Case Information
*1 REPORTED IN THE COURT OF SPECIAL APPEALS OF MARYLAND No. 1128 September Term, 2013 JOHN RIGGINS A/K/A SEAN RIGGINS v.
STATE OF MARYLAND Eyler, Deborah S., Kehoe,
Rodowsky, Lawrence F. (Retired, Specially Assigned) JJ.
Opinion by Kehoe, J. Filed: May 27, 2015 *2
Nearly forty years ago, the Court of Appeals held that a defendant in a criminal
case has a due process right to inspect prior written statements made by prosecution
witnesses that are in possession of the State.
Carr v. State
,
Following a jury trial in the Circuit Court for Baltimore City, John Riggins (a/k/a Sean Riggins) was convicted of disarming a police officer, resisting arrest, and second degree assault. He received consecutive sentences for each conviction. Mr. Riggins presents three contentions on appeal.
First
, he argues that the trial court erred when it declined to order the prosecutor to
disclose to defense counsel a use of force report pertaining to appellant’s arrest that had
been prepared by a police officer who testified at trial. The State concedes that a use of
force report “authored by a police officer who testified at trial [is] subject to disclosure
under . . .
Jencks v. United States,
Second, appellant contends that there was insufficient evidence to sustain his convictions for resisting arrest because the arrest itself was illegal. We find this argument unpersuasive.
Third , appellant asserts that his convictions for second degree assault and resisting arrest merged, and the trial court erred by sentencing him separately for each. This contention is mooted by our holding that his convictions must be vacated.
We will vacate the judgments of the circuit court and remand this case for further proceedings.
Analysis
I. The Use of Force Report
Appellant’s convictions arose out of an incident that occurred when several Baltimore police officers responded to a complaint that a man was selling drugs in a vacant home located at 612 North Cumberland Street. When the officers arrived at the house, they observed appellant standing in the doorway. When appellant saw the police, *4 he attempted to flee. This resulted in a physical altercation during which appellant was struck with a baton. Three officers were involved in the mêlée: Detective Jeffrey Lilly [2]
and Officer Carlos Moorer, both of whom testified at appellant’s trial, and an otherwise unidentified “Officer Golimowski,” who did not.
The Baltimore City Police Department requires its officers to prepare “use of force” reports when the officer uses physical force in an encounter with a member of the public. The record before us indicates that the Department maintains these reports in the officer’s personnel file, and does not disclose the documents to third parties. Moorer prepared a use of force report after appellant’s arrest. The issue before us is whether the trial court erred when it denied appellant’s motion to require the prosecutor to provide him with a copy of Moorer’s statement.
Defense counsel first raised the issue of disclosure of the use of force reports during pre-trial discovery. On October 5, 2012, defense counsel sent an email to the prosecutor requesting disclosure of the use of force reports, in compliance with the State’s continuing discovery obligations. A few days later, the prosecutor responded, informing defense counsel that she did not have access to that information. The prosecutor advised defense counsel that “[t]he proper way” to obtain the use of force reports was to subpoena the Police Department. The prosecutor also informed defense *5 counsel that the use of force reports are “part of the personnel file and are not routinely disclosed.”
Defense counsel then served subpoenas on the Department. The Department’s custodian of records responded on February 15, 2012. The documents forwarded with the response did not include use of force reports from any of the officers involved with appellant’s arrest. Defense counsel did nothing more to obtain the use of force reports until the first day of trial, July 15, 2013.
On the morning of trial, the court addressed preliminary matters, selected the jury,
and then recessed for lunch. It was not until the court reconvened after the lunch recess,
but before the jury entered the courtroom, that defense counsel raised the issue of the
State’s failure to disclose the use of force reports. Defense counsel requested that the
court conduct an
in camera
examination of the use of force reports in light of the Court of
Appeals’ opinion in
Fields v. State
,
was hesitant to undertake such an effort, stating to defense counsel “[y]ou’re telling me as the jury’s literally standing in the hall about an incident that could’ve been and should’ve *6 been dealt with earlier today[.]” The following colloquy then took place (emphasis added):
THE COURT: . . . You’re saying – you’re not asking for the results of an investigation. You’re not asking this court to look at what was said about the officers. You’re just saying you want a report that they wrote, correct ? . . . .
