Appellant and his co-defendant were selling music compact discs (“CDs”) from a table they had set up on the sidewalk near Union Station. The CDs were “counterfeit”; that is, they were manufactured without the authorization of the copyright owner. Appellant was convicted at a bench trial of attempted deceptive labeling of a sound recording, in violation of D.C.Code §§ 22-103 (attempt) and -3814.1 (deceptive labeling) (1996). 1
The only issue on appeal is whether the trial court erred in admitting, in the government’s case in chief, evidence of prior criminal conduct in violation of the strictures of the case law emanating from
Drew v. United States,
118 U.SApp. D.C. 11,
I.
The principal government witness in its case in chief was Officer Tracey Hanbury. He testified that he saw two men selling compact discs from a table they had set up on the sidewalk near Union Station. He saw both men sell CDs to customers. When he confrоnted the two individuals, he realized they were the same two men whom he had arrested some five weeks previously after witnessing them selling CDs outside Union Station. Athough the prior arrest was for vending without a
Officer Hanbury further testified that the CDs he observed in appellant’s possession at the time of the second arrest were “obviously counterfeits.” He noted: “The front of the CD [wаs] just a thin piece of paper ... that was copied on the CD and .. was cut with a pair of scissors where some of them don’t have perfectly straight lines... They were also wrapped in saran wrap type wrapping and that wasn’t consistent with what you would see in a music CD store.”
The government presented an expert witness, Phillip Brooks, who testified that counterfeit CDs often have “poor shrink wrappings ... poorly folded corners ... while a legitimate compact disc is characterized by tight corners, [and] tight[ly] sealed.” He further explained that “the insert card on a counterfeit disc will be a thin piece of paper ... of poor quality,” while the insert cards on a legitimate compact disc “are one of the more expensive aspects of the disc.” He also said that the playing side of a counterfeit compact disc “will be greenish or bluish in tint which indicates it’s a CD recordable,” whilе “the legitimate compact disc will be silver and ... legitimate record companies do not manufacture their compact disc on CD rec-ordables.” Mr. Brooks identified as counterfeits a random selection of discs from the box of 62 CDs seized from appellant.
Testifying in his own defense, appellant said he had come to Union Station for a dinner and movie with his common-law wife. After he parked his car and was walking toward the entrance, a рolice car came speeding towards him, two officers jumped out and escorted appellant over to the co-defendant and placed them under arrest. Appellant testified he was not selling any CDs and didn’t receive any money from any customers. Appellant stated that he had never sold CDs in the District, but had other people sell CDs for him. Appellant acknowledged that he had been previously arrested and was then informed that thе CDs being sold at his vending table were counterfeit but he said that at the time he had no idea that they were counterfeit. Once he found this out, he stopped carrying CDs at his vending table. Appellant’s co-defendant testified that all of the property on the table belonged to him and that he had not given appellant any money that evening and, in fact, the co-defendant had not made a single sale all evening.
In rebuttal, the government called Officer Aishа Jackson, who testified that on several previous occasions she had “shut down” appellant for selling CDs without a vending license in the vicinity of Union Station. 3 She accompanied Officer Han-bury at the time of the prior arrest when the warning was given to appellant that the CDs that he was selling were counterfeit. On that occasion, appellant acknowledged that the CDs were his and stated, “Yeah, these are mine, everybody is doing it.”
II.
“If evidence оf prior bad acts that are criminal in nature and independent of the crime charged is offered to prove predisposition to commit the charged crime, it is inadmissible.... ‘It is a principle of long standing in our law that evidence of one crime is inadmissible to prove disposition to commit crime, from which the jury may infer that the defendant committed the crime charged. Since
The government first contends that
Drew
is inapplicable to the disputed evidence because the circumstances surrounding appellant’s prior arrest provided “direct and substantiаl proof’ of a constituent element of the crime charged, by demonstrating his knowledge of the counterfeit nature of the CDs at issue. The government’s argument, that a factor in a previous crime which tends to make more probable an element of the current crime charged is therefore direct and substantial proof of the current crime charged, if too broadly read could threaten to swallow up the very protection that
Drew
endeavors to provide.
Drew
places upon other crime evidence a presumption of prejudice not because such evidence is “irrelevant; on the contrary, it is said to weigh too much with the jury and to ... overpersuade them .... ”
Thompson, supra,
A substantial portion of our cases declaring other crimes evidence to be “direct and substantial proof’ of the crime charged involve the admission of evidence of prior possession of a weapon, which was also used in the charged crime.
See, e.g., Sanders v. United States,
III.
The government argues, and we agree, that applying Drew, the evidence in question was properly admitted to prove appellant’s knowledge that the CDs were counterfeit. 7
We have not previously expressly recognized “knowledge” as a legitimate purpose for which other crimes evidence may be offered and, thereby, escape
Drew’s
prohibition. In
Johnson,
we enumerated substantial and legitimate purposes warranting admission of other crimеs evidence, which “includ[ed], but [were]
not limited
to ... (1) motive; (2) intent; (3) absence of mistake or accident; (4) common scheme or plan; [and] (5) identity.”
Johnson, supra,
Given our adoption of this further exception to
Drew,
we must evaluate whether the evidence of appellant’s previous arrest for the purpose of showing his knowledge was properly admitted. “A decision on the admissibility of evidence, of course, is committed to the sound discretion of the trial court.”
