Myron O‘Neal GRAY, Appellant, v. UNITED STATES, Appellee.
Nos. 12-CM-2045, 12-CM-2050.
District of Columbia Court of Appeals.
Submitted Jan. 7, 2014. Decided Sept. 25, 2014.
99 A.3d 129
Rоnald C. Machen Jr., United States Attorney, and Elizabeth Trosman and Margaret E. Barr, Assistant United States Attorneys, were on the brief for appellee.
Before GLICKMAN and FISHER, Associate Judges, and RUIZ, Senior Judge.
RUIZ, Senior Judge:
Gray appeals his convictions, after a bench trial, for threats,1 contempt,2 and unlawful entry.3 He contends that the trial court applied an incorrect legal standard in finding him guilty of threats and that the trial court erred in considering videos that were not formally admitted into evidence in finding him guilty of unlawful entry and contempt. We conclude that the trial court did not commit аny error warranting reversal and affirm appellant‘s convictions.
I. Factual Background
The charges against appellant arose from incidents on May 12 and May 15, 2012, at his workplace, a Home Depot store on Rhode Island Avenue in Northeast Washington, D.C. Appellant‘s supervisor testified that because of appellant‘s “erratic” behavior in the store on May 11,4 appellant was told to “go home” and that he would be called when he should return to work. Early the following morning, May 12, appellant returned to the store and made a hоstile remark to a coworker. Later that day, when appellant returned to the store with his dog, he was arrested and charged with having threatened the coworker that morning. At that time, appellant was told that he was barred from returning to the Home Depot store. An order requiring appellant to stay away from the coworker and the Home Depot store and parking lot was issued on May 14. The following day, May 15, Home Depot store cameras recorded appellant entering and exiting the store and driving through the parking lot.
The coworker, Jonathan Lowery, had worked with appellant for approximately five months, and he considered appellant a casual friend with whom he normally talked about “sports, boxing, and stuff like that.” Lowery testified that on the morning of May 12,5 appellant approached him and he “was threatening me, said he will kill me, I‘ll see you outside of work. He pointed his finger at me in my chest, I will kill you I see you outside of work.” Lowery said that he was not scared by appellant‘s remarks but surprised, because they werе “kind of random. I didn‘t understand the whole reason why he was so angry towards me.” Lowery explained that he had had “no problems” with appellant in the past, and that appellant had no reason to threaten him.
Lowery said he thought appellant‘s behavior that day was “kind of strange, er
Appellant testified in his defense. He admitted that he visited the Home Depot with his dog on May 12, but said that he did so as a customer rather than as an employee. He denied having any contact with Lowery that day. Appellant reсounted that he was arrested at Home Depot on May 12, released on May 14, and then went to Providence Hospital later that evening, where he was admitted in the early hours of May 15.7 He woke up on May 15 to learn that he would be transferred to Seton House and, not wanting to go there, appellant left Providence Hospital at 12:00 or 1:00 p.m. He said he was re-arrested later that day at Emory Recreation Center and taken to Seton House. Appellant denied that he visited Home Depot on May 15, and said thаt his rental car was in the store‘s parking lot that day because he had parked it there on May 12 and it was left in the parking lot when he was arrested. Appellant‘s mother also testified that she took her son to Providence Hospital at 9:00 p.m. on May 14, stayed overnight with him there, and then returned to Home Depot the next day to pick up appellant‘s rental car.
The judge explained her factual findings on the threats charge as follows:
With respect to the threats count . . . I‘ll find [appellant] guilty. I understand that Mr. Lowery, maybe thеre‘s some—there‘s no reason for him to lie. He seemed to be a quite credible guy. He just said they were good friends and [appellant] made this threat toward him. . . . I don‘t know that Mr. Lowery necessar[ily] took it as a threat because I think he thought that [appellant] was having problems. But the standard is not what Mr. Lowery thought. I think it was what a reasonable person thought. Now, a reasonable person would assume that you say, I‘m going to kill you, and then do a gun motion, that a reasonable person would take that as a threat. . . . I just don‘t see a reason for why he would come in here and lie when there‘s no reason. He‘s got a perfectly fine relationship with [appellant]. It just seems [appellant] was having whatever problems he was having that day and did what he did to Mr. Lowery. So I‘ll find [appellant] guilty on the threats count.
