Rashawn King appeals his convictions for first-degree murder and related weapons charges. On appeal, he challenges two evidentiary rulings: The admission of evidence of flight and the admission of evidence he claims falsely implicated him in threatening a witness. We conclude there was no error requiring reversal and affirm appellant’s convictions.
I.
On October 14, 2008, Toni Smart identified appellant as the man she saw shoot and kill her friend, James Hill, earlier that day.
II. Flight Evidence
A. The Evidence of Flight and the Trial Court’s Rulings
Appellant contends that the trial court erred when it allowed the government to present “flight” evidence to the jury as evidence of his consciousness of guilt. Before analyzing the precedents in this jurisdiction governing the admissibility of flight evidence, we recount the evidence and the trial court’s rulings in this case.
The government asked permission to admit flight evidence during a pre-trial conference. The government explained it wanted to introduce evidence that, after the shooting, appellant “had fled from the neighborhood.” The government also asked to introduce evidence that appellant had been apprehended after a car chase and “gave a fake name” when arrested. The government “believe[d] that providing a false name, particularly where he had reason to believe he was wanted for this murder, is admissible evidence to show consciousness of guilt.” In order to avoid presenting prejudicial evidence of the carjacking, the government “intended to present ... evidence that officers attempted to stop [appellant] in a vehicle, with no mention of the armed carjacking or that it was a vehicle taken in an armed carjacking, that [appellant] fled in a vehicle, and that after the chase was stopped and gave the name on October 24th, and to leave it at that.”
The court commented that “it appears to me that [appellant’s] absence from his regular neighborhood immediately after this event for 10 days, giving — you know, basically being — I don’t know if it amounts to a chase or just being followed by the police over quite a few blocks, giving a fake name — it seems all of that is admissible on the issue of consciousness of guilt.” Defense counsel responded that he “ha[d] no objection to the second part about being stopped in the car,” but questioned the government’s ability to “establish that he was spending the night in his mother’s up until the [day of the shooting], and a lot of the times he was not. Just to add consciousness of guilt we think is a leap without any foundation.” The government proffered that a police officer had “talked to [appellant] a week before the incident” outside his mother’s house, and explained that appellant’s mother had “testified at the last trial, the carjacking trial, that while [appellant] sometimes stayed elsewhere, he regularly stayed at her house and was living with her at the time ... of the armed carjacking.” Defense counsel then proffered that appellant was “actually on the run for a juvenile matter” between
The court ruled that the government had “a basis” for its flight argument, but cautioned the prosecutor to “avoid anything about the vehicle being carjacked or ... stolen.” As to defense counsel’s explanation that appellant was avoiding his house because of “a juvenile matter,” the court explained that the defense would be “permitted to offer that alternative explanation as to why [appellant] was not there,” but that the explanation did not change the fact that “the government has a basis with the information they have, wishing to argue consciousness of guilt to the jury.”
At trial, the government called Officer Willie Galtney. Galtney testified that, around 5:30 p.m. on October 24, 2008, he began pursuing a vehicle in response to “a transmission over the Seventh District radio zone from the dispatcher.” Galtney described a chase conducted at a “high rate of speed” over the Anacostia Bridge, weaving out of “bumper-to-bumper traffic,” that culminated when the vehicle went “into a parking garage” and “erash[ed] into ... a U.S. postal van that was parked in the garage.” The driver then “bailed out of the vehicle,” went over a fence, and ran off. Galtney pursued, but the driver was eventually apprehended by another officer “a short time later.”
Defense counsel asked Galtney if he had been “pursuing [appellant] related to this murder[.]” The government objected, and the court summoned the attorneys to the bench. There, the court asked defense counsel if he really “intended to get into” this area of questioning. Counsel responded that he thought the question to the officer was “fair,” and “would still keep the ground rules of not getting into the carjacking.” The court replied “I don’t think so,” and cautioned the defense attorney that he would “open the door” if he continued. Counsel withdrew the question, and Galtney was excused.
