Lead Opinion
Fоllowing a bench trial, appellant was found guilty of simple assault. Contrary to his first argument on appeal, the evidence was sufficient to support a finding beyond a reasonable doubt that he assaulted the victim, Lieutenant Wilkins of the Metropolitan Police Department. Appellant also contends, however, that the judge as trier of fact made no unambiguous finding that he had the intent, required for assault by our decisions, to use force against the officer. Because we agree that the judge’s oral finding of guilt leaves unclear whether appellant indeed had the requisite intent — rather than having struck the officer accidentally — we must remand the case for clarification by the judge and any supplemental findings as to intent which the judge deems necessary.
Evidence showed that as Lieutenant Wilkins tried to arrest appellant for a drug sale and place handcuffs on him, appellant resisted the arrest. Depending on which testimony was credited, appellant did so either by pushing, elbowing, and intentionally striking the officer or, instead, by “balling himself up,” “rolling onto his stomach,” and “flailing his elbows” to avoid the handcuffing. The prosecution argued that appellant was guilty under either scenario so long as he intended the act of flailing his arms, even if he did not mean to strike the officer. Appellant, by contrast, citing this court’s decision in Williams v. United States,
Our examination of the trial judge’s brief explanation for finding appellant guilty leaves us uncertain whether the judge resolved this disagreement. Appellant is correct that in Williams (also a bench trial) we rejected as a basis for conviction of assault a finding merely that the defendant had thrown a shoe in the direction of the victim — “intending] to throw the shoe,” id. at 1002 — without a finding also that he “meant to throw it at the cоmplaining witness.” Id. at 1003. We therefore remanded the case for the judge to make an express finding whether the government had proven beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant had “thrfown] the shoe with the intent to hit [the victim] with it.” Id. at 1004. In this case, similarly, it is not clear whether the judge deemed sufficient that appellant had accidentally made contact with the officer while squirming and attempting to keep his arms apart (“He was trying to move his arms apart.”) and avoid the cuffing, or instead found that appellant had intended to use force against the officer, if only to avoid the cuffing and not (as the judge said at another point) “trying to injure [him].” The judge’s ultimate and terse explanation for finding appellant guilty — “[The officer] was struck by the defendant. The defendant was flailing his elbows around trying to keep them apart so he wouldn’t be cuffed” — leaves too much uncertainty whether he applied an understanding of intent consistent with our decision in Williams.
Accordingly, as in Williams, we remand the case for the trial judge to clarify the intent he fоund exhibited by appellant’s actions, including any additional findings the judge believes necessary. If the judge finds that appellant, in struggling and flailing his arms about, intended to use force against the officer, then appellant’s “conviction and sentence may stand.” Williams,
So ordered.
Notes
. On appeal appellant argues likewise that "[a]n accidental touching will not suffice to convict the defendant of simple assault” because, "[a]s the Supreme Court has stated, it is not natural 'to say that a person actively employs physical force against another person by accident.' ” (Br. for App. at 16) (quoting Leocal v. Ashcroft,
Concurrence Opinion
Retired, concurring:
I concur in remanding the case to the trial court for further consideration and fact-finding. As in (Antwan) Williams v. United States,
I.
To begin, I add a few facts to complete the description of the encounter between appellant and Lieutenant Wilkins — all of which were presented through the testimony of Lieutenant Wilkins and the officers who came to assist him in arresting appellant. I also add the arguments made by counsel and the trial court’s reasoning.
On the afternoon of June 3, 2006, Metropolitan Police Department (MPD) Officer Michael Newton observed what he believed to be a drug transaction between a seller, later identified as appellant, and two buyers on the 1600 block of E Street, N.E. After stopping the buyers, who were found to have marijuana, Officer Newton directed other MPD officers to arrest appellant, who was still nearby. MPD Lieutenant Ronald Wilkins, who was undercover, saw appellant entering an apartment building and followed him into the building. Once inside, Wilkins saw appellant approach the open door of an apartment in the hallway. As appellant tried to enter the apartment, Lieutenant Wilkins grabbed him by the shirt. Appellant “started twisting” and managed to pull himself into the apartment. Wilkins called for back-up assistance.
