We granted a petition for a writ of certiorari in this case to decide if the Circuit Court for Talbot County erred in allowing the State to amend a criminal information, charging violations of the controlled dangerous substances laws, by substituting “cocaine” for “marijuana” when the defendant did not consent to the amendment.
I.
The petitioner, Steve Eugene Johnson, was arrested on June 20, 1997, by Officer Mark Waltrup of the Easton Police Department. According to Officer Waltrup, he observed Johnson approach a motor vehicle, while clasping something in his right hand which Waltrup believed to be crack cocaine, and state, “What you want? What you need?” When Waltrup and two fellow officers approached Johnson from behind, he allegedly swallowed the object in his right hand and “kicked and flailed,” at which point the officers subdued him with pepper spray in order to accomplish the arrest. A search following the arrest resulted in the seizure of a loaded “Tech-9” semiautomatic pistol in Johnson’s backpack and a bag containing four grams of crack cocaine in his pocket.
In the statement of charges filed by the police, Johnson was accused of possession of crack cocaine in sufficient quantity to indicate an intent to distribute, possession of crack cocaine, possession of a firearm in violation of Maryland Code (1957, 1996 Repl.Vol.), Art. 27, § 281A, possession of controlled paraphernalia, and resisting arrest. Johnson waived his right *386 to a preliminary hearing in District Court. In August 1997 a criminal information was filed against Johnson in the Circuit Court for Talbot County by the State’s Attorney. The information, however, differed from the charges filed by the police. Count one of the information charged that Johnson “did unlawfully possess a Schedule I non-narcotic controlled dangerous substance, to wit: marijuana, in sufficient quantity to reasonably indicate ... an intent to distribute.... ” In count two of the information, he was charged with the unlawful possession of marijuana. The remaining charges in the information were the same as the charges filed earlier by the police.
In December 1997 the State filed a motion to amend the information so that counts one and two would allege that the controlled dangerous substance involved was cocaine and not marijuana. Johnson refused to consent to the proposed amendment, and a hearing on the motion was held in January 1998. At the hearing, Johnson argued that the proposed amendment would violate Maryland Rule 4-204 because it changed the character of the offense charged and therefore required his consent. The State argued that the amendment did not change the character of the offense. The Circuit Court agreed with the State and granted the motion to amend.
At his jury trial in January 1998, Johnson testified in his own defense. He admitted that he was in possession of the gun but denied that he possessed any drugs. With regard to the resisting arrest charge, he stated that he struggled because the police officers approached him from behind without identifying themselves. The jury found Johnson guilty on all counts.
On count one, the court sentenced Johnson to incarceration for 20 years, with 5 years suspended, and with the 15 years to be served without the possibility of parole. No sentence was imposed on the count two conviction because of merger. On count three, possession of paraphernalia, Johnson was fined $100. For the weapon offense, count four, a consecutive 10 year sentence was imposed. Finally, on count five, resisting *387 arrest, Johnson received a concurrent sentence of one year imprisonment.
On appeal, the Court of Special Appeals upheld the Circuit Court’s decision to grant the motion to amend, but reduced the non-parolable portion of the sentence on count one from 15 years to 10 years. The intermediate appellate court reversed the conviction for possession of controlled paraphernalia based on insufficiency of the evidence. The Court of Special Appeals affirmed the judgments on counts four and five.
Johnson v. State,
II.
The only question presented in the certiorari petition is whether the trial court erred in permitting the State to amend counts one and two of the criminal information by substituting “cocaine” for “marijuana” when the defendant did not consent to the amendment.
The amendment of a charging document is governed by Maryland Rule 4-204, which provides (emphasis supplied):
“On motion of a party or on its own initiative, the court at any time before verdict may permit a charging document to be amended except that if the amendment changes the character of the offense charged, the consent of the parties is required. If amendment of a charging document reasonably so requires, the court shall grant the defendant an extension of time or continuance.”
The pertinent language, whether “the amendment changes the character of the offense charged,” has been in effect since 1979, when Rule 713, the immediate precursor to Rule 4-204, was amended. Prior to 1979, the text of the Rule alternated between the present “character of the offense” language and language allowing an amendment “as to matter of form, but not as to matter of substance.” 1 Consequently, depending *388 upon the language of the Rule in effect at the time, this Court has conducted either a “character of the offense” analysis or a “matter of substance” analysis to determine if unconsented amendments to charging documents have been permissible.
Regardless of the exact rule language in effect, however, this Court’s analysis has been essentially the same, the fundamental criterion being whether the amendment constitutes merely a “matter of form.”
See Busch v. State,
For example, in
Thanos v. State, supra,
“We thus think it clear that there is a change in the character of the offense charged where the amendment ‘changefs] the basic description of the offense,’ Gray v. State, [216 Md. 410 , 416,140 A.2d 643 , 646 (1958) ]; it is equally clear that the basic description of the offense is indeed changed when an entirely different act is alleged to constitute the crime. We also observe that, whether one applies the ‘matters of substance’ test or the ‘character of the offense’ test, there are constitutional limitations which constrict the determination of whether an amendment to a charging document may be construed as constituting simply a matter of form. * * * We think it elementary that where a specific criminal act has been charged, another may not be substituted for it on the theory that it is simply a matter of ‘form.’ ”
The holding in
Thanos
was reiterated in
Brown v. State, supra,
In the instant case, Johnson was charged under Code (1957, 1996 Repl.Vol.), Art. 27, §§ 286(a)(1) and 287(a). Art. 27, § 286(a)(1), makes it unlawful to
*390 “manufacture, distribute, or dispense, or to possess a controlled dangerous substance in sufficient quantity to reasonably indicate under all circumstances an intent to manufacture, distribute, or dispense, a controlled dangerous substance.”
