Appellant, Latrel L. Gilchrist, appeals his multiple convictions pertaining to the murder of Bernard Davis, and his single conviction relating to the murder of a witness who saw the fatal shooting of Mr. Davis. 1 He claims that the trial court’s application of our decision in Lamner v. United States, 2 concerning a declaration against penal interest, constituted reversible error because the first prong of the test articulated in Lawmer violated his constitutional rights under the Sixth and Fifth Amendments to the Constitution, and because the trial court incorrectly applied the third prong of the Laumer test. Discerning no error, we affirm the judgment of the trial court.
FACTUAL SUMMARY
Thе government presented testimony from several witnesses, which recounted the circumstances of Mr. Davis’ murder in February 1997. Nevel Butler testified that she and Mr. Gilchrist lived together in one unit of a four unit apartment house on Mellon Street in the Southeast quadrant of the District of Columbia. At the time, Ms. Butler had what she called “a heavy addiction” to crack cocaine, 3 and she sold crack cocaine. On February 21, 1997, Ms. Butler’s best friend, Yvonne Gooding, saw and spoke with Ms. Butler, and then went in search of drugs so that the two women could get high. Subsequently, Ms. Good-ing returned to Ms. Butler’s apartment with a male friend, later identified as Mr. Davis, and еventually gave Ms. Butler “two dimes” of rock ($20.00 worth of crack cocaine). When Mr. Gilchrist returned to the apartment, he insisted that Ms. Good-ing and Mr. Davis leave, and they complied. Mr. Gilchrist also left the apartment.
Approximately forty-five minutes later, Ms. Gooding and Mr. Davis went back to Ms. Butler’s residence, where they talked and smoked cocaine. When Mr. Gilchrist returned to Ms. Butler’s apartment house, he sat outside on the steps with Ms. Butler. Soon, Mr. Gilchrist overheard Ms. Gooding and Mr. Davis arguing, inside the apartment, about money Mr. Davis owed her. Mr. Gilchrist again directed Ms. Gooding and Mr. Davis to leave, but Ms.
Mr. Davis fell to the floor. Mr. Gilchrist demanded a towel, but Ms. Butler “was just frozen,” and Ms. Gooding found a towel. Mr. Gilchrist wrapped the towel around Mr. Davis’ head, and then pulled him out of the back door by his leg. 4 Mr. Gilchrist sought the assistance of a neighborhood friend, Johnnie Love, who was sitting outside on a nearby street, smoking marijuana and waiting for Mr. Gilchrist’s brother. According to Mr. Love’s testimony at trial, Mr. Gilchrist took Mr. Love to an alley, showed him a body, and asked Mr. Love to help him get rid of it in the neighboring woods. Mr. Love noticed that the person on the ground was still alive, and as he turned to leave, Mr. Gilchrist “started stomping” the person on the ground. Mr. Love looked around in time to witness the last stomp, and he heard Mr. Gilchrist say: “The dude is dead now.” Thе men covered the body “with some boards and stuff that was laying around the area.” The next day Mr. Gilchrist informed Mr. Love that he had shot Mr. Davis, and he had taken from Mr. Davis $350.00 and a pair of tennis shoes. Mr. Love saw Mr. Gilchrist every day around this time, and had previously seen him with a 9 millimeter gun. 5
The government also presented the testimony of Vicki Lewis, a friend of Ms. Butler. She knew Mr. Gilchrist and had seen him with a gun that required a clip. In February 1997, Ms. Lewis was selling cocaine at a Mellon Street address located near Ms. Butler’s apartment. She watched Mr. Davis pull out $400-$500 before purchasing $50 worth of crack cocaine. After the purchase hе left, met Ms. Butler and Ms. Gooding, and the three headed toward Ms. Butler’s apartment. Later that night, Ms. Lewis heard a gunshot, which came from the back of the alley. The next morning, Ms. Lewis arrived at Ms. Butler’s apartment between 6:30 and 7:00 a.m. As she entered the back door to Ms. Butler’s apartment, which faced the alley, she noticed that Reginald Ross was behind her, and Ms. Gooding was in the apartment. Subsequently, Ms. Butler, Ms. Gooding, Ms. Lewis, and Mr. Ross smoked drugs together. Then, Mr. Ross started to depart by the back door, but ran back saying, “The police are outside. The police are outside.” He left through the front door. At the time of these events, Ms. Lеwis’ sister, Cynthia Lewis, was in a romantic relationship with Mr. Ross, and the defense theory at trial appeared to be that Mr. Ross, not Mr. Gilchrist, killed Mr. Davis. Five days after Mr. Davis was killed, Mr. Ross shot