Lieutenant Wilkins held fast to appellant’s shirt and entered the apartment with him. Appellant fell onto a couch by the door. Wilkins identified himself as a police officer several times and tried to place handcuffs on appellant, but appellant “balled himself up and was attempting to roll ... on[to] his stomach.” Wilkins and appellant then begаn to “tussle[ ] back and forth.” As Wilkins repeatedly tried to maneuver appellant’s wrists into a position to place the handcuffs, appellant continued to avoid the handcuffing. (“The more I would grab a hold of him to try to maneuver his hands around the more he would roll.”) Wilkins described the incident as “a lot of pushing, back and forth and elbows being thrown”; he also stated that as he attempted to get a hold of appellant’s arm, appellant would “swing his arm back and hit [him].”
MPD Officers Dwayne Johnson and Zachary Melby responded to Lieutenant Wilkins’s call for back-up. Together, the three officers succeeded in placing appellant in handcuffs. The officers described that appellant would:
pull[ ] his arms away and try to ball up which is common for someone who doesn’t want to surrender his arms and get handcuffed. It’s just harder for us. If they lock their arms under their body then you have to kind of physically pull their arms away to get them placed inhandcuffs. You know, a lot of pushing back and forth and elbows being thrown, stuff like that.
Apрellant “push[ed] and elbow[ed]” the officers several times, striking Wilkins’s torso “a couple [of] times.” As the “wrestling match” continued, Wilkins noticed a folding lock-blade knife in appellant’s right front pants pocket. Wilkins “had a hold of [appellant’s] right hand and with one of [his] hands grabbed the knife and threw it on the ground.” The officers were soon able to restrain appellant and place him in handcuffs. The officers then searched him and recovered four small bags of cocaine, four pills containing amphetamines, and $136 in cash.
On cross-examination, defense counsel asked Lieutenant Wilkins whether he believed appellant had intended to strike him. Wilkins responded:
I don’t think his intentions were specifically to strike me in the torso area with his arms. It was my opinion that he was intentionally trying to roll his body and lock his arms to prevent being handcuffed which supported the APO charge. I don’t think he specifically or had the specific intent to strike me in the chest or the body area with his elbows as he was trying to break my grip freе. That’s why he wasn’t charged with that as a specific intent.
At the close of the government’s case, defense counsel moved for a judgment of acquittal as to the charge of assault, arguing that the government had failed to prove the mens rea element of assault. In support of the motion, counsel cited Lieutenant Wilkins’s testimony regarding his belief that appellant had no intention of striking him. Defense counsel also underlined the fact that appellant had been arrested for the crime of assaulting a police officer (APO) but was actually prosecuted for simple assault and that, unlike APO, simple assault requires a showing of actual intent to injure the officer, beyond merely resisting or impeding arrest. The trial court denied the motion, explaining:
When it comes to the simple assault ... you’re quite right to argue, I think, what Wilkins says, that he did not believe that the defendant was trying to strike him for the sake of striking him. He wanted to get loose, or he didn’t want to have the cuffs put on him. But, nonetheless, that, while it’s a slightly different motive, or a slightly diffеrent motivation, [it] is the officer’s assessment of why he did it; why he struck at him with his elbows. He was trying to move his arms apart. So ... I’m not quite persuaded, at this stage of things anyhow, that this was inadvertent, you might say; it was an accident; it was a mistake; it was not intention[al].
I think it was intentional in the sense that it was done to get ... [Lieutenant Wilkins] away from him. And the cuffs away. He wasn’t trying to exact revenge on Wilkins, or he wasn’t trying to threaten Wilkins. He wasn’t trying to injure Wilkins for some other reason. He wanted to stop him from cuffing him and I think it’s probably sufficient here. Because he — I think, the evidence would — that this was done purposefully.... [H]e knew what they were doing and they were there to arrest him, and he wanted to get away. He didn’t want to be arrested; he didn’t want to be cuffed. So even though he had that, rather than — ... I’m gonna’ frighten you; I’m gonna’ punish you; I’m gonna’ hurt you; I’m gonna’ threaten you. Even though he didn’t do it for those reasons exactly, I still think it suffices for simple assault.
