Girma ABOYE, Appellant, v. UNITED STATES, Appellee.
No. 13-CM-1219.
District of Columbia Court of Appeals.
Decided Aug. 6, 2015.
121 A.3d 1245
The prosecution made its record. The record it made did not support the conclusion that what the citizen reportedly saw gave the police reasonable articulable suspicion to believe Mr. Morgan had engaged in a drug transaction. This court should not fill the gaps in the prosecution‘s evidentiary presentation by putting words in the citizen‘s mouth and interpreting vague reports of innocuous conduct as suspicious. To the contrary, now more than ever courts must hold firm on reasonable articulable suspicion. “[T]he exclusionary rule is our sole means of ensuring that police refrain from engaging in unwanted harassment or unlawful seizure of anyone—whether he or she is one of the most affluent or most vulnerable members of our community.” United States v. Foster, 634 F.3d 243, 249 (4th Cir.2011). The predictable consequence of the majority opinion‘s holding—that a citizen‘s vague report of someone reaching into the back of his pants alone can support reasonable articulable suspicion—is more Terry stops. Police may happen upon more drug dealers, but surely they will also stop more people who are innocent of any wrongdoing. This court may never see those cases,10 but we cannot ignore the fact that such stops have significant costs, both individual and societal—costs which, in my view, further underscore the absence of reasonable articulable suspicion in this case.11 I respectfully dissent.
Kristina L. Ament, Assistant United States Attorney, with whom Ronald C. Machen Jr., United States Attorney at the time the brief was filed, and Elizabeth Trosman, Suzanne G. Curt, David Misler, Karen Seifert, and Derrick Williams, Assistant United States Attorneys, were on the brief, for appellee.
Before GLICKMAN and EASTERLY, Associate Judges, and KRAVITZ, Associate Judge of the Superior Court of the District of Columbia.*
* Sitting by designation pursuant to
GLICKMAN, Associate Judge:
Appellant Girma Aboye was convicted of making bias-related threats to do bodily harm after he confronted a gay couple with homophobic slurs and threatened to kill them with his dog. On appeal, he makes two arguments: first, that the Bias-Related Crime Act does not apply to the offense of threats; and second, that there was insufficient evidence to convict him of that offense. We reject both contentions and affirm appellant‘s conviction.
I.
The evidence presented at trial by the government may be summarized as follows. In 2012-2013, Michael Eichler and Zachary Rosen were an engaged gay couple living in Adams Morgan with their dog, Nico.1 Appellant owned a store in the neighborhood and also had a dog, Tarzan, who was described at trial as a brindled pit bull mix. The two dogs and their respective owners sometimes encountered each other while out walking; according to Eichler and Rosen, Tarzan usually was rather unsociable and even hostile to Nico. On one encounter in the fall of 2012, though, Eichler perceived Tarzan as friendly and attempted to lead Nico forward so that the two dogs could interact. Appellant, however, jerked Tarzan back and declared, “My dog doesn‘t like homosexuals. You are a homosexual, right?” Eichler affirmed that this was so, and appellant continued, “My dog doesn‘t like homosexuals; my dog doesn‘t like faggots.”
A few months later, on the evening of March 11, 2013, Eichler, Rosen, and Nico happened to be sitting on the patio outside Chief Ike‘s Mambo Room in Adams Morgan, next door to appellant‘s store. Appel
Appellant looked at Rosen and heatedly yelled, “Shut up you faggots[;] I‘m going to kill you with my dog. I‘m going to have my dog kill you.”2 Rosen testified that appellant‘s outburst made him feel unsafe. Eichler called 911 on his cell phone. As he did so, appellant went into his store and returned with his dog on a leash. Tarzan and Nico barked at each other. Appellant then walked Tarzan past Eichler, Rosen, and Nico and down the street, away from the area.
While appellant was gone, Metropolitan Police Department Officer Fred Fritts arrived in response to Eichler‘s 911 call. Upon appellant‘s return from walking his dog, Officer Fritts detained him for having threatened Eichler and Rosen. Called at trial to testify as a defense witness, Fritts confirmed that Rosen and Eichler told him that Tarzan (in contrast to his owner) “was not being aggressive,”3 and from his own observation of the animal, Fritts described Tarzan as “[v]ery friendly” and “energetic but not threatening.”4
Appellant eventually was charged with an enhanced misdemeanor offense, namely bias-related threats to do bodily harm in violation of
II.