* * * *
[DEFENSE COUNSEL]: Yes, and when requested of the State of the documents [sic], their position was that it is part of the personnel file. THE COURT: Well, that may be true or not, that’s not the issue. The point is, your subpoena goes to the custodian of records. And, whatever the State should turn over to you in discovery, again, is a different issue, so.
* * * *
And, you’re saying that the State has told you that it’s somewhere else, and it’s something that they did not turn over in discovery and that they should have, certainly. Another discovery violation. Again, if it’s what’s required. My point to you is, that should’ve all been done beforehand.
You knew in January when you sent the subpoena out, and whenever, I don’t know, sometime in October 2012, [4] that you weren’t getting the documentation. So, your recourse would’ve been to go to the discovery Judge; that not done that [sic], and doing this at this late hour, is problematic to the Court. . . .
* * * *
[Y]ou have not brought [the Department’s failure to comply with the subpoena] to the discovery Judge, where you had the opportunity to do this. *7 To do this now at trial is, again, as I stated is problematic. I note your objection. We’re going to move on. I note your objection, and I will – [DEFENSE COUNSEL]: May I just make –
THE COURT: You can in one second, hold on . . . .
THE COURT: Okay, all right. What else do you want to say . . . .
[DEFENSE COUNSEL]: Essentially, that the State’s duty to disclose, is ongoing. And, we are not in a position where we’re asking for a postponement . We’re simply asking that the Court order the State to produce those documents. And, we’re not seeking to halt the trial in any way. We were just simply asking that the State produce these documents. THE COURT: Well, now, that’s a different issue. We are at a point where you are asking them to produce something; they’re saying it’s not within their purview. Maybe that’s true, maybe it’s not . If we find – if we go forth and we find that the Court is wrong, which is possible – then, if Mr. Riggins is found guilty . . . . then there’s a perfect issue on appeal. I’m going – I’m a Trial Court. I’m going to proceed with the trial. I believe that those discovery issues should’ve been resolved in a different way. I agree that discovery is always ongoing, and it’s always on the State to provide information.
But, since it was requested, not turned over; and, again, the reason allegedly – and, again, this was presented to the Court, that it is within the police department; the State doesn’t have it. The Court of Appeals will listen to that argument, if it comes to that.
But, right now, the motion to order the State to turn over use of force reports that may exist that were requested in discovery, but then again not brought to the Court’s attention about any discovery violation is denied. . . . In order to clarify the record, the trial court then asked the prosecutor whether she “[had] a copy of what [defense counsel is] referring to?” The prosecutor responded: *8 “I do not have a copy of it, Your Honor. I’ve never seen these documents. I don’t know anything about them.” The trial court directed that the jury be brought into the courtroom and trial commenced.
The State’s only witnesses were Lilly and Moorer, two of the officers involved in appellant’s arrest. Moorer provided detailed testimony as to appellant’s actions. On cross- examination, defense counsel asked Moorer if he had prepared a use of force report and if “that report essentially depicted . . . what occurred” at the time of appellant’s arrest. Moorer answered both questions in the affirmative. Moorer further testified that he did not have a copy of the report with him at trial. Defense counsel did not ask to see the report or object at that time to the reports’ unavailability. [5]
Appellant contends that “[t]he trial court abused its discretion by not ordering the State to turn over Officer Moorer’s” use of force report. For its part, the State concedes that the court erred but, as we have said, contends that appellant’s contentions are not preserved for review. A brief tour of the legal landscape will assist in assessing the State’s preservation argument.
*9 (1) A Defendant’s Right to Inspect Pre-Trial Statements by Prosecution
Witnesses:
Jencks v. United States
,
The opportunity to cross-examine a prosecution witness based on a prior written
statement about the events for which the accused is on trial protects the right of
confrontation. In the landmark decision
Jencks v. United States
,
We hold . . . that the petitioner is entitled to inspect the reports to decide whether to use them in his defense. Because only the defense is adequately equipped to determine the effective use for purpose of discrediting the Government’s witness and thereby furthering the accused’s defense, the defense must initially be entitled to see them to determine what use may be made of them. Justice requires no less.
Id . at 668–69 (footnotes omitted).
The Court of Appeals adopted the
Jencks
disclosure principles in
Carr v. State
,
Every skilled trial advocate knows the crucial importance in such situations of cross-examination. Effective cross-examination here made it necessary that defense counsel be permitted to directly confront the witness with his inconsistent prior statement. To deny to defense counsel the tool necessary for such adequate cross-examination under these circumstances amounts in our view to a denial to the defendant of due process of law. Hence, a new trial is mandated.