The government also introduced evidence showing that a search warrant had been executed shortly after the shooting at the home of appellant’s mother. During the search, the police located two identification cards belonging to appellant. No other homes were searched in connection with the investigation. Detective Antonio Duncan described his work with the “fugitive task force,” as they set about attempting to locate appellant. The detective recounted “setting up[ ] multiple units ... throughout the block” where appellant’s mother’s home was located, but testified that between October 15 and 24, no one on the task force observed appellant in the neighborhood near his mother’s house. Detective Duncan explained that the task force had conducted “computer checks” for appellant and his family, “conducted interviews,” and placed appellant’s father under surveillance. On cross-examination, De
During closing arguments,
You also have as corroboration the defendant’s flight. You know from the evidence presented to you that the defendant didn’t stay at his house. Officers were there within hours executing a search warrant. They had an arrest warrant. The defendant was not at his home. The task force, the fugitive task force, was put on it. They staked out his house. They canvassed the area. They staked his father and followed his father around. No defendant. All the officers in the First District were told to look for Rashawn King. No one found him.
October 24th, 10 days after the shooting, he’s not in Southwest. He’s down in another part of the city, the Seventh District, where when the officers try to stop him, he engages in a high-speed chase through the city at rush hour, crashing the car. And when he’s finally stopped on foot, he says, “My name is
James King,” not Rashawn King. And the judge has instructed you [that] you may consider his flight, his flight from the area and his flight on October 24th as evidence of consciousness of guilt. All that corroboration is evidence that what Toni [Smart] has said is truthful. That is evidence you may consider.
B. Flight Evidence Analysis
Evidence related to appellant’s apprehension following his pursuit by the police
Appellant claims the trial court erred when it permitted the government to introduce evidence that he fled from the police in a car at high speeds and, after he was apprehended and arrested, gave a false name. However, as the government correctly notes, appellant waived this issue during the pre-trial hearing when defense counsel informed the court that he had “ha[d] no objection to the second part about being stopped in the car.” “We have repeatedly held that a defendant may not take one position at trial and a contradictory position on appeal.” Brown v. United States,
Defense counsel did, however, object to the admission of evidence showing that appellant was not at his mother’s home for ten days. Accordingly, we evaluate that claim for an abuse of discretion and Kot-teakos harmless error. Williams v. United States,
In the District of Columbia, a defendant’s flight or concealment is considered a variety of an “ ‘admission[ ] by conduct.’ ” Burgess v. United States,
Accordingly, the trial court must determine, “before evidence is admissible to establish consciousness of guilt,” whether “the chain of inferences connecting the defendant’s post-crime conduct to the crime itself would allow the jury to find that the conduct was inconsistent with that of an innocent person.” Williams,
Here, the trial court did not conduct the complete Myers inquiry, as required by Williams, before determining that the evidence of appellant’s flight was admissible. The trial court should have engaged in a further inquiry in order to ensure that the government’s evidence of flight demonstrated “ ‘actual guilt of the crime charged,.’” Smith v. United States, 777 A.2d 801, 807 (D.C.2001) (emphasis added) (quoting Scott v. United States,
We consider the challenged evidence of flight in the context of the trial as a whole. See Kottealcos,
Reviewing the evidence at trial as a whole, we are clear that the case for appellant’s guilt was strong, almost overwhelmingly so. We also think that the challenged evidence of flight from appellant’s home was of secondary importance in the trial. First, during opening statement, defense counsel admitted that appellant was “on the run” because of a juvenile matter during the time the police were searching for him after the shooting of Hill and defense counsel implied in closing argument that appellant was simply staying with his girlfriend during this time.
Appellant also argues that the government’s efforts to impeach Sturgis’s testimony during the defense case resulted in the introduction of impermissible evidence of witness intimidation. See, e.g., Foreman v. United States,
Further, the prosecutor’s questioning did not cross the line this court drew in Foreman. The prosecutor’s question to Sturgis did not implicate appellant; it did not even imply that Sturgis “threatened” Clemonts or Smart, only that he called and told Clemonts “that [he was] going to say [he] didn’t see anything and [he wasn’t] coming down here to testify and [Clem-onts] shouldn’t either.” Although the implication is clear that Sturgis was suggesting that Clemonts and Smart should not testify against appellant, there is no suggestion that Sturgis threatened to do them harm if they did not do as he suggested. Nor did Detective Jackson’s testimony that Smart was “upset” because of Stur-gis’s call establish that she was afraid of or threatened by Sturgis.