The defense also presented witnesses, including Cynthia Lewis, the sister of Vicki Lewis. 6 On the day Mr. Davis was killed, Ms. C. Lewis had been in Ms. Butler’s apartment “getting high.” She did not remember what time she arrived, but she saw Ms. Butler, Mr. Ross, and Mr. Gilchrist. She left around 11:30 p.m. or midnight by the front door, and saw Ms. Good-ing and a male approaching Ms. Butler’s apartment house. Ms. C. Lewis proceeded to her nearby home and slept until shе was awakened by Mr. Ross, her boyfriend. He was “[a] little excited and anxious.” He informed her that “something [had] happened” at Ms. Butler’s residence. On cross-examination, Ms. C. Lewis acknowledged that she had testified before the Grand Jury in September 2001, and at that time had indicated that the person she saw going into Ms. Butler’s apartment with Ms. Gooding was Mr. Davis. Furthermore, she had said before the Grand Jury that she left Ms. Butler’s house around 8:00 or 9:00 p.m., that the house was “getting crowded,” and that while she was there, she saw Ms. Butler, Mr. Gilchrist, and “Buddy, some little kid” whose name she could not remember. Apparently she did not mention Mr. Ross’ name before the Grand Jury. On redirect, Ms. C. Lewis said she thought Mr. Gilchrist was in the back room, that she did not have a watch that night, and she also denied that a child was at Ms. Butler’s residence, since it was “a crack house.”
The trial court and counsel for the government and the defense engaged in extensive discussions concerning whether to permit the testimony of a proposed defense witness, Willie Hamilton. His testimony would focus on a statement against penal interest allegedly made by Mr. Ross, prior to his death — that he (not Mr. Gilchrist) killed Mr. Davis. The judge decided to listen to Mr. Hamilton’s testimony without the jury before deciding whether to permit the defensе to call him as a witness. After listening to his testimony and making certain determinations, the trial court denied the defense request to present Mr. Hamilton as a witness.
ANALYSIS
Background for the Statement Against Penal Interest Issue
At the outset, we set forth the background essential for the discussion of the parties’ arguments regarding the trial court’s ruling on the proposed testimony of Mr. Hamilton. In the absence of the jury, Mr. Hamilton testified that Mr. Ross and he were childhood friends, and they attended the same elementary and junior high schools. Mr. Hamilton knows Mr. Gilchrist; he had a close relationship with one of Mr. Gilchrist’s brothers, Jimmy Smith; and he knew another one of Mr. Gilchrist’s brothers, “Buddy.”
At some point in Summer 2002, July or August, late at night, Mr. Hamilton was walking “across a field of Johnson Junior High School in Southeast, Washington,” when he saw Mr. Ross. Mr. Ross wanted to get high, and the two men smoked crack cocaine. Mr. Hamilton estimated that they smoked about five dime bags of coke while they were together. While speaking with Mr. Ross, Mr. Hamilton said he had heard that Mr. Ross was “hot,” meaning, helping the government. Mr. Ross responded that in exchange for getting a charge against him dismissed, or dropped
On cross-examination by government counsel, Mr. Hamilton admitted having used several other names and four different Social Security numbers. He also acknowledged past convictions, and incarceration in 1991 and 1992. In addition, he conceded that the first time defense investigators spoke with him, he only mentioned the conversation he hаd with Mr. Ross about his helping the government, and that during his last conversation with the investigators, 7 he did not know or did not recall whether he revealed, or he probably did reveal, Mr. Ross’ statement about his reason for shooting the male person. When the prosecutor posed the question, “And [Mr. Ross] told you he shot [the man] in the alley,” Mr. Hamilton replied, “In the alley on Mellon Street.” In response to the prosecutor’s question concerning what Mr. Ross had told him about “boards,” Mr. Hamilton answered:
He said something about some boards. Body by some boards, body under some boards, something about some boards.... He said something about some boards. He said he shot the dude, slobbed the dude, something about some boards, under boards, by some boards, something about some boards.