Art. 27, § 287(a), forbids
“[the possession of] ... any controlled dangerous substance, unless such substance was obtained directly, or pursuant to a valid prescription or order from a practitioner, while acting in the course of his professional practice.”
The language in the criminal information filed against Johnson was taken directly from these statutes. Nonetheless, as in Thanos and Brown, the description of the specific act alleged was significantly changed by the amendment. The information initially accused the defendant of possessing marijuana, whereas the amended information charged an entirely different act, possessing crack cocaine. It follows that, under Thanos and Brown, the amendment did change “the character of the offense charged.”
The State argues that, because the defendant was charged with violating the same sections of the Code both before and after the amendment, the amendment did not change the character of the offense. In
Gray v. State,
As stated earlier, Johnson was charged under §§ 286(a)(1) and 287(a), which are part of the statutory provisions regulating controlled dangerous substances. In
Cunningham v. State,
Relevant to this case, the maximum penalty for possession of cocaine, defined as a Schedule II “narcotic drug,” in sufficient quantity to indicate an intent to distribute, is twenty years imprisonment and/or a $25,000 fine. See Art. 27, §§ 279(b), 277(q), and 286(b)(1). The maximum penalty for the possession of marijuana, defined as a Schedule I “nonnarcotic drug,” in sufficient quantity to indicate an intent to distribute, is five years imprisonment and/or a $15,000 fine. See Art. 27, §§ 279(a), 277(o), and § 286(b)(3). In addition, the enhanced penalties for “second offenders” under § 286(c) do not apply when the previous conviction involved marijuana, but do apply when the previous conviction involved, inter alia, a “narcotic drug” such as cocaine. The penalty section under § 287, for simple possession of a controlled dangerous substance, provides for a maximum penalty of four years imprisonment and/or a $25,000 fine, but if the controlled dangerous substance involved is marijuana, the maximum penalty is reduced to one year imprisonment and/or a $1,000 fine. See § 287(e).
This Court in
State v. Simpson,
“the identification of the particular controlled dangerous substance involved in a given offense is so inextricably tied to the critical matters of the appropriate unit of prosecution and the permissible or mandated punishment that it must be treated as an element of the offense.”
Although the
Simpson
case involved a prosecution under § 287(a), its holding applies equally to charges under § 286(a). In every prosecution under both §§ 286 and 287, the State
*392
must prove the particular controlled dangerous substance in order to convict.
See Simpson,
The State contends that Johnson was not prejudiced by the erroneous amendment of the criminal information because he had been arrested on a statement of charges alleging possession of cocaine. Consequently, the State urges that, because Johnson knew the charges against him from the time of his arrest, any error in amending the criminal information was harmless.
The charging document in this circuit court prosecution was the criminal information and not the statement of charges filed by the police. The information was the charging document used by the defendant and his counsel to prepare his defense. The purpose of Maryland Rule 4-204, governing the amendment of charging documents, is to prevent any unfair surprise to the defendant and his counsel. Contrary to the State’s argument, the line between an amendment which is deemed prejudicial, and one which is not deemed prejudicial, is drawn by the language of the Rule itself. If the State’s proposed amendment changes the character of the offense, and the defendant does not consent, then the amendment is deemed prejudicial to the defendant. If the amendment does not change the character of the offense, the Rule deems it nonprejudicial. This Court has consistently reversed convictions whenever an unconsented amendment to a charging document has changed the character of the offense, without any further exploration into prejudice.
See, e.g., Busch v. State, supra,
It follows that Johnson’s convictions under counts one and two must be reversed.
JUDGMENT OF THE COURT OF SPECIAL APPEALS REVERSED IN PART AND CASE REMANDED TO THAT COURT WITH INSTRUCTIONS TO REVERSE THE CONVICTIONS ON COUNTS ONE AND TWO. JUDGMENT OF THE COURT OF SPECIAL APPEALS ON COUNTS THREE THROUGH FIVE AFFIRMED. COSTS IN THIS COURT TO BE PAID BY TALBOT COUNTY. COSTS IN THE COURT OF SPECIAL APPEALS TO BE PAID THREE-FIFTHS BY TALBOT COUNTY AND TWO-FIFTHS BY STEVE JOHNSON.
Notes
. The history of Rule 4-204 reveals that it is derived from Maryland Code (1957), Art. 52, § 22, which allowed the amendment of criminal *388 informations, warrants, etc., "provided, however, that such amendment [did] not change the character of the offense or crime with which the accused [was] charged.” In 1961, Art. 52, § 22 was replaced by Rule 714, which applied the "form vs. substance” language to indictments and informations, but applied the “character of the offense” language to warrants. Rule 714 was amended in 1973, permitting the amendment of a charging document as long as it did not "change the character of the offense charged.” The rule was amended again in 1974, back to the "form vs. substance” language of 1961. In 1977, Rule 714 was renumbered as Rule 713. Rule 713 was amended in 1979 to include the "character of the offense” language for all charging documents other than indictments; amendments to indictments were permitted as long as they did not "change the substance of the indictment.” Finally, in 1984, Rule 4-204 was enacted in its present form.