Id. at 472–73.
In
Leonard v. State
,
The reasoning and holdings of Carr and its progeny are reflected in Maryland’s criminal pre-trial discovery rule. Md. Rule 4-623(d)(3) states that a State’s Attorney must disclose “all written statements of [a State’s witness] that relate to the offense charged[.]” The State’s Attorney must use “due diligence to identify all of the material . . . that must be disclosed under this Rule.” Rule 4-263(c)(1). Moreover, “[t]he obligations of the State’s Attorney . . . extend to material and information . . . in the possession or control of the attorney . . . [and] any other person who . . . has reported to the attorney’s office in regard to the particular case.” Rule 4-263(c)(2). The State’s Attorney must provide this information “[w]ithout the necessity of a request” from defense counsel. Rule 4-263(d). (2) A Defendant’s Right to Inspect Otherwise Confidential Records: Robinson v.
State
,
The State’s obligation to provide pre-trial written statements by witnesses extends
to police records that are otherwise confidential. In
Robinson v. State
,
Confidentiality does not ordinarily negate possession, actual or constructive. In other words, that a statement may be confidential goes to its discoverability, rather than to who possesses it. In this State, each major police department has an IAD division. Consequently, because that division is a part of the police, its records are in the possession of the police. And if the police is an arm of the prosecution, it follows that the records are also constructively in the possession of the prosecution . . . .
Id. at 309. The Court held that, even though the internal affairs records were confidential and “not, on that account, shared with, or readily available to, the prosecution[,]” neither the police department’s claim of confidentiality, nor the prosecutor’s claim of inaccessibility could defeat the accused’s right to review them. Id. at 309–13. The Court held that the trial court erred in conducting an in camera review of the statements. Instead, defense counsel should have been permitted to inspect the statements at trial, in accordance with “the Jencks/Carr/Leonard line of cases.” Id. at 312. The Court concluded:
In this case, the defendant has a particularized need for access to the officers’ statements, to test the officers’ trial testimony. On the other hand, the officers have been exonerated by the IAD investigation; thus, any *13 privacy interest in their statements that may have existed is no longer applicable.
Id. at 313.
The appropriate procedure can vary according to the nature of the documents in
question. In
Zaal v. State
,
In
Fields v. State,
Collectively, these authorities underscore several principles that are pertinent to the
case before us. First, “the significance, to an accused, of determining whether a witness’
trial testimony is inconsistent with the witness’ prior written statement on the subject”
establishes a “particularized need” for disclosure of otherwise confidential records related
to the accused’s arrest.
Robinson
,
With these lessons in mind, we return to the case before us.
(3) The Trial Court’s Ruling.
Although the trial court “[a]bsolutely agree[d]” with defense counsel that any use of force reports written by the officers involved in arresting appellant “were not immune from discovery,” the court focused on appellant’s failure to seek pretrial relief for the State’s non-disclosure. In our view the colloquy between the court and counsel reveals misunderstandings about the State’s disclosure obligations both in pretrial discovery and during trial, under the Jencks-Carr-Leonard and Robinson-Fields lines of cases. We explain.
We first address the State’s pretrial discovery obligations. The trial court, defense
counsel, and the prosecutor agreed that any use of force report authored by a testifying
officer involved in arresting appellant was subject to pretrial disclosure, as a written
statement of a prosecution witness under Rule 4-263(d)(3). Nonetheless, when defense
counsel inquired about such statements during pretrial discovery, the prosecutor informed
defense counsel that she did “not have access to th[at] information,” and advised defense
counsel that “[t]he proper way” to obtain the reports was to subpoena the Police
Department. This response reflects a misconception of the prosecutor’s obligations under
Rule 4-263. It is the State’s affirmative duty to disclose any written statement by a
*16
witness whom the State plans to call at trial.
See
Md. Rule 4-263(d)(3). Further, the trial
court and the prosecutor mistakenly distinguished the disclosure obligations of the State’s
Attorney from those of the Baltimore City Police Department. That the use of force
reports were in the physical possession of the Department did not obviate the State’s
responsibility to disclose them. “[O]rdinarily the police are an arm of the prosecution, for
purposes of the
Jencks/Carr
analysis, and, thus, a disclosure requirement applicable to the
prosecution applies to them as well.”