After the close of all the evidence, defense counsel moved for a judgment of acquittal a second time, once аgain alleging that the government had failed to establish
I think that the testimony about the motive doesn’t ... undo the Government’s evidence about the attempt or effort with force or violence to injure another. He wanted to do what he did, you know. He didn’t do it simply for the sake of injuring him, just out of sheer malice or malevolence, he did it to stop him from handcuffing him.
During closing argument, the prosecutor argued that appellant had assaulted the officer because “Lieutenant Wilkins had to wrestle with [appellant] in order to get him under arrest.... ” In his rebuttal argument, the prosecutor clarified that “[appellant] was attempting to evade arrest and he was using his arms and his body in order to do so. That was intentional and in the process he hit Lieutenant Wilkins. Whatever Lieutenant Wilkins believes the defendant’s specific intent to be is neither here nor there. What matters is his actions. And, at the time, it’s clear that they were intentional аnd they need harm, or attempt to harm, Lieutenant Wilkins.”
After the parties delivered their closing arguments, the trial court found appellant guilty of simple assault and possession of cocaine and amphetamine. Finding the testimony of the police officers “fundamentally credible,” the trial court explained:
I convict [the defendant] of assault because, even though [Lieutenant Wilkins] provides a motive of what, in his view, was going on, still it constitutes an assault. It may have been an assault for the reason the officer said, rather than some other reason, urged on [me] by the U.S. Attorney or by other witnesses, but still I think it was an assault. He was struck by the defendant. The defendant was flailing his elbows around trying to keep them apart so he wouldn’t be cuffed. Now that’s the occasion for the assault on Lieutenant Wilkins.
Appellant appealed his conviction for assault.
II.
Appellant maintains that to convict him of assault, the fact of a blow to the officer’s torso was not enough, and that the government was required to prove and the trial court had to find beyond a reasоnable doubt, that he intended to “cause injury” or “use physical violence” directed against Lieutenant Wilkins. He cites (Antwan) Williams,
The government disagrees, citing a number of cases in which we have stated
A.
D.C.Code § 22-404(a)(l) (2001) criminalizes simple assault, penalizing anyone who “unlawfully assaults or threatens another in a menacing manner.” It has long been recognized that “assault as contemplated by the statute is common law assault.” Beausoliel v. United States,
Following Patterson, “[t]he concept of criminal assault ... expanded in this jurisdiction, as in most jurisdictions, to include not only the common law attempted-battery theory but also the intent-to-frighten theory adopting certain aspects from the civil law of torts.” Parks v. United States,
[Cjertain aspects of the concepts of a criminal assault and the tort of assault have merged, enlarging the criminal concept to encompass such conduct as could induce in the victim a well-founded apprehension of peril. Under this expanded concept of common law assault, a lack of actual ability to inflict the harm threatened is largely irrelevant, since the behavior of the assailant still might be such as would generate fright in the intended victim.... It is not the secret intent of the assaulting party, nor the undisclosed fact of his ability or inability to commit a battery, thаt is material; but what his conduct and the attending circumstances denote at the time to the party assaulted.
Anthony,
Despite the different origins of these two types of assault,
The District of Columbia Circuit disagreed. It began its analysis by examining the language of the relevant statute, which provided simply that, “Every person convicted of an assault with intent to commit mayhem, or of an assault with a dangerous weapon, shall be sentenced to imprisonment for not more than ten years.” D.C.Code § 22-502 (1961). Unlike other statutes that had been interpreted to require intent, the statute proscribing ADW “[did] not include such words as ‘willfully’ or ‘with intent.’ ” Parker,
The court bolstered this textual analysis with the practical observation that “[t]he potential for serious bodily harm through the reckless use of dangerous weapons is as substantial as it is obvious. Use of such weapons, even when there is no specific intent to еmploy them to inflict injury, is invariably fraught with the possibility of dangerous consequences.” Id. Given the inherent dangerousness of the offense, the court feared that “the policies of the statute,” ie., preventing dangerous weapons from being used at all, “would not be served by allowing voluntary intoxication to be asserted as a defense [to ADW].” Id. Therefore, the court concluded that “a specific intent to inflict serious injury with the weapon is not necessary” for an ADW conviction, and so “drunkenness [wa]s no defense.” Id. at 1012.