At the conclusion of the cross-examination, the trial judge inquired, “what did [Mr. Ross] say about why he killed this guy?” Mr. Hamilton stated, “He didn’t_If I say, I’d just be speculating.” Responding to other questions posed by the trial judge, Mr. Hamilton declared that Mr. Ross did not say whether the man shot was white or black, or how old he was, or whether he lived in the neighborhood. On redirect examination, Mr. Hamilton explained that Mr. Ross said he was robbing the man when he- shot him, but Mr. Hamilton did not know why Mr. Ross shot him.
Following the testimony of Mr. Hamilton, the trial court listened to the arguments of defense and government counsel, including defense counsel’s assertion that the trial court had to determine the credibility of Mr. Hamilton.
8
The trial court
With regard to the third Laumer prong — there must be “corroborating circumstances that cleaiiy indicate the trustworthiness of Mr. Ross’ purported statement to Mr. Hamilton” — the trial court noted that while Mr. Ross' statement, as recounted by Mr. Hamilton, included references to “boards” and “robbery,” notably, the statement incorrectly specified the place of Mr. Davis’ shooting as the alley rather than the apartment of Ms. Butler. Also, significantly, Mr. Ross did not make his alleged statement until five years after Mr. Davis’ murder. And, the court pointed to the “overwhelming evidence” that Mr. Gilchrist murdered Mr. Davis. Defense counsel raised no objection at the conclusion of the trial court’s analysis. Hence, the trial court concluded that what Mr. Ross allegedly told Mr. Hamilton in Summer 2002, could not be allowed into evidence as a statement against penal interest because, under Laumer, Mr. Hamilton was not a credible witness, and Mr. Gilchrist had not “show[n] that there are corroborating circumstances here that clearly indicate the trustworthiness of [the] purported statement by Mr. Ross.”
The Parties’ Contentions on Appeal
On appeal, Mr. Gilchrist contends, for the first time, that the first prong of the
Laumer
test violates his rights under the Fifth and Sixth Amendments to the Constitution because that prong permits the judge rather than the jury to determine the credibility of the proposed witness, and because the first prong has been overruled by decisions of this court and the Supreme Court. He also argues that “the trial court erred in its application of the third [ ]
The government maintains that Mr. Gilchrist’s “constitutional claim is not properly before [this] [c]ourt,” because he never made a constitutional argument in the trial court against the continuing validity of the first prong of the Laumer test. Therefore, the government contends, we should decline to hear that argument, or at most, we should review it only under the plain error standard. With respect to Mr. Gilchrist’s argument about the third prong of the Laumer test, the government takes the position that the trial court properly analyzed Laumer’s corroborating evidence requirement, including the timing of Mr. Ross’ alleged statement.
The Standard of Review
“The trial court’s conclusion that a statement is [or is not] against the declarant’s penal interest is clearly a legal question.” 10 Hence, we conduct a de novo review of the trial court’s decision to exclude Mr. Hamilton’s testimony concerning Mr. Ross’ alleged statement that he (Mr. Ross), not Mr. Gilchrist, killed Mr. Davis. 11
Mr. Gilchrist’s Failure to Raise the Constitutional Claim in the Trial Court
The government is correct in its argument against Mr. Gilchrist’s first contention in this court, since the record leaves no doubt that he failed to make a constitutional claim in the trial court relating to the first prong of the Laumer test. Indeed, he only made a general credibility determination claim, and categorically argued that the trial judge had to determine the credibility of Mr. Hamilton. Nevertheless, in an effort to persuade us that his constitutional claim is properly before this court, Mr. Gilchrist relies principally on Yee v. Escondido, 12 That reliance is misplaced; there, the Court concluded that “[p]etitioners unquestionably raised a taking claim in the state courts,” and therefore, “[t]he question whether the rent control ordinance took their property without compensation, in violation of the Fifth Amendment’s Taking Clause, [was] properly before [it].” 13 The critical legal principle enunciated in Yee centered on the requirement of “a claim propеrly raised” in the trial court, and Yee signaled that only with respect to a properly raised claim does an appellant “generally posses[ ] the ability to frame the question to be decided in any way he chooses, without being limited to the manner in which the question was framed” in the trial court. 14 Thus, consistent with Yee, we have distinguished between “claims” and “arguments,” reiterating in Salmon v. United States, that “although claims not presented in the trial court ordinarily will not be considered on appeal, parties are not limited to the precise arguments made below.” 15
Here, we are convinced that the trial judge was not “fairly apprised” that Mr. Gilchrist was raising a constitutional claim with respect to the first
Laumer
prong.