A provision of the Bias-Related Crime Act,
a criminal act, including arson, assault, burglary, injury to property, kidnapping, manslaughter, murder, rape, robbery, theft, or unlawful entry, and attempting, aiding, abetting, advising, inciting, conniving, or conspiring to commit arson, assault, burglary, injury to property, kidnapping, manslaughter, murder, rape, robbery, theft, or unlawful entry.5
Because the offense of threats to do bodily harm is not one of the particularly enumerated crimes in this definition, appellant argues that it is not a “designated act” subject to enhanced punishment under the Bias-Related Crime Act.6 The government rejoins that the use of the word “including” before the enumeration of particular offenses shows that the list is merely illus
The question being one of statutory interpretation, our review is de novo.7 We begin with the plain language of the statute, but if we find ambiguity, “our task is to search for an interpretation that makes sense of the statute and related laws as a whole.”8 In doing so, we may “turn to legislative history to ensure that our interpretation is consistent with legislative intent.”9
Subsection (2) of
Appellant takes issue with this reasoning. If a “designated act” is no more nor less than “a criminal act,” why, appellant asks, didn‘t the Council just say so? Why did the Council bother to invent an unnecessary synonym (“designated” as a substitute for “criminal“) and enumerate a list of particular qualifying offenses? Doesn‘t this signal that, in this instance, despite the rule of construction in
We do not think that it does. For three reasons, we are more inclined to chalk up the somewhat puzzling wording of the statute to the occasional vagaries of legislative draftsmanship when many hands are at work, than to any intent to limit the scope of the definition of a “designated act.” First, as we have said, positing such an intent requires us to assume that the drafters of the statute employed the word “including” in an atypical manner, one at odds with the Council‘s own standard rule of construction. Second, there is no apparent selection principle at work in the Bias-Related Crime Act‘s broad list of
Third, all indications from the legislative history of the Bias-Related Crime Act are that the Council had no such intent. The Act was proposed in 1989 and became law in 1990.12 In recommending the bill to the Council, the Committee on the Judiciary described it as an effort to “curb the proliferation” of “bias-related or ‘hate’ crimes” of all kinds, specifically including not only assaultive behavior, but also non-assaultive intimidating “activities like burning a cross in front of a black family‘s home [and] painting a swastika on a synagogue.”13 Criminal threats, in other words, were meant to be targeted. The Act was designed to apply, the Committee emphasized, “[i]rrespective of the basis of a bias-related crime,” in order to “send a powerful message ... that such insidious forms of hatred will not be tolerated in the District and will be treated seriously by law enforcement authorities.”14 Underscoring the immateriality of the particular type of offense to the Act‘s coverage of hate crimes, the Committee explained the terms “bias-related crime” and “designated act” as referring simply to “a criminal act” without substantive qualification:
[The definitional section of the Act] [d]efines “bias-related crime” as a criminal act which is based primarily upon race, color, religion, national origin, sex, age, marital status, personal appearance, sexual orientation, family responsibilities, physical handicap, matriculation, or political affiliation. The section also defines “designated act” as a criminal act pursuant to D.C.Code.15
We have found no indication anywhere in the legislative history of the Bias-Related Crime Act that the Council meant to limit it to the particular criminal offenses listed as being “included” in the definition of a “designated act.”
We conclude that the term “designated act” in
III.
Appellant also contends that the evidence was insufficient to convict him for threatening to kill Eichler and Rosen with his dog Tarzan. When reviewing the sufficiency of the evidence, we interpret the trial record in the light most favorable to
“A person is guilty of the offense of threats under
Appellant argues that there was insufficient evidence at trial to establish the second element of the offense of threats because there was no evidence that his dog actually was dangerous. On the contrary, appellant argues, the only pertinent evidence at trial about Tarzan was his breed (part pit bull), Eichler and Rosen‘s admission that “the dog was not being aggressive,” and Officer Fritts‘s testimony that Tarzan was friendly, energetic, and unthreatening. There was no evidence regarding the size, age, health, or physical characteristics of the dog.
The government responds, and we agree, that such details were unnecessary to prove appellant guilty of making a threat that would instill the requisite fear in the ordinary hearer. According to the evidence, appellant heatedly yelled menacing and homophobic slurs at Eichler and Rosen and threatened to kill them. He had a history of making antagonistic, homophobic remarks to these two men, and he did not appear to be joking when he threatened to sic his dog on them. Whatever that animal‘s precise physical characteristics, it was no miniature lap dog; and whatever its actual temperament and proclivities, appellant had told Eichler that Tarzan was hostile to homosexuals. An ordinary hearer in this situation reasonably could fear that Tarzan might become vicious and attack if directed by his master to do so.22 And even if Tarzan was friendly and tame, appellant‘s death threat was
Affirmed.
