After a bench trial, Appellant Ricardo Cunningham was convicted of one count of possession of marijuana in violation of D.C.Code § 48-904.01 (2001). On appeal, he contends that (1) the evidence was insufficient to convict him; and (2) the trial judge erred by denying his right to cross-examine, as to bias, the key government witness, a police officer, regarding the officer’s motive to curry favor by testifying because he was under investigation for the alleged use of excessive force. We conclude that the evidence was sufficient to support the conviction; however, we remand for further inquiry by the trial court to determine whether the officer was aware of the pending investigation against him. Such knowledge arguably would provide a motive for him to curry favor with the government.
I.
Mr. Cunningham was observed by three undercover police officers in the driver’s seat of a grey, older model Ford conversion van parked in a parking lot of an apartment complex. Metropolitan Police Department (“MPD”) Officer Angelo Battle saw Mr. Cunningham in the driver’s
As the arrest team entered the parking lot and approached the van, Mr. Cunningham exited the vehicle and began to run through the parking lot. Officer Whaley saw him “make this kind of motion, lean down to the center console[,] and then open the door, jump out [of] the vehicle[,] and run, fleeing from the vehicle.” 2 Officer Whaley believed that Mr. Cunningham was “[t]aking off a jacket and moving something around the center console area or dropping something.” Officer Mason, along with other officers, chased down Mr. Cunningham on foot and brought him back to the van. When he was returned to the van, he was wearing a black shirt and black pants.
While other officers were chasing Mr. Cunningham, Officer Whaley approached the van and blocked the passenger-side door, preventing other occupants of the van from exiting. He noticed a jacket on the driver’s seat. Officer Mason also saw a jacket on the driver’s seat that looked “like somebody took it off and laid it right there on the driver’s seat.” The officers searched the jacket and recovered three bags containing a green weed-like substance and empty ziplock bags from the jacket pockets. Officer Mason also observed that there were other items of clothing strewn throughout the van, including another coat on the right rear passenger seat and a pair of pants on the front passenger seat. Officer Whaley kept “his eye on the [jacket] in which the drugs were found” and “he did not see anyone else [in the van] touch the jacket.”
Moments before Officer Whaley testified at trial, the government alerted the court and defense counsel to a Lewis 3 issue relating to the officer. Officer Whaley was being investigated for the use of excessive force in an incident that occurred in March 2006. The government explained to the trial court that the officer believed that the subject of the investigation was “someone else in his chain of command,” and he was merely “on the witness list” and had in fact testified against someone else also under investigation. The government asserted that Officer Whaley “ha[d] no idea that the United States (“U.S.”) Attorney’s Office [was] investigating him” and requested that “no inquiry be made of the officer” concerning the investigation, so as not to alert Officer Whaley of the ongoing investigation against him.
Mr. Cunningham’s trial counsel countered, “It seems like we should be able to
Well, he is aware that there is an investigation going on, and that he is involved in it because he’s been a witness in the investigation. And if there is an allegation by someone that he participated in excessive force then he would have every reason to try to curry favor of the U.S. Attorney’s Office....
The trial court ruled that the officer did not know about the investigation and had no reason to curry favor. Therefore, the trial court allowed him to testify and instructed that “[w]e don’t need to ask the officer about the investigation because he doesn’t know anything about it.... ”
After closing arguments, the trial court issued its oral findings and credited the testimony of each officer. The court found that Mr. Cunningham’s flight and removal of his jacket evinced consciousness of guilt that he possessed illegal controlled substances in his jacket. The court then sentenced him to sixty days’ imprisonment.
II.
Mr. Cunningham contends that the evidence was insufficient to convict him of possession of marijuana. He asserts that the trial judge misstated the testimony— that Police Officer Whaley saw him taking off a jacket — and then relied on the misstatement when concluding that he possessed the jacket with the drugs in it. It is undisputed that Officer Whaley never saw Mr. Cunningham take off the jacket, but believed based upon Mr. Cunningham’s movements in the van that he was taking off a jacket right before exiting the vehicle. While Mr. Cunningham concedes that, based on Officer Whaley’s observation, the court could have inferred that he took a jacket off, appellant asserts that there is no indication in the record to show the court made such an inference.
The standard of review for a challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence in a criminal case is well established. Our decision in
Smith v. United States,
Our standard of review for claims of evidentiary insufficiency requires that the evidence be viewed in the light most favorable to the government. In applying that standard, we recognize that it is the province of the trier of fact to determine the credibility of the witnesses and to make reasonable inferences from the evidence presented. All reasonable inferences must be drawn in favor of the government, and deference must be given to the [trier of fact’s] right to determine credibility and weigh evidence. We continue to adhere to the proposition that the government is not required to negate every possible inference [of innocence] before an accused may be found guilty of an offense beyond a reasonable doubt. It is only where the government has produced no evidence from which a reasonable mind might fairly infer guilt beyond a reasonable doubt that this court can reverse a conviction.
Id. at 1221 (alterations in original) (internal quotation marks and citations omitted).
To establish possession of a controlled substance, “the government [must] prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the accused: (1) possessed a controlled substance; and (2) that he did so knowingly and intentionally.”
Id.
