On October 31, 2006, after a several-week trial, a jury convicted appellants Marquette Ward and Franklin Thompson of several offenses relating to the shooting deaths of Mario Evans and Jakhema “Princess” Hansen in the Sursum Corda neighborhood of N.W. Washington. Ward was convicted of the first-degree premeditated murder while armed of Mario Evans; carrying a pistol outside his home or place of business without a license; conspiracy to murder Hansen; first-degree premeditated murder while armed (Hansen); assault with intent to kill while armed (“AWIKWA”) (victim Tonique White); first-degree burglary while armed; first-degree (felony) murder while armed (Hansen); two counts of obstruction of justice (with respect to Hansen and witness Timika Holiday); and four counts of possession of a firearm during a crime
In these appeals, Ward contends that he was denied his Sixth Amendment right to a speedy trial. Both Ward and Thompson contend that the trial court erred in permitting the government to elicit hearsay testimony recounting statements by Hansen and statements appellants made to government witness Devin Evans, who had been a fellow inmate of each in the D.C. Jail. Additionally, both appellants argue that the court erred in denying their motions for severance. Thompson further contends that he was charged with and convicted of multiplicitous crimes, in violation of his right to due process. We conclude that some of appellants’ convictions merge, and we therefore remand to the trial court for it to determine which affected convictions to vacate. In all other respects, we affirm the judgments of conviction.
I.
We summarize the evidence only briefly. Holiday testified that on January 18, 2004, Mario Evans was selling PCP in the hallway of a Sursum Corda apartment building. Among the other people in the hallway were Ward, Hansen, Holiday and one Bernard Smith. Ward and Evans began to argue when Evans refused to sell Ward a PCP-laced cigarette for a discounted price. After arguing for some time, Ward paid the full price and left the hallway. Shortly thereafter, Ward returned and opened fire on Evans, killing him. Holiday spoke with police officers who arrived on the scene, identified Ward as the shooter, and told the police that Hansen had also witnessed the shooting.
Holiday further testified that on January 23, 2004, Hansen and Holiday were approached by Thompson, who warned Hansen that she had “better not be snitching.” Later that day, while Hansen was visiting Holiday at Holiday’s grandmother’s house, a masked Thompson burst into the house and began shooting, killing Hansen (who was in the living room with Holiday) and injuring White (Holiday’s sister, who was in the kitchen). Thompson also pointed his gun at Holiday, but realized that it was empty and then left the house. The government’s theory at trial was that Thompson, a friend of Ward, murdered Hansen and attempted to kill Holiday to prevent them from testifying about the Mario Evans murder.
II.
On January 24, 2004, Ward was arrested and held for the Mario Evans murder. On October 24, 2004, a grand jury indicted Ward, charging him with the murder of Evans as well as firearm offenses. Ward was arraigned on November 2, 2004, and an initial trial date was set for March 7, 2005. However, several delays ensued, including delay attendant to the grand jury’s handing down of a superseding indictment on June 1, 2005, and pre-trial motions did not begin until September 11, 2006.