II. Threats
A person is guilty of the offense of threats under
An analysis of the evidence necessarily begins with the words the speaker used, the first element of threats. Whether a speaker makes a threat, however, depends not simply on the words the speaker uttered; the speaker‘s words “must be considered in the сontext in which they were used.” In re S.W., 45 A.3d 151, 155 (D.C. 2012) (quoting Jenkins, 902 A.2d at 85); see also Clark, 755 A.2d at 1031. The factfinder‘s task in considering the second element of threats is to determine whether the speaker‘s words, taken in context, were “of such a nature as to convey fear of serious bodily harm or injury to the ordinary hearer.” Carrell, 80 A.3d at 171 (quoting Campbell, 450 A.2d at 431 n. 5). Thus, the words the speaker has uttered are “just the beginning” of a threats analysis. In re S.W., 45 A.3d at 157.9 In conducting this analysis, the factfinder must be guided by how an “ordinary hearer” would interpret those words taking into account the “full context in which the words are spoken.” Carrell, 80 A.3d at 169.
Thus, the ordinary hearer10 we posit is one aware of all the surrounding
It is well-established that the government need not prove that the actual hearer felt fear or intimidation. See Postell v. United States, 282 A.2d 551, 554 (D.C. 1971) (“We do not ask whether appellant succeeded in frightening these police officers, but whether under the circumstances the language used by appellant when heard by the ordinary person would be understood as being spoken not in jest, but as carrying the serious promise of bodily harm or death.“). This does not mean, however, that the actual hearer‘s response is irrelevant, as the actual hearer may well be, and frequently is, a rеasonable person. A showing that a reasonable person in a particular situation would have, e.g., been aware of a certain risk, can be evidence that an actual person in that same situation was aware of it as well. See Thomas v. United States, 557 A.2d 1296, 1300 (D.C. 1989). Similarly, evidence about an actual person‘s response to a situation is evidence, sometimes the best evidence available, of how a reasonable person would have responded under the circumstances. Where, as here, there is evidence that words, though facially threatening, did not in fact “convey fear of serious bodily harm or injury” to the actual hearer, the factfinder should consider and evaluate the reasons given for that reaction as part of its inquiry into how an “ordinary hearer” informed of all the cir
In sum, in considering the second element of the offense of threats, the factfinder must weigh not just the words uttered, but also the complete context in which they were used. The context of an utterance includes “facial expression, tone, stress, posture, inflection, and like manifestations of the speaker.” Clark, 755 A.2d at 1031. It also includes the factual circumstances in which the words were uttered, the relationship between the speaker and the hearer, and their shared knowledge and history.11 The context of an utterance can turn words that would be innocuous in most contexts into a threat.12 Similarly, context can make facially threatening words benign.13 A person can be guilty of threats without causing the target of the threats to fear serious bodily harm or injury, just as a person whose words actually cause fear can be innocent of threats.14 The actual hearer‘s response to the speaker‘s words and the actual hearer‘s reasons for that response are relevant because they could reveal important evidence about the context of the speaker‘s utterance, including the relationship between the speaker and the actual hearer, that explains why that response was (or was not) objectively reasonable under the circumstances.
We turn to apply these principles to the case at hand. Here, the trial court found appellant guilty of threats based on Lowery‘s testimony that Gray said “I‘m going to kill you,” and made “a gun motion” with his fingers. The trial court credited Lowery‘s testimony that appellant uttered those words, a finding that is amply supported by the record. Therefore, the first element of threats is satisfied.
These words are facially threatening. The court then needed to consider whether an ordinary hearer in Lowery‘s circumstances would have taken them at face value, i.e., as a “real” threat of serious bodily harm. As the trial court noted, Lowery did not “necessarily” take appellant‘s words as a threat, explaining that he had a casual and friendly relationship with appellant; that he had had “no problems” with appellant in the past; and that appel
Evidence does not need to be all in favor of the prosecution in order to be sufficient to convict. Here, notwithstanding Lowery‘s reaction, there was sufficient evidence that appellant‘s words to Lowery, viewed in context, were “of such a nature as to convey fear of serious bodily harm or injury to the ordinary hearer.” Carrell, 80 A.3d at 171. There was no evidence that appellant was joking; indeed, Lowery testified that appellant seemed “serious.” The words were accompanied by appellant making “a gun motion” pointed at Lowery‘s chest. There was evidence that appellant was told to go home the previous day because of “erratiс” behavior which included threatening another coworker. Lowery‘s testimony that appellant appeared frustrated and upset, and that he walked away from appellant to avoid a “further confrontation” and reported the incident to his supervisor, suggest that even if Lowery did not feel personally threatened, he also did not dismiss the incident altogether. When the prosecutor asked whether Lowery thought appellant would act on the threat, Lowery answered “maybe, possibility,” before the court рrevented him from answering any further.15 The evidence before the court, viewed as a whole, was sufficient to support a finding that appellant threatened Lowery.