16
Plain Error and the Laumer Test
Even if we decided to exercise our discretion and to review Mr. Gilchrist’s constitutional claim despite his failure to raise the issue in the trial court, he would not be entitled to a reversal of his convictions under the applicable plain error standard of review.
19
Under the first two prongs of the plain error test and Mr. Gilchrist’s analysis, he would have to demonstrate that the trial court committed constitutional error in determining the credibility of Mr. Hamilton, rather than leaving that assessment to the jury, and he would have to establish that the error was “plain.” Mr. Gilchrist maintains that the trial court committed error because “[t]he last' three deсades of controlling decisional law [in the Supreme Court and in this court] have undermined substantially the philosophical basis underlying the first prong of the
Laumer
test and, as a result,
Laumer
does not bind this court.” However, he cites no decision from the Supreme Court or this court explicitly declaring that a trial court which determines the credibility of a witness, offered to repeat a declarant’s statement against penal interest, violates the Fifth and Sixth Amendments to the Constitution. And, not one of the cited cases overrules the
Laumer
test. Indeed, this panel would be bound by
Lau-mer
since only the en banc court may
Furthermore, even if we determined that the trial court erred or plainly erred with respect to the posited constitutional claim, we would not agree that Mr. Gilchrist would be able to demonstrate prejudice under the third or fourth prongs of the plain error standard. This is ,so because he would not be able to satisfy the third prong of the
Laumer
test, “whether there exist corroborating circumstances that clearly indicate the trustworthiness of
Laumer distilled from Chambers v. Mississippi, supra, “general considerations” relevant to the issue of reliability and trustworthiness of a statement against penal interest; the first two are pertinent here: “(1) the time of the declaration and the party to whom the declaration was made; [and] (2) the existence of corroborating evidence in the ease.” 25 Contrary to Mr. Gilchrist’s argument, we are satisfied that the trial court properly applied the considerations pertaining to the third Laumer prong, and did not confound the first and third prongs.
The trial court’s analysis of the third prong of the test is consistent with Chambers and Laumer. The trial court looked at the timing of Mr. Ross’s declaration. Unlike the declarant’s statement in Chambers, Mr. Ross’ statement was made five years after Mr. Davis’ murder, rather than “shortly after the murder had occurred.” 26 As we said in Laumer, “the court in United States v. Guillette, found that the de-clarant’s inculpatory statement which was made some four months after the crime was too attenuated and remote to provide assurance of reliability.” 27 Clearly, Mr. Ross’ alleged statement was made long after the murder of Mr. Davis; the reasons for the delay are not clear on this record; and, as the trial court noted, there is no evidence that Mr. Ross told anyone else about his alleged role as Mr. Davis’ murderer. Moreover, although “the existence of a close relationship between the declarant and the witness also may provide indications of trustworthiness,” 28 the closeness of the relationship between Mr. Ross and Mr. Hamilton is not crystal clear. True, they were childhood friends and attended the same elementary and junior high schools, but there is no independent evidence showing that the friendship and closeness continued to the time of Mr. Ross’ alleged statement.
With respect to the existence of corroborating evidence — another consideration identified in
Chambers
and
Laumer
— the trial court emphasized that Mr. Ross’ statement incorrectly specified the place of the shooting as the alley, rather than Ms.
Accordingly, for the foregoing reasons, we affirm the judgment of the trial court.
So ordered.
Notes
.Mr. Gilchrist was convicted of the lesser-included offense of attempted robbery (of Mr. Davis), in violation of D.C.Code § 22-2901 (1981), recodified at D.C.Code § 22-2801 (2001); three counts of possession of a firearm during commission of a crime of violence (PFCV), in violation of § 22-3204(b), recodi-fied at § 22-4504(b); first-degree felony murder while armed, in violation of §§ 22-2401, - 3202, -2404.1(8), recodified at §§ 22-2101, - 4502, -2104.01(8); the Iesser-included offense of second-degree murder while armed, in violation of §§ 22-2403, -3202, 2404.1(8), reco-dified at §§ 22-2103,-4502,-2104.01(8); and carrying a pistol without a license, in violation of § 22-3204(a), recodified at § 22-4504(a). With respect to the murdered witness, Mr. Gilchrist was convicted of obstruction of justice, in violation of § 22-722(a)(3)(B).
.
. Ms. Butler admitted that she was convicted in 1990 of attempted possession of cocaine; in 1998 of possession of cocaine; and in 2002, she еntered a guilty plea to possession of cocaine and PCP. She declared that she was not under the influence of narcotics on the day of her testimony.