(citing D.C.Code
We conclude that the direct and circumstantial evidence was sufficient to support the conviction for possession of marijuana. Mr. Cunningham does not challenge that the green weed-like substance found in the black jacket was marijuana. We are therefore left to determine whether there was sufficient evidence to conclude that he knowingly and intentionally possessed it by possessing the black jacket in which the marijuana was found. Although the trial court, in its oral findings of fact, inaccurately stated that Officer Whaley testified that he saw Mr. Cunningham taking off a jacket, the circumstantial evidence supported a finding that Mr. Cunningham had taken his jacket off and left it on the driver’s seat — the same jacket in which the marijuana was found. Officer Battle observed Mr. Cunningham wearing a black jacket and black shirt, but when he fled the vehicle he was only wearing a black shirt. Prior to Mr. Cunningham leaving the van, Officer Whaley witnessed what he believed to be Mr. Cunningham “[tjaking off a jacket and moving something around the center console area or dropping something.” Officer Whaley and Officer Mason testified that the jacket was draped over the driver’s side seat as if someone had taken the jacket off and laid it there. In addition, the court made a finding, which Mr. Cunningham did not challenge, that fleeing from the van evinced consciousness of guilt that he possessed illegal controlled substances in his jacket. The evidence when viewed as a whole, in addition to the reasonable inferences to be drawn, is sufficient to support the verdict.
See Smith, supra,
III.
Mr. Cunningham next contends that his conviction should be reversed on the grounds that the trial court violated his Sixth Amendment rights by precluding a line of questioning intended to show Officer Whaley was biased against him.
See Brown v. United States,
After notifying the court of the investigation against Officer Whaley, the government insisted that Officer Whaley believed he was merely a witness in that investigation and did not know he was actually under investigation. When Mr. Cunningham’s trial counsel argued that this created bias, the court asked Mr. Cunningham’s trial counsel why Officer Whaley would seek to curry favor with the government when he did not know he was under investigation. Appellant’s trial counsel re
is aware that there is an investigation going on, and that he is involved in it because he’s been a witness in the investigation. And if there is an allegation by someone that he participated in excessive force then he would have every reason to try to curry favor of the U.S. Attorney’s Office....
More artfully, on appeal, Mr. Cunningham contends that “[gjiven the prevalence of leaks and rumors (both accurate and inaccurate rumors), etc., arising from ongoing investigations, only the witness himself would know if he was unaware or unsuspecting that he was a target of the investigation[,][and] the prosecutor has no way of knowing what Officer Whaley did or did not know or suspect.”
See Randolph v. United States,
We have recognized that bias is always a proper subject of cross examination, and the refusal to allow questioning about facts indicative of bias from which the jury could reasonably draw adverse inferences of reliability is an error of constitutional dimension, violating the defendant’s rights secured by the Confrontation Clause.
See Coles v. United States,
“On the other hand, the right to cross-examination is subject to reasonable limits imposed at the discretion of the trial judge, and the extent of cross-examination [of a witness] with respect to an appropriate subject of inquiry is within the sound discretion of the trial court.”
Brown, supra,
In addition, before pursuing a line of questioning suggesting that a witness is biased, a defendant must lay a foundation sufficient to permit the trial judge to evaluate whether the proposed question is probative of bias.
Brown, supra,
In this case, appellant sought to cross-examine Officer Whaley about his potential bias because he was under investigation
The proffer of Mr. Cunningham’s trial counsel lacked a specific factual foundation to suggest that Officer Whaley knew he was a subject of the ongoing investigation. Nevertheless, as the prosecutor disclosed, Officer Wfiialey was in fact under investigation. Because Officer Whaley was indeed the subject of the investigation (and not merely a witness), it was not unreasonable to conclude that he might have knowledge of the investigation and might be attempting to curry favor by testifying favorably for the government.
See Blunt, supra,
The trial court should have been more skeptical of the government’s proffer, asking for more information to support the conclusion that Officer Whaley did not know he was under investigation. It should also have allowed a few carefully-phrased questions to explore whether Officer Whaley was aware of his status, thereby attempting to preserve the secrecy of the government’s investigation, without needlessly tipping him off that he was a suspect. Depending on the answers received, and the content of any further information the government provided, further inquiry might or might not have been appropriate.
This court confronted a similar situation in
McCloud v. United States,
At this juncture, we see no point in attempting to script an inquiry that would balance the competing interests identified above. Nearly three years after the trial, the investigation should be over and the trial comb or counsel may ask the questions directly. In the unlikely event that the investigation is not yet over, the issuance of this opinion will obviate the previous concerns about secrecy.
This matter is remanded to the trial court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion. 6
So ordered.
Notes
. The arrest team consisted of MPD Officers Kevin Whaley, Tony Mason and Jonathan Branch. All three were in an unmarked police car, had their badges out, and were wearing black vests with the word "police” written on the front and back of the vests.
. The government described the motion demonstrated by Officer Whaley for the record: "[T]here was a rolling of one’s shoulders from side to side and then leaning down towards the console area.”
. The "Lewis list” is a computerized list, maintained by the Office of the United States Attorney for die District of Columbia, preserving information that might be used to impeach police officers if they testify. Among other things, it identifies officers who are under investigation. See
United States v. Bowie,
. Before remanding in
McCloud,
we paused to consider "whether the error can be deemed
. Although Mr. Cunningham's trial counsel, as distinguished from McCloud, attempted to make a proffer, the proffer lacked any specific factual foundation to indicate that Officer Whaley knew he was the subject of the investigation, and this proffer was too speculative as to the key fact that went to potential bias.
. We reject appellant's argument, raised for the first time on appeal, that the trial court should have permitted cross-examination on the theory that the details of the excessive-force allegations would have shown that Officer Whaley was so hostile to drug dealers that he would commit illegal acts to cause them harm.
