Appellant was convicted of threats to do bodily harm, D.C.Code § 22-507 (1996), based on statements he made to a police officer. He argues on appeal that the statements should have been suppressed because they were made during the course of an unlawful arrest. Alternatively, he contends that there was insufficient evidence to support the conviction. We affirm.
I. Facts
The complainant, Officer Gwendolyn Mapp, was the sole witness in the trial court. According to her testimony,
1
Appellant and Officer Mapp spoke for about four or five minutеs at this location. When appellant admitted that he did not live in the complex, the officers decided to take him to the main office to issue a “barring notice” to keep him off the property in the future. This involved taking a photograph and giving him a written notice. They explained this tо appellant, another officer handcuffed him, and all four officers escorted him toward the office. Although appellant had been “agitated” and “uncooperative” at first, he “calmed down” when he was told that he was going to be barred from the property and stated thаt he needed to be able to come on the grounds to take care of his grandmother who lived in the complex’s senior citizen building. Appellant had not been in the “proper area” to go to that building when Officer Mapp saw him on the property, but she planned to check this infоrmation at the office.
Before reaching the office, however, appellant made the following statement to Officer Mapp, who was standing directly beside him: “You won’t work here again, wait until I tell the boys, they will take care of you.” When Officer Mapp “stopped dead in [her] tracks” and looked up at appellant (who was taller than she was), he continued, “You think I’m playing, just watch and see.” Surprised, Officer Mapp asked, “What did you say?” 2 to which appellant replied, “You won’t work anywhere after I tell .the boys.” Officer Mapp took these statements tо mean that appellant would arrange for boys in the neighborhood to do something to her so that she would be physically incapacitated from working. The statements were made in a “serious[ ]” and “threatening” tone, appellant looked Officer Mapp “straight in [the] eye,” and she did not think he was joking. She immediately placed appellant under arrest.
II. Suppression Motion
Appellant first contends that the trial court should have suppressed his threatening statements because he was unlawfully arrested at the time he made them. Although Officer Mapp did not consider appellant under arrest, the trial court concluded that appellant was objectively under arrest and that such arrest was unlawful because it was not based on probable cause. Since this issue is not critical to our disposition, we assume
arguendo
that appellant was unlawfully arrested when he made thе statements. We are thus faced with the question, apparently one of first impression in this jurisdiction, whether evidence of a separate and distinct crime must be suppressed under the “fruit of the poisonous tree” doctrine if the crime was
As a general rule, evidence discovered pursuant to an illegal search or seizure must be suppressed as “fruit of the poisonous tree,” whether the evidence is physical or testimonial in nature.
See Patton v. United States,
Many other federal and state appellate courts have already considered whether commission of a separate and distinct crime constitutes the kind of independent act that purges the primary taint of illegal custody. These courts have almost uniformly held that it does. The leading case is
United States v. Bailey,
[N]otwithstanding a strong causal connection in fact between lawless police conduct and a defendant’s response, if the defendant’s response is itself a new, distinct crime, then the police constitutionally may arrest the defendant for that crime.... Where the defendant’s response is itself a new, distinct crime, there are strong policy reasons for permitting the police to arrest him [or her] fоr that crime. A contrary rule would virtually immunize a defendant from prosecution for all crimes he [or she] might commit that have a sufficient causal connection to the police misconduct. ... Unlike the situation where in response to the unlawful police action the defendant merely reveals a crime that already has been or is being committed, extending the fruits doctrine to immunize a defendant from arrest for new crimes gives a defendant an intolerable carte blanche to commit further criminal acts so long as they are sufficiently connected to the chain of causation started by the police misconduct. This result is too far reaching and too high a price for society to pay in order to deter police misconduct.
Bailey, supra,
The vast majority of appellate courts have followed
Bailey,
refusing to suppress either evidence of the distinct crime itself
While many of such cases involved physical use of force against police officers, others involved unlawful verbal responses such as threats оr false statements. In any event, the critical issue is not the gravity of the defendant’s response to unlawful police action, but the legality of it. We hold today that, at least absent unforeseen exceptional circumstances, 4 the commission of a separate and distinct crimе while in unlawful police custody is the type of intervening act which purges the primary taint. Since appellant’s response in the instant case created probable cause to arrest him for threats under D.C.Code § 22-507, there is no constitutional basis to suppress the evidence. 5
III. Sufficiency of Evidence
Apрellant also contends that there was insufficient evidence to convict him. According equal weight to circumstantial evidence and direct evidence,
see Jones v. United States,
The elements of threats are (1) that the defendant uttered words to another person; (2) that the words were of such a nature as to convey fear of serious bodily harm to the “ordinary hearer”; and (3) that appellant intended to uttеr the words as a threat.
United States v. Baish,
In the instant case, given the underlying situation, appellant’s choice of words, his tone, his manner, and Officer Mapp’s immediate interpretation, a reasonable jury could conclude that the statements made would “сonvey fear of serious bodily harm to the ordinary hearer,”
Baish, supra,
Affirmed.
Notes
. In reviewing both the suppression ruling and the jury verdict, we view the evidence in the light most favorable to the prevailing party.
See In re T.L.L.,
. The trial court expressly found that this statement "was not an attempt by [Officer Mapp] to interrogate Mr. Clark but was actually an expression of surprise.” We defer to this finding of fact, but review
de novo
the trial court's legal conclusion that the statement therefore did not constitute custodial interrogation within the mеaning of
Miranda v. Arizona,
.
Bailey
was not the first case to touch upon the issue.
See, e.g., People v. Garcia,
. Thе trial court specifically found that appellant’s statements were voluntary and spontaneous in nature.
. There may also have been probable cause to arrest appellant for "assault[ing], resisting], oppos[ing], impeding], intimidat[ing], or in-terfer[ing] with" a police officer in violation of D.C.Code § 22-505.
See In re C.L.D.,
. We deal here with a statement arguably ambiguous on its faсe. We leave for another day whether words which in their plain and surface meaning cannot be construed as threatening bodily harm may nonetheless support a conviction for threats under D.C.Code § 22-507 on the basis of the cited interpretive considerations.
.
Maisonet, supra,
involved a letter from an inmate to the judge who sentenced him stating, “I may have to do all my ten (10) years, but if ever get out of here [prison] and nothing happen to me while I am in here, you will never be able to be prejudice and racist against another Puerto Rican like me.”
