term, "custody" typically refers to the (often temporary) "care and control of a thing or person for inspection, preservation, or security."14 Unlike "possession," which might be understood to imply a property interest or usage right of some kind, the term "custody" makes clear that the government must disclose discoverable items in which it has no such interest or right and that it merely holds for the benefit of another.15

Last but not least is the term "control." This court has not yet had to consider the definition of "control," as that term is used in Rule 16, when the item in question is in the hands of a private or other non-governmental entity – which is the pertinent question in this case. However, under the corresponding federal Criminal Rule and the similar discovery provisions of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, courts have held that "control" in that situation means the government has the "legal right" and ability to obtain the item from the other entity "upon demand."16 The term "control" normally implies, in other words, the government's "direct or indirect power" to acquire or access the materials at will and by right.17 The government's right to obtain material from another entity on demand may arise under extrinsic law, as when the material is the property of the government. It also has been held to arise by express agreement18 or where the government shares access to, and utilization of, materials acquired or used in an investigation conducted jointly with the other entity.19 It is not enough, however, that the entity in possession of the item would be willing to permit access or provide the item on request; the need for the possessor's voluntary acquiescence shows that control is lodged in the possessor rather than the government. Moreover, acceptance of such an expanded definition of Rule 16"control" would impermissibly impose on the government a duty to acquire evidence it does not have, which is, as we have said, well beyond the Rule's intended scope.20

Similarly, the fact that the government (like the defendant or any other party) might obtain or gain access to an item from its possessor by means of a subpoena duces tecum or other discovery mechanism cannot be enough to establish that the government has "control" over the item within the meaning of Rule 16 ; on the contrary, the need to resort to such legal process would show that the basic indicia of control are absent.21 And it goes without saying that the government's ability to take a thing by force without right does not equate to Rule 16 control.

Thus,...

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