In a footnote, the court addressed an argument by the government that assault crimes, as a general matter, did not require intent to cause injury. The court noted that “[s]ome jurisdictions avoid this element by presuming an intent to injure from the commission of the act, by presuming an intent to injure from reckless conduct, or by relying on the reasonableness of the apprehensions of the persons assaulted.” Id. at 1012 n. 4. The court declined to address the issue, but in so doing, stated that “the issue of intoxication aside, it is not claimed here that the elements of an assault are lacking. It seems clear that, regardless of the definition, vol
Following Parker was Pino v. United States,
B.
At the same time that we have labelеd assault a general intent crime, however, we have also articulated additional showings of intent which would seem to go above and beyond the ordinary conception of general intent merely to do the act constituting the assault. Recalling the distinction between attempted-battery assault and intent-to-frighten assault, we have stated:
The major difference between [the two types of assault] is in the nature of the intent that must be proven. Attempted-batteiy assault requires proof of an attempt to cause a physical injury, which “may consist of any act tending to such corporal injury, accompanied with such circumstances as denote at the time an intention, coupled with the present ability, of using actual violence against the person.” Intent-to-frighten assault, on the other hand, requires proof that the defendant intended either to cause injury or to create apprehension in the victim by engaging in some threatening conduct; an actual battery need not be attempted.
Robinson v. U.S.,
We put this requirement into practice in Parks,
At his trial, after the presentation of the evidence, the defendant made a motion for judgment of acquittal as to the APODW charge, which the trial court denied. In denying the motion the court found that “a reasonable juror could conclude beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant intended] either to cause injury or to create apprehension in [the officer], by bringing the pistol or weapon up from where it was apparently stowed.” Id. at 6. On appeal, the conviction was challenged on the ground that the evidence did not support the conclusion that the defendant’s actions were of “the type that would demonstrate an inten[t] to cause apprehension or a menacing threat” to the officer. Id.
For essentially the same reasons, we also upheld the conviction under an attempted-battery theory. We stated:
A reasonable jury could infer that [the defendant] was in the process of committing an actual battery when, with his gaze fixed on [the officer who had pulled him over]: [the defendant] started the car and put it in gear in one continuous motion with his right hand; reached straight down his leg to the floor; retrieved a pistol from under the seat and brought it back up in his hand; and leaned to his right while raising the pistol up as far as his knee. The jury could also infer that had it not been for [the second offieer]’s intervention by yelling, “Stop!” and shooting at [the defendant], [the defendant] intended to commit a battery by shooting [the first officer].
Id. at 7. We relied upon these reasonable inferences from the evidence in affirming the conviction, implying that factual findings of this nature are required whenever intent is at issue in an assault prosecution.
We went further in (Antwan) Williams,
At trial, the officer who was hit with the shoe testified that he did not think it had been an accident. However, another officer who also had been present at the sta-tionhouse during the incident, testified that he thought the impact had not been intentional. The defendant also maintained that he had not intended to hit the officer. Id. The trial court nevertheless found the defendant guilty, stating:
[Simple assault] is a general intent crime, not a specific intent. [The defendant] didn’t have to have a specific intent to injure [the complaining witness] but he had the intent to throw an object that injured the complaining witness. And it was not accidental that he threw the object. He admitted himself [that] he threw the object. That was not any accident. Now, it may have — so the government is correct in that they do not have to prove that there was a specific intent to injure the complaining witness.
We agreed. Citing Patterson, we stated that “[d]ecisions in this jurisdiction have ... reiterated for ninety years or more that in an ‘attempted-battery’ assault case, the prosecution must prove, inter alia, ‘an intention ... of using actual violence against the person.’ ” Id. at 1003 (quoting Patterson,
Acknowledging that we had long characterized simple assault as “general intent” crime, we also stated that:
If this proposition were to be read as broadly as the trial judge applied it in this case, however, this would permit the government to prevail in an assault case without proving what we have identified as the essence of the offense. Alfaro,859 A.2d at 156 . In other words, the limitation (no specific intent to injure required) would swallow up the rule (government must prove intent to use actual violence).