. Ms. Butler and Ms. Gooding later cleaned the blood from the floor of the apartment.
. Sometime in the summer of 1997, Mr. Love and Mr. Gilchrist roomed together. Mr. Love allegedly assisted Mr. Gilchrist in killing Ms. Gooding and disposing of her body. After his arrest on a gun charge, Mr. Love revealed his knowledge of the murders of Mr. Davis and Ms. Gooding to an officer of the United States Park Police.
. The defense questioned Metropolitan Police Detective James King, and Mr. Gilchrist’s brоther (James Jerome Simkins) on direct examination, mainly in an effort to impeach the testimony of James Love regarding the murder of Ms. Gooding.
. By the time of this conversation, Mr. Ross had been killed.
. Defense counsel referred to the Laumer requirement. In Laumer, we declared that:
"[T]he decision as to the admissibility of a proffered declaration against penal interest rests with the trial court,” and that “the trial judge [is required to] undertake a three-step inquiry to ascertain (1) whether the declarant, in fact, made a statement; (2) whether the declarant is unavailable; and (3) whether corroborating circumstances clearly indicate the trustworthiness of the statement.”
Id. at 199. With respect to the first prong of the Laumer test, defense counsel contended,
"The [trial] [c]ourt must assess thе general credibility bf Mr. Hamilton and probe his bias and motive to fabricate,” and defense counsel maintained that Mr. Hamilton had no motive to fabricate what Mr. Ross told him. Later, defense counsel declared, "[T]he Court of Appeals [ ] stated that [the trial court] must look at the credibility of this witness and probe for bias information.” As for the second prong of the test, Mr. Ross was unavailable because of his death. Defense counsel maintained that Mr. Ross' statement satisfied the third
Laumer
prong, the presence of “corroborating circumstances which clearly indicate the trustworthiness of [the statement].” These corroborating circumstances included the fact
. The trial court bluntly concluded that Mr. Hamilton "is about as clearly a career criminal as anyone sees in this courthouse;” that he “has basically made his living and made his way in the world by lying and fabricating over the last 20 years of his life"; that “his prior convictions are significant in assessing his crеdibility”; and he is proud of his lies, crimes, and ability "to use aliases to fool people.” Moreover, the trial court found no evidence that Mr. Ross "had any matters pending before the Grand Jury” in summer 2002, and in fact, he testified before the Grand Jury in 2001, not 2002.
.
Laumer,
.
Bell v. United States,
.
.
Id.
at 534,
.
Id.
at 535,
.
.
See Comford v. United States,
.
Yee, supra,
.
Brown v. United States,
."A claim not properly preserved at trial is subject to the strictures of plain error review.”
Comford, supra,
.
. For example, as the government argues in its brief:
The line of cases based on Apprendi v. New Jersey,530 U.S. 466 ,120 S.Ct. 2348 ,147 L.Ed.2d 435 (2000) ..., is obviously inap-posite because those cases consider a narrow and unrelated question: whether a sentencing court constitutionally may increase a defendant’s sentence bеyond the otherwise-applicable statutory maximum based on facts that have not been submitted to a jury and proved beyond a reasonable doubt. Nor does United States v. Gaudin,515 U.S. 506 , 509-11,115 S.Ct. 2310 ,132 L.Ed.2d 444 (1995), address an evidentiary ruling, and it therefore is similarly inapposite. Id. (identifying materiality as an element of the offense of making false statements under 18 U.S.C. sec. 1001, and then reaffirming the well settled rule that a criminal defendant is entitled to a jury finding on each element of a charged offense).
Neither
Holmes v. South Carolina,
Mr. Gilchrist cites federal circuit cases involving Fed.R.Evid. 804(b)(3) (statement against interest), such as
United States v. Atkins,
.
Lilly v. Virginia,
.
Doret v. United States,
.
Lilly, supra,
.
Laumer,
.
Chambers,
.
Laumer,
. Laumer,
. The corroborating evidence in
Chambers
contrasts markedly with that provided by Mr. Gilchrist. Shortly, after the murder, the de-clarant in
Chambers
told a friend that he was the shooter. Corroborating circumstances included the declarant’s voluntary sworn confession, the testimony of an eyewitness, and the sighting of the declarant with a gun right after the shooting.
Id.
at 300,
.
See (Sean E.) Thomas, supra,