Sanders, swpra,
Appellant was convicted of attempted deceptive labeling. “A person commits the offense of deceptive labeling if, for commеrcial advantage or private financial gain, that person knowingly advertises, offers for sale, resale, or rental, or sells, resells, rents, distributes, or transports, or possesses for such purposes, a sound recording or audiovisual work, the label, cover, or jacket of which does not clearly and conspicuously disclose the true name and address of the manufacturer thereof.” D.C.Code § 22-3814.1(b) (emphasis added). Thus, to secure a conviction fоr deceptive labeling, the government was required to prove that appellant knew that “the label, cover, or jacket of [the CDs in question]... [did] not clearly and conspicuously disclose the true name and address of the manufacturer thereof.” Such knowledge would be implicit if appellant knew the CDs were counterfeit, and therefore could not reflect the true name of the manufacturer. Testimony that appellant had been previously warned that the CDs he was selling were counterfeit went to the issue of whether he knew the CDs at issue were counterfeit. Although the government presented no direct evidence that the appearance of the CDs at issue was the same as the CDs about which appellant was warned, a fair inference to that effect could be made from the expert’s general description of counterfeit CDs and the testimony of Officer Hanbury, the sаme individual who had previously warned the appellant about counterfeit CDs, that he immediately recognized that the CDs at issue were counterfeit. Thus, the trial court did not abuse its discretion in admitting evidence that appellant had previously sold counterfeit CDs because the evidence was not admitted to establish appellant’s criminal propensity but to demonstrate appellant’s knowledge as to the counterfeit nature of the discs, аn essential element of the crime charged.
Appellant contends the trial court did “not make any independent inquiry separate from the initial
Drew
determinations to allow it to conclude that the probative value would outweigh the prejudicial impact on the defendant.” First, appellant misstates the standard. The question is whether the “probative value [of the evidence] is substantially outweighed by the danger of unfair prejudice it poses.”
Johnson, supra,
IY.
Appellant’s most cogent argument is that
Thompson, supra,
Despite appellant’s assertion,
Thompson’s
holding only addressed other crimes evidence offered to demonstrate intent and has not since been unequivocally extended to apply to other
Drew
exceptions.
9
The rule announced in
Thompson
stemmed from the prejudicial danger inherent in the
The dilemma that is presented by too broad an application of Thompson is demonstrated in the case before us. It was incumbent upon the government to prove knowledge of the counterfeit nature of the CDs in its case in chief. Without evidence of the warning to appellant at the time of the prior arrest, a successful motion at the close of the government’s case in chief for judgment of acquittal for insufficient proof of that point was a clear threat, since otherwise such an inference would depend solely upon the appearanсe of the CDs. The trial court itself made this precise observation. 11 There was no stipulation by the appellant to the fact of knowledge, in the event that his defense of innocent presence was rejected. It would seem in such a situation, even where the Drew evidence relates to intent, the trial court could well demand such an express stipulation as a condition of exclusion of such evidence in the government’s case in chief.
V.
The trial court did not err in permitting, in the government’s case in chief, the introduction of other crime evidence for the purpose of demonstrating appellant’s knowledge of the counterfeit nature of the CDs, even where he had not at that time disputed, nor did he later dispute, that issue. Accordingly, the judgment appealed from is hereby
Affirmed.
Notes
. These sections have been recodified as §§ 22-1803 and-3214.01 (2001).
. Such
Drew
evidence is sometimes more broadly referred to as "bad acts” evidence, since it has been extended to bad acts "minimally in the nature of a criminal offense.”
Freeman v. United States,
. Appellant objected to Officer Jackson's testimony. The trial court permitted the examination as relevant to appellant’s credibility in testifying that he had never, personally, sold CDs in the District. Appellant does not contest this ruling on appeal.
. We have said that such substantial and legitimate purpose for the admission of other crimes evidence may include but is "not limited to, one of the following issues: (1) motive; (2) intent; (3) absence of mistake or accident; (4) common scheme or plan; or (5) identity.”
Johnson, supra,
. The only real difference between other crimes evidence subject to
Drew
and evidence that falls into one of the categories to which
Drew
does not apply is the standard and manner under which the еvidence must be preliminarily established. To admit the former, the proponent must demonstrate to the trial court that the defendant committed the other crime by clear and convincing evidence.
See Johnson, supra,
. The difficulty of determining whether other crimes evidence is one of the three types of evidence that is not subject to the strictures of
Drew
as set forth in
Johnson
(another example is determining whether evidence fell within the so-called
Toliver
exception,
Toliver v. United States,
. Knowledge and intent are not the same. ''[K]nowledge is informatiоn as to a fact. The act of knowing; clear perception of the truth; firm belief; information. While both intent and knowledge are recordations in the mental processes, intent is the design, resolve, or determination with which a person acts.”
Witters v. United States,
. In
Murphy,
this court held that although the appellant informed the court that his defense would depend on the admissibility of the other crimes evidence, the sole fact that "the government was required to prove [the dеfendant's] specific intent to distribute as an element of the offense charged... cannot support the admission of other-crimes evidence ... [A] defendant must do something which controverts the alleged specific intent in some meaningful way before the prosecution may introduce
Drew
evidence on the issue of
intent.”
. Three of our cases arguably address this issue of whether
Thompson
applies to other
Drew
exceptions, none of which analyze the question in any depth. Two state, in dictum, that other crimes evidence must be directed to a contested issue.
See Howard
v.
United States,
.
Thompson
also recognized that "[i]ntent is an element of virtually every crime. If the 'intent exception’ warranted admission of evidence of a similar crime simply to prove the intent element of the offense on trial, the exception would swallow the rule.”
. While the testimony of Officer Hanbury was that the CDs were "obviously” counterfeit, the trial court commented that, "[i]f the two of you [defendants] had not been previously warned, I might not have even been able to find you guilty based on the evidence if this was the first time you were ever caught selling these fake CDs.”