In the present case, the trial judge held that if [the defendant] intentionally threw the shoe, then he acted with the requisite general intent. Under the judge’s stated view, [the defendant] would be guilty even if he was aiming at the floor, or the wall, or the waste paper basket (or, as she put it, “tossed it to the side”), and accidentally struck the complainant. So long as the throwing was intentional, according to the judge, then it made no difference whether [the defendant] meant to throw it at the complaining witness. The judge thus reasoned that even if one credited the testimony of [the second officer] and of [the defendant] that [the defendant] did not intend the shoe to strike [the officer], [the defendant] was nevertheless guilty of assault. We cannot agree with this position. On the contrary, if the defense version were true, then [the defendant] did not have the intention to use violence against [the officer], and the very essence of attempted-battery assault was lacking.
Id. at 1003-04 (citing Alfaro,
C.
What is clear from our opinions is that despite our description of assault as a general intent crime, where evidence of the defendant’s intent to inflict injury was close, we have in practice required more than the mere “intent to perform the acts which constitute the assault.” Dunn,
“General intent” is often distinguished from “specific intent,” although the distinction being drawn by the use of these two terms often varies. Sometimes “general intent” is used in the same way as ‘criminal intent’ to mean the general notion of mens rea, while “specific intent” is taken to mean the mental state required for a particular crime. Or, “general intent” may be used to encompass all forms of the mental state requirement, while “specific intent” is limited to the one mental state of intent. Another possibility is that “general intent” will be used to characterize an intent to do something on an undetermined occasion, and “specific intent” to denote an intent to do that thing at a particular time and place.
W. LaFave, Substantive Criminal Law § 5.2(e), pp. 358-54 (2d ed. 2003) (footnotes omitted) (hereinafter “W. LaFave”). The Supreme Court also has noted that “[t]his ambiguity has led to a movement away from the traditional dichotomy of intent and toward an alternative analysis of mens rea,” United States v. Bailey,
We need to move away from a distinction that has created confusion in the definition of simple assault under D.C.Code § 22-404(a)(l). A division of the court may nоt overrule any case by which we are bound if it has relied for its holding upon the distinction between general and specific intent. See M.A.P. v. Ryan,
My conclusion from our long line of cases is that our holdings in (Antwan) Williams, Parks, and Robinson meant what they said and that “[a]ttempted-bat-tery assault requires proof of an attempt to cause a physical injury, which ‘may consist of any act tending to such corporal injury, accompanied with such circumstances as denote at the time an intention, coupled with the present ability, of using actual violence against the person.’ ” Robinson,
For attempted-battery assault, the requirement of an assaultive intention is also consistent with the premise that attempted battery, as an inchoate crimе, requires an intent to commit the crime being attempted. See W. LaFave § 16.3(a), p. 566 (“An attempt to commit any crime requires a specific intent to commit that crime; and so assault of the attempted-battery sort requires an intent to commit the battery, i.e., an intent to cause physical injury to the victim.”); Charles E. Torcía, Wharton’s Criminal Law § 179, 418 (15th ed. 1994) (“An assault is an attempt to commit a battery. Since, conceptually, a battery is involved, there must be an attempt to commit the target offense. Therefore, the defendant must intend to cause a contact to
It is also worth noting that, under the common law of Maryland, from which the common law of the District of Columbia is derived, “[b]oth varieties of assault are specific intent crimes,” Lamb v. State,
D.
It bears repeating that because attempted-battery assault, by definition, is an attempt, there need be no actual injury or contact at all. Therefore, although some cases seem to dwell on evidence of touching “however small,” Ray,
It is also worth noting that although our cases state that attempted-battery assault requires an intent to cause bodily injury by making an attempt to batter with “force or violence,” those terms do not necessarily import their everyday meaning when used in this context. Many assault cases do involve violent actions and actual physical injury, but nonviolent acts that are offensive in naktre and involve no physical injury also can be assaultive in character. This is because simple assault “is designed to protect not only against physical injury, but against all forms of offensive touching, and even the mere threat of such touch
Where an act is violent or clearly offensive in nature, evidence of the act itself will suffice to infer the necessary assaultive intent. In other cases, however, the actor’s assaultive intent is to be inferred from the circumstances, such as threats or slurs that may accompany the act, as well as from the physicality and forcefulness of the conduct itself. A recent case offers an illustrative example. In Dunn, a security officer was confronted by an animal-rights protester who had concealed his face, taunted the officer with a chant (“all your fault, all your fault”), “shoved” a protest sign at the officer, and “thrust[ing] forward,” “pushed” with enough force to cause the 6'4", 215 pound security officer to move back.