Appellant argues that “in considering only what a reasonable person would believe if he heard appellant‘s words” to Lowery, the court misapplied the law by “not taking into consideration the relationship between the parties, the context in which [the incident] occurred” or the particular reaction of the alleged victim in the case.” Specifically, appellant contends that the trial court “disregarded” Lowery‘s testimony that he was “not shaken or scared” and the reason Lowery gave for his reaction. If appellant were correct, there would be cause to reverse and remand the case. See Lihlakha v. United States, 89 A.3d 479, 488-90 (D.C. 2014) (remanding because trial court “did not appear to recognize” the relevance of certain evidence); Foster v. United States, 699 A.2d 1113, 1115-16 (D.C. 1997) (recognizing sufficiency of evidence presented but reversing and remanding because evidenсe was “insufficient on the precise grounds apparently relied upon by the trial court“). That is not, however, how we read the record.
In reaching a verdict, the court made reference to the normally friendly workplace relationship between Lowery and appellant. Moreover, the trial court heard the defense argue in closing, without objection, that Lowery is a reasonable person and that his subjective response, viewed in context, was objectively reasonable. In rebuttal, the prоsecutor responded that
III. Unlawful Entry and Contempt
Appellant challenges the unlawful entry and contempt convictions on the ground that the trial court based its factual findings on store surveillance videos that were not formally authenticated and admitted into evidence. Specifically, appellant notes that the trial court studied the videos and made findings that the license plate, make, and color of a car shown on the video entering the Home Depot parking lot were “the same” as for a car that appellant had leased. Although the trial court could not identify the person on the videos as appellant, it relied on testimony from a store employee who also viewed the videos and who had known appellant as a coworker for over a year, that they showed appellant parking his car in the lot, entering the store, and then leaving the store shortly afterwards.
Immediately before trial, defense counsel notified the cоurt that she had received surveillance videos from the government the previous afternoon, but had been unable to view them until that morning; counsel had not seen all of them when the case was first called.16 After viewing the tapes, defense counsel announced that she was ready to proceed. Defense counsel objected when government witnesses testified about other surveillance videos that neither the defense nor the government had seen prior to trial.17 Counsel, however, did not object when the govеrnment played the surveillance tapes at trial, or when the trial court mentioned them in announcing the verdict, even though these tapes were never formally admitted into evidence.
For these reasons, we review the trial court‘s decision to rely on these tapes for plain error. “To prevail on a ground not presented to the trial court, the defendant must demonstrate plain error, which requires a showing both that the trial court‘s ruling was obviously wrong and that there has been a miscarriage of justice.” Foote v. United States, 670 A.2d 366, 369 (D.C. 1996).
Basic principles of appellate review dictate that in deciding whether evidence is sufficient to support a conviction, appellate courts are limited to considering evidence in the trial court record. See
Some courts have recognized an exception to the general principle that appellate review is confined to the record at trial where the evidence was presented at trial, discussed by witnesses, and was treated by all parties as if it had been admitted. See, e.g., United States v. Barrett, 111 F.3d 947, 951 (D.C. Cir. 1997) (“The exhibits were treated below, without objection, as if they were admitted into evidence; they are therefore deemed admitted.“). Here, the government received the surveillance videos late, and the defense did not object to the trial court‘s ruling that the government could present the videos that defense counsel had viewed that morning. The government played the videos in court, and witnesses discussed them. Defense counsel cross-examined witnesses about the store‘s camera systems and the particular videos that purported to show appellant. The prosecutor and defense counsel referred to the videos in closing arguments. Defense counsel did not object to the trial court‘s reliance on the videos in announcing the verdict. Under the circumstances, it was not plain error for the trial court to rely on the videos in reaching a verdict.18
We therefore affirm the judgment of conviction on all counts.
So ordered.
