Lead Opinion
Aftеr a bench trial, L.B. was convicted of making threats to do bodily harm, a violation of D.C.Code § 22-407. In this appeal, L.B. argues that she was found involved of a crime that was not included in the delinquency petition. We agree and reverse.
I.
By a petition dated February 4, 2012, L.B. was charged with one count of threats to do bodily harm, a violation of D.C.Code § 22-407. The chаrging document specifically alleged that L.B. “threatened to do bodily harm to Sgt. Bedlion.”
Sergeant Bedlion of the Metropolitan Police Department testified to the threats at trial. He explained that he had responded to a domestic violence incident in Northeast D.C. where he encountered a number of bystanders, including L.B. Bed-lion told L.B. shе could leave the scene, and L.B. responded by saying “I’m going to slap your bitch ass.” Bedlion believed the comment was directed at him, and placed L.B. under arrest for making threats. Taking the stand in her own defense, L.B. admitted making the statement, but insisted that it had been actually directed at the boyfriend of the person being arrested in the domestic violence incident (herself a friend of L.B.’s). The boyfriend, L.B. explained, had been standing “behind the officer” when she made the comment.
The trial court summarized the evidence in reaching its verdict, noting that L.B. “acknowledged making the threat” and “acknowledged it was intended as a threat.” “The only thing the parties disagree on,” the trial court explained, “is who she made the threat against.” After explaining the elements of the “offense of threats to do bodily harm,” the trial court concluded that L.B. could be adjudged delinquent because “she did intend to threaten the boyfriend.” Noting, correctly, that it “doesn’t matter whether or not he heard the threat,” the trial court convicted L.B.
II.
On appeal, L.B. argues that she was cоnvicted of a crime (threatening the boyfriend) different from the crime with which she was charged (threatening Bed-lion). Thus, she explains, her due process right to notice of the “specific charge or factual allegations to be considered at the hearing” was violated. In re Gault,
This court reviews de novo any errors of law in a trial court’s judgment after a bench trial. See Brown v. M St. Five, LLC,
This rule has been used by this court to identify separately punishable threats in a number of cases. For example, in Joiner v. United States,
Thus, the crime of threatening Bedlion is a separate offense from the crime of threatening the unidentified boyfriend. Although both crimes require proof of the same elements, the idеntity of the victim distinguishes them from one another. “Basic to our system of criminal justice is the principle that a charging document must be sufficient to put an accused on notice of the nature of the crime against which he must defend.” In re D.B.H.,
Although perhaps imperfect, given the absence of an indictment from juvenile proceedings, we are further persuaded that reversal is required in this case by analogy to this court’s “variance” and “constructive amendment” jurisprudence. “A variance occurs when the facts proved at trial materially differ from the facts contained in the indictment but the essential elements of the offense are the same.” Peay v. United States,
For example, in Long v. United States,
In a similar case, Joseph v. United States,
In both Long and Joseph, the government’s proof established the elements of the crime charged in the indictment. What it did not establish in either case, however, was proof of the identity of the victim named in the indictment. Like threats to do bodily harm, the victim’s identity is not a formal “element” of either of assault with intent tо commit robbery or assault with intent to kill while armed. See D.C.Code § 22-401, Perry v. United States,
Here, the trial court’s ruling accomplished a similar “constructive amendment” of the charges against L.B. Rather than convicting L.B. on threats against Bedlion, аs alleged in the petition, the trial court found her guilty of uttering threats against the boyfriend. Like in Long and Joseph, L.B. was convicted of a crime listed in the document that charged her. However, like Long and Joseph, that conviction rested on the substitution of an
So ordered.
Notes
. Because L.B.’s counsel elicited L.B.'s testimony that the threat was directed at someone
Indeed, these facts also demonstrate why neither Super. Ct. Juv. R. 7(e), nor the statute on which it is based, D.C.Code § 16-2305(e), permit what occurred here. Both the rule and the statute only "permit” a trial court to allow amendments of the petition, and the statute makes it clear that such amendments shоuld only be granted on "the motion of the Corporation Counsel or counsel for the child.” No such motion was made here. Even if the trial court was permitted to amend the petition without a motion, both the rule and the statute make it clear that such amendments require "notice” to the parties and, if a party demonstrates a need for it, "additional time to prepare.” Neither notice nor the opportunity to request more time was given here. Finally, both the rule and statute only permit amendments "at any time prior to the conclusion of the factfinding hearing.” In this case, the amendment took place when the trial court was making its findings, an event that, by rule, occurs "after a factfinding hearing.” Super. Ct. Juv. R. 31(a). Accordingly, neither Super. Ct. Juv. R. 7(e), nor cases explaining its function and application, see In re W.K.,
. "To prove threats to do bodily harm, the government must prove: (1) the defendant uttered words to another person; (2) that the words were of such a nature as to convey fear of bodily harm or injury to the ordinary hearer; and (3) that the defendant intendеd to utter the words which constituted the threat.” Joiner-Die v. United States,
. Analogously, this court has suggested that "a continuous stream of threats against a single person in a single brief encounter would coalesce into a single threats offense rather than constitute separate multiple offenses — much as a succession of physical blows in a continuing attack on a single victim is treated as a single assault in our cases.” Williams v. United States,
. In a footnote to Scutchings v. United States,
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting:
I would affirm the adjudication of delinquency. I doubt that L.B. preserved her claim that she was convicted of a crime different from the one with which she was charged. She did not object to the variance between thе trial judge’s findings and the petition with respect to the identity of the person whom she had threatened. But even if L.B.’s claim in this court is not subject to the rigors of plain error review (as the government contends), I think it should be rejected because L.B. sustained no cognizable prejudice as a result of the variance.
The standard for evaluating prejudice in this case is found in Superior Court Juvenile Rule 7(e). Under Rule 7(e), any claim of a variance between a petition and the proof at trial is curable by amending the information to conform to the proof “if no additional or different offense is charged and if substantial rights of the respondent are not prejudiced.”
Because I think the variance of which L.B. complains was not prejudicial, I respectfully dissent.
. Super. Ct. Juv. R. (7)(e). Cf. Super. Ct. Crim. R. 7(e); see generally Wright & Leipold, Federal Practice and Procedure: Criminal 4th § 129 (2008).
. See In re W.K.,
. The majority opinion cites Long v. United States,
.See, e.g., Dyson v. United States,
. Brief for Appellant at 7.