III.
This brings us to facts of the case at hand. The trial court denied appellant’s motions for judgment of acquittal after hearing the government’s argument that appellant need only have intended the act that constituted the assault, and the defense’s argument that there needs to be a further showing of intent to injure the officer, relying on Williams. In stating its relatively brief findings of fact and conclusions of law, the trial court did not expressly parsе the two separable issues of intent to do the act, and intent to inflict injury on Lieutenant Wilkins. According to the trial judge, “[t]he defendant was flailing his elbows around trying to keep them apart so he wouldn’t be cuffed. Now that’s the occasion for the assault on Lieutenant Wilkins.” As our per curiam opin
As in (Antwan) Williams, the fact that appellant engaged in an act that resulted in contact with the officer is a given. What makes this case potentially more difficult to resolve is that here Lieutenant Wilkins and appellant were in very close proximity, literally touching each other, because the officer was attempting to grab appellant’s arms to handcuff him, such that any movement or action by appellant was virtually guaranteed to cause physical contact with the officer. On remand, the trial court must determine whether appellant, in these circumstances, had “ ‘an intention, coupled with the present ability, of using actual violence against’ Lieutenant Wilkins,” Robinson,
. Appellant does not challenge the drug-related convictions.
. We have identified a third kind of common law simple assault, non-violent sexual touching. See Mungo v. United States,
. The District of Columbia Circuit's citation to McGee is ironic in this regаrd because that case in fact held that assault is a specific intent crime: Distinguishing between civil and criminal assault, the court held that "[i]n a criminal prosecution for an assault and battery ... the intent to injure is one of the essential elements of the offense.” McGee,
. See, e.g., Anthony,
. Model Penal Code § 5.01(1) provides:
A person is guilty of an attempt to commit a crime if, acting with the kind of culpability otherwise required for commission of the crime, he: (a) purposely engages in conduct that would constitute the crime if the attendant circumstances were as he believes them to be; or (b) when causing a particular result is an element of the crime, does or omits to do anything with the purpose of causing or with the belief that it will cause such result without further conduct on his part; or (c) purposely does or omits to do anything that, under the circumstances as he believes them to be, is an act or omission constituting a substantial step in a course of conduct planned to culminate in his commission of the crime.
. It is wоrth repeating the somewhat dubious provenance of the pronouncements that the mere intent to physically perform the assaul-tive act is sufficient. As discussed in Section A, supra, they depend on what is arguably an over-extension of our predecessor court’s
. Appellant, in his reply brief, provides a persuasive example:
[Acceptance of the government’s argument would lead to what are certainly unintended results. Take, for example, the case of person A, who stops suddenly while walking on a sidewalk. Person B, walking closely behind, bumps into A and falls down onto the hard pavement. A intended to stop on the sidewalk, but he did not intend to injure B. Could A be guilty of misdemeanor assault? Under the government’s theory, the answer is "yes.” (Br. fоr App. at 5).
. A few examples illustrate the point. If A points a gun at B, but does not fire, or points an inoperative gun at B, A commits intent-to-frighten assault, but not attempted-battery assault, because the evidence supports that A had an intent to frighten B, but not an intent to cause bodily injury. Compare Robinson,
. I cannot cоnclude, based on the cold record, that the government's evidence is insufficient to convict under the proper legal standard. As pointed out in the text, there is the factual question whether appellant purposely elbowed the officer or hit him in the process of keeping his arms from being handcuffed. Moreover, Lieutenant Wilkins testified that he and appellant "tussl[ed]” and "wrestl[ed].” The trial judge did not rely on this testimony. Though appellant argues that the officer’s use of these terms, when viewed in context, cannot be understood to have their usual meaning, it is for the trial judge to evaluate the import of the testimony he heard first-hand in applying correct legal principles to "a more comprehensive view of the evidence.” Howard,