Robinson
,
Accordingly, the prosecutor should have attempted to obtain any use of force reports concerning appellant’s arrest. If the Department asserted that the documents were confidential, the prosecutor should have referred the matter to the court. See Md. Rule 4- 263(m)(1)-(2) (“ On motion of a party, [or] a person from whom discovery is sought , . . . the court, for good cause shown, may order that specified disclosures be denied or restricted in any manner that justice requires” or “may permit any showing of cause for denial or restriction of disclosures to be made in camera.”) (emphasis added). It is evident from the case law and the language of the rule that neither the prosecutor nor the Department can make a unilateral decision to refuse disclosure. See Md. Rule 4- 263(g)(1)(B) (A State’s Attorney is not “required to disclose . . . material or information *17 if the court finds that its disclosure is not constitutionally required and would entail a substantial risk of harm to any person that outweighs the interest in disclosure.”) (emphasis added).
The trial court’s ruling was based upon defense counsel’s failure to raise the State’s non-disclosure both during discovery and before the jury was selected. Defense counsel could have raised the issue earlier but, by focusing exclusively on defense counsel’s failings, the trial court failed to give proper consideration to the prosecutor’s contribution to the problem before it. In our view, that contribution was considerable. The prosecutor was presumably aware of the Jencks/Carr/Robinson line of cases. In light of the charges against appellant, the prosecutor should have anticipated that one or more of the officers involved had prepared a use of force report. Under the circumstances, it was the prosecutor’s affirmative duty to obtain any reports. The prosecutor did not discharge her duty—she admitted that, as of the day of trial, she had not seen the reports and “[d]idn’t know anything about them.”
The trial court denied appellant’s motion on the basis of defense counsel’s failure
to raise the State’s non-disclosure on a timely basis. The trial court’s ruling was
inconsistent with the
Jencks/Carr
line of cases, which make it clear that a defendant’s
“right, at trial, to inspect the prior statement of a State’s witness” is separate from his
right to obtain that statement in pretrial discovery.
See Leonard
,
As we have noted, the State asserts that appellant failed to preserve this issue for appellate review. The State makes two arguments in support of this contention. Neither argument is persuasive.
First, the State asserts that appellant’s trial counsel argued only that the prosecutor failed to fulfill her discovery obligations, while on appeal, appellant asserts that his fair trial rights under Carr and Robinson were violated when the trial court refused to order disclosure of the use of force report. We do not agree with the State’s characterization of defense counsel’s argument to the trial court. To be sure, counsel did assert that there had been a violation of Rule 4-263 but counsel also contended, and we believe that the trial court understood counsel to contend, that the prosecution’s disclosure obligation extended through trial. This is sufficient to preserve appellant’s challenge for this Court. [7]
Second, the State contends that appellant waived his claim of error because
defense counsel failed to renew her request to inspect the use of force report after Moorer
*19
testified. We do not agree. Counsel had unsuccessfully litigated the issue of whether she
could inspect the use of force statement during trial. The trial court had made clear that it
would not order the prosecutor to produce the use of force reports under either of the
theories presented by defense counsel and, moreover, the prosecutor admitted that she did
not have the report and had no knowledge of its contents. Against this backdrop, another
request to inspect Moorer’s report was not necessary to preserve appellant’s assignment
of error.
See Massey v. State
,
The State’s case rested entirely upon the credibility of Officers Moorer and Lilly.
“‘In a jury trial, judging the credibility of witnesses is entrusted solely to the jury, the trier
of fact; only the jury determines whether to believe any witnesses, and which witnesses to
believe.’”
Fields
,
II. The Sufficiency of the Evidence for the
Resisting Arrest Conviction
Appellant contends that “the evidence was insufficient to find [him] guilty of
resisting arrest because the State failed to prove that he was resisting a lawful arrest.”
Even though we have vacated appellant’s convictions, we must address his sufficiency
challenge.
See
,
e.g.
,
Bircher v. State
,
We will conclude that the evidence is sufficient if, viewing the evidence in the
light most favorable to the State, “
any
rational trier of fact could have found the essential
elements of the crime beyond a reasonable doubt.”
Jackson v. Virginia
,
At about 2 p.m. on January 30, 2012, several Baltimore City police officers responded to a complaint that a man wearing a black jacket was selling drugs inside a vacant row house located at 612 North Cumberland Street. Among the responders were Moorer and Lilly.
