Lead Opinion
UPON A REHEARING EN BANC
On June 15, 1999, a panel of this Court affirmed Patrick Sean Cooper’s conviction of possession of an imitation controlled substance with intent to distribute. See Cooper v. Commonwealth,
On appeal, Cooper argues that the trial court erred in admitting other crimes evidence and that the evidence was insufficient to prove he intended to distribute the substance. We agree.
We view the evidence in the light most favorable to the Commonwealth, granting to it all reasonable inferences fairly deducible from the evidence. See Archer v. Commonwealth,
Alexandria Police Officer Ballenger arrested Cooper on an outstanding warrant and found five individually packaged rocks of fake crack cocaine when searching him. The officer asked if the substance was “demo” which is slang for fake crack cocaine. Cooper replied, “[y]ou know it.” Officer Ballenger testified that the individually wrapped substance resembled crack cocaine in every respect and was packaged more consistently with distribution than with personal use. He also testified that there was no reason for an individual “to intentionally purchase fake crack cocaine.”
In the defense case, Cooper testified that a friend had shown him the fake cocaine and handed it to him just as the police arrived. He was left holding it as his friend walked away, so he put it in his pocket in order not to draw attention to himself. He denied possessing it with intent to distribute it.
ANALYSIS
It has long been settled that evidence that the accused committed other crimes is inadmissible to prove guilt of the crime for which the accused is on trial, notwithstanding the similar natures of the two crimes. See Kirkpatrick v. Commonwealth,
The general rule precluding admissibility has many exceptions which are as well established as the rule itself. See Morton v. Commonwealth,
We find the required nexus between Cooper’s prior sale of imitation cocaine and the present charge is lacking in this case and that the evidence was thus erroneously admitted. Cooper’s sale of imitation cocaine approximately two and one-half months before the charged offense was a separate act
For the reasons stated above, we also find that the evidence of another crime was inadmissible under the “general scheme” exception to the rule. See Rodriguez v. Commonwealth,
Finally, we disagree with the Commonwealth’s contention that Cooper’s prior crime was admissible to rebut his testimony. This case may be distinguished from our decision in Satterfield v. Commonwealth,
The Commonwealth argues that Cooper provided the foundation for the challenged evidence in his opening statement when he noted the absence of certain critical factors in the Commonwealth’s evidence, including intent. We disagree. The opening statement is not evidence, and, thus, cannot “open the door” for otherwise inadmissible prior crimes evidence. See Bynum v. Commonwealth,
We further find the erroneous admission of the evidence was not harmless. “A nonconstitutional error is
*650 what I really wanted to do ... was throw [the imitation drug evidence] down, but [the police] were watching.... I never got to the point to form an opinion of what I was going to do with the substance. Actually, I was just looking at it with friends until [someone] yelled "narcotics.” ... [T]hey was just showing it to me.
[W]hen the trial judge erroneously and unconditionally admits prejudicial evidence, we cannot presume that the trial judge disregarded that evidence which he ruled to have probative value. While a judge is uniquely qualified by training, education and experience to disregard potentially prejudicial aspects of inadmissible evidence in the ultimate adjudication of the issue, we cannot assume that the judge has done so where the judge’s rulings indicate otherwise.
Wilson,
For the foregoing reasons, we hold that the trial court erred in admitting the prior crimes evidence and that the error was not harmless; accordingly, we reverse Cooper’s conviction, and remand for further appropriate proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Reversed and remanded.
Notes
. Appellant testified that at the time of his arrest,
Dissenting Opinion
joins, dissenting.
I respectfully dissent and would affirm the conviction. This case does not involve a drug transaction. It arose from the drug scene, but it did not involve trafficking in illegal narcotics. The substance involved was not controlled, and that characteristic is essential when drawing on precedent that involved actual drugs.
Fake or imitation cocaine is innocuous. It is not proscribed, mere possession is not illegal. An imitation substance has two characteristics: (1) it is not a controlled drug, and (2) it imitates, mimics, impersonates, or masquerades as a controlled drug. This case involved a substance that imitated cocaine, specifically crack cocaine, a form of the drug distributed in small bits and chunks roughly the size and shape of rock salt.
When an innocuous substance takes on the physical characteristics of crack cocaine, it becomes virtually useless for its normal purpose. A chip of soap or a bit of nut that looks like a real rock of crack cocaine is useless as soap or a snack because of size alone. It has no utilitarian value other than to be sold as that which it resembles. In this case, the Commonwealth presented evidence of that characteristic of fake crack cocaine, and this Court acknowledged as much in Werres v. Commonwealth,
The Commonwealth offered this argument: all fake crack cocaine is misrepresented and sold as real cocaine; the defendant possessed fake crack cocaine; therefore, the fake crack cocaine that the defendant possessed was to be misrepresented and sold as real cocaine. Facts tending to prove that the defendant knew the substance had no innocent use would also tend to prove he intended to sell it as real cocaine. The evidence of the defendant’s prior sale supports the premise that all fake crack is misrepresented and sold. It confirms the accuracy of the conclusion; the defendant possessed with the intent to misrepresent and sell. If you knowingly possess something that has no use but to be distributed, then it is logical to infer that you possessed it for that purpose.
At trial, the defendant maintained the evidence showed only that he was arrested while innocently holding a substance that was not an illegal substance. He denied possessing it with intent to distribute it. He admitted acknowledging the substance was “demo,” but that admission only established one aspect of its nature: that it was not a controlled substance. It did not address the second characteristic of this imitation substance; it so resembled the real substance that it had no legitimate use.
The evidence of the earlier sale that the Commonwealth offered fits recognized exceptions to the rule excluding evidence of prior offenses. The evidence showed the defendant knew the true nature of the substance. It showed he was not an innocent bystander accidentally or inadvertently holding the object when the police arrived. It showed the motive for
In weighing the prejudice of the evidence versus its probative value as required by Guill v. Commonwealth,
I believe the nature of the substance involved distinguishes this case from true drug cases in which unrelated prior drug transactions have been repeatedly rejected as evidence. In this case, the prior offense showed much more than a simple propensity to commit the crime charged. Accordingly, I would hold that trial court properly admitted the evidence.