For Sixth Amendment speedy-trial purposes, the clock starts with “either a formal indictment or information or else the actual restraints imposed by arrest and holding to answer a criminal charge,” Dillingham v. United States,
To determine whether a defendant’s right to a speedy trial was violated, the trial court must employ a balancing test in which it weighs the conduct of both the prosecution and the defendant. See Barker v. Wingo,
In evaluating the reasons for delay, “we focus primarily on whether and to what extent it was due to a deliberate attempt by the prosecution to gain tactical or other advantage” or, instead, “a more neutral reason.” Diggs v. United States,
In this case — one the trial court referred to as “a case of this complexity”— the evidence supports the trial court’s finding that only a relatively small portion of
We treat as chargeable to the government the continuance of the trial from March 2005 until June 21, 2005, requested by the government on the ground that the prosecutor then assigned to try the case as lead counsel was unavailable due to other trials. However, during that time, the government continued to investigate the connection between the Evans murder and the Hansen murder — an investigation that resulted in the grand jury’s issuing the superseding indictment charging Ward with conspiracy and obstruction of justice in connection with Hansen’s murder and with the assaults on Holiday and White. Although we “may assume that some portion of’ the time needed to obtain a superseding indictment is chargeable to the government, Long v. United States,
Delays chargeable to Ward and additional neutral delays occurred after issuance of the superseding indictment, which joined the Ward and Thompson cases. At arraignment on June 21, 2005, Ward’s counsel declined to enter his appearance for the additional counts added in the superseding indictment. Not until after the court offered to appoint Ward’s counsel under the Criminal Justice Act, did counsel agree to represent Ward on the additional counts, accepting appointment on October 26, 2005. But, the record further shows, the trial court’s calendar did not allow for a fall trial, and Thompson’s then-counsel was not available until March 2006. In addition, on November 30, 2005, Thompson’s then-counsel withdrew because of a conflict of interest, and it was necessary for the court to appoint
On January 12, 2006, the government again filed a motion to continue trial, this time until June 2006, because of the lead prosecutor’s schedule. However, Ward’s counsel was unavailable until the second week of September. As a result, the court set a new trial date of September 11, 2006. Thus, only a portion of the delay just described was directly chargeable to the government.
Considering the various circumstances discussed above, we can see no error in the trial court’s determination that Ward did not demonstrate that his trial was so unjustifiably delayed as to entitle him to relief. We also agree with the trial court’s reasoning that Ward’s claim of prejudice fails. To be sure, impairment of a defendant’s preparation of his defense— the “most serious” prejudice, Barker,
III.
Both appellants contend that the trial court erred in allowing government witnesses to testify about statements made by the decedent Hansen, including the following: Kizzy Black, Shawnta Collier, and Gail Gurley all were allowed to testify that Hansen told them that she saw Ward kill or shoot at Mario Evans. Gurley was also permitted to testify that Hansen told her that Ward contacted Hansen and warned her to “lay low.” Gurley further testified that she drove Hansen to the Violent Crimes Branch to speak with police and that en route, Hansen told Gurley that Ward was following them in a black truck. Holiday was permitted to testify to what Hansen said Ward told Hansen during a telephone call, i.e., that Hansen and Holiday were not to “open [their] mouth[s]” and that Ward would “look out for” them “in money terms” “once th[e] situation die[d] down.” In addition, Metropolitan Police Department Detective Willie Jeffer
Appellants contend first that admission of Hansen’s statements violated their Sixth Amendment right to confront witnesses against them. We reject this claim as to statements Hansen made to her friends (Black, Gurley, and Holiday) because we discern no basis for treating them as testimonial. Only testimonial hearsay is “subject to the strictures of Crawford [v. Washington,
Moreover, even if we assume arguendo that Hansen’s statements were testimonial and that the testimony relaying them was hearsay, we agree with the trial court that the testimony fell under the forfeiture-by-wrongdoing doctrine, adopted by this court in Devonshire v. United States,
Ward contends that the Devonshire doctrine was inapplicable as to him because the only evidence that the government offered to establish his role in a conspiracy to kill Hansen was the hearsay statement of his alleged co-conspirator Thompson.
We reject Thompson’s argument because we agree with other courts that the forfeiture-by-wrongdoing doctrine is not so limited in application that it overcomes the hearsay bar only where the murdered witness was to testify against her killer.
Appellants further contend that the trial court erred in admitting Devin Evans’s testimony about statements appellants made to Evans.
Ward’s challenge is to Evans’s account of admissions Thompson made about killing Hansen (including the admission described in note 5 supra) and Evans’s account of statements that Evans attributed to Ward (i.e., that Ward “killed a little dude” who was selling PCP, that Ward sent Thompson and Ward’s cousin to kill “the little girl,” and that Ward asked Evans to make a telephone call for him to alert Ward’s cousin that a witness (Holiday) was out of witness protection and back in the neighborhood and “to make sure she didn’t make it to court”). Ward complains first that Thompson’s statements against Thompson’s penal interest were also considered as evidence against Ward, but the hearsay exception for statements against interest does not limit the use of such statements to use solely against the declarant.