Lilly testified that, when he arrived at the row house, he saw a man wearing a black coat with a fur hood at the door. The man, whom Lilly identified as appellant, stepped back into the house as soon as he saw the police. Shortly thereafter, Lilly heard over the radio that the man was fleeing from the rear of the house, and Lilly ran down an adjacent street to cut him off. While running, Lilly saw the man jump on top of a freestanding wooden door, separating the street from an alley. Lilly testified that he [8] could not see appellant’s hands and that appellant was wearing “a big jacket[.]” Lilly was concerned that appellant might be armed, so he drew his service weapon and told appellant to get off the door. Appellant did not comply, and the door collapsed under him. Appellant then ran into the alley.
After holstering his handgun, Lilly pursued appellant into the alley, whereupon appellant stopped and turned to face the officer. Lilly ordered appellant “to get down,” and placed one hand on appellant’s left shoulder “to force him down” while radioing their location. Appellant then tackled Lilly at the waist and both men fell to the ground, *22 wrestling and punching one another. In the ensuing struggle, appellant pulled Lilly’s handgun from its holster.
About this time, Moorer arrived at the scene. He testified that he heard Lilly yell that “his gun was out of his holster.” He described appellant as being “over top of Lilly, just banging” him and “throwing strikes in his face.” Moorer tried to pull appellant off of Lilly, whereupon appellant began to strike Moorer. After retrieving and holstering his weapon, Lilly struck appellant several times with a baton, but appellant was “still fighting” with the officers. Eventually, appellant said “I quit,” and the officers were able to handcuff him.
Moorer suffered a hand injury, which was treated at the scene, and appellant was treated at a hospital for scrapes and bruises. Photographs of the injuries, Lilly’s torn and soiled uniform, and the alley were admitted into evidence. We next consider whether this evidence was sufficient to support a conviction for resisting arrest.
Resisting arrest is a statutory crime that encompasses “the well-defined
[9]
parameters of Maryland common law concerning resisting arrest.”
McNeal v. State
, 200
Md. App. 510, 528 (2011),
aff’d on other grounds
,
*23
An arrest takes place at the point “(1) when the arrestee is physically restrained, or
(2) when the arrestee is told of the arrest and submits[,]” which may occur by means of
“‘any act that indicates an intention to take him into custody and that subjects him to the
actual control and will of the person making the arrest.’”
Little v. State
,
Appellant contends that the officers made two attempts to arrest him, neither of which was supported by probable cause, and thus his resistance was justified. Appellant asserts that the first attempt occurred when Lilly “first saw [appellant] jump on the wooden door out of the alley, [as] he pulled his gun and commanded him to get off the door,” then chased him into the alley, where he put his hand on appellant’s shoulder “to have control of him” by forcing him down. Appellant contends that the second attempted arrest took place when Moorer “jumped on him,” while he was struggling with Lilly. Appellant maintains that because he “was still resisting an illegal arrest” by Lilly when Moorer attempted the second arrest his “lawful use of force in resisting one illegal arrest should not be the basis for a lawful arrest that results in a resisting arrest conviction.”
The State responds that the initial encounter between Lilly and appellant was an investigatory or “Terry” stop supported by a reasonable suspicion that criminal activity was afoot, and that “Lilly’s conduct was at most a ‘hard take-down’—an investigatory *24 stop accompanied by arrest-level force—which still falls short of the arrest claimed by appellant.” We agree.
“In determining whether an investigatory stop is in actuality an arrest requiring
probable cause, courts consider the ‘totality of the circumstances.’”
In re David S.
, 367
Md. 523, 535 (2002). “Not every seizure of a person is ‘elevated automatically into an
arrest,’ simply because the police used ‘measures . . . more traditionally associated with
arrest than with investigatory detention.’”
Barnes v. State
,
Lilly testified that when he arrived at 612 North Cumberland Street appellant immediately retreated into the house upon seeing the police, and fled out the back. Appellant then refused to comply with Lilly’s commands and continued to run into the alley. Fearing for his safety, Lilly briefly drew his service weapon, but holstered it before chasing appellant into the alley. When Lilly encountered appellant in the alley, he did not draw his weapon; instead, he gave appellant “more commands to get down.” Lilly testified that he put his hand on appellant’s shoulder “to force him down,” to get “control of him, and also get on the air to let the rest of the units know where [his] location was.”