The judgment of conviction is
Affirmed.
Notes
. At trial, Smart and her boyfriend, Rickie Clemonts, both testified that they had been smoking marijuana and drinking with Hill in an alley when appellant approached and demanded Hill pay him back a $50 debt. According to Smart, when Hill refused, appellant produced a pistol and shot Hill about five times. Clemonts testified that he did not see the shooting, but confirmed appellant's presence in the alley at the time of Hill’s death. Three other government witnesses also testified that appellant was in the alley at the time of the shooting, but they did not see the shooting take place. Appellant called Ant-wain Sturgis, who claimed to have also witnessed the shooting. Sturgis, who knew appellant, testified that appellant was not the shooter and that Hill was killed by an unidentified man.
. This court affirmed appellant’s carjacking conviction in King v. United States,
. Although defense counsel mentioned the “juvenile matter” in opening statement, counsel presented no evidence of this “juvenile matter” during the trial, and did not refer to it again. Later, defense counsel informed the judge the defense had "expected to call [appellant’s] aunt” to testify about this issue, but “found out that she was in the courtroom, so we didn’t have her available as a witness.” The government opined at the time that any testimony about "why [appellant] was fleeing ... would open the door to the admission of his impeachable convictions”; which would have included his recent conviction for carjacking.
. A police sergeant later testified that appellant had claimed his name was "James King” after his arrest.
. Prior to closing arguments, the trial court gave the following instruction without objection:
You’ve heard evidence that the ... defendant fled or hid after the alleged crime was committed or after being accused of a crime. It is up to you to decide whether he fled or hid. If you find he did so, so may consider his fleeing or hiding as tending to show feelings of guilt, which you may in turn consider as tending to show actual guilt. On the other hand, you may also consider that the defendant may have had reasons to flee or hide that are fully consistent with innocence in this case. If you find that the defendant fled or hid, you should consider such evidence along with all the other evidence in the case and give it as much weight as you think it deserves.
. Defense counsel's attempt at trial to cross-examine the officer to dispel the inference that appellant had been chased and arrested because of the murder did not overcome his earlier acquiescence to admission of the evi
. The overall standard for this analysis is no different from the one generally required since our adoption of Federal Rule of Evidence 403, whether probative value is “substantially outweighed” by prejudicial impact. (William) Johnson v. United States,
. Even if the trial court should have excluded the evidence because the government’s pretrial proffer on this point was weak, the defense’s opening statement (explaining that he had fled his mother’s home because of the juvenile matter), cross-examination of Smart (where counsel elicited Smart’s testimony that appellant lived with his mother) and direct examination of Sturgis (same), subsequently cured the deficiency by filling in the gaps enough to permit the jury reasonably to infer that appellant regularly stayed at his mother’s house.
. While some of our cases have acknowledged that the existence of alternative explanations for a defendant's flight — other than consciousness of guilt of the charged crime — will not necessarily preclude the presentation of flight evidence to a jury, see Smith, 777 A.2d at 808, we have never substituted the jury’s evaluation of the defendant’s competing explanation for the trial court’s obligation to determine in the first instance whether “the circumstances reasonably support an inference that [the defendant] fled because of consciousness of guilt of the charges relating to [the charged crime], and [whether] the probative value of the flight evidence is not outweighed by the potential prejudicial impact on the jury.” Id. (noting that “[njothing in the record suggests that Smith’s flight could be linked to any other criminal conduct”).
. There does not appear to have been any evidence presented at trial supporting either assertion.
. Since the trial court properly prevented the government from eliciting hearsay statements from Detective Jackson, we reject appellant’s claim of error on that basis.
. When asked "[w]ho says you're not supposed to snitch?,” Smart replied: "That's what the neighborhood does. You get caught snitching, you will disappear.” Smart also said that she gets "threatened all the time.” The prosecutor then tried to get into specifics, but the trial court prevented further inquiry after a lengthy colloquy.