Our review of the record indicates that the impeachment of Evans to which Ward points was as to minor matters (e.g., how many times he spoke to appellants).
IV.
Claiming that they were prejudiced by having their trials joined, appellants contend that the trial court erred in joining the trials and abused its discretion when it denied their subsequent motions to sever. Joinder of defendants is appropriate in a number of circumstances, including where (as the trial court found in this case) “one offense leads logically to the other” and where “the offenses are part of a common scheme and are so closely connected in time and place that necessarily proof of the two crimes overlaps substantially.” Ray v. United States,
Nor did the trial court abuse its discretion in denying severance.
V.
Thompson argues that his convictions of both premeditated murder while armed and first-degree felony murder while armed are duplicitous, as are his convictions of three counts of PFCV, which he contends should merge because they “[arose] out of [his] uninterrupted possession of a single weapon during a single act of violence.” Matthews v. United States,
VI.
We remand to the trial court to vacate either the conviction for first-degree premeditated murder or the felony murder conviction as to Hansen, and to vacate the corresponding PFCV conviction, for each appellant. In all other respects, the judgment of the trial court is
Ajfimed.
Notes
. As we have previously observed, requiring immediate indictments could act to "impair the prosecutor’s ability to continue the investigation or obtain additional indictments,” "pressure prosecutors to resolve doubtful cases in favor of early (and possibly unwarranted) prosecutions," and ultimately "preclude full consideration of the desirability of not prosecuting in particular cases.” Tolliver v. United States,
. Ward argues that even at an early stage after his arrest, the government suspected that there was at least some relationship between the Evans and Hansen murders. The prosecutor told the trial court, however, that it could not have obtained the superseding indictment any earlier than it did because, while circumstances earlier gave "the flavor that something more was amiss than just Mr. Ward acting on his own or Mr. Thompson acting on his own,” the government did not have the basis (most notably, the statement of Devin Evans, discussed infra) needed for additional charges until the spring of 2005. We discern no basis for concluding that the government took longer than was reasonably required to complete its investigation.
. As the trial court aptly put it, Ward was "just as much a part [in the] delay as [the government was].”
. Although Thompson may be correct that the government used Hansen's statements to Detective Jefferson “to establish that she lied to the police, which was probative of the fact that Mr. Thompson had warned her not to snitch,” that does not amount to using Hansen’s statements to prove the truth of the matter asserted (i.e., a use that would render Detective Jefferson’s testimony relaying the statements "hearsay”).
. Ward’s reference is to Devin Evans's testimony that, while he and Thompson were incarcerated together in May 2004, Thompson told him that he killed a girl who was "hot” because "she [had] seen something she wasn’t supposed to see,” and that he (Thompson) “was supposed to [get] paid for it but he never got paid for it because he got locked up first.”
.We said in Devonshire that "a defendant who kills a potential witness, who is expected to give damaging testimony against the killer in some future proceeding, waives the right under the Confrontation Clause of the Sixth Amendment to object to the admission of that witness’s out-of-court statements.”
. Cf. Butler v. United States,
. See Gatlin v. United States,
. The government asserts that Thompson did not preserve this objection. Because we reject it in any event, we need not pause over whether that assertion is correct.
. As Ward concedes, appellants' statements to Evans were not testimonial. Thus, they were not subject to the Confrontation Clause. See Johnson v. United States,
. See Laumer v. United States,
. See Thomas v. United States,
. Under Super. Ct.Crim. R. 8(b), "all of the defendants need not be charged in each count" for defendants’ trials to be joined.
. Severance is required only when it is necessary to permit a defendant to have a fair trial. See Void v. United States,
