Aftеr a jury trial, appellant was convicted of distributing cocaine. On appeal he makes a twofold claim under
Brady v. Maryland,
I
A. The Underlying Facts
In the early morning hours of August 18, 2001, appellant, Robert Guest,
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was arrested for selling cocaine to Officers John Haines and James Koenig of the Metropolitan Police. The officers were working undercover, wearing plain clothes and driving an unmarked truck. They were patrolling an area in Southeast Washington where several nightclubs are located, on the lookout for “aggressive panhandlers,”
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auto thefts, and robberies. Appellant approached the officers twice in the 100 blocks of K and L Streets, S.E., both times asking if they were interested in buying cocaine. Before approaching the officers’ truck for the second time, appellant had been walking with two other men, later identified as Michael Simpson and Michael Scott. After the officers agreed to buy cocaine during the second encounter,
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appellant motioned to Simpson, who was standing aсross the street. Simpson then came over and dropped a pink ziplock bag containing cocaine into the cab of the truck.
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After calling for backup, Officer
B. The Brady Request
About a month before trial, defense counsel wrote a letter to the prosecutor requesting, in addition to “all the discovery materials you have provided” (for which she expressed her thanks), that the govеrnment disclose (1) Michael Scott’s criminal record, (2) Scott’s “history of dealings with law enforcement authorities in relation to these 8/18/01 arrests and any other eases,” 6 (3) any information that Scott was “the source or conduit of any of the drugs” thаt were the subject of the pending indictment, and (4) “any information that ... Scott is known or was known in 2001 to police as a purveyor of cocaine.” Such information, counsel wrote, “looks to me like Brady.”
During a motion hearing just before the trial bеgan, defense counsel told the court that the government had not complied with her Brady request. The prosecutor explained to the court that, after running Scott’s name through the government’s computers, the only information he was ablе to find was the police report in this case (Form PD-163) stating that Scott was present at the scene, which counsel already had. The prosecutor added that the officers had questioned Scott at the scene, but he was released because they determined that he had no apparent connection to the drug deal. The court concluded that if defense counsel had the police report, the government “didn’t suppress anything,” and. ruled that “the govеrnment’s disclosures [were] sufficient to deal with the specific Brady request.” Nevertheless, the court suggested that the prosecutor make further inquiry of the officers, run a records check for Scott’s last known address, and provide, if availablе, any information concerning Scott’s address or criminal history. The prosecutor said he had already spoken to the officers “and they did not recall getting that information from him,” but he agreed to “investigate about it a little further.” The prоceedings were then adjourned for the weekend.
The following Tuesday, after the jury had been selected and sworn, defense counsel again informed the court at a bench conference that the government still had not furnished Scоtt’s address. 7 The court responded, “I can’t create evidence out of non-evidence. All I can do is put the government to its constitutional obligation ... to make sure that [if] they have any information which could be exculpatory [under] Brady, [and if] it’s material, that they disclose it.” The prosecutor also stated that he had talked with and examined the notebooks of “every officer” who was on the scene, and that none of the officers even remembered Scott until the prosecutor pointed out his name in the PD-163.
II
Appellant contends that he was denied due process, in violation of Brady, because the trial court failed to ensure that the government had ascertained Scott’s last known address. This claim is essentially a challenge to the court’s finding that the government did not possess the information that appellant sought. We conсlude that the trial court’s determination was not plainly wrong. See D.C.Code § 17-305(a) (2001). After the prosecutor explained that the only information he had about Michael Scott was the police report containing his name, but no address, the cоurt directed the prosecutor to conduct a records check and to inquire further with the police officers who were involved in this case. He did so, but was unable to find additional information about Mr. Scott, and defense counsel mаde no showing that either the individual prosecutor or the government as a whole possessed any information of the type that she sought. Nor, on appeal, has appellant made any showing or proffer that the government in fact had such information.
In
Brady
the Supreme Court held that “the suppression by the prosecution of evidence favorable to an accused upon request violates due process where the evidence is material either to guilt or to punishment, irrespective of the good faith or bad faith of the prosecution.”
Given the record before us, we hold that there was no
Brady
violation in this case because the government did not have any additional information about Mr. Scott.
See Velasquez,
Finаlly, with respect to the actions taken by the trial court, we emphasize that a
Brady
motion is not meant to serve as a “discovery device” that “impose[s] an undue burden upon the [trial] court” to satisfy a defendant’s general request for infоrmation.
10
Smith v. United States,
Appellant’s conviction is therefore
Affirmed.
Notes
. Appellant’s surname is spelled "Gest" in the indictment; elsewhere in the record it appears as both "Gest" and "Guest.” He states in his briеf that the correct spelling is "Guest.”
. According to the testimony of Officer Haines, aggressive panhandlers are individuals who attempt to "charge [people] to park on public space.”
. The officers were not prepared to get involved in a drug deal when appellant first asked them if they were interested in buying cocaine. Officer Haines testified that he had never been part of an undercover narcotics operation, and that he was fоcused on arresting aggressive panhandlers when appellant first approached him.
.Officer Haines testified that he immediately recognized the substance in the bag as crack cocaine. A field test and a later laboratory analysis both confirmed that in fact it was cocaine.
. Simpson, charged as a co-defendant, was tried with appellant and was convicted of distributing cocaine and possessing marijuana. He did not note an appeаl from his conviction.
. Counsel's letter also asked “specifically whether and under what circumstances [Scott] has failed to comply with requests' for information by prosecutors, police, or other agents including probation officers. I demand to know all promises and assurances to him
.The previous day, before jury selection began, defense counsel told the court that the government had not yet provided Scott’s address. The prosecutor replied thаt the only information he had about Scott was the police report, which listed only Scott’s name. There was no further discussion of the matter at that time.
. Under
Brady,
"the individual prosecutor has a duty to learn of any favorable evidence known to the others acting on the government’s behalf in the case, including the police.”
Kyles v. Whitley,
. Evidence will be deemed material "only if there is a reasonable probability that, had the evidence been disclosed to the defense, the result of the proceeding would have been different. A 'reasonable probability' is a probability sufficient to undermine confidence in the outcome.”
Pennsylvania v. Ritchie,
. We conclude that appellant's request was a "general request,”
Pennsylvania v. Ritchie,