Based on this testimony, we conclude that Lilly was making an investigatory stop
supported by a reasonable suspicion that appellant had knowledge of the reported drug
activity. Given the threat to his safety during appellant’s initial flight from the house
through his eventual confrontation with appellant in the alley, the officer acted reasonably
in using physical force. Lilly did not draw his weapon when appellant turned to face him
in the alley; instead, he instructed appellant to get down while simultaneously calling for
assistance with one hand and placing the other on appellant’s shoulder. Such force was
reasonable to ensure the officer’s safety and prevent appellant’s further flight.
See Elliott
,
Appellant’s use of force to thwart Lilly’s lawful
Terry
stop gave Moorer probable
cause to arrest appellant. A citizen may not use force to thwart a lawful
Terry
stop.
Hicks
v. State
,
Because appellant does not contest that his other convictions were supported by sufficient evidence, we shall remand for further proceedings on all counts, including a new trial if appropriate.
III. Merger
Appellant was sentenced to the following terms of incarceration: six years for disarming a police officer, a consecutive two years for resisting arrest, and another consecutive two years for second degree assault. In his final assignment of error, appellant contends that “[t]he trial court erred by sentencing [appellant] for both the resisting arrest and second degree assault convictions because those offenses merge under the required evidence test.”
This complaint stems from an alleged “factual ambiguity in the record as to whether both offenses were predicated upon the same conduct[.]” The ambiguity arises out of the trial court’s jury instructions. The court instructed the jury that, in order to find appellant guilty of assault:
the State must prove that the Defendant caused offensive physical contact to Jeffrey Lilly . The contact was the result of an intentional or reckless act of the Defendant, and was not accidental. . . . (Emphasis added.) With regard to resisting arrest, the court instructed: the State must prove one, that a law enforcement officer attempted to arrest the Defendant. Two, the Defendant knew that a law enforcement officer was attempting to arrest him. Three, that the Defendant intentionally refused to submit to the arrest and resisted the arrest by force, or threat of force. And, four, that the arrest was lawful, that is that the officer had probable cause to believe that the Defendant had committed the crime of second degree assault. (Emphasis added.)
As a general rule, convictions for second degree assault of the battery variety and
resisting arrest merge when the object of the battery is the arresting officer.
See Nicolas v.
*27
State
,
THE JUDGMENTS OF CONVICTION ARE VACATED. THE CASE IS REMANDED TO THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR BALTIMORE CITY FOR FURTHER PROCEEDINGS CONSISTENT WITH THIS OPINION.
COSTS TO BE PAID BY THE MAYOR AND CITY COUNCIL OF BALTIMORE.
Notes
[1] Md. Rule 4-263(d)(3) was revised after appellant was convicted (effective January 1, 2014) to further designate the “written statements” provision as subsection (continued...)
[1] (...continued) (C), but otherwise remains substantively identical. We shall apply the 2013 version of the rule in effect for appellant’s trial.
[2] We will discuss the evidence as to the events surrounding the arrest in greater detail in Part II of this opinion.
[3] The Court of Appeals considered two issues in
Fields
. The first was whether the
motion court erred in declining to conduct an
in camera
examination of an internal affairs
division investigation of two key State’s witnesses.
[4] The trial court misspoke; the Department’s response to the subpoena was mailed on February 15, 2012.
[5] For his part, Lilly testified that he had not prepared a use of force report, but that his supervisor did. Lilly did not bring a copy of the report to trial.
[6] This Court’s decision in
Leonard
was affirmed in a per curiam decision by the
Court of Appeals “[f]or the reasons set forth by Judge Wilner in
Leonard v. State
, 46 Md.
App. 631,
[7] For the reader’s convenience, we set out again the relevant exchange between counsel and the trial court (emphasis added): [DEFENSE COUNSEL]: Essentially, that the State’s duty to disclose, is ongoing. And, we are not in a position where we’re asking for a postponement. We’re simply asking that the Court order the State to produce those documents. And, we’re not seeking to halt the trial in any way. We were just simply asking that the State produce these documents. THE COURT: Well, now, that’s a different issue. We are at a point where you are asking them to produce something; they’re saying it’s not within their purview. Maybe that’s true, maybe it’s not.
[8] The witnesses used the term “alley.” From photographs in the record, the “alley” appears to be no more than four feet wide—“passageway” might be a more appropriate term.
[9] Md. Code, § 9-408(b)(1) of the Criminal Law Article states in pertinent part that:“[a] person may not intentionally . . . resist a lawful arrest.”
